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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 >> Megtian Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs [2010] EWHC 18 (Ch) (15 January 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/18.html Cite as: [2010] STC 840, [2010] EWHC 18 (Ch), [2010] STI 232 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE VAT AND DUTIES TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MEGTIAN LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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Mr Mark Cunningham QC and Mr Daniel Margolin (instructed by Howes Percival Solicitors, The Guildyard, 51 Colegate, Norwich NR3 1DD) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 16th – 17th December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs :
"5. In outline MTIC fraud typically operates in the following way. Where goods are bought by a trader (T) registered for VAT in the UK from a trader (E) registered for VAT in another EU country E does not have to charge T VAT on his purchase but when the goods are brought to the UK T has to account for acquisition tax of 17.5%. However, T is also entitled to deduct that amount as input tax and so at that stage the goods are in effect VAT free or tax neural. If T sells the goods to another trader registered in the UK (T2) he must charge and account for VAT on the sale. If, having collected that VAT from T2 he then absconds without accounting to the authorities for that VAT, T will have made a dishonest profit of 17.5% on the value of the goods. T2 will have deducted the tax he paid to T as input tax and has paid T the tax inclusive price for the goods. T2 will recoup the VAT paid to T from his customers when he sells the goods and, although the authorities have lost the output tax due to them, the direct source of T's illegitimate gain is the money paid to him by T2 and indirectly by T2's customers. Assuming he acted dishonestly that is a straightforward fraud by T.
6. However, such a fraud depends upon T being able to find a purchaser who wants to sell the goods in the UK because otherwise the purchaser will have paid the VAT inclusive price without being able to recoup it by onward sale to customers.
7. MTIC fraud depends upon T2, rather than selling the goods in the UK, exporting them to another country which may or may not be in the EU. In that case T2 makes a zero rated sale to the overseas buyer. He still recovers the tax he paid to T as input tax but does not have to collect and account for any tax from his customer and so not only do the authorities lose the tax that T should have paid when he sold the goods to T2 they are also the source of the money T has absconded with. That is because T2 can afford to pay T the tax inclusive price knowing that he will recover the tax from the authorities as input tax. T's opportunity to deal repeatedly with T2 is therefore increased because there is no need for T2 to find customers in the UK in order to be able to account for output tax after paying T the tax inclusive price.
8. The fraud still depends upon finding customers in the overseas markets but, if whoever is behind the fraud can manipulate that, then the opportunity for repeated fraud can be achieved. Typically, additional UK traders may be interposed between T and T2 to disguise the fact that the fraud is occurring.
9. None of the above means that T2 is necessarily involved in the fraud because he may well not be aware that his overseas customers or T are in any way involved in fraud and both he and any interposed traders may all be innocents who have unknowingly been manipulated by whoever is behind the fraud.
10. In the terminology adopted in such cases T is known as the missing or defaulting trader T2 is known as the broker and any interposed parties are known as buffers."
"81. These transactions are alleged to have the following characteristics. Trader A imported goods and sold them to B who sold them to Megtian who exported them. A accounted for output tax on the sale to B who accounted for output tax on the sale to Megtian. Megtian exported the goods and claimed back the input tax from its purchase from B but did not have to account to HMRC for any output tax because the sale was by way of an export. Such a transaction is called a clean chain in the jargon adopted in cases where MTIC fraud is alleged.
82. However, in the same tax period A was involved in other transactions in which it had exported goods and claimed input tax which off-set in whole or in part the output tax due on the Megtian transactions and those exports by A were connected to fraud because in those chains of transactions there was a fraudulent transaction of much the same sort as those already described in the preceding paragraphs. The allegation is that the apparently legitimate transactions were undertaken to disguise A's involvement in the fraudulent chains because it would either not have to claim an actual repayment from HMRC and risk drawing particular attention to itself or if it did make such a claim it would have apparently legitimate transactions to draw to the attention of the authorities to attempt to demonstrate its bona fides. The chains containing fraudulent transactions are called "dirty chain" transactions in the jargon adopted in MTIC fraud cases."
"… it is all too easy for a so-called question of law to become no more than a disguised attack on findings of fact which must be accepted by the courts. As this case demonstrates, it is all too easy for the appeals procedure to the High Court to be abused in this way. Secondly, the nature of the factual inquiry which an appellate court can and does undertake in a proper case is essentially different from the decision-making process which is undertaken by the tribunal of fact. 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?"
He continued:
"… for a question of law to arise in the circumstances, the appellant must first identify the finding which is challenged; secondly, show that it is significant in relation to the conclusion; thirdly, identify the evidence, if any, which was relevant to that finding; and fourthly, show that that finding, on the basis of that evidence, was one which the tribunal was not entitled to make."
He concluded:
"What is not permitted, in my view, is a roving selection of evidence coupled with a general assertion that the tribunal's conclusion was against the weight of the evidence and was therefore wrong. A failure to appreciate what is the correct approach accounts for much of the time and expense that was occasioned by this appeal to the High Court."
"Their duty is no more than to examine those facts with a decent respect for the tribunal appealed from and if they think that the only reasonable conclusion on the facts found is inconsistent with the determination come to, to say so without more ado…"
GROUND 1: "Certain of the Tribunal's findings of fact that the tax losses in each of the Appellant's supply chains were due to fraud were contrary to the evidence".
