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Neutral Citation
Number: [2009] EWHC 1150 (Ch)
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Case No: CH/2009/APP/0066
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IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
CHANCERY DIVISION
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Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
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22/05/2009
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B e f o r e :
THE CHANCELLOR OF THE HIGH COURT
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Between:
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BLUE SPHERE GLOBAL LTD
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Appellant
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- and -
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE &
CUSTOMS
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Respondent
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Mr Michael Patchett-Joyce
& Mr James Rickards (instructed by Messrs Thomas
Cooper) for the Appellant
Ms Melanie Hall QC & Mr Jonathan Hall (instructed by Messrs Howes Percival)
for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 13th and 14th May 2009
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor :
Introduction
- Blue Sphere
Global Ltd ("BSG") carried on business as a distributor of
computer equipment. It was registered for VAT purposes on 11th November
2004. In April 2006 it entered into two pairs of transactions. The first
pair ("A") related to the purchase and sale of 10,550 Nokia
N8800 mobile phones, the second ("B") to the purchase and sale
of 4,300 Nokia and Samsung mobile phones. The relevant details are as
follows:
A
(1)
21st April 2006
(a)
Infinity Holdings Ltd ("Infinity") bought the phones on six invoices
from three companies resident in the European Union, namely Vertex Trading, Esat Apps and Rachel Tel.
(b)
Infinity sold those phones on four invoices to BSG for £5,206,425.
(2)
25th April 2006 BSG sold those phones to Universal Handels
GmbH for £4,694,750
B
(1)
27th April 2006
(a)
Infinity bought the phones from two companies resident in the EU, namely, Alpha
C Aps and Vertex Trading.
(b)
Infinity sold the phones to BSG for £2,186,145.
(2)
28th April 2006 BSG sold the phones to Allimpex Handels GmbH for
£1,970,000
The
transactions referred to in A(1)(a), A(2), B(1)(a) and
B(2) were zero-rated. In the case of the transactions referred to in A(1)(b) and B(1)(b) the purchase price included VAT at the
standard rate.
- Infinity
accounted for the purposes of VAT in respect of the transactions referred
to in A(1)
and B(1). BSG duly accounted for the transactions referred to in A(1)(b),
A(2), B(1)(b) and B(2) in its VAT return and sought the repayment of
£1,100,750 as the balance of input tax after off-setting the output tax in
the same period. On 25th April 2007 the claim for repayment was refused by
HMRC on the ground that transactions A and B were part of an overall
scheme to defraud the revenue and that there were features of those
transactions and conduct on the part of BSG which demonstrated that BSG
knew or should have known that such was the case. On 18th May 2007 BSG
appealed to the VAT and Duties Tribunal. It contended that the input tax
incurred by BSG was in respect of a taxable supply of goods in furtherance
of its business so as to be deductible input tax within s.24 VAT Act 1994.
BSG maintained that it did not know and had no means of knowledge of any
fraud.
- The Statement of
Case of HMRC in opposition to the claim dated 21st June 2007 asserted that
Infinity was a 'contra-trader' involved in frauds on the revenue in other
transactions. HMRC maintained that the transactions of BSG with Infinity
necessarily connected BSG with such fraud and that the available evidence
showed that BSG knew or should have known it. By its order dated 12th May
2008 the Tribunal directed that all allegations that BSG knew that its
purchases from Infinity were connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT
should be disregarded so that the sole issue was whether BSG should have
known of that fact. The appeal was heard by the Tribunal over six days
commencing on 30th June 2008. For the reasons given in their decision
dated 17th December 2008 the Tribunal dismissed BSG's appeal. This is the
appeal of BSG from that decision. Before I turn to the arguments of
counsel for BSG in support of it I must explain what 'contra-trading' is,
the contra-trading with which, HMRC allege, that BSG was involved, the
legal basis on which HMRC seeks to justify its refusal to repay the input
tax incurred by BSG and the decision of the Tribunal.
Contra-trading
- Contra-trading
is the name given to a method by which the fraudulent evasion of VAT may
be concealed from the revenue authorities of member states. It is clearly
described in paragraphs 3 to 6 of the decision of the VAT and Duties
Tribunal (Dr Avery-Jones and Ms Sandi O'Neill) in Olympia Technology
Ltd v HMRC [2008] UKVAT 20570 in the following terms:
"3.
We start with a simple example of an import of goods by X who sells them to Y
who exports them. The tax on acquisition (import) by X is cancelled by input
tax of the same amount, and the output tax charged on sale by X will be
cancelled by input tax repaid to Y on the export, so that the United Kingdom
exchequer receives no net tax. If both X and Y are fraudsters Y will have to
finance the output tax charged by X, which is recovered by X not paying the
output tax to Customs. The only gain by the fraud is if Customs pay the input
tax to Y when the exchequer is left with a loss of the amount of the input tax;
the non-payment of output tax by X is merely the recovery of what Y put in. If
X is a fraudster and Y is innocent, Y finances the output tax charged by X and
is entitled to repayment of this input tax even though this represents tax
never paid by X. The non-payment of the output tax by X is the benefit of the
fraud, and the exchequer is left with the same loss of the amount of the input
tax.
4.
In contra-trading there are, in its simplest theoretical form, two chains of
transactions. First, the "dirty chain," in which there is a
defaulting trader ("defaulting trader" for short), comprising A (the
defaulting trader) who is the importer of goods into the UK, who sells
them to B (the buffer company), who sells them to C who exports the goods, and
is thus in a VAT reclaim position. (For simplicity we shall use the expressions
import and export for intra-Community trade, acknowledging that these are not
the proper labels.) Secondly, the "clean chain," in which there are
no missing traders, comprising C, who is this time the importer of other goods,
who sells to D, who sells to E, the exporter (the Appellant in this appeal is
in the position of E in relation to the three alleged contra-trading deals).
