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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> DFS Furniture Company Plc v Customs & Excise [2004] EWCA Civ 243 (16 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/243.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 243, [2004] WLR 2159, [2004] 1 WLR 2159 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (The Vice-Chancellor)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
DFS Furniture Company plc |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Commissioners of Customs and Excise |
Respondents |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Dr Paul Lasok QC and Mr Peter Mantle (instructed by Solicitor's Office HM Customs and Excise) for the Respondents
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
This is the judgment of the court.
INTRODUCTION
"…. more than two years after the time when evidence of facts sufficient in the opinion of the Commissioners to justify the making of the assessment comes to the knowledge of the Commissioners."
THE FACTS
"2. The relevant circumstances may be shortly stated. DFS is a retailer of furniture and registered for the purposes of VAT. In the accounting periods falling between 1st April 1993 and 31st March 1996 it supplied furniture to its customers on interest free credit terms. The transaction by which such a sale was carried out involved the supply of the furniture by DFS to the customer on terms which required the customer to pay the price by instalments to the finance company introduced by DFS. The amount paid by the finance company to DFS in due course was less than the price paid by the customer to the finance company. In its accounts for those accounting periods DFS accounted for VAT on the price paid by the customer, not the lower amount it received from the finance company.
3. The question whether the supplier should account for VAT on the price paid by the customer or on the lower sum received from the finance company arose in proceedings between the Commissioners and Primback. The Commissioners established that Primback should account for VAT on the price paid by the customer, not the lower sum received from the finance company both before the VAT Tribunal and, on appeal, before May J. But on 25th April 1996 Primback's appeal succeeded by a majority in the Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal gave permission to the Commissioners to appeal to the House of Lords.
4. On 26th July and 20th August 1996 DFS, at the invitation of the Commissioners, made voluntary disclosures of excess payments of VAT on the difference between the price paid by the customer and the lower sums received by DFS from the finance company. VAT on that difference came to £13.1m and DFS sought its repayment with interest of £1.5m. These sums were paid by the Commissioners to DFS by three payments made between 30th August 1996 and 6th January 1997.
5. On 1st February 1999 the House of Lords referred three questions to the European Court of Justice for preliminary rulings in relation to the appeal of the Commissioners from the decision of the Court of Appeal in favour of Primback. Both the Advocate-General in his opinion delivered on 28th November 2000 and the European Court of Justice in its judgment given on 15th May 2001 held, in effect, that the Court of Appeal had arrived at the wrong conclusion. Effect to those preliminary rulings was given by the order of the House of Lords made on 11th October 2001 whereby, without further argument, the order of the Court of Appeal was set aside and that of May J upholding the assessment restored.
6. Meanwhile, on 24th September 2001 the Commissioners issued a recovery assessment on DFS under s.80(4A) in the sum of £13.1m. On 7th December 2001 Customs raised a further assessment under s.78A(1) in respect of the payment of interest in the sum of £1.5m. DFS appealed against both assessments. Following a two-day hearing in Manchester on 11th and 12th June 2002 the decision of the VAT and Duties Tribunal was given on 26th September 2002. The Tribunal concluded (para 91) that the critical feature, which prompted the assessments, was the decision of the European Court of Justice given on 15th May 2001 but that, though the existence of the judgment was a fact, its contents were matters of law (para 101). Accordingly, though the judgment of the European Court of Justice was given within the two-year period permitted by s.78A(2) it was neither a fact nor evidence of a fact for the purposes of that sub-section. As all other relevant matters, primarily the repayments made between 30th August 1996 and 6th January 1997, had occurred more than two years before the assessments raised on 24th September and 7th December 2001 the latter were outside the period permitted by s.78A(2)."
THE LEGISLATION
The original statutory regime
"73 Failure to make returns etc.
(1) ….
(2) In any case where, for any prescribed accounting period, there has been paid or credited to any person –
(a) as being a repayment or refund of VAT, or
(b) ….
an amount which ought not to have been so paid or credited, or which would not have been so paid or credited had the facts been known or been as they later turn out to be, the Commissioners may assess that amount as being VAT due from him for that period and notify it to him accordingly.
….
(6) An assessment under subsections (2) …. of an amount of VAT due for any prescribed accounting period must be made within the time limits prescribed by section 77 and shall not be made after the later of the following –
(a) 2 years after the end of the prescribed accounting period; or
(b) one year after evidence of facts, sufficient in the opinion of the Commissioners to justify making the assessment, comes to their knowledge,
….
75 Assessments in cases of acquisitions of certain goods by non-taxable persons
(1) ….
(2) An assessment under this section must be made within the time limits provided for in section 77 and shall not be made after whichever is the later of the following –
(a) ….
(b) one year after evidence of the facts, sufficient in the opinion of the Commissioners to justify the making of the assessment, comes to their knowledge.
