2010] UKFTT 46 (TC)

TC00359
Appeal
number LON/2005/0625
VAT –
refusal of right to deduct input tax – Missing Trader Intra-Community (MTIC)
fraud
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
NEXT
GENERATION INTERNATIONAL LIMITED Appellant
-
and -
TRIBUNAL: JUDGE
ROGER BERNER
GILL
HUNTER (Member)
Sitting in public in
Kevin Andrews, Senior VAT Consultant, VAT Consultants Ltd, for the
Appellant
Rupert Jones, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM
Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2010
DECISION
1. This is the appeal of Next Generation International Limited (“the Appellant”) against the decision of HMRC contained in a letter dated 21 February 2008 denying the Appellant the right to deduct input tax in the sum of £122,690.75 claimed in respect of the VAT accounting period August 2006 (08/06). HMRC’s grounds for this decision are that the input tax was incurred by the Appellant in two transactions connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT and that the Appellant knew or should have known that the transactions were connected to fraud. In short this is one of the line of cases commonly referred to as MTIC (“missing trader intra-community”) fraud cases.
2. The Appellant was represented by Kevin Andrews, Senior VAT Consultant with VAT Consultants Ltd. Rupert Jones of Counsel appeared for HMRC.
3. We had witness statements, and heard oral evidence from, a number of witnesses. For HMRC we had evidence from its officers Michael Quartey, Fidelis Mayungbe, Peter Dean, Clive White and Roderick Stone, and from John Fletcher, a Principal Adviser of KPMG LLP. There was one witness for the Appellant, Robin Ramdanee, who at the time of the hearing was the General Manager of the Appellant, but who at the date of the transactions in question in this appeal was one of its directors. We also received in evidence a substantial quantity of documents.
4. The legislation governing the recovery of input tax is contained in sections 24 and 25 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 (“VATA”). There was no dispute on the application of those provisions, which we need not refer to in full.
5. The basis for the decision of HMRC to refuse repayment of input tax to the Appellant for the relevant period was the decision of the European Court of Justice in Axel Kittell v Belgium [2008] STC 1537. It was submitted by Mr Jones, and not disputed by Mr Andrews, that Kittell provides a legal basis for denying a taxable person the right to deduct input tax (and, in appropriate circumstances, to obtain repayment of input tax) in defined circumstances. At paragraphs [56] to [59] the ECJ set out the guiding principles:
“56. … 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'.”
This was echoed in paragraph [61] of the ECJ judgment.
6. In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Livewire Telecom Ltd [2009] STC 643, Lewison J set out the following summary of the ECJ jurisprudence as follows (at [76]):
“I would
summarise the current state of the jurisprudence of the ECJ on this subject as
follows:
(i) The objective
of preventing evasion of VAT is an objective encouraged by the Sixth Directive
(see Kittel [2008] STC 1537, [2006] ECR I-6161, para 54 of the judgment);
(ii) This objective precludes the recovery of input tax
where the tax is evaded by the taxable person himself (Kittel, para 53
of the judgment). In such cases where the right to deduct has been exercised
fraudulently the deduction may be retrospectively disallowed (Kittel, para
55);
(iii) This objective sometimes justifies stringent
requirements as regards suppliers' obligations, but any sharing of risk must be
compatible with the principle of proportionality (Teleos [2008] STC 706, [2008] QB 600, para 58 of the judgment);
(iv) It is disproportionate and contrary to Community
law to require a person who is a careful and honest trader to assume liability
for the frauds of others (Teleos, para 77 of the opinion, footnote 26);
(v) It is also disproportionate to hold a taxable
person liable for fraudulent acts of third parties over whom he has no
influence (Netto [2008] STC 3280, para 23 of the judgment);
(vi) A trader who does take every precaution that could
reasonably be required of him, and does not realise that he is participating in
VAT fraud must be entitled to rely on the legality of his own transaction (FTI
[2006] STC 1483, [2006] ECR I-4191, para 33 of the
judgment);
(vii) A person who knew or should have known that by
his purchase he was taking part in a transaction connected with the fraudulent
evasion of VAT is to be treated in the same way as a person who fraudulently
exercises the right to deduct (Kittel, paras 55 to 56);
(viii) It is not
contrary to Community law to require a supplier to take every step that 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 (Teleos,
para 65; Netto, para 24);
(ix)
Likewise a taxable person can be expected to act with all due diligence and
care (Netto, para 45 of the opinion);
(x)
Whether a taxable person knew or should have known that he was participating in
a transaction connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT must be determined
having regard to objective facts or factors (Kittel, para 59 of the
judgment);
(xi)
Community law does not prohibit presumptions, but presumptions must be
rebuttable by evidence (Garage Molenheide [1998] STC 126, [1997] ECR I-7281, para 52 of the
judgment; FTI, para 32).”
7. On this basis, and on the basis of the
judgment of the Chancellor in Blue Sphere
Global Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2009] STC 2239 at [29],
there was no dispute as to the questions the Tribunal must address. They are:
(1) Was there a tax loss?
(2) If so, did this loss result from a fraudulent
evasion?
(3) If there was a fraudulent evasion, were the
Appellant’s transactions which are the subject of this appeal connected with
that evasion?
(4) If such a connection were established, did
the Appellant know or should the Appellant have known that its purchases were
connected with a fraudulent evasion of VAT?
8. In Livewire,
when considering the test, Lewison J made it clear that the trader in the
position of the Appellant does not have to know, or be said ought to have
known, the identity of the missing trader.
He said (at [91]):
“Unless there is a missing trader somewhere further down the chain (or in a parallel chain) there is no fraud. I accept that the honest trader need not know the identity of the missing trader but unless he knows or should have known that there was (or was likely to be) a missing trader somewhere in the dirty chain, I do not see how it can be said that he knew or should have known that his transaction was connected with fraud.”
Livewire itself was of course a case on contra-trading, but it is clear from Mr Justice Lewison’s reference to a missing trader in the chain that he was speaking generally. As will be seen, this case does not concern contra-trading, but the principle that the trader need not know the identity of the missing trader is equally applicable here.
9. The test of the trader’s knowledge set out by Lewison J in Livewire requires at the least that the trader should have known that there was likely to be a missing trader somewhere in the dirty chain. Also in the High Court, in considering how to apply the Kittel test, Floyd J in Mobilx Ltd (in administration) v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2009] STC 1107 said (at [7]):
“In the light of the difficulties of making enquiries beyond the immediate supplier, there is a danger in reading para 51 of Kittel in a narrow sense and as suggesting that provided proper checks are carried out by the trader on a supplier, then the trader's claims to repayment of VAT are not capable of challenge. That is not, in my judgment, a correct view. Suspicious indications obtained by a trader from carrying out due diligence checks on its supplier are one, but not the only basis from which it may properly be inferred that a trader knew or should have known of its implication in VAT fraud. The test to be applied is that set out in para 61 of the judgment, and indeed in the ECJ's final determination at the end of the judgment. Paragraph 51 needs to be understood in the sense that 'all reasonable precautions' may, in some cases, involve ceasing to trade in specified goods in a particular market, at least in the particular manner in which the trader undertakes that trade. Such a situation may conceivably arise where, from other indications available to the trader, the trader knew or should have known that it is more likely than not that, despite all due diligence checking, any further goods traded in the same way will be implicated in VAT fraud.”
10. The standard against which the trader is to be measured is that of a person with the skill, experience of the ordinary competent trader. This can be found from the judgment of Lewison J in Livewire at [123] to [125]. The test must be applied to the taxable person, which in this case is the Appellant company, and not merely its director, Mr Ramdanee. There may be others whose knowledge ought properly to be attributed to the Appellant.
