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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 >> HM Revenue & Customs v Ali [2011] EWHC 880 (Ch) (23 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/880.html Cite as: [2011] STI 1212, [2011] EWHC 880 (Ch), [2012] STC 42, [2011] BTC 722 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR IMTIAZ ALI |
Defendant |
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101 Finsbury Pavement London EC2A 1ER
Tel No: 020 7422 6131 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR ANDREW GEORGE (instructed by Messrs Sydney Mitchell LLP) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"This regulation applies if –
(a) it appears to the Inland Revenue that the deductible amount exceeds the amount actually deducted, and
(b) condition A or B is met."
It refers to an excess which is in effect the amount by which the amount which should have been deducted exceeds the amount actually deducted by the employer in relation to PAYE. Condition B, which is relevant to our purposes, is that:
"The Inland Revenue are of the opinion that the employee has received relevant payments knowing that the employer wilfully failed to deduct the amount of tax which should have been deducted from those payments."
"the amount payable by a person by way of income tax is the difference between the amount in which he is chargeable to income tax and the aggregate amount of any income tax deducted at source and any tax credits to which section 397(1) or 397A(i) of IT TOIA 2005 applies."
"An injunction is sought ordering the defendant to do or refrain from doing anything within the jurisdiction (whether or not damages are also claimed…)"
"'Grant a mandamus or an injunction or appoint a receiver by an interlocutory order in all cases in which it appears to the court to be just or convenient to do so.'
"That subsection, speaking as it does of interlocutory orders, presupposes the existence of an action, actual or potential, claiming substantive relief which the High Court has jurisdiction to grant and to which the interlocutory orders referred to are but ancillary."
"The words used in sub-rule (i) are terms of legal art. The sub-rule speaks of 'the action' in which a particular kind of relief, 'an injunction' is sought. This pre-supposes the existence of a cause of action on which to found 'the action.' A right to obtain an interlocutory injunction is not a cause of action. It cannot stand on its own. It is dependent upon there being a pre-existing cause of action against the defendant arising out of an invasion, actual or threatened by him, of a legal or equitable right of the plaintiff for the enforcement of which the defendant is amenable to the jurisdiction of the court. The right to obtain an interlocutory injunction is merely ancillary and incidental to the pre-existing cause of action. It is granted to preserve the status quo pending the ascertainment by the court of the rights of the parties and the grant to the plaintiff of the relief to which his cause of action entitles him, which may or may not include a final injunction.
"Since the transfer to the Supreme Court of Judicature of all the jurisdiction previously exercised by the court of chancery and the courts of common law, the power of the High Court to grant interlocutory injunctions has been regulated by statute. That the High Court has no power to grant an interlocutory injunction except in protection or assertion of some legal or equitable right which it has jurisdiction to enforce by final judgment, was first laid down in the classic judgment of Cotton LJ in North London Railway Co v Great Northern Railway Co [1883] 11 QBD 30, 39-40, which has been consistently followed ever since."
"I take it to be clear law, both on principle and authority, that a Mareva injunction will not be granted to an applicant who has no cause of action against the defendant at the time of the application: see, for example, The Neidersachsen… Siporex submit that a claim of entitlement to a declaration, in the absence of any claim of entitlement to an immediate money judgment, does not ground a claim to Mareva relief. That submission is founded on a Court of Appeal decision, The Steamship Mutual Underwriting Association (Bermuda) Limited v Thackur Shipping Co Ltd. In that case the applicant P. & I. Club had given a guarantee 111 order to prevent the arrest of one of its member's ships, against the counter-undertaking of the member. The club apprehended that it would be called on to honour its guarantee but that the member would default on the counter undertaking. It accordingly sought Mareva injunction, which Mr Justice Hirst refused, to freeze the member s assets. Sir John Donaldson, MR, in a brief judgment with which Lords Justices O'Connor and May agreed:
"'It seems to me that it is important to remember that s. 37 (1), which is the section of the Supreme Court Act 1981 which gives jurisdiction to this Court, speaks of granting an injunction or appointing a receiver in all cases in which it appears to the Court that It would be just and convenient to do so. Justice and convenience· in this context is not an abstract conception. It predicates that there is a cause of action in respect of which the Court may make an order and the Court will be unable to enforce its order unless there is security provided by a Mareva injunction. Therefore we asked Mr Kealey what the cause of action was that we were being asked to support. The answer is that the only cause of action that they can conceivably have at the moment is a cause of action for a declaration that in the event of the club having to honour its guarantee and in the further event of the shipowners being called upon to pay the club under their undertaking and perhaps in the further event of the shipowners not meeting their obligation, the shipowners will be liable to the club. It seems to me that no declaratory relief needs a Mareva injunction to support it.
