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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Johnson v Revenue and Customs [2008] EWHC 412 (Ch) (06 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/412.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 412 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MALCOLM ARTHUR JOHNSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
PO Box 1336, Kingston-Upon-Thames KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7305 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
Email Address: HYPERLINK "mailto:[email protected]"
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Nawbatt appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN:
"Pursuant to an agreement of even date." (Quote unchecked)
As I understand it, that agreement has not yet been produced to Revenue and Customs and it may have some bearing on the underlying transaction, which led to the execution of this transfer form.
"On 8th October of 2000, 25,001 ordinary shares of £1 each in New Forge Foods Limited, being subject to an option, were gifted into a charity, Monarch Munificence Limited." (Quote unchecked)
Again, as far as I understand it, the option which is referred to in the tax return, to the extent that it was recorded in any document, has not been shown to Revenue and Customs.
"Copies of all correspondence and other communications in your possession or power relating to the transactions." (Quote unchecked)
Paragraph 2 was not directed to documents, but it was in these terms, it sought:
"A full explanation of the purpose of the transactions." (Quote unchecked)
The notice continued:
"By describing or defining what the transactions were and the transactions were defined so as to refer to the transfer of 25,001 shares, subject to an option in New Forge Foods Limited to Monarch Munificence on 8th October 2000 and all associated or connected arrangements." (Quote unchecked)
The inspiration for that wording, the reference being to the transfer of shares, was plainly the wording in the tax return to which I have referred. The definition of transactions was not confined to the transfer of shares, because it expressly embraced all associated or connected arrangements and, indeed, continuing from where I had stopped reading:
"The reference to other arrangements was to include certain matters in particular, but even that must not be an exclusive statement of such arrangements. Amongst the matters particularised were the purchase of any capital redemption bond, secondly, any arrangements of whatever description whether formal or informal with TPD Taylor or any companies with which TPD Taylor is associated concerning the transfer of shares to Monarch Munificence Limited, their subsequent transfer or disposal and/or the acquisition, holding and/or redemption, encashment, transfer or disposal of a capital redemption bond or contract." (Quote unchecked)
The list of matters particularised then referred to two limited companies that I need not refer to and they contained by referring to:
"Any loan advanced or monies worth transfer of any description received by you or any member of your family related directly or indirectly to the transactions." (Quote unchecked)
The s.20 notice then defined a number of terms, one of which was the term:
"Correspondence and other communications." (Quote unchecked)
I need not read out the entire definition, but it was in wide and extensive terms.
"The reasons given to the General Commissioner in application for consent to issue you with a s.20(1) notice are:
i. That you entered into arrangements for the purchase of a capital redemption bond contract for the purposes of avoiding tax.
ii. That I believe that under those arrangements you were entitled to receive by way of loans part or the entire amount invested in the bond and that there was no expectation of any repayment.
iii. That I believe you may have a beneficial interest in the company entering into the capital redemption bond with you.
iv. That I believe that these rights are not reflected in the valuation of the bond made at the time of its acquisition.
v. That I believe there has been a preconceived series of transactions designed to produce an artificial loss.
vi. Accordingly, I believe that the 2000/2001 self-assessment may be insufficient and that a discovery assessment can be made to recover any under payment of tax.
vii. The documents in particular as requested are required to establish whether the believed insufficiency in the self-assessment exists and, if it does, to enable the insufficiency to be quantified." (Quote unchecked)
"Reading the reasons sensibly, together with the notice, it is clear that the defendant, Dr Brannigan," that is the relevant Inspector of Taxes, "has reason to believe that there was a tax minimising scheme, and I use the word minimising in order to be as neutral as possible, which involved the payment of a large sum of money as consideration for a bond which may also have involved the use of a company to grant a bond associated with or owned or controlled by the taxpayer. That, either in the bond or in some collateral agreement or in some informal agreement there was a right to receive a loan of the whole or part of the consideration for the bond with no legitimate or real expectation of any repayment and, that the possibility of that loan or the right to it may not have been properly included in the value of the transactions as disclosed in the tax return." (Quote unchecked)
That is the end of paragraph 22. In paragraph 24 the judge said this:
"Looking at the matter sensibly, what this case is about is the belief of the Inland Revenue that Mr Taylor" -- he is the Isle of Man solicitor -- "has been the approved (inaudible) of a tax minimising scheme, which may or may not be defective once all the aspects of the scheme have been put on the table. The concern of HMRC and the reason for the service of the notice in this case, is to ensure that all the facts are on the table to see whether or not they give rise to a liability for a tax or a disallowance of an allowance other than that set out in the tax return and if so, whether the conditions required for an assessment under s.29 are satisfied." (Quote unchecked)
"There may be many cases when it is not in the interests of the Revenue to disclose to the taxpayer precisely what information it has." (Quote unchecked)
In paragraph 28 he said:
"An Inspector is not required to satisfy the taxpayer, that in all the circumstances he is justified in proceeding on the section. There is no express and in my judgment, no implied requirement that the Inspector provide to the taxpayer the evidence from which it came to this conclusion that it was appropriate to apply for consent. What he must give is a written summary of his reasons for doing so." (Quote unchecked)
Later in the same paragraph the Learned Judge said this:
"He did not set out the evidence he had before him, which gave rise to the belief to which his reasons referred and, in my judgment, he was not required to do so. Why he gave the notice does appear from the reasons he gave and, in my judgment, they were sufficient for the purposes of the section." (Quote unchecked)
"If the purpose of a transaction is relevant to the amount of tax liability or an allowance arising as a result of that transaction, then that purpose is a particular which the Inspector may reasonably require to have furnished to him. The purpose may relate to cumulative transactions or to a single transaction. But the purpose for which the transaction or transactions in the present case were entered into may be relevant for the tax liability of" -- and the judge quoted Mr Collins in particular -- "...cannot, I think, be disputed, because one of the issues raised by the Inspector is whether there was any genuine commercial purpose for the transaction or transactions to which the notice relates. If the transactions were entered into with a view to minimising tax liability and show a chain of transactions having no commercial purpose, then that may be a relevant consideration in determining whether there is a liability for tax beyond that which has already been accounted for. In those circumstances it seems to me there was power to require the particulars set out in the notice, including the particulars of the purpose of the transaction to be provided to the Inspector." (Quote unchecked)
"The transfer was made on advice received from HLB Kitsons Fiscal Solutions, and I do not have any copy of the advice (if any of it was in writing) nor any clear recollection of any explanation that may have been given by the advisor." (Quote unchecked)
"I am unable to provide a full explanation, because I do not have the knowledge of the arrangements with TPE Taylor or any company with which he is associated. I therefore cannot provide any explanation of any purpose except to the extent provided for in this letter." (Quote unchecked)
I should add that the letter on my reading of it does not give any explanation of the purpose of the transaction. So he is saying that he is wholly unable to give an explanation of their purpose and again that, on the face of it, appears a remarkable statement to make.
"When the Appellant, in his letter dated 23rd October 2006, stated at item 4.1, 'I have no knowledge of any arrangement of any description with TPD Taylor or... redemption, transfer or disposal of the capital redemption bond or contract." In the light of earlier correspondence and telephone conversations, we do not believe this can be correct." (Quote unchecked)