The effect of the clean chain is that the net input tax position of C in the
dirty chain is cancelled by output VAT in the clean chain. There is no direct
financial benefit to C in this as C has paid the input tax to B, and therefore
C could be in league with the defaulting trader, or could be a trader who is
controlled (possibly without knowing it) by a "puppet master" to
enter into the cancelling transactions to disguise A's involvement a fraud, or
a trader who happens to carry out both import and export transactions
unconnected with any fraud,. The effect of the contra-trades is that C does not
excite Customs' attention as it is not applying for a repayment; the
non-payment of tax by A is less noticeable since without a return Customs do
not know how much tax A owes. The input tax reclaim that C had in the dirty chain
has moved to E who is at the end of a clean chain. The only way for Customs to
refuse repayment of E's input tax is to show that E knew or ought to have known
of A's fraud in a completely different chain, and of C's involvement in the
fraud.
5.
The nature of contra-trading is easy to state in the above way but the problem
in real life is that there is no logical connection between the clean and dirty
chains. First, the VAT accounting periods for C and E will not coincide; E may
be on a monthly accounting period as it is a habitual exporter, but C may be on
a three-monthly period, and C need only arrange that the net tax is nil during
that three-monthly period by entering into transactions after E's transactions.
Secondly, the goods dealt in may be different in the two chains. Thirdly, for a
particular C there may be many different equivalents to A and E, and for a
particular E there may be many equivalents of C, each with more than one
equivalents to A. Fourthly, C may not have deliberately entered into imports in
the clean chain in order to cancel the input in the dirty chain; C may merely
be both an importer and an exporter whose outputs in relation to the former
happen roughly to cancel its inputs in relation to the latter. Fifthly, there
may be many Bs and Ds in between the importer and exporters.
6.
The fraud in a simple MTIC fraud is that the defaulting trader always intends
to default. It will normally be the case that he defaults later than the dates
the deals in the chains are executed because he fails to pay the tax due for
the period in which the deals occur. One of the problems is that C, the
exporter in a simple MTIC fraud, is always separated from the defaulting
importer by one or more Bs and may not know of the existence of A. If C enters
into a deal that is too good to be true it can be said that he ought to know of
the fraud even though he does not know of A's identity. In a contra-trading
fraud the question is whether E knows or ought to have known that C entered
into the clean chain transactions to cover A's intention to default. Again the
problem is that E may be separated from C by one or more Ds (although in this
case C, the alleged contra-trader sells directly to E, the Appellant)."
- Applying that
description to the facts of this case, as I shall need to do on a number
of occasions in subsequent paragraphs of this judgment, BSG is the
equivalent of E, the ultimate exporter in the clean chain. There is no D,
but C, the importer in the clean chain, is Infinity. In paragraph 37 of
its Statement of Case dated 21st June 2007 HMRC asserted that Infinity had
a significant number of defaulters in its other transaction chains, that
is, those traders who were the equivalent of A. It set out the names of
the alleged defaulters and the amount of the tax losses arising from their
defaults. The paragraph concluded with the assertion that:
"Given
that the deal chains to which [BSG]'s return relates all lead to a
contra-trader, the input tax claimed is all connected with fraud."
- In subsequent
paragraphs of its statement of case HMRC set out at some length the facts
and matters on which it relied in support of its allegation that BSG
should have known that it was taking part (as E) in a transaction (the
clean chain) connected (because C is concerned in both chains) with
fraudulent evasion of VAT (by A in the dirty chain). Such facts and
matters included prior warnings given by HMRC to Mr Peters, the
controlling shareholder and director of BSG, of the risks of MTIC fraud
both generally and specifically in relation to his business between
October 2002 and March 2006. HMRC asserted that BSG had not carried out
due diligence in relation to Infinity, Universal Handels
or Allimpex. It relied on a large number of
specific features of the clean chain including unusual or non-commercial
aspects of them. HMRC asserted in paragraph 43 of its Statement of Case
that in all those circumstances it properly concluded that BSG should have
known that the transactions in the clean chain were "connected with
fraudulent evasion of VAT".
- When it came to
the hearing of the appeal HMRC relied on the chain of transactions between
Infinity (as C in the dirty chain) and A.S.Genstar
Ltd and Wade Tech Ltd as the original suppliers (A) in the dirty chains. A.S.Genstar Ltd was a missing trader. It had vacated
its premises and gone missing leaving an outstanding VAT liability of
£48m. Wade Tech Ltd was a 'hijacked trader' in the sense that its identity
had been stolen so that the liabilities to VAT in excess of £25m incurred
in its name could not be enforced against it.
- HMRC's statement
of case concluded in paragraph 45:
"In
the premises, the available evidence enables the Tribunal to be satisfied to
the requisite standard of proof that:
(a)
[the clean chains] formed part of transaction chains
in which one or more of the transactions was "connected with fraudulent
evasion of VAT", and
(b)
[BSG]...."should have known" of that fact."
HMRC's
right to refuse repayment
- At this stage I
should explain the legal bases for BSG's claim for repayment and of HMRC's
right to refuse. The right of a registered trader to deduct input tax paid
by him in respect of the supply of goods or services to him from output
tax received by him in relation to goods or services supplied by him and
to pay or be reimbursed the difference arises under both EU law and the
VAT Act 1994. In respect of EU law the relevant provisions at the material
time were Articles 17(2), 22(8) and 28 of the Sixth VAT Directive. Article
22(8) recognised the entitlement of member states to impose other
obligations necessary for the correct collection of tax and for the
prevention of evasion. Similarly Article 28c(A) enabled member states to
impose conditions for ensuring the straightforward application of the
exemption thereby conferred in respect of intra-community trade "and
preventing any evasion, avoidance or abuse".
