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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Livewire Telecom Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT V20533 (10 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2008/V20533.html Cite as: [2008] BVC 2208, [2008] V & DR 131, [2008] UKVAT V20533, [2008] STI 1161 |
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20533
INPUT TAX – MTIC fraud – contra-trading – whether the Appellant knew or ought to have known about the fraud – no – appeal allowed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
LIVEWIRE TELECOM LIMITED Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: DR JOHN F AVERY JONES CBE (Chairman)
SHEILA WONG CHONG FRICS
Sitting in public in London on 20-23, 26-28 November 2007
David Scorey and Jern-Fei Ng, counsel, instructed by Vantis Tax Limited, for the Appellant
Jeremy Benson QC and David Bedenham, counsel, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2008
DECISION
The facts
The Appellant
(1) The Appellant was incorporated on 1 April 1999 and has, since June 2003, been trading in mobile telephone handsets in the course of business. Approximately 99% of the Appellant's trades are in relation to new mobile telephones (as opposed to used or re-conditioned mobile telephones).
(2) The Appellant is registered for VAT in the United Kingdom (VAT registration number 744 3743 25) and accounts for VAT on a monthly basis.
(3) The sole director and shareholder of the Appellant is Mr Richard Gallant, who is responsible for running the Appellant's business on a day-to-day basis.
(4) From the time of commencement of trading up until March 2006, the Appellant has had each and every one of its claims for recovery of input tax credit met by the Respondents ("Customs").
The deals
(5) The Appellant carried out 14 deals in April 2006.
(6) The Appellant bought goods from only 2 suppliers during this period:
(a) Insignia Telecom (UK) Ltd ("Insignia"); and
(b) Primeline (Europe) Ltd ("Primeline").
(7) The Appellant sold goods to only 4 customers during this period:
(a) Brianstom Investment Ltd ("Brianstom");
(b) Compagnie Internationale de Paris ("CIP");
(c) Lavina Trading Ltd ("Lavina"); and
(d) MK Digital World (Cyprus) Ltd ("MK Digital World").
The decision
(8) On 3 May 2006, the Appellant submitted to Customs a claim for recovery of input tax for the sum of £2,158,459 in respect of the April 2006 period. Notwithstanding this, Customs have subsequently repaid certain amounts of input tax incurred (namely that in relation to freight and overhead charges) amounting to the sum of £10,115.98. The balance of which recovery is being sought is now £2,148,343.02.
(9) Upon receipt of the claim for recovery of input tax, Customs embarked on an "extended verification" exercise which lasted for approximately 7 months.
(10) During the course, and prior to the completion, of Customs' extended verification exercise, judicial review proceedings were brought by the Appellant which subsequently came to an end when the decision to deny recovery of input tax was communicated to the Appellant 2 days prior to the hearing of the application for judicial review.
(11) By way of a letter dated 4 December 2006 from Mrs Sue Bransgrove ("the Decision"), Customs informed the Appellant that they had made the decision to deny recovery of the input tax that was being sought on the following grounds:
"I am satisfied that the transactions set out in the attached appendix form part of an overall scheme to defraud the revenue. I am also satisfied that there are features of those transactions, and conduct on your part, which demonstrate that you knew or should have known that this was the case, in that you either deliberately, or recklessly, ignored factors which indicated that these transactions may have formed part of such an overall scheme."
Customs' pleaded case
(12) By way of a Statement of Case dated 12 January 2007 ("the Statement of Case"), Customs provided details of their case that the transactions entered into by the Appellant in April 2006 formed part of an overall scheme to defraud the Revenue.
(13) It is common ground between the parties that neither the Appellant, nor its suppliers had failed to account properly for the VAT they owed in respect of 14 deals which had been entered into. Customs accept that there were no UK tax losses in the Appellant's direct supply chains.
(14) It is Customs' case that the purported scheme to defraud the Revenue relates to the fraudulent evasions of VAT which are said to have taken place in other supply chains of which the Appellant was not a part, and in relation to contra-trading or "offset" transactions which are said to have been carried out by two traders, Uni-Brand (Europe) Ltd ("Uni-Brand") and Sygnet Computing Ltd ("Sygnet").
