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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> PD Concepts Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2009] UKFTT 127 (TC) (09 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00095.html Cite as: [2009] STI 2870, [2009] SFTD 353, [2009] UKFTT 127 (TC) |
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[2009] UKFTT 127 (TC)
TC00095
Appeal number MAN/07/0702
VAT – input tax – MTIC – appeal dismissed.
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
P D CONCEPTS LTD Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS (VAT) Respondents
TRIBUNAL RICHARD BARLOW
PETER WHITEHEAD
Sitting in public in Manchester on 12, 14, 15, 19 and 26 January and 19 February 2009.
Mr Nigel Gibbon of Omnis for the Appellant.
Mr Jonathan Cannan of counsel instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
Introduction.
The respondents' case.
Q. The £294.50 [selling price to ATES in deal one] could you just remind the tribunal how that price came about, how that was agreed with ATES?
A. Through negotiation.
Q. You mentioned previously that they gave a –
A. Target price.
Q. – target price. Would that have been the target price or was there negotiation around the target price.
A. If I remember right I think it is about £1.50 [under] what we asked for.
And when being cross examined he said:
Q. So your target price was 293.
A. No, their target price.
Q. Sorry, yes, their target price was 293, but you did the deal at 294.50.
A. Correct.
Q. I think all the deals that you have done throughout your trading have always been in round figures in the sense of round pounds or to a 50 pence.
A. Yes.
Q. In your negotiations with any of your customers … did the negotiations never settle on a price that went down to the nearest 10 pence, or even the nearest penny because it makes a big difference doesn't it.
A. It never has done, no.
Q. But you say that there were full negotiations on both sides with ATES and In Touch and that the price that was settled on happened to be these round sums.
A. Yes.
The appellant's case.
Optronix.
The applicable law.
89. As I have noted the ECJ has used various phrases to describe the link between the fraud and the impugned transaction. In Optigen the phrase was "a chain of supply of which those transactions form part"; in Kittel the phrase was "connected with fraud". In Teleos and in Netto it was "participation in tax evasion". Both Teleos and Netto are, in my judgment, a narrowing of the test.
90. The Kittel test, even in its original form, requires that the taxable person "knew or should have known" something. It is therefore necessary to identify what it is that he knew or should have known.
91. In cases (such as the present) where the taxable person is not a co-conspirator in an overall scheme to defraud the revenue by the fraudulent evasion of VAT it is, I think, necessary to identify the fraud with which the taxable person's transaction is alleged to be connected, and of which he should have known. Mr Anderson asserted several times that the fraud in question was a fraud to defraud the revenue through a series of transactions designed to extract money from the Exchequer by means of defaulting chains and contra-trading. The contra-trading deals, he said, were designed to displace claims for repayment of input tax. The ultimate intra-community export of goods was critical in order to extract money from the Exchequer, which was the purpose of the whole scheme. That, he said was the fraud. Assuming, for the moment, that the trader who makes his claim for repayment of input tax is not himself a dishonest co-conspirator, I had difficulty in understanding how this differed from saying that the fraud was the fraud of the missing trader in the dirty chain. The honest trader knows that he has bought goods on which he has paid VAT. He knows that he will export those goods and reclaim the VAT from HMRC. Unless there is a missing trader somewhere further down the chain (or in a parallel chain) there is no fraud. I accept that the honest trader need not know the identity of the missing trader but unless he knows or should have known that that there was (or was likely to be) a missing trader somewhere in the dirty chain, I do not see how it can be said that he knew or should have known that his transaction was connected with fraud. …
98. Likewise in Just Fabulous Burton J said of an MTIC carousel fraud (§ 7):
"The fraud is plainly committed, if the participants in such chain are dishonest, at the stage of the missing trader, although the loss may not crystallise until the Revenue has to pay out in full in respect of the return filed by the exporter." (Emphasis in original)
99. All these observations were directed to "straight" MTIC frauds rather than a contra-trading fraud. In the case of a "straight" MTIC fraud it seems to me that a taxable person who is not himself a dishonest co-conspirator will not be deprived of his right to reclaim payment of input tax unless he knew or should have known of a connection between his own transaction and the fraud of the missing trader.