11. Mr Andrews raised only one issue in relation to the applicable law. Based on an answer given to him in his cross-examination of Mr Stone, he argued that the missing trader or the defaulter must be the importer, and that HMRC had provided no evidence, such as EC sales lists, to prove that the alleged missing trader in connection with these transactions, UR Traders Ltd, had been the importer of the mobile phones in question. We do not agree. As Mr Jones pointed out, this issue has been determined by Clarke J in Red 12 Trading Limited v HMRC [2009] EWHC 2563 (Ch) where he states that the fact that descriptions of the classic or simplest form of missing trader habitually referred to the defaulter as the importer (or vice versa) did not mean that a right to deduct input tax on the ground of such fraud could only be denied if HMRC established that the defaulter was the original importer. He said (at [84]):
“In many cases of MTIC fraud the defaulter, i.e. the company which fails to account for VAT and beyond which HMRC will not have been able to trace the chain, will be the actual importer. But it need not be so. Y may be the actual importer who sells (or transfers possession of) the goods to A who sells to B. Both the actual importer and A may go “missing” and make no payment to HMRC at all (as was the case with deals 12–14: see para 21 (iv). The goods may bypass the defaulter and be allocated by the freight forwarder directly to one of the buffer companies (as happened in deal 1) although input and output tax is accounted for by a buffer company earlier in the chain. The buffer company serves its function of preventing HMRC tracing back to the original importer. Third party payments may be made by purchasers in the middle of the chain cutting out those above. What is needed for an MTIC fraud to work is an importation without payment of VAT, a trader who disappears without accounting to HMRC for the output tax it has received, and an export which generates an entitlement to claim back input tax. The original importer will make the most profit from failing to pay over output VAT. For that reason the defaulter is usually the original importer; but any company in the chain which defaults at any stage in the chain will make a profit from not accounting for the VAT, assuming that it has sold on at a profit. In order to justify denial of the right to deduct input tax there must be knowing participation in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of the tax. If that is established, the right is lost. It would be inconsistent with that principle, and an unmerited boon to fraudsters, to require the authorities to prove that the defaulter was the original importer.”
Accordingly it is not necessary for HMRC in this case to prove that UR Traders Limited was the importer of the mobile phones in question.
12. There was no dispute on the standard of proof. This is the ordinary civil standard, namely the balance of probabilities. However, as regards the burden of proof we should make some comments, as there are conflicting approaches in different High Court judgments. The position is summarised by Clarke J in Red 12 Trading at [44] to [49]:
“44 In HMRC v Brayfal Ltd (Unreported)
CH/2008/App 082 Lewison J said that:
“In cases
of this kind, the burden is on HMRC to establish a fraudulent tax loss and that
the transactions giving rise to that loss are connected to the taxpayer's
transactions. If that is established, then the taxpayer must show that it did
not know and could not have known about the fraud.”
45 In Calltell Telecom Ltd v HMRC [2009] EWHC
1081 (Ch) Floyd J held that:
“7. The
mere fact that a transaction forms part of a chain in which fraud occurred is
not enough to justify the refusal of repayment of income tax. To justify such a
refusal the tax authorities must prove that the taxpayer was himself being
fraudulent, or knew or had the means of knowledge of fraud by others.”
46 On 22nd
May 2009 the Chancellor handed down judgment in Blue Sphere Global Ltd v HMRC [2009] EWHC 1150 (Ch), in which he
upheld a trader's appeal from a decision of the tribunal upholding the
Commissioners' refusal to repay input tax. In the course of his judgment he
held that the test used by the tribunal to determine whether the trader had the
requisite knowledge that it was participating in transactions connected with
the fraudulent evasion of VAT was misleading. That test had been expressed by
the tribunal inter alia as follows:
“We
consider that the due diligence exercise relating to Universal [one of the
trader's purchasers] 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.”
47 That
test was, the Chancellor held, misleading for two reasons. First, the burden
was on the Commissioners to prove that the trader ought to have known that by
its purchases it was participating in transactions connected with the
fraudulent evasion of VAT. It was not for the trader to prove that it ought
not. Secondly, it was not sufficient to demonstrate that the trader was
involved in transactions which might turn out to have undesirable
associations. The relevant knowledge was that the trader 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 was not enough; paras 51 and 52.
48 The
Commissioners also had to prove that the trader ought to have known that
earlier transactions, with which the seller of the mobile phones to the trader
was connected, were transactions involving the fraudulent evasion of VAT:
paragraph 53.
49 The
Commissioners, who are appealing the Chancellor's decision in Blue Sphere, contend that, insofar as
the Court intended to alter the burden on HMRC in a simple MTIC case (Blue Sphere was a case of contra
trading) the decision is in conflict with earlier domestic and ECJ authority
not cited to the Chancellor.”
13. This is a simple MTIC, and does not involve
contra-trading. In Red 12 Trading Clarke J found that it was not necessary to decide
the incidence of the burden of proof, but said obiter at [53]:
“Were it necessary to reach a conclusion I should be in agreement with the Chancellor. The ECJ authorities emphasise the importance of the taxpayer's right to deduct input tax in respect of what, viewed objectively, are taxable supplies, whilst recognising the right of public authorities to refuse repayment if the taxpayer knew or ought to have known that its purchases had a fraudulent connection. In these circumstances it seems to me that, if the Commissioners seek to deny the taxpayer a right to repayment of input tax paid on taxable supplies on the grounds of the taxpayer's knowledge (actual or constructive) of a connection to fraud, it is for them to establish that. If, in the light of all the evidence, including that of the taxpayer, the tribunal is not satisfied that he had or ought to have had the requisite knowledge, the taxpayer will be entitled to recover. In practice before a tribunal the stage may be reached at which the evidence calls for an answer, in the sense that, if the taxpayer gives no evidence that he made any inquiries, the tribunal could conclude that he had the requisite knowledge because he either had or ought to have had knowledge of the fraudulent nature of the transaction. But, at the end of the day, it remains for HMRC to convince the Tribunal that it should so conclude.”
14. In light of this we have concluded that we ought to follow the Chancellor’s test of the burden in Blue Sphere, as approved albeit obiter by Clarke J in Red 12 Trading. We do not consider that we can distinguish Blue Sphere from this case on the ground that this is a simple MTIC and does not involve contra-trading.
15. The Appellant is a limited company incorporated on 12 September 1995. It is registered for VAT having first applied for registration on 28 July 1996 and having been registered from an earlier date, namely 2 July 1996, to take account of earlier taxable supplies. The VAT1 registration form completed by the Appellant specified its business as “computer consultancy services”, and we heard from Mr Ramdanee that this had been the nature of the initial business that had been undertaken by him and his partner in the business, Mr A K Bhardwaj.
16. On 16 August 2002 the Appellant was de-registered for VAT on the basis that it had failed to submit two previous VAT returns and that its principal place of business showed no sign of trading. However the Appellant was re-registered on 8 October 2002 on the footing that it was trading from a new principal place of business.
17. At the time of the transactions relevant to these appeals, the directors of the Appellant company were Mr Ramdanee and Mr Bhardwaj. Mr Bhardwaj was also the company secretary. From 12 September 1995 to 19 August 2008, Mr Ramdanee was the director of the Appellant and from that date, according to his witness statement, Mr Ramdanee was, as general manager, involved in all administration duties for the day to day operations of the company and a six month handover period to the new director.