- The relevant
provisions of domestic law in relation to the right of a registered person
to deduct input tax from output tax and to be paid or reimbursed the
difference are sections 24, 25 and 26 of the VAT Act and regulation 29 of
the VAT Regulations 1995. Notwithstanding the terms of Articles 22(8) and
28c(A) of the Sixth Directive there is no provision in the VAT Act
qualifying the registered person's right to repayment at the end of an
accounting period of any excess of input over output tax.
- The right to
refuse such repayment on which HMRC relies arises from a series of
decisions of the ECJ to which effect has been given in a number of
decisions of the VAT and Duties Tribunal and puisne judges in England. It has not been
suggested that they were wrong to have done so. Consequently it is my duty
to follow where they have led notwithstanding my concern as to whether
this is an appropriate manner in which effectively to impose a liability
for tax.
- The starting
point is the opinion of the Advocate-General and the judgment of the ECJ
in Optigen Ltd v Commissioners for Customs & Excise [2006] Ch.218. That case concerned a 'carousel'
fraud. Optigen sought to deduct input tax on
their purchases. Customs & Excise refused to allow such a deduction on
the ground that the participants in the carousel fraud had no genuine
business motive but only the aim of misappropriating VAT. The questions
referred to ECJ by the High Court sought to ascertain whether it should
consider the chain or carousel as a whole, as suggested by Customs &
Excise, or each transaction individually, as contended by Optigen.
- The
Advocate-General and the ECJ concluded that each transaction must be
considered individually and that "the character of a particular
transaction in the chain cannot be altered by earlier or subsequent
events", see paragraph 27 of the Opinion of the Advocate-General and
paragraph 47 of the judgment of the ECJ. Similarly the Advocate-General
and the ECJ rejected the argument of Customs & Excise that unlawful or
fraudulent transactions were beyond the scope of VAT, see paragraph 32 of
the Opinion of the Advocate-General and paragraph 49 of the judgment of
the ECJ. The consequences were spelled out in paragraphs 51 and 52 of the
judgment of ECJ as follows:
"51
It follows that transactions such as those at issue in the main proceedings,
which are not themselves vitiated by VAT fraud, constitute supplies of goods or
services effected by a taxable person acting as such and an economic activity
within the meaning of Articles 2(1), 4 and 5(1) of the Sixth Directive, where
they fulfil the objective criteria on which the definitions of those terms are
based, regardless 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.
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."
- The ECJ answered
the questions referred to it in the following terms:
"Transactions
such as those at issue in the main proceedings, which are not themselves vitiated
by value added tax fraud, constitute supplies of goods or services effected by
a taxable person acting as such and an economic activity within the meaning of
Articles 2(1), 4 and 5(1) of Sixth Council Directive 77/388/EEC of 17 May 1977
on the harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to turnover
taxes - Common system of value added tax: uniform basis of assessment, as
amended by Council Directive 95/7/EC of 10 April 1995, where they fulfil the
objective criteria on which the definitions of those terms are based,
regardless 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. The right to deduct input value added tax
of a taxable person who carries out such transactions cannot 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 value added tax fraud, without
that taxable person knowing or having any means of knowing."
The
proposition on which HMRC relies, which has been developed in later cases,
arises from the reservations and limitations in that answer in respect of the
possible fraudulent nature of another transaction in the chain "of which
that taxable person had no knowledge and no means of knowledge" or the vitiation
of another transaction in the chain by some VAT fraud "without that
taxable person knowing or having any means of knowing".
- Those
reservations and limitations were developed into affirmative principles by
the ECJ in Kittel v Belgium [2008] STC 1537 delivered on 6th July
2006. In that and its conjoined case Belgium v Recolta Recycling SPRL the Belgian tax authorities
were concerned with carousel frauds. In the former case a deduction for
input tax was refused, in the latter an allegation of being party to the
conspiracy to commit a VAT fraud was rejected. In each case questions were
referred to the ECJ by the Cour de Cassation in Belgium in
relation to a rule of Belgian law avoiding all fraudulent or illegal
transactions. The questions posited "a recipient of a supply of goods
who has entered into a contract in good faith without knowledge of a fraud
committed by the seller". The ECJ also considered (paragraph 28) that
the referring court wished to know if the answer of the ECJ would be
different if the taxable person knew or should have known that by his
purchase he was participating in a transaction connected with a fraudulent
evasion of VAT.
- In its findings
the ECJ noted its conclusions in Optigen. In paragraphs 46
to 50 it reiterated that the trader's right to deduct in respect of a
transaction unaffected by other transactions, whether previous or
subsequent, so that (para 51):
"...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..."
- The ECJ then
considered the converse cases and stated:
"53 By
contrast, the objective criteria which form the basis of the concepts of
'supply of goods effected by a taxable person acting as such' and 'economic
activity' are not met where tax is evaded by the taxable person himself (see
Case C-255/02 Halifax and Others [2006] ECR I-'0000, paragraph 59).
54 As
the Court has already observed, preventing tax evasion, avoidance and abuse is
an objective recognised and encouraged by the Sixth Directive (see Joined Cases
C-487/01 and C-7/02 Gemeente Leusden and Holin Groep [2004] ECR I-5337, paragraph 76).
Community law cannot be relied on for abusive or fraudulent ends (see, inter
alia, Case C-'367/96 Kefalas and Others [1998] ECR I-2843, paragraph 20; Case
C-'373/97 Diamantis [2000] ECR I-1705, paragraph 33; and
Case C-'32/03 Fini H [2005] ECR I-1599, paragraph 32).
55 Where
the tax authorities find that the right to deduct has been exercised
fraudulently, they are permitted to claim repayment of the deducted sums
retroactively (see, inter alia, Case 268/83 Rompelman
[1985] ECR 655, paragraph 24; Case C-'110/94 INZO [1996] ECR I-857, paragraph 24; and Gabalfrisa, paragraph 46). It is a matter for the
national court to refuse to allow the right to deduct where it is established,
on the basis of objective evidence, that that right is
being relied on for fraudulent ends (see Fini
H, paragraph 34).
