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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 >> GKN Holdings Plc & Ors v Inland Revenue & Anor [2013] EWHC 108 (Ch) (31 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/108.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 108 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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GKN HOLDINGS PLC & OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE (2) COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Defendants |
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Mr Rupert Baldry QC and Mr James Rivett (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HMRC) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 5 November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
"The fact that a defendant has made an interim payment, whether voluntarily or by court order, shall not be disclosed to the trial judge until all questions of liability and the amount of money to be awarded have been decided unless the defendant agrees."
At that stage, the Revenue did not agree that any such disclosure should be made to me, so it was necessary for a different judge to hear the interim payment applications, and Sir Andrew's judgments on them were not reported. Since then, however, the Revenue have changed their mind, and it was agreed that I should hear the present application. It also follows that Sir Andrew's judgments are no longer subject to any reporting restrictions and may be freely cited.
The stay application
"All claims listed in Schedule 1 [i.e. the claims enrolled in the GLO] save for those identified to proceed as test claims pursuant to Paragraph 11 above be stayed until further order with permission to apply for the stay to be lifted on giving 14 days' notice in writing to the other parties."
"I agree with Sir Andrew Park's general proposition that if the court is satisfied that the conditions in rule 25.7(1)(c) have been fulfilled then the court should order an interim payment to be made unless there is a sufficient specific reason not to do so. The only specific reasons not to do so that were advanced by Mr Baldry are the three identified above. As to the first [i.e. that the claimant is a non-test claimant in a GLO action], in my view it is irrelevant that the application for an interim payment was made in the context of a GLO and that the present application and appeal concern a non-test claimant. Nothing in rule 25.7(1) prevents a party to a GLO from making an application for an interim payment order. I appreciate that there may be terms of particular GLOs that could prevent such an application being made, but, so far as this court is concerned in relation to this particular application, there is nothing to prevent it being made. Similarly, the fact that GKN is a non-test claimant in the FII GLO cannot, of itself, be a bar to the grant of an interim payment application if the conditions in rule 25.7(1)(c) are otherwise fulfilled. Again, there may be particular terms of particular GLOs that might preclude the court making an interim payment order but that is not so in the present case."
"if the claim went to trial, the claimant would obtain judgment for a substantial amount of money (other than costs) against the defendant from whom he is seeking an order for an interim payment …"
"that the court must be satisfied that if the claim were to go to trial then, on the material before the judge at the time of the application for an interim payment, the claimant would actually succeed in his claim and furthermore that, as a result, he would actually obtain a substantial amount of money. The court has to be so satisfied on a balance of probabilities. The only difference between the exercise on the application for an interim payment and the actual trial is that the judge considering the application is looking at what would happen if there were to be a trial on the material he has before him, whereas a trial judge will have heard all the evidence that has been led at the trial … The court must be satisfied (to the standard of a balance of probabilities) that the claimant would in fact succeed on his claim and that he would in fact obtain a substantial amount of money. It is not enough if the court were to be satisfied (to the standard of a balance of probabilities) it was "likely" that the claimant would obtain judgment or that it was "likely" that he would obtain a substantial amount of money."
If this fairly stringent test is satisfied, one may ask rhetorically how it could be fair to deprive a non-test claimant of the opportunity to invoke the interim payment jurisdiction, which is of general application to claims of all kinds, merely because for good case management reasons the claimant has been enrolled in a GLO but has not been designated as a test claimant.
"… it would, in my opinion, be an abdication of the judicial role were I, considering as I do that it is in principle right that there should be interim payments, nevertheless to refrain from making an order for them on the ground that it is difficult to decide what the right amounts should be."
The interim payment application
"It is admitted that ACT was unlawful and unduly levied in circumstances where a resident company received a dividend from a non-UK resident company resident within the EU/EEA and was obliged to account for ACT when distributing that dividend to its own shareholders, to the extent that the ACT would not have been payable had a deduction been allowed in the amount of the corporation tax levied on the underlying profits distributed by the non-UK resident company plus the withholding tax levied on that distribution in the source state."
"Where under the law of a Member State a taxpayer can choose between two alternative causes of action in order to claim restitution of taxes levied contrary to Articles 49 and 63 TFEU and one of those causes of action benefits from a longer limitation period, is it compatible with the principles of effectiveness, legal certainty and legitimate expectations for that Member State to enact legislation curtailing that longer limitation period without notice and retrospectively to the date of the public announcement of the proposed new legislation?"