[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions >> Mills v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E01008 (04 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/Excise/2007/E01008.html Cite as: [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E1008, [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E01008 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Mills v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E1008 (04 January 2007)
E01008
Excise Duties Non-restoration of car used to carry seized goods - Appellant's goods mixed with goods belonging to another passenger - whether question of legality of forfeiture open for consideration by the tribunal - whether, if the question of the legality of forfeiture deemed to be determined against the Appellant, the question of Own Use was open for consideration by the tribunal - reasonableness of decision on review
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
MARK MILLS Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: Charles Hellier (Chairman)
George Miles
Sitting in public in Bristol on 22 November 2006
Mr Mills in person
Fiona Darrock of counsel instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2006
DECISION
A. Introduction
B. Findings of Fact
(1) Mr Mills is a fairly heavy smoker of roll-up cigarettes. His preferred tobacco is Golden Virginia. This comes in pouches of 50 grammes each. Mr Mills gets through 3 or 4 pouches of tobacco a week. Mr Mills does not know how many cigarettes he gets from a pouch of tobacco, but on the basis of Mrs Gillespie's evidence which we accept, that generally a smoker will get 80 to 100 cigarettes from a pouch of tobacco, we find that it is likely that Mr Mills smokes between 35 and 55 cigarette a day.
(2) Mrs Mills also smokes. She too smokes roll-up cigarettes but when she goes out in company she prefers to smoke manufactured cigarettes. She does not smoke as heavily as Mr Mills, getting through between 1 and 2 pouches of tobacco a week or, again on the basis of Mrs Gillespie's evidence between 12 and 26 roll-up cigarettes a day. Her preferred brand of rolling tobacco is also Golden Virginia. She tends to roll thicker cigarettes than Mr Mills.
(3) Mr Kerry smokes too. With his partner he gets through about 4 or 5 pouches a week.
(4) None of Mr Mills, Mrs Mills or Mr Kerry knew within any degree of certainty or comfortable margin how many cigarettes they would get for a pouch of tobacco. We do not find this surprising.
(5) Mr Mills and Mr Kerry were at one time taxi drivers. At some time before 2006 they decided to give up taxi driving and go into business together in the building industry. Mr Kerry was better with figures and such like than Mr Mills, so Mr Kerry looked after the finances of the business.
(6) Mr Mills and Mr Kerry were drawing about £15,000 net p.a. from this business or about £300 - £350 per week. The cash flow of the business was lumpy. Their ability to make drawings depended upon when they were paid for the work done. In some weeks they would not be able to draw anything; in other weeks they might catch up. (We should note at this stage that we preferred Mr Kerry's evidence of the profitability of the business to the evidence of the account Mr Mills gave when they were stopped. Mr Kerry was better with figures than Mr Mills.)
(7) On 19 January 2006 Mr Mills and Mr Kerry were laying a concrete floor. When they had finished there was not much they could do on the job the following day. Their tobacco supplies were running out. The plasterer on the site suggested that they go to France to get some tobacco. They made a decision to go.
(8) The next morning at 8.00 am they left Weymouth (where Mr Mills lives) together in the Volvo S60 car. Mrs Mills learned that morning that they were taking the Volvo. She assumed that they would be bringing back enough tobacco for a year or more.
(9) They drove to Poole. There they split up: Mr Mills went to Southern Newspapers to deliver some 15,000 leaflets; Mr Kerry went to the bank to get some money. They had recently received payment of a bill and there was money in the business account. He withdrew from the business account £2,497.37. He exchanged £1,497.37 for €2,080 at the bank exhausting their supply of euros, and then went to the Post Office where he exchanged £1,008.57 for a further €1,400. Then he rejoined Mr Mills and, with a good supply of euros in hand, they set off for the Ferry to France.
