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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Panorama Cash & Carry Ltd (t/a Booze Direct) v Revenue And Customs [2020] EWHC 1808 (Ch) (15 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1808.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1808 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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PANORAMA CASH & CARRY LIMITED T/A BOOZE DIRECT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendants |
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Joshua Carey (instructed by HMRC Solicitors Office) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 16 June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
Background
"There have been 11 movements[1] of suspended excise goods from your account in Edwards Beers & Minerals Ltd which were not delivered to the declared destination warehouse – Simply Vodka BVBA in Belgium (as recorded in the accompanying paperwork)."
"… any steps to confirm the bona fides of your customer or the authority of Simply Vodka BVA to receive these goods.
Basic enquiries could have revealed that the Belgian tax warehouse was no longer in operation and given you sufficient information to make an informed decision about the request from your customer to dispatch the requested goods to that destination.
You would appear to have made no investigation into your customer or destination and as the Belgian warehouse is not operational it follows that none of these consignments could possibly have been delivered."
"(1) The appellant did take steps to confirm that Legata was bona fide.
(2) The appellant did take steps to confirm the authority of Simply Vodka to receive duty suspended goods.
(3) The appellant did make enquiries to confirm that Simply Vodka was operational.
(4) The Appellant did make investigations into Legata and Simply Vodka.
(5) The excise duty liabilities were considerably in excess of the £77,660 quoted in the letter.
(6) The original decision was not contained in a letter dated 20 August 2010. That was a draft letter, the actual decision being contained in a letter dated 10 September 2010. 10
(7) There was no letter to the appellant dated 19 August 2010.
(8) Mr Donnachie failed to clarify whether there were 10 or 11 consignments.
(9) The review letter contains no reference to the relevant material provided by Mr and Mrs Kang in relation to the appellant's background and the specific transactions.
(10) Mr Donnachie failed to take into account that conditions falling short of revocation could have been placed on the appellant's registration.
(11) Mr Donnachie failed to take into account the effect revocation would have on the appellant's business."
"It is clear from the Decision and the evidence I heard that HMRC had targeted the Company and intended it to be unable to trade knowing this would cause it harm."
The claim
Misfeasance in public office
"First there is the case of targeted malice by a public officer, ie conduct specifically intended to injure a person or persons. This type of case involves bad faith in the sense that the exercise of public power for an improper or ulterior motive. The second form is where a public officer acts knowing that he has no power to do the act complained of and that the act will probably injure the plaintiff. It involves bad faith inasmuch as the public officer does not have an honest belief that his act is lawful."
"This is a legally sound justification for adopting as a starting point that in both forms of the tort the intent required must be directed at the harm complained of, or at least to harm of the type suffered by the plaintiffs. This results in the rule that a plaintiff must establish not only that the defendant acted in the knowledge that the act was beyond his powers but also in the knowledge that his act would probably injure the plaintiff or person of a class of which the plaintiff was a member. In presenting a sustained argument for a rule allowing recovery of all foreseeable losses counsel for the plaintiffs argued that such a more liberal rule is necessary in a democracy as a constraint upon abuse of executive and administrative power. The force of this argument is, however, substantially reduced by the recognition that subjective recklessness on the part of the public officer in acting in excess of his powers is sufficient. Recklessness about the consequences of his act, in the sense of not caring whether the consequences happen or not, is therefore sufficient in law." [emphasis added]
"My Lords, I consider that dishonesty is a necessary ingredient of the tort, and it is clear from the authorities that in this context dishonesty means acting in bad faith. In some cases the term "dishonesty" is not used and the term "in bad faith" or acting from "a corrupt motive" or "an improper motive" is used, or the term "in bad faith" is used together with the term "dishonesty".
"34. The Claimant avers that it was the victim of the Commissioners Misfeasance in a Public Office.
a. The Commissioners acting in the course of their Public Office abused their powers in three ways, each of which independently gives rise to liability. They:-
i. Arrived at an unlawful decision to revoke the Claimant's registration as a registered owner of duty suspended goods, which appears to have been taken on 20 August 2010;
ii. Conducted a Statutory Review which unlawfully upheld the revocation; and
iii. Chose not to comply with the direction of the Tribunal to conduct a fresh review limited to the facts as found by the Tribunal within a reasonable time.
b. In respect of any or all of the above, the Commissioners could not have honestly believed they were exercising their powers lawfully and or in the alternative they exercised their powers recklessly.
c. The Commissioners knew that revocation would cause the Claimant economic loss. They further know or should have known that maintaining the revocation decision by way of an unlawful review would continue or cause further economic loss.
d. The Commissioners having been directed to conduct a further review by the Tribunal limited to the facts as found by the Tribunal could rationally have only reached a conclusion to restore the Claimant's authorisation.
e. The delay amounted to an abuse of the process of the Tribunal."
"35. The claimant's registration as a registered owner of duty suspended goods amounted to a property right for within [sic] the meaning of Article 1 Protocol 1 Convention on Human Rights.
36. The decision of the Commissioners to deprive the Claimant of its property right did not have a legitimate aim, it did not strike a balance between the Claimant and the general interest and lacked proportionality accordingly the decision was manifestly unreasonable."
(1) Identify the officer or officers who are said to have committed the wrong. Although conventionally the officer in question need not be a party to the claim because the public authority will be vicariously liable, it is necessary to make clear who is said to have been the wrongdoer. The wrongdoers on the facts of this case cannot be the Commissioners because they had no involvement at all. On the basis of the pleaded case, there are at least three possible wrongdoers, Mr McWilliam, Mr Donnachie and whomever is said to have chosen not to comply with the Tribunal's Decision within a reasonable time. Mrs Kang's witness statement suggests that the complaint lies against Mr Donnachie but that will not assist the claimant in respect of paragraphs 34a (i) and (ii) of the particulars of claim.
