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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Seabrook Warehousing Ltd. & Ors, R (on the application of) v HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWCA Civ 140 (25 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/140.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 140, [2010] STC 996 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Kenneth Parker Q.C. sitting as Deputy High Court Judge
CO/5172/2009, [2009] EWHC 1742 (Admin)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON
and
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF SEABROOK WAREHOUSING LTD & ORS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Philip Coppel QC and Sarah Hannett (instructed by The Solicitors Office, HMRC) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 4th February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON :
WFE and its context.
The 2006 Consultation
"1. If you currently use the WFE option, what are your commercial reasons for doing so?
2. To what extent would Option A affect your business?
3. Would Option A result in increased costs for your business (please provide an estimate of that cost 'per annum' and the basis of the estimate)?
4. If already registered with HMRC as an owner of goods in a warehouse with the facility to purchase duty suspended goods, why do you deal in duty paid goods?
5. Do you have any other comments on Option A?"
"3.5 Given these planned clarifications to HMRC guidance, the Government has decided that, at this stage, it will not proceed with either of the options for changes to the WFE regime outlined in HMRC's consultation paper of June 2006. It will, however, continue to monitor closely the level of excise duty drawback claims and to carry out detailed assurance work to ensure that drawback claims are valid in all respects."
"HMRC continue to monitor the usage of the drawback system closely, and although we are not taking them forward at this time, options for further reform remain under review, including the Government's lead option in the consultation – abolishing the warehouse for export provisions."
The Impact Assessment and the removal of WFE
"1. The drawback system allows businesses to claim repayment of excise duty on duty paid alcohol that they destroy, export or warehouse for export (WFE). The largest proportion of repayments relates to beer WFE and in the past year there has been a sharp increase, with claims more than doubling (from £21m to £53m) compared with the same period last year. We believe these increases are substantially linked to fraud, and that duty losses may well be as high as £25m in 08/09 – of a projected £70m duty we expect will be claimed on all alcohol intended for export. In the absence of a robust regulatory response to this threat, it is feared losses may rise as high as £40m in 2009/10. The fraud itself bears some of the hallmarks of VAT MTIC fraud, with claimants sourcing alcohol from lengthy complex supply chains containing occasional missing traders. This has hampered HMRC's ability to establish the eligibility of goods for drawback.
2. We consulted formally with businesses on reform of the drawback regime in 2006 and in particular on withdrawing WFE (a summary of the responses to this consultation is available on the HMRC website). We were eventually persuaded, at that time, by arguments that fraud-related problems could be contained by applying more rigorous evidence of UK duty payment. However, we undertook to continue to monitor the drawback system closely and stated, in supporting documents published at Budget 2007, that options for further reform would remain under review, including abolishing the WFE provisions.
3. After a measure of initial success, the changes we made proved to be ineffective as fraudsters found ways to circumvent the more rigorous evidence requirements. We have therefore concluded that, in its present form, the drawback system is inherently risky and the only way that we can make a real impact on drawback-related fraud is through regulatory change, the aim of which is to design out two risks that the WFE system presents:
(i) claims for drawback on goods that were never duty paid in the first place; and (ii) the re-entry – via WFE – of goods into the duty suspension system that are later diverted onto the UK market without payment of duty.
4. In line with what we said in 2007, we believe it is now necessary to go ahead and remove the WFE provisions. As an alternative, businesses will be able to use the 'direct export' drawback scheme where UK duty is repaid only after evidence of duty payment in another EU Member State. We acknowledge that this will place certain additional requirements on businesses that were brought to our attention in the 2006 consultation exercise. In response to this, where possible, HMRC will work with legitimate businesses to make the operation of the direct export scheme as straightforward as possible."
"1. to have an immediate and substantial impact on fraud including the risk of claims being made on non-eligible goods and the onward diversion of WFE goods re-entered into the duty suspension system
2. to reduce unfair competition in the SME [small and medium enterprises] wholesale sector
3. to contribute to the reduction of losses from alcohol fraud."
"( The average monthly level of beer WFE drawback claims by SMEs for the period May 2007 to October 2007 represents the legitimate business need for beer WFE drawback from SMEs.
- All drawback claims other than beer WFE claims by SMEs are legitimate.
