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Segger v Customs and Excise [2004] UKVAT V18673 (29 June 2004)
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VAT PENALTIES — conduct involving dishonesty for purpose of evading VAT — lack of evidence implicating appellant — presumption of innocence accorded by article 6(2) of Human Rights Convention — danger of miscarriage of justice if appellant presumed to be partner in absence of evidence — appeal against penalty assessment allowed to the extent of reduction of penalty to nil
MANCHESTER TRIBUNAL CENTRE
MRS GILLIAN ANNE SEGGER Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS AND EXCISE Respondents
Tribunal: Mr M S Johnson (Chairman)
Mr R Presho FCMA (Member)
Sitting in public in Newcastle upon Tyne on 15 April 2003, 14 October 2003 and 6 and 7 April 2004
The Appellant attended in person throughout and was represented by Mr P Cook, of PM Cook & Co, chartered accountants, at the adjourned hearing in April 2004
Mr N Poole, of counsel, instructed by the Solicitor's Office of HM Customs and Excise, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2004
DECISION
Background to the appeal
- The appellant in this case is Mrs Gillian Anne Segger ("Mrs Segger"). The following issues have arisen in her appeal:
a. whether assessments to value added tax under section 73 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 ("the Act") issued by the Commissioners of Customs and Excise ("Customs") and made in respect of supplies allegedly treated as improperly zero-rated for the purposes of that tax, were justified;
b. whether there was dishonest conduct for the purpose of evading VAT such as to render Mrs Segger liable as provided in section 60(1) of the Act.
- The background is that the business carried on under the style "N Segger Plant Hire" ("the business") was registered for VAT by Mr Neil Segger ("Mr Segger") as from 1 September 1987 [1]. The business was described in Form VAT 1 as a partnership. It provided earth-moving equipment for use on building sites. In the nature of that kind of work [2], some of the supplies made by the business fell to be zero-rated and some standard-rated. This appeal relates to supplies of the business which were treated as zero-rated when tax at the standard rate should have been accounted for in respect of them. The supplies in dispute were made during the three years of VAT accounting periods of the business beginning on 1 January 1997 and ending on 31 December 1999. The impact of the business having over-stated its zero-rated supplies during those periods was artificially to inflate the input tax due according to the VAT returns made by the business.
- The appeal was lodged in the name of "Neil Segger Plant Hire" by Mr Segger personally. At the time that the appeal was lodged, on or about 30 April 2001, he was on the verge of being made bankrupt. His bankruptcy ensued on or about 18 May 2001. Mr Segger's Trustee in Bankruptcy has not adopted the appeal and has played no part in it. This appeal has therefore been treated by the tribunal as having been maintained by Mrs Segger. Mr Segger has nevertheless accompanied his wife to tribunal and they have both been present throughout the hearing.
- Mr Cook did not represent Mrs Segger before the tribunal when the appeal came on for hearing in April and October 2003 – his representation was at the April 2004 hearing only. Mr Poole of counsel has represented Customs before the tribunal at every stage.
- Tax assessments in respect of the business were issued by Customs and notified to the business under section 73 of the Act. These totalled £133,051 plus interest. That total was subsequently reduced by £1,300. Customs also issued and notified to Mr and Mrs Segger a penalty assessment under section 76 of the Act in the amount of £119,745, that is to say £133,051 less mitigation of 10%. That assessment was subsequently reduced to £118,575. Those are the assessments before the tribunal, so far as they may relate to Mrs Segger.
The section 85 Agreement
- The task of the tribunal has been facilitated by an agreement under section 85 of the Act reached on the penultimate day of the hearing, that is to say, on 6 April 2004. Under that agreement ("the Agreement"), the parties have agreed that the making of assessments by Customs under section 73 of the Act was justified but that the assessed total should be varied downwards to a total of £105,640. It has further been agreed that payment of the tax so due is to be made by offsetting the same against input tax totalling £106,178.15 properly claimed but not yet allowed. The parties have not agreed the question of liability under section 60 of the Act, and that important matter remains for determination by the tribunal. The effect of the Agreement is accordingly that, subject to the outcome of her appeal as to the penalty assessment, Mrs Segger will not actually have to pay Customs any of the tax assessed under section 73 of the Act. That being so, she has not as we see it accepted that anything is due from her, so we do not construe the Agreement as an admission of liability on her part.