(10) From France they went to Belgium where they went to the "Belgium Chocolate Factory" at Ostend. There they purchased 43.5 kilos of Golden Virginia tobacco - a total of 870- pouches - , 400 manufactured cigarettes (Marlborough Lights [GM1]) and 2 litres of spirits. (Southern Comfort and Bacardi). The Appellant's share of the purchases comprised 435 pouches of the tobacco, at least half the manufactured cigarettes and the bottle of Southern Comfort. The remainder was for Mr Kerry.
(11) Mr Mills and Mr Kerry agreed that each would take half the tobacco. They agreed to divide it up when they got back to Weymouth. The Tobacco was placed in the car for the journey home. It was not concealed.
(12) Mr Kerry intended to transfer about half the tobacco he had acquired to his family for reimbursement of the amount paid. The balance of his tobacco he intended to smoke himself or between himself and his partner. He did not intend to sell it at a profit.
(13) They were stopped by Customs in the control zone at Coquilles in France before they reached the ferry. They were asked what the purpose of their trip had been, and they replied that it was to buy tobacco. They were asked how much they had brought back. Mr Mills replied "82 sleeves"; "Is that 82 cigarettes?" asked the officer, "No," said Mr Mills, "tobacco"."
(14) After a few more questions, they were asked to wait by the Respondents' officer then asked to attend an interview. In his interview:
(i) Mr Mills was asked how much his half of the tobacco was. He is recorded as saying "42, 45 something like that I'm not sure" and that his share was "420 or 430 pouches".
(ii) Mr Mills was asked about his income. He replied that the income of the business was £35,000 to £40,000 (but that was not his personal income). In his interview Mr Kerry indicated that his net take from the business was £15,000 p.a.
and Mr Kerry indicated that half of the tobacco belonged to him, and that he would distribute half of the tobacco amongst his family, for the cost which he had paid, which he thought was about €3500.
(15) The copies of the officer's Notebooks before us record that after being stopped by Customs and being asked the purpose of his travel, the Appellant was asked how much tobacco they had bought. His reply is recorded as "82 sleeves". He was asked for receipts by the officer and provided two receipts, the first was for 82 sleeves for a price of €3,444, and the second for a further 5 sleeves for £142.50.
(16) The Respondents officers then seized the tobacco, the cigarettes, the spirits and the car. Mr Mills was given a booklet by the Respondents' officers which explained the effect of seizure and the courses of action open to him following seizure. He passed this booklet to his solicitors when he returned home.
(17) After the decision to seize the car had been communicated to Mr Mills and Mr Kerry, they asked to see the Customs officer in charge. Mr Mills explained the circumstances: the amount of tobacco, the receipt, where they had been and the seizure of the car, and Mr Kerry explained that in relation to his share of the tobacco some was for his own consumption and some he would give to relations for reimbursement of the cost of acquisition. Mr Mills asked how he could get the car back. The officer told him he had to write a suitably apologetic letter explaining the hardship the loss of his car would cause him and said that he should get his car back.
(18) Mr Mills had last travelled abroad when he and his wife went to Egypt in 2005, and his last trip to Europe had been in August 2003 when he travelled with his wife to France. On that occasion he and his wife brought back a substantial quantity of (30 kilos) of rolling tobacco which they had kept under the stairs at home. It lasted Mr and Mrs Mills for about two years. They had brought back only a modest amount after their trip to Egypt. Mr Kerry's last trip abroad had been to Egypt in 2005 with Mr and Mrs Mills. His last trip to France had been in 1988.
(19) On 30 January 2006 Mr Mills' solicitors Mustoe Shorter wrote to the Respondents. They requested the return of his car suggesting that there was no basis to retain it. They noted that some Golden Virginia tobacco, cigarettes and spirits had been seized and indicated that they were for Mr Mills' personal use.
(20) The Respondents replied by return on 31 January 2006. They said that they took the request as an appeal against seizure so that the case would be prepared for condemnation proceedings. They indicated that if Mr Mills did not wish such proceedings to take place the Respondents should be notified without further notice. Then they said:
"Customs will continue to consider your client's request for restoration on the basis that the things were seized legally, for example, that intra-EU purchases of excise goods were being brought into the UK for a commercial purpose. Now is your client's opportunity, if you have not already done so, to send us anything that your client would like us to consider in support of his request for restoration."
