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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 >> Capper v Chaney & Anor [2010] EWHC 1704 (Ch) (08 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1704.html Cite as: [2010] Lloyd's Rep FC 593, (2010) 174 JP 377, [2010] EWHC 1704 (Ch), 174 JP 377 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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John Michael Capper |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Daniel Chaney (2) The Commissioner of the Police for the Metropolis |
Defendants |
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Kennedy Talbot and Nicholas Mather (instructed by Edward Solomon, Metropolitan Police Solicitor) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 1st July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
"This Part has effect for the purposes of—
(a) enabling the enforcement authority to recover, in civil proceedings before the High Court or Court of Session, property which is, or represents, property obtained through unlawful conduct,(b) enabling cash which is, or represents, property obtained through unlawful conduct, or which is intended to be used in unlawful conduct, to be forfeited in civil proceedings before a magistrates' court or (in Scotland) the sheriff."
"Where an application for the forfeiture of any cash is made under this section, the cash is to be detained (and may not be released under any power conferred by this Chapter) until any proceedings in pursuance of the application (including any proceedings on appeal) are concluded."
"(1) A person who claims that any cash detained under this Chapter, or any part of it, belongs to him may apply to a magistrates' court … for the cash or part to be released to him.
(2) The application may be made in the course of proceedings under section 295 or 298 or at any other time.
(4) If—
(a) the applicant is not the person from whom the cash to which the application relates was seized,(b) it appears to the court … that that cash belongs to the applicant,(c) the court … is satisfied that the conditions in section 295 for the detention of that cash are no longer met or, if an application has been made under section 298, the court or sheriff decides not to make an order under that section in relation to that cash, and(d) no objection to the making of an order under this subsection has been made by the person from whom that cash was seized,the court … may order the cash to which the application relates to be released to the applicant or to the person from whom it was seized."
"Subsection (4) relates to the case of any other true owner who is not the person from whom the cash was seized. Here, if the court is satisfied, the cash may be released – but only if the person from whom it was seized does not object. That proviso is intended to prevent the court from becoming involved in a complicated ownership dispute between the person from whom the cash was seized and the rightful owner of the cash."
i) Parliament has provided an express statutory remedy for cases where cash is seized by the police and a person claims to be an innocent owner of it.
ii) The only purpose and intended effect of bringing these proceedings is to gain a litigation advantage in the current cash detention and forfeiture proceedings in the magistrates' court.
iii) Bringing these proceedings in the High Court in these circumstances is a classic abuse of process; an action technically within the jurisdiction of this Court, but which is in fact brought for a collateral purpose.
"I am not persuaded that the authorities relied on by the Commissioner make good the broad proposition… that in circumstances where a statutory scheme has been enacted to deal with a particular question or issue, the High Court should, for that reason alone, decline jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief in respect of any issue capable of resolution within such statutory scheme, or to treat proceedings which raised such an issue as, necessarily, an abuse of process."
"12 Clearly the purpose intended to be achieved by this elaborate, long established statutory scheme would be defeated if it were open to a taxpayer to leave undisturbed an assessment with which he is dissatisfied and adopt the expedient of applying to the High Court for a declaration of how much tax he owes and, if he has already paid the tax, an order for repayment of the amount he claims was wrongly assessed. In substance, although not in form, that would be an appeal against an assessment. In such a case the effect of the relief sought in the High Court, if granted, would be to negative an assessment otherwise than in accordance with the statutory code. Thus in such a case the High Court proceedings will be struck out as an abuse of the court's process. The proceedings would be an abuse because the dispute presented to the court for decision would be a dispute Parliament has assigned for resolution exclusively to a specialist tribunal. The dissatisfied taxpayer should have recourse to the appeal procedure provided by Parliament. He should follow the statutory route.
13 I question whether in this straightforward type of case the court has any real discretion to exercise. Rather, the conclusion that the proceedings are an abuse follows automatically once the court is satisfied the taxpayer's court claim is an indirect way of seeking to achieve the same result as it would be open to the taxpayer to achieve directly by appealing to the appeal commissioners. The taxpayer must use the remedies provided by the tax legislation."
"It is not easy to discern any clear dividing-line between High Court proceedings which are, and those which are not, objectionable as attempts to circumvent the exclusive jurisdiction principle. Possibly the correct view is that there is an absolute exclusion of the High Court's jurisdiction only when the proceedings seek relief which is more or less co-extensive with adjudicating on an existing open assessment: but that the more closely the High Court proceedings approximate to that in their substantial effect, the more ready the High Court will be, as a matter of discretion, to decline jurisdiction."
"It is not open to the [Commissioner], against whom no claim is made, to interfere in private litigation between [Mr Capper] and [Mr Chaney]. Even if he had an interest in the outcome of that dispute (and, for the reasons set out below, he does not) this is a dispute between two individuals which they need to resolve in order to ascertain the destination of the Fund after it is released from the custody of the [Commissioner]."