- If the measure is introduced, all businesses making legitimate WFE claims will continue to make the same average monthly number and value of claims using the direct export drawback regime."
"13. HMRC has identified the following costs to legitimate trade.
- Additional administrative burden of direct export drawback claims compared to WFE.
- Delays in receipt of payment for the claim due to the requirement of proof of export and foreign duty payment.
- One off costs of changing business operating systems.
14. The above costs were identified through the consultation exercise. No other significant costs were identified.
15. HMRC has estimated the additional administrative burden using its standard cost model which provides estimates of the costs to business associated with its administrative processes. The net additional annual administration cost associated with the change to direct export drawback for legitimate claims is estimated to be around £3000 at current prices.
16. The estimated cash flow costs assume a delay of 14 days and annual interest rate of 3.5%. This gives rise to an estimated annual loss of interest of £43,000 on legitimate claims (£30m).
17. Together these give rise to an estimated total annual on-going cost of £0.04m.
18. HMRC has been unable to quantify one off costs of changing business operating systems because the consultation responses provided no quantitative information on which to base these estimates. However HMRC expects these to be low because 75% of those businesses who currently make use of WFE drawback already also use the direct drawback regime and the total number of businesses affected is small (around 50)."
"Competition assessment/ Small firms Impact test
22. The main beneficiaries of these changes will be SME UK wholesalers and retailers trading legitimately in the UK market. It should reduce unfair competition for those businesses currently competing with black market traders thus creating a level playing field. We estimate that the retail value of trade expected to transfer to legitimate businesses will be £60 million in the first year.
23. For legitimate businesses currently operating WFE there will be an impact but we judge that this will be marginal for most businesses for which WFE is not a core business activity. As an alternative, businesses will be able to use the 'direct export' drawback scheme where UK duty is repaid only after evidence of duty payment in another Member State. Although inherently more secure from a revenue point, this system does place certain additional requirements on businesses. HMRC will work with them, taking a pragmatic approach, to make it as simple to work as possible."
The legislation and the Regulations
The Claimants' case
First ground: failure to take into account relevant considerations.
"Firstly, the customer may wish to hold the goods in duty suspension in their tax warehouse. Some member companies EU customers only purchase duty suspended stock. Secondly, the customer may not want to pay duty in his state for goods that he has yet to receive, both for cash flow reasons and also because he may not want to get involved in the administrative burden this scheme entails. Finally, the bureaucracy associated with the direct dispatch creates a significant delay, certainly greater than that for the current WFE scheme."
"2.7 Although neither option was favoured by the majority of respondents, Option A was the least preferred option of the two, with only one respondent supporting this proposed course of action. All but one of those respondents that currently utilised the WFE system for drawback felt that this would have a significant negative impact on their business, both in terms of cash flow and their ability to compete with larger companies. The one respondent in support of this option felt that it would remove an easy source of illegal revenue for fraudsters, which could be used to further finance the illegal trade in alcohol.
2.9 A number of respondents explained that customers in other EU member states often preferred to receive goods in duty suspension. However, the removal of the WFE option would mean that there was no means for goods on which UK duty had been paid to be sent in duty suspension to a tax warehouse in another Member State, as the 'direct dispatch' system requires proof of duty payment in the Member State of destination before drawback can be paid. This, it was claimed, would restrict trade within the EU and be anti-competitive, and could result in alcohol being sourced from outside the UK, having an impact on the UK economy."
"37. It does appear, therefore, that in making the impact assessment HMRC did not proceed on the basis that, if WFE were abolished, legitimate cross-border supplies of beer would be significantly reduced or that revenues from such supplies would be significantly lower. HMRC, therefore, discounted the matter under consideration.
38. Although it might have been preferable if HMRC had specifically addressed this matter in the Impact Assessment, the relevant legal issue is whether the failure to do so and the implicit rejection of the point in question vitiated the decision to abolish WFE. In my view, it did not. On an objective analysis the alleged impact was highly speculative and, on the information available, not capable in any event of reliable quantification, for the following reasons."