- Provision was made in the Agreement for its signature and acceptance by the Trustee in Bankruptcy of Mr Segger, and on 13 May 2004, Customs lodged at the Tribunal Centre a further copy of the Agreement dated 27 April 2004 signed by him as well as by Mrs Segger.
The outstanding issue for the determination of the tribunal
- As to the basis of the appeal, so far as remaining to be decided, Section 60(1) of the Act provides that, in any case where (a) for the purpose of evading VAT, a person does any act or omits to take any action, and (b) his conduct involves dishonesty (whether or not it is such as to give rise to criminal liability), he shall be liable to a penalty. The only person who is alleged to have been dishonest is Mr Segger. When asked by the tribunal, Mr Poole made it clear that he was not alleging dishonesty against Mrs Segger.
- Section 60(7) of the Act provides that, on an appeal against an assessment to a penalty under that section, the burden of proof as to (a) and (b) above shall lie upon Customs. In view of this, Customs presented their case first.
Evidence before the tribunal
- Mr Poole called the following witnesses to give oral evidence on behalf of Customs:
- Mr Michael Sean O'Flaherty, the assessing officer of Customs in respect of the section 73 assessments;
- Mr Paul Vidler, an officer of Customs who investigated supplies made by the business at the request of Mr O'Flaherty; and
- Mrs Victoria Robertson, a visiting officer of Customs who initially identified discrepancies and shortcomings in the accounts for the business.
- The tribunal had the benefit of two large lever-arch files of documentation prepared by Customs, plus a smaller supplementary file, a separate clip of invoices, and loose copies of correspondence and schedules referred to during the course of the hearing. The supplementary file contained transcripts of interviews attended by Mr Segger, the contents of which were expressly accepted as accurate by Mr Cook [3]. Indeed he told us that the contents of all the bundles were accepted at face value. That therefore means that Mrs Segger accepted as correct the witness statement dated 15 January 2004 of Dawn Hargreaves, VAT Manager of Carillion Construction Ltd, and that dated 6 January 2004 of Rodney Stanley Ashford, Group Taxation Manager of George Wimpey plc, copies of both of which were included in the second large lever-arch file.
- The acceptance by Mr Cook of the contents of the bundles moreover means that Mrs Segger has recognized that Mr Segger described himself to Customs, in the interview he had with Customs in October 1999, as being in partnership with her [4]. In that interview, he described her as a partner who had never done anything in the business – a "sleeping" partner. However the fact that Mr Segger described Mrs Segger as his partner does not, of course, mean that she has acknowledged that that is what she was.
- The supplementary file contained a witness statement from Mr Vidler dated 6 August 2003 which he proved in oral evidence. Mr Vidler was not cross-examined. Mr Cook had the opportunity to cross-examine Mr O'Flaherty and Mrs Robertson, which he took.
- When it was Mr Cook's turn to call witnesses and present evidence, he elected to call no evidence. Accordingly the tribunal has not had the benefit of hearing from either Mr or Mrs Segger, although, as mentioned above, they were present throughout the hearing.
The facts
- We find the following facts.
- The penalty assessment was dated 20 June 2001. It accordingly post-dated the notice of appeal, which related only to the section 73 assessments. No attempt was made to appeal against the penalty assessment until the first hearing of the appeal on 15 April 2003. On that occasion the tribunal directed that it would entertain an appeal out of time against the penalty assessment, on terms that a pro forma notice of appeal dated that day be signed and left with the clerk to the tribunal for conveying to the Manchester Tribunal Centre. That was done, and the hearing of the appeal against the penalty assessment was thereupon commenced.
- We find that in 1986 and again in 1988 Mr Segger was visited by Mrs E Foster of Customs [5] about his VAT affairs. She wrote letters to him in which she stressed the need for him to keep records. In her letter to him dated 27 September 1988, she wrote:
"On my visit of 7 September 1988 it was discovered that you have continued to omit zero-rated sales from your VAT returns and do not keep a proper record of these… In the event of further failure to keep proper records, it may be necessary to report the matter."
- On 21 October 1997, Mrs Robertson visited the business in order to verify the correctness of its VAT returns. She discovered that there existed unsubstantiated zero-rated supplies which were contended to have been made. She discussed that matter with Mr Segger, and telephoned his accountant Mr Cook, who explained to her that the records of the business were incomplete. Subsequently she met Mr Cook. He failed to produce invoices on the basis of which complete records could be constructed.
