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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 and Customs v Malde [2021] EWHC 100 (Ch) (22 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/100.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 100 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1L |
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B e f o r e :
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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PARUL KESHAVLAL MALDE |
Defendant |
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Howard Watkinson (instructed by Freeths LLP Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13 January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli :
Background
(1) The amount standing to the credit of an account described as a Currency Savings account with Emirates NDB had increased from £1,674,760 in 2015 to £1,913,307 in 2018 (the "Emirates account");(2) The amount standing to the credit of an account described as an "Offshore Term Deposit" with Canada Life had increased from £349,597 in 2015 to £411,418 in 2018 (the "Canada Life account"); and
(3) The amount standing to the credit of an account described as a "Savings Account" with Pictet had decreased from approximately £2.28 million in 2015 to £950,000 in 2018 (the "Pictet account").
"HMRC has had something like five months since the letter of 18 October 2018 and four months since the subsequent correspondence, to decide whether or not to pursue production by Mr Malde of any further unredacted bank statements and/or to take a position on alleged contempt by him in failing to disclose more documents or explain the anomalies it has asserted."
The law
(1) So as to ensure that there are no continuing breaches of the order, as in JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov [2014] EWHC 2788 (Comm), per Popplewell J at [53] to [54], where the purpose was to ensure that the frozen funds were not being used to fund the legal fees of a party in breach of the order;(2) Where there is an obvious discrepancy between assets which were at one time held by the defendant and the current assets disclosed in response to a freezing order, which might indicate a real possibility that there are further assets to which the freezing order may apply: Public Institution for Social Security v Al Rajaan [2020] EWHC 1498 (Comm), per Jacobs J at [25];
(3) Where further information might reveal that assets currently outside the scope of the freezing order ought to be included within it: JSC Mezhdunarodniy Promyshlenniy Bank v Pugachev [2015] EWCA Civ 139, at [58].
"As it seems to me, the court must be persuaded that there is practical utility in requiring such evidence and that it is necessary to enable the freezing order properly to be policed. It will be vigilant to prevent the abuse of seeking further evidence for some other purpose: such as to expose further inconsistencies, unduly pressurise a defendant who has already been cross-examined, yield ammunition for an application for contempt, or provide further material which might be of assistance, even if not actually deployed, in the main (foreign) proceedings."
"Parker J. described the plaintiffs' application and his order for discovery as in aid or support of the Mareva injunction and so in a sense they were. But in so far as they relate to the defendant's assets at past dates as distinct from their present whereabouts their purpose seems to be not so much to help the court or the plaintiffs to locate and freeze particular assets now, as to open the way to incriminating and ultimately punishing the defendant for contempt of court in formerly disobeying the Mareva injunction and/or breaking his undertaking. This purpose emerges not only from the wide terms of the order but from the judge's comments at the end of his judgment. To that extent the order goes beyond the legitimate purpose of an order for discovery in aid of a Mareva injunction and Robert Goff J.'s order in A v. C and is not necessary for the proper and effective exercise of the Mareva injunction."
The discretion to order further disclosure
The parties' arguments in outline
(1) The purpose of the application – relating to bank statements going back five years – cannot be for the purpose of policing the order, but can only be for the purpose of exposing past breaches;(2) There are insufficient grounds to order further disclosure;
(3) There has been excessive delay on HMRC's part;
(4) The order sought, extending to numerous accounts over a five-year period, is disproportionate;
(5) So far as HMRC rely on matters relating to the Pictet account, it is abusive to do so because similar allegations were made, but then withdrawn, in the contempt proceedings.
The Emirates account
The Pictet account
(1) The defendant had failed to disclose foreign currency accounts held by him at Pictet;(2) The defendant had failed to disclose that he held assets that were sold with the proceeds being paid into the Pictet account;
(3) The defendant paid quarterly management fees to Aquila Invest Geneva SA ("Aquila");
(4) The defendant made payments to his solicitors from the Pictet account that had not previously been disclosed; and
(5) The defendant made a payment for "taxation clearing" from the Pictet account.