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.
58 In
addition, such an interpretation, by making it more difficult to carry out
fraudulent transactions, is apt to prevent them.
59 Therefore,
it is for the referring court to refuse entitlement to the right to deduct
where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the taxable
person knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in
a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, and to do so even where
the transaction in question meets the objective criteria which form the basis
of the concepts of 'supply of goods effected by a taxable person acting as
such' and 'economic activity'.
60 It
follows from the foregoing that the answer to the questions must be 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.
61 By
contrast, where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the
supply is to a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his
purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent
evasion of VAT, it is for the national court to refuse
that taxable person entitlement to the right to deduct."
- Counsel for BSG
suggests that the French text "impliquée dans" suggests a
closer involvement with the fraud than the English translation
"participating in". I express no view on that submission. The
importance of Kittel is that it is the
first affirmative formulation of the principle on which HMRC relies for
its refusal to repay to BSG the excess of input tax over its output tax
for the period 04/06. The principle, as expressed in paragraphs 59 and 61,
is that deduction/repayment should be refused to "a taxable person
who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating
in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT".
- This principle
was referred to by ECJ in the later cases of R v Commissioners Customs
& Excise, ex parte Teleos plc [2008] QB 600 and Netto
Supermarkt GmbH v Finanzamt
Malchin [2008] STC 3820. The judgments of
the ECJ were delivered in the former on 27th September 2007 and in the
latter on 21st February 2008. In HMRC v Livewire Telecom Ltd [2009] STC 643 Lewison
J suggested (paragraph 89) that in both Teleos
and Netto the ECJ had narrowed the test
formulated in Kittel. This was
disputed before me by counsel for HMRC so I must consider those cases in
rather more detail than would otherwise be necessary.
- In Teleos Teleos had sold mobile
phones to a Spanish undertaking for the latter to export from the UK to
other member states. Teleos claimed that its
supply was zero-rated as an intra-community supply pursuant to Article 28c(A)(a). HMRC discovered that the relevant documents
supplied by the Spanish undertaking to Teleos
evidencing the export to the other member states were false and the goods
had never left the UK.
HMRC required Teleos to account for VAT in
respect of its supply to the Spanish undertaking. The High Court found
that Teleos had not known and could not
reasonably have known of the fraud. The questions it referred to the ECJ
related to the conditions necessary for an intra-community supply, in
particular whether the goods had to be actually exported and whether
innocent suppliers could be required to account for the VAT.
- The ECJ
considered that last question in relation to the principles of legal
certainty (paragraphs 48 to 51), proportionality (paragraphs 52 to 58) and
fiscal neutrality (paragraphs 59 to 60). In paragraphs 61 to 64 the ECJ
considered arguments in relation to freedom of movement. In that
connection it referred to the settled case law of the ECJ:
"...which
is applicable to the main proceedings by way of analogy, it would not be
contrary to Community law to require the supplier to take every step which
could reasonably be required of him to satisfy himself that the transaction
which he is effecting does not result in his participation in tax evasion (see,
as regards 'carousel' type fraud, Federation of Technological Industries and
Others, paragraph 33, and Kittel and Recolta Recycling, paragraph 51)."
That
formulation was repeated in paragraph 68 where the ECJ added the proviso that:
"...the
supplier took every reasonable measure in his power to ensure that the
intra-Community supply he was effecting did not lead
to his participation in such evasion."
- Netto concerned the
refund of VAT by a supermarket chain to customers who bought from its
stores goods for export outside the Community. The conditions to be
observed to entitle it to a refund of VAT in those circumstances included
documents duly stamped by the relevant customs authority. It was later
discovered that the documents on which Netto
relied were forged and Netto was assessed to VAT.
The question referred to the ECJ asked whether a member state was
precluded from granting the exemption even where the taxable person was
unable even by exercising due care to ascertain that the documents on
which the exemption depended were forged.
- The ECJ
considered that it would clearly be disproportionate to hold a taxable
person liable for the shortfall in tax caused by fraudulent acts of third
parties over which he has no influence whatsoever (paragraph 23). The ECJ
continued:
"24.
On the other hand, as the Court has already held, it is not contrary to
Community law to require the supplier to take every step which could reasonably
be required of him to satisfy himself that the transaction which he is
effecting does not result in his participation in tax evasion (see Teleos and Others, paragraph 65, and the
case-law cited there).
25.
Accordingly, the fact that the supplier acted in good faith, that he took every
reasonable measure in his power and that his participation in fraud is excluded
are important points in deciding whether that supplier can be obliged to
account for the VAT after the event (see Teleos
and Others, paragraph 66)."
Thus,
as in Teleos, the formulation adopted by the
ECJ was 'participation in' 'fraud' or 'tax evasion'.
- In Livewire para 89 Lewison J said:
"As
I have noted the ECJ has used various phrases to describe the link between the
fraud and the impugned transaction. In Optigen
the phrase was 'a chain of supply of which those transactions form part';
in Kittel the phrase was 'connected
with fraud'. In Teleos and in Netto it was 'participation in tax
evasion'. Both Teleos and Netto are, in my judgment, a narrowing
of the test. As I have noted the ECJ has used various phrases to describe the
link between the fraud and the impugned transaction. In Optigen
the phrase was 'a chain of supply of which those transactions form part';
in Kittel the phrase was
'connected with fraud'. In Teleos and
in Netto it was 'participation
in tax evasion'. Both Teleos and
Netto are, in my judgment, a narrowing
of the test."