- One reason given for the lack of records was that zero-rated supplies in the building industry are commonly covered by Inland Revenue "715 certificates" [6] and are hence not made the subject of separate invoices. However we find that there was a failure to issue invoices to main contractors who should have received invoices.
- We moreover find that it is not correct [7] that the business consisted solely of undertaking ground works, so that all the income of the business was properly zero-rated. A glance at the VAT returns of the business suffices to show how stark the position of the business was alleged to be. Between period 03/97 and period 03/99, the only output tax accounted for was the amount of the quarterly fuel scale charge for vehicles (i.e. £35, subsequently £56). Each quarterly return therefore included a substantial repayment claim. Customs were therefore being asked to accept that there were no standard-rated supplies made by the business at all during two years.
- Such was the situation handed over by Mrs Robertson to Mr O'Flaherty for investigation. He interviewed Mr Segger in October 1999 and obtained copies of invoices and purchase ledgers. He noted that some invoices were hand-written and some type-written, and commenced the process of constructing schedules of items declared and undeclared. This was protracted and time-consuming work. During the course of Mr O'Flaherty's efforts, Customs were in contact by correspondence with Mr Fleming of Armstrong, Watson & Co, Chartered Accountants, representing the business. We find that Mr Fleming was co-operative. In particular, by a letter to Mr Simmons [8] of Customs dated 12 February 2001, Mr Fleming wanted to try to resolve matters and offered inspection of invoices at the accountants' Northallerton office. We find that for some reason that offer was not taken up.
- Customs' investigations demonstrated conclusively that both zero-rated and standard-rated supplies were made by the business. Comparisons were made between the annual accounts of the business and its VAT returns. Mrs Robertson had occasion to raise VAT assessments on the business for periods in 1995 and 1996. She did that in 1998 [9]. An inhibition was placed by Customs on meeting the repayment claims included in the VAT returns being rendered by the business. The industry of Mr O'Flaherty and Mr Vidler produced clear, unequivocal evidence that supplies were made by the business to contractors who were liable for VAT on those supplies at the standard rate. Those contractors included Wimpey Homes North East, McLean Homes North East, Carillion Construction Ltd (formerly Tarmac), and a number of others.
- The tribunal has the disadvantage of not having heard from either Mr or Mrs Segger in evidence. It appears however to be the position that Mr Segger entrusted the preparation of some (but, as appears below, far from all) invoices for the business to an employed bookkeeper by the name of Christine Carbert ("Christine"). We have not, of course, heard from Christine. On the strength of the oral evidence we have heard, we would not be in a position to make findings of fact as to the extent to which Mr Segger might in practice have been responsible for the generation and preparation of invoices, and to what extent those things might have been delegated to Christine.
- However, we do have the contents of the bundles, which are agreed at face value. From such contents, we are able to make findings as follows:
a) Mr Segger's case was presented by his accountant to Customs [10] as being that, prior to 1999, the business made nothing but zero-rated supplies – we have found this to be manifestly incorrect;
b) Allegedly, so it was initially said, he turned to making standard-rated supplies with effect only from early 1999, which explains why his VAT returns from then onwards accounted for output tax [11] in a way they had not done previously – but we note that the loose schedule referred to in paragraph 27 of this Decision comprehensively demonstrates the spuriousness of this suggestion;
c) Mr Segger told Customs when interviewed in October 1999 [12] that the VAT returns of the business, including the output tax figures, were completed by Christine from information passed to her by him;
d) In a subsequent interview with Customs held in December 1999, Mr Segger maintained that he began making standard-rated supplies in 1996/97 [13] – that was clearly a change of story from what, via his accountant, he had previously put forward;
e) Mr Segger further accepted that he made out hand-written invoices himself, so that Christine was not in sole charge of that side of the business [14], also (at a subsequent interview held with Customs in March 2000) he accepted that hand-written invoices constituted 75% of the total [15] ;
f) It was also accepted that Christine would have no knowledge of which invoices bore VAT and which did not, and that Mr Segger made such decisions on behalf of the business [16] ; and
g) It was also accepted that Christine had entered contra-charges (i.e. inputs) into the VAT account when the account was silent as to outputs in respect of the same supplies [17] .