….
77 Assessments: time limits and supplementary assessments
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, an assessment under section 73 …. shall not be made –
(a) more than six years after the end of the prescribed accounting period ….
(2) ….
….
78 Interest in certain cases of official error
(1) Where, due to an error on the part of the Commissioners, a person has –
(a) accounted to them for an amount by way of output tax which was not output tax due from him and which they are in consequence liable to repay to him, or
…….
then, if and to the extent that they would not be liable to do so apart from this section, they shall pay interest to him on that amount for the applicable period
….
80 Recovery of overpaid VAT
(1) Where a person has (whether before or after the commencement of this Act) paid an amount to the Commissioners by way of VAT which was not VAT due to them, they shall be liable to repay the amount to him.
(2) The Commissioners shall only be liable to repay an amount under this section on a claim being made for the purpose.
….
(4) No amount may be claimed under this section after the expiry of 6 years from the date on which it was paid, except where subsection (5) applies.
(5) Where an amount has been paid to the Commissioners by reason of a mistake, a claim for the repayment of the amount under this section may be made at any time before the expiry of 6 years from the date on which the claimant discovered the mistake or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it.
…."
The period from 18 July 1996 to 4 December 1996
The new statutory regime
"78A Assessment for interest overpayments
(1) Where –
(a) any amount has been paid to a person by way of interest under section 78, but
(b) that person was not entitled to that amount under the section,
the Commissioners may, to the best of their judgment, assess the amount so paid to which that person was not entitled and notify him.
(2) An assessment made under subsection (1) above shall not be made more than two years after the time when evidence of facts sufficient in the opinion of the Commissioners to justify the making of the assessment comes to the knowledge of the Commissioners.
…."
"(4) Subsection (1) above shall be deemed to have come into force on 4th December 1996 in relation to amounts paid by way of interest at any time on or after 18th July 1996."
"(4) The Commissioners shall not be liable, on a claim made under this section, to repay any amount paid to them more than three years before the making of the claim."
"(4A) Where –
(a) any amount has been paid, at any time on or after 18th July 1996, to any person by way of a repayment under this section, and
(b) the amount paid exceeded the Commissioners' repayment liability to that person at that time,
the Commissioners may, to the best of their judgement, assess the excess paid to that person and notify it to him.
(4B) For the purposes of subsection (4A) above the Commissioners' repayment liability to a person at any time is –
(a) in a case where any provision affecting the amount which they were liable to repay to that person at that time is subsequently deemed to have been in force at that time, the amount which the Commissioners are to be treated, in accordance with that provision, as having been liable at that time to repay to that person; and
(b) in any other case, the amount which they were liable at that time to repay to that person.
(4C) Subsections (2) …. of section 78A apply in the case of an assessment under subsection (4A) above as they apply in the case of an assessment under section 78A(1)."
"(9) Subsections (6) …. above shall be deemed to have come into force on 4th December 1996."
"(2A) …. an assessment under section 76 of a penalty under section 65 or 66 may be made at any time before the expiry of the period of 2 years beginning with the time when facts sufficient in the opinion of the Commissioners to indicate, as the case may be –
(a) that the statement in question contained a material inaccuracy, or
(b) …."
THE DECISION
"100. I turn, therefore, to consider whether the judgment is to be considered to be a fact, or a matter of law, no other possibility having been suggested. To my surprise, neither Mr Cordara nor Dr Lasok referred me to any authority on the matter, and as far as I have been able to ascertain the point is undecided.
101. It seems to me to be an uncontroversial proposition that the content of the judgment – that is, the explanation of the law set out in it – is a matter of law or, at least, "evidence of the law", as was said by Lord Hobhouse in the Brockhill Prison case. On the other hand, the date of its pronouncement, and its pronouncement itself, seem to me to be equally uncontroversially matters of fact. Mr Cordara's case was that the Commissioners were not waiting for an explanation of the law: they already knew (or, at the least, thought they knew) what it was. Neither the law nor the facts changed because of the judgment and the Commissioners were still in precisely the position they had been in all along. Dr Lasok, of course, concentrated on the event – the pronouncement of the judgment - arguing that it was that event which, in the opinion of the Commissioners in the person of assessing officers such as Mr Gibson, justified the making of the assessment.
102. The problem for the Commissioners appears to me to lie not in Mr Cordara's hypothesis of a compromise of the Primback litigation before it reached the Court of Justice (that would have led only to unresolved questions) but in the much simpler question: what would have been the Commissioners' position if the Court of Justice had decided against them? The answer is obvious: they would have been forced to accept that, as a matter of law, they were not entitled to recover the repayments made to the appellant. In my judgment that answer can lead only to the conclusion that what the Commissioners were waiting for, and the factor on which their decision to issue assessments against taxpayers such as this appellant was truly based, was the content of the judgment which, if I may repeat what Lord Hobhouse said, is "evidence of law".