(1) Aquila provided discretionary and advisory portfolio management for clients. In relation to the defendant, Aquila had complete autonomy with regard to investment decisions made on behalf of the defendant. They undertook investment activity at their own discretion and not at the direction of the defendant. The assets under management (according to the investment management agreement exhibited to his statement) were deposited at Pictet bank.(2) The defendant had a "Capital Account" with Aquila with IBAN no. CH6808755066008300100. This served mainly for the settlement of stock market or similar trades and occasionally for shifting balances into another currency. It had always operated as an investment account. The defendant had sole control over the funds remitted from that account to third parties (for example to pay tax liabilities or legal fees), but he had no control over money coming into the account or where those monies originated from.
(3) There are various currency accounts within the defendant's Capital Account, in order to diversify investments. These included GBP, USD, CHF and EUR. The defendant has the right to access those accounts "via Aquila and Pictet", but he does not make decisions as regards which trades are made by Aquila. The investment agreement authorised Aquila to engage in foreign exchange trading. Mr Chedel said that Aquila did not trade currencies in a speculative manner, but would hedge a currency exposure against GBP.
(4) In relation to various disposals of assets revealed by the Pictet account identified in the points of claim in the contempt proceedings, Mr Chedel said that these were all carried out by Aquila under its discretionary mandate. They were transactions undertaken, without any orders, suggestions or influence from the defendant, in order to produce funds for him. Any payments out (when requested by the defendant) must normally be covered by corresponding sales of investments.
(5) The only outflows of funds from the account were to the defendants' solicitors, HMRC and the Mill Hill School Foundation.
(6) Tax charged on investments in the Account is paid to the relevant fiscal authorities and is referred to in the Account as "tax clearing."
The Canada Life account
Grounds for making an order
Whether it is just and convenient to order disclosure to ensure the freezing order is effective
(1) As to delay, although the increase first came to light in July 2018, and notwithstanding that the defendant's contention that statements could not be obtained because the account was "dormant" is unconvincing, it is only as from March or April 2020 that it was clear the account was no longer dormant. I therefore do not consider that HMRC's failure to act earlier than August 2020 should count against it so far as the application relates to the Emirates account.(2) Arguments of disproportionality have little weight in relation to statements for the Emirates account alone, even extending over a five-year period, given that, on the defendant's case, it has seen little activity for much of that time.
Privilege against self-incrimination
"115. Mr Smith advances a number of points in answer to the claim to privilege. The first is that the privilege does not attach to the compulsory production of documents which have an existence independently of the relevant order compelling their production; it is limited to statements or other material which is brought into existence in consequence of the compulsion of the Court. I considered the jurisprudence on this issue at paragraphs [52] to [87] of an extempore judgment I gave in relation to an earlier application in this litigation relating to Gaziz Zharimbetov: [2012] EWHC 2784 (Comm). I concluded:
"72. In my view, it has been established by the authorities that the privilege against self-incrimination does not extend to provide a person with protection against the risk of incriminating himself by the provision of a document or documents which come into existence independently of any order, statute or other instrument of law which compelled their production. It does not normally cover documents other than those which come into existence by an exercise of will pursuant to a testimonial obligation imposed upon the party. I derive that formulation in particular from the passages I have identified at paragraphs 68 and 69 of Saunders v United Kingdom [1998] 1 BCLC 362, (1996) 23 EHRR 313, paragraphs 28, 31, 36, 38, 46, 63 and 64 of C Plc v P [2008] Ch 1, paragraph 18 of R v S (F) [2009] 1 WLR 1489, and paragraph 53 of R v Kearns [2002] 1 WLR 2815, cited with approval by the Court of Appeal in R v S ."
116. Mr Béar submitted, with his characteristic skill and tact, that this was an erroneous conclusion to draw from the authorities. Having had the benefit of his submissions and an opportunity for further reflection, I remain of the view that although the authorities do not all speak with one voice, their effect is as I endeavoured to summarise."
"The right not to incriminate oneself is primarily concerned with respecting the will of an accused person to remain silent and presupposes that the prosecution in a criminal case seek to prove their case without resort to evidence obtained through methods of coercion or oppression in defiance of the will of the accused (see Saunders v. the United Kingdom, 17 December 1996, §§68-69, Reports 1996-VI; Jalloh, cited above, §§100 and 102; and Bykov, cited above, §92). The right to remain silent under police questioning and the privilege against self-incrimination are generally recognised international standards which lie at the heart of the notion of a fair procedure under Article 6. Their rationale lies, inter alia, in the protection of the accused against improper compulsion by the authorities, thereby contributing to the avoidance of miscarriages of justice and to the fulfilment of the aims of Article 6 (see John Murray, cited above, §45; Jalloh, cited above, § 100; and Bykov, cited above, §92)."