"'What the club really wants is security for a future cause of action - a cause of action which will give rise to entitlement to monetary relief. I think that that would be contrary to a long line of authority which says that s. 37 is to be used in support of an existing legal or equitable right. I furthermore think that if we extended it to this case, even assuming we have jurisdiction to do so it would be difficult to see what possible limits there could be to the Mareva jurisdiction, since whenever it was apprehended that someone was likely in the future to commit a breach of contract, and it was further apprehended that if they did and if judgment were given against them they might be unable to meet the judgment debt, it would follow that the fearful plaintiff was entitled to a Mareva injunction. That plainly is not the case.
"'I would dismiss this application. '
"The ratio of that decision is, as it seems to me, plainly applicable in the present case. Comdel had when the injunction was granted; and still have, no existing legal or equitable right. That is an additional and compelling reason why I must discharge this injunction."
"The Mareva injunction was introduced in the 1970s because the courts held that they must necessarily have jurisdiction and did have jurisdiction to prevent parties to actions frustrating their orders by moving assets out of the jurisdiction, or dissipating assets in one way or another, with a view to making themselves proof against a future judgment. Where you have someone who is already subject to a money judgment, including an order for costs, the same principle applies, namely that the courts will not allow people to set their orders at nought simply by removing assets from the jurisdiction."
"The first question is whether the Judge was correct to hold that the Court had jurisdiction to make that part of his order based upon the allegation of apprehended breach of the obligation to deliver in the stipulated order of repair when, as was conceded, no cause of action for damages in that regard had yet accrued."
"The second basic principle is that, although the terms of s 37(1) of the 1981 Act and its predecessors are very wide, the power conferred by them has been circumscribed by judicial authority dating back many years. The nature of the limitations to which the power is subject has been considered in a number of recent cases [and he refers to the Siskina, Castanho and British Airways Board v Laker]."
"I see no valid reason in logic or practical convenience in the interests of justice why jurisdiction should not exist in respect of Mareva injunctions, with the qualification which Saville J applied, namely, that such a Mareva injunction should not operate unless and until the anticipated cause of action had arisen. But we are precluded by authority from doing so on this question of technical jurisdiction. In that case there existed no cause of action, however, you might like to view what Lord Diplock meant by pre-existing cause of action in The Siskina. In our case there does exist a present right, that is to say the payment of tax, albeit payable in the future, but there is an accrued right and a threatened breach, assuming that the evidence establishes it, is very different, it seems to me from the sort of situation being addressed in Veracruz.
"Returning to Lord Diplock, as already mentioned we see the words 'threatened invasion being capable of being a cause of action which is pre-existing'. But perhaps it is the thrust of his analysis that if the threat were immediately carried out it would give rise to an immediate breach for which there is no parallel in our case." [Quotation unchecked.]
"A claim to an interlocutory injunction under section 37(1) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 was incidental to and dependent on the enforcement of a substantive right and could not exist in isolation; but that, although the substantive right usually [and I emphasise that word] took the form of a cause of action, it was not a necessary condition of the grant of such an injunction that it should be ancillary to a claim for relief to be granted by an English court; that there was no reason in principle why an order for a mandatory stay of an action could not be combined with an injunction to secure interim relief; and that, accordingly, there was power under section 37(1) to grant the injunction sought by the plaintiffs."
"Finally I should make it clear that I have merely been considering the effect of the decision in the Siskina on the assumption that it correctly states the law. The tests laid down in absolute terms have already received one substantial modification: see Castanho v Brown & Root, British Airways Board v Laker Airways. Moreover, in South Carolina Insurance Lord Goff of Chiveley (with whom Lord Mackay of Clashfern agreed) reserved the question whether the law as laid down by the Siskina (as subsequently modified) was correct in restricting the power to grant injunctions to certain exclusive categories. With respect, I share the same doubts as there expressed and reserve the question for consideration when it arises."
"I am reluctant to accept the proposition that the power of the court to grant injunctions is rested on exclusive categories. That power is unfettered by statute and it is impossible now to formulate the circumstances in which it may be thought right to make the remedy inavailable." [Quotation unchecked.]
"The respondents begin with an argument of general principle. Although the words of section 37(1) and its forebears are very wide it is firmly established by a long history of judicial self-denial that they are not to be taken at their face value and that their application is subject to severe constraints."
