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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 >> XYZ v HM Revenue & Customs & Anor [2010] EWHC 1645 (Ch) (18 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1645.html Cite as: [2010] BPIR 1297, [2010] EWHC 1645 (Ch) |
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Chancery Division
Companies Court
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court)
____________________
In the matter of ABC Limited (in liquidation) | ||
And in the matter of the Insolvency Act 1986 | ||
XYZ | ||
(acting in his capacity as liquidator of ABC Limited) | ||
Applicant | ||
and | ||
H.M. Revenue & Customs | 1st Respondent | |
and | ||
The Secretary of State for the Home Department | 2nd Respondent |
____________________
Mr. Malcolm Davis-White Q.C. Mr. Tiran Nersessian, instructed by Messrs. Howes Percival, appeared for the respondent.
Mr. David Perry Q.C. and Mr. Ben Watson appeared for the Secretary of State.
Hearing dates: 30th and 31st July 2009. 5th February 2010.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Customs ("HMRC") of information obtained from the prosecution authorities of the Netherlands under an International Letter of Request ("LoR") dated 17th
December 2007 which sought mutual assistance in accordance with the relevant conventions relating to criminal matters.
European mutual legal assistance conventions.
"We note and understand that under Section 9(2) of the [2003 Act] the evidence so obtained cannot be used, without your consent, for any purpose other than that specified in the request."
use the material for another purpose, and the terms of the requested consent
were then set out:-
"Consent is therefore sought for all material obtained from the server provided to RCPO under this LOR (whether or not connected to the operations in this LOR) to be used by HMRC for the purposes of establishing the assessment base or the collection or administrative control of tax.
The information may also be used for the assessment of other levies, duties, and taxes and for the recovery of claims relating to certain levies, duties, taxes and other measures. In addition, it may be used in connection with judicial proceedings that may involve penalties, initiated as a result of infringements of tax law without prejudice to the general rules and legal provisions governing the rights of defendants and witnesses in such proceedings".
(1) The applicant had clearly established that it was desirable and appropriate (subject to the position of the Dutch authorities) that the documents should be provided to him to combat VAT fraud in the interests of HMRC.(2) There was an issue as to whether the terms of the consent given by the Dutch authorities, on its proper construction, covered the proposed disclosure to, and use of the documents by the applicant.
(3) Even if the applicant was right in saying that the consent did cover the proposed disclosure and use, it appeared that the Dutch authorities had not so understood it, and did not believe that it did; there being no reason why they should not withdraw their consent to something which had not yet happened, it was at least a matter for consideration whether the Court should regard the correspondence as tantamount to such withdrawal.
(4) Generally, there was obviously great force in the detailed submissions of the Secretary of State to the effect (without doing full justice to them) that it was essential in the interest of international co-operation in criminal matters to have regard to the views of the foreign authorities which provide the relevant information, and to the difficulties to which such authorities may be subject under their own national law in consenting to what might appear here to be an appropriate use of their documents.
(1) The precise juridical nature of their objections to the disclosure of the information by HMRC to the applicant, explained as fully as possible with reference to relevant Dutch law.(2) Whether these objections were maintained, given that this was a case in which the liquidation was being conducted for the sole benefit of HMRC, with no other creditors.
(3) Whether, in the event that the information were to be disclosed to the applicant, there would be a real risk of endangering prosecutions brought or to be brought by them, and if so how.
"I am unable to assess the position of [the] liquidator under English law, but if, in situations such as this one where HMRC is the sole creditor, this liquidator solely and exclusively acts in the interest and on behalf of HMRC, it is fair to assume that providing data from the server to the liquidator in this situation falls within the scope of the permission granted for use by HMRC. However, in that case, it should be guaranteed that the liquidator exclusively uses the data for the purpose for which the data had been handed over, i.e. collecting tax debts for HMRC, and that it only pertains to the data that are necessary for collecting the tax debt. I am unable to assess whether or not that is sufficiently guaranteed. In the case of use by HMRC, I believe it is fair to assume so; in the case of a liquidator, this is not entirely clear to me.Insofar as HMRC is the sole creditor and liquidator, solely and exclusively acts as nominee in the interest and on behalf of HMRC, as described above, it is fair to assume that use of the data by that liquidator falls within the scope of the permission granted, provided that it is also guaranteed that only such data were provided that are relevant for collecting the tax debts, and that this liquidator only uses the data for the purpose for which HMRC acquired the data in the first place, and for the purpose for which this liquidator obtained these data from HMRC, i.e. for collecting the tax debts on behalf of HMRC …"
I have therefore set out in this judgment the difficulties to which BOC gives rise. Without expressing a view as to whether it is rightly decided, I think that it is very desirable that it should be reconsidered at an appellate level and that, if the issue arises again in the course of ordinary civil litigation, the Secretary of State should be notified and given an opportunity to intervene.
N. Strauss Q.C.
Deputy Judge Chancery Division
18th June 2010