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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ashbolt & Anor v Revenue & Customs & Anor [2020] EWHC 1588 (Admin) (18 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1588.html Cite as: [2021] Lloyd's Rep FC 143, [2020] BTC 17, [2020] STC 1813, [2020] EWHC 1588 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
And
MRS JUSTICE WHIPPLE DBE
____________________
ANTHONY ASHBOLT and SIMON ARUNDELL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) HER MAJESTYS REVENUE & CUSTOMS (2) THE CROWN COURT SITTING AT LEEDS |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Andrew Bird (instructed by HMRC Solicitors Office and Legal Services) for the Defendants
The Second Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 6 May 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Simler and Mrs Justice Whipple:
Introduction
i) Issue 1: whether the judge was entitled to find that the "first set of access conditions" in Schedule 1 paragraph 2 of PACE were satisfied, and in particular that there were reasonable grounds for believing that an indictable offence had been committed: paragraph 2(b).
ii) Issue 2: If so, whether the judge was entitled to find (a) that other methods of obtaining the material had not been tried because it appeared to HMRC they were bound to fail; and (b) the additional criterion in Schedule 1 paragraph 12 and 14(d) was satisfied, namely that service of notice of an application for a production order "may seriously prejudice the investigation".
iii) Issue 3: what if any relief should be granted in the event of any finding of unlawfulness?
The Legal Framework
"1. If on an application made by a constable a judge is satisfied that one or other of the sets of access conditions is fulfilled, he may make an order under paragraph 4 below.
2. The first set of access conditions is fulfilled if—
(a) there are reasonable grounds for believing—
(i) that an indictable offence has been committed;
(ii) that there is material which consists of special procedure material or includes special procedure material and does not also include excluded material on premises specified in the application, or on premises occupied or controlled by a person specified in the application (including all such premises on which there are reasonable grounds for believing that there is such material as it is reasonably practicable so to specify);
(iii) that the material is likely to be of substantial value (whether by itself or together with other material) to the investigation in connection with which the application is made; and
(iv) that the material is likely to be relevant evidence;
(b) other methods of obtaining the material—
(i) have been tried without success; or
(ii) have not been tried because it appeared that they were bound to fail; and
(c) it is in the public interest, having regard—
(i) to the benefit likely to accrue to the investigation if the material is obtained; and
(ii) to the circumstances under which the person in possession of the material holds it, that the material should be produced or that access to it should be given.
3. …
4. An order under this paragraph is an order that the person who appears to the judge to be in possession of the material to which the application relates shall—
(a) produce it to a constable for him to take away; or
(b) give a constable access to it,
not later than the end of the period of seven days from the date of the order or the end of such longer period as the order may specify.
…
12. If on an application made by a constable a circuit judge—
(a) is satisfied—
(i) that either set of access conditions is fulfilled; and
(ii) that any of the further conditions set out in paragraph 14 below is also fulfilled in relation to each set of premises specified in the application; or
(b) …
he may issue a warrant authorising a constable to enter and search the premises …
…
14. The further conditions mentioned in paragraph 12(a)(ii) above are—
(a) …;
(b) …;
(c) …;
(d) that service of notice of an application for an order under paragraph 4 above may seriously prejudice the investigation."
a) there were reasonable grounds for believing (i) that an indictable offence had been committed; (ii) there was material which consisted of or included special procedure material … on premises specified in the application, or on premises occupied or controlled by a person specified in the application….; (iii) the material was likely to be of substantial value (whether by itself or together with other material) to the investigation in connection with which the application is made; and (iv) the material was likely to be relevant evidence; and
b) other methods of obtaining the material had not been tried because it appeared they were bound to fail; and
c) it was in the public interest having regard to the benefit likely to accrue to the investigation if the material was obtained and the circumstances under which the person in possession of the material was holding it, that the material should be produced or that access to it should be given; and
d) in relation to each set of premises specified in the application, that service of notice of an application for an order under paragraph 4 above may seriously prejudice the investigation.
a) The test of "reasonable grounds for believing" in the first set of access conditions means just that. It does not require proof that any criminal offence has in fact been committed. At the end of the investigation, there may be an innocent explanation for what has happened: see Newcastle United FC at [84].
b) In relation to the access condition in paragraph 2(b) (ii) (other methods of obtaining the material not tried because "it appeared that they were bound to fail") the circuit judge must be satisfied that the reason for not trying to obtain the material by other means was that it appeared to the officer making the application for the warrant that such other means were bound to fail. In other words, what matters is the belief of the officer making the application at the time the application is made. This involves a question of judgment for the officer, based on his or her knowledge of the investigation so far and the evidence available. There must be cogent grounds for the belief; a bare assertion will not do. If the officer has explained the reasons for believing that other methods were bound to fail, in terms that are reasonable and compelling, he or she will have fulfilled the requirement: see R(S) v Chief Constable at [34] and Newcastle United FC at [92] and [93].
c) In relation to the additional condition in paragraph 14 (d), if a search warrant is to be issued the circuit judge must be personally satisfied that the service of notice of an application for a less intrusive measure (a production or access order of which the target will self-evidently have notice and an opportunity to object) "may seriously prejudice the investigation". This additional requirement "of judicial satisfaction" (as Holroyde LJ described it in Hart) at the time the order is made provides an additional safeguard for the owner of premises against whom the intrusive measure of a search warrant is sought: see Newcastle United FC at [94] and Hart at [16].
