[2024] UKUT 00385 (TCC)
Upper Tribunal Tax and Chancery Chamber

[2024] UKUT 00385 (TCC)

Fecha: 26-Ene-2024

Ground of appeal

Ground of appeal

16.

The Appellant essentially relies on one ground of appeal in his application for permission to appeal. He says that the FTT erred in law in finding that he was the beneficial owner of the Property. In fact, he says that he had executed a trust in favour of his daughter in 1991 and since then he had owned the Property as trustee subject to the trust. As such, he had not been the beneficial owner of the Property and beneficial ownership of the Property never vested in his trustee in bankruptcy. In support of that ground of appeal the Appellant has produced a copy of a declaration of trust.

17.

It is clear therefore that the Appellant’s ground of appeal cannot succeed unless he is able to adduce new evidence, both oral and documentary evidence, as to the existence of the trust. As the FTT noted, there was no evidence before it as to the existence of any trust of the Property. The question I must consider for present purposes is whether there is any realistic prospect that the Appellant would be granted permission by the Upper Tribunal to adduce new evidence to support the existence of a trust.

18.

The question of whether the Upper Tribunal can admit new evidence in order to found an appeal against a decision of the FTT which otherwise discloses no error of law has previously been considered by the Upper Tribunal. It is clear from the discussion in Ketley v HM Revenue & Customs [2021] UKUT 218 (TCC) at [52] – [69] that even if there is discretion to admit such evidence, regard should be had to the three-part test for the admission of new evidence set out by Denning LJ, as he then was, in Ladd v Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489 at page 1491:

… first, it must be shown that the evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the trial; secondly, the evidence must be such that, if given, it would probably have an important influence on the result of the case, though it need not be decisive; thirdly, the evidence must be such as is presumably to be believed, or in other words, it must be apparently credible, though it need not be incontrovertible.

19.

The Upper Tribunal in Ketley held that even if it could in principle admit new evidence to found a ground of appeal, it was clear that the application had to be refused. It would not be fair and just to admit the new evidence.

20.

The Appellant’s case on the present application is as follows:

(1)

He was misled by the Land Registry, the trustee in bankruptcy and HMRC as to the beneficial ownership of the Property.

(2)

The question of a pre-existing trust did not arise until the Appellant received HMRC’s skeleton argument in the summer of 2023. He raised the issue at that stage but was “fobbed off” by HMRC and the FTT clerks were “disinclined to take the matter further, seriously, or at all”.

(3)

He had failed to grasp the significance of the trust.

(4)

The original trust may have been sent to the Land Registry, but a true copy has been produced.

(5)

At the time of the bankruptcy, the trustee in bankruptcy requested to see the trust document and required the two witnesses to attend its offices to confirm the position. One of the witnesses died some years ago, but the other is still alive. The trustee in bankruptcy confirmed the existence of the trust.

(6)

He tried to raise this matter before the hearing on 12 January 2024 and subsequently by email prior to the Decision being released but it is not referred to in the Decision.

(7)

If HMRC had ever asked to see a copy of the trust, he would have provided a copy immediately.

21.

I note that the Appellant’s evidence in his witness statement before the FTT was that the Property had become vested in his trustee in bankruptcy in 2000 because he was the beneficial owner of the Property at that time. The Appellant’s correspondence with HMRC between July 2019 and May 2021 was to the same effect. There were opportunities within that correspondence for the Appellant to provide evidence as to the existence of a trust, but he did not take those opportunities. Further, the Appellant’s evidence at the FTT hearing was that he had received the sale proceeds on his own account.

22.

The Appellant seeks to completely change the case which he put to the FTT. Not simply the legal arguments he relied on but the evidential basis of his case. This is despite the fact that the Appellant had numerous opportunities to put evidence before the FTT to support a case that the Property was subject to a trust of which he was simply a trustee and not a beneficiary.

23.

