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Barnett, R (On the Application Of) v Inland Revenue

[2003] EWHC 2581 (Admin)

CO/1269/2003
Neutral Citation Number: [2003] EWHC 2581 (Admin)
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

Royal Courts of Justice

Strand

London WC2

Monday, 27th October 2003

B E F O R E:

MR JUSTICE DAVIS

THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF BARNETT

(CLAIMANT)

-v-

COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE

(DEFENDANT)

Computer-Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of

Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited

190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG

Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838

(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)

MR M WATSON-GANDY (hearing) & MISS C GUPPY (judgment)(instructed by Stallard Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the CLAIMANT

MS I SIMLER (hearing) & MR A NAWBATT (judgment)(instructed by Inland Revenue) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT

J U D G M E N T

Monday, 27th October 2003

1. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: This is a claim brought by a claim form issued on 4th March 2003 by Mr Michael Barnett for judicial review of a decision of the Board of Inland Revenue dated 5th December 2002 declining to exercise its discretion in favour of Mr Barnett pursuant to the provisions of what is now section 152(3) of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (formerly section 115(3) of the Capital Gains Tax Act 1979). Permission limited to certain grounds was granted by Newman J on 7th May 2003. At the outset of the hearing before me I refused an application to amend to add certain proposed new grounds.

2. The matter has a long history. Putting it shortly, however, the position is this. Mr Barnett sold a property at 14 Belsize Park Gardens in north London on 22nd April 1986. He wished to obtain roll-over relief from Capital Gains Tax in respect of his gain accruing on the sale of that property by reinvesting in replacement properties.

3. The relevant statutory provisions for present purposes are those contained in section 152(1) to (3) of the 1992 Act (formerly section 115(1) to (3) of the 1979 Act). Those sections read as follows:

"152 Roll-over relief

(1) If the consideration which a person carrying on a trade obtains for the disposal of, or of his interest in, assets ('the old assets') used, and used only, for the purposes of the trade throughout the period of ownership is applied by him in acquiring other assets, or an interest in other assets ('the new assets') which on the application are taken into use, and used only, for the purposes of the trade, and the old assets and new assets are within the classes of assets listed in section 155, then the person carrying on the trade shall, on making a claim as respects the consideration which has been so applied, be treated for the purposes of this Act -

(a) as if the consideration for the disposal of, or of the interest in, the old assets were (if otherwise of a greater amount or value) of such amount as would secure that on the disposal neither a gain nor a loss accrues to him, and

(b) as if the amount or value of the consideration for the acquisition of, or of the interest in, the new assets were reduced by the excess of the amount or value of the actual consideration which he is treated as receiving under paragraph (a) above

but neither paragraph (a) nor paragraph (b) above shall affect the treatment for the purposes of this Act of the other party to the transaction involving the old assets, or of the other party to the transaction involving the new assets.

(2) Where subsection (1)(a) above applies to exclude a gain which, in consequence of Schedule 2, is not all chargeable gain, the amount of the reduction to be made under subsection (1)(b) above shall be the amount of the chargeable gain, and not the whole amount of the gain.

(3) Subject to subsection (4) below, this section shall only apply if the acquisition of, or of the interest in, the new assets takes place, or an unconditional contract for the acquisition is entered into, in the period beginning 12 months before and ending 3 years after the disposal of, or of the interest in, the old assets, or at such earlier or later time as the Board may by notice allow."

4. The requirement thus under the statutory provisions is, amongst other things, that an unconditional contract for the acquisition of the replacement assets must be entered into before the expiry of three years after the disposal of the old assets; but the Board has a discretion to extend time.

5. At the relevant times the Board operated and published a policy set out in a document entitled CG60640. That provides as follows under the heading "Roll-over relief: time for re-investment: Board's discretion":

"Extension of the time limit in Section 152(3) is permitted where the claimant can demonstrate that

they had a firm intention to acquire replacement assets within the time limit

but

they were prevented by some fact or circumstance beyond their control from acquiring the replacement assets, or any assets, within the time limit

and

acted as soon as they reasonably could after ceasing to be so prevented.