100. Burton J considered a contra-trading fraud later in his judgment. He said (§ 52):
"… on the assumed facts … Evolution is 'a taxable person who knew … that by his purchase, he was taking part in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT'. In those circumstances, I am satisfied that the Revenue would have the right to refuse to pay the input claimed, and my concluded view is the same as was the untutored response of Charles J in Megantic: and the same as the provisional view of Mr Bishopp in Calltell (see [2007] UKVAT V20266, para 18) that:
'18. … if the Respondents can show that the transactions were what they claim them to be … they have at least an arguable case that a trader who, knowingly or with means of knowledge, engages in conduct designed to conceal, or avoid the consequences of discovery of, a fraud should be in no better position than the perpetrator of the fraud.'"
101. In the case of contra-trading, therefore, the fraudulent conduct extends to conduct "designed" to conceal or avoid the discovery of a fraud. In other words the cover up is part of an overarching scheme, and is part of an overall fraud. But whether this is a correct description of the overall fraud depends on the facts. Underlying Mr Anderson's description of the fraud is the assumption that there is an overarching scheme. But whether there is such a scheme is for the Tribunal to decide. Mr Anderson's formulation assumes that which it is necessary for HMRC to prove.
102. In my judgment in a case of alleged contra-trading, where the taxable person claiming repayment of input tax is not himself a dishonest co-conspirator, there are two potential frauds:
i) The dishonest failure to account for VAT by the defaulter or missing trader in the dirty chain; and
ii) The dishonest cover-up of that fraud by the contra-trader.
103. 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 [1990] Ch. 265, 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."
104. This conclusion is, I think, consistent with what Burton J said in Just Fabulous (§ 24):
"whether or not Evolution knew of the precise nature of the defaulter chain or of the goods purportedly dealt with in that chain or the identities of the participants in that chain, Evolution knew of the fraudulent aim of Blackstar in acquiring, through the off-set on the contra-trading transaction, the opportunity to receive, by such off-set, VAT which it would not be able to recover direct from the Revenue." (Emphasis added)
105. In other words, if the taxable person knew of the fraudulent purpose of the contra-trader, whether he had knowledge of the dirty chain does not matter.
106. However, if the contra-trader is not himself dishonest, then there will only have been one fraud, namely the dishonest failure to account for VAT by the defaulter in the dirty chain. In that situation, the taxable person will not, in my judgment, be deprived of his right to reclaim input tax unless he knew or should have known of that fraud. But if the taxable person knew or ought to have known of that fraud, then he will be deprived of his right to reclaim input tax, even if the contra-trader is wholly innocent (as, for instance, where the missing trader and the taxable person between them dishonestly orchestrate a sale to and purchase from an innocent intermediary, which appears to have happened in Recolta).
108. Similarly in Calltell Telecom Ltd v HMRC [2007] UKVAT V20266, discussing the question of knowledge, the Tribunal (Chairman Colin Bishopp) said (§ 52):
"It is difficult to see how a trader, entering into a chain of transactions in which every trader accounts correctly for VAT (and which is not tainted for some other reason) could have the means of knowing that it is a device for concealing, or avoiding the consequences of discovery of, another, fraudulent, chain of transactions. Nevertheless it is, we think, possible that a trader could have the means of knowing that, by his participation, he is assisting a fraud. Much will depend on the facts, but an obvious example might be the offer of an easy purchase and sale generating a conspicuously generous profit for no evident reason. A trader receiving such an offer would be well advised to ask why it had been made; if he did not he would be likely to fail the test set out at paragraph 51 of the judgment in Kittel."
1) Was the appellant a co-conspirator in an overall scheme to defraud the revenue by evasion of VAT?
2) If not, the appellant will only be denied its input tax recovery if it either knew or should have known about an identified fraud.
3) That identified fraud may be either the fraud committed by the missing trader in the dirty chain or the "cover-up" by the contra-trader, which means conduct designed to conceal or avoid discovery of the missing trader fraud.
4) What the appellant (if it was not an actual co-conspirator) knew or should have known is set out in paragraphs 103 to 105 which require further discussion.
Discussion and conclusions.
RICHARD BARLOW
TRIBUNAL JUDGE
RELEASE DATE: