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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Superior Import / Export Ltd & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Revenue And Customs & Anor [2017] EWHC 3172 (Admin) (11 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/3172.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3172 (Admin), [2018] Lloyd's Rep FC 115, [2018] STI 261, [2018] STC 2000 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE CARR
____________________
The Queen (on the application of) (1) SUPERIOR IMPORT / EXPORT LIMITED (2) BALBIR SINGH JOHAL (3) GURDEV KAUR JOHAL |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS (2) BIRMINGHAM MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendants |
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Mr James Fletcher (instructed by Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs) for the First Defendants
The Second Defendant was not represented and did not appear
Hearing date: 15th November 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Carr :
Introduction
a) Crown House, Home Gardens, Dartford, Kent DA1 1DZ ("the Crown House premises"). The Crown House Premises are occupied by the First Claimant, Superior Import/Export Ltd ("Superior"). The sole director of Superior is Mr Harpreet Singh Johal ("Mr Harpreet Johal");
b) The Priory, Swanley Village Road, Swanley, Kent BR8 7NU ("the Priory premises"). The Priory premises are owned by the Second Claimant, Mr Balbir Singh Johal ("Mr Balbir Johal"), who is the father of Mr Harpreet Johal;
c) 98 Rochester Road, Gravesend, Kent DA12 2 HZ ("the Rochester Road premises"). The Rochester Road premises are owned by the Third Claimant, Mrs Gurdev Kaur Johal ("Mrs Gurdev Johal"), who is the grandmother of Mr Harpreet Johal.
Factual summary
"2.2 Purpose of the joint investigation team:
…
In particular, the JIT aims to:
- gather evidence and facilitate the exchange of information between investigative teams….;
- facilitate the involvement of investigators from one Member State in the investigations being pursued by the other;…
- identify the instruments and proceeds of crime;
- use the evidence gathered for the purposes of prosecution, and the restraint and confiscation of the proceeds of crime in France and the United Kingdom."
And:
"9. EVIDENCE
…The JIT leaders shall agree the processes and procedures to be followed regarding the sharing between them of evidence obtained pursuant to the JIT in each Member State…."
And:
"13. 2 Recording of and use of information obtained during the JIT
...Without prejudice to Article 13 and subject to the law of the Member State in which material is obtained, the JIT members and prosecution authorities may use as evidence in criminal proceedings all information exchanged in the framework of the JIT, unless the providing party imposes conditions or restrictions on the use of specified material….
13.3 Consultation with regard to legal proceedings
The Parties to the agreement designated…will ensure they consult each other, in agreement with the appropriate authorities of their State, on the timing and method of intervention by the investigators and on the best manner in which to undertake eventual legal proceedings."
"10. GENERAL CONDITIONS OF THE AGREEMENT
In general, the conditions laid down in Article 13 of the Convention… shall apply as implemented by each Member State in which the JIT operates."
The application
"- Being knowingly concerned in the fraudulent evasion of Excise Duty contrary to section 170(2) of the Customs and Excise Management Act 1979
- Conspiracy to commit fraud contrary to section 1 of the Criminal Law Act 1977
- Money laundering offences contrary to sections 327, 328 and 329 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002."
"3) The investigation is being carried out in conjunction with an ongoing French Judicial Customs (SNDJ) operation, codenamed 'Operation Eurostock' and a Joint Investigation Team (JIT) agreement was created at Eurojust on 21/07/16. This has allowed the two departments to work in tandem and to freely exchange information in relation to the fraud, in order to substantiate the links between the criminal organisations involved and to use any evidence gathered, for the purposes of prosecution and the restraint and confiscation of the proceeds of crime in both France and the UK."
"47) The evidence obtained so far during this investigation as explained above strongly suggests that the individuals:..SALH….PAUL…SINGH…JOHAL…DHANDA….CONLON…MOHAMMAD….DARBAR, each played a pivotal role in this suspected complex fraud and together they have defrauded [HMRC] of approximately £441,584,000 between the period 01/04/10 to date."