"The first is where a suspect is obliged to testify under threat of sanctions and either testifies in consequence (see, for example, Saunders, cited above; and Brusco v. France, no. 1466/07, 14 October 2010) or is sanctioned for refusing to testify (see, for example, Heaney and McGuinness, cited above; and Weh v. Austria, no. 38544/97, 8 April 2004). The second is where physical or psychological pressure, often in the form of treatment which breaches Article 3 of the Convention, is applied to obtain real evidence or statements (see, for example, Jalloh, Magee and Gäfgen, all cited above). The third is where the authorities use subterfuge to elicit information that they were unable to obtain during questioning (see Allan v. the United Kingdom, no. 48539/99, ECHR 2002-IX)."
"One would hesitate to conclude that the court intended in these cases to establish an absolute rule that the prosecution and punishment of a person who refuses to provide incriminating real evidence in pre-trial investigations will contravene article 6. Such a rule would fatally undermine the court's acceptance in Saunders, at para 69, that a suspect can properly be required to provide other types of real evidence, such as samples of breath, blood, urine and DNA: a requirement which is normally underpinned by the threat of a sanction in the event of non-compliance. It may be that these judgments should be understood, consistently with the general approach adopted by the Grand Chamber in such cases as Jalloh v Germany, O'Halloran and Francis v United Kingdom and Ibrahim v United Kingdom, as reflecting the nature and degree of the compulsion or coercion used in order to obtain documents and information from the applicants (documents which might, in Funke at least, have been obtained by other, unobjectionable, means). Understood in that way, these cases might be fitted into the general pattern of later cases concerned with the use of oppressive methods of obtaining real evidence."
"the nature and degree of compulsion used to obtain the documents in question, the weight of the public interest in the investigation and punishment of the offences at issue, the existence of any relevant safeguards in the procedure, and the use to which any material so obtained may be put."
(1) It was difficult to regard the compulsion arising from the service of the notices as falling within any of the three kinds of situations identified in [267] of Ibrahim. Nor were they comparable with the conduct held to be oppressive in the Funke line of cases, "even if those cases were of any relevance in a situation where no prosecution for failure to provide the documents has taken place."(2) There was substantial weight to be given to the public interest in effective international co-operation in the investigation of possible tax avoidance and, while this did not outweigh the right not to incriminate oneself when that right crystallises at trial, it may be a strong justification for requiring the provision of information and documents at the stage of pre-trial investigations.
(3) Considering the use to which the documents may be put, since the case concerned pre-trial investigations, it was not known what the documents might contain and what use might be made of them. If charges were brought and the Norwegian authorities sought to rely on the documents obtained at trial, then it would have been open to Volaw to object to the admission of the evidence. It was not for the courts of Jersey to anticipate the response of the Norwegian court at that later stage (or, for similar reasons, what a Jersey court might do in any subsequent criminal prosecution in Jersey).
"In the light of all these considerations, the Board sees no reason to find at the present stage, which has not yet progressed beyond the service of notices as part of an investigation into possible offences, that the requirements of article 6 will not be met in relation to any proceedings brought against any of the appellants in Jersey, or that those requirements would not have been met in relation to any proceedings brought against them in Norway. The notices do not in themselves deprive any of the appellants of their right to a fair trial. The complaint based on article 6 of the ECHR is therefore rejected."
(1) The public interest in the court ensuring that its orders are effective carries great weight.(2) At this stage there is no certainty as to what the documents might reveal and whether any committal proceedings would be instituted even if the documents revealed past breaches. I do not regard HMRC's refusal to give an undertaking not to bring further committal proceedings as relevant in this regard. Without knowing what the documents might reveal it is perfectly understandable for a claimant not to tie its hands by undertaking not to bring any further committal proceedings, however serious the breaches that might later be revealed.
(3) If incriminating documents are produced, and committal proceedings are brought in reliance on them, then the defendant has the significant safeguard under Article 6 to seek to exclude the evidence. As in Volaw, it is not for me to anticipate how the defendant's rights under Article 6 might be protected in that event.