It is a question of fact and degree and each case is considered on its own merits. Examples of circumstances outside the claimant's control might include death or serious illness of a vital party at a crucial time, unsettled disputes or litigation, genuine difficulty in establishing good title or in finding suitable replacement assets or delay in receipt of disposal consideration.

A mere change of intention at a late stage or a shortage of funds arising out of application of disposal consideration to some purpose other than the acquisition of new qualifying assets will not normally be regarded as circumstances beyond the claimant's control."

It is to be noted that where the three identified elements are demonstrated it is provided that an extension of time is permitted not that it may be permitted. It is also to be noted that the policy expressly states that it is a question of fact and degree and each case is considered on its own merits.

6. In the event, the replacement assets acquired by Mr Barnett, being 13 Elrington Road, Hackney, were not acquired by way of unconditional contract until 27th July 1989: that is to say, more than three years after the disposal of the former assets. The vendor of the Hackney property was a company called Foldell Ltd, in which Mr Barnett had an interest. Mr Barnett invited the Board to exercise its discretion to extend time under section 115(3) of the 1979 Act (as it then was). It appears that that matter was reviewed on a number of occasions by the Board, the ultimate decision being the one as set out in the communication of 5th December 2002.

7. An assessment for capital gains tax for 1986/87 in respect of the gain arising on the disposal of 14 Belsize Park Gardens was raised by the Inspector of Taxes. Mr Barnett appealed to the General Commissioners. At that stage Mr Barnett was contending that his reinvestment was in fact within the three year time limit; alternatively, he was contending that the matter fell within the Revenue's discretion and that should be exercised in his favour.

8. It is clear from the wording of section 152(3) that the discretion to extend time is invested in the Board, not in the General Commissioners: as is confirmed by the judgment of Sir Richard Scott VC in the case of Steibelt (Inspector of Taxes) v Paling [1999] STC 594.

9. In advance of the hearing before the General Commissioners, which had been fixed for 12th November 2002, Mr Watson-Gandy (counsel then appearing for Mr Barnett, as he has before me on this claim for judicial review) provided a detailed skeleton argument. The first argument was that Mr Barnett had in fact reinvested the proceeds of the Belsize Park Gardens property in the Hackney property within the three year time limit. The second argument, however, was that the Board of Inland Revenue had erred on its determination of the facts when deciding not to exercise its discretion to extend the time limit (that being the then stance of the Board and as subsequently confirmed by the decision of 5th December 2002).

10. In that context the skeleton argument invited a determination by the General Commissioners of the factual basis on which the discretion was to be exercised. These were proffered by Mr Watson-Gandy in his skeleton argument as follows. As set out in section 5 of the skeleton argument lodged before the General Commissioners this is said:

"The Appellant therefore seeks a determination of the factual basis upon which the discretion is to be exercised namely that:

[1] The Appellant had a firm intention to acquire a replacement asset by 22nd April 1989, namely 13 Elrington Road, Hackney, London E8.

[2] The Appellant was prevented by some fact or circumstance beyond his control from acquiring the replacement asset.

[3] The circumstance outside the Appellant's control was the unsettled dispute over planning permission.

[4] The circumstance outside the Appellant's control was not shortage of funds ...

[5] Obtaining planning permission was determinative of whether 13, Elrington Road, Hackney, London E8 could be a suitable replacement asset ...

[6] The Appellant acted as soon as he reasonably could after ceasing to be so prevented."

Various evidential references were given to support those propositions.

11. The General Commissioners then had to decide whether Mr Barnett had, for the purposes of section 152(3), an entitlement to roll-over relief on the footing that he had entered into an unconditional contract with regard to 13 Elrington Road before 22nd April 1989. They also had been invited to decide the factual basis upon which the discretion under section 152(3) (formerly section 115(3)) was to be exercised.

12. I was told that the hearing before the General Commissioners lasted for much of the day. Mr Barnett himself gave evidence. The Inspector of Taxes appearing had taken the view and had submitted that the facts relating to the discretion under section 152(3) were irrelevant for the General Commissioners' decision, but the General Commissioners, as I understand it, nevertheless invited examination of Mr Barnett on those matters.