(15) It is Customs' case that the fraud is alleged to have involved a number of allegedly missing or defaulting traders in other supply chains which Customs say are connected to the Appellant's direct supply chains because those chains form part of an overall scheme to defraud. The allegedly missing/defaulting traders said to be are:
(a) Amstech Phones Ltd ("Amstech");
(b) Termina Computer Services Ltd ("Termina");
(c) ICM UK Ltd ("ICM");
(d) Performance Europe Ltd ("Performance Europe");
(e) Data Solutions Northern Ltd ("Data Solutions");
(f) Callender Group ("Callender");
(g) MG Components ("MG Components");
(h) Alpha Sim Ltd ("Alpha Sim");
(i) Midwest Communications Ltd ("Midwest");
(j) Anfell Traders ("Anfell");
(k) Park Supplies Ltd ("Park");
(l) Colston Associates Ltd ("Colston");
(m) Bullfinch Systems Ltd ("Bullfinch") and
(n) Eclipse Windows, Doors and Conservatories Ltd ("Eclipse")
(16) It is not alleged that in the 14 transactions subject to this appeal, the Appellant ever bought directly from, or sold to, any of the allegedly missing, defaulting or contra-trading traders.
(17) It is common ground that none of the goods in the allegedly "dirty" supply chains (in which fraudulent evasions of VAT are said to have occurred) were ever traded in the Appellant's own "clean" supply chains.
Introduction to contra-trading
The clean chains
No | Date Apr 06 | Goods | Importer | Inter-mediate sale | Seller to Aplt and price | Purchaser from Aplt, price and mark-up | Next purchaser |
1 | 21 | 5,000 Moto V3I | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £141.50 | Lavina (Cy) £148.50 (4.2%) | Olympic (NL) |
2 | 21 | 15,000 N 3230 | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £131.50 | MK DW (Cy) £138 (4.9%) | Olympic (NL) |
3 | 21 | 15,000 N 3230 | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £131.50 | MK DW (Cy) £138 (4.9%) | Olympic (NL) |
4 | 21 | 750 N 9500 | Sygnet | Atomic | Insignia £302 | CIP (Fr) £317 (4.9%) | Pol Comm Trading (Po) |
5 | 21 | 3,000 N 6680 | Sygnet | Atomic | Insignia £157.50 | CIP (Fr) £165.25 (4.9%) | Pol Comm Trading (Po) |
6 | 21 | 2,000 N 8800 | Sygnet | Atomic | Primeline £401 | CIP (Fr) £421 (5%) | Pol Comm Trading (Po) |
7 | 21 | 3,000 N 7380 | Sygnet | Atomic | Primeline £251 | Brianstom (Cy) £263.50 (5%) | Ascom (Den) |
8 | 21 | 3,000 SE W900I | Sygnet | Atomic | Insignia £272.50 | Brianstom (Cy) £286 (4.9%) | Ascom (Den) |
9 | 21 | 1,000 N 9300i | Sygnet | Atomic | Insignia £308.50 | Brianstom (Cy) £324 (5%) | Ascom (Den) |
10 | 21 | 4,000 Nokia N90 | Sygnet | Atomic | Insignia £265 | Brianstom (Cy) £378.25 (4.3%) | Ascom (Den) |
11 | 25 | 5,000 N 6630 | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £141.50 | MK DW (Cy) £148.50 (4.9%) | Olympic (NL) |
12 | 25 | 6,000 N 6630 | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £141.50 | MK DW (Cy) £148.50 (4.9%) | Olympic (NL) |
13 | 26 | 6,500 N 6630 | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £141.50 | MK DW (Cy) £148.50 (4.9%) | Olympic (NL) |
14 | 26 | 5,000 N 6630 | Uni-Brand | - | Insignia £141.50 | MK DW (Cy) £148.50 (4.9%) | Olympic (NL) |
MKDW=MK Digital World; CIP=Compagnie Internationale de Paris
Cy=Cyprus; NL=the Netherlands; Fr=France; Po=Poland; Den=Denmark.
N=Nokia; Moto=Motorola; SE=Sony Ericsson.
We make two additional points on the deal chains:
(1) The reason for the absence of any deals before 21 April 2006 is that it was only on 20 April 2006 that the Appellant's VAT repayment claim for 03/06 was approved and without it the Appellant could not trade. The Appellant had been speaking to the parties to line up the deals before then.
(2) Lavina and Brianstom have the same director and shareholder. The director of Atomic is the brother of the director of Sygnet.
The dirty chains
Further findings of fact
(1) Mr Gallant has worked in the mobile phone industry since 1996, first in his father's company (Eurodale Manufacturing Limited) and then since 2003 with the Appellant (which had existed since 1999 and had changed its name from Livewire Business Limited on his acquisition of it in 2003; he had acquired an existing company with a VAT registration so that he could trade immediately).
(2) The Appellant's business is that of wholesale broker (exporter) of mobile phones, 99 per cent of which are new phones. The Appellant aims to make a profit margin of 4 to 7 per cent. On the deals with which we are concerned it made around 4.9 and 5 per cent on all deals except for one at 4.2 per cent (see the table above). Shipping costs are £1 to £1.75 per unit; inspection and scanning for IMEI [international mobile equipment identity] numbers 10p to 40p per unit; insurance 0.25 per cent of the selling price. Its turnover in the first 15 months was £48m, reducing to £25m in the next year the reduction being caused partly by a commercial (not VAT) fraud of which they were the victim in September 2004. Phones are covered by insurance of £125m. The Appellant tries not to hold stock because it cannot afford to tie up money in stock and also because manufacturers such as Nokia and Sony tend to reduce prices of phones several times a year without warning.
(3) The normal pattern of trading by the Appellant is that after negotiations which start with a prospective customer wanting a particular quantity of phones with a delivery date, the Appellant tries to source such requirement and then informs the customer. The customer issues a purchase order, followed by the Appellant issuing a purchase order. Goods are inspected on behalf of the Appellant by an independent inspection company before they are released by the supplier. The inspection includes noting the IMEI numbers. The Appellant obtained Dun & Bradstreet credit checks on both the supplier and the customer because this was recommended by Customs, although the Appellant doubted the usefulness of this since they sold for cash and the goods were not released until they had been paid. The Appellant also obtained a declaration from its supplier that it was not selling at a price lower than its purchase price, and that it had carried out a list of checks on its supplier. The Appellant obtained a declaration from its customer that the goods would not be supplied to a UK customer if shipped to the UK, and that if any IMEI numbers (see below) of the phones sold are found to be supplied to the Appellant again the Appellant will not make any further supplies to that customer. Primeline reserved title to goods until payment. The Appellant reserved title to the goods until payment.
(4) Mr Gallant was unaware of the concept of contra-trading until late autumn 2006 when he was informed by Customs, which is after the deals with which we are concerned. He was unaware of the existence of Uni-Brand and Sygnet until late 2006.
(5) The grey market in phones arises because official distributors are required to estimate their requirements several months in advance of delivery for which they will offer a discounted price. For example official distributors for Nokia are generally expected to order 50,000 phones per month to qualify for a retrospective discount ("marketing money"). They will tend to over-order with the result that unwanted stock ("overstocks") is then sold in the grey market. The Appellant deals extensively with an Eastern Europe official Nokia distributor (with the full knowledge of Nokia) which sells its overstocks in Europe, which are imported into the UK by the Appellant (having 2-pin chargers) and then sold to UK wholesale customers. In the market there is no discount for bulk. Phones are sold at a particular price regardless of the number.
(6) The Appellant was visited by Customs on 23 September 2003, 11 November 2003, 15 December 2003, 21-22 January 2004, 23 February 2004, 20 April 2004, 16 June 2004, 5 August 2004, 14 October 2004, 10 November 2004, 7 December 2004, 27 January 2005, 10 February 2005, 9 March 2005, 13 April 2005, 12 May 2005 (joint and several liability discussed and Appellant advised not to make or receive third-party payments), 15 June 2005, 5 October 2005, 2 February 2006. Repayments were in all cases approved following these visits. During this period the points allocated for compliance improved. On 9 May 2006 officers visited the Appellant to collect records relating to the 04/06 return.
(7) In June 2005 the Royal Bank of Scotland informed the Appellant that its accounts would be closed, which they were on 17 August 2005. The Appellant opened an account with Arab Bank plc in June 2005, which was found to be too slow and expensive. On 20 August the Appellant opened an account with HSBC that was used only for paying wages and other overheads. On 31 August 2005 the Appellant opened an account with First Curacao International Bank ("FCIB").
(8) Every mobile phone has a unique IMEI number. The Appellant arranges to scan these numbers on all phones with which it deals, which are entered into a database that searches for numbers that have been the subject of earlier deals. The Appellant also checks a random sample of IMEI numbers to verify that they are genuine and that the number corresponds with the correct phone model. These numbers were passed by the Appellant to Customs from 1 November 2004. No matches of IMEI numbers were ever found by the Appellant indicating that it had not dealt with any particular phone more than once. Collecting these numbers is not a requirement in Notice 726 and passing these numbers to Customs is a benefit to Customs for which the Appellant, as mentioned above, has to pay 10p to 40p per unit. Customs collect IMEI numbers and put them on a database called Nemesis which is not accessible to anyone outside Customs. This showed that 1,979 of the phones in deals 2 and 3 were previously exported on 28 February 2006 to Switzerland, and 1,500 of them were exported to Dubai on 5 March 2006; 512 were exported to Dubai on 7 March 2006; and 456 were exported to Dubai on 30 March 2006. This information was not available to the Appellant.