- Given that Mr Cook informed the tribunal that there was no dispute as to the correctness of the transcripts of the interviews, the above matters do in our view suffice to present an adequate impression for present purposes of the degree of involvement of Mr Segger and Christine respectively in the VAT side of the business.
- Although lacking complete information as to the affairs of the business, Mr O'Flaherty did what he could to reconstruct the full picture by employing methods of his own devising to calculate the proportions of zero-rated and standard-rated supplies respectively surmised to have been made by the business in the years 1997, 1998 and 1999. He based the section 73 assessments on those calculations.
- Mr O'Flaherty first gave evidence to the tribunal on 15 April 2003. He was still giving evidence on the last day of the hearing, 7 April 2004. By that date, he had had an opportunity to revisit his calculations. He produced to the tribunal a Schedule of Arrears ("the loose schedule") representing Customs' final position as to the tax due. The loose schedule had been available on 6 April 2004 for discussion between the parties. It led to the Agreement.
- The loose schedule shows how the under-declaration of £105,640 mentioned in the Agreement has been totalled. Given that the loose schedule is an agreed document [18], it is of academic interest only for us to note the derivation of its contents. We nevertheless record that we were taken through the loose schedule by Mr O'Flaherty in evidence, and we are of the opinion that it incorporates the best evidence that it has been possible to procure as to the value added tax position of the business in each of the years 1997 to 1999, and contains a reasonable and defensible analysis of how the bottom-line figure of £105,640 due has been arrived at.
The allegations of Customs
- Having found the facts, we turn next to the alleged dishonesty for the purpose of evading VAT. Customs base the allegation of dishonesty on the following. They say these things:
- It is clear that standard-rated supplies were made during periods when the business was rendering VAT returns containing only the equivalent of fuel scale charges as output tax;
- Both the following were very large, namely (a) the discrepancies between the contents of the annual accounts of the business and the figures declared in the VAT returns; and (b) the number of invoices wholly unrecorded in the accounts of the business;
- Mr Segger denied responsibility in the interviews held with Customs, yet the interviews show that he was responsible;
- Mr Segger had been reminded more than once over the years of the importance of accurate record-keeping, but he was still not keeping such records; and
- The standard of proof for civil evasion of VAT has been complied with in this case.
Submissions of Mr Poole for Customs
- On behalf of Customs, Mr Poole submitted that the fact of the Agreement was itself evidence of dishonesty, in that the large total of tax accepted to have been undeclared, attributable to VAT accounting periods stretching over a full three years, was inexplicable otherwise. That went, he submitted, both to the matter of tax dishonestly evaded, and to the question whether the resultant penalty should be the subject of mitigation. Mr Poole submitted that the burden of proof upon Customs had been discharged, although Mrs Segger was admittedly not herself alleged to have been dishonest, and although she had not been shown to have been an active partner in the business. The fact that she was treated as a partner made her as liable as if she herself had been dishonest.
- It might be thought, Mr Poole submitted, that in the absence of an allegation of dishonesty against her, she could not be liable under section 60 of the Act. However Mr Poole relied upon Akbar & Ors (trading as Mumtaz Paan House) v C & E Comrs VAT Tribunal Decision No 15386 (30 October 1997) ("the Mumtaz Paan House case") and Islam & Ors v C & E Comrs VAT Tribunal Decision No 17834 (25 July 2002) ("the Islam case") in support of the proposition that Mrs Segger is liable, irrespective of her own personal lack of dishonesty. He referred the tribunal to the combined effect of sections 10 and 12 of the Partnership Act 1890, from which it is clear that, where a partnership firm incurs a penalty, every partner is jointly and severally liable for the penalty, even though the partner is not responsible for the act or omission giving rise to the penalty.
- Mr Poole submitted that it was inconceivable that Mr Segger was unaware that standard-rated invoices rendered by the business were not being declared for VAT. His long involvement with VAT, stretching back to the 1980s, and his long experience in business, must have made him aware. As bookkeeper for the business, Christine had done what she could – it was not alleged that she was responsible for misrepresentations in the VAT account – but she had been dependent upon Mr Segger for the information that she had included. Mr Segger had not been frank with Customs. Mr Poole drew our attention to examples of invoices, and comments made in interview by Mr Segger, from which the responsibility of Mr Segger for the VAT account could be discerned.