Mr Harpreet Johal's individual role was then described in the following terms:
"JOHAL is suspected of being in overall control of the fraud in the London area and has connections with other individuals suspected to have an involvement in alcohol fraud. He also has regular liaison with the French suspects, concerning the importations for his companies and displays a vast amount of wealth and assets, suspected to have been purchased through the proceeds of this crime."
a) What she was looking for. She stated that there were in excess of 200 known companies and individuals concerned in this suspected fraud, referred to an attached schedule, which covered the period 1st April 2010 to date and "all business and personal material deemed relevant to the investigation [was] to be seized";
b) Why she believed that the material for which she wanted to search was likely to be of substantial value to the investigation. She stated that, if identified, the items would assist in proving the suspects' knowledge and involvement. It was unlikely that the items could be obtained in any other way. The material would also assist HMRC in freezing assets and bank accounts connected to the suspects;
c) Why she believed that the material for which she wanted to search was likely to be relevant evidence. She referred to the high likelihood of arrangements for importation being made by email or telephone, and the existence of fraudulent duplicate paperwork. Business records would provide details of any business activity, declared and undeclared. Banking material would allow further enquiries and facilitate the obtaining of production order material.
"(d) Is there any reason to think that the material for which you want to search consists of or includes items subject to legal privilege, excluded material or special procedure material?
No, there is no intention to search for or seize any such material."
"8) Duty of disclosure…
Is there anything of which you are aware that might reasonably be considered capable of undermining any of the grounds of this application, or which for some other reason might affect the court's decision? Include anything that reasonably might call into question the credibility of information you have received, and explain why you have decided that that information still can be relied upon.
There is nothing at this stage in the investigation that I am aware of that may undermine the case or affect the court's decision on granting this application. It is likely that there will be some legitimate business records and/or cash derived from genuine transactions at the business premises connected to the OCG, however it is necessary to seize all material in order to ascertain which is legitimate and which is fraudulent."
The hearing
a) Were the UK suspects aware of the operation as a result of the French intervention in January 2017? (Answer: still business as usual since the French arrests. HMRC not aware if the targets were aware. The targets were still believed to be in the country.)
b) Why was HMRC waiting a week from authorisation of the warrants to carry out the intervention? (Answer: explanation given);
c) What type of properties was HMRC intending to search and where there any local sensitivities in the areas concerned? (Answer: mixture of residential and business. Children might/would be present. Women officers would be attending.)
d) Where were the vehicles likely to be located? (Answer: the vehicles should be at the premises.)
e) When did the investigation start? (Answer: the investigation was taken on in June 2016.)
The warrants
"…to search for: All material deemed relevant to the suspected fraud and investigation concerning the companies and individuals listed in the attached document, for the period 01/04/10 to present, which may include: electronic media including laptops, computers, tablets, memory cards, dongles, external hard drives, mobile phones, other communication devices, printers, fax machines, Satellite Navigation Systems, CCTV, discs, Imac's (sic), business records including purchase invoices, sales invoices, copies of accounts, diaries, calendars, CMR's (sic), delivery notes, evidence pertaining to money laundering including cash, foreign banking documents, copy cheques, cheque book stubs, paying in books, bank statements, merchant acquirer data, account opening documentation, documents relating to savings accounts, valuable jewellery and watches, high value items, documentation relating to the purchase or sale of property or assets in the UK and abroad and travel documents including UK and foreign passports or identity cards, non UK duty paid Excise goods."