13. The decision of the General Commissioners was announced at the hearing and then communicated by letter from their clerk dated 14th November 2002, which letter enclosed the decision. That decision as enclosed with the letter reads as follows:

"The Commissioners dismissed the appeal because they were not persuaded that Mr Barnett had entered an unconditional contract to purchase 13 Elrington Rd London E8 within three years of the sale of 14 Belsize Park Gardens London NW3. He is not therefore entitled to the roll-over relief afforded by S 152(3) of Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992.

The Commissioners had no jurisdiction to consider the Board's exercise of the discretion allowed under S 152(3). They also found that this was not a case where the Extra-Statutory concession referred to in D24 applied, because that concession related to the use of replacement assets. However they considered that the provisions in paragraph CG60640 of the Capital Gains Manual were analogous to those in D24, so far as they related to the way in which the Revenue should interpret S152(3). In those circumstances the Commissioners were satisfied that they were entitled to review whether this case fell within the provisions of CG60640, according to the approach set out by Sir Richard Scott VC in Steibelt (Inspector of Taxes) v Puling . The Commissioners found that Mr Barnett had the firm intention to acquire replacement assets within the time-limit, but was prevented from contracting to purchase 13 Elrington Rd by a delay in obtaining the appropriate planning consent, and that he acted to purchase the property as soon as the planning position was clarified."

14. There was some debate after that communication was received as to whether the wording of that decision corresponded precisely with what had been read out at the end of the hearing on 12th November; but it is clear that that document does represent the decision of the General Commissioners. I might add that the General Commissioners had, at the end of the hearing, adjourned the appeal before them to enable the Board to reconsider the exercise of its discretion.

15. Mr Barnett, in the light of that decision of the General Commissioners, renewed his request for the exercise of the Board's discretion under section 152(3). He relied on the General Commissioners' decision in that regard, and in particular what had been stated in the last sentence of the decision.

16. The decision of the Board of 5th December 2002 was in these terms:

"The Board has been asked to exercise the discretionary powers given to it by virtue of section 115(3) Capital Gains Tax Act 1979 so as to permit a capital gain accruing to Mr M A Barnett, of 33 Belsize Park Gardens, London NW3 4JJ in respect of a disposal of 'old assets' (14 Belsize Park Gardens) on 22 April 1986 to be relieved against an acquisition by him of 'new assets' (13 Elrington Road) on 27 July 1989.

Under the general statutory rule contained in section 115(3), the gain accruing to Mr Barnett would fall to be relieved only if an unconditional contract for the acquisition of 'new assets' had been entered into by him no later than three years after the disposal of the 'old assets' ie in this case by 21 April 1989. The Board is, however, empowered by the statute to extend the period beyond 21 April 1989 if it so allows by giving notice.

Notice of extension will be given only where the Board is satisfied that there was a clear intention on the part of a claimant to acquire 'new assets' within the statutory period referred to in section 115(3) and that the claimant was prevented from entering into an unconditional contract of acquisition within that time by reason of circumstances beyond his control.

Having reviewed the case again in the light of the Commissioners' decision on Mr Barnett's appeal which was heard on 12 November 2002, whilst the Board is satisfied that Mr Barnett intended to acquire replacement 'new assets', it still does not consider that he has shown either that there were particular circumstances beyond his control which prevented an acquisition of 'new assets' by 21 April 1989 or that any such circumstances persisted beyond that time and continued until the acquisition of 13 Elrington Road in July 1989.

In reaching this decision, the Board has taken account of the nature of Mr Barnett's business activities and the likely availability of replacement assets on the market suitable for use and occupation for the purpose of those activities. It has been unable to conclude that there were compelling circumstances which obliged Mr Barnett to acquire 13 Elrington Road, rather than any other similar property, for the purposes of his business. Nor has it found any evidence that 13 Elrington Road possessed any unique or special characteristics rendering this property the only, or most suitable, asset for business acquisition. It is the Board's view that Mr Barnett's decision to pursue the acquisition of this particular property (despite the absence of appropriate planning consent for business use) to the apparent exclusion of other suitable properties, was driven principally by his relationship with the vendor, Foldell Ltd, rather than by facts and circumstances beyond his control.

The Board is also of the view that, in relation to 13 Elrington Road itself, the absence of business planning consent was not an impediment to Mr Barnett's entering into an unconditional contract for the acquisition of that property from Foldell Ltd within the statutory three year reinvestment period specified in section 115(3).