(21) On 9 February Mr Mills' solicitors replied. The one material paragraph of their letter was this:
"Our client simply wants his car returned to him and that is what we seek from you."
(22) On 23 February 2006 the Respondents wrote to Mr Mills' solicitors setting out the nature of the goods seized, stating that Customs' policy was generally not to restore seized goods but indicating exceptions, and setting out the Respondents' decision not to restore the goods. The letter made clear that the writer had not considered the legality of the seizure itself. The writer said:
"If you have contested the legality of…the seizure… the appeal will be heard in the Magistrates Court in due course…"
(23) On 14 March 2006 Mr Mills' solicitors wrote to the Respondents asking for a review of the decision in their letter of 23 February 2006. They sought further information, and gave further information and made representation on behalf of Mr Mills. We note the following remarks:
"As far as Mr Mills is concerned, the application for restoration relates purely to the motor vehicle. We are not seeking to challenge on behalf of Mr Mills the legality of the seizure of the motor vehicle concerned."
"We understand that Mr Carey (sic) indicated that he would retain some of his share of the tobacco for his own personal use, and would give some of the tobacco to members of his family and receive back the cost of purchase."
"Mr Mills' share of the excise goods was for his own personal use and there is no evidence to contradict that assertion."
(24) On 26 April 2006 Mrs Gillespie wrote to Mr Mills' solicitors with a review of the decision. Her conclusion was that the vehicle should not be restored. We will return to the detail of Mrs Gillespie's letter later.
(25) The Volvo S60 had been bought for about £12,000 about 12 months before the seizure. The registered keeper was Mr Mills but the insurance policy was in the name of Mrs Mills with Mr Mills as a named driver. This was because Mrs Mills was the main user of the car. She used it to go to work as a pharmaceutical assistant and also in the pursuit of her own beauty therapy business. She had obtained qualifications in some beauty therapy practices and, prior to the seizure of the car had had a handful of clients to whom she drove in the car. Following the seizure of the car she had been able to get to work by bus but she had no longer been able to service her clients without a car. She has not been able to make up the lost income. The lack of a car also caused Mrs Mills difficulty in visiting her family where members lived at some distance from Weymouth. Mrs Mills became depressed after the seizure of the car.
(26) Mr Mills also owned at the time of the seizure a Peugot 406 (SJ04 UFN). He had acquired the car prior to going to the Middle East to work for 6 months. Whilst he had been away it had not been used. He had agreed with Melody Mitchell that she could acquire the car from him. Melody Mitchell used and at all relevant times was using the car for the purposes of her business as a taxi driver. Her deal with Mr Miller was that she would pay him in instalments and that at the end of the payments she would become owner of the car. Until that time Mr Mills remained owner and registered keeper. Following the seizure of the Volvo Mr Mills did not feel able to require Melody Mitchell to return this car to him for his own use or that of his wife.
C. The Statutory Provisions and Relevant Case Law
(1) The imposition of duty
"(i) that person's reasons for having possession or control of those products,
(ii) whether or not that person is a revenue trader (as defined in Section 1(1) of the Customs and Excise Management Act 1979),
(iii) that person's conduct, including his intended use of those products or any refusal to disclose his intended use of those products,
(iv) the location of those products,
(v) the mode of transport used to convey those products,
(vi) any document or other information whatsoever relating to those products,
(vii) the nature of those products including the nature and condition of any package or container,
(viii) the quantity of those products, and in particular, whether the quantity exceeds any of the following quantities -
3,200 cigarettes,
400 cigarillos (cigars weighing no more than 3 grammes each),
200 cigars,
3 kilogrammes of any other tobacco products,
(ix) whether that person personally financed the purchase of those products,
(x) any other circumstance that appears to be relevant."