(9) The Appellant carried out all the checks suggested in Notice 726 on its customers and suppliers, plus collecting the IMEI numbers. The Appellant's due diligence measures were implemented by Mr Bridger who was head of the Abbey National Building Society's investment fraud team from 1988 to 1998.
(10) As a result of Customs denying the recovery of input tax for April 2006 which is the subject of this appeal, the Appellant was forced to cease trading on 1 May 2006 and all the employees were made redundant. In consequence, the Appellant has been unable to pay its corporation tax, freight forwarding charges of over £58,000 and insurance premiums of about £42,000, and has incurred borrowings of £850,000. From the start of the reverse charge regime on 1 June 2007 the Appellant commenced trading again but trading has been restricted because of cash flow problems, and Customs have informed the Appellant that all non-reverse charge deals will be subject to extended verification before input tax is repaid.
(11) Mr Whitehouse's company TMT First Limited specialises in re-programming and re-configuring mobile phones (known as flashing) from premises of 1,000 square metres employing between 14 and 40 staff. It has over 70 workstations used for this purpose. Mobile phones are essentially identical pieces of hardware. The manufacturer will install its own software dealing with such things as the language. For example Nokia have a single program that enables a phone to be used in most European countries with re-programming. Phones may be programmed to work only on a specific network such as Vodafone or Orange. Phones can be re-programmed to work in other markets (except the US which uses a different configuration) or with other networks. Flashing can take between five seconds and an hour (most not needing the longer programming) and costs between £2 and £8 per handset. The Appellant has in the past had phones flashed for between £1 and £2.75 per handset. One technician can flash a number of phones at the same time. Chargers can be changed from two to three pin and vice versa for £2 to £4 per phone without any change to the phone itself. The Appellant has in the past purchased chargers separately. None of the phones in the deals with which we are concerned were flashed nor were the chargers changed.
The law
"46 An obligation on the tax authorities to take account, in order to determine whether a given transaction constitutes a supply by a taxable person acting as such and an economic activity, of the intention of a trader other than the taxable person concerned involved in the same chain of supply and/or the possible fraudulent nature of another transaction in the chain, prior or subsequent to the transaction carried out by that taxable person, of which that taxable person had no knowledge and no means of knowledge, would a fortiori be contrary to those objectives.
47 As the Advocate General observed in point 27 of his Opinion, each transaction must therefore be regarded on its own merits and the character of a particular transaction in the chain cannot be altered by earlier or subsequent events.
…
52 Nor can the right to deduct input VAT of a taxable person who carries out such transactions be affected by the fact that in the chain of supply of which those transactions form part another prior or subsequent transaction is vitiated by VAT fraud, without that taxable person knowing or having any means of knowing."
"51 In the light of the foregoing, it is apparent that traders who take every precaution which could reasonably be required of them to ensure that their transactions are not connected with fraud, be it the fraudulent evasion of VAT or other fraud, must be able to rely on the legality of those transactions without the risk of losing their right to deduct the input VAT (see, to that effect, Case C-384/04 Federation of Technological Industries and Others [2006] ECR I-0000, paragraph 33).
52 It follows that, where a recipient of a supply of goods is a taxable person who did not and could not know that the transaction concerned was connected with a fraud committed by the seller, Article 17 of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as meaning that it precludes a rule of national law under which the fact that the contract of sale is void, by reason of a civil law provision which renders that contract incurably void as contrary to public policy for unlawful basis of the contract attributable to the seller, causes that taxable person to lose the right to deduct the VAT he has paid. It is irrelevant in this respect whether the fact that the contract is void is due to fraudulent evasion of VAT or to other fraud.
…
56 In the same way, a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was taking part in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT must, for the purposes of the Sixth Directive, be regarded as a participant in that fraud, irrespective of whether or not he profited by the resale of the goods.
57 That is because in such a situation the taxable person aids the perpetrators of the fraud and becomes their accomplice."
The Court therefore allows the existence of two possible alternativess: (1) that the recipient of a supply did not, and could not, know of the fraud committed by the other party to the contract, with the result that he is entitled to deduct the input tax; or (2) that he did know, or should have known, that he was taking part in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, with the result that he is not so entitled because he is a participant in the fraud and an accomplice of the fraudster. A person who takes every precaution which could reasonably be required of them to ensure that their transactions are not connected with fraud falls into the former category because by taking those precautions he could not have known of the fraud. In the same way in Teleos, Case C-409/04 the Court has again protected the innocent party to a contract where, unknown to it, the other party is a fraudster by preventing Customs from reopening its entitlement to recover input tax on the export:
"50 Accordingly, it would be contrary to the principle of legal certainty if a Member State which has laid down the conditions for the application of the exemption of intra-Community supplies by prescribing, among other things, a list of the documents to be presented to the competent authorities, and which has accepted, initially, the documents presented by the supplier as evidence establishing entitlement to the exemption, could subsequently require that supplier to account for the VAT on that supply, where it transpires that, because of the purchaser's fraud, of which the supplier had and could have had no knowledge, the goods concerned did not actually leave the territory of the Member State of supply."
