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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions >> Allied Ships Supplies (Ireland) Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E01052 (05 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/Excise/2007/E01052.html Cite as: [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E01052, [2007] UKVAT(Excise) E1052 |
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E01052
Excise Duty point at which goods ceased to be owned by an excise trader under WOWGR payment of itself found to be insufficient to pass title appeal allowed.
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE REF. LON/05/8001
ALLIED SHIPS SUPPLIES (IRELAND) LIMITED Appellant
- and
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS
Respondents
Tribunal: IAN W HUDDLESTON (Chairman)
MRS. JOAN WHITESIDE
Sitting in public in Belfast on 12th and 13th December 2006
Mr. Philip Henry BL for the Appellant
Mr. James Puzey BL for the Respondents
The Appeal
Background
- the Appellant raised an invoice against the Customer dated 1st September 2004, and gave evidence that the invoice was faxed to the Customer. The net sum due for the Goods on foot of that invoice was £35,624.50;
- Mr. James Deehan ("Mr. Deehan") (an employee of the Appellant) sought confirmation from the Haulier that WYBO was authorised to receive excise duty suspended goods, and further confirmed that fact through the Glasgow SEED Unit.
Mr. Deehan sent an e-mail to the Respondents notifying them of the proposed movement, and that it was scheduled for despatch on the 7th September 2004;
- on the 2nd September 2004 a second invoice was raised against the Customer this time for the transport costs of the Haulier in having the Goods transported to France. That invoice was in the sum of £1,100;
- the following Monday (the 6th September 2004), an officer of the Respondent (Mr. Kieran Smith) spoke to Mr. Deehan by telephone on a number of occasions (namely at 14.30, 14.35, 15.05 and 16.00) concerning the proposed consignment. The salient points of those conversations are as follows:
(a) 14.35
(i) That the consignment was due to be despatched at 12 on 7th September 2004.
(ii) That the Goods had been paid for in full.
(b) 15.05
(i) The Officer advised that there was a problem with the consignment in that it breached the Warehouse Keeper and Owners of Warehoused Goods Regulations 1999 ("WOWGR"), in particular regulation 9(2) and 22(1). Regulation 9(2) had been breached because the consignment had been paid for and ownership transferred to the Parched Parrott.
(ii) Mr. Deehan advised that the Appellant had received advance payment because this was the first load to a new customer.
(iii) He asked whether he could send the money back at this stage; Mr. Smith could not and did not advise on this.
(c) 16.00
(i) Mr. Deehan advised the Officer that he had spoken to the Respondent's National Advisory Service and had been told that ownership would not transfer until the Goods arrived at the French warehouse.
(ii) Mr. Smith advised that this was incorrect in the circumstances of this consignment because payment was received and ownership had been transferred.
(iii) Mr. Smith advised that because the initial period had expired, the consignment could not be moved.
"If the goods are already paid for, then our trader is in breach of WOWGR and as such we need to detain the load"
Mr. Singh responded on 8th September:
"My trader Parched Parrot has acknowledged that the goods would not be released by Allied Ship Stores until he had paid for them this indicates to me that he was aware that the goods would be held post payment in suspension at Allied. I feel that this is really enough of a breach to warrant seizure of these goods "
- a revenue trader;
- was not WOWGR registered; and
- did not have a duty representative acting as agent in respect of the Goods
and that as the Goods had been kept in the Appellant's warehouse for a period in excess of the permitted period of seventy two hours, the Goods would be detained until excise duty was paid or a WOWGR Certificate for the consignee produced (Regulation 9 WOWGR). On that occasion the regulations were explained to the Appellant and the relevant parts of Public Notices 197 and 201 were brought to Mr. Deehan's attention.
"I dispute the decision as the core issue of contention relates to when change of ownership occurs and who governs change of ownership. Also due to the fact that all stipulations set out by Customs & Excise in relation to such movements were adhered, including notifying of the details of the movement and its destination."
"The property in goods belongs to Allied Ships Supplies (Ireland) Limited and will not pass to the buyer until the sellers have received full payment and Customs Regulations covering such movements have been fulfilled."
The Respondent's Case
- by operation of Regulation 21 WOWGR, if at any time after relevant goods are deposited in an excise warehouse, those goods cease to be owned (emphasis added) by a registered owner, or there is no duty representative acting as the owner's agent, the time at which either of those events occur is the excise duty point for those goods;
- the persons jointly and severally liable to pay duty at the excise duty point are:
(a) the authorised warehouse keeper for the excise warehouse in which the goods are kept;
(b) the owner of the goods immediately before the excise point; and
(c) the owner of the goods immediately after the excise duty point
- on the facts of this case, the Goods themselves ceased to be owned by a registered owner on the 3rd September 2004, when payment was received by the Appellant in full, and that the Customer did not, at that point, have a duty representative acting as its agent;
- that the Appellant was the authorised warehouse keeper for the excise goods in which the Goods were kept on the 3rd September 2004, and therefore became liable for the excise duty;
- that by virtue of the operation of Regulation 22(1) WOWGR, if dutiable goods are deposited or kept in an excise warehouse in contravention of Regulation 9 WOWGR, those goods shall be liable to forfeiture;
- that Regulation 9 WOWGR states that relevant goods shall not be kept in an excise warehouse for a period in excess of seventy hours, beginning with their deposit in that warehouse, if the owner is a revenue trader who does not have a duty representative acting as an agent in respect of those goods;
- that the Goods which are the subject of this appeal were sold to the Customer on the 3rd September 2004, and that ownership passed on that date;
- that the Customer is not a registered owner, is a revenue trader and did not have a duty representative acting for it in respect of those goods and that therefore they could only be kept in the Appellant's warehouse until the 6th September 2004. As a consequence, the Goods' detention on the 7th September 2004 was both lawful and proper;
- that the Respondents assessed the Appellant to excise duty in respect of the Goods and levied the original penalty pursuant to Section 12 of the Finance Act 1994, and that the assessment was both in time and otherwise the best judgment.