The written application for search warrants
"It is believed that submission of the FRA is a deliberate attempt to "re-describe" the loans made by TAL Management Ltd to Ashbolt with the sole purpose of circumventing the loan charge and evading the tax that would become due on those loans at 5 April 2019."
"it is therefore believed that the amounts received by Mr Arundell were in fact… loans and that the memorandum of fiduciary receipts and the FRA have been created after the events in order to retrospectively re-describe what were originally loans with the sole purpose of circumventing the loan charge and evading the tax that would become due on those loans at 5 April 2019.…"
""… I believe that… Ashbolt …. and Arundell were fully aware that the money they received from their PMCs was in the form of (purported) loans and not in the capacity of fiduciary, as claimed by the submission of the FRAs. All, as well as using the schemes for themselves, are known to have marketed or introduced others to the schemes and therefore have a good understanding of the mechanics of how the schemes operate and would know that the claims made on the Agreements were untrue. I therefore believe that by signing and submitting a FRA, or causing one to be submitted, on which they have claimed to be acting (and long been acting) in a fiduciary capacity for the money received from their PMC, and that this position was agreed on or before the date that the first loan was advanced, they have knowingly and dishonestly made a false representation (of the facts, namely retrospectively re-describing purported loans as fiduciary arrangements) in order to avoid paying the loan charge, thereby causing a loss to the UK Treasury."
"Throughout HMRC's civil investigations, both with the suspects and others, the pattern has been that questions relating to subjects other than the Remuneration Trust have been complied with by either the user or their representatives and relevant information has been supplied to HMRC. In contrast, responses received to questions regarding the Remuneration Trust and associated transactions, whether purportedly from the taxpayer or their agent, are all very similar in style and tone and it is believed that these responses are written/orchestrated by representatives of the scheme promoter. The nature of these communications have typically been evasive, uncooperative and obstructive, and information has only been provided to HMRC after protracted correspondence and the issue of Information Notices, which it is believed have not been fully complied with. Requests to meet with users of the schemes to discuss their Remuneration Trusts have consistently been declined. It is, therefore, believed that if the required information were requested from the suspects or their advisers either voluntarily or by means of a production order, it would not be provided expeditiously or completely."
"approached prior to executing the warrant as it is believed that access to the premises would not be immediately and voluntarily granted. This is due to the serious nature and value of the offences being investigated and the possible significant consequences of being prosecuted.
The purpose of the search may be frustrated or seriously prejudiced unless an officer arriving at the premises can secure immediate entry to them. There is the risk that without immediate access, relevant evidence may be concealed, destroyed or even fabricated which would frustrate the purposes of the search and the further investigation of the offences, which include submission of false documentation to HMRC."
"it could possibly be said that users of the scheme, and the suspects in this investigation, considered the claims made on the FRA is to be legitimate, or alternatively may feel that they have been "duped" as to the legitimacy or legality of any variations to it. However, whilst there may be some merit in such an argument in relation to "ordinary" users of the scheme, due to the fact that… Ashbolt… and Arundell are additionally known or believed to have marketed Baxendale Walker LLP schemes and introduce their own clients to them, it is believed that they have a full understanding of the mechanics of how the schemes operate. They knew therefore that the position claimed by the FRA was not true and that they have signed and submitted the agreement, or caused to be submitted, knowing the information on it to be false."
The hearing before HHJ Mairs
"Now, each of the suspects may say, "well, look, I depend upon advice from Baxendale Walker, you know, in the same way as you depend upon advice from your accountant, Dr or whatever else, therefore, I have no reason to believe that any of this was dishonest or was wrong.… What do you say in relation to that as a submission?"
Mr Hirst answered,
"Yes. As I have mentioned on the application itself, there may be some argument for that, we think, with ordinary users of the scheme, however, because all of the suspects on the applications are known to be introducers or sub- promoters of the scheme, we believed they have an in-depth knowledge of the way the scheme works and would know that the document that they submitted contained false information."
The second exchange took place after he had given judgment when he said,
"As a supplementary, I should have asked you, and did not, when you say in your report about answers being evasive or being uncooperative, can you give me an example of that?"