Execution and arrest
Grounds of challenge and relief claimed
a) Ground 1: it was unlawful and irrational for the BMC to issue warrants when HMRC's express purpose was to exceed the powers conferred by those warrants;
b) Ground 2: the warrants failed to embody the safeguards set out in s. 15(6)(b) of PACE. As will be seen below, this ground has expanded to cover a more general complaint that the warrants did not satisfy the pre-condition requirements of s. 8 of PACE;
c) Ground 3: there were no reasonable grounds for belief, as required by s. 8(1)(d) of PACE that the material sought did not consist of or include items subject to legal privilege or special procedure material;
d) Ground 4: the Justice failed to consider whether the other statutory preconditions for the issue of the warrants were satisfied;
e) Ground 5: the warrants should be set aside by reason of a breach of the duty to give full and frank disclosure;
f) Ground 6: there was excessive searching contrary to s. 16(8) of PACE, such that the entry into all 3 premises was unlawful by virtue of s. 15(1) of PACE;
g) Ground 7: the application for the warrants should have been made under s. 13 of the Crime International Co-operation Act 2003 ("the 2003 Act"). This ground too has been developed further into a complaint as to the transfer, if any, of material obtained by HMRC under the warrants to the French authorities.
Evidence on the claim
a) Mr Harpreet Johal. He describes his personal and career background. He denies any wrongdoing and suggests that HMRC misunderstands in particular how the bonded system works. He states that he was shocked at HMRC's searches of premises with dogs where his unwell parents resided and also the Rochester Road premises where his elderly grandmother resides and of which he is not the registered owner. He states that of the names listed in HMRC's schedule, 98% are not known to him. He states his belief that HMRC's actions were "wholly unlawful";
b) Mr Balbir Johal. He describes the search of the Priory premises on 15th June 2017 from his perspective and speaks of his ill health and that of his wife. His grandson was also present in the premises at the time. He fails to see why HMRC attended at his property. It seemed from their actions that they were intent on searching every part of his property and went through everything "without just cause". He states that the whole experience has been very bad for him and his whole family;
c) Mrs Gurdev Johal. She describes the search of the Rochester Road premises from her perspective. She says that she felt humiliated and upset and the whole incident has left her shocked and scared;
d) Ms Samantha Currey ("Ms Currey"). She is Mr Harpreet Johal's personal assistant. She attended the search of the Crown House premises. She says that she was working at home at the time but attended the premises when alerted to HMRC's arrival. She says that she told the HMRC officers that they would regularly provide paperwork to HMRC and so she did not understand the purpose of the search. She describes how Superior's solicitor, Mr Sanjay Panesar ("Mr Panesar"), arrived and, after discussion with her, raised the issue of legally privileged and special procedure material with the HMRC officers. She states that the officers looked at personal material on a computer and took other documentation including private and confidential material relating to other business which have nothing to do with Mr Harpreet Johal. She adds that there has been "constant monitoring" of Superior;
e) Mr Panesar who, as indicated above, is Superior's solicitor. He attended first the Priory premises at the time of HMRC's search. He states that he explained to HMRC officers that he thought that the search warrant was too wide and advised that the occupants would not understand the documents because of language differences. He also attended the Crown House premises. He asserted to HMRC officers that there would be special procedure and legally privileged material on the premises. He did not assert that all material would be legally privileged, but only that everything would contain some legally privileged material. The officers stopped the search, took legal advice and then continued. He states that he also raised the question of notices under s. 50 of the Criminal Justice and Police Act 2001 ("the 2001 Act"). No such notices were ever served;
f) Mr Christopher Mann. He is a tax advisor to Superior. He states that Superior has provided records to HMRC on a monthly basis. He has also attended a meeting with HMRC on behalf of Superior alongside Mr Harpreet Johal and Ms Currey on 10th May 2017 when no concerns were raised by HMRC.