(2) Seizure and Forfeiture
"Where -
(a) except as provided by or under the Customs and Excise Acts 1979, any imported goods, being goods chargeable on their importation with customs or excise duty, are, without payment of that duty -
(i) unshipped in any port,
(ii) unloaded from any aircraft in the United Kingdom,
…or
(b) any imported goods are concealed or packed in any manner appearing to be intended to deceive an officer,
those goods shall, subject to subsection (2) below, be liable to forfeiture."
"Any thing liable for forfeiture under the customs and excise Acts may be seized or detained by any officer or constable or any member of Her Majesty's armed forces or coastguard."
(1) "Without prejudice to any other provision of the Customs and Excise Acts 1979, where any thing has become liable to forfeiture under the customs and excise Acts -
(a) any ship, aircraft, vehicle animal, container (including any article of passengers' baggage) or other thing whatsoever which has been used for the carriage, handling, deposit or concealment of the thing so liable to forfeiture, either at a time when it was so liable or for the purposes of the commission of the offence for which it later became so liable; and
(b) any other thing mixed, packed or found with the thing so liable,
shall also be liable to forfeiture."
(3) Appeal against forfeiture
"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, the thing in question shall be deemed to have been duly condemned as forfeited.
"6 Where notice of claim in respect of any thing is duly given in accordance with paragraphs 3 and 4 above, the Commissioners shall take proceedings for the condemnation of that thing by the court, and if the court finds that the thing was at the time of seizure liable to forfeiture the court shall condemn it as forfeited….
"10(1) In any proceedings for condemnation instigated in England, Wales or Northern Ireland, the claimant or his solicitor shall make oath that the thing seized was, or was to the best of his knowledge and belief, the property of the claimant at the time of the seizure.
"(2) In any such proceedings instituted in the High Court, the claimant shall give such security for the costs of the proceedings as may be determined by the Court.
"(3) If any requirement of this paragraph is not complied with, the court shall give judgment for the Commissioners."
(4) Restoration
"the Commissioners may, as they see fit - …(b) restore, subject to such conditions (if any) as they think proper, any thing forfeited or seized under those Acts;"
"(1) Where the Commissioners are required in accordance with this Chapter to review any decision, it shall be their duty to do so and they may on that review, either:
(a) confirm the decision; or
(b) withdraw or vary the decision…"
"(4) In relation to any decision, as to an ancillary matter [which includes a decision not to restore], 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."
(5) The reopening of the legality of forfeiture
"52. …[the Convention] 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 that those provisions necessarily prevent any further consideration of the legality of the seizure was an excessive limitation.
53. … Lord Phillips in Lindsay at paragraph 64 of his judgment: [states] that the principle of proportionality requires that each case should be considered on its particular facts. …
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 may 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"
"If all someone importing cigarettes such as this does is to persist in saying they are for personal use, the correct response is to say: "You have advanced no ground whatever for restoration in exercise of the powers under Section 152(b)"".
"first did the importer have a realistic opportunity to invoke the condemnation procedure and, secondly, if he did, are there nonetheless reasons disclosed by the facts of the case which should persuade the Commissioners or the Tribunal to permit him to re-open the question of the validity of the original [forfeiture]…."
(6) Our decision on the re-opening issue
(1) first, as noted at paragraphs 20 to 24 above, we see nothing in Schedule 3 which permits a notice, once given, to be ungiven. If that is right then the Respondents remain under a duty to take condemnation proceedings and paragraph 5 does not apply. There is therefore no presumption that the goods are legally forfeited which binds us;
(2) second, even if our first reason is wrong, we do not read the Appellants' solicitors' letter of 9 February 2006 as the cancellation of the original notice. Or the letter of the March 2006 as being capable retrospectively of withdrawing the earlier notice.
(7) The nature of our jurisdiction
"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 in section 16(4)(b) for a further review if there was only one possible conclusion.
"As noted above Mr Bartlett 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 JH Corbitt (Numismatists) Ltd [1980] 2 WLR 653 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.