18. In
his evidence Mr Ramdanee explained the background to the mobile phone trading
entered into by the Appellant. An
opportunity arose in Harlow,
19. This in turn led to the Appellant being introduced into the broking business by a third party, identified as Mr R Nagji, who became an agent and trusted adviser to the Appellant. After some initial, limited, activity in this market in 2004, because of the fact that the directors were in full-time employment, the Appellant was invited to become an investor in New Order Exports Ltd (“New Order”), receiving a return described as a commission. No explanation was provided as to the agreement as regards the return to be obtained on the Appellant’s investments in New Order, but an examination of the commission statements produced in evidence by the Appellant shows that for each of the deals done in August 2005, the Appellant received a return equal to 75% of the net profit. Each of those deals also resulted in a gross profit for New Order, after recovery of input tax, of around 6% (the figures varying only between 5.82% and 6.17%).
20. Mr Ramdanee’s evidence was that at the start of 2006 the Appellant’s agent told the Appellant that its investment was no longer required, but that the Appellant was to be given the opportunity to trade on its own account. The Appellant agreed to do so on the basis that the return (which the Appellant had seen was obtainable on the New Order transactions) was excellent. Mr Ramdanee said that the agent introduced him and Mr Bhardwaj “to the party”, in the form of two trades. From deal logs produced in evidence by the Appellant, we find that the following deals were undertaken in this period:
(1) On 23 February 2006 the Appellant purchased 2,000 digital e-cards from Gulf Link FZE at £19 per unit, a gross value of £38,000. On 26 February 2006, the Appellant sold 2,000 digital e-cards to New Order at a unit price of £21, a gross value of £42,000 (exclusive of VAT).
(2) On 4 March 2006 the Appellant again sold 2,000 digital e-cards to New Order at £21 per unit.
(3) On 15 March 2006 the Appellant purchased 2,000 digital e-cards from Gulf Link FZE at £19 per unit. The customer name included against this transaction is again New Order.
(4)
On 4 April 2006 the Appellant sold 3,500 mobile phones
(no indication is given as to make or model) to Sunico A/S of
(5) In May 2006, there were further transactions in digital e-cards, in each case the acquisition being from Gulf Link FZE, and the customer being Sinclair Data Systems Ltd.
(6) On 30 May 2006 the Appellant entered into four transactions in mobile phones of different unit prices. Its supplier was again Joe UK Limited and its customer Sunico A/S. The overall value of its purchases was £433,062.50, exclusive of VAT, and its aggregate sale price was £459,213.14, a mark-up, on a net of VAT basis, of 6%. For the individual phone consignments the mark-ups were between 5.93% and 6.15%.
21. In the VAT period 08/06 two transactions were identified by HMRC as appropriate for extended verification, and it is those transactions with which this appeal is concerned. There is no dispute on the facts of the transactions themselves, which were described in HMRC’s evidence, and were included in the deal logs produced by the Appellant. On 11 July 2006 the Appellant purchased from Blue Star Trading Ltd 1,450 Nokia 8800 mobile phones at a unit price of £312.20 giving a value, exclusive of VAT, of £452,690 and 1,000 Nokia 9300i mobile phones at a unit price of £248.40 giving a value, exclusive of VAT, of £248,400. On the same day the Appellant sold to Sunico A/S the same quantity of each phone, in the case of the Nokia 8800 at a unit price of £330.90, giving a value of £479,805, and in the case of the Nokia 9300i at a unit price of £263.30, giving a value of £263,000. The mark up on each sale by the Appellant was a fraction short of 6%.
22. The evidence of HMRC, specifically that of Mr Mayungbe and Mr Dean, demonstrates that these transactions were part of a chain. The transactions were identified as separate deals in relation to the Nokia 8800 and the Nokia 9300i respectively, but it seems to us that, apart from one additional final link in the chain that relates only to the sale by Sunico A/S of the Nokia 9300i phones to a Netherlands company, the transactions in both phones were invoiced by each supplier in the chain as a single deal, and we therefore consider that, up to the purchase by Sunico A/S, we should regard the transactions a representing a single chain, and not two separate chains. On the basis of the documentary evidence before us, we find that the Appellant’s transactions were part of the following chains, which identify separately the invoice chain, the money chain (that is, how payments were made notwithstanding the invoice chain) and the freight forwarder chain, that is how the ownership of the goods moved:
Invoice chain:
Money chain:
Sunico – the Appellant – Bluestar Trading – Ultimate Wholesale – Alpha (
Freight forwarder chain: DRA – Imanse – Ultimate Wholesale – Bluestar Trading – the Appellant
23. This
is the full extent of the chain in respect of the Nokia 8800 phones. The only difference in relation to the Nokia
9300i phones is that there is an additional link in the invoice chain at the
very end, after Sunico, where Silus (
24. As regards the fact that companies in the invoice chain, namely UR Traders, Principle Traders and Carpaa, did not also feature in the money, or payment, chain, we had evidence from Mr Stone that such third party payments were often a feature of MTIC fraud. These third party payments are as a result of payment instructions given to either the trader dealing with the missing trader (“the first line buffer”) or to another buffer trader further along the chain. The purpose is to ensure that the missing trader is unlikely to have assets available to meet its VAT liability.
25. Mr Stone also gave evidence regarding the possible reason for a difference between the invoice chain and the freight forwarder chain. The effect of this would be that the freight forwarder would not know the identity of the missing trader, thus making it more difficult for HMRC to identify such a trader at the freight forwarder level so as to de-register the missing trader.
26. One
particular feature of the money chain merits further comment. As will be seen from the above description,
Sunico A/S features both at the start and end of that chain. It paid £263,000 to the Appellant on 18 July
2006 and on the following day it received £275,000 from DRA Corporation Limited,
a
27. The first question we have to address is whether HMRC have satisfied us, on the balance of probabilities, that there was a tax loss. As described above, we are satisfied that the transactions can be traced back to UR Traders Ltd (“UR Traders”). UR Traders has not submitted a VAT return since its first VAT return for period 10/05. Its registration was cancelled with effect from 26 July 2006. We were informed by Mr Quartey, and we accept, that various assessments have been raised against UR Traders in respect of which that company has defaulted in an amount, at the date of the hearing, of about £66 million.
28. We are satisfied that there was a tax loss.
29. Mr Jones argued that the evidence clearly demonstrated that the tax loss was attributable to fraud. He pointed to the tax loss on the default of UR Traders. The evidence of Mr Quartey showed that on its VAT registration form UR Traders had stated its business activities as “retail electrical items, crockery, computer parts” and its estimated taxable turnover as £200,000. The value of the expected purchases from the EU and sales to the EU was stated as nil. Based on the assessments raised against UR Traders, the total taxable supplies made by that company in the 12 months subsequent to registration would have been in excess of £366,385,579, inclusive of VAT. Given the estimated taxable turnover at the time of the VAT registration, this is a growth rate in excess of 183,000% in a period of less than one calendar year.
30. On
26 July 2006 Mr Quartey visited UR Traders at its principal place of business
at
31. Also on 26 July 2006 Mr Quartey sent a letter to UR Traders notifying it of the removal of its VAT registration from the VAT register. Subsequently, on 1 February 2007, Mr Quartey visited 240A Helly Road, Manor Park, London E12 6UD, the address listed at Companies House as the residential address of the company director Ahmad Janjuva and the company secretary Khalid Nawaz. There was no response. Despite leaving a calling card, Mr Quartey has not been contacted by either the company director or the secretary.
32. On 30 August 2007 mail addressed to UR Traders was returned to HMRC marked RTS (return to sender). Mr Quartey attempted to contact UR Traders on two telephone numbers given in its application to register for VAT, but neither is in service. A National Telephone Unit (“NTU”) check shows that one of the numbers was registered to NPower Yorkshire Ltd, Top Rank Club, 79 High Street North, London E6 1HZ, and the other to a person other than the named company director or secretary. Finally no VAT return has ever been rendered by UR Traders since its first VAT return for the period 10/05.
