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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Nourish Training Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v Revenue And Customs [2023] EWHC 350 (Admin) (20 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/350.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 350 (Admin), [2023] BVC 6 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE KING on the application of NOURISH TRAINING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendant |
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Howard Watkinson (instructed by HMRC) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 1 February 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Bourne :
Introduction and background
"I consider that the following factors indicate that you are principally or solely registered to abuse the VAT system by facilitating VAT fraud:
1. Labour charge rates from suppliers are too low and not commercial. For example, there are instances where labour was supplied to Nourish Training Limited in October 2020 at £8.72 per hour which was National Minimum Wage at time of supply. Therefore, based on rates Nourish Training Limited paid to its suppliers, it would not have been possible for their suppliers to comply with National Minimum Wage, meet its statutory obligations as an employer and make a sustainable profit. As Nourish Training Limited also employ temporary workers via PAYE, they would be aware of the additional costs associated with employing a worker such as Employers National Insurance Contributions and other statutory obligations e.g., holiday pay. Therefore, Nourish Training Limited ought to have known the rates they were being offered were too good to be true.
2. Timeline of engagements demonstrate that Nourish Training Limited have consistently used labour providers whose supplies are connected with VAT fraud resulting in substantial tax losses to HMRC. Once a provider is deregistered for VAT, they are immediately replaced by a new supplier, and in most cases, these transactions are later connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT. The only reasonable explanation for this pattern of behaviour is that the relationships between Nourish Training Limited and its suppliers were contrived to further an overall fraud.
3. £8,230,124 of input tax claimed by Nourish Training Limited from VAT period ending 09/18 up to and including 03/22 has been traced back to the fraudulent evasion of VAT. This represents a high percentage of total input tax claimed by Nourish Training Limited. In some periods all input tax reclaimed in relation to supplies of labour was connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT. Such high percentages are considered to be evidence for contrivance, and for Nourish Training Limited's complicity in such.
4. Nourish Training Limited finds the workers, then places them with labour providers who then supply them back to Nourish Training Limited – charging VAT on the whole supply. As Nourish Training Limited finds the workers, this arrangement does not make commercial sense as this would increase Nourish Training Limited costs, given it would be expected that the labour provider would be adding an additional profit margin on labour supplies made to Nourish Training Limited.
This arrangement also does not make sense from a cashflow perspective, as Nourish Training Limited would be paying out an additional 20% on each invoice to account for VAT, which would not be present if they engaged the workers directly via PAYE.
Therefore it is not clear what value if any, these labour providers provided to Nourish Training Limited. The fact that Nourish Training Limited did not seek to question the integrity of such outwardly uncommercial practises indicates at the very least it ought to have known that the supplies were connected with fraud.
5. Despite receiving education on due diligence and notifications from HMRC of suppliers being deregistered for VAT, Nourish Training Limited on several occasions, continued to trade with and/or obtain recommendations from the same individuals, resulting in further tax losses to HMRC. I have concluded that Nourish Training Limited chose to ignore the advice and warnings given to it by HMRC given its high incidence of participation in fraudulent supply chains over a sustained period.
Whilst Nourish Training Limited may satisfy the formal requirements for VAT registration under Schedule 1 of the VAT Act 1994, HMRC considers that the VAT registration is being used to facilitate VAT fraud, and in accordance with the principles recited above, its VAT registration should be cancelled."
Application to rely on further evidence
The nature of the application for interim relief
"(1) The High Court may by order (whether interlocutory or final) grant an injunction or appoint a receiver in all cases in which it appears to the court to be just and convenient to do so.
(2) Any such order may be made either unconditionally or on such terms and conditions as the court thinks just."
(1) In an application for an interim injunction in a public law case, the basic principles which are familiar from American Cyanamid v Ethicon Ltd [1975] AC 396 are applied with some modification [51].
(2) Accordingly, "… whether to grant an injunction in a public law case involves the exercise of a discretion which takes all relevant matters into account, including the strength of the case advanced by the party seeking relief, but without applying a rigid test to that aspect, such as requiring a 'strong prima facie case'. The context of the particular decision under challenge, the interests of the public in general that are involved, and the broader legal framework will obviously be important factors for the court to take into account" [52].
(3) In CC & C Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2015] 1 WLR 4043, Underhill LJ said:
"43. I do not therefore believe that the court is entitled to intervene to grant interim relief where the registration of a trader in duty-suspended goods is revoked simply on the basis that there is a pending appeal with a realistic chance of success. But it does not follow that there are no circumstances in which the court may grant such relief; and, as noted above, HMRC do not in fact so contend. The correct principle seems to me to be this. If a 'relevant decision' is challenged only on the basis that it is one to which HMRC could not reasonably have come the case falls squarely within section 16 of the 1994 Act [which conferred the relevant right of appeal in that case], and the court should not intervene. However, where the challenge to the decision is not simply that it is unreasonable but that it is unlawful on some other ground, then the case falls outside the statutory regime and there is nothing objectionable in the court entertaining a claim for judicial review or, where appropriate, granting interim relief in connection with that claim …
44. In short, therefore, I believe that the court may entertain a claim for judicial review … in cases where it is arguable that the decision was not simply unreasonable but was unlawful on one of the more fundamental bases identified above. Such cases will, of their nature, be exceptional."
(4) R (ABC Ltd) v Revenue & Customs Commissioners [2018] 1 WLR 125 concerned similar issues relating to registration for wholesale supply of duty-paid alcohol, for which the Commissioners were required to apply a statutory "fit and proper person" test. Burnett LJ (as he then was) said:
"61 ...
