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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Ingenious Media Holdings plc & Anor, R (on the application of)v Revenue and Customs [2016] UKSC 54 (19 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2016/54.html Cite as: [2016] UKSC 54, [2017] 1 All ER 95, [2016] BTC 41, [2016] STI 2746, [2016] WLR 4164, [2016] WLR(D) 540, [2016] 1 WLR 4164, [2016] STC 2306 |
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[2016] UKSC 54
On appeal from: [2015] EWCA Civ 173
JUDGMENT
R (on the application of Ingenious Media Holdings plc and another) (Appellants) v Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (Respondent)
before
Lady Hale, Deputy President
Lord Mance
Lord Kerr
Lord Reed
Lord Toulson
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
19 October 2016
Heard on 4 July 2016
Appellants Hugh Tomlinson QC Jessica Simor QC (Instructed by Olswang LLP) |
|
Respondent James Eadie QC David Pievsky (Instructed by HMRC Solicitors Office) |
LORD TOULSON: (with whom Lady Hale, Lord Mance, Lord Kerr and Lord Reed agree)
Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005
“(1) Revenue and Customs officials may not disclose information which is held by the Revenue and Customs in connection with a function of the Revenue and Customs.
(2) But subsection (1) does not apply to a disclosure -
(a) which -
(i) is made for the purposes of a function of the Revenue and Customs, and
(ii) does not contravene any restriction imposed by the Commissioners,
(b) which is made in accordance with section 20 or 21,
(c) which is made for the purposes of civil proceedings (whether or not within the United Kingdom) relating to a matter in respect of which the Revenue and Customs have functions,
(d) which is made for the purposes of a criminal investigation or criminal proceedings (whether or not within the United Kingdom) relating to a matter in respect of which the Revenue and Customs have functions,
(e) which is made in pursuance of an order of a court,
(f) which is made to Her Majesty’s Inspectors of Constabulary, the Scottish inspectors or the Northern Ireland inspectors for the purpose of an inspection by virtue of section 27,
(g) which is made to the Independent Police Complaints Commission, or a person acting on its behalf, for the purpose of the exercise of a function by virtue of section 28, …
(h) which is made with the consent of each person to whom the information relates, …
(3) Subsection (1) is subject to any other enactment permitting disclosure.
(4) In this section -
(a) a reference to Revenue and Customs officials is a reference to any person who is or was -
(i) a Commissioner,
(ii) an officer of Revenue and Customs,
(iii) a person acting on behalf of the Commissioners or an officer of Revenue and Customs, or
(iv) a member of a committee established by the Commissioners,
(b) a reference to the Revenue and Customs has the same meaning as in section 17,
(c) a reference to a function of the Revenue and Customs is a reference to a function of -
(i) the Commissioners, or
(ii) an officer of Revenue and Customs,
…”
4. Section 5 is headed “Commissioners’ initial functions”. It provides:
“(1) The Commissioners shall be responsible for -
(a) the collection and management of revenue for which the Commissioners of Inland Revenue were responsible before the commencement of this section, [and]
(b) the collection and management of revenue for which the Commissioners of Customs and Excise were responsible before the commencement of this section, …”
5. Section 9 is headed “Ancillary powers”. It provides:
“(1) The Commissioners may do anything which they think -
(a) necessary or expedient in connection with the exercise of their functions, or
(b) incidental or conducive to the exercise of their functions.”
Facts
“Patrick McKenna … and … [X] … are the two main providers of film investments schemes in the UK.
…
To the Revenue the two men represent a threat. HM Revenue and Customs believes that film schemes have enabled investors to avoid at least £5 billion in tax. Much of that sum, the Revenue says, is attached to schemes created by [X] or Mr McKenna.
…
Mr McKenna, 56, founder of Ingenious Media, is also involved in a long-running Revenue inquiry into three of his partnerships.
…
‘He’s never left my radar,’ a senior Revenue official said of Mr McKenna. ‘He’s an urbane man, …, he’s a clever guy, he’s made a fortune, he’s a banker, but actually he’s a big risk for us so we would like to recover lots of the tax relief he’s generated for himself and other people. Are we winning? I would say, beginning to. I think we’ll clean up on film schemes over the next few years.’”
Mr Hartnett’s reasons for disclosure
The claim
14. The claim by Ingenious Media and Mr McKenna was brought by way of an application for judicial review, although in substance it was a straightforward claim for breach of a duty of confidentiality. The form in which the claim was brought appears to have influenced its perception by the courts below. At first instance, Sales J held that it was not appropriate for the court to approach Mr Hartnett’s decision to say what he said as if the court were the primary decision-maker: [2013] EWHC 3258 (Admin), para 40. The court, he held, could only intervene if satisfied that Mr Hartnett could not rationally take the view that speaking to the journalists as he did would assist HMRC in the exercise of its tax collection functions. Sales J emphasised, at para 50, that the rationality standard is a flexible one, which varies in the width of discretion allowed to a decision-maker according to the strength of the public interest and the strength of the interests of any individual affected by the decision to be taken. He laid stress on the fact that the disclosures made were limited and that the interview was agreed to be off the record. The disclosures made were, in his judgment, not irrational, were made for a legitimate purpose and were proportionate. In short, he approached the matter as a review on public law principles of an administrative act, and he dismissed the claim.
