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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Arif (t/a Trinity Fisheries) v HM Revenue & Customs [2006] EWHC 1262 (Ch) (07 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/1262.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1262 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MOHAMMED ARIF (trading as TRINITY FISHERIES) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr James Puzey (instructed by HM Revenue & Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 24TH May 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
Introduction | 1 |
Background | 4 |
The case against Mr Arif | 7 |
Results of invigilation | 8 |
Counter-measures | 9 |
Underdeclaration of purchases | 10 |
Increase in takings | 13 |
The till roll | 14 |
Non co-operation | 16 |
The tribunal hearing | 17 |
The powers of the High Court | 20 |
The Tribunal's evaluation of the evidence | 24 |
Results of invigilation | 24 |
Counter-measures | 25 |
Under-declaration of purchases | 28 |
Increase in takings after invigilation | 30 |
The till rolls | 31 |
Non co-operation | 34 |
Overall conclusion | 35 |
The case on appeal | 37 |
The unexplained £565 | 38 |
Individual days | 41 |
Quantum | 46 |
Other criticisms | 49 |
Result | 50 |
Introduction
Background
The case against Mr Arif
Results of invigilation
Counter-measures
Underdeclaration of purchases
Increase in takings
The till roll
Date | Z reading |
11 February 1999 | £71,328.76 |
16 February 1999 | £76,706.42 |
26 February 1999 | £85,928.98 |
Non co-operation
The tribunal hearing
The powers of the High Court
"If a party to a hearing before commissioners expresses dissatisfaction with their determination as being erroneous in point of law, it is for them to state a case and in the body of it to set out the facts that they have found as well as their determination. I do not think that inferences drawn from other facts are incapable of being themselves findings of fact, although there is value in the distinction between primary facts and inferences drawn from them. When the case comes before the court it is its duty to examine the determination having regard to its knowledge of the relevant law. If the case contains anything ex facie which is bad law and which bears upon the determination, it is, obviously, erroneous in point of law. But, without any such misconception appearing ex facie, it may be that the facts found are such that no person acting judicially and properly instructed as to the relevant law could have come to the determination under appeal. In those circumstances, too, the court must intervene. It has no option but to assume that there has been some misconception of the law and that this has been responsible for the determination. So there, too, there has been error in point of law. I do not think that it much matters whether this state of affairs is described as one in which there is no evidence to support the determination or as one in which the evidence is inconsistent with and contradictory of the determination, or as one in which the true and only reasonable conclusion contradicts the determination. Rightly understood, each phrase propounds the same test. For my part, I prefer the last of the three, since I think that it is rather misleading to speak of there being no evidence to support a conclusion when in cases such as these many of the facts are likely to be neutral in themselves, and only to take their colour from the combination of circumstances in which they are found to occur."
"The question is not, has the party upon whom rests the burden of proof established on the balance of probabilities the facts upon which he relies, but, was there evidence before the tribunal which was sufficient to support the finding which it made? In other words, was the finding one which the tribunal was entitled to make? Clearly, if there was no evidence, or the evidence was to the contrary effect, the tribunal was not so entitled."
The Tribunal's evaluation of the evidence
Results of invigilation
Counter-measures
"Had matters rested at that point, this tribunal would have been unhappy with the conclusion that VAT had been underdeclared. True, an invigilation had been performed which suggested that the recorded figures for takings on which Mr Arif's declarations of VAT had been based were low, but on the strength of the evidence so far assembled, not so suspiciously low, in our view, that they could be concluded to be false. For Customs to reach a conclusion that there had been underdeclarations, either additional observations of the business, or an examination of the supply side (i.e. the purchases of the business), or some other evidence, would at that stage be required."
Under-declaration of purchases
"However, just as the results of the invigilation on 26 February 1999 were not in our view conclusive as to suppression, so we think that the supply side information obtained by Customs and presented to the tribunal is insufficiently conclusive of suppression."
"Whilst this evidence taken as a whole is indicative of suppression, in point of detail it has been successfully challenged."
Increase in takings after invigilation
"We think that it is obvious that Mr Arif deliberately adjusted his declared takings to allow for the level of trading that had by then been appreciated by Customs. The declared figures speak for themselves."
The till rolls
93 In his oral evidence, Mr Arif told the tribunal that he did not recall when he started using till rolls for his "Trinity Fisheries" business. He described how he would sometimes use a roll more than once, resulting in overprinting, and sometimes use no roll at all. If a mistake was made at the till, he would write the details down on a piece of paper, and he encouraged his staff to do likewise. From 1999 onwards, mistakes were keyed in when they were appreciated.
94 Mr Arif said that he had always sought to reconcile the till readings with his manual count. He did that both before and after 1999. He took "Z" readings to see if his count tallied. He wanted there to be a check, especially if he was relying upon staff who were non-family members. He would require an explanation if he hadn't been there and there wasn't a tally – any mistakes would have to be noted.
95 Mr Arif said that he threw away his "Z" readings, counted the cash received and entered the amounts into his record book. He said that the cash entries would be right, and that the till entries might not necessarily match. He would put his records in a box and hand the box to his accountant.
96 Mr Arif described how he would use the till as a calculator. He said that he wouldn't first take a reading, nor did he clear the till after performing a calculation. He was also unsure how to void an entry in the case of a pre-programmed till such as he used. In cross-examination, Mr Puzey nevertheless demonstrated how the entries appeared to include subtractions.
97 Asked why his practice varied as to using the till as a calculator, Mr Arif replied that he couldn't always find a pen. Then he would use the till as a calculator. He would have to open the till, remove the money in it, use the till as a calculator, take the "Z" reading and reconcile the contents with the till roll. He did not use the till as a calculator all the time."
Non co-operation
Overall conclusion
"That result impacts upon the other evidence in the case besides that of the till rolls. Given that we find that Mr Arif's evidence as to the till rolls is unacceptable, what is the tribunal to make of the other evidence as to suppression in this case? Would it not then be correct that the evidence of the invigilation, of the supply side of his business, and of his takings since the invigilation is all indicative of shortfalls in the tax properly payable by him before Customs investigated? Mr Nawaz has on Mr Arif's behalf done an excellent job in attacking the quality of that evidence, but in principle, the evidence nevertheless goes to confirm that Mr Arif has defaulted in payment of all the tax due from him."
The case on appeal
The unexplained £565
i) The sum of £565 was entered into the till early in its life and then the Z reading was reset;ii) One of the customs officers, unaccustomed to the way in which the till operated, entered £565 by mistake or
iii) Mr Arif should have been believed when he said that he used the till as a calculator.
Individual days
Date | Trader's books | Traders books (average) |
HMRC assertion | Till record |
16.2.99 | 538.17 | 534.66 | 946.32 | 629.01 |
25.2.99 | 565.00 | 555.62 | 993.49 | 563.81 |
26.2.99 | 946.30 | 792.15 | 1392.91 | 946.50 |
"We do not think that the evidence of the till rolls demonstrates a disproportionately high level of takings for this business. The suppression rate employed seems to us to be a reasonable one when applied to the declared takings of the business over the years of assessment that we are considering. There is nothing in the level of those takings from time to time which leads us to believe otherwise."
Quantum
Other criticisms
Result