103. I cannot accept Dr Lasok's, if I may say so somewhat convoluted, argument that a judgment is a "fact which is evidence of the law." One has only to put that phrase in the context of s 78A(2) to arrive at the phrase "evidence of facts which are evidence of the law." If Parliament had intended that the coming to the Commissioners' knowledge of evidence of the law was relevant to the running of time, it could easily have said so without resorting to gymnastics of this kind.
104. It does not seem to me that the Commissioners can salvage their position by contending, true though I accept it to be, that they believed that the law was as it was ultimately found to be, that they have throughout conducted themselves upon the basis that their view would ultimately be vindicated, and that all they required to make the assessments was the delivery of the judgment. The event – the physical act of delivering the judgment – and incidental details such as the date on which that happened were irrelevant to the making of the assessments; what mattered was the content of the judgment, for the simple reason that if it was in their favour, the Commissioners could assess, and if it was against them, they could not.
105. It was not suggested for the Commissioners that any other facts came to their knowledge between 1997 and the making of the assessments (save for the appellant's failure to make a voluntary disclosure, which I have already determined to be irrelevant) and it follows therefore that the assessments were made outside the two year period prescribed by section 78A(2), provided, of course that the time limit applied in the circumstances of this case.
106. Dr Lasok's further argument was that, if the trigger for an assessment is not "evidence of facts" but something else, the time limit imposed by s 78A(2) is not engaged. As I understood it, his point was that if an assessment was based on facts alone, the time limit applied; but if it was dependent in whole or in part on other factors the condition which set time running – "evidence of facts sufficient … to justify the making of the assessment" coming to the Commissioners' knowledge – was never satisfied, because the facts alone were not sufficient to justify the assessment; and correspondingly time never began to run if, as I have found, the judgment which triggered the assessments cannot be considered to be "evidence of facts."
107. Ingenious though that argument is, it does not seem to me to stand up to scrutiny. No assessment is ever based on fact alone; there is always a legal framework. One may take a simple example: it might be established that, as a matter of fact, a trader has sold goods for a particular consideration but he has not declared and paid tax to the Commissioners. But that is not enough to assess him; the Commissioners must show in addition that he was liable, as a matter of law, to declare and pay the tax – that he was liable to be registered (a mixed question of fact and law) and that his supplies were taxable, often a question of legal rather than factual debate.
108. In my view s 78A(2) proceeds upon the basis that every assessment must be based on legal liability (using a mathematical analogy, a constant), but the facts of the case (the variables to which the constant is applied) have to be ascertained. The law is assumed always to have been known; therefore once the facts are ascertained, time begins to run. It could not even be said here, in an attempt to take the case out of that rule, that the law was not a constant. This is not a case of a legislative change in the law, nor one in which a court has concluded that a hitherto accepted interpretation of the law is incorrect. As Mr Cordara correctly put it, the law relevant to this case has not altered at all.
109. I turn, last, to the principles of European law to which I have referred. These considerations were raised by Mr Cordara in support of the appellant's position and not, I think, as primary arguments. Since I have determined the appeal in its favour on other grounds, they are now of only minor relevance; certainly the appellant cannot complain that there is any prejudice to it by reason of disproportionate remedy, or because its legitimate expectations have been infringed. Dr Lasok spent some time dealing with the Court's jurisprudence on time limits but since I have not determined the appeal upon the basis that an open-ended, or non-existent, time limit offends any principle, I do not think I need say any more.
110. I accept Dr Lasok's point that the repayments were made for reasons of good management and fair dealing to taxpayers generally, and I recognise that the Commissioners had made their position clear throughout, that the appellant knew perfectly well that it had, at best, a doubtful right to retain the money and that the outcome of this appeal will result in its receiving, or retaining, an unwarranted windfall. Nevertheless, I am satisfied that Mr Cordara is right in saying that the Commissioners could and should have made assessments within the two years after the repayments were made, and that their failure to do so can lead to only one result."
THE JUDGMENT OF THE VICE-CHANCELLOR
"23. The proper construction of the time bar contained in s.78A(2) must be ascertained in the light of its context. The particular context is its application to claims made by the Commissioners under s.80(4A) for sums repaid in excess of the repayment liability of the Commissioners under s.80(1) at the time of repayment. Repayment liability is defined by s.80(4B) to include sums for which the Commissioners were not liable at the time of repayment because of legislation enacted thereafter. If such legislation, its contents and effect are not facts for the purposes of the time bar then in many, if not most, cases the effect of s.78A(2) would be to negate the evident purpose of s.80(4B)(a). It may be, but it is not necessary for me to decide, that the reference in s.80(4B)(a) to a 'provision' is wide enough to comprehend a subsequent decision of the court as to the true interpretation and application of a statute, directive or regulation. It is sufficient for present purposes to recognise that if, as I think, the reference in s.78A(2) to evidence of facts, when applied to s.80(4A), is wide enough to encompass retrospective legislation, its contents and effect then it would be capricious to adopt an interpretation which excluded a subsequent judgment and its contents and effect.