"'The effect of these authorities, so far as material to the present case, can be summarised by saying that the power of the High Court to grant injunctions is, subject to two exceptions to which I shall refer shortly, limited to two situations. Situation (1) is when one party to an action can show that the other party has either invaded, or threatened to invade, a legal or equitable right of the former for the enforcement of which the latter is amenable to the jurisdiction of the court. Situation (2) is where one party to an action has behaved, or threatens to behave, in a manner which is unconscionable. The third basic principle is that, among the forms of injunction which the High Court has power to grant, is an injunction granted to one party to an action to restrain the other party to it from beginning or if he has begun from continuing, proceedings.'"
"In reliance on this line of authority the respondents maintain that the English court can never grant an injunction in support of a cause of action which the parties have agreed shall be the subject of an arbitration abroad, and a fortiori where the court has itself halted the proceedings."
"I prefer not to engage the question whether the law is now firmly established in terms of Lord Brandon's statement, or whether it will call for further elaboration to deal with new practical situations at present unforeseen. For present purposes it is sufficient to say that the doctrine of the Siskina, put at its highest, is that the right to an interlocutory injunction cannot exist in isolation, but is always incidental to and dependent on the enforcement of a substantive right, which usually although not invariably takes the shape of a cause of action. If the underlying right itself is not subject to the jurisdiction of the English court, then the court should never exercise its power under section 37(1) by way of interim relief."
"Held, dismissing the appeal, that a court had jurisdiction, in the strict sense, to grant an injunction where it had in personam jurisdiction over the person against whom it was sought; that a freezing order might, in suitable circumstances, be granted and served on the respondent before substantive proceedings had been instituted, although the judge should pay careful attention to the substantive relief which was, or would be, sought; but that in general a freezing order, on an application without notice, would not be properly made in the absence of any formulation of the case for substantive relief which the applicant intended to institute; and that, in the circumstances as they had stood before Park J, the protection which ought to be associated with the granting of a without notice order had been absent and the order had not been properly made."
"Mareva (or freezing) injunctions were from the beginning, and continue to be, granted for an important but limited purpose: to prevent a defendant dissipating his assets with the intention or effect of frustrating enforcement of a prospective judgment. They are not a proprietary remedy. They are not granted to give a claimant advance security for his claim, although they may have that effect. They are not an end in themselves. They are a supplementary remedy, granted to protect the efficacy of court proceedings, domestic or foreign."
"The authorities show, in my opinion, that, provided the court has in personam jurisdiction over the person against whom the injunction, whether interlocutory or final, is sought, the court has jurisdiction, in the strict sense, to grant it. The practice regarding the grant of injunctions, as established by judicial precedent and rules of court, has not stood still since The Siskina was decided and is unrecognisable from the practice to which Cotton LJ was referring in North London Railway Co v Great Northern Railway Co and to which Lord Diplock referred in The Siskina. Mareva injunctions could not have been developed and become established if Cotton LJ's proposition still held good. In The Siskina the jurisdiction of the court over the defendant depended on the ability of the plaintiff to obtain leave to serve the defendant out of the jurisdiction. Once the leave that had been granted had been set aside there was no jurisdictional basis on which the grant of the injunction could be sustained. On the other hand, if the leave had been upheld, or if the defendant had submitted to the jurisdiction, it would still have been open to the defendant to argue that the grant of a Mareva injunction in aid of foreign proceedings in Cyprus was impermissible, not on strict jurisdictional grounds, but because such injunctions should not be granted otherwise than as ancillary to substantive proceedings in England. In 1977 Mareva injunctions were in their infancy and the House might well have agreed."
"The liability to pay that quantified amount under section 29 arises at the earliest 30 days later, but, in my judgment, the cause of action has already arisen. I reject the argument for the defendant that the cause of action only arises after the expiration of 30 days from the service of assessments. Therefore, there being an existing cause of action, this case falls within the general rule that a freezing order will normally only support an existing cause of action."
"The plaintiff issued amended assessments against the defendants assessing them to additional tax. Before the period allowed for the payment of the assessment had elapsed the plaintiff moved ex parte for Mareva injunctions restraining the defendants from removing assets from the jurisdiction. The issue arose as to whether Mareva injunctions should be granted where no action has been or can be commenced because the debt said to be due is not immediately payable.
