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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Stannard, R. v [2005] EWCA Crim 2717 (01 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/2717.html Cite as: [2005] BTC 558, [2005] EWCA Crim 2717 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT SOUTHWARK
HIS HONOUR JUDGE FINGRET
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL
and
MR JUSTICE PITCHFORD
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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MICHAEL RICHARD STANNARD |
Appellant |
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MR J FISHER QC for the Appellant
Hearing date: 26 September 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"Count 3.
MICHAEL RICHARD STANNARD between the 1st January 1993 and the 31st October 1997 with intent to defraud cheated Her Majesty the Queen and the Commissioners of Inland Revenue of public revenue, namely corporation tax, by claiming or causing to be claimed a deduction against profits for interest paid including debenture interest paid in advance by Bonnington Shipping Limited to Anglo Austrian Finance Limited when in truth and in fact no such transaction had taken place.
Count 4.
MICHAEL RICHARD STANNARD between the 1st October 1992 and the 31st October 1997 with intent to defraud cheated Her Majesty the Queen and the Commissioners of Inland Revenue of public revenue, namely corporation tax, by claiming or causing to be claimed a deduction against profits for interest paid including debenture interest paid in advance by Fairflight Leasing Limited to Anglo Austrian Finance Limited when in truth and in fact no such transaction had taken place."
"The offences involved the purchase of subsidiaries of UK companies which had unpaid corporation tax liabilities and the funds to meet such liabilities. The defendant's company acquired the two target companies named in the indictment for their balance sheet value plus an amount equal to approximately half of the corporation tax liability. Having acquired these two companies the defendant arranged for the creation of false documents designed to give the impression that Anglo Austrian Finance Ltd had subscribed for bearer debenture bonds on which interest would be payable in advance.
This interest created a deduction against profits thus extinguishing any charge to Corporation Tax. Thus it was possible for the cash held in the purchased companies to be extracted. It is this cash or the tax evaded which forms the basis of this Confiscation Hearing.
The Crown say that the benefit is the cash withdrawn from the two companies namely:
Bonnington Shipping £3,516,299 to which should be added interest based on RPI to July 2001 of £805,232 totalling £4,321,521.
Fairflight Leasing Ltd £2,325,000 and interest of £518.475 totalling £2,843,475.
This figure of £7,165,006 would, say the Crown, be the total value of the benefit if CJA 1988 s.71(4) applies, ie. if the defendant obtained property as a result of or in connection with the commission of the offences.
Alternatively, if s71(5) applies, in that the defendant derived a pecuniary advantage as a result of or in connection with the commission of the offences, the total value of the benefit would be £3,099,030 being the tax evaded by the scheme made up as follows:
Bonnington Shipping Ltd £1,199,670 together with interest to 30th July 2001 of £542,047 which totals £1,741,717.
Fairflight Leasing £929,979 and interest of £427,334 totalling £1,357,313."
"Where a person derives a pecuniary advantage as a result of or in connection with the commission of an offence, he is to be treated for the purpose of this Part of this Act as if he had obtained as a result of or in connection with the commission of the offence a sum of money equal to the value of the pecuniary advantage."
"The sum which an order made by a court under this section requires an offender to pay must be at least the minimum amount, but must not exceed –
(a) the benefit in respect of which it is made; or
(b) the amount appearing to the court to be the amount that might be realised at the time the order is made."
By virtue of Section 71(7) the minimum amount was £10,000.
"(1) In this Part of this Act, "realisable property" means, subject to subsection (2) below –
(a) any property held by the defendant; and
(b) any property held by a person to whom the defendant has directly or indirectly made a gift caught by this Part of the Act."
Section 74(2) has no application in this case.
"A gift (including a gift made before the commencement of this Part of this Act) is caught by this Part of this Act if –
(a) it was made by the defendant at any time after the commission of the offence or, if more than one, the earliest of the offences to which the proceedings for the time being relate; and
(b) the court considers it appropriate in all the circumstances to take the gift into account."
"However, it is plain from authorities cited by the Crown that the corporate veil may fall to be lifted where companies are used as a vehicle for fraud. Here the companies in question were the appellant's alter ego".