33. As well as the facts surrounding UR Traders itself, Mr Jones also referred us to the chains of transactions as themselves evidencing fraud. We received evidence from Mr Fletcher as to the “grey market” in mobile phone handset distribution and the limited opportunities to enter that market. It was submitted on behalf of HMRC that the transaction chains were not consistent with profitable grey market trading. We accept the evidence of Mr Fletcher in this respect. According to his evidence the grey market exists because of market failures occurring in the authorised distribution market. These market failures fall into two distinct categories: those relating to volume failures, and those relating to price failures. Volume failures (or forecast failures) are caused by the authorised distributor holding too much or too little stock. This failure creates the two grey market trading opportunities of volume shortages and dumping. Price failures are caused by differentials arising in the price of particular handsets in different markets. These differentials can be caused by a variance in the level of the handset subsidy applied to the handset by the mobile network operator in different countries. This leads to the grey market opportunity of box-breaking. The differential can also be caused by the original equipment manufacturer (“OEM”), in this case Nokia, setting a different price for the same handset in different markets. This leads to the grey market opportunity of arbitrage.
34. Mr
Fletcher identified a number of negative indicators in respect of each of these
grey market opportunities that would suggest that profitable grey market
trading was not being undertaken. In
relation to box-breaking, trading in handsets that did not originate in the UK
indicates that box-breaking is unlikely to be taking place, since handsets in
the UK are amongst the most heavily subsidised in Europe. The presence of a two-pin plug means that the
phone was not originally intended for use in the
35. In relation to arbitrage, Mr Fletcher’s evidence was that trading in Nokia phones excludes traders from pursuing arbitrage opportunities as Nokia sets homogenous pricing for its customers across all territories. Whilst currency arbitrage would remain possible in theory, Mr Fletcher’s evidence was that, having regard to the fluctuations in the sterling to euro exchange rate during 2006, it was unlikely that these would have been sufficient to support arbitrage opportunities other than at enormous volumes, and they appeared insufficient to generate opportunities that would cover even the fixed costs.
36. Mr Fletcher said that profitable volume shortage opportunities in the grey market required very specific phone descriptions on order forms and invoices. Furthermore, a trader would be unlikely to be able to compete in the market without its own stock, or rapid access to the exact stock required, due to the rapid response expectations of its customers. Advantages of price and reliability of supply could be obtained through dealing with an authorised distributor. Failure to do so, despite selling sufficient numbers of phones to establish trade terms with an authorised distributor, would be a negative indicator in respect of profitable grey market trading in respect of volume shortages.
37. Mr Fletcher explained the “dumping” takes place where distributors have excess stock that they cannot trade for a suitable level of profit in their own operating territory. A distributor is unlikely to purchase stock that is being dumped, as the distributor would be expected to have the requisite market knowledge to know that the phone is being dumped and would be commercially unpopular.
38. Mr Fletcher also explained that in a profitable grey market the most profitable position is for the distributor to be supplied by an authorised distributor or mobile network operator and for them in turn to sell directly to the retailer or end customer. This works best if there are relatively short deal chains. Profitability and margins are likely to be reduced in longer deal chains, which therefore suffer from the risk of disintermediation, that is where traders are cut out of the chain.
39. In cross-examination by Mr Andrews, Mr Fletcher said that he was not arguing that the negative indicators to which he had referred would suggest fraud. They merely suggested that it was highly unlikely that the transactions entered into with those indicators would be a profitable or profit-driven grey market trade. We accept Mr Fletcher’s evidence, and we find that the long chain of traders, the lack of specificity on the orders and invoices we have seen, the fact that the phones were Nokia phones and that there was no warehousing of stock by any of the parties, taken together indicate that it was more likely than not that the trades were not being carried out in pursuit of profitable grey market trading, but were, as Mr Jones submitted, contrived for the purpose of fraud on the VAT system.
40. We are satisfied that HMRC have discharged the burden of showing that the tax loss resulted from fraud. We accept that UR Traders was a missing trader, and we regard its failure to make VAT returns and to account for VAT, its disappearance and the disappearance of its director and secretary, its false contact details, and the fact that it must have given a third party payment instruction to exclude itself from the payment chain and was also excluded from the freight forwarder chain as showing, in the context of a chain of transactions that cannot be accepted as representing profitable grey market trading, on the balance of probabilities that it was engaged in fraud and that the tax loss resulted from that fraud.
41. Mr Jones also argued that the circularity of payments in the money chain that we have described earlier showed a clear tax loss attributable to fraud because the payments must be orchestrated in such a way that the person who makes the first payment receives it back in a circle and that the payment chain is never broken. HMRC’s argument was that such a circle could not realistically occur by chance, or at least that the chances of it occurring by chance are so small as to be disregarded. We agree that this is strong evidence of an orchestrated design, and we find that the transactions were contrived, were not in themselves commercial transactions, and were designed for the purpose of VAT evasion.
42. As
well as circularity of payments, Mr Jones referred us to the IMEI checks that
HMRC had carried out on the inspection reports obtained by the Appellant from
A1 Inspections Limited on the consignments of the two phones concerned in the
Appellant’s trades. The IMEI, or
International Mobile Equipment Identity, numbers are unique identifiers
attached to each phone and they can be scanned and recorded each time the
phones enter and leave the
43. Mr Andrews argued, by reference to a reply of Mr Stone given to him in cross-examination, that it would be necessary that the defaulting trader was shown to have been the importer, and that this had not been shown by HMRC, either having regard to EC sales lists or otherwise. Mr Stone had said that “on paper … [the defaulter] would have to be the acquirer”. This is a question of law, and not of evidence, and as we have noted earlier it is not necessary for HMRC to show that UR Traders was the acquirer of the phones in the intra-community trade.
44. Mr Andrews also argued that the three traders in the chain that did not receive payment, namely Carpaa, Principle Traders and UR Traders, could themselves be regarded as “fiscal victims”, and unable to pay their VAT liabilities simply through themselves not being paid. He suggested that it might have been possible for these companies to claim bad debt relief. As regards UR Traders, we do not accept this as a credible explanation. In our view UR Traders was not a fiscal victim as described by Mr Andrews, but the tax loss occasioned by its default was the result of a fraud, for the reasons we have given.
45. We have examined the evidence regarding the chain of deals including both UR Traders, the missing trader, and the Appellant. For the reasons we have given we are satisfied that the Appellant’s transactions were connected to the fraudulent evasion of UR Traders.
46. In relation to the burden of proof on this
question, Mr Jones said that the primary submission of HMRC was that, having
heard the evidence, the Tribunal need not consider the issue of the potentially
conflicting authorities on where the burden of proof lies. If, contrary to the position of HMRC on the
law, the burden of proof lies fully upon HMRC, he submitted that the evidence
heard by the Tribunal was more than sufficient to discharge that burden. We indicated earlier that we prefer the approach
of the Chancellor in Blue Sphere and
the obiter comments of Clarke J in Red 12
Trading, and we accordingly approach this question on the footing that,
having due regard to the evidence given by the Appellant, or the absence of it,
the burden lies on HMRC.
47. As regards the evidence, the Tribunal heard
only from Mr Ramdanee. It heard no oral
evidence from Mr Ramdanee’s business partner and co-shareholder in the
Appellant, Mr Bhardwaj, nor from the Appellant’s agent, Mr Nagji, nor from
Bluestar, from which company the Appellant bought the phones in question, nor
from Sunico A/S, the Danish company to which the Appellant sold the phones.