a) Ms Wilkes. She explains the background to the application for warrants and their drafting and issue. She explains that April 2010 was chosen as the start date because that is the month when one of the principal subjects of the investigation was released from prison. She sets out the alleged importation into the UK of alcohol upon which duty had not been paid to HMRC. She sets out particulars of the French investigation, including that suspects had been arrested and admitted fraud but refused to comment on the alleged involvement of UK suspects. She refers to the HMRC investigation with French Judicial Customs under the JIT. She states that the information and warrants were completed by her and checked by case manager Mr Christopher Coleman ("Mr Coleman"), senior case officer Matthew Davies ("Mr Davies") and an independent senior officer who conducted a quality assurance check, namely Mr Homans. She explains that she referred to the existence of legitimate material in box 8 of the application because it was reasonable to expect such material to exist and that it would assist in proving knowledge of the correct accounting and retention procedures to be followed. She explains why she did not consider there to be any special procedure material on the premises as the items being searched for were not business confidential material but material such as invoices and contact details. She sets out the checks undertaken on the addresses prior to the searches;
b) Mr Davies. He confirms his review of the warrants drafted by Ms Wilkes. He explains that, given the nature of Superior's business, he did not envisage any special procedure or legally privileged material to be present at any of the premises that HMRC intended to search. He asked the independent authorising officer, Mr Homans, to review the application;
c) Mr Coleman. He also provides evidence of checking the warrants. He listed the French officers to be present during search. He was in operational control of searches;
d) Ms Nicola Gape. She explains how she composed a briefing prior to the searches, with a power point presentation;
e) Mr James Lowe. He conducted the operational briefing on 14th June 2017, having assisted Ms Gape in its preparation. It was delivered to approximately 70 officers including officers of the French Service Nationale de Douane Judiciaire;
f) Ms Jennifer Davis. She was the officer in charge of the search at the Priory premises and explains interaction with family members and gives evidence as to the use of dogs;
g) Ms Claire Herold. She provides evidence of her interaction with Mrs Gurdev Kaur and other family members during the search of the Rochester Road premises;
h) Mr Mark Norton. He was the Gold Officer during search and explains how he dealt with legal professional privilege issues. He was advised that the assertion that all material was subject to legal privilege could not be correct. (As set out above, Mr Panesar denies ever making such a broad assertion, only that all material would contain some privileged material);
i) Mr Stephen Thompson. He was the Bronze Officer in charge of the search of the Crown House premises. He explains how he dealt with Mr Panesar's objections relating to legal professional privilege and how the search was carried out.
Relevant legislation
PACE
"8 Power of justice of the peace to authorise entry and search of premises
(1) If on an application made by a constable a justice of the peace is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing—
(a) that an indictable offence has been committed; and
(b) that there is material on premises mentioned in subsection (1A) below which is likely to be of substantial value (whether by itself or together with other material) to the investigation of the offence; and
(c) that the material is likely to be relevant evidence; and
(d) that it does not consist of or include items subject to legal privilege, excluded material or special procedure material; and
(e) that any of the conditions specified in subsection (3) below applies, he may issue a warrant authorising a constable to enter and search the premises in relation to each set of premises specified in the application…..
(2) A constable may seize and retain anything for which a search has been authorised under subsection (1) above…
(4) In this Act "relevant evidence", in relation to an offence, means anything that would be admissible in evidence at a trial for the offence."
"15 Search warrants-safeguards
(1) This section and section 16 below have effect in relation to the issue to constables under any enactment…. of warrants to enter and search premises and an entry on or search of premises is unlawful unless it complies with this section and section 16 below."
"A warrant-
(a)…
(b) shall identify, as far as practicable, the articles or persons to be sought."
"A search under a warrant may only be a search to the extent required for which the warrant was issued."
The 2001 Act
"50 Additional powers of seizure from premises
(1) Where—
(a) a person who is lawfully on any premises finds anything on those premises that he has reasonable grounds for believing may be or may contain something for which he is authorised to search on those premises,
(b) a power of seizure to which this section applies or the power conferred by subsection (2) would entitle him, if he found it, to seize whatever it is that he has grounds for believing that thing to be or to contain, and
(c) in all the circumstances, it is not reasonably practicable for it to be determined, on those premises—
(i) whether what he has found is something that he is entitled to seize, or
(ii) the extent to which what he has found contains something that he is entitled to seize,that person's powers of seizure shall include power under this section to seize so much of what he has found as it is necessary to remove from the premises to enable that to be determined."
