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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions >> Peet v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT(Excise) E01111 (14 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/Excise/2008/E01111.html Cite as: [2008] UKVAT(Excise) E1111, [2008] UKVAT(Excise) E01111 |
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E01111
EXCISE DUTY – restoration of goods – cigarettes and tobacco – appeal against re-review ordered by previous tribunal – "guideline" amounts not exceeded – some of the goods intended to be provided on a non-profit basis to others – on re-review part of the goods was to be restored - re-review decision reasonable – appeal dismissed
MANCHESTER TRIBUNAL CENTRE
BRIAN JOSEPH PEET Appellants
- and -
HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: Ian Vellins (Chairman)
Arthur Brown (Member)
Sitting in public in Manchester on 6 March 2008
The Appellant appeared in person
Katie Jones, counsel, instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2008
The appeal
The background
The interview
The original review decision of Mr. Crouch
"On the one trip you have spent £456 in cash. It is not reasonable for a person who is barely able to save £10 a week from their sole source of income, which is derived from state benefits and who has no savings apart from money you have left, to have spent just over five weeks' income on a consumable product. I consider it implausible that you have funded this purchase from savings that you have made "over the years". It is even more implausible if you take into account your further expenditure of approximately £200 on cigarettes and tobacco four weeks previously. It is more likely that you have been paid by others in advance in order to fund this purchase. Looking at the tobacco and cigarettes that you maintain you purchased on that earlier trip, 800 cigarettes and 40 pouches of tobacco, you told the office that you had 160 cigarettes left and 8 pouches of tobacco. You told the office that you smoked both cigarettes and tobacco and that you smoked 20 to 30 cigarettes per day. Therefore in a four week period you have smoked 640 cigarettes and have got through 30 pouches of tobacco, apart from the odd ones given to your brothers. It is generally accepted that 80 to 100 cigarettes can be obtained from a pouch of tobacco. That means that in the period in question you have smoked in the region of 3,000 cigarettes. This represents a consumption rate of approximately 100 cigarettes per day compared to your declared 20 to 30 cigarettes per day, which would mean that if you were awake for 16 hours per day you would have to consume one cigarette every ten minutes, which stretches the bounds of credulity beyond acceptable levels. I can only conclude that from the excise goods you'd purchased previously were disposed of by other means than your personal consumption, ie disposed of commercially and that the tobacco goods purchased on this occasion were also destined for commercial disposal and should therefore not normally be restored. I am of the opinion that non-restoration is fair, reasonable and proportionate in these circumstances. I have found no reason for disapplying the policy of Customs and no exceptional circumstances."
The hearing before Mr. Johnson's tribunal
"14. The reasons why the Appellant did not proceed with his court challenge were firstly that it was going to be too expensive and secondly that he trusted that justice would nevertheless be done by this tribunal. The review decision does not seem to us to take proper account of that background.
- We think that the reasons for the Appellant in this case not having argued his case before the Magistrates Court are good ones. They are the reasons stated in paragraphs 14 of this decision. Those reasons should have been taken into account by the reviewing officer.
- The imported goods did not exceed the "guidelines" amounts. We find that the Appellant believed that if he limited his importation of cigarettes and tobacco to those amounts, it could not reasonably be assumed against him that the importation was for commercial purposes. That was a circumstance that it does not appear to use that the reviewing officer took into account in reaching the decision.
- In tribunal the Appellant told us, and we accept, that some of the cigarettes and tobacco were acquired in the knowledge that they would probably be surplus to his own consumption requirements. We find that this aspect of the matter was touched on but not fully clarified in interview. It appears that he intended to pass onto others some of the cigarettes and tobacco, and the recipients from the Appellant would pay him at cost price what they received, on the basis that the Appellant could not afford to make gifts. We are told, and we accept, that it was not a case of the recipients having commissioned the Appellant to buy cigarettes or tobacco for them; rather it was a case of the Appellant having available some spare cigarettes and tobacco that he might provide at cost price if not needed by him."
The review decision of Mr. David Cawthraw
"When your goods were seized you were issued with Notice 12A, What You Can Do If Things Are Seized By Customs. This explained the options open to you. You initially challenged the legality of the seizure and completed the appeal letter from notice 12A but did not sign the document. Concurrently you requested restoration of the goods. Your letter dated 15 May 2006 clearly stated that although you wished to challenge the legality of the seizure you could not afford to do so. This was taken, reasonably in my view, that you wished to withdraw from those proceedings. You said that you could not afford to challenge the legality of the seizure and I assumed by those comments you meant the travel costs involved in travelling to Dover. I note that this aspect does not deter you from travelling to Dover and to buy excise goods abroad though in any case you could have requested a Magistrates Court hearing nearer to your home address. Furthermore Notice 12A fully explained the restoration and appeals procedures. That said I accept that Customs could have sought clarification from you at that stage and explained to you the available options."
"You told the officer that you smoked 20-30 cigarettes a day and on your previous trip, a month earlier, you had bought 800 cigarettes and 40 pouches of tobacco. You claimed you had 8 pouches and 160 cigarettes left from that trip. That means that you had consumed or given away 640 cigarettes and 32 pouches. Your own consumption in a 30 day period would have been, using an average of 25 cigarettes a day, 750 cigarettes.
It is generally accepted that one can obtain 80/100 cigarettes from a 50 gramme pouch of tobacco. Therefore in the remaining 32 pouches you had the equivalent of 2,880 cigarettes (90 (average per pouch) x 32 = 2.880). When this is added to the 640 tailor made cigarettes, this totals 3,520; less your own consumption of 750 cigarettes = 2,770 cigarettes passed to others at cost price. This figure represents 78.69% (or 79% rounded up) of the total goods. Your share therefore is equal to 21%. I have used this percentage to calculate the split of tobacco goods in this case: 3kg tobacco x 21% = 0.6kg rounded down. 3,200 x 21% = 675 cigarettes rounded up. These goods should be restored to you free of charge. The remaining goods should not be restored to you as they were to be passed to others at cost price and this was a second offence."
Evidence at hearing of appeal
Findings of fact and law and conclusions
MAN/2007/8057
Ian Vellins
CHAIRMAN
Release Date: 14 May 2008