48. Mr Jones referred us first to the deal
chains, which we have found to be connected to the fraudulent evasion of VAT. He said that there were two deals – one for
the Nokia 8800 phones and one for the Nokia 9300i phones – that showed two
perfect carousels with the money flowing in a circle through numerous FCIB bank
accounts (and Jyske bank in the case of Sunico A/S) within the course of two
days. He argued that it was inherently
implausible that both transactions could have occurred by chance. Mr Jones said that in order for MTIC fraud to
be carried out successfully, the transactions had to be directed. The fraud cannot operate successfully unless
the orchestrators of the fraud know that the funds will pass through the hands
of each of the nominated European exporter, UK buffer traders, UK broker (here
the Appellant) and European importer. He
argued that there was no reasonable explanation as to how the Appellant
happened to purchase from exactly the right supplier and sell to exactly the
right customer the precisely correct number of phones on each separate
occasion, thereby ensuring that the orchestrators of the fraud received the
money injected at the start of each carousel.
49. By “carousel” here, Mr Jones was not, as we
understand it, describing a typical carousel fraud of the nature we have
described above in relation to the scanning of the IMEI numbers, where goods
are exported from the UK as part of a scheme for fraudulent evasion of VAT, and
are then re-imported so that the fraudulent process can begin again. He was merely referring to the circular nature
of the money chain which, we have found, shows that the transactions were
contrived, and we accept therefore that they must have been orchestrated.
50. We do not consider that any conclusions can
be drawn from the fact that these transactions have been analysed as separate
for the purpose of identifying the relevant chains. As we have set out above, in our view,
certainly from the perspective of the Appellant, this was a single trade,
covering both the Nokia 8800 phones and the Nokia 9300i phones. These were not, contrary to Mr Jones’
submission, separate transactions. We
do, however, accept that the single deal chain was orchestrated.
51. The burden of Mr Ramdanee’s evidence on the
July deals was that the entry of the Appellant into the brokerage business in
mobile phones was made after extensive study and hard work in related fields,
leading to an acceptance into the market place.
We found his evidence in this regard unconvincing. He referred extensively to the research that
had been carried out prior to trading, but was unable to recall, or provide to
the Tribunal, any significant detail of this.
Of the tens, or hundreds, of potential suppliers said to have been
researched in the period of about a month prior to these transactions, Mr
Ramdanee could not recall a single name.
He told us that he might have fax logs to evidence the contacts made,
but these were apparently archived and we did not receive any in evidence. His reason for lack of detail in this period
was that he had been interested in watching the football World Cup. We formed the view that Mr Ramdanee was an
opportunist who relied on others to provide the opportunities to trade, whether
this was Mr Nagji, or New Order, or some other person; he told us that he had
received advice from others but could not tell us from whom.
52. Our conclusion that the Appellant carried
out less than extensive research was reinforced by Mr Ramdanee’s own evidence
in cross-examination. He was asked by Mr
Jones how many suppliers and customers he spoke to before he arrived at Bluestar
as the supplier. His answer was: “They
were the first.” Furthermore, in
relation to the trade with Sunico A/S he said: “I believe Sunico was my first
port of call as well.” Mr Ramdanee’s
explanation for the fact that the Appellant was able to deal with Bluestar and
Sunico was that this was “a lot of luck”.
We do not accept this evidence.
Also in cross-examination Mr Ramdanee was asked about certain
transactions carried out by New Order Exports Limited, the company in which the
Appellant had previously invested in return for a share of its profits from
mobile phone trading. He was asked if
there was any coincidence in the fact that New Order had bought from the same
supplier – Bluestar – and sold to the same customer – Sunico A/S as the
Appellant did shortly afterwards. His answer
was that he was not privy to New Order’s records. He claimed that he did not carry out any
checks in relation to the Appellant’s substantial financial investment in New
Order except to verify its existence on the Companies Register, and that he did
not look at New Order’s trading records.
He said that he did not obtain any information about Bluestar and Sunico
from New Order, saying: “No, it was through my agent”, and confirming that this
was Mr Nagji. We find that the Appellant
did not make contact with Bluestar or Sunico A/S through its own research or
marketing activity. It was directed
towards those traders by Mr Nagji.
53. Mr Jones submitted that the Appellant was
not involved in the genuine grey market and that it knew or should have known
that it was not involved in genuine commercial trading. We accepted Mr Fletcher’s evidence that the
trades carried out are unlikely to have been for the purpose of profitable grey
market trading. Mr Andrews argued that
the business the Appellant was in was of pure broking which had different
characteristics to those referred to by Mr Fletcher. Thus it was to be expected that deals would
be back-to-back and that stock would not be held. We accept that broking is different from
wholesale and that neither the mere fact that trades are back to back or stock
is not physically held are of themselves indicative of fraud, but the trade
must nevertheless be explicable in commercial terms. Mr Jones argued that Mr Ramdanee’s evidence
showed that he was not concerned with the commercial rationale for the Appellant’s
business activity. We agree. Mr Ramdanee referred to the profit motive,
and to supply and demand as the reasons for the trade. Supply and demand is of course a basic
principle of economics, but we consider that a reasonable businessman would
seek a deeper understanding of the economics of the business, and would be
expected to appreciate that, in the circumstances of these transactions, the
market itself would not produce the profit.
Mr Ramdanee did demonstrate an awareness that one of the roles of the
exporter in these deals, indeed probably the principal role, was the financing
of the VAT element of the price paid to the
54. We do not accept Mr Ramdanee’s evidence that
the price agreed with Sunico A/S was a negotiated price. For both of the consignments of mobile phones
the mark up was just short of 6%. Of
itself it seems to us to be an unlikely coincidence that the Appellant had
managed to obtain prices with Bluestar for each type of phone that enabled a
uniform mark up to be achieved on its own sale.
The only discernable added value provided by the Appellant in the
transaction is the financing of the VAT cash flow. But that is not something that adds value as
far as an EU customer is concerned, and not therefore something that an EU
customer would expect to pay for in the form of a mark up of 6%. In evidence, Mr Ramdanee referred to the
pricing and said that this was based on market experience. He said that there was “a certain
acknowledgement that your cash flow would be tied up to actually fund the deal. So the profits would … have to be more
significant, so to say.” But, in a genuine trade, it is not credible that such
an acknowledgement could come from an EU customer that was unconcerned with the
mechanics of UK VAT but would be concerned with the commercial price. This
suggests that Sunico A/S was not engaged in a genuine trade or that the value
added by the Appellant taking the cash flow burden was acknowledged by someone
other than Sunico A/S, and that the price was determined otherwise than through
negotiation. We therefore consider that the pricing of the deal with Sunico A/S
was determined without negotiation and without reference to the market.
55. Mr Jones argued that there were other clear
indicators that the Appellant was not involved in genuine commercial trading
which would have alerted the reasonable, honest and competent trader to the
fact that the transactions were connected with fraud. He pointed to the fact that all the phones in
the export transactions had two-pin charger plugs. Mobile phones are not manufactured in the
56. Mr Fletcher’s evidence was that the longer
the deal chain the greater the risk of disintermediation, and the less likely
that this could be part of profitable grey market trading. Mr Ramdanee claimed that he did not know at
the relevant time that there were at least five participants in the chain. Apart from the Appellant itself, he knew of
Bluestar and Sunico A/S, but he ought also to have been aware that Bluestar
would have acquired the phones from another trader, which could have been an
authorised distributor, and that Sunico A/S would on-sell the phones as it was
not itself a retail customer. Mr Jones
argued that the basic premise which underlies the Appellant’s trading activities
is that two European companies dealing in the same market as the Appellant,
using the same websites and notice boards as the Appellant, one looking to buy
and one looking to sell a particular quantity of a particular mobile phone on a
given day, are unable to find each other and the seller therefore has to export
to the UK (with all the export costs that entails), whereby the goods pass
through a number of different traders before being re-exported to Europe by the
Appellant. We agree that this is a factor
that should have been considered by the Appellant. It ought to have led to the conclusion that
the trade was inherently implausible as a genuine commercial trade.