- As I have noted,
counsel for HMRC takes issue with the views of Lewison J as to whether the tests as formulated in Optigen and/or Kittel
have been narrowed. She points out that the reference in Teleos to Kittel
is only to paragraph 51 of the latter. She submits that such a reference
is limited to direct involvement in the fraudulent evasion of VAT. By
contrast the ECJ did not refer to paragraphs 56 to 59 in Kittel which deal with constructive knowledge
of a connection. The verbal formulations in Teleos
and Netto do, as a matter of
English, narrow the formulation of the principle of Kittel
as expressed in paragraphs 56 to 59 in Kittel.
But I do not think that the test has, as a matter of law, been narrowed.
Not only was the reference in Teleos to Kittel limited to paragraph 51 of the latter,
neither Teleos nor Netto
involved any form of carousel fraud, nor was there any argument in either
of them as to whether the precise connection should be the narrower
concept of participation. Nothing in this case turns on any narrow
distinction between the test as formulated in Optigen and Kittel
on the one hand and as formulated in Teleos
and Netto on the other. If it did I
should respectfully differ from Lewison J in
this respect.
- In the event the
test adopted by Lewison J does not appear to have been any narrower than
that formulated in Optigen and Kittel. At paragraphs 102 and 103 he
said:
"102.
In my judgment in a case of alleged contra-trading, where the taxable person
claiming repayment of input tax is not himself a dishonest co-conspirator,
there are two potential frauds:
(i) The dishonest failure to account for VAT by the
defaulter or missing trader in the dirty chain; and
(ii)
The dishonest cover-up of that fraud by the contra-trader.
103.
Thus it must be established that the taxable person knew or should have known
of a connection between his own transaction and at least one of those frauds. I
do not consider that it is necessary that he knew or should have known of a
connection between his own transaction and both of these frauds. If he knows or
should have known that the contra-trader is engaging in fraudulent conduct and
deals with him, he takes the risk of participating in a fraud, the precise
details of which he does not and cannot know."
- Lewison J expanded on those propositions in paragraphs 105
to 109. Thus in paragraph 105 he noted that if the taxable person knew of
the fraudulent purpose of the contra-trader it matters not that he did not
know of fraud in the dirty chain. In paragraph 106 he recognised that if
the contra-trader was not himself dishonest then there will have been only
one fraud, namely the dishonest failure to account for VAT by the
defaulter in the dirty chain and the taxpayer will not be deprived of his
right to reclaim input tax unless he knew or ought to have known of that
fraud. Lewison J continued in paragraph 107:
"there is an evidential or factual difficulty in proving a
connection with fraud in a case of contra-trading, where the contra-trading is
not part of an overall scheme to defraud the Revenue. The [Tribunal in
Livewire] noted...that the problem in real life is that there is no logical
connection between the clean and dirty chains. As [counsel for Livewire] said,
the connection is an accounting connection in that the alleged contra-trader
offsets his input tax in the dirty chain against output tax in the clean chain.
But since the whole system of VAT works on the basis of constant offsetting of
input and output tax, the implication of HMRC's case is that every taxable
person could be connected with every other taxable person."
He
added in paragraph 109:
"...Indeed
it seems to me that the whole concept of contra-trading (which is HMRC's own
coinage) necessarily assumes that to be so [sc.the
clean and dirty chains are part of an overall scheme to defraud the Revenue].
But that assertion is the assertion of a factual conclusion which HMRC is
required to prove on the facts of an individual case."
- In Livewire Lewison J was concerned with two cases of contra-trading.
In Livewire itself the taxable person was at the end of the clean chain.
In the associated case of Olympia
the taxable person was at the end of the dirty chain in most of the
transactions but in three of them was at the end of the clean chain. In
the event Lewison J upheld the decision of the
Tribunal in Livewire that HMRC had not established the requisite knowledge
but allowed HMRC's appeal in Olympia
and remitted the case to the Tribunal for it to apply the correct test.
Thus the decision of Lewison J is of direct
relevance to the issues arising on this appeal.
The decision of the Tribunal
- The Tribunal
started by setting out the four questions they considered that they must
answer. It is common ground that they were the correct questions. They
were:
(1)
Was there a VAT loss?
(2)
If so, did this loss result from a fraudulent evasion?
(3) If
there was a fraudulent evasion, were the BSG transactions the subject of this
appeal connected with that evasion?
(4)
If such a connection was established, should BSG have known that its purchases
were connected with a fraudulent evasion of VAT?
- In paragraphs
111 to 133 the Tribunal answered the first question in the affirmative.
Their finding related to ten chains originating with A.S.Genstar or Wade Tech (A). These were the dirty chains which
went through four or five intermediaries (B) and ended with Infinity (C)
on various dates from 17th May to 21st June 2006. The Tribunal answered
the second question in the affirmative as well, for the reasons given in
paragraphs 134 and 135, because of the fraud of A.S.Genstar
and Wade Tech to which I have referred in paragraph 7 above. There is no
appeal from either of those conclusions.
- In paragraphs
136 to 147 the Tribunal considered whether the transactions entered into
by BSG in April 2006, namely the clean chains summarised in paragraph 1
above, were connected to those fraudulent evasions. The Tribunal started
by recognising the problems which arise if the contra-trader, as in this
case, is not himself involved in the fraud in the sense of helping to
cover it up but concluded in paragraph 137 that it was not necessary for
HMRC to prove that the contra-trader is himself fraudulent. They
continued:
"All
that is required to demonstrate a connection, in a case where the fraud has
occurred at some point elsewhere in the chain, is for it to be established that
the actions of the contra-trader facilitated the transactions which led to the
tax loss, by either reducing or eliminating the contra-trader's input tax recovery
claim which would otherwise have been brought to HMRC's attention (and which as
a result would thus have prompted much earlier investigation of the deal chain
or chains leading to it, as well as the probable refusal of the claim)."
- The Tribunal
then considered the quantity of transactions with which Infinity was
concerned and concluded in paragraph 138 that:
"Infinity
did assist in concealing the missing traders' defaults by using the output tax
on its "acquisition" transactions as a means of setting off the input
tax claims in respect of its "despatch" transactions."