"81… Both under European law and under United Kingdom law the burden of proof normally rests on the taxpayer or taxable person to claim the advantage of any benefit or exception…. It follows from the approach traditionally taken in tax systems such as that in the United Kingdom that the taxpayer or taxable person is the person that has or should have full knowledge of relevant matters about income or transactions, and it is therefore that person on whom any burden of proof should rest. The alternative requires both the imposition of, and the extensive use of, intrusive information powers against all taxpayers or taxable persons."
The Tribunal concluded at [85]:
"Nor does it accept that shifting the burden to the Appellant imposes an impossible or disproportionate burden on it. The tribunal's answer to question (1) is that it must be shown that the taxable person neither knew nor had the means of knowing of any fraud. But that is tested by seeing if the taxable person that had no direct knowledge of the fraud had taken proportionate steps to enquire. The tribunal sees no inherent excessive difficulty in a taxable person establishing what it did or did not know at a particular time, and the steps that it took before and at that time to ensure it met to the required standard the obligation put on it to enquire."
Mr Scorey contends that it is Customs who are contending for an exception to the general principle of the right to deduction of input tax and so the burden should be on them. Again, we consider that the difference between the parties is not great. Both the Appellant and Customs have given evidence and so it is only if the Tribunal is doubtful about the result that the point arises, and in the light of our decision it does not arise. There is no need for us to make a decision on this point.
"82 Mr Crow for the Secretary of State said that his preferred position was that the standard to be applied in these proceedings should be the civil standard. His submission, as it was put in his written case, was that although the civil standard was a single, inflexible test, the inherent probability or improbability of an event was a matter to be taken into account when the evidence was being assessed. He maintained that this view was consistent with the position for which he contended, that these were civil proceedings which should be decided according to the civil evidence rules. But it is not an invariable rule that the lower standard of proof must be applied in civil proceedings. I think that there are good reasons, in the interests of fairness, for applying the higher standard when allegations are made of criminal or quasi-criminal conduct which, if proved, would have serious consequences for the person against whom they are made."
The heightened civil standard was found to be virtually indistinguishable from the criminal standard. The House of Lords held that, given the seriousness of the matters involved, the court should be satisfied to the criminal standard of proof that a defendant had acted in an anti-social manner before making an anti-social behaviour order.
"It would need more cogent evidence to satisfy one that the creature seen walking in Regent's Park was more likely than not to have been a lioness than to be satisfied to the same standard of probability that it was an Alsatian. In this basis, cogent evidence is generally required to satisfy a civil tribunal that a person has been fraudulent or behaved in some other reprehensible manner. But the question is always whether the tribunal thinks it more probable than not."
Here we are not concerned with a penalty but with much the less serious issue of whether input tax is recoverable. It would be illogical if VAT penalties for fraud were decided on the basis of the civil standard applying Lord Hoffmann's approach but that recovery of input tax in alleged MTIC fraud cases was decided on the basis of a more stringent standard of proof. We therefore consider that the reasons applicable in McCann are not present here and we should not depart from the civil standard applied in accordance with Lord Hoffmann's approach, even though McCann is a later authority.
Preliminary matters
Reasons for our decision on the facts
Tax loss
"54. If, as I conclude, Kittel sanctions the action by the Revenue in this case, on the assumed facts, then Mr Lasok is right that the effect of those principles will need to be worked through, depending upon the precise facts, in the slightly different circumstance of a contra-trade chain. Even in relation to a defaulter chain itself, where the right to refuse deductions is expressly sanctioned by Kittel, the kind of questions which Mr Lasok canvasses, of penalty and multiple recovery, might arise, but it is certainly true that they are more likely to arise once the principle applies to an additional chain."
Mr Benson told us that the losses in the sample chains attributed to this appeal have not been used elsewhere, and that if he succeeded in this appeal they would not be used in the future, the position about their use being clear from this decision. We are prepared to accept this assurance, particularly as the point does not arise in our decision.
The fraud
"My opinion is that Sygnet acts upon instructions from a controlling mind. So the answer to your question, sir, is, no, I do not think that Sygnet knew he was taking part in a fraud."