- Mr Poole invited us to ignore any alleged incompetence on the part of Christine. It was clear that the tax that had gone undeclared was not her fault. On the contrary, Mr Segger had repeatedly been reminded of the need for accurate and complete records, yet he had failed in that regard. The failure was great in monetary terms. The magnitude of the discrepancies was such, Mr Poole submitted, that they must have been wilfully ignored by Mr Segger.
Submissions of Mr Cook for Mrs Segger
- For the appellant, Mr Cook submitted that Mr Segger was a successful businessman "with an eye for the bottom line". He knew the billing procedures; he was aware of what VAT was due and payable. It was accepted that errors had been made, most of them in 1999. Christine had not been able to cope – she was incapable of doing so. Clearly she was incompetent, he said, when it came to the preparation of the VAT returns. The acceptance of the Agreement by Mrs Segger reflected her desire for finality. She did not accept what was alleged against Mr Segger. Since May 2001, his Trustee in Bankruptcy had been in possession of the information that should have made it possible to defend Mr Segger's conduct. That information was not available to her.
- Mr Cook submitted that, on the facts of the case, the Partnership Act 1890 should not be regarded by the tribunal as rendering Mrs Segger liable. He questioned how Mrs Segger, who had not been involved in the business, could be said to have accepted liability under section 60 of the Act merely by signing the Agreement. The question of liability had expressly been left open for the tribunal to decide.
Reasons for the decision and decision of the tribunal
- In our view, conduct involving dishonesty on the part of Mr Segger for the purpose of evading VAT has been proved by Customs to the requisite high standard [19]. The parties, with the assistance of Mr Cook as accountant for the business, have agreed that the business was correctly assessed for more than £100,000 of value added tax that should have been accounted for but was not. The shortfall in tax accounted for was attributable to the business having treated as zero-rated supplies that were properly standard-rated, in respect of VAT accounting periods extending over three years. No evidence has been produced justifying the treatment of those supplies as zero-rated. We accept Mr Poole's submission that, taking account of the admissions elicited from Mr Segger in interview, in particular the matters mentioned in paragraph 24 of this Decision, it is highly likely that the omissions to account for VAT were deliberate on his part. The responsibility was clearly his, and there is not a shred of evidence to suggest that Christine, his bookkeeper, was in any way to blame.
- We have carefully listened to and considered Mr Poole's submissions with regard to the Mumtaz Paan House and Islam cases. It is clear from these authorities that an inactive or "sleeping" partner is no less liable to a penalty under section 60 of the Act notwithstanding his or her lack of direct involvement in the dishonest conduct for the purpose of tax evasion. Moreover effect must be given to the Partnership Act 1890. Sections 10 and 12 of that Act admit of no doubt in their construction that every partner in a partnership firm is severally as well as jointly liable for penalties incurred by the firm. That of course assumes that it has been determined, as a mixed question of law and fact, that an individual is a partner – indeed section 2 of that Act sets out what the heading calls "rules for determining existence of partnership".
- We note that, in the Islam case, it was found as a fact [20] that the partners not involved in record-keeping had been in the business of the partnership for such a long time that they must have known that a VAT fraud was going on, even though they may not have known precisely what form it was taking. In the Mumtaz Paan House case, dishonest conduct was alleged against all the appellants generally, as occurring in the ordinary course of business of the firm, with specific acts of dishonest conduct against one appellant in particular [21]. In the Islam case, and also in the Mumtaz Paan House case, the respective tribunals found that all the appellants were liable in the light of the Partnership Act, notwithstanding (in the case of the Islam case) article 6 of the Human Rights Convention ("the Convention") [22].
- Section 3(1) of the Human Rights Act 1998 provides that, so far as it is possible to do so, primary legislation must be read and given effect in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights. Article 6(2) of the Convention provides that everyone charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law. In the case of C & E Comrs v G K Han and D Yau [2001] STC 1188, the Court of Appeal categorised proceedings challenging penalties pursuant to section 60 of the Act as proceedings concerning criminal charges within the meaning of article 6. It follows, therefore, that the relevant provisions of both the Act and the Partnership Act 1890 must in the present case be read and given effect in such a way as to be compatible with article 6(2).
- In our view this means that the liability of a so-called "innocent" partner is dependent upon evidence implicating him or her in the circumstances giving rise to the penalty. We hold that we are obliged to read and give effect to the Act and the Partnership Act 1890 in that way. Subject to such evidence, Mrs Segger is entitled to the presumption of innocence with regard to her alleged liability for the penalty.
