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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stockler v HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWCA Civ 893 (30 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/893.html Cite as: [2010] BTC 692, [2010] STC 2584, 80 TC 412, [2010] EWCA Civ 893, [2010] STI 2378 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
SIR JOHN LINDSAY
ON APPEAL FROM THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
(MR JOHN CLARK)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
SIR MARK WALLER
____________________
WILLIAM STOCKLER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
Akash Nawbatt (instructed by the Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs)
for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 May 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Introduction
i) HMRC will withdraw the amendments of the partnership's returns for certain specified years.ii) The Appellant (Stockler Charity) will pay (within a given time) "the aggregate amount of income tax assessable on the partners of the Appellant in consequence of the decision of the Special Commissioners", the subject of the appeal, subject to certain uncontroversial adjustments.
iii) The Appellant will pay, within the same time, interest at the statutory rates on the sum so payable.
iv) The Appellant will pay HMRC's costs of the appeal up to acceptance of the offer.
The issue on the appeal
"95(1) Where a person fraudulently or negligently–
(a) delivers any incorrect return of a kind mentioned in section 8 or 8A of this Act (or either of those sections as extended by section 12 of this Act), or
(b) makes any incorrect return, statement or declaration in connection with any claim for any allowance, deduction or relief in respect of income tax or capital gains tax, or
(c) submits to an inspector or the Board or any Commissioners any incorrect accounts in connection with the ascertainment of his liability to income tax or capital gains tax,
he shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding the amount of the difference specified in subsection (2) below.
(2) The difference is that between–
(a) the amount of income tax and capital gains tax payable for the relevant years of assessment by the said person (including any amount of income tax deducted at source and not repayable), and
(b) the amount which would have been the amount so payable if the return, statement, declaration or accounts as made or submitted by him had been correct."
The relevant legislation
"(a) an assessment of the amounts in which, on the basis of the information contained in the return and taking into account any relief or allowance a claim for which is included in the return, the person making the return is chargeable to income tax and capital gains tax for the year of assessment; and
(b) an assessment of the amount payable by him by way of income tax, that is to say, the difference between the amount in which he is assessed to income tax under paragraph (a) above and the aggregate amount of any income tax deducted at source and [tax credits]"
"(1) Subject to subsection (2) below, the difference between—
(a) the amount of income tax and capital gains tax contained in a person's self-assessment under section 9 of this Act for any year of assessment, and
(b) the aggregate of any payments on account made by him in respect of that year (whether under section 59A of this Act or otherwise) and any income tax which in respect of that year has been deducted at source,
shall be payable by him or (as the case may be) repayable to him as mentioned in subsection (3) or (4) below but nothing in this subsection shall require the repayment of any income tax treated as deducted or paid by virtue of [various specified provisions]"
"(5) An amount of tax which is payable or repayable as a result of the amendment or correction of a self-assessment under—
(a) section 9ZA, 9ZB, 9C or 28A of this Act (amendment or correction of return under section 8 or 8A of this Act), or
(b) section 12ABA(3)(a), 12ABB(6)(a), 28B(4)(a), 30B(2)(a), 33A(4)(a) or 50(9)(a) of this Act (amendment of partner's return to give effect to amendment or correction of partnership return),
is payable (or repayable) on or before the day specified by the relevant provision of Schedule 3ZA to this Act."
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, where a person gives notice of appeal and, before the appeal is determined by the Commissioners, the inspector or other proper officer of the Crown and the appellant come to an agreement, whether in writing or otherwise, that the assessment or decision under appeal should be treated as upheld without variation, or as varied in a particular manner or as discharged or cancelled, the like consequences shall ensue for all purposes as would have ensued if, at the time when the agreement was come to, the Commissioners had determined the appeal and had upheld the assessment or decision without variation, had varied it in that manner or had discharged or cancelled it, as the case may be."
"An assessment which can no longer be varied by any Commissioners on appeal or by order of any court is sufficient evidence, for the purposes of—
(a) the preceding provisions of this Part, and
(b) the provisions of Schedule 18 to the Finance Act 1998 relating to penalties,
that the amounts in respect of which tax is charged in the assessment arose or were received as stated in the assessment."