Later he said:
"Q. Therefore, do I take it, it is your evidence that, to the extent there is in this case a contra trading transaction, as you call it, which is not sufficient to balance out the other tax liability, there are two possibilities that you are positing to the Tribunal: One is just sheer incompetence on the part of those running Sygnet and the other is that they were told to do it or to do some of the deals, not necessarily all? Is that right?
A. I don't think it is incompetence, sir, I think -- he has completed the deals so he is quite competent in doing it. The question is really whether he did as he was told, which is my suspicion."
Similarly, in relation to Uni-Brand, Mr Lam said:
"Q. Let us deal with those individually. Let us take deal 60, which we have seen from deal sheets begins with Eclipse. Are you say[ing] that Uni-Brand knew of that fraud by Eclipse?
A. No, I am not saying that, no, sir.
Q. I am going to ask you the same question in respect of the remaining four. Did it know of the fraud by Eclipse --
A. I think it might be partly saying that, you know, to the first --
Q. The same for all?
A. Yes."
Later he said:
"Q. In paragraph 28 you say: 'As mentioned previously, it appears that Uni[-Brand] has organised its affairs in such a way that there is a split.' Is it right that what you are saying there is that Uni-Brand has deliberately organised its affairs in such a manner?
A. Based on the information, it appears so, sir."
In both cases the first and second answers appear to be inconsistent and do not support Customs' case on the involvement of those two companies in a fraud.
The Appellant's connections with the fraud
Knowledge or means of knowledge
(1) The pattern of the 14 deals suggests that they were contrived. It is unlikely that such a pattern would arise by chance. Our table in paragraph 8 above shows some sort of pattern, for example that Uni-Brand imports end up with Olympic, while Sygnet's end up with Pol Comm or Ascom. But this implies knowledge of the identity of the purchaser from the Appellant's purchaser which the Appellant could not have, and certainly could not have at the time of entering into its transactions. While we accept the existence of some sort of odd pattern, it is not indicative of fraud and is certainly not something the Appellant could have known about.
(2) The Appellant makes onward supplies to customers known to be involved in fraud, such as Brianstom and Pol Comm, about whom there is information obtained from mutual assistance that indicated involvement with fraud. Mr Scorey rightly contends that this assumes what Customs are trying to prove. On the assumption that these companies are involved in fraud, about which we have no other evidence, this does not suggest that the Appellant knew that they were.
(3) The deals were all back-to back, nobody held any stock and the same quantity of goods passed down the whole chain. This is much more a criticism of how trade is conducted in this market, which was described without any disapproval by Moses J in R (Teleos) v Customs and Excise Commissioners [2004] All ER (D) 73 (May) at [80]-[84], than an indication of the Appellant's knowledge. Mr Scorey pointed out that many normal commercial disputes arise through back to back transactions in the same quantities of goods, such as with bills of lading. There is also nothing different in the transactions in this period from the Appellant's earlier transactions that Customs had approved.
(4) All 14 deals took place on three days. Mr Scorey points out that there were negotiations that took place earlier, and the Appellant's telephone log was produced showing many calls being made. The deals could and, we find, would, have taken place earlier if Customs had made the previous month's repayment earlier, this being required to fund the VAT on the purchases. Customs were therefore the cause of this point. Again, transactions on the same day were described as perfectly normal in Teleos.
(5) The terms of business of the Appellant's suppliers were effectively sale or return. We find that this was not the case. Mr Gallant's witness statement could be read in the way suggested by Mr Benson. We believe that the reason is that Mr Gallant thought that if his supplier reserved title (as did Primeline) the Appellant could return the goods without adverse consequences so long as they had not been paid for. Mr Gallant's oral evidence was that he needed to take title to the goods for insurance purposes and that if the Appellant's sale went off he was in a stronger bargaining position if he had not paid for the goods. There is nothing unusual in itself in title passing on the contract (indeed if this is not to occur the seller has to reserve title as a term of the contract). This is different from saying that the seller was obliged to take them back.
(6) The Appellant was paid by its customers before it paid its suppliers, but held title to the phones, which was too good to be true. Mr Gallant responded that taking title was a requirement of his insurance, and he deliberately did not sell on credit. We agree that the Appellant was fortunate to be able to trade on such terms but there is nothing sinister about selling for cash and buying on credit; that is exactly what, for example, retailers do all the time (although we appreciate the Appellant was not a retailer).