The Appellant's Case
- the ownership in the Goods only transferred when the following conditions are satisfied (and contended further this applies to all of its goods):
(a) that all details of the receiving bond are verified with SEED;
(b) that traders' details are verified with the receiving bond;
(c) that the goods are paid for;
(d) that the goods are transported on Allied Ships own (Appellant's emphasis) transport, and their own (Appellant's emphasis) movement guarantee (reference 572MP);
(e) the goods are securely lodged in the receiving bonded warehouse;
(f) that all Customs regulations are adhered to, which is only completed on receipt of stamped AAD documentation;
- on the facts of this case the Parched Parrott did not make full payment for the goods on the 3rd September 2004, because the invoice for transport had not been paid.
(a) the word "full payment" means full payment, not only of the goods, but all payments due in respect of the movement of those goods;
(b) as to the phrase "Customs Regulations", he gave evidence as to the AAD procedures, and indicated that, in his opinion, Customs Regulations were only satisfied when the "copy 3" form had been returned, which effectively was when Customs absolved the bonded warehouse from any further obligation in respect of the goods something which customarily occurred up to two months after the original consignment.
In short, therefore, the Appellant's case seemed to rest on the following:
(i) the Clause in the invoices;
(ii) the fact that the Customer had not paid the Second Invoice;
(iii) that Customs Regulations had not been complied with in full;
(iv) that risk in the Goods remained with the Appellant although the exact basis upon which that contention was made was unclear.
Decision
- in the first place, the Clause was ambiguous as to its actual meaning, although the Tribunal accepted that it was an attempt to retain title;
- in particular, within the context of the Clause, the phrase "Customs Requirements" is imprecise and, if the Tribunal were to accept the Appellant's contention that ownership would only pass when the AAD Form was returned to the Appellant, that would produce the illogical situation that the Appellant would be contending that ownership in goods had not passed long after they had been despatched from the bonded warehouse in France to the Customer, and probably even consumed. The Tribunal would not give such an interpretation to that phrase;
- as to the question of whether "full payment" had been made, the Tribunal was of the view (as will be apparent below) that payment of the First Invoice was not the sole determinant of the passage of title.
The Tribunal did not find the six conditions which the Appellant had stipulated in its letter of the 16th September 2004, and subsequently relied on in evidence, as being particularly convincing. In any event, those six conditions were simply the Appellant's interpretation of the position, and did not actually constitute evidence of the contractual arrangements which existed between the Appellant and the Customer in relation to the Goods in question. The Appellant's letter of 16th September did state that:
"These arrangements were agreed with Allied Ships Supplies and the Parched Parrot prior to the movement taking place"
But no evidence or corroboration of that statement was actually adduced to the Tribunal and no weight is given to it.
The only "documentary" evidence, therefore, which was relevant to these proceedings the Tribunal largely found unhelpful and, as a consequence, it was left to interpret the intention of the parties based on the actions that had occurred.
"5(2) Where, in pursuance of the contract, the seller delivers the goods to the buyer or to a carrier or other bailee or custodia for the purpose of transmission to the buyer, and does not reserve a right of disposal, he is taken to have unconditionally appropriated the goods to the contract."
"19(1) Where there is a contract for the sale of specific goods, or where goods are subsequently appropriated to the contract, the seller may, by the terms of the contract or appropriation, reserve the right of disposal of the goods until certain conditions are fulfilled; and in such a case, notwithstanding the delivery of the goods to the buyer, or to a carrier or other bailee or custodian for the purpose of transmission to the buyer, the property in the goods does not pass to the buyer until the conditions imposed by the seller are fulfilled."
"19(2) Where goods are shipped, and by the bill of lading the goods are deliverable to the order of the seller or his agent, the seller is prima facia to be taken to reserve the right of disposal"
Applying that to the facts of this case:
- the Clause in the Invoice for all of its ambiguities, did seem to indicate to the Tribunal an intention on the part of the seller / Appellant to withhold the passing of title until "Customs Regulations had been satisfied";
- as indicated above, the Tribunal did not agree with the Appellant on its interpretation of what the Clause meant in this regard but, nonetheless, it was clear that it was meant to preserve the Appellant's rights as seller and the Tribunal believed Mr. Deehan's evidence that the reason for doing so was to protect the Appellant in relation to its participation in the Movement Guarantee Scheme;
- as carriage was arranged by the Appellant through its normal carriers, it did seem to the Tribunal that the Appellant did continue to control the Goods and therefore had, in effect, reserved a "right of disposal". The Tribunal was of the view that the Appellant could have at any point up to delivery of the Goods to WYBO told the Haulier to deliver them elsewhere. That was, in the Tribunal's view, sufficient to constitute a right of disposal.
"20(1) Unless otherwise agreed, the goods remain at the Seller's risk until the property in them is transferred to the buyer, but when the property in them is transferred to the buyer the goods are at the buyer's risk whether delivery has been made or not."
It was quite clear to the Tribunal that the parties to this transaction had not even considered the question of risk. The only evidence on the point was that which Mr. Deehan gave in both his evidence in chief and cross-examination. He had been clear, however, that it was his view that risk remained with the Appellant until the Goods had been delivered to WYBO. If the Goods had been damaged or destroyed or stolen in transit, that risk was something he felt fell to the account of the Appellants, and not the Customer.
The appeal would be allowed. No order as to costs.
LON/2005/8001