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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Millennium Fresh Foods Limited v Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs [2009] UKFTT 43 (TC) (08 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00021.html Cite as: [2009] UKFTT 43 (TC), [2009] UKFTT 00021 (TC) |
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TC00021
Customs Duty – Customs procedures – Procedure for Processing Under Customs Control – Appeal against refusal to authorise procedure – Whether Customs decision on review unreasonable – Whether change in economic factors require fresh examination of the 'economic condition' for authorisation – Whether HMRC wrongly treated themselves as bound to follow the conclusion of the Customs Committee
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
MILLENNIUM FRESH FOODS LIMITED Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
(CUSTOMS DUTY)
Tribunal: CHARLES HELLIER
KEITH DUGDALE
Sitting in public in Norwich on 13 March 2009
Mr J Goodwin, Director, for the Appellant
Mr J Puzey, counsel, instructed by the solicitor to HMRC, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
The Law
"Article 130
The procedure for processing under customs control shall allow non-Community goods to be used in the customs territory of the Community in operations which alter their nature or state, without their being subject to import duties or commercial policy measures, and shall allow the products resulting from such operations to be released for free consultation at the rate of import duty appropriate to them. Such products shall be termed processed products.
Article 131
The list of cases in which the procedure for processing under customs control may be used shall be determined in accordance with the committee procedure.
Article 132
Authorisation for processing under customs control shall be granted at the request of the person who carries out the processing or arranges for it to be carried out.
Article 133
Authorisation shall be granted only:-
(a) to persons established in the community;
(b) where the import goods can be identified in the processed products;
(c) when the goods cannot be economically restored after processing to their description or state as it was when they were placed under the procedure;
(d) where the use of the procedure cannot result in the circumvention of the effect of the rules concerning origin and quantitative restrictions applicable to the imported goods;
(e) where the necessary conditions for the procedure to help create or maintain a processing activity in the Community without adversely affecting the essential interests of Community producers of similar goods (economic conditions) are fulfilled. The cases in which the economic conditions are deemed to have been fulfilled may be determined in accordance with the committee procedure."
"Article 502
1. Except where the economic conditions are deemed to be fulfilled pursuant to chapters 3, 4 or 6 [which is not the case in this appeal], the authorisation shall not be granted without examination of the economic conditions by the customs authorities …
3. For the processing under customs control arrangements (Chapter 4), the examination shall establish whether the use of non-Community sources enabling processing activities to be created or maintained in the Community."
Article 503 provides when an examination of the economic conditions involving the Commission may take place; that includes " where the customs authorities concerned wish to consult before or after issuing an authorisation".
Article 504 deals with such an examination and its procedures. Article 504(4) provides:
"4. The Committee's conclusion shall be taken into account by the customs authorities concerned and by any other customs authorities dealing with similar authorisations or applications …"
Chapter 4 of Title III provides more detailed rules in relation to Processing Under Customs Control. Article 552 states:-
"1. For the types of goods and operations mentioned in Annex 76, Part A, the economic conditions shall be deemed to be fulfilled.
For other types of goods and operations examination of the economic conditions shall take place.
2. For the types of goods and operations mentioned in Annex 76, Part B and not covered by Part A, the examination of the economic conditions shall take place in the Committee …"
(i) whether the requirement imposed on the local customs authorities to take into account the Committee's conclusions in Article 504(4) required the customs authorities to treat themselves as bound by that conclusion;
(ii) whether in considering the second limb of the economic conditions – the interest of procedures of "similar goods" – both the producers of the relevant raw materials (in this case chicken meat) and the producers of the processed products (the processed chicken) should be considered;
(iii) whether, as a result of Article 552(2) every application for authorisation for processing Under Customs Control should be referred to the Committee or the extent to which there should be such referral having regard to Article 504(4).
"4. The Customs Code Committee's conclusion is not binding on national customs authorities when they are determining an application for authorisation for processing under customs control."
This clear conclusion was made against the background of the virtually compulsory referral to the Committee required by Article 552(2): the Court said:
"That interpretation of Article 504(4) … according to which the Committee's conclusion is not binding, cannot be called into question by the fact that in certain circumstances, particularly where, as in the main proceedings, goods subject to agricultural policy measures are concerned consultation with the Committee is compulsory by virtue of Article 552(2) … Even in such cases, the competent national authorities must only take account of the Committee's conclusion and are not bound by it. A duty to consult the Committee cannot be treated as a duty to adopt its conclusion."
Thus it is quite clear that whilst the local customs authorities must take into account what the Committee says, they must come to their own conclusion as to whether the economic conditions are fulfilled and not simply treat themselves as bound by the Committee's conclusion.
Agreement between Member States to abide by Committee Conclusions
The jurisdiction of this Tribunal
"1. Any person shall have the right to appeal against decisions taken by the customs authorities which relate to the application of customs legislation, and which concern him directly and individually.
…
The appeal must be lodged in the member state where the decision has been taken or applied for.
2. The right of appeal may be exercised –
(a) initially, before the customs authorities designated for that purpose by the Member States;
(b) subsequently before an independent body, which may be a judicial authority or an equivalent specialised body, accounting to the provisions in form in the Member States.