(1) Did the officers reach a decision which no reasonable officer could have reached?
(2) Did she take into account all relevant considerations?
(3) Did she leave out of account all irrelevant considerations?
D. Discussion: Own Use
(i) Mr Mills was in possession of the tobacco because he was bringing it back for his wife and himself;
(ii) Mr and Mrs Mills would happily have smoked their supply of 21.75 kg of tobacco over the two years after its acquisition;
(iii) in the context of their rate of consumption this amount of tobacco was not an unbelievably large purchase even though it exceeded the guidelines in Regulation 12(1B)(e)(vii);
(iv) we did not hear any evidence that led us to believe that Mr Mills intended to dispose of any of it for a consideration;
(v) Mr Mills was not a revenue trader;
(vi) Mr Mills' conduct at and prior to the interview with Customs on 20 January 2006 and his disclosure of the amount of tobacco and the provenance of the goods gave no reason to conclude that he intended them otherwise than for his own use; instead the reverse;
(vii) the location of the products in Mr Mills' car and the use of his car to convey the tobacco did not indicate to us any commercial purpose in their importation;
(viii) in particular - the method of financing of the purchase from monies of Mr Mills and Mr Kerry's partnership did not seem to us to indicate anything other than that it was financed by money earned by each of them respectively and which was otherwise available to them for such use as they might individually think fit; and
(ix) having heard Mr Kerry we did not find it suspicious that he and Mr Mills were smoking manufactured cigarettes on their journey home.
E. The Review Officer's Letter
"If your client is claiming that the goods are for "Own Use" - then he should have appealed to a Magistrates Court…
…having had an opportunity of raising the lawfulness of the seizure in the Magistrates' Court, and does not have a second chance of doing so at a tribunal or statutory review."
"Initially Mr Mills declared 82 sleeves [(of 10 pouches each)] (41 kilos) when he actually had 43.5 kilos thus misleading the officer about the true quantity of them. If he had nothing to hide there was no need to mislead the officer, and, on those grounds alone, I have good reason to doubt his credibility. Furthermore, as he was carrying receipts for the full quantity, he clearly knew he was misleading the officer."
Other Issues
(1) Vagueness as to consumption rates
(2) What Mr Mills was smoking on the journey
(3) Payment
(4) Shelf Life
(5) Risk and Reward
(6) The lawful Forfeit of the Car
(7) The Commissioners' Policy
Conclusion
(i) the only goods being carried in the car which were not for Own use were some of those of Mr Kerry;
(ii) those of Mr Kerry's goods which were not for his own use were destined to be supplied on a "net for profit" basis;
(iii) their policy distinguishes between aggravated and non-aggravated offences. In determining whether there were aggravating circumstances the Respondents should bear in mind:-
(a) that there was no evidence of any previous offences by either Mr Kerry or Mr Mills;
(b) that the quantities of tobacco imported by Mr Kerry and Mr Mills were respectively 21.75 kg, and not 43.5 kg;
(c) that the whole of Mr Mills' import was for his Own Use;
(d) that some part of Mr Kerry's import was for his Own use; and
(e) the other evaluations made above;
(iv) that even in the case of an aggravated offence the Respondents' stated policy is that vehicles will normally be restored for 100% of the revenue involved - if it is a first aggravated detection. In considering the application of this part of their policy the Respondents should have regard in particular to the fact that there was no evidence that this was anything other than a first detection, and that the "revenue involved" might reasonably be considered to be the revenue relating to part of Mr Kerry's import but that none would be involved in Mr Mills' import;
(v) that Mr Mills and his wife have been deprived of their car for almost 11 months;
(vi) that Mr Mills, because his own tobacco was forfeit at the same time as his car, has already suffered a financial penalty;
(vii) that the Peugot 406 was not and should be treated as available for Mr and Mrs Mills' use at any relevant time.
Charles Hellier
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 4 January 2007
LON/2006/8045