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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Customs and Excise v Weller [2006] EWHC 237 (Ch) (23 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/237.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 237 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
VAT AND DUTIES TRIBUNAL CENTRE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS AND EXCISE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DAVID WELLER |
Respondent |
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Jolyon Maugham (instructed by Bar Pro Bono Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Evans-Lombe :
"(3) That the appeal shall proceed on the basis that the Tribunal has jurisdiction to consider whether the seized goods were for the Appellant's personal use even though there have been no condemnation proceedings and condemnation has not been challenged…;"
"1 [Mr Weller] was stopped at Dover on 11 July 2004. He had been a foot passenger and was carrying 1400 cigarettes, 1.5 kilograms of hand rolling tobacco and 3 litres of spirits. After interview [The Commissioners] concluded that the goods were held for commercial purposes and so they were seized. [Mr Weller] was given Notice 12A. [Mr Weller] took advice and wrote to [The Commissioners] on I August 2004 enclosing letter B which asked for his goods to be restored and making clear that his main argument was that he did not hold the goods for commercial purposes. He said that he did not want to involve the courts and he did not return letter A which asked for condemnation proceedings to be taken. Condemnation was deemed to have taken place on 11 August 2004.
2. [The Commissioners] replied to [Mr Weller's] letter of I August 2004 on 23 August 2004 and said that the goods would not be restored but that [Mr Weller] could ask for a review of that decision. [Mr Weller] wrote on 19 September 2004 in effect asking for a review; he raised a number of points including his previous point that the goods were not held for commercial purposes. The review decision was given on 26 October 2004. It confirmed the decision not to offer restoration of the goods and told [Mr Weller] that if he wished to contest that decision he should lodge an appeal with the Tribunal. He did lodge an appeal on 22 November 2004 and one of his grounds of appeal was that the initial seizure decision, that he had been carrying goods for commercial purposes, was incorrect as the goods were never intended for commercial purposes."
"1. (1) The Commissioners shall… give notice of the seizure of any thing as liable to forfeiture and of the grounds therefore to any person who to their knowledge was at the time of the seizure the owner or one of the owners thereof…
3. Any person claiming that any thing seized as liable to forfeiture is not so liable shall, within one month of the date of the notice of seizure or, where no such notice has been served on him, within one month of the date of the seizure, give notice of his claim in writing to the Commissioners at any office of Customs and Excise…
5. If on the expiration of the relevant period under paragraph 3 above for the giving of notice of claim in respect of any thing no such notice has been given to the Commissioners, or if, in the case of any such notice given, any requirement of paragraph 4 above is not complied with [not material] the thing in question shall be deemed to have been duly condemned as forfeited…
8. Proceedings for condemnation shall be civil proceedings and may be instituted -
(a) in England or Wales either in the High Court or in a magistrates' court…"
"The Commissioners may, as they see fit –
(b) restore, subject to such conditions (if any) as they think proper anything forfeited or seized…. "
"(2) Any person who is—
(b) a person in relation to whom, or on whose application, such a decision has been made may by notice in writing to the Commissioners require them to review that decision.
(3) The Commissioners shall not be required under this section to review any decision unless the notice requiring the review is given before the end of the period of forty-five days beginning with the day on which written notification of the decision, or of the assessment containing the decision, was first given to the person requiring the review."
" (4) In relation to any decision as to an ancillary matter, or any decision on the review of such a decision, the powers of an appeal tribunal on an appeal under this section shall be confined to a power, where the tribunal are satisfied that the Commissioners or other person making that decision could not reasonably have arrived at it, to do one or more of the following, that is to say—
(a) to direct that the decision, so far as it remains in force, is to cease to have effect from such time as the tribunal may direct;
(b) to require the Commissioners to conduct, in accordance with the directions of the tribunal, a further review of the original decision; and
(c) in the case of a decision which has already been acted on or taken effect and cannot be remedied by a further review, to declare the decision to have been unreasonable and to give directions to the Commissioners as to the steps to be taken for securing that repetitions of the unreasonableness do not occur when comparable circumstances arise in future."
"58 While the division of jurisdiction between the courts and the tribunal may arguably be curious, and is probably retained because of the long standing jurisdiction of the courts in proceedings for condemnation, the division is clear and it is not intended that the tribunal should have jurisdiction to reconsider the condemnation of goods as forfeited. Mr Cordara's submission that the tribunal should have jurisdiction to consider whether duty has been paid is no more than another way of claiming that the court's findings should be reopened. The tribunal's view would produce the surprising result that the person whose goods had been seized could make a choice of fact-finding tribunal. If he wanted the court to determine the issue he would serve a notice under paragraphs 3 and 4; if he wanted the tribunal he would do nothing. In my judgment, the statutory scheme does not produce that result. The application to the tribunal is for restoration under section 152. There is no breach of article 6 because the owner has recourse to the courts in the condemnation proceedings."
"46 All that said, I shall now turn to express my view on what was said by Pill LJ. So far as domestic law is concerned I would respectfully say that the observations were clearly correct. I do not think it can have been intended that the importer before the tribunal would have a second bite at the cherry of lawfulness, having failed in the condemnation proceedings, or let them go by default
47 To the extent that it was argued that the literal provisions of section 152(b) are wide enough to allow such a second bite, I would agree that that is so, but the reason why the importer cannot have that liberty is not because of the terms of the statute, but because of the normal English law rules of res judicata or abuse of process.