The
acquisition and despatch transactions referred to are respectively the clean
chains whereunder Infinity supplied goods to BSG and
the dirty chains whereby Infinity acquired different goods originating with A.S.Genstar and Wade Tech. They elaborated the point in
paragraph 140, where, having referred to paragraph 61 of the ECJ's judgment in Kittel, they concluded that:
"The
test applicable at this stage (before considering whether the taxable person
"knew or should have known") appears to us to be an objective
examination of any possible connection between the taxable person's purchase
and a wider transaction involving the fraudulent evasion of VAT. This does not
appear to us to impose a specific requirement to establish that fraud has taken
place at a series of points elsewhere in the chain of transactions, as long as
it has already been objectively established that there is fraud in the chain.
In order to have reached such a conclusion, we accept that sufficient evidence
is required by way of proof of that proposition. As already indicated, we are
satisfied on the evidence before us that the actions of A.S.Genstar
Ltd and the hijacked trader Wade Tech Ltd were fraudulent."
- In paragraph 141
the Tribunal considered that the evidence was insufficient to enable them
to find that Infinity was itself fraudulent but that:
"...at
the very least [Infinity] must either have known or have had reason to suspect
that within its transaction chains there were missing, hijacked or otherwise
defaulting traders."
- The Tribunal
then dealt with the fact that the dirty chains with which Infinity was
involved followed, chronologically, the clean chains which included BSG.
They did not accept (paragraph 145) that:
"...a
purchase in a "clean" chain can automatically be assumed not to be
connected with a fraudulent evasion which in point of time comes after that
purchase.....Logically, there can be a connection, of which the exporter may or
may not be aware."
- They concluded
in paragraph 146, having taken into account the matters relating to
Infinity referred to in paragraph 147, that:
"BSG's
two transactions entered into with Infinity in April 2006 were connected to the
fraudulent evasions by AS Genstar Ltd and Wade Tech
Ltd, because the transactions were used as a basis for offsetting the input tax
claims which Infinity would otherwise have had to make at the end of its 06/06
VAT return period in respect of the "despatch" deals for which one or
other of those two entities was the supplier at the head of the relevant
chain."
- The Tribunal
then considered in paragraphs 148 to 228 whether BSG should have known of
that connection. They adopted the view of the Tribunal in Honeyfone Ltd v HMRC
[2008] UKVAT 20667 and Burton J in R v HMRC, ex parte Just Fabulous
(UK) Ltd [2008] STC 2123 that it is sufficient
if the trader should have known that there was some fraud even though he
does not have the means of knowing the details of that fraud but preferred
to formulate it, as in Kittel, as
"participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of
VAT". In applying those propositions to the facts of the case before
them they said (paragraph 151):
"On
that basis, the fact that Infinity's despatch deals post-dated BSG's purchases
from Infinity and sales, respectively, to Universal and Allimpex,
does not preclude a finding that BSG should have known that, by such purchases,
it was taking part in transactions connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT.
However, sufficient proof is required to establish this in the context of a
trader which is the exporter in a "clean" chain, having purchased from
a supplier alleged to be a contra-trader."
In
that last sentence the Tribunal recognised that the burden of proof lay on
HMRC. Counsel for HMRC accepted that the Tribunal was right to do so in this
case.
- The Tribunal
then evaluated the evidence on the various matters relied on by HMRC and
foreshadowed in its original statement of case. Thus they referred in
considerable detail to Mr Peters' previous experience, the warnings given
to him, his investigations of Infinity, Universal and Allimpex and their perceived inadequacies, certain
surprising and uncommercial aspects of the
purchases from Infinity and the sales to Universal and Allimpex
and what happened to the goods the subject of the clean chain. In
paragraph 223 the Tribunal found that:
"Our
overall conclusion, taking into account the deficiencies in BSG's due diligence
procedures and the dating of the commitments to buy and sell the stock, before
those procedures had even been completed, is that Mr Peters did not do enough
to protect himself (and therefore BSG) from the risk of becoming enmeshed in
transactions which might prove to be connected in some way to fraud. The ease
with which he was able to find purchasers of large consignments of mobile
phones, as well as a supplier able at virtually no notice to fulfil orders for
precisely the types of phones required, should have put him on notice that the
arrangements called for further investigation, particularly as the invoicing
for the transactions was organised to coincide on the same day for all stages
in each chain. This insufficiency of action to protect BSG leads us to the view
that, in terms of the statement in Kittel at
[61] he
"...
should have known that, by his purchase, he was
participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT".
- The Tribunal
elaborated on the experience of Mr Peters in paragraph 224 and on the lack
of commerciality of some aspects of the clean chain. In paragraph 226 they
rejected an allegation that Mr Peters had been manipulated. In that
connection they said:
"We do not find on the evidence
before us that there was control and manipulation, although we do consider that
Mr Peters was much too ready, without careful and detailed review and
exhaustive checks of all aspects of the proposed transactions, to become committed
to them. It is not correct that he turned a blind eye to the various elements
of the transactions, but his enquiries were not sufficiently exhaustive to
protect BSG. In Honeyfone at paragraph 47, the
Tribunal said:
"It seems to us that in these
contexts what a trader "should have known" may include what he ought
to have known or had the means of knowing. Those phases [sic, ie phrases] indicate to us that it therefore may include
what he could have found out if he had made further enquiries.""