Ground 1: it was unlawful and irrational for the BMC to issue warrants when HMRC's express purpose was to exceed the powers conferred by those warrants
"It is likely that there will be some legitimate business records and/or cash derived from genuine transactions at the business premises connected to the OCG, however it is necessary to seize all material in order to ascertain which is legitimate and which is fraudulent."
Ground 3: there were no reasonable grounds for believing, as required by s. 8(1)(d) of PACE, that the material sought did not consist of or include items subject to legal privilege or special procedure material
"(d) Is there any reason to think that the material for which you want to search consists of or includes items subject to legal privilege, excluded material or special procedure material?
No, there is no intention to search for or seize any such material."
Ground 4: the Justice failed to consider whether the other statutory preconditions for the issue of the warrants were satisfied
Ground 5: the warrants should be set aside by reason of a breach of the duty to give full and frank disclosure
a) the good compliance history of Superior and Mr Harpreet Johal in relation to their tax affairs;
b) the fact that the Priory premises were occupied by Mr Harpreet Johal's parents who were in ill-health;
c) the fact that the Rochester Road premises were occupied by, among others, a woman of 85 years.
"The officer shall make reasonable enquiries to:
i) establish if:
... anything is known about the likely occupier of the premises and the nature of the premises themselves;
... the premises have been searched previously and how recently; (ii) obtain any other relevant information."
a) as for a history of good tax compliance, it is difficult to see how a good history would be relevant in circumstances where compliance is an ingredient of being able to trade at all. But in any event the Justice was informed of routine HMRC visits, of communication with Mr Harpreet Johal and of the possibility of some legitimate trading as well. This point was not in the event pressed by Mr Jones with any vigour;
b) as to occupancy of the properties, HMRC made reasonable investigations by reference to correspondence and HMRC records, checks on the electoral roll and with the Land Registry for the Rochester Road premises together with a drive-by observation. The Priory premises were also observed. Ms Wilkes set out the position as understood in relation to the properties in paragraph 38 of box 2 of the application. It appears that the Justice was informed that at least some children may be living at the residential addresses. It was also indicated that wives would not be arrested;
c) as for the additional matters referred to, such as the health of the occupants or full extent of occupancy, HMRC cannot have failed to make full and frank disclosure of that of which they were unaware. The complaint is in reality one of a failure to make proper enquiries, as opposed to a failure to make full and frank disclosure. There is no material to suggest that HMRC failed to disclose material matters of which they were aware. It is also highly questionable as to how HMRC would have had access to information such as the occupants' medical health records or details in any event.
Ground 6: there was excessive searching contrary to s. 16(8) of PACE, such that the entry into all 3 premises was unlawful by virtue of s. 15(1) of PACE
"Subject to the de minimis principle, which common sense requires, I conclude that a search has exceeded the purpose for which the warrant was issued…when material which does not satisfy those criteria has been seized. But in deciding whether it has been shown that a particular seizure was unlawful it is necessary to take as starting point the fact that one is examining the propriety or the judgment of the officer executing the warrant made in the circumstances in which he found himself and on the basis of what was or should have been known to him."
"Judicial review is not a fact finding exercise and it is an extremely unsatisfactory tool by which to determine, in any but the clearest of cases, whether there has been a seizure of material not permitted by a search warrant. In my judgment a person who complains of excessive seizure in breach of section 16(8) should not, save in such cases, seek his remedy by way of judicial review but should rely on his private law remedy when he will have a tribunal will be able to hear evidence and make findings of fact unfettered by Wednesbury principles".
As this authority makes clear, judicial review is an extremely difficult forum for the disposal of disputed allegations of facts such as these.
