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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 >> Golobiewska v Revenue and Customs [2008] EWHC 536 (Ch) (26 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/536.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 536 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GOLOBIEWSKA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
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PO Box 1336, Kingston-Upon-Thames KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7305 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
Email Address: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Kevin Beal (Instructed by HM Revenue & Customs) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WARREN:
"Ward LJ: 'It may be appropriate for you to reconsider the concession that seems to have been made in the course of the cross-examination.' Mr O'Connor: 'It will undoubtedly be the case that it will be appropriate to reconsider the whole matter.' Ward LJ: 'She did not appreciate that this car had been adapted for this purpose and yet she knew that he was going off with a stash of cigarettes.' Mr O'Connor: 'Indeed, my Lord.' Ward LJ: 'Is it worth yet another round of litigation?'"
And he goes on with a passage that I do not need to set out again.
"In our view it is not open to us to look beyond this passage from that transcript of the Court of Appeal hearing that the concession was no more than that stated by Ward LJ."
That is not without its own difficulty. Ward LJ did not identify the concession in the passage which I have just quoted. Indeed, the only material which indicates what the concession was is the chairman's note. There was no evidence before the second tribunal from anyone actually present when the concession before the first tribunal was made and, whatever any judges may have said about the concession, they had no other material either. So, I must take it that the concession, whatever his note actually means, is as recorded by the chairman and that is the concession which I take it the second tribunal considered themselves bound to accept. Presumably the second observation of Ward LJ in the passage I have just quoted is that this would summarise HMRC's position if the concession were indeed withdrawn. It does not in any way record what the concession actually was.
"It is incorrect to submit, as Miss Calder did, that she was prevented from asking questions about the arrangements that Mrs Golobiewska had made with Mr Tanecki concerning the alterations to her car. She gave specific evidence in chief about just this matter and she was not prevented in re-examination from exploring the matter further following the cross-examination. We do not accept that there was any abuse of process by the Respondent asking questions relating to alterations to the car and we do not accept that those representing her were in any way prejudiced by this. By examining the precise circumstances of the conversion to the car Mr Beal was exploring the extent to which Mrs Golobiewska must have known of Mr Tanecki's intention, not her actual knowledge and also her credibility. We consider that Mr Beal was fully entitled to examine the evidence in the light of the previous findings of the tribunal, but bear in mind that we are not entitled to make new findings on those issues."
In my judgment, that is a perfectly proper approach. Moreover, in her written submissions after the hearing before the second tribunal Miss Calder, who then appeared for the Appellant, wrote this:
"It was obviously necessary to ask her [that is the Appellant] relevant questions in-chief about the nature of their relationship. It was obviously necessary to ask her questions in chief about how he came to be in possession of her car."
"42. Whilst we accept there is no direct evidence of Mrs Golobiewska's knowledge of Mr Tanecki's purpose, there was considerable indirect evidence, not least Mr Golobiewska's lack of credibility and lack of consistency as a witness. We do not find the whole circumstances of her relationship with Mr Tanecki and the circumstances in which the car was adapted, taking account of the cost and the strange business of the early visit to the United Kingdom, to be inconsistent with her evidence that she and Mr Tanecki were merely acquaintances. We consider the only reason for her attempting to show that they were merely acquaintances rather than close friends was to distance herself from his smuggling activities.
Her financial circumstances, including the fact that she apparently made no charge to Mr Tanecki for the loan of the car; her need for a car to get herself to work; the fact that she does not appear to have been a friend of Mr Tanecki's wife or family; her initial attempt to show that it was only Mr Tanecki who took the car to the garage when documentary evidence showed that she herself had been to the garage; the fact that Mr Tanecki asked for the personal belongings in the car to be returned to her all point to a very different relationship between her and Mr Tanecki from that which she attempted to convey. We can see no reason for lack of truthfulness other than that she was seeking to persuade us that she did not or could not have known of Mr Tanecki's intention.
In all the circumstances she has not satisfied us, the burden of proof being upon her, that she did not know or if we are wrong as to that, that she did not turn a blind eye to Mr Tanecki's intentions with regard to the car and his visit to England and we find that Mrs Golobiewska did turn a blind eye to the circumstances as to Mr Tanecki's purpose.
However, it having been conceded by the Commissioners that the review decision was flawed, this matter was referred back to the Respondents for a further review to be conducted on the basis the facts found by the first tribunal as set out above and those found by us."
"We accept Miss Calder's submission that it is very difficult for any witness to remember precisely events which happened seven years before. However, it is not as if Mrs Golobiewska was suddenly asked after seven years to recall those events. She had given evidence at the earlier tribunal which took place some two years after the event and in respect of which findings of fact were fully recorded and we find it inconceivable that Mrs Golobiewska was not properly reminded both about the previous tribunal proceedings, the proceedings in 2004 in the High Court and subsequently in the Court of Appeal in 2005. The fact that she did not choose to refresh her memory by looking at her statement of 2000 before appearing before us as we were told is the case, is no indication that prior to setting off for England she had not read any of the relevant papers or been asked to cast her mind back over events. She either knew or ought to have known exactly what this hearing was about and we find it very surprising that those representing her did not properly furnish her with the relevant papers to refresh her memory if that was the situation."