"It is equally clear in this case, from the evidence given at the trial that MS [the appellant] had a controlling interest in each of the companies involved in the acquisition of Bonnington and Fairflight, and the companies and Trusts used to ease the distribution of cash assets of those companies. More particularly he controlled the companies which enabled him to evade payment of the Corporation Tax liabilities of Bonnington and Fairflight. So, it is appropriate to lift the corporate veil."
The judge had heard the evidence at the trial and at the confiscation hearing and was in a good position to make findings of fact. He was in our judgment entitled to make that finding on the evidence in this case.
"Had these grave frauds succeeded then, in crude terms, Mr Allen would have been better off to the tune of £4m. That represents in our judgment the measure of his pecuniary advantage".
"No Trust Deed has been produced and is clear that, although MS said that he can request money from the Trust but is not entitled to it, clearly he controls its activities. "Supposing you did want to write to the Rupert Trust, who would you write to?" asked Mr Lucraft. He replied "I would write to Anglo European Trustees. Q. "You would write to yourself in Gibraltar" A. "Yes". These and similar replies are clear evidence that Rupert Trust is or was controlled by MS and that he was correct when he said that Moulin de Beaufils was his property."
"The role of the Rupert Trust in MS's financial affairs became clear in his evidence on p116 of the transcript of evidence of 30th May when asked by Mr Lucraft "So what would happen, so I have this right, is that the property is sold and you, wearing your hat with the Rupert Trust, when it was sold, that would effectively say to the Trustee, which would again be yourself; just put the money back into the Rupert Trust for my daughter's school fees. A. More or less yes.
He went on to say that the purpose of this and other trusts was to "put a barrier between any assets and myself". He went on "if everything went wrong, and somebody tried to bankrupt me, I could say that these are discretionary trust assets, they are not mine for a bankruptcy
MS cannot hide behind the Rupert Trust in these proceedings and the assets of Gila will be included in the sum of £96,620."
The judge added that he was satisfied that "this trust and its assets are under the total control of MS".
"In our judgment, "cheating the revenue" can take place without any positive act of deceit or, to adopt and respectfully endorse the words of Drake J when ruling on this matter in the appellant's first trial: "The common law offence of cheating does not necessarily require a false representation, either by words or conduct. Cheating can include any form of fraudulent conduct which results in diverting money away from the Revenue and in depriving the Revenue of money to which it is entitled." This appellant was in circumstances in which he had a statutory duty to make the VAT returns and to pay over to the Crown the VAT due. He dishonestly failed to do either. Accordingly he was guilty of cheating Her Majesty the Queen and the Public Revenue. No further act or omission required to be alleged or proved."
"Mr Ashe-Lincoln candidly conceded that if no distinction can be drawn in this context between an act and an omission, to use convenient shorthand, then this appeal fails. His submission was that this, as he would say, crucial, distinction did not fall to be considered in Hudson [1956] 40 Cr App R 55 or indeed in the case of Tonner[1985] 80 Cr.App.R.170 [1985] 1 W.L.R. 344 to which we were referred by counsel for the Crown. No doubt that is right except that in the opinion of this Court the distinction is not crucial and, where it exists, as in the instant case, does not justify a departure from the conclusions reached by the Court of Criminal Appeal in Hudson (supra). In coming to this decision we are influenced by the fact that in none of the cases or authorities such as Hawkins is the distinction between "deceit" involving an act and "non-deceit" involving no more than an omission canvassed or regarded as vital or indeed relevant. The distinction has always been and in our view remains between "frauds affecting the Crown and public at large," to repeat the words of Hawkins, and those which affect only individuals."
"The next direction I have to give you is what in law is cheating the Public Revenue. To cheat, members of the jury, is defined by the Concise Oxford Dictionary as: 'To deceive or trick a person into or out of a thing'. The common law offence of cheating the Public Revenue does not necessarily require a false representation either by words or conduct. Cheating can include any form of fraudulent conduct which results in diverting money from the Revenue and in depriving the Revenue of the money to which it is entitled. It has, of course, to be fraudulent conduct. That is to say, deliberate conduct by the defendant to prejudice, or take the risk of prejudicing, the Revenue's right to the tax in question knowing that it has no right to do so."
(a) The offence can be proved on the basis of an omission.
(b) It can be constituted by deliberate conduct prejudicing the Revenue's right to the tax in question.
(c) The offence can be established without loss resulting from the cheat having been proved.