"Held, (i) Special circumstances obtain when the Commissioner of Taxation seeks a Mareva injunction in such circumstances, since the debt has peculiar characteristics attaching to it because the legislation which gives rise to it provides that production of an appropriate certificate is conclusive evidence of the making of the assessment and of its amount.
"(ii) Where there is undoubtedly a debt owing even if it cannot immediately be the subject of an action and where the granting of the injunction would work no injustice, a Mareva injunction may be granted although no action has been commenced."
"Standing in the path of the plaintiff was a dictum of Lord Diplock in Siskina … where his Lordship, with whom all their Lordships agreed said --"
"It seems to me that special circumstances obtain when the Commissioner of Taxation seeks a Mareva injunction in respect of an assessment which has issued but is not immediately payable because the time which must be allowed for the payment of the assessment has not elapsed. Such a debt has peculiar characteristics attaching to it because of the legislation which gives rise to it. Section 204 of the Act provides that, subject to the provisions of
Pt VI in which it appears, any income tax assessed shall be due and payable by the person liable to pay the tax on the date specified in the notice as the date upon which tax is due and payable, not being less than 30 days after the service of the notice. or, if no date is so specified, on the thirtieth day after the service of the notice. By s 177(1) the production of a notice of 20 assessment or of a document under the hand of the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, or a Deputy Commissioner, purporting to be a copy of a notice of assessment, shall be conclusive evidence of the due making of the assessment and (except in proceedings on appeal against the assessment) that the amount and all the particulars of the assessment are correct. The High Court stated in McAndrew v FCT (1956) 98 CLR 263 at 270 that it was the policy of the legislation: "00 the one hand to give to the taxpayer fuU opportunity on objecting to his assessment of contesting his liability in every respect before a court or before a board of review but on the other hand to require that in proceedings for the recovery of the tax the taxpayer will be concluded by the assessment and will not be entitled to go behind it for any purpose." It follows, in my opinion, that a peculiar quality attaches to a debt claimed as a result of an assessment made under the Act. All that the Commissioner need do to establish conclusively the existence of the debt is to produce the appropriate notice of or copy of the notice of assessment. The debt is not payable in presenti but is a debt in existence - debitum in present solvendum in futuro. In these circumstances it seems to me that the Commissioner is entitled to pray in aid the injunctive power of the court when he establishes that prima facie there is a real risk that the taxpayer will so deal with his assets as to render useless in whole or in part the judgment to which the Commissioner would be conclusively entitled upon the mere passage of time. If an order might properly be made in Construction Engineering (Aust) Pry Ltd v Tambel (Australasia) Pry Ltd, supra, as, with respect, I think it was, it seems to me that there was even greater reason the court should have granted an injunction in this case where the existence of the debt was not a matter of uncertainty, depending upon the result of other extra-curial proceedings which had not yet reached the point where an action might be instituted in this court."
"Nevertheless it seems to me that, where, as in this case, there is undoubtedly a debt owing even if it cannot immediately be the subject of an action and where the granting of the injunction would work no injustice, particularly when the debt may in any event be sued for within a very short time, which may be only a matter of days and at most a period of 30 days, a Mareva injunction may be granted. Such an injunction should, of course, be returnable at the shortest possible notice."
"On the important question of the [health] authority's powers and the circumstances in which it can seek the aid of the court, I respectfully agree with Lord Woolf MR and would adopt his ultimate formulation which is in these terms:
"'if a public body is given a statutory responsibility which it is required to perform in the public interest, then, in the absence of an implication to the contrary in the statute, it has standing to apply to the court for an injunction to prevent interference with its performance of its public responsibilities and the court should grant such an application when "it appears to the court to be just and convenient to do so.'"
"'…the duty of a person seeking an order, in particular an order which can have as substantial an effect as a freezing order, in the absence of the Defendant against whom it is sought, is strict and important.'"
"Mr Blackett-Ord [who represented the applicant] submitted that it has now become the practice for parties to bring ex parte applications seeking a freezing order by pointing to some dishonesty and that, he says, is sufficient to enable this court to make a freezing order. I have to say that, if that has become the practice, then the practice should be reconsidered. It is appropriate in each case for the court to scrutinise with care whether what is alleged to have been the dishonesty of the person against whom the order is sought in itself really justifies the inference that that person has assets which he is likely to dissipate unless restricted."