24. In this connection it is necessary to have in mind that the time bar applied to claims under s.80(4A) is in the same terms as applied to claims under s.78A(1) and in similar terms to the time bars contained in ss.73(6)(b), 75(2)(b) and 77(2A). Moreover whilst ss.78A(2) and 77(2A) were introduced by the Finance Act 1997 ss.73(6)(b) and 75(2)(b) were contained in the VAT Act 1994 as originally enacted. In none of these other contexts is there any provision comparable to s.80(4B)(a). Nevertheless I see nothing in those contexts to suggest that an interpretation of the relevant time bars so as to include as facts the existence, contents and effect of either subsequent legislation or decisions of the European Court of Justice or superior courts in England would be inconsistent with the purpose of those provisions. Indeed in the case of the time bar contained in s.73(6)(b) it would further the purpose of the assessments authorised by s.73(2) that there should be such an inclusion.
25. The context of s.80(4A) is relevant in another way. It was evidently intended to be all embracing and to introduce a statutory mechanism for the recovery of sums repaid by the Commissioners in excess of the amount for which they were legally liable, for whatever reason. If the time bar is interpreted in the manner for which DFS contends then it will not be comprehensive in its operation. It will not cover situations in which the Commissioners have a prima facie claim for restitution for sums paid under a mistake of law, as envisaged in Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Birmingham City Council [1999] 2 AC 349, where the mistake is discovered two years after the repayment, albeit within the limitation period appropriate to such claims generally.
26. In my view not only the context of s.80(4A) but also the wording of s.78A(2) support the contention of the Commissioners. There can be no doubt that the existence of a judgment is a fact. Likewise its contents are facts. In my view, unless it is an entirely hypothetical issue, in which case the court should not have given a judgment at all, its effect is a fact too. The existence and effect of a judgment may also be relevant to the purpose of s.78A(2), namely the justification for the assessment. The contrary view appears to stem from an assumption that if a judgment is evidence of the law then its existence, contents and effect cannot be facts or evidence of facts as well.
27. Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough, in the passage in his speech in R v Governor of Brockhill Prison, ex parte Evans (No.2) [2001] 2 AC 19, 45 which I have quoted in paragraph 18 above, was dealing with the argument that at the time the Governor calculated the release date the existing decisions supported his calculations. It had been submitted that those decisions represented the law until overruled. He disagreed for the reasons apparent from the passage in his speech I have quoted. But the contrast he drew was not between a judgment as law and a judgment as fact but between a judgment as the law in the sense that a statute is and as evidence of the law. It was irrelevant to any issue in that case whether in addition to being evidence of the law the judgment, its contents or effect were also facts or evidence of facts.
28. In my view, the existence of a judgment, its contents and its effect are facts or evidence of facts for the purpose of the time bar contained in s.78A(2), notwithstanding that they may for other purposes be evidence of the law. This at least is demonstrated by the decision in R v Jagdev [2002] 1 WLR 3017. I do not accept the submission of counsel for DFS that so to hold is to deny to taxpayers the protection against tardy assessments to which Woolf J and Aldous LJ referred. The time bar operates in relation to the retrospective legislation or the subsequent decision of the court in the same way as it operates in the case of any other fact. Similarly the suggestion that taxpayers will never be able safely to close their books if the time bar is interpreted in this way contributes nothing to the argument because they are always vulnerable to the discovery of any other fact."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
CONCLUSIONS
"[Judicial decisions] are a source of law but not a conclusive source. Judicial decisions are only conclusive as between parties to them and their privies. The doctrine of precedent may give certain decisions a more authoritative status but this is relative …. A decision or judgment may on examination be shown to be inconsistent with other decisions. The value, force and effect of any decision is a matter to be considered and assessed. They are not statutes which (subject to European Union law) have an absolute and incontrovertible status."
"For the purposes of para 4(2) it is, in my judgment, the exercise of the right to claim rather than the bare right to repayment that provides the essential commencement for limitation periods. For the purposes of para 4(2) the prescribed accounting period is the period in which the right to claim was duly exercised by inclusion within the total in box two on the issued return. The use of the word 'credited' in the first line of para 4(2) is a clear pointer to that construction. Furthermore, I cannot see that the phrase 'for that period' in the penultimate line can be a reference to any period other than that covered by the return in which the tax was reclaimed." (Emphasis supplied)
RESULT