- The
Tribunal then set out the enquiries Mr Peters should have undertaken
before BSG became committed to the relevant transactions and concluded in
paragraph 228:
"His
failure to make full enquiries and investigations in advance meant that he did
not discover information which ought to have led him into yet further
investigations. In turn, the result was that BSG became committed, without
sufficient protection, to enter into the transactions with Infinity linked by
way of contra-trading to the other transactions derived from two traders
established to be fraudulent, namely A.S.Genstar Ltd
and Wade Tech Ltd. We think that if he had asked and obtained answers to the
appropriate questions, he would have concluded that the uncommercial
features of the deals being offered to BSG could only be explained by taking
into account other transactions which Infinity was entering into, and that the
most probable explanation was that those other transactions were connected in
some way with fraud. Our conclusion is that BSG ought to have known that, by
its purchases, it was participating in transactions connected with fraudulent
evasion of VAT."
The submissions of the parties and my
conclusion
- It is common
ground that this appeal brought under s.11 Tribunals and Inquiries Act
1992 is limited to points of law so that I must accept the Tribunal's
findings of fact unless counsel for BSG can satisfy me that no tribunal
properly directing itself could have reached them, see Edwards v Bairstow [1956] AC 14. Indeed I did not
understand counsel for BSG to challenge any findings of fact. Rather, he
submitted that (1) there was no sufficient connection between the
fraudulent evasion of VAT by A.S.Genstar and
Wade Tech and the transactions carried out by BSG, but even if there was
(2) BSG did not have the means of knowledge to justify a conclusion that
BSG should have known of that connection. It is convenient to deal with
these two points separately.
Connection
- Counsel for BSG
emphasises the statements in Optigen and Kittel (see
paragraphs 13 and 16 above) that the character of a particular transaction
in the chain cannot be altered by earlier or subsequent events. He points
out, correctly, that at the time BSG entered into the transactions
specified in paragraph 1 above, namely April 2006, the transactions giving
rise to the tax loss had not occurred. Further, as he stresses, the
allocation of those transactions for VAT purposes to the earlier
transactions involving BSG were made after the event by HMRC selecting 10
transactions, at random, from some 623 transactions involving Infinity as
importer in the period 06/06. Those ten chains commenced with A.S.Genstar or Wade Tech but they were not involved in
all the other 613. As Lewison J pointed out in Livewire
paragraph 107 (see paragraph 27 above) there is no logical connection
between those chains and the clean chains involving BSG; such connection
as there is is an accounting connection. Why,
asks counsel for BSG, should those transactions be allocated to the clean
chain involving BSG rather than clean chains involving others? He submits
that the connection on which HMRC relies is unreal and is inconsistent
with the principles of legal certainty, fiscal neutrality, proportionality
and freedom of movement.
- As indicated in
paragraph 37 of its original statement of case and reiterated by counsel
before me, the connection on which HMRC relies is the fact that both clean
chains originated with Infinity and a large number of dirty chains ended
with Infinity. Thus the connection is through the involvement of Infinity
in both and the VAT consequence that it can, indeed must, in the relevant
accounting period set-off its input tax on the dirty chains against its
output tax in the clean chains. HMRC accepted in paragraph 44 of their
Statement of Case that, on this basis, all traders in a chain in which
Infinity was involved must, necessarily, have been connected with the
fraud. The difference in their treatment depends on the evidence as to
their knowledge.
- In both Optigen and Kittel the ECJ
was concerned with carousel fraud, not contra-trading. In the former the
principle was expressed in terms which confined its operation to
transactions in the dirty chain and in terms which, if satisfied, excluded
liability. By contrast in Kittel the
principle was expressed in affirmative terms extending beyond transactions
in the dirty chain. On that formulation all that is required is that the
transaction in which the trader participated was "connected with
fraudulent evasion of VAT". Just Fabulous (UK) Ltd also
concerned a carousel fraud but was a strike out application not a
consideration of how the concept of 'connection' is to be applied. The
first reported case at the level of the ECJ or the High Court involving
contra-trading is Livewire.
- The question of
'connection' was considered by Lewison J
primarily in relation to knowledge. At paragraphs 107 and 109 (see
paragraph 27 above) he dealt with it on the basis that whether the clean
and dirty chains were connected is a matter of fact to be proved by HMRC.
It is, I think, clear from those paragraphs of his judgment in Livewire
that he did not consider that there was an inevitable connection between
the clean and dirty chains if C was the same entity. Equally I do not
think that that was the basis of his decision in either appeal before him.
He decided the appeals on the basis of the knowledge of the taxpayer
thereby, seemingly, assuming the relevant connection.
- There is force
in the argument of counsel for BSG but I do not accept it. The nature of
any particular necessary connection depends on its context, for example
electrical, familial, physical or logical. The relevant context in this
case is the scheme for charging and recovering VAT in the member states of
the EU. The process of off-setting inputs against outputs in a particular
period and accounting for the difference to the relevant revenue authority
can connect two or more transactions or chains of transaction in which
there is one common party whether or not the commodity sold is the same.
If there is a connection in that sense it matters not which transaction or
chain came first. Such a connection is entirely consistent with the dicta
in Optigen and Kittel because
such connection does not alter the nature of the individual transactions.
Nor does it offend against any principle of legal certainty, fiscal
neutrality, proportionality or freedom of movement because, by itself, it
has no effect.
- Given that the
clean and dirty chains can be regarded as connected with one another, by
the same token the clean chain is connected with any fraudulent evasion of
VAT in the dirty chain because, in a case of contra-trading, the right to
reclaim enjoyed by C (Infinity) in the dirty chain, which is the
counterpart of the obligation of A to account for input tax paid by B, is
transferred to E (BSG) in the clean chain. Such a transfer is apt, for the
reasons given by the Tribunal in Olympia (paragraph 4 quoted in paragraph 4 above), to
conceal the fraud committed by A in the dirty chain in its failure to
account for the input tax received from B.
- Plainly not all
persons involved in either chain, although connected, should be liable for
any tax loss. The control mechanism lies in the need for either direct
participation in the fraud or sufficient knowledge of it. It is important,
as the Tribunal recognised in paragraph 131 of its decision, that such tax
losses are only used once. Thus having used the tax losses attributable to
A.S.Genstar and Wade Tech by allocation to the tax reclaimed by
BSG they are no longer available to be allocated to other transactions or
claims.