(7) In all the 14 deals the phones were exported to a warehouse in Uithoorn, the Netherlands (which we believe is near Schiphol airport in Amsterdam). The purchasers under those deals were Lavina (Cyprus), MK Digital World (Cyprus), CIP (France), and Brianstom (Cyprus), none of which is in the Netherlands. Mr Gallant responded that he did not find this odd. It was a secure warehouse and CIP and some of the other companies wanted them delivered to the Netherlands, and the others were content for them to be sent there. Mr Scorey pointed out that 83.5 per cent of the total number of phones (63.8 per cent by value) were immediately sold on to Olympic, a Dutch company. Again, we agree that this is an unusual feature, but does not in itself indicate knowledge (or means of knowledge) of a fraud.
(8) The Appellant's due diligence was flawed in particular by:
(a) Primeline, according to the Dun and Bradstreet report of 28 February 2006, had a negative worth and a credit rating of £9,000. Although the Appellant was buying on credit this suggests that Primeline might not be able to pay its suppliers thus risking the supply of goods to the Appellant and its customers. Primeline had not been visited by the Appellant until 4 May 2006 which is after the deals. Mr Scorey pointed out that 12 of the 14 deals were with Insignia, which had a credit rating of £500,000, resulting in a VAT reclaim of over £1.8m, and the reclaim referable to purchases from Primeline was £272,125. Mr Gallant had limited interest in credit ratings since the Appellant sold for cash and the supplier's credit rating was more of a matter for its supplier.
(b) Insignia was not visited by the Appellant before the deals and a trade reference came from JAG Telecom which was not known to the Appellant.
(c) No meaningful checks were undertaken into the Appellant's customers even though the Appellant was at risk from having exported the goods if it were not paid.
(d) Lavina's introduction letter stated that the company dealt in mobile phones for the Cyprus market as well as Europe but the Dun and Bradstreet report stated that it did not sell there.
(e) Lavina and Brianstom shared the same director and the Appellant did not ask why two companies were needed.
(f) Tax losses were also found in deal chains in the 08/05 and 03/06 period thus demonstrating that due diligence checks were not adequate.
(g) Trade references were not taken up and those that were did not ask for any figures and so were useless. The Appellant's standard form asked the referee to say "I confirm that I have dealt with […] since […] during which time they have always made payments reliably, in full and on time. I can confidently recommend […] as a solid and reliable supplier/customer, and experts in their field."
We quite agree that the due diligence was flawed and we are surprised that the Appellant did not take this more seriously, particularly as they had already been victims of a fraud. We suspect that much of the due diligence was carried out because Customs asked to see it on their monthly visits, rather than because the Appellant thought it assisted them. So far as trading risk was concerned Mr Gallant may have relied on his hunch as a businessman, which is not an indication that he knew about a fraud. There are also explanations for several of the above items. For example, the Dun and Bradstreet report on Primeline does not indicate that it was then trading in mobile phones (an associated company Primeline Telecom Limited is mentioned) and the latest accounts referred to were those to 31 December 2004. Another Dun & Bradstreet report of 21 April 2006 stated that Lavina was an "IBC (offshore company)." We have no evidence about this but even if it was prohibited from engaging in the Cyprus market as the Dun & Bradstreet report stated, presumably it could sell outside Cyprus to an importer into Cyprus; indeed, how would the Appellant know what its purchaser intended to do with the goods? With regard to Lavina and Brianstom, we are certainly not prepared to draw any conclusions against the use of two companies by the same person. It is worth pointing out that even if the Appellant had conducted perfect due diligence on its suppliers and customers it could not have indicated the fraud by the missing traders in the dirty chain. While the trade references would have been better if they had included figures we could understand a referee's reluctance to include figures, and we do not accept that such references were useless.
(9) Many of the companies referred to including the Appellant (but not Insignia) had bank accounts with the FCIB, which is currently the subject of a criminal investigation by the Dutch tax administration in relation to money laundering. Mr Gallant responds that they offered 24 hour banking and an online service that could not be obtained anywhere else. He had difficulty in obtaining banking facilities after the Royal Bank of Scotland refused to deal with mobile phone traders, and HSBC would have an account only for payment of overheads. We agree that this feature is odd but Mr Gallant's evidence of 24 hour banking could have been the reason for the general use of FCIB by mobile phone traders in the grey market, who are not necessarily engaged in fraudulent deals. The investigation by the Dutch authorities was after the time of the deals and so the Appellant had no reason to be suspicious about FCIB until he heard about the allegations in August 2006.
(1) Mr Gallant was fully aware of the risks of MTIC fraud. His father's company had been assessed in connection with its involvement in a carousel fraud, the assessment being subsequently withdrawn. Customs officers had regularly visited him to verify repayments and discussed MTIC fraud. None of this is disputed. We do not consider that this is relevant.