48 As I have already said, that conclusion does not lead to the more severe conclusion, tentatively drawn by Lord Phillips MR in para 10 of the original judgment in this case, in that it does not cause the tribunal to be effectively functus even on issues of discretion.
49 I turn to the Convention. The forfeiture process interferes with Mr Gascoyne's rights to his property that are potentially protected by article 1 of the First Protocol to the Convention.
50 That is made clear in the judgment of this court in Lindsay v Customs and Excise Comrs [2002] 1 WLR 1766, 1784, para 52, to which I have already referred, in the leading judgment of Lord Phillips MR in that case. That being so, issues of proportionality, and indeed of due process in the arrangements made by this jurisdiction for dealing with issues of forfeiture, potentially arise.
51 As to those, in my view there is no Convention objection to holding that an actual finding in condemnation proceedings binds in a tribunal application, be it binding as to the decision as to lawfulness of seizure, or binding as to the underlying facts. In that respect, one can draw assistance, and the European Court of Human Rights has drawn assistance, from the parallel jurisprudence of article 6. If the importer has actually been in court, first of all he has had his day in court in front of a judicial body, and, secondly, as is well known, Convention jurisprudence permits a proportionate restriction on access to a court, provided the essential rights that are in contest from a Convention point of view are not thereby rendered nugatory. That was decided in Lithgow v United Kingdom (1986) 8 EHRR 329, incidentally a First Protocol case, at pp 393-394, para 194.
52 Secondly, however, that jurisprudence itself creates a great deal more difficulty in relation to the deeming provisions under paragraph 5 of Schedule 3. One's instincts, if no more, suggest that the extent to which it was held in Gora's case that those provisions necessarily prevent any further consideration of the legality of the seizure was an excessive limitation.
53 Miss Simler drew our attention in that connection to what was said by Lord Phillips MR in Lindsay's case, at p 1786, para 64, that the principle of proportionality requires that each case should be considered on its particular facts. Lord Phillips MR then went on to indicate the sort of facts that might be relevant.
54 As it seems to me, for an importer to be completely shut out in the only tribunal before which he has in fact appeared from ventilating the matters that are deemed to have been decided against him because of paragraph 5 of Schedule 3 does not adequately enable him to assert his Convention rights.
55 In my view, therefore, in a case where the deeming provisions under paragraph 5 are applied, the tribunal can reopen those issues: though the tribunal will always have very well in mind considerations of, or similar to, abuse of process in considering whether such issues should in fact be ventilated before it.
56 The mere fact that the applicant has not applied to the commissioners, and therefore there have been no condemnation proceedings, would not, in my view, be enough. But, in my judgment, it goes too far to say that the deeming provisions have always, in every case, got to be paramount.
57 I do not think that that issue was ever brought to the attention of this court in Gora's case. If it had been, I doubt whether the court would have expressed itself in quite the unqualified terms that it adopted.
"
"22. It is, in my judgement, clear from that passage that in the run of the mill case where there has been a failure to give a paragraph 3 notice invoking the condemnation proceedings the deeming provision will operate against the applicant in any subsequent appeal to a Tribunal. The Tribunal's function, therefore, is analogous to a sentencing court once a defendant has been convicted. No matter that the defendant still protests his innocence of the charge against him, the function of a sentencing court is to accept mitigation but not to question the original conviction.
23. Lord Justice Buxton's reference to abuse of process or to considerations analogous to abuse of process are, in my view, references to the well-known principle that it may of an abuse of process to raise in one tribunal matters that could and should have been raised in another. So the relevant questions will always be, first, could the applicant have raised the question of lawfulness of forfeiture in other proceedings and, if the answer to that question is yes, why did he not do so? In the light of his reasons for not raising the matter in condemnation proceedings the Tribunal can then answer the question should he have done so and if they answer that question 'yes', then it will be, in most cases, an abuse of process for him to raise the question before the Tribunal."
"a) the risk of an award of £750 costs against Mr Weller, which the Commissioners are awarded in condemnation proceedings, and which are not awarded in the Tribunal
b) 'Letter A' (the requesting condemnation proceedings) was not completed because Public Notice 12A (2002) did not explain that a party would later be precluded from challenging the seizure and further guidance would have been helpful. Further, it did not mention that goods were not routinely restored, but only restored in exceptional circumstances; [I was shown a copy of the Notice 12 A which was given to Mr Weller which, in my view, clearly sets out the consequences of not applying for the initiation of condemnation proceedings]
c) 'over zealous' work by front-line staff, [it was common ground that this subparagraph meant that the officers had dealt brusquely with Mr Weller but had not physically mistreated him]
d) in respect of costs the risks, when weighed up, were overwhelming;
e) the Commissioners win in the vast majority of condemnation cases in the Magistrates Court; [The statistics are that in only one case out of 299 in the last recorded year did an importer succeed before the Magistrates].
f) requesting condemnation proceedings would have meant being away from work for long periods; and
g) to avoid stress;"