…
Article 245
The provisions for the implementation of the appeals procedure shall be determined by the Member States."
"the powers of an appeal tribunal on an appeal under this section shall be confined to a power, when 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) …
(b) to require the Commissioners to conduct, in accordance with the direction of the tribunal, a further review of the original decision; and
…"
"On a literal application of those words it might be argued that they are only directed at the result of the review and that the Tribunal could only intervene if the decision were unsustainable in the light of the facts and the law. The Tribunal would only be concerned with the actual decision and section 16(4)would only apply if the only possible decision was contrary to that of the Commissioners on the review.
"On this view the Tribunal would not be concerned by a failure to consider all relevant material. It must be remembered that section 16(4) also applies to Customs appeals and such a restrictive interpretation might well be incompatible with the obligations of Member States under Article 243 of the Community customs Code. Furthermore it is difficult to see what purpose would be served by the provision of section 16(4)(b) for a further review if there was only one possible conclusion.
"As noted above [HMRC] did not contend for a narrow construction of Section 16(4).
"In our opinion the word "reasonably" is to be construed in the wider sense used by Lord Greene MR in Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 KG 223, …
"The approach to be adopted by a Tribunal in reviewing the exercise of a discretion conferred on the Commissioners (albeit a different discretion) was put in this way by Lord Jane in Customs and Excise Commissioners v J H Corbitt (Numismatists) Ltd [1980] 2 WLR 753 at 663,
"It could only, properly [review the discretion] if it were shown that the Commissioners had acted in a way in which no reasonable panel of Commissioners could have acted: if they had taken into account some irrelevant matter or had disregarded something to which they should have given weight".
"That approach was adopted by the Court of Appeal in John Dee Ltd v Customs and Excise Commissioners.
On this basis we ask ourselves the following questions:
(1) Did Mr Payne reach a decision which no reasonable officer could have reached?
(2) In particular does the decision betray an error of law material to the decision?
(3) Did Mr Payne take into account all relevant considerations?
(4) Did Mr Payne leave out of account all irrelevant considerations?
In HMRC v Mills [2007] V&DR 404 Mann J at [42] did not dissent from this approach to the tribunal's jurisdiction under this section. In Golobiewska v Commissioners of Customs & Excise [2005] VAT DT 267 the Court of Appeal considered the nature of the jurisdiction of the tribunal under section 16(4). Lloyd LJ agreed that the tribunal cannot decide whether a decision qualified as reasonable in the relevant sense unless it examines the facts asserted by the parties and substantiates whether those facts exist. Although it appears that under section 16(4) the Tribunal would be limited to considering whether there was sufficient evidence to support an officer's finding, in practice, given the powers of the Tribunal to carry out a fact-finding exercise, the Tribunal should decide the primary facts and in the light of its findings then go on to consider whether the decision is reasonable.
Millennium Foods' application
Mr Payne's review decision
"When a previous decision has been reached by the Committee, the decision shall be taken into account by the Customs authorities dealing with similar applications.
"This means that when the Committee has examined a similar application, its decision in that case sets a binding precedent to be applied by customs to similar application." [our italics]
Mr Payne then explains that in 2003 and 2004 HMRC submitted applications to the Committee in relation to the same subject matter. He records the rejection by the Committee in each case and reasons given. He concludes:-
"… Article 504(4) … means that customs must not be divergent from decisions reached by the Committee. Therefore HMRC must apply the outcomes of the Committee's decision to similar cases …
Consequently … HMRC cannot grant [your application]".
Our conclusions on the reasonableness of Mr Payne's review
"The national customs authorities may disregard the conclusions adopted by the Committee provided they give reasons for their decision in that respect."
Our Direction
(i) in making that review the Commissioners, whilst taking into account any decision of the Committee on this or any similar application, if any, shall not treat any conclusion of the Committee as binding upon it;
(ii) the Commissioners shall set out in their decision their reasons for treating the economic conditions as fulfilled or otherwise in a manner which will permit the proper consideration of those reasons by this Tribunal under section 16 FA 1994;
(iii) the Commissioners shall take into account in their decision the evidence provided by the Appellant in connection with its application and any further evidence provided within 10 days of the hearing of this appeal or such longer time as shall be permitted by them;
(iv) if the Commissioners consider that the economic conditions have been examined by the Committee in a similar application (having regard to the information provided by the Appellant and any further information available to them) they shall give their decision without further reference to the Committee;
(v) if the Commissioners consider that the economic conditions have not been examined by the Committee in any such similar application, they shall refer the application to the Committee;
(vi) the Commissioners shall on or before Friday 1 May 2009:
(a) if (iv) applies give their decision in relation to the application;
(b) if (v) applies refer the application to the Committee and write to the Appellant setting out their decision and their reasons and including the terms of their reference; and
(vii) in the case of (vi)(b), once the Committee has given its conclusions, the Commissioners shall reach their own conclusion on the application and, bearing in mind (i) and (ii) above, communicate that decision to the Appellant within 21 days of the Committee's decision.
CHARLES HELLIER
TRIBUNAL JUDGE
RELEASED: 8 April 2009
LON 2008/7088