(2) Brianstom (the purchaser in four transactions) in its purchase order specified "no customs stamps" for which there was no legitimate explanation and which would facilitate the goods being used in carousel chains. Mr Gallant responded in oral evidence that he told the director that he could not guarantee that Customs would not stamp the goods on export, which the director accepted. He considered that the requirement meant no older Customs stamps, which we accept as probable since clearly the Appellant would have no control over the existence of Customs stamps on the goods leaving the UK after the Appellant had sold them. On the other hand, in his witness statement Mr Gallant said that he understood the requirement to mean that the phones should be new as opposed to used or reconditioned. We do not accept this as we doubt if the purchase order for what we assume is a current model of phone could be understood by anyone concerned as relating to second-hand phones. We find that this point is ambiguous in relation to knowledge of fraud. It could be either that Brianstom wanted to start a fraud with clean looking goods, or it could be the opposite that it wanted to deal only with goods that had not been in and out of the country which might have been involved in a fraud. We do not therefore give any weight to this point.
(3) The phones are of Central European specification. Mobile phones are not manufactured in the UK and so must have been imported. Mr Gallant's response is that UK phones are within the Central European specification and the only difference is the two pin charger, which could be changed, and the language of the manual which was often in several languages. We consider that Customs have misunderstood the meaning of Central European specification. It is certainly odd that phones with two pin chargers have been imported into the UK (since they are not manufactured here) but in itself this does not mean that the Appellant had knowledge of a fraud when it was exporting them to countries that would require two pin chargers. However, the Appellant did not (on this occasion) import them and if it found in the UK market goods that it required for the export market we do not draw any adverse inference from this.
(4) The Appellant could have sourced European specification telephones from the continent thereby limiting the risk of becoming involved in fraud. Mr Gallant responds that he had purchased phones with two pin chargers from Nokia distributors in the UK. We suspect that the reason for not sourcing the phones abroad is that the Appellant, which only does export transactions, finds it much easier to source the phones in the UK market with which it was familiar. The fact that it can do such business suggests that the customer finds a lower price in the UK than in its home market.
(5) Mr Barnett suggested that the Appellant check with the freight forwarder how many times the phones had been traded while in the freight forwarders' warehouse. Mr Gallant responds that he could not get an answer from Mr Barnett as to how many times should make him suspicious. We do not think this information would have helped even if it had been obtained. In seven of the cases there was only one deal between the importer and the Appellant and in the other seven there were two, which would not have excited suspicion.
(6) The Chairman in Calltell had said he found it impossible to believe that day after day many thousands of surplus phones are released onto the grey market to pass through the hands of several traders before finding a willing buyer in another member state. We have found as a fact how the grey market arises (see paragraph 12(5)) about which we see nothing suspicious. The evidence may have been different in Calltell.
(7) In the 04/06 period CIP was directly supplied by Primeline, demonstrating that the Appellant's involvement in deal 6 was unnecessary. Although not relied on, we notice that Sygnet also sold to that company in deal 33. The most that this indicates is that CIP knew of the existence of Primeline (and Sygnet); it does not indicate that on 21 April 2006 when the company wanted to purchase particular phones to fulfil its order from Pol Comm, Primeline could supply them on the right delivery terms. We notice that two of the three orders were supplied to the Appellant by Insignia and not Primeline.
(8) The Appellant stated in its letter introducing itself that it was established in 1999 to supply cellular products within the global wholesale sector. Mr Gallant agreed that while the Appellant had been established in 1999 it did not deal in phones until 2004. We are hardly surprised to find advertising material that does not tell the whole truth.
(9) Mr Bridger told officer Mrs Bransgrove that the Appellant knew that there was no missing trader in their chains, from which Mr Barnett drew the inference that the Appellant must have known all the other traders in their supply chains in order to state this. Mr Gallant explained that how he knew this was because on being informed by Mrs Bransgrove on 20 June 2007 that there were irregularities in the supply chain leading to the Appellant, he contacted both Insignia and Primeline to obtain confirmation that there was nothing irregular in the chains. This they confirmed without disclosing any names and therefore he was able to make the statement to Mrs Bransgrove on the telephone on 30 June 2007. There was therefore an innocent explanation about the Appellant's ability to make this statement.
JOHN F AVERY JONES
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 10 January 2008
LON/06/1365
Note 1 We are using this expression to differentiate this chain from the undoubtedly dirty chain, without intending to pre-judge the issue of whether it is in fact clean, or part of an overall fraud, as Customs contends. [Back]