(i) The High Court has jurisdiction to grant an injunction maintaining registration pending appeal to the FTT, which has been revoked by HMRC, when a parallel challenge to that decision is made in judicial review proceedings.
(ii) The jurisdiction should not be exercised simply on the basis that the person concerned has a pending appeal with a realistic chance of success.
(iii) If the decision is challenged only on the basis that HMRC could not reasonably have come to it, the case falls within section 16 of the Finance Act 1994 and the court should not intervene.
(iv) If the challenge to the decision is on some other ground outside the statutory regime the court may entertain judicial review or grant interim relief.
(v) A definition of the additional element needed is elusive but would include 'abuse of power', 'impropriety' and 'unfairness' as envisaged in Harley Development Inc v Comr of Inland Revenue [1996] 1 WLR 727
…
81. In my opinion, a statutory appeal against a refusal of approval which is unable to provide a remedy before an appellant has been forced out of business, rendering the appeal entirely academic (or theoretical or illusory in the language of the Strasbourg Court) is capable of giving rise to a violation of article 6 which the High Court would be entitled to prevent by the grant of appropriate injunctive relief under section 37 of the 1981 Act . To that extent, the exceptions enumerated by Underhill LJ in the CC & C Ltd case … can be expanded to include cases in which a claimant can demonstrate, to a high degree of probability, that the absence of interim relief would violate its ECHR rights. Moreover, such an injunction need not be ancillary to a claim for judicial review of any decision of HMRC, although it might be.
…
85. A claimant seeking an injunction would need compelling evidence that the appeal would be ineffective. It would call for more than a narrative statement from a director of the business speaking of the dire consequences of delay. The statements should be supported by documentary financial evidence and a statement from an independent professional doing more than reformulating his client's stated opinion. Otherwise, a judge may be cautious about taking prognostications of disaster at face value. It should not be forgotten that a trader who sees ultimate failure in the appeal would have every incentive to talk up the prospects of imminent demise of the business, in an attempt to keep going pending appeal. Equally, material would have to be deployed which provided a proper insight into the prospects of success in an appeal. There is no permission filter for an appeal to the FTT. The High Court would not intervene in the absence of a detailed explanation of why the decision of HMRC was unreasonable. It must not be overlooked that the FTT is not exercising its usual appellate jurisdiction in these types of case where it makes its own decision. Finally, there would have to be detailed evidence of the attempts made to secure expedition in the FTT and the reasons why those attempts failed. Whilst the jurisdiction exists to grant interim relief in this way, its use is likely to be sparing because steps (i) and (ii) identified above should provide practical relief in cases which justify it and the circumstances in which it would be appropriate for injunctive relief to issue will be rare."
(5) ABC was appealed to the Supreme Court under the name of R (OWD Ltd trading as Birmingham Cash & Carry) v RCC [2019] 1 WLR 4020. Lady Black at [70-72] expressed "unease" with the proposition that the Revenue could be required to re-register a person whom they did not believe was fit and proper, but noted Burnett LJ's reasoning about the court's injunctive powers and the fact that, permission having been refused on that ground, that proposition could not be challenged in that case.
(6) R (Ingenious Construction Ltd) v HMRC [2020] EWHC 2255 (Admin) also concerned a removal of VAT registration. Sir Ross Cranston ruled that there was a power to grant the injunction sought but (1) the public interest would carry significant weight in the balance of convenience, (2) an applicant would need to establish to a high degree of probability that the absence of interim relief would render its appeal rights illusory and (3) that, following CC & C, an applicant had to show not just a realistic chance of success but something akin to an abuse of power, impropriety or unfairness.
(7) Although there were differences between the relevant statutory schemes, these did not mean that there should be different approaches to the grant of injunctive relief [92].
(8) If insolvency were to become a real prospect, the claimant's primary remedy should be to seek further expedition of its FTT appeal [126].
The merits of the application for interim relief
"59. The test in Kittel is simple and should not be over-refined. It embraces not only those who know of the connection but those who "should have known". Thus it includes those who should have known from the circumstances which surround their transactions that they were connected to fraudulent evasion. If a trader should have known that the only reasonable explanation for the transaction in which he was involved was that it was connected with fraud and if it turns out that the transaction was connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT then he should have known of that fact. He may properly be regarded as a participant for the reasons explained in Kittel.
60. The true principle to be derived from Kittel does not extend to circumstances in which a taxable person should have known that by his purchase it was more likely than not that his transaction was connected with fraudulent evasion. But a trader may be regarded as a participant where he should have known that the only reasonable explanation for the circumstances in which his purchase took place was that it was a transaction connected with such fraudulent evasion."
"In my opinion, as a consequence of the VAT registration number being withdrawn, it is clear that the two larges customers will be forced to seek an alternative to Nourish with the loss to the company of approximately 63% of its turnover. The loss of the GLAA licence will result in a further 35% of revenues being lost from a further 12 clients seeking an alternative to Nourish.
I am of the opinion that the loss of these revenue levels will render the company insolvent within a matter of a few weeks."
"However, should the GLAA Licence be revoked, the company would become insolvent in a matter of weeks from the Licence being revoked. I would estimate as quickly as two to three weeks from the date of Revocation but it is difficult to put an exact time span on the failure."
"Mr Purviss has now confirmed that Ralph Coleman International Limited will remove 33% of its business within two weeks with the rest to follow once suitable alternatives have been arranged to avoid fatal business disruption. I have been informed that they are moving two of their five sites to alternatives in the next two weeks."
The application for permission
Conclusion