"If there is an answer to Mr Friel's complaint, it has to be (and Mr Lewis pitches his camp upon this terrain) that the evidence of the earlier accident could not have made a difference to the tribunal's decision. As I have said this is not a topic for ex post facto evidence. Nor, with respect, is to be tested, as Turner J appears to have tested it in refusing permission to appeal, by asking whether the decision was likely to have been influenced by the omitted information. The question is whether the information could have made any difference. The answer to it may turn on law – for example it may not have been legally relevant or admissible – or on fact – for example because it was on any view inconsequential or incapable of disturbing the weight of evidence going in the other direction. If it was relevant, or if ignorance of it was a source of unfairness, then it is only exceptionally that relief will be denied. The reasons for this are classically found in the remarks of Bingham LJ, as he then was, in R v Chief Constable of the Thames Valley Police ex parte Cotton [1990] IRLR 344 at 60. I will not recite them, but they are to be borne in mind in every case in which a breach of fair or proper procedure is established but it is asserted that the breach has made no difference."
"Of course the Minister cannot be expected to read for himself all the relevant papers that relate to the matter. It would not be unreasonable for him to rely on a summary of the relevant facts furnished by the officers of his Department. No complaint could be made if the departmental officers, in their summary, omitted to mention a fact which was insignificant or insubstantial. But if the Minister relies entirely on a departmental summary which fails to bring to his attention a material fact which he is bound to consider, and which cannot be dismissed as insignificant or insubstantial, the consequence will be that he will have failed to take that material fact into account and will not have formed his satisfaction in accordance with law"
"61. I have found Brennan J's judgment in Peko-Wallsend particularly helpful here. He said (at 61):
A decision-maker who is bound to have regard to a particular matter is not bound to bring to mind all the minutiae within his knowledge relating to the matter. The facts to be brought to mind are the salient facts which give shape and substance to the matter: the facts of such importance that, if they are not considered, it could not be said that the matter has been properly considered.
Then at 64:
[The] decision cannot be attacked on the ground that the minister has not given sufficient weight to detriment, but it can be attacked if the minister fails to have regard to detriment. The minister may deny any weight to detriment, but only if he has first had proper regard to that matter.
And at 65:
The department does not have to draw the minister's attention to every communication it receives and to every fact its officers know. Part of a department's function is to undertake an evaluation, analysis and précis of material which the minister is bound to have regard to or to which the ministers may wish to have regard in making decisions… The consequence… is, of course, that the minister's appreciation of a case depends to a great extent upon the appreciation made by his department. Reliance on the departmental appreciation is not tantamount to an impermissible delegation of the ministerial function. A minister may retain his power to make a decision while relying on his department to draw his attention to the salient facts."
"Option 3 – Tightening evidential requirements.
We tried this approach following consultation in 2006. Although initially successful, this measure proved to be ineffective as, we believe, fraudsters quickly found a way of circumventing our controls by providing manufactured evidence in support of non-eligible claims. Also, discrediting suspect claims involves complex and intensive supply chain audits and with claim numbers and values increasing it is becoming increasingly difficult to justify the disproportionate level of resources require to undertake this work.
- Claim numbers have risen from 3874 in 2007/08 to over 5000 in 08/09.
- There are 565 WFE claims currently on hand pending litigation/investigation with a combined value of £8.3 million.
- At any given time, up to 20 staff can be tied up on this work (in policy, processing assurance, enforcement and legal services)."
"26. The only evidence that seems to be put forward by the Commissioners as being indicative of fraud is the fact that a number of drawback claims were made in respect of brands of alcohol that are popular in the UK. This is in no way indicative of fraud. A significant number of UK consumers travel to the continent to purchase alcohol (colloquially known as "booze cruises"). It is no wonder then that popular UK brands of alcohol are being exported to countries to which UK consumers may travel for the purposes of purchasing reduced price alcohol. In addition, there are numerous other markets, outside of the UK, where popular UK brands are in demand: specifically, the British ex-pat market is one such example.
27. In addition, it is difficult to see how the Commissioners can maintain the assertion that the increase in WFE repayment claims is due to fraud when approximately 40% of the WFE claims documented in exhibit 14 to Mr Sands's witness statement were made by 5 of the 6 export traders who are the Claimants in the present application. We have derived this having compared the total figures for WFE claims in Exhibit 14 (£35,763,483) to the figures supplied by the Claimants for the same period April 2007 to March 2008 (approximately £14,000,000). To the best of my knowledge, the Commissioners make no allegation of fraud against any of the present claimants. None of the Claimants have had any repayment claims refused on the basis of fraudulent activity."
