BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> A PLC, Re an Application by the Commissioners for her Majesty's Revenue and Customs to serve a Section 20(3) TMA 1970 Notice [2007] UKSPC SPC00647 (16 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2007/SPC00647.html Cite as: [2007] UKSPC SPC647, [2007] UKSPC SPC00647 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Spc00647
SECTION 20 TMA 1970 NOTICE – whether implied privilege for accountants' advice – no – whether Inspector's opinion about the relevance of the material was reasonable – yes
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
APPLICATION BY THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS TO SERVE A SECTION 20(3) TMA 1970 NOTICE ON A PLC AND A SECTION 20(1) NOTICE ON ITS SUBSIDIARY COMPANY
Special Commissioner: DR JOHN F AVERY JONES CBE
Sitting in private in London on 13 November 2007
An Officer of HMRC, Special Civil Investigations, for HM Revenue and Customs
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
ANONYMNISED DECISION
(1) Subject to this section, an inspector may by notice in writing require [a person—
(a) to deliver to him such documents as are in the person's possession or power and as (in the inspector's reasonable opinion) contain, or may contain, information relevant to—
(i) any tax liability to which the person is or may be subject, or
(ii) the amount of any such liability, or
(b) to furnish to him such particulars as the inspector may reasonably require as being relevant to, or to the amount of, any such liability.]
…
(3) Subject to this section, an inspector may, for the purpose of enquiring into the tax liability of any person ("the taxpayer"), by notice in writing require any other person to deliver to the inspector or, if the person to whom the notice is given so elects, to make available for inspection by a named officer of the Board, such documents as are in his possession or power and as (in the inspector's reasonable opinion) contain, or may contain, information relevant to any tax liability to which the taxpayer is or may be, or may have been, subject, or to the amount of any such liability; and the persons who may be required to deliver or make available a document under this subsection include the Director of Savings.
Section 20B contains the following restrictions:
(8) A notice under section 20(3) or (8A) or section 20A(1) does not oblige a barrister, advocate or a solicitor to deliver or make available, without his client's consent, any document with respect to which a claim to professional privilege could be maintained.
(9) Subject to subsections (11) and (12) below, a notice under section 20(3) or (8A)—
(a) does not oblige a person who has been appointed as an auditor for the purposes of any enactment to deliver or make available documents which are his property and were created by him or on his behalf for or in connection with the performance of his functions under that enactment, and
(b) does not oblige a tax adviser to deliver or make available documents which are his property and consist of relevant communications.
(10) In subsection (9) above "relevant communications" means communications between the tax adviser and—
(a) a person in relation to whose tax affairs he has been appointed, or
(b) any other tax adviser of such a person,
the purpose of which is the giving or obtaining of advice about any of those tax affairs; and in subsection (9) above and this subsection "tax adviser" means a person appointed to give advice about the tax affairs of another person (whether appointed directly by that other person or by another tax adviser of his).
Section 20BA (which is not relevant here but I quote because of the exception for legal professional privilege in Sch 1AA below) provides:
(1) The appropriate judicial authority may make an order under this section if satisfied on information on oath given by an authorised officer of the Board—
(a) that there is reasonable ground for suspecting that an offence involving serious fraud in connection with, or in relation to, tax is being, has been or is about to be committed, and
(b) that documents which may be required as evidence for the purposes of any proceedings in respect of such an offence are or may be in the power or possession of any person.
Schedule 1AA provides:
5—(1) Section 20BA does not apply to items subject to legal privilege.
(2) For this purpose "items subject to legal privilege" means—
(a) communications between a professional legal adviser and his client or any person representing his client made in connection with the giving of legal advice to the client;
(b) communications between a professional legal adviser and his client or any person representing his client or between such an adviser or his client or any such representative and any other person made in connection with or in contemplation of legal proceedings and for the purposes of such proceedings; and
(c) items enclosed with or referred to in such communications and made—
(i) in connection with the giving of legal advice; or
(ii) in connection with or in contemplation of legal proceedings and for the purposes of such proceedings,
when they are in the possession of a person who is entitled to possession of them.
(3) Items held with the intention of furthering a criminal purpose are not subject to legal privilege.
(1) The only documents not disclosed are those documents forming part of a chain of correspondence the dominant purpose of which was the obtaining of legal advice.
(2) The rationale for protecting documents recording the giving and receiving of legal advice was set out clearly in Akzo Nobel [2007] All ER (D) 97 as follows:
"[121] Similarly, it must be pointed out that LPP meets the need to ensure that every person must be able, without constraint, to consult a lawyer whose profession entails the giving of independent legal advice to all those in need of it."
(3) The Report of the Keith Committee recognised the contrast between the position of lawyers and other professionals giving tax advice in the law as it then was. Section 20B(9) was enacted as a result of a recommendation of the Committee to recognise that a great deal of tax advice was given by accountants and other advisers who should be put on the same footing as lawyers.
(4) Tax Bulletins 46 and 62 say "References to legal advice in this article should therefore be read as covering all tax advice whether or not it is given by lawyers." This has been withdrawn without any explanation.
(5) The decision of the House of Lords in R v A Special Commissioner ex p. Morgan Grenfell & Co Ltd 74 TC 511 supports the Parent Company's claim. At [38] Lord Hoffmann disagreed with the Revenue's argument that it was important for them to have access to legal advice in cases where liability turns on the purpose for which a transactions was entered into, saying that the court must infer the purpose from the facts. The issues here are precisely parallel to the issues considered in Morgan Grenfell.
(6) The House of Lords in Morgan Grenfell did not consider s 20B(9) to (11).
(7) A purposive approach to Morgan Grenfell requires that privilege should be given to accountants' advice.
