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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Hannah v Revenue and Customs (Case management - applications by the parties - whether Appellant had permission to include two new grounds - scope of Tribunal's jurisdiction under TMA s.50 - whether the transfer of assets abroad legislation breached Art 56 TFEU - whether evidence on Guernsey law should be directed) [2024] UKFTT 1116 (TC) (12 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2024/TC09382.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 1116 (TC) |
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Appeal reference: TC/2018/04359 |
TAX CHAMBER
Judgment Date: 12 December 2024 |
B e f o r e :
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DAVID WARREN HANNAH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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For the Appellant: Julian Hickey of Counsel, instructed by Levy and Levy
For the Respondents: Christopher Stone KC and Katherine Elliot of Counsel, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs
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Crown Copyright ©
Case management – applications by the parties - whether the Appellant had permission to include two new grounds – scope of Tribunal's jurisdiction under TMA s 50 – whether the transfer of assets abroad legislation breached Art 56 TFEU – whether evidence on Guernsey law should be directed – other directions
Introduction
(1) the Cornerstone business was transferred to a Guernsey company, Marlborough Nominees Ltd ("MNL"), in exchange for loan notes issued to the Appellant;
(2) MNL established Cornerstone Advisory Service Ltd ("CAS") to run that business;
(3) the shares in CAS were settled into the Cloudburst Trust; and
(4) the Cornerstone business was later transferred to other offshore entities.
(1) Issue 3, which was whether the Appellant should have permission to amend his grounds of appeal to include two new grounds. The first of those engaged the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, and the second concerned the application and effect of Article 63 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union ("Art 63 TFEU"); and
(2) Issue 7, which was whether permission should be given for the Appellant (or the parties jointly) to provide the report of an expert on Guernsey law.
Rule 2 of the Tribunal Rules
Issue 1
Issue 2
(1) the grounds of appeal for the 2020 appeal simply repeated those for the original appeal; and
(2) HMRC had not yet filed or served a Statement of Case ("SoC") in response to the 2020 appeal.
Issue 3
The approach
(1) The amended grounds of appeal must have a realistic as opposed to a fanciful, prospect of success. This means that they must carry some degree of conviction, be properly particularised and be supported by evidence which establishes a sufficiently arguable case.
(2) Whether to allow the proposed amendment involves a balancing exercise taking into account the overriding objective of dealing with cases fairly and justly, including considering the injustice to each party and to litigants in general if the application is allowed or refused.
The grounds
(1) HMRC had misinterpreted and misapplied the ToAA legislation;
(2) the Appellant was not a beneficiary of the Cloudburst Trust;
(3) the amounts assessed were excessive; and
(4) there had been no deliberate behaviour on the Appellant's part.
The PE ground
(1) HMRC appeared to be alleging that MNL and the other entities (together, the Entities) each had a PE in the UK;
(2) if so, the Entities were liable to pay UK corporation tax on the profits of the Cornerstone business; and
(3) in consequence, HMRC cannot pursue the Appellant for income tax with reference to those profits without offending against the principle of no double taxation.
Submissions
TMA s 50(6)
"If, on an appeal notified to the tribunal, the tribunal decides
(a)-(b) …
(c) that the appellant is overcharged by an assessment other than a self-assessment,
the assessment or amounts shall be reduced accordingly, but otherwise the assessment or statement shall stand good."
Discussion
"[21] It is fundamental to our adversarial system of justice that the parties should clearly identify the issues that arise in the litigation, so that each has the opportunity of responding to the points made by the other. The function of the judge is to adjudicate on those issues alone. The parties may have their own reasons for limiting the issues or presenting them in a certain way. The judge can invite, and even encourage, the parties to recast or modify the issues. But if they refuse to do so, the judge must respect that decision. One consequence of this may be that the judge is compelled to reject a claim on the basis on which it is advanced, although he or she is of the opinion that it would have succeeded if it had been advanced on a different basis. Such an outcome may be unattractive, but any other approach leads to uncertainty and potentially real unfairness.
[22] The starting point must always be the pleadings. In Loveridge and Loveridge v Healey [2004] EWCA Civ 173, Lord Phillips MR said this at paragraph 23:
'In McPhilemy v Times Newspapers Ltd [1999] 3 All ER 775 Lord Woolf MR observed:
"Pleadings are still required to mark out the parameters of the case that is being advanced by each party. In particular they are still critical to identify the issues and the extent of the dispute between the parties."
It is on the basis of the pleadings that the parties decide what evidence they will need to place before the court and what preparations are necessary before the trial.'"
"…There is a venerable principle of tax law to the general effect that there is a public interest in taxpayers paying the correct amount of tax, and it is one of the duties of the commissioners in exercise of their statutory functions to have regard to that public interest…For present purposes, however, it is enough to say that the principle still has at least some residual vitality in the context of section 50, and if the commissioners are to fulfil their statutory duty under that section they must in my judgment be free in principle to entertain legal arguments which played no part in reaching the conclusions set out in the closure notice. Subject always to the requirements of fairness and proper case management, such fresh arguments may be advanced by either side, or may be introduced by the commissioners on their own initiative."