"63. Finally, I should mention in this context a point made by Mr Grodzinski at the hearing. The calculations of HMRC assume that for the year 2008 only £16 million WFE drawback claims represented legitimate trade. For that year the Claimants made WFE drawback claims of £30 million, all of which were paid by HMRC. It was submitted that it was, therefore, irrational to treat at least £14 million of the Claimants' drawback claims as fraudulent, when those claims had not been questioned.
64. However, this submission confuses two different issues. The decision to abolish WFE was based upon an objective evaluation of the relevant market. There was no explanation of why WFE drawback claims had increased at the rapid rate disclosed by the data. In the absence of such an explanation, HMRC drew the conclusion that only about £16 million of the WFE claims could represent legitimate trade. In my view, that conclusion was rational and justifiable.
65. On the other hand, it is notoriously difficult to prove fraud in any individual case. Indeed, if HMRC could readily ascertain which claims were fraudulent, and could show to the requisite level of proof that they were fraudulent, it is doubtful whether it would have been necessary to abolish WFE. It is precisely because HMRC cannot readily distinguish genuine from fraudulent transactions, and meet the requisite level of proof, that abolition of WFE, at least for the time being, was judged by HMRC to be necessary."
"29…. The abolition of WFE was a measure of economic management. HMRC took the decision in order to combat what it perceived to be very substantial fraud in cross-border trade, leading to heavy loss of excise duty and distortion of competition in relevant markets, recognising explicitly that the decision could to a certain degree adversely affect legitimate trade. The decision required HMRC to assess complex economic and commercial factors, and to strike an informed and rational balance between competing interests. It is trite law that the Court will require clear and convincing grounds to justify interference with such a decision."
"69. It seems to me that on this issue I must proceed cautiously. HMRC has experience accumulated over many years of tackling fraud in this area, and has an operational understanding of the likely comparative efficacy of anti-fraud measures that the Court does not enjoy. I need, therefore, to accord appropriate weight to the considered judgment of HMRC that the direct export arrangements offer the authorities a better opportunity to combat fraud than is possible under WFE. I see force in the point made by Mr White in his evidence, but HMRC has itself identified the relevant risk and nonetheless concluded that direct export is a superior method of control.
70. In these circumstances I am unable to find that HMRC's assessment that the abolition of WFE is likely to reduce substantially the number of fraudulent drawback claims is one that no reasonable customs authority could have reached. However, I do again note that the policy is to be kept under review, and HMRC will no doubt in the period ahead monitor whether the policy has achieved its objective as an anti-fraud measure."
"21. There remains a risk (over time) that criminal gangs could adapt and establish new networks / warehouses in other Member States to legitimise movements through the alternative 'direct export' drawback scheme, where UK duty is repaid only after evidence of duty payment in another member state is provided, and that fraudulent repayment levels may rise. But the 'direct export' system is inherently more secure and it will be more difficult for the would-be fraudster to abuse that system. But we shall be monitoring the position very closely and keeping it under review."
Ground two: Failure to consult
"78. All that happened after the 2006 consultation was that, after a relatively short period, WFE drawback claims continued to increase rapidly, just as they had increased in the period leading to the 2006 consultation. Furthermore, just as in respect of that previous period, there was no obvious objective economic reason for the increase. The phenomenon – the unexplained increase in WFE drawback claims – was precisely the same; only the period was different. There was no material change in the basic circumstances that could begin to support a case for re-consultation.
79. In my judgment, fairness did not require that HMRC should allow interested parties another opportunity in 2009 to comment upon a matter – the increase in WFE drawback claims – that they had been able to comment upon in the 2006 consultation. Indeed, putting aside the plainly unconvincing point about the depreciation of sterling (see paragraph 58 above), the Claimants are not able to show what new and relevant arguments they would have advanced in a putative 2009 re-consultation that they had not been able to advance in the actual 2006 consultation."
Breach of EC law
New evidence
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
LORD JUSTICE PILL