Accordingly, the Board will not exercise its statutory discretion to issue a notice under section 115(3) extending the reinvestment period to encompass the acquisition of 13 Elrington Road. In consequence, this acquisition by Mr Barnett will not fall to be taken into account for the purposes of capital gains tax in determining Mr Barnett's claim to relief under section 115 in respect of the gain accruing to him on the disposal of 14 Belsize Park Gardens on 22 April 1986."

17. It is the validity of that decision which is now attacked. What Mr Watson-Gandy, on behalf of Mr Barnett, says in essence is this. The General Commissioners are the judges of fact in tax cases. In the present case, in the second part of their decision, the General Commissioners made findings which were material to the issue of discretion under section 152(3). The General Commissioners had, he submits, a wide discretion as to the conduct of hearings before them and as to the determination of issues before them: see regulation 15(2) of the General Commissioners (Jurisdiction and Procedure) Regulations 1994. Having made their decision on these matters, and no appeal having been brought by the Inspector of Taxes, the Board was, he submits, bound to give effect to the Commissioners' findings in exercising its discretion under section 152(3). That, as is evident from the decision letter of 5th December 2002, the Board had failed to do. On the contrary, he said, the Board had made findings inconsistent with those of the General Commissioners. Accordingly, the decision letter was flawed and should be quashed.

18. The response of Miss Simler on behalf of the Board in essence is this. The discretion under section 152(3) is vested in the Board, not in the General Commissioners. The only matter for the General Commissioners to decide was the determination of Mr Barnett's appeal against the assessment for capital gains tax arising from the sale of the Belsize Park Gardens property. For that purpose the General Commissioners had to establish the entitlement, if any, of Mr Barnett to roll-over relief under section 152(3), specifically in this case whether he had entered into an unconditional contract to acquire replacement assets prior to 22nd April 1989. That aside, submits Miss Simler, the General Commissioners had no function at all to purport to make findings related to the exercise of any discretion under section 152(3), nor could they, by purporting to do so, fetter the Board's discretion in any way; and it was for the Board to make its own assessment of the case.

19. Considering the competing submissions, I have reached the conclusion that the case advanced on behalf of Mr Barnett by Mr Watson-Gandy breaks down at a number of stages in the argument.

20. The first point is that the General Commissioners indeed considered that they were entitled to review whether the case fell within CG64640, which they further indicated was analogous to the extra statutory concessions in D24 in accordance with the approach set out by Sir Richard Scott VC in Steibelt v Paling . But that, in my view, reveals a misunderstanding on the part of the General Commissioners of the decision of the Vice-Chancellor. CG60640 does not purport to be an interpretation of section 152(3). Indeed, section 152(3) really needs no interpretation in this respect. It explicitly confers a discretion on the Board. What CG60640 indicates, in effect by way of extra statutory concession, are circumstances in which the discretion will be exercised in favour of the taxpayer and the general approach that will be adopted by the Board. So far as the text of D24 is concerned, however, that is set out at page 601 of the Vice Chancellor's judgment. It related to section 152(1) of the 1992 Act. As to D24, the Vice Chancellor, in obiter comments at page 604 of his judgment, said this:

"I regard D24 as being a very sensible attempt by the Revenue to indicate how it believes the language of the 1992 Act in this regard should be applied. I think it highly likely that, as a matter of construction, a court would conclude that that was how the 1992 Act should be applied. I am not satisfied that in publishing D24 the Revenue was making any concession at all. It would be making a concession only if the true construction of the 1992 Act were stricter than the approach outlined in D24.

Accordingly, if that is a legitimate approach to the function of D24, and I believe that it is, the question whether, on the facts of the case, a particular taxpayer complies with the various requirements of D24 is the same as the question whether, on the facts, s 152(1) on its true construction applies."

Thus D24 was not being regarded as an extra statutory concession at all, but an attempt to explain the meaning of section 152(1). It is thus quite different both in kind and in type to CG60640. The General Commissioners in the present case proceeded on a wrong footing accordingly.