57. Mr Jones argued that the Appellant was
trading a substantial volume of Nokia phones, which represented an obviously
unrealistic market share of the total volume of phones available from
authorised distributors. He submitted
that, as someone who claimed to have undertaken considerable research into the
mobile phone market, Mr Ramdanee should have known, at least in approximate
terms, the size of the market in which the Appellant was dealing. He said the fact that a company such as the
Appellant was able to command such astonishing market share in such a short
space of time is an indicator of fraud that would have been apparent to any
honest and careful trader. We do not
accept Mr Jones’ argument in this respect.
Mr Fletcher’s evidence was that the Appellant’s trades amounted to a
sizeable share of the market. We were
referred to calculations of the market share for the two mobile phones in
question. In the case of the Nokia 8800,
the Appellant’s trade involved 1,450 units and the total market in 07/06
identified from Mr Fletcher’s evidence was 44,435. Mr Fletcher’s evidence was that 36% of this
market would be satisfied by phones that were neither sold through the mobile
phone network’s direct sales channels nor through the large specialist
multiples such as Carphone Warehouse.
The grey market would itself be only a proportion of this 36% share
because the white market would meet the larger proportion of the wholesale
demand for that sales channel. Taking
these figures, and accepting that the grey market would itself be a smaller
percentage than 36% of the total market, it was said that the Appellant’s trade
would represent 3.26% of the total market and 9.06% of the available market,
only a part of which would be satisfied through the grey market itself. The corresponding percentages for the Nokia 9300i
were 6.86% of the total market and 19.06% of the available market.
58. In calculating market share Mr Fletcher
referred to market data obtained from GfK Marketing Services Ltd, part of the
GfK group of market research companies.
GfK are recognised as a leading market research provider. Data is collected from over 26 countries
worldwide by use of links to electronic point of sales systems located in
retail outlets. The outlets covered are
solely retail; the wholesale market is not tracked in this research, and so
there is no figure for the number of phones manufactured or released for sale
against which to compare the Appellant’s trades. Mr Fletcher was challenged in
cross-examination by Mr Andrews as to the value of the comparison that had been
made. His response was that it added
value to the discussion because the grey market exists, as does the rest of the
wholesale market, to supply the retail market.
A comparison of the retail and wholesale markets in this way was
relevant because it allows a view to be taken as to the proportion of the
phones that have been traded in the grey market as against those that are
actually being sold.
59. Mr Fletcher accepted, however, that the GfK
numbers were not entirely comprehensive.
Only 92% of retail sales of its “tracked universe” were included, and
the tracked universe excluded corporate (or business to business) sales and a
number of other outlets, such as offshore islands, petrol stations, newsagents,
black market, exports and toy shops.
Business to business (or B2B) sales were explained by Mr Fletcher as the
sales of phones by mobile network operators to large corporate customers who
would provide phones to their employees.
A corporate buyer would not source phones from the grey market, and so
this exclusion did not affect the market share calculations.
60. In our view the exclusions from the “tracked
universe” against which these comparisons have been made are such that the
precise percentages extrapolated are not themselves of material evidential
value. It is not possible, in our view,
on the basis of this evidence as presented, to conclude to the standard
required that the Appellant’s trades in the mobile phones in question did
represent such a sizeable proportion of the overall market as to be a factor in
determining whether the Appellant either knew, or should have known, of the
fraud. We also note that the GfK data is
not readily available to an ordinary trader.
It may be available at a cost, but we do not consider that a reasonable
trader would be expected to have access to this information. For these reasons we do not place any
reliance on the market share information.
61. Mr Jones’ next point was that the legal
risks involved in the transactions undertaken by the Appellant were either not
properly analysed or were ignored, in particular with respect to being sued for
the contract price in the event of the deal chains collapsing and, in such a
scenario, having to pay the cost of retrieving the goods which had been
forwarded abroad. This, it was argued,
was indicative of non-commercial trading.
Mr Ramdanee’s evidence showed that he was not really concerned with the
contractual position. His evidence was
that he expected that if there had been any problems those problems could have
been resolved verbally, without recourse to any legal contract, and including
the ability to back out of the deal.
62. We were shown the terms and conditions of
purchase that covered the purchase order made by the Appellant in relation to
its purchase from Bluestar. These were
not bespoke or even drafted with this particular type of transaction in mind;
Mr Ramdanee said in evidence that the terms and conditions had been downloaded
from the internet. Those conditions
include the following as regards cancellation of the contract:
“7. In the
event of force majeure, strike, riot, civil commotion, war, epidemic, quota,
embargo, interruption or congestion of transportation, inability to obtain
shipping space, or other causes or circumstances beyond the control of the
Purchaser, which interfere with the completion of this contract, the Purchaser
on giving notice to the Vendor shall be entitled to cancel this contract
without paying to the Vendor any damages or compensations. The Purchaser reserves the right to postpone
the shipment.”
The Appellant
also reserved the right under these conditions to withhold payment on any
delivery in settlement of outstanding claims and on any shipments made that
were not to the appellant’s satisfaction.
63. There was nothing in these purchase
conditions that would have enabled the Appellant simply to unwind its
transaction with Bluestar if its own customer, Sunico A/S had defaulted. Nor did the conditions make reference to the
passing of legal title, a matter which, according to Mr Ramdanee’s evidence,
was crucial in determining that the goods would only be released upon
payment. The Appellant remained liable
to pay Bluestar, and could not simply unwind the contract or return the goods
(assuming it could have recovered them once shipped to
64. Mr Jones submitted that a key aspect of any
genuine, high value transaction that a business undertakes is to ensure that
the product is properly identified, so that the product matches the customer’s
order and to avoid any potential disputes, after the event, as to the subject
matter of the contract. He argued that
this was clearly lacking in the Appellant’s business, and that this provided a
strong indication that the specification of the products simply did not matter
either to the Appellant or its customer.
From the evidence before us Mr Jones identified the following points in
support of his argument:
(1) The Appellant failed to identify the phones
properly on both purchase and sale, leaving it open to the likelihood of
disputes. The Appellant did no more than
list the make, model, quantity and price, and the generic term “Central
European specification”. This
information was insufficient to establish the true specification of the phones,
their true value, and whether the phones would meet a customer’s
specifications. The generic product
description on the purchase orders and invoices left traders at risk of dealing
in handsets which were not adequately enough specified to meet customer
requirements. Mr Fletcher’s evidence was
that such descriptions did not include a range of matters which a purchaser
would expect.
(2) The purchase orders from Sunico A/S in no
way matched the phones that are said to have been inspected on behalf of the
Appellant by A1 Inspections. Mr Jones
produced for the Tribunal a summary of the specifications requested by Sunico
A/S as compared against the phones despatched.