Ground 7: the application for the warrant should have been made under s. 13 of the 2003 Act
"13 Requests for assistance from overseas authorities
(1) Where a request for assistance in obtaining evidence in a part of the United Kingdom is received by the territorial authority for that part, the authority may—
(a) if the conditions in section 14 are met, arrange for the evidence to be obtained under section 15, or
(b) direct that a search warrant be applied for under or by virtue of section 16 or 17 or, in relation to evidence in Scotland, 18."
"16 Extension of statutory search powers in England and Wales and Northern Ireland
(1) Part 2 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (c. 60) (powers of entry, search and seizure) is to have effect as if references to indictable offences in section 8 of, and Schedule 1 to, that Act included any conduct which—
(a) constitutes an offence under the law of a country outside the United Kingdom, and
(b) would, if it occurred in England and Wales, constitute an indictable offence.
(2) But an application for a warrant or order by virtue of subsection (1) may be made only—
(a) in pursuance of a direction given under section 13, or
(b) if it is an application for a warrant or order under section 8 of, or Schedule 1 to, that Act by a constable for the purposes of an investigation by an international joint investigation team of which he is a member."
Ground 2: the warrants failed to embody the safeguards set out in s. 15(6)(b) of PACE
"The warrant needs to be drafted with sufficient precision to enable both those who execute it and those whose property is affected by it to know whether any individual document or class of documents falls within it."
"While for these reasons I would not quash the warrant in the instant case, a warrant should be capable of being understood by those carrying out the search and by those whose premises are being searched, without reference to any other document."
a) the words in the second line of the warrant "All material deemed relevant to the suspected fraud and investigation…". The occupiers to whom the warrants were presented under s. 16(5) could not know what the fraud and investigation was, nor how any individual item could be "deemed relevant" to such investigation. Reliance is placed on Hoque and Das (supra) where the warrant was held to be fatally defective on this ground. The warrant purported to delegate the scope of the permitted search and seizure to the officers authorised to conduct the search;
b) the words in the fourth line of the list "which may include…..:" do not limit the material which may be seized and which might be "deemed relevant": they encourage a searching officer to believe he is authorized to seize these things, especially computer equipment, even if he does not deem it to be relevant;
c) the specification of computers as opposed to their contents is not permissible, since it was practicable to specify the documentation required: see R (Cabot Global Ltd) v Barkingside Magistrates' Court [2015] EWHC 14(Admin) (at [51]);
d) the list of individuals and companies on the attached schedules is said to be "extraordinarily wide", containing 237 names.
a) the words "which may include" do not extend the material that could be searched for. The items identified fell within the overarching requirement of (deemed) relevance. As was stated in Kent Pharmaceuticals (supra) (at [25]), the words of inclusivity "have to be treated in a restrictive manner";
b) the specification of computers as opposed to their contents is not objectionable: see R (Sharer) v City of London Magistrates' Court and HMRC [2016] EWHC 1412 (Admin) (at [54]) and, even more recently, R ((A) and (B)) v Central Criminal Court and another [2017] 1 WLR 3567 (at [73] to [85]) in particular.
" …There is, it seem[s] to me, a further flaw in the warrants as issued. It is the responsibility of the justice of the peace to apply the access criteria of section 8(1)(a)-(e). Section 8 does not permit the justice of the peace to delegate to the constable the very responsibility which the justice of the peace is exercising under section 8(1). On the contrary, the evidence submitted by the constable should establish to the satisfaction of the justice of the peace reasonable grounds for believing that the articles to be identified in the warrant so far as practicable meet the access criteria in section 8(1). A constable's power to seize additional material beyond the scope of the warrant is governed by section 19 of [PACE] and section 50 of [the 2001 Act]. It seems to me…that to reflect the responsibility of making the judgment of relevance to the constable may have the effect of rendering the ambit of the warrant too wide, as in the present case I have concluded."
Conclusion