(a) A meteoric rise in @tomic's turnover from nil in the year ending May 2003 to £234 million in the year ending May 2006, nearly all of which derived from sales of mobile phones.(b) A business plan prepared by the directors and shown to HMRC suggesting, contrary to the fact, that the company's business would mainly be the importation and sale of pizza ovens.
(c) The receipt by the company of 49 warnings that others with whom it was dealing were suspected of MTIC fraud.
(d) The failure by @tomic to produce evidence, upon request by HMRC, that it insured the goods with which it was dealing, despite their enormous value (save for insurance which turned out to have been obtained retrospectively, after HMRC's request).
(e) Attempts by @tomic to persuade HMRC not to mark packing cases dealt with by @tomic so as to show they had been inspected either at import or export (a process which the Tribunal considered would be unlikely to affect the value of the goods, but which would considerably facilitate detection of fraud).
"There is one other general comment that is appropriate at this stage. It relates to the evaluation of circumstantial evidence. Pollock CB famously likened circumstantial evidence to strands in a cord, one of which might be quite insufficient to sustain the weight, but three stranded together might be quite sufficient (R v Exall (1966) 4 F & F 922). Thus there can be no valid criticism of a tribunal which considers that one piece of evidence, while raising a suspicion, is not enough on its own to find dishonesty; but that several such pieces of evidence, taken cumulatively, lead to that conclusion."
(a) Primeline obtained credit check reports in respect of traders recommending very modest credits, but nonetheless traded with them to the tune of many millions of pounds.(b) Primeline's turnover grew from some £13,000 odd in the year ending 2000 to £40.7 million odd in the year ending February 2006, and to £152.2 million odd in the three months ending May 2006.
(c) A director had lied about having been given clearance to trade with another trader.
(d) Primeline had falsely represented the nature of its intended trade to HMRC when applying for VAT registration.
(e) A director of Primeline had previously failed to register for VAT as sole proprietor, despite having a liability to do so.
GROUND 3: "The Tribunal erred in law in failing properly to identify the fraud with which it must be established that the Appellant knew or ought to have known each of its Deals was connected"
"In my judgment in a case of alleged contra-trading, where the taxable person claiming repayment of input tax is not himself the dishonest co-conspirator, there are two potential frauds:
(i) the dishonest failure to account for VAT by a defaulter or missing trader in the dirty chain; and
(ii) the dishonest cover-up of that fraud by the contra-trader."
The issue for Lewison J was whether a disallowance of repayment of input tax claimed by the broker at the foot of the clean chain required it to be shown that he knew or ought to have known of both of those frauds, or merely one or the other of them. He concluded that the second of those alternatives was sufficient, at least in a case where dishonesty had been established as against the contra-trader.
"Thus it must be established that the taxable person knew or should have known of a connection between his own transaction and at least one of those frauds. I do not consider that it is necessary that he knew or should have known of a connection between his own transaction and both of these frauds. If he knows or should have known that the contra-trader is engaging in fraudulent conduct and deals with him, he takes the risk of participating in a fraud, the precise details of which he does not and cannot know. As Millett J put it in Agip (Africa) Ltd v Jackson [1992] 4 All ER 385 at 406, [1990] Ch 265 at 295 (in the context of dishonest assistance in a breach of trust):
'… In my judgment, however, it is no answer for a man charged with having knowingly assisted in a fraudulent and dishonest scheme to say that he thought that it was "only" a breach of exchange control or "only" a case of tax evasion. It is not necessary that he should have been aware of the precise nature of the fraud or even of the identity of its victim. A man who consciously assists others by making arrangements which he knows are calculated to conceal what is happening from a third party takes the risk that they are part of a fraud practised on that party.'"
"Indeed it seems to me that the whole concept of contra-trading (which is HMRC's own coinage) necessarily assumes that to be so."
GROUNDS 4 AND 5: "The Tribunal's conclusion that the Appellant knew that each of its Deals was connected with fraud was contrary to the evidence. The Tribunal's conclusion that the Appellant ought to have known that each of its Deals was connected with fraud was contrary to the evidence."
"112. HMRC accepted there is no direct evidence that Megtian knew or must have known that the 30 transactions in question were connected with fraud. But we have no hesitation in finding that the cumulative effect of the evidence we have heard over eleven days of hearing and extensive examination of the documents placed before us in 41 lever arch files including the evidence we have summarised above but not limited to that evidence; has satisfied us that Megtian knew that the transactions were connected with fraud. Mr Andreou is a highly intelligent man and a very experienced businessman and so the case for a conclusion that Megtian ought to have known of those facts is strong. It is not therefore necessary for us to determine whether the test of what someone ought to have known is subjective or objective and whether it should take account of the person's experience and ability. Clearly if the correct test is that it should be viewed objectively the answer would be the same in this case."
"The case is one in which the respondents allege "MTIC" fraud has occurred and that the appellant should have known that each of the transactions in question was connected with fraud. The respondents did not make a specific assertion that the appellant knew of such fraud but did invite the Tribunal to make such a finding if the evidence justifies it."
(a) Megtian's consistent achievement of large gross profits on every transaction, substantially higher than normally achievable in the relevant grey market.(b) Minimal and sometimes consistent mark-ups, achieved in round figures by the buffer traders, in amounts which appeared to be unresponsive to the number and make of the phones in the different transactions.
(c) Substantial sales of phones in bulk to buyers outside the EU in countries for which the handbooks were in incorrect languages, and for which there were warranties incapable of being relied upon by buyers in those countries.