"I have been trying to ascertain the source of the deposits into these accounts and the destinations of the withdrawals. The statements show that the amount of income you have received do not correspond with the amounts declared on your tax Returns. It is proposed to make assessments for the purpose of making good to the Crown, a loss of tax which may have been underpaid by reason of your fraudulent or negligent conduct in submitting tax returns which are believed to be incorrect. I will be unavailable from 23 March to 1 April 2009 and will arrange for this as soon as possible after that date."
"Mr Ali said that Direct Resolution limited was dormant when he was a director. [At the time of the interview, and this was an addition by Mr Ali, he believed that his directorship had ended in June 2001, although he subsequently found that it actually ended in September 2001.] He said it did not trade. Cox asked for what period Ali was a director. He said … 1999 to 2001."
"Cox said that he had been a director up until say September [that is corrected to November] 2001 and asked Ali whether the company had traded from March 2001 to September 2001. Ali said it had traded from March [crossed out, June substituted by Mr Ali] to September 2001. Cox said that if this was the case why had accounts not been submitted from March 2001 onwards. He said he didn't know because he was not a Director after that time."
"Cox asked what the business involved. Ali said training courses. Cox asked what the turnover was in the period after March 2001. Ali said he couldn't remember. Cox asked for a rough idea. He said he couldn't remember. She asked if it was in the region of £10,000, £100,000, £1M. Ali said he couldn't remember."
[He now says that he is not aware of the extent of the business after he left].
"Ali said he was not responsible for the Company after June 2001. Cox said he was a director for the period to December 2001. Cox asked Ali whether he had employed anybody in that period. He said that he may have employed somebody but he could not remember. [That is an amendment from 'he did not know how many people'.] Cox asked whether he'd operated PAYE correctly. Ali said he couldn't remember. Cox asked Ali to think very carefully about this."
"Cox asked Ali whether he had benefited himself from the company. Ali said he had received a salary of about £13,000 in 2002. Cox asked whether this was everything he had earned from the company. [That was a change from 'had out of the company'.] Ali confirmed this. Cox asked Ali whether he had taken money out of the company through a directors' loan account. Ali said no. Ali said the only money he had taken out of the company was £13,000 salary mentioned earlier. Cox asked Ali whether he had taken any money through dividends, loans or bonuses. Ali said no to all. Cox asked Ali if he was positive. Ali said yes."
"Our client has requested we draw your attention to our correspondence to the Inspector of Taxes of Birmingham dated 10 August 2006 in which he confirmed money had been received from Mr Javed Ahmed. This money was received both personally and from Direct Resolutions Limited, the shares of which were held by Mr Javed Ahmed."
"I can confirm that an agreement was drawn up by me on behalf of Mr Javed Ahmed and Mr Imtiaz Ali. As the agreement was drafted approximately ten years ago I cannot be accurate as to the exact date. I also do not have copies of the agreement or access to the file relating to Mr Ahmed and Mr Ali. I can confirm that Mr Ali had been the beneficiary of a large sum of monies which he had been left by his grandfather. I recall this matter as the sums involved were substantial and, as stated by you, in the region of 250 million rupees. I recall advising on this matter. As I was acting for Mr Ahmed in the first instance I had informed Mr Ali that he should take independent legal advice in relation to the agreement.
"The agreement involved the transfer of the ownership from Mr Ali to Mr Ahmed in Direct Resolutions Limited. Mr Ali was to be retained in the business in a management or some other employee role and only act upon the instructions of Mr Ahmed. Mr Ahmed was to take the obligations for the directorship and liabilities of the company. The agreement also centred round the transfer of funds from the company to Mr Ali. We refer to your letter (inaudible) the sum of £2.6 million. I do not recall the exact figure, but this amount appears to be correct. The sum was to be paid back by Mr Ali to Mr Ahmed in Pakistan in rupees. I was not privy to that transaction, although the agreement reflected that part of the deal." [Quotation unchecked.]
"Our client will transfer the ownership and directorship of the company called Direct Resolutions Limited ('the company') from himself to Mr Ahmed. Mr Ahmed would operate the company as he saw fit and would take responsibility for any liabilities. Mr Ahmed would pay our client a sum of approximately £2.6 million ('the sum') to our client, which was done through the company. Upon payment of the sum our client would transfer the 250 million rupees to Mr Ahmed." [Quotation unchecked.]
"In the difficult judgment period I am having to fund the tribunal litigation and will explore new business opportunities. (Inaudible) will be the subject of a freezing injunction for any extended length of time will have a serious impact on my ability to work on a self-employed basis and could ultimately lead me facing loss of business opportunity and perhaps even being unable to make any form of living." [Quotation unchecked.]