The appellant's case
The respondent's case
IRC v Woollen and earlier cases
"It is pointed out that there are two specific powers there to compound proceedings, but there is no such specific power in the case of the tax itself. They apply only to interest and to penalties. But a power to compound proceedings for a penalty, whether before or after judgment, or at any stage, or in respect of culpable interest, appears to me to permit an agreement whereby the Revenue on some terms are prepared to release their undoubted power to enforce interest and penalties. If they choose in the exercise of their duties of care and management to say 'we will release you from the penalties and the culpable interest to which you may otherwise be exposed on condition that you pay us a sum in respect of past tax', that appears to me to be a compounding of the proceedings. There is included in it, of course, a release from further proceedings for the tax. But if that be the way that, in the judgment of the Revenue, they can best collect the tax and the penalties for the benefit of Her Majesty, I can see no reason why they should not. Indeed the matter may in the end be as simple as this. If there is a power to enforce there must also necessarily be a power for good consideration to accept some lesser sum. The Revenue of course have no power to refrain from collecting tax which is due, but these agreements are all made in a situation where the actual tax recoverable has not yet been quantified. The liability is in existence but the machinery which is involved in the collection and enforcement has not yet run its course, either at all or only partly."
"A little lower down Lord Hanworth observes that it would be unfortunate if the subject were not able to make an agreement unless and until some assessment had been made. Counsel for the taxpayer says, entirely correctly, that that is not authority against him because the point did not specifically arise in that case. But it appears to me that if the Revenue are to have the necessary powers, as they are under section 1 of the 1890 Act [the Inland Revenue Regulation Act 1890], it is an incidental power to enable them to enter into an agreement to compromise an overall situation consisting partly in outstanding tax, partly in a potential liability to culpable interest and partly in potential liability to pay penalties if by that means they consider they can best recover and manage the tax which is committed to their care."
"It would seem to me extraordinary, and also regrettable, if the Revenue could not achieve by agreement that which it could undoubtedly achieve by coercion. The submission that it could not, as counsel for the taxpayer acknowledges, runs counter to the habitual practice of the Revenue recognised by the recent Royal Commission without query or criticism. But counsel fairly points to the fact that although the legislation expressly authorises the Revenue to mitigate and compound claims for penalties and default interest, it does not expressly authorise the Revenue to compromise claims for back duty save where an assessment has been made and appealed against.
I would prefer, if necessary, to accept this legislative omission as an anomaly of drafting than be compelled to a result I regard as offensive to good sense and subversive of the beneficial present practice. But there is, I think, no anomaly. The power to make agreements with taxpayers for the payment of back duty, even in the absence of assessment and appeal, is in my view a power necessary for carrying into execution the legislation relating to Revenue within the meaning of section 1 of the 1890 Act. It is, of course, a power to be exercised with circumspection and due regard to the Revenue's statutory duty to collect the public revenue. But if in an appropriate case the Revenue reasonably considers that the public interest in collecting taxes will be better served by informal compromise with the taxpayer than by exercising the full rigour of its coercive powers, such compromise seems to me to fall well within the wide managerial discretion of the body to whose care and management the collection of tax is committed. Such informal compromise deprives the taxpayer of the locus poenitentiae provided by section 54(2), and the right to re-open assessments under section 33, but it protects him against exercise of the Revenue's more draconian enforcement powers (e.g. under sections 61 and 65) and often, as here, against further liability for penalties and default interest. I have no hesitation in holding such an agreement, properly made, to be binding. There is accordingly, in my opinion, no arguable defence to the present claim."
"But apart from that I take the view that the practice of the Revenue not to claim as preferential amounts claimed under investigation settlement agreements is a valid practice in law, because any claim to treat as preferential such sums under a settlement agreement in the form of that we have in the present case, which is a standard Revenue form, would be invalid.
The validity of the practice of the Revenue in settling claims for outstanding tax and possible penalties and interest by investigation settlement agreements such as that in the present case was upheld by this court in IRC v Nuttall [1990] 1 WLR 631. They did not there need to go into the precise points we have here but there are certain observations which are helpful.
As I see it, when a settlement agreement of this type is entered into, the Revenue have a new cause of action, namely, a cause of action for the sums agreed to be paid by the agreement according to the terms of that agreement. Thus immediately after entering into the agreement, the Revenue could not have sued for anything until the first instalment became due under the terms of the agreement. If that instalment was not duly paid within 30 days of the date of the letter notifying acceptance of the offer, the only remedy available to the Revenue would have been to sue for the amount of that instalment by an action in debt, presumably in the Queen's Bench Division. There could be no question of seeking enforcement by levying distress or by proceedings in the Magistrates Court under s 61 or s 65 of the Taxes Management Act, as Bingham LJ points out ([1990] 1 WLR 631 at 643–644) in the Nuttall case. There are observations of Parker LJ ([1990] 1 WLR 631 at 638) to the same effect.