Knowledge
- As I recorded in
paragraph 2 above there is no suggestion that BSG knew of any fraudulent evasion
of VAT. Further the Tribunal rejected the suggestions either that BSG had
been controlled or manipulated as part of some wider conspiracy or that
its controlling director, Mr Peters had 'turned a blind eye' to the
various elements of the transactions, see paragraph 38 above. So, given
that the clean chains are, through Infinity, connected with the dirty
chains, the question is, in terms of paragraph 59 of the judgment of the
ECJ in Kittel, whether
"having regard to objective factors,...[BSG]... should have known
that, by [its] purchase, [it] was participating in a transaction connected
with fraudulent evasion of VAT".
- As Lewison J pointed out in Livewire (see paragraph 26
above), in alleged contra-trading cases there are, at least, two potential
frauds (1) the dishonest failure to account for VAT by the defaulter or
missing trader (A) in the dirty chain, namely A.S.Genstar
and Wade Tech, and (2) the dishonest cover-up of that fraud by the
contra-trader (C), namely Infinity. In this case the Tribunal rejected the
contention of HMRC that Infinity had itself been fraudulent even though it
must have known or have had reason to suspect that within its transaction
chains there were missing, hijacked or otherwise defaulting traders, see
paragraph 141. Accordingly for the purpose of applying the Kittel test the only relevant fraud is that of A.S.Genstar and Wade Tech.
- Counsel for BSG
submits that the Tribunal was wrong to have concluded, as they did in
paragraph 228, that BSG ought to have known that, by its purchases, it was
participating in transactions connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT.
First, neither the fraudulent evasion nor the relevant connection had by
then occurred. Second, the "sufficient to protect" test adopted
by the Tribunal in assessing the adequacy of the due diligence carried out
by BSG was too strict. Third, given the Tribunal's conclusions in relation
to Infinity, the perceived inadequacies of BSG's due diligence did not
justify the conclusion that BSG ought to have known of the relevant fact.
- Counsel for HMRC
seeks to uphold the conclusions of the Tribunal on the footing that, given
there was the connection, through Infinity, between BSG's transactions in
the clean chain and the fraudulent evasions of A.S.Genstar and Wade Tech in the dirty chains, BSG ought to
have known of that connection. She relies on a number of detailed acts or
omissions by Mr Peters in relation to Universal, Allimpex
and Infinity recounted by the Tribunal in particular paragraphs of its
decision. She emphasises the unusual or uncommercial
features of the transactions effected by BSG with one or other of the
three parties involved. She refers to the Tribunal's own summary in
paragraph 228 which I have quoted in paragraph 38 above.
- I start by
considering the second objection of counsel for BSG, namely that the
"sufficient to protect" test adopted by the Tribunal was too
high. No doubt it is derived from Kittel paragraph 51, Teleos
paragraph 68 and Netto paragraphs 24 and
25. It first appeared in paragraph 162 of the Tribunal's decision. Having
considered in some detail the extent of the enquiries made by Mr Peters in
relation to Universal they concluded:
"We
consider that the due diligence exercise relating to Universal was inadequate,
as was the failure to follow up outstanding questions where matters did not
appear to be in satisfactory order. The exercise was not sufficient to protect
BSG from the risk of involvement in transactions which might turn out to have
undesirable associations."
The
same test was applied in paragraph 223 of the Tribunal's judgment, quoted in
paragraph 37 above.
- In my view, this
test is misleading for two reasons. First the burden is on HMRC to prove
that BSG ought to have known that by its purchases it was participating in
transactions connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT. It is not for BSG
to prove that it ought not. Second, it is not sufficient to demonstrate
that BSG was involved in transactions which "might" turn out to
have undesirable associations. The relevant knowledge is that BSG ought to
have known that by its purchases it was participating in transactions
which were connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT; that such
transactions might be so connected is not enough.
- Similar
considerations apply to the formulation of the case for HMRC. The
contention is that BSG ought to have known of the connection, through
Infinity, between its transactions and the fraudulent evasion of VAT by
the defaulting traders in the dirty chain. This formulation involves two
separate questions, knowledge of the connection and knowledge that the
connection was with the fraudulent evasion of VAT. Clearly BSG would have
known that its transactions would, for the purposes of VAT, be connected
with other transactions with which Infinity was concerned in the sense
that Infinity's output tax, paid by BSG, would have to be set against
input tax payable by Infinity in respect of other transactions. But that
is not enough. HMRC must also prove that BSG ought to have known that
those other transactions involved the fraudulent evasion of VAT.
- The Tribunal
rejected any allegation of conspiracy involving BSG or Infinity. It
rejected the suggestion that BSG had been manipulated. It acquitted
Infinity of fraud. If Infinity did not know of the fraud when it happened and
was not party to any arrangement that it should happen, how could BSG have
known of any fraud before it happened? No amount of due diligence
undertaken in respect of Infinity, Universal or Allimpex could have revealed it. And if BSG could not have
known, how could there be circumstances from which it could properly be
concluded that BSG ought to have known?
- In my view it is
an inescapable consequence of contra-trading that for HMRC to refuse a
reclaim by E it must be in a position to prove that C was party to a
conspiracy also involving A. Although the fact that C is party to both the
clean chain with E and dirty chain with A constitutes a sufficient
connection it is not enough to show that E ought to have known of the
fraudulent evasion of VAT involved in the subsequent dirty chain. At the
time he entered into the clean chain there was no such dirty chain of
which he could have known, nor was the occurrence of such dirty chain
inevitable in the sense of being pre-planned.
- In my view the
Tribunal was wrong to have concluded that BSG ought to have known that by
its purchases from Infinity it was participating in transactions connected
with fraudulent evasion of VAT. For that reason I would allow this appeal.