Mr Hirst answered,
"Yes. There will be several examples, but normally what happens is, whenever they are asked a direct question, they tend to reply with another question or ask under what legislation we are allowed to ask that question in the first place. They have made complaints in just about every case that I have seen, groundless, in my opinion, complaints, and just tried to be as obstructive and delay things as much as they possibly can."
"There are a number of evidential matters I am satisfied of, which form reasonable grounds to believe that these FRAs are a deliberate and dishonest misrepresentation designed to avoid liability. Firstly, the FRAs state that the user has been a fiduciary since at least 2011 and, anachronistically, no agreement was submitted to HMRC prior to 2017 and, importantly, no agreement was signed before the changes in the law making these loans taxable.
Secondly, during civil enquiries into four of the suspects… which has been ongoing for some time, no mention was made of any FRA, but payments were referred to universally as loans. Finance agreements and memoranda [of] further advances detail borrower, lender and loan. They were signed by parties in their capacity as borrower or lender.
Thirdly if the FRA accurately reflects the relationship at the professed time, there would be no requirement in fact for a loan agreement.
[Fourthly] Production orders granted in August 2018 reveal that the money received has not been held in a fiduciary capacity for the benefit of the trust but has been spent on lifestyle expenses and, furthermore, we have the example of Arundell using funds from Simi Management Ltd, it would appear, directly to fund lifestyle expenses.
[Fifthly] An identical template has been used for all of the FRAs and I have considered the example provided at appendix C.
Lastly, and importantly, the knowledge and experience possessed by each of the suspects who held themselves out as experts in the field of tax planning and wealth management indicate that they knew the FRA was a false representation and had a full knowledge of how the system operated. Each of them operated as an introducer to Baxendale Walker in a professional capacity and, therefore, did not solely rely on information from Baxendale Walker as to the nature of the agreement and the nature of their tax liability."
"Paragraph 2(b), other methods of obtaining the information. Throughout the civil investigation answers in relation to material dealing with the trusts has been broadly identical, evasive and uncooperative. Information notices have not been complied with fully and, given the suspects are unaware of the criminal investigation, there is a real risk that such evidence as is available would be dissipated by them."
Issue (1) – The access conditions (and in particular the "indictable offence" criterion)
(i) in Mr Ashbolt's case, the FRA purportedly dated 15 March 2017 and recording the terms of an arrangement between him and TAL management Ltd as at 18 February 2008, signed by him both for himself and as director of TAL management Ltd; and
(ii) in Mr Arundell's case, there were two categories of documents submitted to HMRC: the FRA purportedly dated 14 January 2011 recording the terms of an arrangement between him and Simi Management Ltd as at that date, signed by him both for himself and as director of Simi Management Ltd; and numerous Memoranda of Fiduciary Receipts purportedly dated between 7 April 2015 and for January 2016.
Issue (2) – Were access condition 2(b) (ii) (other methods not tried because appeared bound to fail) and the additional condition set out at paragraph 14 (d) (service of notice of an application for a production order may seriously prejudice the investigation) fulfilled?
i) the extent of the claimants' co-operation with the civil enquiry was set out by Mr Hirst in the written application. In summary, the claimants had "typically been evasive, uncooperative and obstructive, and information has only been provided to HMRC after protracted correspondence and the issue of Information Notices, which it is believed have not been fully complied with".
ii) Mr Hirst expressed the view that alerting the suspects to the existence of a criminal investigation "would give rise to the risk that that relevant evidence may be destroyed, concealed, or fabricated, or that collusion takes place between the suspects and/or the scheme promoters."
iii) In consequence he said, "The purpose of the search may be frustrated or seriously prejudiced unless an officer arriving at the premises can secure immediate entry to them. There is the risk that without immediate access relevant evidence may be concealed, destroyed or even fabricated which would frustrate the purposes of the search and the further investigation of the offences, which include submission of false documents to HMRC."
iv) Against that however, he made clear that there had been partial cooperation by the claimants during the civil enquiry; they were both of good character and each was involved in the provision of tax planning and wealth management solutions and that Mr Ashbolt was an Independent Financial Adviser.
"Throughout the civil investigation answers in relation to material dealing with the trusts has been broadly identical, evasive and uncooperative. Information notices have not been complied with fully and, given the suspects are unaware of the criminal investigation, there is a real risk that such evidence as is available would be dissipated by them."
Conclusion
UPON the application of the Claimants for Judicial Review by a Claim Form issued on 19th August 2019
AND UPON permission to apply for Judicial Review having been granted by Sir Duncan Ouseley dated 27th November 2019
AND UPON hearing leading and junior counsel for the Claimants and counsel for the First Defendant at a remote hearing on 6th May 2020
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The Application for Judicial Review is dismissed.
2. The Claimants shall pay the costs of the First Defendant, summarily assessed in the sum of £25,000.
Signed: Ingrid Simler
Dated: 19 June 2020