Again, if the position were to be that when the Revenue decided to bring proceedings for the unpaid balance at the end of the time for the making of the final payment there had been substantial payment of earlier instalments or payments on account, there would be no question on this form of agreement of the Revenue going back to claim enforcement by the procedures of distraint in so far as the sum due could be traced back by some process of apportionment of the payments made under the agreement and of the sums deducted under the agreement itself in respect of the repayments and repayment supplements due to the taxpayer and the Aberdeen company. All that could be enforced would be the balance due under the agreement.
It must necessarily follow, in my judgment, that the Revenue practice is right, that they had no power to rank preferentially in respect of the sums due by the two companies, which were parts of the tax included in schedules 3 and 4 to the offer, which was part of the investigation settlement agreement. They had lost their identity as income tax assessed on the company but were merely parts of a global sum which was not in itself assessed income tax."
"Thus here again, as it seems to me, what is being said is that there is a distinction—narrow it may be but crucial in principle—between what the Revenue collect under the contract and what they might otherwise be entitled to collect under the statute.
Tax liability can only originate from a statute. It cannot originate from a contract. Under the special provisions of section 54 tax liability duly originating from an assessment under the statute can by special statutory provision be determined by agreement. Indeed, most assessments, without any need for a formal appeal, are assessments made by agreement between the taxpayer and the party. It is true still, by and large, to say that the people of this country are taxed by consent. But it is a very different thing, it seems to me, to attribute to the instalments payable under the contract in the present case the quality as to any part of tax or interest or penalties. No assessment of the tax liability is necessarily made in these cases at all and if an assessment is made, as we are told it has been in the present case, what is payable under the agreement is not the result of a final determination of the statutory claim but a compromise between the parties in their contractual capacity."
"By the same token the sums due to the Revenue from the companies after the settlement agreement had been made were, in my judgment and could only be properly regarded as, sums due in discharge of a contractual liability and not sums in respect of any part of which a preferential claim could be made on the grounds that they were tax."
The decisions of the Special Commissioner and the High Court
"Section 95(2)(a) is looking at the tax properly "payable" on the basis of the facts as eventually established; it does not require the process to be carried out by way of an assessment."
"Whatever the means of collection and enforcement, and whatever limits on HMRC's powers for those purposes, the liability to HMRC must remain one in respect of "tax"; given HMRC's collection and management functions, what other explanation would there be for the liability arising?"
"25. … I read Nuttall as confirming that there is a wide managerial discretion in HMRC permitting agreement, even of liability that would otherwise be determined only by formal assessment under the machinery of relevant statutory provisions, and that when such an agreement is properly made it will be binding on its parties.
26. Pausing at this juncture, and assuming that the Part 36 offer and acceptance represents an agreement properly made, I see, as yet, no reason why it should not be taken to have established an additional sum payable within the meaning of s.95(2)(a) notwithstanding that no assessment exists to fix it."
i) It illustrates that taxpayers may agree their liability with HMRC in a binding way even in respect of assessable taxes and penalties; no assessment is necessarily made.ii) Nothing in Woollen precludes a sum being "payable" as tax for the purposes of section 95(2)(a) yet being, if it is unpaid, recoverable only as a contractual debt. On that basis he did not see it as helpful to Mr Stockler or his firm to say that the £122,731.77 would not have been recoverable as tax; "it had by agreement been payable as an amount of tax and payability is what section 95(2)(a) is concerned with".
iii) Nolan LJ's reference to section 54 TMA deals with the case where there has been an assessment but where it had been appealed and where agreement is reached before the appeal is determined by the Commissioners. In the present case so far as concerns the £122,731.77 there was eventually no assessment and the agreement was made after the first decision by the Special Commissioners. "One cannot, in my view, jump from the express provisions made as to agreements within section 54 to conclude, as would be contrary to Nuttall, that no other kinds of agreement between taxpayer and HMRC should be either intra vires or enforceable."
Discussion
Conclusion
"It may be, in the light of the later argument, that Stockler Brunton or their client Stockler Charity felt that paragraph 1 of the offer, if accepted, would plainly and without any express mention deny any claim for penalty, a strategy which later events have shown to be fraught with risk."
Sir Mark Waller
Lord Justice Mummery
Section 95 TMA construed
i) The amount of the income tax payable for the relevant years of assessment by the taxpayer: (section 95(2)(a)).ii) The amount which would have been the amount so payable, if the returns submitted to HMRC had been correct: (section 95(2)(b)).
iii) The amount of the difference between (1) and (2) and that is the cap on the amount of the penalty to which the taxpayer is liable: (section 95(1)).
Submissions on section 95 TMA
Discussion and conclusion