- Accordingly, we should not start with a preconceived idea that Mrs Segger is liable to the penalty under appeal because she was treated as a partner in the business. Having said that, article 6(2) is dealing with proof according to law. Whilst it is incumbent upon Customs to prove conduct involving dishonesty for the purpose of evading VAT, as section 60(7) of the Act provides, Customs were by reason of section 45(1) and (2) of the Act entitled to assume, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the registration of the business as N Segger Plant Hire specifically as a partnership connoted that the business was from time to time being carried on by more than one person. The details of the members of the partnership should appear from Form VAT 2. There is not the slightest suggestion in this case that anyone other than Mrs Segger might have been the partner of Mr Segger for this purpose. Nor has Mrs Segger or her representative advanced a case that she was not her husband's partner.
- As we understand him, Mr Poole is submitting that it suffices to make Mrs Segger liable that she has been treated as a partner in the business. However the Act is silent as to whether the liability of a partnership is that of each and every one of the persons who may be treated as partners. Sections 10 and 12 of the Partnership Act 1890 make an "innocent" partner liable as much as any other partner for a penalty incurred by the firm, but beg the questions whether a particular individual falls within the scope of those sections, and whether she is responsible for the particular liability.
- We mention above that the penalty assessment in this case dates from shortly after the commencement of the bankruptcy of Mr Segger. The appeal against the section 73 assessments was lodged shortly before his bankruptcy. This appeal has proceeded to a conclusion on the basis that Mr Segger no longer has locus standi before the tribunal to challenge the assessments [23]. Customs' Statement of Case was prepared after the commencement of the bankruptcy as if both Mr and Mrs Segger were appellants, but that was incorrect. Firstly, the Trustee in Bankruptcy has not indicated an interest in appealing against any of the assessments. Secondly, for the appeal against the section 73 assessments to have proceeded in the name of the business, whether or not Mr Segger was in partnership, a direction under rule 13(2) of the Value Added Tax Tribunals Rules 1986 (as amended) substituting the Trustee in Bankruptcy for Mr Segger as appellant would have been required. For reasons about which one can only speculate, the Trustee has not been concerned to be substituted. Nor has he sought to dispute the penalty assessment [24].
- It is a feature of this case that no evidence has been called by Mrs Segger. Had the appeal been maintained on behalf of the business, it would have been lost on the issue of conduct involving dishonesty for the purpose of evading VAT, because Customs have proved the liability of Mr Segger for the purpose of section 60 of the Act. However we have no evidence as to the extent of the involvement of Mrs Segger in the business, if any. No dishonesty on her part has either been alleged or proved. It has not even been demonstrated that she held herself out as a partner so as to fall within the scope of sections 10 and 12 of the Partnership Act 1890.
- Both the authorities cited by Mr Poole in support of the liability of Mrs Segger are in our view distinguishable, because both were decided on the basis of evidence that the "innocent" appellants were partners. We have had no such evidence in this case. That has rendered our task of deciding the outcome of this appeal particularly difficult.
- In our view, in any appeal of this kind in which a partnership is alleged but in which it is not expressly admitted by the appellant that she was a partner, evidence ought to be presented to the tribunal, either by Customs or by the appellant or both, from which the tribunal can decide whether or not a partnership exists. Otherwise the tribunal is unable to discharge its duty of determining the existence of the partnership, which the law assumes will be done before ever the liability of the partners is addressed. One leading textbook that lists the "usual evidence" for proving the existence or otherwise of an alleged partnership is Lindley & Banks on Partnership, 18th Edition (2002), paragraphs 7-30 to 7-34, pages 119-22.
- We have already mentioned that Customs had statutory grounds for presuming that a partnership existed between Mr & Mrs Segger in this instance. Mrs Segger has not provided evidence that she was not a partner. We see no basis, therefore, on which we are justified in concluding that she was not a partner. As mentioned above, the Partnership Act 1890 undoubtedly makes her personally liable for the penalty in dispute if she was her husband's partner in the business.
- However we are equally not satisfied that she was in truth her husband's partner, simply by reason of the lack of evidence in this case. In dismissing the appeal, which in the absence of evidence that Mrs Segger was not a partner we conceive that we should do, we feel that there would nevertheless be a danger of a miscarriage of justice so far as she is concerned. We are of the view that this danger can only properly be met by waiving the penalty in this instance, notwithstanding the proven dishonesty of Mr Segger.