21. The second point, which is in some respects linked to the first point, although perhaps even more fundamental, is that I agree with Miss Simler that it simply was not the function of the General Commissioners to make findings, let alone findings designed to bind the Board, in respect of the exercise of the discretion under section 152(3). That discretion is, under the terms of the statute, specifically invested in the Board. It is nothing to do with the General Commissioners and they have no entitlement, as I see it, to make it something to do with them by, for example, invoking regulation 15(2). Indeed, the logic of Mr Watson-Gandy's submissions would tend to suggest that if General Commissioners made findings in favour of a taxpayer in precisely the terms of CG60640, the Board must give effect to those findings: but if that is so the operation of CG60640 would then positively require the Board to exercise its discretion in favour of the tax payer. Thus, in such a case the General Commissioner would not simply have fettered the discretion vested in the Board: they would in effect have actually dictated its exercise. That cannot be right. Indeed, as Miss Simler pointed out, had the General Commissioners purported to make findings totally adverse to Mr Barnett in this regard, one would not have expected him thereafter to have regarded them as binding on him. Yet further, it is difficult to see what appeal could lie in favour of the Board from these purported findings. The issue before the General Commissioners was the appeal against the assessment of capital gains tax arising from the sale of the Belsize Park Gardens property, and specifically whether Mr Barnett had entered into an unconditional contract to acquire replacement assets within the three year period. On that issue, the Revenue had succeeded. The decision was in their favour. They had nothing to appeal against. Mr Watson-Gandy's attempts to deal with that particular point were unconvincing, to say the least.

22. The third point is this. It is to be noted that the findings of fact which the General Commissioners expressed are not in fact coextensive with the three matters set out in CG60640. They did not, for example, find that Mr Barnett was prevented from acquiring replacement assets "by some fact or circumstance beyond his control"; only that he was prevented from contracting to buy 13 Elrington Road by a delay in obtaining the appropriate planning permission. That is a significant difference. Indeed, the findings that the General Commissioners purportedly made fell a long way short of what Mr Watson-Gandy had invited them to find in his skeleton argument submitted to them. The question whether there was some circumstances "beyond Mr Barnett's control" preventing him from acquiring "the replacement assets, or any assets" was thus left open on the face of the General Commissioners' decision: and on any view fell to be decided by the Board.

23. I should add that Miss Simler took me through various documentary materials. A number of the letters and documents are consistent with the delay occurring being due to inaction on the part of Mr Barnett or his associates or to attempts to obtain, or delays in obtaining, finance. Moreover, it is the case that in the event Mr Barnett eventually entered into an unconditional contract to buy the Hackney property before planning permission for 13 Elrington Road had even been granted.

24. I do not of course make any findings myself on any of this: nor do I say that the General Commissioners were not entitled to reach the limited factual conclusions that they purported to reach (leaving aside the question of relevance and jurisdiction for this purpose). But what is plain is that there was material on which the Board could properly reach the conclusion that no facts or circumstances beyond the control of Mr Barnett occurred, and could properly reach the other conclusions which it expressed in its decision under section 152(3) of 5th December 2002, and directing itself in accordance with the policy set out in CG60640. Such decision was not unlawful or unreasonable in any public law sense.

25. I add that Miss Simler was prepared to accept, for the purposes of this case, that the Board was under a duty at least to consider and take into account the entirety of the General Commissioners' decision before deciding how to exercise its own discretion. It is plain both from the decision letter itself and, if it is relevant, from a subsequent witness statement by Mr Bowen on behalf of the Board that the Board did indeed do that.

26. Mr Watson-Gandy did at one stage say that if this was right, that meant that the Board was the final judge and jury on this matter. But the statute confers the discretion on the Board, with no right of appeal. If, as Mr Watson-Gandy suggested, Article 6 points could then arise (although that may be debatable, as it seems to me, in this particular tax context) then that is in any case met by the point that a decision made by the Board not to exercise discretion under section 152(3) is itself in principle capable of court challenge by judicial review, provided of course appropriate public law grounds are raised.

27. In the present case, however, I have come to the conclusion that no such grounds are established and therefore I must dismiss this claim.

28. MR NAWBATT: My Lord, I understand my legal friend has an application to make. I have various submissions on costs.

29. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: We will deal with permission to appeal first.

30. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, I am instructed to ask for permission to appeal on the basis that the matter raises significant matters of public importance. My Lord, my submission is limited to that point.

31. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: I do not think this is a case where permission will be granted. If you can persuade the Court of Appeal that permission should be granted I suggest you should try that, but I refuse permission myself.

32. MISS GUPPY: I am grateful.

33. MR NAWBATT: My Lord, you should have before you the statement of costs from the Inland Revenue.

34. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Yes.

35. MR NAWBATT: My Lord, there is just one aspect that is not covered by that, and that is the costs of today.

36. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Your costs.

37. MR NAWBATT: Precisely, my Lord.

38. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: That is very important to you, I suppose.

39. MR NAWBATT: My Lord, yes.

40. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: How much is that?

41. MR NAWBATT: £270 plus VAT.

42. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Give me the total please.

43. MR NAWBATT: £12,759.25.

44. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Miss Guppy, what do you say about costs?

45. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, I have a couple of points.

46. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: I think, in principle, you must pay the costs of this claim; do you accept that?

47. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, in principle, yes. I would like to flag up one matter, if I may. My Lord, the claimant invited the defendants to consider the possibility of alternative dispute resolution in a letter dated 7th October 2003. My Lord, I have actually passed up a copy of that letter and hopefully you will have that in front of you. A reply was given by the defendants on 8th October 2003.

48. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Was that the first time that mediation was suggested?

49. MISS GUPPY: It was.

50. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: It was a little late. You want me to bear that in consideration.

51. MISS GUPPY: Bear that in consideration given the provisions of the Civil Procedure Rules, particularly --

52. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: You need not trouble me with chapter and verse.

53. MISS GUPPY: I have passed up two cases, which you are probably well familiar with.

54. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: I normally refuse to look at cases on costs matters. You say these are relevant to principle, are they?

55. MISS GUPPY: Simply on the basis that there was a blank refusal by the defendants to consider the possibility of alternative dispute resolution. It is relevant to the costs judgment. It was not entertained by them to any extent.

56. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: A tax point involving an attempt to quash a decision of the Board is not an obvious candidate for ADR, is it? One can see that if there was a dispute about the amount of penalties, that might or might not, but it is a very legal point, is it not?

57. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, it is a legal point. However, there are certain points I would seek to make, if I may. The Revenue clearly have a power to reopen their discretion. The problem from the claimant's point of view is that they had not really, in my submission, had a chance to air their point properly to the Revenue, that each time that they attempted to do so they were met with a refusal. Insofar as that is the case, my Lord, they did not have an opportunity to explain to the decision maker, as it were, to sit down and put heads together, which may, in my submission, have been fruitful, although I concede, my Lord, that the offer was made late in the day.

58. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Yes. I was told that this matter was reviewed by the Revenue about five times and there was, as it were, a rolling request to review on each occasion. So it can hardly be said that this was a one-off refusal.

59. MISS GUPPY: It is accepted that it is not a one-off refusal, but the reasons given for the refusal, on my understanding, is that there was no further evidence given, and the position of the claimant really was that further evidence or information was being given.

60. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Well, Mr Barnett took the opportunity to deploy a very great deal of evidence before the General Commissioners, so all that was in play. It is for him to put the whole case forward.

61. MISS GUPPY: Sorry, my Lord, may I just take instructions one moment. My instructions are that he has not had the opportunity of challenging the substantial issues that were raised in relation to the decision that was made in December.

62. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: One cannot keep on running back every time a decision is made. The Revenue are entitled to say they have made their decision and that is it, absent special circumstances. This challenge was a challenge of 5th December 2002. It is not for want of sympathy, Miss Guppy, but the decision was made and, as I have decided, it is a decision that could properly be made.

63. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, it does raise matters of general public importance, I would submit, and the Revenue could have sat down and it would not have taken too long to sit down and actually have a meeting. I would invite you to bear that in mind when you are considering costs.

64. Perhaps if I could raise one point on the issue of costs in relation to the schedule.

65. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Do I have a schedule from your side?

66. MISS GUPPY: I certainly hope so, my Lord.

67. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: I am not sure I have seen it. Could I have a look at it please.

68. MISS GUPPY: I do apologise (_Handed).

69. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: That is all right. Your side's costs are greater than the Revenue's costs.