The Appellant says that it did not become apparent to him that the existence of a trust was relevant until he received HMRC’s skeleton argument in the FTT. The skeleton argument is dated 11 July 2023 and addressed the Appellant’s correspondence with the Land Registry in November 2016. That correspondence referred to the existence of a trust, although as noted it was not complete. HMRC pointed out in their skeleton argument the absence of any evidence to support the existence of a trust.

24.

The FTT appeal had been due to be heard in July 2023 but was postponed. In the event it was not heard until January 2024. In the meantime there was lengthy correspondence between the Appellant, HMRC and the FTT. HMRC noted in that correspondence that the Appellant was not relying on any further documentary evidence relating to the existence of a trust. HMRC made clear that they would object to any application to adduce further evidence.

25.

The Appellant served a short skeleton argument on 21 September 2023. His case was that beneficial ownership of the Property had vested in the trustee in bankruptcy. At the same time, he also contended that there was a trust of the Property and that “the aforesaid trust named others (not myself) as beneficiaries”. He also asserted that HMRC was now out of time to assess the trustees or the beneficiaries in relation to capital gains tax on disposal of the Property.

26.

This was yet another opportunity for the Appellant to provide evidence as to the existence of a trust. He must have realised the significance of the existence of a trust because he referred to it in his skeleton argument. He could easily have provided a copy of the trust deed on which he now seeks to rely. He could easily have given evidence as to the meeting with the trustee in bankruptcy involving the individuals who are said to have witnessed the execution of the trust deed, and the fact that the trustee in bankruptcy accepted the existence of a trust.

27.

The Appellant candidly accepted that he had no explanation as to why he had not provided evidence as to the existence of the trust prior to this application. He recognised, albeit with the benefit of hindsight, that it would obviously have been a sensible thing to do.

28.

Immediately after the FTT hearing in January 2024, the Appellant emailed HMRC asking HMRC to consider the effect for capital gains tax purposes of the existence of a trust. The FTT had also invited the Appellant to provide further written submissions on the Estoppel Issue. The Appellant provided his further submissions on 24 January 2024. At this stage, the Appellant believed he was going to be unsuccessful on his arguments before the FTT. Therefore, he also raised what he described as “the trust issue”, stating that “there was an informal trust in place naming my children as beneficial owners” and that the trustee in bankruptcy had accepted the validity of the trust. He did not provide any copy of the trust deed.

29.

The FTT decision was released on 26 January 2024. It does not refer to the Appellant’s email dated 24 January 2024 but there is no reason to think that the FTT had not seen the email.

30.

The Appellant has sought to blame HMRC for his failure to adduce the evidence on which he now seeks to rely. That criticism is unfair. The Appellant had numerous opportunities to adduce the evidence. He only sought to rely on the existence of a trust when it became apparent that he was likely to lose on the grounds of appeal he had been relying on. It is only now that he has produced a copy of the trust deed.

31.

I do not consider that there is any reasonable prospect of the Appellant being permitted to adduce new evidence to establish his proposed ground of appeal. As Lewison LJ stated, the hearing is the first and last night of the show. Evidence as to the existence of a trust may well have had an important influence on the outcome of the appeal. I am also prepared to accept that the evidence is apparently credible. HM Land Registry appear to have been provided with the original trust deed and accepted it as valid. However, the evidence was clearly available to the Appellant throughout HMRC’s enquiry and throughout the FTT proceedings. There is no satisfactory explanation as to why the Appellant did not produce the evidence during the enquiry or prior to the FTT hearing. Even after the hearing, the Appellant only referred to an “informal trust” and did not provide a copy of the trust deed.

32.

Further, there is a real risk that HMRC would be prejudiced if the Appellant was now permitted to rely on the existence of a trust. As one of the trustees, he would seek to argue that HMRC are now out of time to assess the trustees for capital gains tax on the disposal of the Property. At the time the FTT proceedings commenced, HMRC would certainly have been in time to assess the Appellant as trustee rather than as beneficial owner.

33.

I do not consider that there is any reasonable prospect of the Appellant being permitted to adduce evidence as to the existence of the trust. It follows that he has no realistic prospect of establishing any error of law in the decision of the FTT.