We have considered the evidence in this respect and it is apparent from
this comparison that there were significant differences, particularly in
relation to software language and warranty that in a normal commercial
transaction would have given rise to issues, for example as to price. Mr Ramdanee ignored the fact that the phones
did not fully come up to specification as being the customer’s problem; the customer
could inspect the goods and choose to accept them. Mr Jones noted that this could have led to
the wholesale rejection of the consignment with the attendant transport costs
of returning the goods from
(3) Inspection
of the goods sold by the Appellant only took place after the goods had been
delivered “ship on hold”. Mr Jones
argued that it was remarkable that, given the non-correlation of the phones
with Sunico A/S’s specification, none of the phones were queried and none were
returned. Nor was the price questioned
or renegotiated by Sunico A/S. Mr
Ramdanee did say in evidence that Sunico A/S had told him that three phones
were missing, a fact that A1 Inspections had not noted. Mr Ramdanee initially said in evidence that
he thought he might have paid Sunico A/S a refund, but there was no evidence of
this and he later claimed that he gave them a discount. But there was no evidence of a discount
either.
65. Mr Ramdanee’s evidence was that there was
nothing in the inspection report carried out by A1 Inspections that caused him
any real concern. He said that his
interest was in the IMEI numbers, and whether they were repeated (which, as we
have earlier described, could indicate that the phones were part of a “carousel
fraud”). As regards the IMEI numbers we
accept that neither the Appellant nor A1 Inspections had access to the NEMESIS
database, and that a check by A1 Inspections could only reveal duplicates in
their own records. However, aside from
the question of the IMEI numbers, it was evident from the inspection report
that in a number of material respects the actual phones did not meet the
specification set out by Sunico A/S in its purchase order. Mr Ramdanee said that in the business world
there would be some room for manoeuvre on this, and it would come down to
negotiations. His view was that it was
for the customer to inspect the goods and if not satisfied to return them. But this fails to take account of the fact
that, unless there had been some breach by Bluestar, the Appellant would have
remained liable to pay the price to Bluestar and would not, as we have
described, have any right simply to return the goods to Bluestar. Mr Ramdanee was asked by Mr Jones why he did
not seek to obtain confirmation from Bluestar that the phones would match those
specified by Sunico A/S. His response
was to the effect that this was not possible given the pressure of time to do
the deal and that in any event even if the goods did not accord with the
purchase order they may in practice be accepted. This to our minds is another example of Mr
Ramdanee not being concerned as to the contractual position or any form of
risk. If, as Mr Ramdanee contended, this
had been a fully-negotiated sale and purchase it is quite evident that a
purchaser would agree a particular price on the assumption that the goods would
meet a particular specification. In such
a case it is not credible, and we do not accept, that any reasonable
businessman would rely on such a purchaser not enforcing the actual contract
and simply saying, in Mr Ramdanee’s words: “OK, we can use those goods.”
66. It follows from this that we agree with the
submission of Mr Jones in this respect
that these factors, taken together, should have alerted the Appellant to the
fact that the transactions in which it was participating were connected to
fraud. An honest and careful trader
would in our view have reached that conclusion.
67. We now move to consider if the Appellant
took all reasonable precautions to avoid entering into transactions that were
connected to fraud. Mr Ramdanee, and
consequently the Appellant, was clearly aware of the prevalence of MTIC fraud
in the mobile phone industry at the time the deals in question were
undertaken. In his evidence he accepted
that he had knowledge of MTIC fraud generally, through meetings with HMRC
officers and VAT Notice 726 over the period.
He knew therefore of the importance of due diligence in relation to the
Appellant’s transactions. His witness
statement says that the Appellant performed all the due diligence checks
outlined in all the relevant notices sent by HMRC.
68. In his evidence Mr Ramdanee claimed that his
understanding was that he only needed to be satisfied that the Appellant’s own
supplier was the missing trader. We do
not accept this. Mr Ramdanee is an
intelligent man who is fully capable of understanding the information that had
been given to him, both in meetings with HMRC officials and in VAT Notice
726. Notice 726 itself refers to the
fact that it concerns VAT unpaid not only on the direct supply to the trader,
but on any previous or subsequent supply, and explains that a trader is not
necessarily expected to know its supplier’s supplier or the full range of
selling prices through its own supply chain.
This clearly indicates that the supply chain may be longer than the
individual purchase and sale carried out by the trader, and Notice 726 goes on
to state clearly, in this connection: “… we would expect you to make a judgment
on the integrity of your supply chain.”
Even if we could conclude that Mr Ramdanee did not appreciate that he
was expected to consider the integrity of the supply chain beyond his own, we
find that this would not have been reasonable, and a failure to consider the
wider picture would mean that the Appellant did not take reasonable
precautions.
69. As regards the Appellant’s due diligence in
relation to its own supplier, Bluestar, the Appellant did not inspect the
premises of that company. Instead, Mr
Ramdanee and one other, whom we infer was Mr Bhardwaj, travelled to a service
station on the M1 motorway to meet the directors of Bluestar. No documents were inspected at that meeting. A Company History Questionnaire was completed
by Bluestar on 10 July 2006, to which it was said that references were attached
from S M Accounting Services and Dass, solicitors. However, no references were produced in
evidence. The Appellant undertook a credit
check on Bluestar on 11 July 2006, the date of the purchases of the mobile
phones from that supplier, undertaken by a company called Checksure. The “checkSCORE” on the report was recorded
as “L – Accounts which should have been filed are late., and the report also
records that “the last filed accounts at Companies House are those to
31/01/04”, some 2½ years prior to July 2006.
The credit check report was timed at 17.27. Mr Ramdanee’s evidence was that he
telephoned Bluestar’s accountants on 11 July 2006 who clarified that the late
filing had been their error and that the accounts would be filed shortly. But he was unable to provide any further
detail. If Mr Ramdanee did telephone the
accountant then it appears to us that this was probably already too late. The credit report shows a balance sheet with
a total asset figure of £4,000 at 31 January 2004, with a total liability
figure of £3,000, leaving net current assets of £1,000. Mr Ramdanee said that he was not concerned
with this, relying on the fact of earlier deals and the business relationship
that had been built up. However, we do
not consider that the Appellant’s checks in this respect, and the fact that
contra-indications were present but not fully followed up, were reasonable.
70. The verification check of Bluestar’s VAT
registration with the HMRC office at Redhill was also done after the deal, on
12 July 2006. Mr Ramdanee’s explanation
of this was that it was difficult to contact Redhill, and he suggested that
HMRC were making verification difficult for traders. He was not concerned that no verification had
been received at the time of the deal.
He saw the transaction purely in terms of risk and reward. The Appellant had traded with Bluestar on a
previous occasion, and Mr Ramdanee’s view was that as payment for the phones
had not as at 12 July 2006 been released it would have remained possible for
the deal to have been unwound. As we
have indicated, we consider that Mr Ramdanee is wrong on this point, and in our
view a reasonable businessman would have known that.
71. Mr Jones referred us to certain documents
relating to due diligence on the directors of Bluestar provided by the
Appellant in the course of this appeal.
These were a British gas bill, a BT bill and photocopies of passports of
the directors, Nahim Tasin and Zahid Mahmood Karim. The British Gas bill was dated 10 August 2006
and the BT bill had an issue date of 9 October 2006. Both documents have a fax header at the foot
of the page which purports to confirm that the documents were sent by Bluestar
on 13 July 2006 at 12:02 and 12:03 respectively. It can be inferred from this that all these
documents were not obtained as part of the Appellant’s due diligence. Mr Ramdanee was unable to give any
explanation as to the apparent discrepancy between the dates on the bills and
the date on the fax. In any event the
fax date of 13 July 2006 was after the deal with Bluestar had been struck.
72. Mr Jones argued that there were similar
question marks over the due diligence undertaken by the Appellant on Sunico
A/S. A credit check was undertaken on
Sunico A/S on 26 April 2006 by D&B Inc.
