CL-2018-000297, CL-2018-000404, CL-2018-000590, - [2025] EWHC 2364 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2018-000297, CL-2018-000404, CL-2018-000590, - [2025] EWHC 2364 (Comm)

Fecha: 02-Oct-2025

Going back, then, to Section G of the main Particulars of Claim, it occupied (so far as it related to the Solo Model) 18 pages, opening with paragraph 49, by which SKAT alleged that the representation

101.

Going back, then, to Section G of the main Particulars of Claim, it occupied (so far as it related to the Solo Model) 18 pages, opening with paragraph 49, by which SKAT alleged that the representations it pleaded “were made as part of fraudulent schemes by which the Alleged Fraud Defendants [which include Mr Shah]:

49(a) identified or procured or assisted in the formation of seemingly eligible applicants for WHT refunds;

49(b) manufactured fictitious and/or sham transactions and/or carried out illegitimate trading for the purpose of facilitating WHT Applications;

49(c) made or procured or assisted in the making of the WHT Applications, including the [representations alleged]; and/or

49(d) dealt with the sums paid by SKAT in reliance on said representations in such a way as to conceal and/or launder and/or distribute the proceeds of the WHT Applications.

102.

That is all very far removed from the approach to the pleading of a cause of action called for by Section C.1.1 of the Guide. It is what it is, however, as the pleading on which SKAT went to trial, and when the full impact of the cross-referencing to Section G of the Particulars of Claim is appreciated, I consider that it was open to SKAT to pursue in closing, as it did, an argument that Mr Shah had a primary liability in deceit on the basis that he deliberately caused SKAT to be deceived (tricked by false representations), using the Tax Agents as the means by which deceptive communications he wished SKAT to receive would be delivered.