70. MISS GUPPY: Indeed. My Lord, I would say that that would be to be expected in the circumstances.

71. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Absolutely, but I think I am entitled to have regard to that.

72. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, the only point I would make in relation to the defendant's costs is the figure that is being claimed for counsel's fees for the hearing, on the second page, £1,900.

73. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Yes.

74. MISS GUPPY: My Lord, I am guided by the Civil Procedure Rules, 48.51, table of counsel's fees. My Lord, I understand this is a matter that was listed for a half a day hearing and that counsel was --

75. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: 48.51?

76. MISS GUPPY: Page 1233 of the White Book. My Lord, I understand it was junior counsel, ten plus years call, and would submit that the appropriate amount would be £1,500 in the circumstances.

77. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Are these mandatory or suggestive?

78. MISS GUPPY: They are suggestive.

79. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: So how much are you saying Miss Simler should get?

80. MISS GUPPY: £1,500.

81. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Plus VAT or inclusive of VAT?

82. MISS GUPPY: It does not actually say, I suspect it is £1,500 plus VAT. My Lord, those are my submissions in relation to costs.

83. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: You say Miss Simler should be knocked down on her fees. That might be used against you hereafter. What do you say about costs, Mr Nawbatt?

84. MR NAWBATT: Perhaps I could deal with the point on the quantum first and then the mediation second. In relation to brief fee I think it is relevant to see what the applicant's costs came up to. There is a brief fee of £2,000 plus VAT claimed.

85. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: I dare say you might have been asking them to knock that down.

86. MR NAWBATT: I take that as a starting point. If your Lordship had found against the Revenue and had accepted the applicant's submissions, then that would have had a far reaching impact on the Revenue. Miss Simler is APAL and she was simply charged at the APAL rate, which is £120 an hour. So, in my submission, the sum claimed is not in any way disproportionate for the hearing.

87. In relation to the mitigation point, I think it is pertinent to look at the case of Dunnett v Railtrack . The whole point of that case was that in giving leave to appeal the Court of Appeal had urged the claimant in that case to consider mediation, we get that from paragraph 1 of the judgment in Dunnett v Railtrack . That is clearly not a comparable case to this one. In this case the dispute was very simple. It was: were the Board bound by the findings made by the General Commissioners? That is not, in my submission, appropriate to be the subject of mediation.

88. My Lord, in terms of the opportunity had by the applicant in this case, one only has to look at paragraph 10 of Miss Simler's skeleton argument where she states that on no less than seven occasions was this matter reviewed by the Board.

89. The only final matter I would draw to your Lordship's attention is this request was made very late on in the day, 7th October, as you yourself said. Permission in this case was granted as early as --

90. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: It was made the day after the application to amend was issued and enabled those issues to be brought in. If mediation had gone ahead it would have allowed the issued raised by the proposed amendment to come in, which in the event I did not allow in this court.

91. MR NAWBATT: Quite, and the respondent did take quite a firm view on that.

92. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: The reality is these points are addressed when the case has to be addressed and that is the reality, is it not?

93. MR NAWBATT: Yes, my Lord. This was not, in my submission, an appropriate case for mediation. There were no factual disputes, it was a simple question of law.

94. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: On the question of costs, the claim has failed and in principle it seems to me that the claimant should pay the defendant's costs.

95. As to Miss Guppy's point that mediation or some kind of alternative dispute resolution was proposed by letter of 7th October 2003, which invitation in effect was summarily rejected, it seems to me, having regard both to the history of this particular matter and to the subject matter of this particular matter, and to the decision under attack, that the point of the Revenue could reasonably be to reject the proposal of mediation, which was raised late in the day. I do not think that matter should impact upon the defendant's entitlement as to costs.

96. As to Miss Guppy's point about the level of counsel's fees, given the subject matter of this case I think those fees are reasonable.

97. In the event, and no other challenge being raised to the schedule of costs, I summarily assess the costs to be paid to the revenue in the sum of £12,759.25. 28 days?

98. MISS GUPPY: Please.

99. MR NAWBATT: We are agreed, sir, yes.

100. MR JUSTICE DAVIS: Thank you both very much indeed.

Barnett, R (On the Application Of) v Inland Revenue

[2003] EWHC 2581 (Admin)

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