Whilst the report indicates Sunico’s rating as “AA – good credit
worthiness” and its history as being “well-established”, Mr Jones submitted
that the pertinent question for the Appellant, as Sunico’s supplier, would be
its ability to pay. The figures in the
finance section of the report are recorded in Danish krone (DKK). It appears from Mr Ramdanee’s evidence that
there was no attempt on the part of the Appellant to translate the DKK figure
into sterling. If it had done, this
would have revealed that Sunico A/S had a credit limit of £2,874.96, a turnover
of £623,350 and a net income of £4,468.
Given that the two deals were for an aggregate price of £823,780.75, Mr
Jones submitted, having regard to the risks attaching to non-payment for the
goods, that it was not reasonable for the Appellant not to have made further
enquiries as to the financial position of Sunico A/S. We agree.
We consider that a reasonable businessman would have made such further
enquiries and by not doing so the Appellant failed to take reasonable
precautions.
73. The lack of any rigorous due diligence in
respect of Bluestar or Sunico A/S is to
our minds all the more unreasonable given the fact that the Appellant knew,
from its earlier dealings, that Bluestar had requested a third party payment to
Sunico A/S, and that the Appellant was aware, as Mr Ramdanee confirmed in
evidence, that third party payments were considered by HMRC to be an indicator
of fraud.
74. The Appellant had an account with the First
Curacao International Bank (“FCIB”) in the
75. The evidence of Mr Ramdanee with respect to
the opening of the FCIB account was less than satisfactory or convincing. Mr Ramdanee recalled that Mr Nagji, the
agent, had advised the use of FCIB as a bank, and said that other traders had
also recommended it. He was asked if New
Order was one of those traders, and he said that this was possible, but he could
not recall. He was also unsure whether
he had completed the application form, or particular parts of it, or whether Mr
Bhardwaj had participated in that exercise and to what extent. From Mr Ramdanee’s evidence it appears that
the formalities were completed at a meeting with Third Dimension Limited, a
company that he and Mr Bhardwaj met for the first time on that occasion. Despite the fact that this was the first
meeting, Third Dimension Limited supplied the Appellant, for the purpose of its
application to open the FCIB account, with a reference from a Mr Anthony
Elliot-Square, a director, that stated:
“”I have
known him [sic] in the capacity of him being known within the trading industry
and current user of our www.ipt.cc, www.icb.cc and www.igt.cc web sites.
I enclose
all the Due Diligence material, plus the Enhanced Due diligence material
required for this industry.”
Mr Ramdanee
could not remember sending or giving any documents to Third Dimension Limited,
though he said that the Appellant must have done so.
76. There were two other references given to
support the Appellant’s application. One
was from New Order, dated 25 November 2005.
It said:
“This is
confirmation that Next Generation Computing Limited is a company known to us,
we have successfully traded with them on many occasions.”
Although Mr
Ramdanee gave a somewhat confused account of his dealing with New Order, and
the Appellant’s transactions in digital e-cards with New Order took place
later, in 2006, we are satisfied that, having regard to the investments made by
the Appellant with New Order, for which the Appellant received commissions that
we have found were shares of net profit, there was nothing inherently wrong
with the reference given by New Order.
77. The same cannot be said for the other
additional reference from Puwar Ltd.
According to his evidence Mr Ramdanee himself had had no dealings with
Puwar, but he said that his partner, Mr Bhardwaj had. Puwar’s reference said:
“We have
worked with the Directors of the organisation below [the Appellant] for five
years, and consider them to be trustworthy and honourable individuals who are
well respected within the general business community.”
Puwar Ltd was
incorporated on 9 May 2002, and so it would not have been possible for it to
have given this confirmation. The Puwar
reference was therefore, as Mr Ramdanee accepted in cross-examination, both
inaccurate and misleading.
78. We find that the circumstances of the
opening of the Appellant’s FCIB account were unusual and in our view not
consistent with ordinary commercial dealings.
The Appellant was aware of MTIC fraud at this time, and we consider that
these circumstances were such as to necessarily have given rise to questions as
to the nature of the trades that would be conducted through the account, and any
advice and recommendations that the Appellant might receive in this connection. As part of the context in which the
transactions were undertaken, the fact that the FCIB account had been opened on
the basis of two false references should have given the Appellant a heightened
sense of awareness that any indications that the transactions themselves had
features that suggested they were outside the expected ordinary course of
business ought to be regarded with the utmost caution. In fact, as we have found, the Appellant
ignored those signals, and did not undertake reasonable precautions in respect
of the trades in question.
79. From all the evidence before us we have
reached the following conclusions:
(1) There was a tax loss.
(2) That tax loss resulted from the fraudulent
evasion of VAT.
(3) The Appellant’s transactions were connected
with that fraudulent evasion.
(4) The Appellant should have known that its
purchases were connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT.
80. As regards our final conclusion, we have
considered whether we are satisfied that HMRC have discharged the burden of
proof that the Appellant knew that its purchases were connected with the fraudulent
evasion of VAT. There is some evidence,
along with certain of our own findings, that indicates that this is indeed the
case. In particular, we did not accept
Mr Ramdanee’s evidence as regards his identifying Bluestar as a supplier and
Sunico A/S as a customer, nor his evidence as to negotiation of the price. On the contrary, we found that Mr Ramdanee
was presented with the deal by another party or parties. Mr Ramdanee paid scant attention to the
contractual position and due diligence and ignored clear indications that the
trades were not ordinary transactions in the commercial market for mobile
phones. His attitude to risk also
suggests that he was confident that in practice there would be no risk, and
this could indicate that he was aware of the contrived nature of the
transaction.
81. It appeared to us that Mr Ramdanee, and
through him the Appellant, was driven by profit, and the opportunity presented
to him to do a deal, to the extent that it blinded him to the true nature of
the transactions the Appellant was entering into, and the numerous indicators
that this was not a commercial deal in the real market, but a contrived
transaction associated with VAT fraud.
However, although it is clear to us that the chains of transactions must
have been contrived, this of itself does not lead to the conclusion that every
participant in the chain must have known that the transactions were connected
with fraud. That depends on the
circumstances of each such participant.
In the case of the Appellant we are not satisfied that HMRC have
discharged the burden of proof that, on the balance of probability, the
Appellant did know that its transactions were connected to the fraud. On the other hand, we are fully satisfied that
the Appellant should have known that its purchases were connected to the fraud.
82. The recent decision of Briggs J in Megtian Limited (in administration) v
Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2010] EWHC 18 (Ch) in the High Court
describes the distinction between a person who knows that a transaction is
connected with fraudulent tax evasion and one who merely ought to have known of
that connection in terms of the different states of mind of those persons. The judgment in Megtian was issued after the hearing of this appeal, and
consequently we heard no argument on it.
We do not base our decision on anything in that judgment. We do, however, consider that it encapsulates
the dividing line between the two concepts.
Mr Justice Briggs said (at [41]):
83. In this appeal, having regard to all the evidence and our conclusion that Mr Ramdanee, and therefore the Appellant, was blinded to the true nature of the transactions, we consider that the Appellant’s state of mind was broadly equivalent to negligence and that, having considered all the evidence, we are satisfied that the Appellant should have known that its transactions were connected to fraudulent evasion of VAT. We are not satisfied, on the basis of our view that it is for HMRC to discharge the burden of proof in this respect, that the Appellant’s mind was dishonest, and that it knew of that connection.
84. For these reasons, we dismiss this appeal.
The Appellant has a right to apply for permission to appeal against this decision pursuant to rule 39 of the Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal) (Tax Chamber) Rules 2009. The parties are referred to “Guidance to accompany a Decision from the First-tier Tribunal (Tax Chamber)” which accompanies and forms part of this decision notice.