15. Sales J’s judgment was upheld by the Court of Appeal in a judgment given by Sir Robin Jacob, with which Moore-Bick and Tomlinson LJJ agreed: [2015] 1 WLR 3183. Sir Robin rejected the claimants’ arguments that the disclosures made were not “in connection with a function” of HMRC, properly construed, and that the judge had adopted the wrong standard of review. As to the first argument, he held that a wide meaning should be given to section 18(2)(a)(i) (“… subsection (1) does not apply to a disclosure which is made for the purposes of a function of the Revenue and Customs”). As to the second argument, Sir Robin echoed Sales J’s holding that it was not for the court to “review all the facts de novo as though it were the primary decision maker” (para 46).
Analysis
The interpretation of section 18
17. Unfortunately the courts below were not referred (or were only scarcely referred) to the common law of confidentiality. The duty of confidentiality owed by HMRC to individual taxpayers is not something which sprang fresh from the mind of the legislative drafter. It is a well established principle of the law of confidentiality that where information of a personal or confidential nature is obtained or received in the exercise of a legal power or in furtherance of a public duty, the recipient will in general owe a duty to the person from whom it was received or to whom it relates not to use it for other purposes. The principle is sometimes referred to as the Marcel principle, after Marcel v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [1992] Ch 225. In relation to taxpayers, HMRC’s entitlement to receive and hold confidential information about a person or a company’s financial affairs is for the purpose of enabling it to assess and collect (or pay) what is properly due from (or to) the tax payer. In R v Inland Revenue Comrs, Ex p National Federation of Self-Employed and Small Businesses Ltd [1982] AC 617, 633, Lord Wilberforce said that “the whole system … involves that … matters relating to income tax are between the commissioners and the taxpayer concerned”, and that the “total confidentiality of assessments and of negotiations between individuals and the revenue is a vital element in the working of the system”. See also Conway v Rimmer [1968] AC 910, 946 (Lord Reid); and R v Inland Revenue Comrs, Ex p Preston [1985] AC 835, 864F (Lord Templeman).
“In my view, where information has been obtained under statutory powers the duty of confidence owed on the Marcel principle cannot operate so as to prevent the person obtaining the information from disclosing it to those persons to whom the statutory provisions either require or authorise him to make disclosure.”
19. Subsections (2)(b) et seq of section 18 contain specific provisions permitting the disclosure of taxpayer information for various purposes other than HMRC’s primary function of revenue collection and management. What then is the proper interpretation of the far broader words of subsection (2)(a)(i) “disclosure … made for the purposes of a function” of HMRC? On HMRC’s interpretation, it would be hard to conceive a wider expression. By taking sections 5, 9 and 51(2) in combination, it is said to include anything which in the view of HMRC is necessary or expedient or incidental or conducive to or in connection with the exercise of the functions of the collection and management of revenue. If that is the right interpretation of subsection (2)(a)(i), it means that a number of the subsequently listed specific exceptions are otiose, including (c) and (d), which deal with disclosure for the purposes of civil or criminal proceedings relating to matters connected with customs and excise. Secondly, and more fundamentally, it means that the protection which would otherwise have been provided to the taxpayer by HMRC’s duty of confidentiality will have been very significantly eroded by words of the utmost vagueness. So to construe the words would run counter to the principle of construction known as the principle of legality, after Lord Hoffmann’s use of the term in R v Secretary of State for the Home Office, Ex p Simms [2000] 2 AC 115, 131. He explained the principle as follows:
“Fundamental rights cannot be overridden by general or ambiguous words. This is because there is too great a risk that the full implications of their unqualified meaning may have passed unnoticed in the democratic process. In the absence of express language or necessary implication to the contrary, the courts therefore presume that even the most general words were intended to be subject to the basic rights of the individual.”
21. A similar principle can be seen in the courts’ approach to the interpretation of powers delegated under a so-called Henry VIII clause. In R (Public Law Project) v Lord Chancellor [2016] 3 WLR 387, para 26, Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC, with the agreement of the other members of the court, cited with approval the following passage in Craies on Legislation, 10th ed (2012), edited by Daniel Greenberg, at para 1.3.11:
“as with all delegated powers the only rule for construction is to test each proposed exercise by reference to whether or not it is within the class of action that Parliament must have contemplated when delegating. Although Henry VIII powers are often cast in very wide terms, the more general the words used by Parliament to delegate a power, the more likely it is that an exercise within the literal meaning of the words will nevertheless be outside the legislature’s contemplation.” (Emphasis added)
25. This argument found favour with the Court of Appeal, but I do not consider that it bears the weight which HMRC seeks to put on it. The argument is too subtle, and it is open to other objections. It is well settled that information may be available to the public and yet not sufficiently widely known for all confidentiality in it to be destroyed. As Eady J put it in McKennitt v Ash [2006] EMLR 10, para 81, where information has been obtained in circumstances giving rise to a duty of confidentiality, “the protection of the law will not be withdrawn unless and until it is clear that a stage has been reached where there is no longer anything left to be protected”. Whether that stage has been reached may be a hard question on which reasonable people may disagree. It is a fallacy to suppose that because a defence to a criminal charge under section 19 is available to a person who reasonably believed the information to be available to the public, it must follow that Parliament intended section 18 to prohibit the disclosure of information of the most ordinary kind about which there could be no possible confidentiality. Moreover, even if section 18(1) has the wide scope suggested by HMRC (which it is not necessary to decide in this case), it does not follow that Parliament must be taken to have intended by subsection (2)(a)(i) to confer on officials a wide ranging discretion to disclose confidential information about the affairs of individual taxpayers.
The court’s approach to review of HMRC’s conduct
“Off the record”
Conclusion