(8) As Advocate General Sir Gordon Slynn said in AM&S Europe Ltd v EC Commission: "If one considers the real purpose of the protection…I can see no justifiable distinction between such documents in the hands of the lawyer and in the hands of the client." The conclusion in Morgan Grenfell should be applied to advice from accountants.
(9) Foxley v UK [2000] ECHR 224 dealt with professional secrecy relating to a trustee in bankruptcy.
(10) The Parent Company expressly does not argue that LPP extends to accountants. However, a privilege may apply to advice about the law.
(1) Whether it is "legal advice" is the issue.
(2) It is also stated in Akzo Nobel that LPP is closely linked to the lawyer's role as collaborating in the administration of justice by the courts.
(3) The Report of the Keith Committee and Hansard extracts quoted by the Parent Company are not admissible aids to construction of the legislation.
(4) The Tax Bulletins were withdrawn as they were overtaken by the House of Lords decision in Morgan Grenfell which overruled the basis on which the Bulletins (which were consistent with the views of the courts below) were based.
(5) Morgan Grenfell was solely about LPP and did not consider an extension to it. The contrast between LPP and other confidential communications was made by Lord Scott of Foscote, with whom three of their Lordships expressly agreed, in Three Rivers District Council v Bank of England (No.6) [2005] AC 610 at [28]:
"In relation to all other confidential communications, whether between doctor and patient, accountant and client, husband and wife, parent and child, priest and penitent the common law recognises the confidentiality of the communication, will protect the confidentiality up to a point, but declines to allow the communication the absolute protection allowed to communications between lawyer and client giving or seeking legal advice." [my italics]
See also the Employment Appeal Tribunal declining to extend LPP beyond advice given by a professionally qualified lawyer in Ryan v New Victoria Hospital [1993] ICR 201. Lord Hoffmann was not at [38] in Morgan Grenfell saying that purpose must always be inferred from the facts, but that if LPP was not overridden by s 20 the Revenue would have to do its best with what was available. This does not mean that advice cannot be relevant to the tax liability. The issue here is not the precise parallel of the issue in Morgan Grenfell; the difference is fundamental.
(6) The conclusion in Morgan Grenfell depended on the character of LPP as a fundamental human right (see [7] second sentence, [35] last sentence). It is not based on a general right of privacy, but on the right of access to justice. No such fundamental right attaches to accountancy advice. Parliament amended s 20 in 2000 by inserting s 20BA and Sch 1AA by preserving from a production order items subject to LPP and limiting the protection to advice from lawyers (and not accountants), which would not have been logical if there was already a protection for accountants' advice.
(7) The Parent Company's purposive approach assumes what it is trying to prove. There is an express qualification in s 20B(9) and an implied qualification for LPP, but there are no other qualifications.
(8) The possible illogicality if s 20 had preserved LPP for documents in the hands of lawyers but not in the hands of clients was explained in Morgan Grenfell as being on account of Parry Jones v The Law Society. The decision justified the solicitor giving confidential information to the Society's accountant in connection with an investigation into compliance with its accounting rules, not on the basis that the client's LLP had been overridden by the Society's rules, but that the clients' LPP was not being infringed because the Society could use the information only for the purpose of its investigation. No such illogicality arises in respect of accountants unless there is a previously-unrecognised fundamental human right attaching to all advice that has nothing to do with the law.
(9) Foxley was not concerned with professional secrecy of a trustee in bankruptcy. The trustee had received, read and copied correspondence between the bankrupt and his legal advisers. The court held at [44] that this was not in keeping with the principles of confidentiality and professional privilege attaching to relations between a lawyer and his client.
(10) The Parent Company's argument is illogical in accepting that the advice does not fall within LPP, but contending that there is a regime protecting from disclosure advice from accountants that is identical to LPP.
(11) Generally, the request is to enable HMRC to understand the relevant transactions, to see why they were entered into and to see whether the relevant statutory provisions, construed purposively, apply to the transactions as they actually were, viewed realistically.
"It is difficult in theory to make any valid distinction between advice about tax matters given to his client by a tax agent and similar advice given by solicitors. This is particularly so in England and Wales where most tax agents are not solicitors but mainly other professional persons such as accountants."
This recommendation was adopted in 1989 and is found in s 20B(9) and (10). At that stage it seemed that legally qualified advisers and "tax advisers" (as defined) were in the same position.
"As the preference is not to mention the declaration and payment of the dividend by [the overseas company] the 'outline proposal' element of the note is brief and just details the intention to issue the warrants to [another overseas vehicle]….Just as a presentational point, we mention that the reason for the issue of the warrants is to facilitate the winding up of [the overseas company], but we do not explain how the issue helps to achieve that—perhaps a point to gloss over…"
Another email states:
"Please do NOT include reference to the dividend in the approvals note as that would give it an inevitability."
Following the issue of the warrants (which had an exercise period of five years) the maximum amount of dividend that could be paid (without reducing the value of the Subsidiary's investment in the overseas company) was paid the day after the issue of the warrants with the consent of the warrant holder being obtained in consideration of the Subsidiary (which is UK resident) making payments that are claimed to be annual payments. The Officer considers that the true purpose of the transactions has been at least glossed over and that a decision to declare the dividend may already have been made. In the light of these emails I cannot accept the Parent Company's contention that "HMRC has been provided with the key facts." I consider that the Officer is entirely reasonable in his opinion that the documents sought contain or may contain information that shows the whole facts which are relevant to the tax liability of the Subsidiary.
JOHN F. AVERY JONES
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
RELEASE DATE: 16 November 2007
SC 2040/07, 2041/07
am