(1) it does not carry the necessary degree of conviction: Mr Hickey's skeleton for this hearing said (emphasis added): "it is possible that the Guernsey company had a PE in the UK…", and "clearly to the extent that there is any PE then the ToAA provisions cannot apply since there would be double taxation"; and
(2) it is not supported by "evidence which establishes a sufficiently arguable case".
The EU ground
(1) the Appellant had received loan notes in consideration for the transfer;
(2) in Hoey the UT considered both Mr Hoey's transfer of his employment to a Guernsey company and the loans made by his new employer out of an employment benefit trust ("EBT"), and then said at [294] (his emphasis):
"It is therefore necessary to look at the factual circumstances in which the relevant capital movements are said to be restricted. These narrow down to the payments into the EBT and loans out of it to consider whether it is justified to examine them under art 63 or not"; and
(3) the issuance of loan notes to the Appellant in exchange for the Charterhouse business therefore engaged Art 63.
(1) Although HMRC had filed and served both a SoC and an amended SoC ("ASoC") in relation to the original appeal, they had not yet responded to the 2020 appeal. They would therefore have to expand and rewrite the ASoC in any event.
(2) The case was at a very early stage; there have been no directions for the exchange of documents or witness evidence.
(3) The scope and effect of the ToAA is already front and centre in this appeal, so the EU ground does not open up an entirely new area. Instead, it adds to the Appellant's reasons for disputing the application of those provisions.
Issue 4
(1) include within those grounds, any of the submissions made in pleadings filed and served after the original appeal was notified to the Tribunal;
(2) expand the reasons why the Appellant considers that the exemption conditions are met; and
(3) in relation to the penalties only, to include any further reasons why these were not due from the Appellant. Any such further reasons could (for example) address the issue of deliberate behaviour, while recognising that the burden here is on HMRC. However, this is not to be understood as a "backdoor" opportunity to provide further new grounds for the assessment appeals. Any such additional grounds must therefore not relate to both the assessment appeals and the penalty appeals, other than to the extent that a finding of deliberate behaviour has consequences for the time limits by which an assessment can be validly made.
Issue 5
Issue 6
Issue 7
Background facts
"We are instructed that our clients are willing to agree to your client's proposed approach to the Application, subject to your client's agreement that it will accept and be bound by the decision of the Royal Court with respect to the determination of the Application (or any part thereof)."
"by correspondence dated the 4th March, 2021, Advocate J.T. Le Tissier
Counsel for His Majesty's Revenue & Customs ("HMRC") advised, inter alia, that upon the provision of written representations HMRC would accept to be bound by any decision of the Court with respect to the determination of the Application (or any part thereof)."
Submissions
"The FTT would benefit from an understanding as to the effect of HMRC's representations under Guernsey law and the extent of its participation in the Guernsey proceedings (i.e. where a party such as HMRC has been put on notice of an application, appointed legal representation and made written submissions). This point has been raised because the Guernsey Court records that HMRC will be bound by the decision."
"The key question will be the scope and nature of that agreement, put simply whether it encompassed only the legal effect of the Guernsey court decision that the Appellant is excluded from benefitting from the Trust (HMRC's position) or the various findings of fact made in considering the application as a whole (the Appellant's position). No question of Guernsey law arises."
Discussion
"[39] …findings of fact made by another decision maker are not to be admitted in a subsequent trial because the decision at that trial is to be made by the judge appointed to hear it ('the trial judge'), and not another. The trial judge must decide the case for himself on the evidence that he receives, and in the light of the submissions on that evidence made to him. To admit evidence of the findings of fact of another person, however distinguished, and however thorough and competent his examination of the issues may have been, risks the decision being made, at least in part, on evidence other than that which the trial judge has heard and in reliance on the opinion of someone who is neither the relevant decision maker nor an expert in any relevant discipline, of which decision making is not one. The opinion of someone who is not the trial judge is, therefore, as a matter of law, irrelevant and not one to which he ought to have regard.
"40. In essence…the foundation of the rule must now be the preservation of the fairness of the trial in which the decision is entrusted to the trial judge alone."
Issue 8
Issue 9
Issue 10
"The Appellant will apply in due course for an order under Rule 15(2)(b)(iii) of the FTT Rules to exclude evidence on the ground of unfairness, in respect of HMRC's apparent intention to rely on the matters referred to in §§ 31, 37 and 64 of the ASoC…The application will have to wait until the parties have exchanged evidence because only then will it be possible to determine such an application once the parties have clarified their cases and decided
what evidence they wish to adduce (this is the approach endorsed by the CoA in Mitchell & Anor v Revenue and Customs [2023] EWCA Civ 261 at §86."
Right to apply for permission to appeal