(2) Particularise the misfeasance. It does not suffice to assert that the original decision and the review were "unlawful", without more, or that some unnamed person or persons at HMRC chose to delay implementing the Tribunal's Decision.
(3) Explain whether the claimant's case is based on targeted or untargeted malice and plead the respective elements of the tort.
(4) Provide any, or least any adequate, plea of dishonesty or bad faith. Paragraphs 35 and 36 of the particulars of claim are unspecific and come nowhere to particularising the necessary mental element of the officer or officers against who the claimant wishes to claim.
(5) Explain the basis for alleging that the delay in implementing the decision of the Tribunal was an abuse of the Tribunal's process. The notion is a curious one bearing in mind the claimant took no steps to refer the case back to the Tribunal and, in any event, it is not promising basis for a misfeasance claim.
Breach of Community law
(1) At the time of the revocation decision HMRC was aware, or should have been aware, of incorrect information about Simply Vodka's registration (or the absence if it) having been supplied: paragraph 29. It is not said that HMRC was aware of the error when the SEED check was carried out.
(2) HMRC knew that in the absence of a valid SEED check the claimant could not have entered into the transactions: paragraph 30.
(3) HMRC failed to act in accordance with the principle of Community law "… that an economic operator who has received precise assurances from an administrative authority may rely upon the protection of legitimate expectations which that authority caused it to entertain.": paragraph 31.
(4) HMRC ought to have concluded that the claimant acted in good faith and taken account of the fact that the claimant had taken every reasonable precaution which could be reasonably required of it and relieved the claimant of any liability under the Community principle of proportionality: paragraph 32.
(5) The statutory review of the revocation decision was unlawful. The claimant relies upon the findings of the First Tier Tribunal: paragraph 33. No particulars are given of the that ground this allegation.
(1) If the Belgian authorities failed to update their SEED database the failure was an act of maladministration capable of engaging their liability under Article 22 of Regulation 2073/2004 and Article 16(3) of the law of 10 June 1997.
(2) The stronger and more evident cause of action against HMRC is based upon the adoption of the revocation Decision. He concludes by saying that: "We therefore consider that the Revocation Decision can be opposed on the basis of the ECJ case-law establishing that suppliers of excise goods may not be liable in the case of fraud by a third-party in circumstances where they took all reasonable precautions prior to the transaction and were not aware of, or involved in the fraud."
"Community law, as it has been developed by the European Court of Justice, is capable of conferring upon individuals the right to claim damages from a national authority by one or other or both of two distinct routes. The purpose of the right to claim damages is to ensure that provisions of Community law prevail over national provisions. This is because the full effectiveness of Community law would be impaired if individuals were unable to obtain redress in the national courts of the relevant member state when their rights were infringed by a breach of Community law: Brasserie du Pecheur SA v Federal Republic of Germany; R v Secretary of State for Transport, Ex p Factortame Ltd (No4) (Joined Cases C-46/93and C-48/93) [1996] QB 404, 495, para20. The first route by which the right to claim damages against the state or an emanation of the state for the non-implementation or misimplementation of a Directive may be asserted is based upon the principle of direct effect. This is the principle which was established in Community law by NV Algemene Transport- en Expeditie Onderneming van Gend & Loos v Nederlandse administratie derbelastingen (Case26/62) [1963] ECR1. The second route is based upon the principle of state liability."
(1) There was a breach by HMRC of the claimant's right to own property within the scope of Article 1 of the Convention. The revocation of its authorisation to own excise goods under duty suspension amounted to a loss of a possession: Van Marle v Netherlands (1986) 8 EHRR 483, 491. The state cannot deprive a person of property unless there is an objective justification.
(2) There is a right to rely upon a SEED check. The point is not developed but it appears to me to be a different way to make the same point about the deprivation of the right to property or perhaps a ground for saying there was a breach of the claimant's legitimate expectations.
(1) "It is respectfully submitted that the action before the High Court to seek damages in respect of clear breaches of Community law rights should be treated as an extension to the commencement of the Tribunal appeal. If the action in the Tribunal were not to be treated as a component in the Applicant's overall claim, then Community law rights would be violated. The Claimant's entitlement pursuant to Principles of Proportionality and Effective Judicial Control which encompasses Article 6 of the Convention along with The Charter of Fundamental Rights would lead to an issue of incompatibility."
(2) "It is therefore the Claimant's submission that when taking account of Community Law which incorporates Convention Law it has a right to sue the State, in this case the Commissioners of HMRC, for damages. Domestic law both procedurally and substantively should be applied to ensure the effectiveness of the procedures for redress. The court should either regard the cause of action as not accruing until the re-review was complete and notified which is the most straightforward approach, or regard the claim as already having been started for the purposes of the 1980 Limitation Act. Certainly, the latter approach is no more dramatic than the courts disapplying an express limitation in the Marks and Spencer case[4] by applying a Simmenthal[5] approach."
Note 1 This was an error. There were 10 movements. [Back] Note 2 In what may have been an unintended irony, Simply Vodka was only ever authorised to deal in beer. [Back] Note 3 The claim will be made against the public authority but it is the state of mind of the officer concerned that is relevant. [Back] Note 4 C-62/00 ECR 2002 1-06325 [Back]