- Section 70(1) of the Act allows the tribunal to reduce the penalty in dispute to such amount, including nil, as the tribunal thinks proper. For the reasons expressed above, we decide that the appeal is allowed to the extent that the penalty is to be reduced to nil.
Costs
- As regards costs, the parties agreed in the Agreement that there should be no order as to costs in relation to the assessments under section 73 of the Act or in respect of the proceedings up to and including the date of the Agreement. That leaves at large only the costs of the final day of the hearing.
- It appears to us that the parties have regarded those costs as costs attributable to the remaining issue of whether Mrs Segger is liable to the penalty assessment. Seeing that we have in effect decided in her favour on that issue, but on the neutral ground that the evidence before the tribunal has not enabled us to make a proper finding as to her liability as partner, which lack of evidence impacts on both parties, it may help the parties to know that our provisional view with regard to the outstanding costs is that there should no order as to those costs either.
- However we direct that the appeal may be restored to the list for the limited purpose of argument as to costs if desired.
MR M S JOHNSON
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE 29/06/2004
MAN/01/0358
Note 1 (although, as will become apparent, Mr Segger was visited by Customs with regard to his VAT affairs prior to that date – indeed we understand that he was first registered for VAT in 1983).
[Back]
Note 2 (which included ground works). [Back]
Note 3 These were further transcriptions of the interviews, the transcripts contained in the first large lever-arch file being manifestly inadequate.
[Back]
Note 4 (see page 4 of the transcript of that interview) [Back]
Note 5 (Mrs Foster did not give evidence)
[Back]
Note 6 I.e. certificates pursuant to the Construction Industry Tax Deduction Scheme – see the Income Tax (Sub-Contractors in the Construction Industry) Regulations 1993 SI 1993/743 (as amended), made under section 566 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988.
[Back]
Note 7 (contrary to what was asserted in a letter dated 13 September 1999 written to Mrs Robertson on Mr Segger’s behalf by Mr I Fleming of Armstrong, Watson & Co, Chartered Accountants)
[Back]
Note 8 (Mr Simmons did not give evidence)
[Back]
Note 9 In a previous appeal, proceeding under reference MAN/00/19, Customs withdrew its opposition to a challenge to these assessments on grounds of lack of evidence, and the appeal of Neil Segger Plant Hire was accordingly allowed, by means of a tribunal direction made on 27 November 2000.
[Back]
Note 10 (i.e. in the letter dated 13 September 1999, mentioned in Footnote 8) [Back]
Note 11 (the same letter refers) [Back]
Note 12 (at page 19 of the transcript in the supplementary bundle) [Back]
Note 13 (at page 2 of the transcript of that interview in the supplementary bundle) [Back]
Note 14 (page 8 of the transcript of the same interview) [Back]
Note 15 (page 8 of the transcript of the interview of March 2000) [Back]
Note 16 (pages 12 & 13 of the transcript of the December 1999 interview, and page 8 of that of the March 2000 interview) [Back]
Note 17 (page 23 of the transcript of the March 2000 interview) [Back]
Note 18 (as Mr Cook informed the tribunal was the case) [Back]
Note 19 (described as “probability of a high degree” – see Gandhi Tandoori Restaurant v C & E Comrs [1989] VATTR 39).
[Back]
Note 20 (see paragraph 51 of the decision) [Back]
Note 21 (see paragraph 23 of the decision) [Back]
Note 22 (see paragraph 49 of the decision in the Islam case; paragraph 23 of the decision in the Mumtaz Paan House case) [Back]
Note 23 This follows from the fact that the only assets of Mr Segger out of which the assessments might be satisfied are those that have vested in the Trustee in Bankruptcy, so that he, rather than the bankrupt, is concerned to continue the appeal (or not, as the case may be) following the onset of the bankruptcy – see Heath v Tang [1993] 1 WLR 1421 at 1424 E – G (Court of Appeal). See also Edward Agop Ahajot, The Count Artsrunik v Waller [2003] SpC 395, a decision of Dr Brice sitting as Special Commissioner. [Back]
Note 24 Despite the fact that the Trustee is prima facie concerned to dispute the liability to the penalty, seeing that, if established, it would be provable in the bankruptcy – see In re Hurren (a bankrupt) [1983] 1 WLR 183 (Walton J). [Back]
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2004/V18673.html