Section 1
This decision on the papers concerns the application of the First and Second claimants (“the claimants”) for cross-examination of an HMRC witness at the hearing of the claimants’ judicial review proceedings, which are now listed to be heard at a substantive hearing in May 2025. I was grateful for counsels’ clear and concise submissions contained in the claimants’ application of 8 July, HMRC’s response of 29 July 2024 and the claimants’ reply of 5 August 2024.
While cross-examination of witnesses in judicial reviews is exceptional, I have decided, for the reasons explained below, to allow the application. The cross-examination is limited to a contested issue of material fact in respect of which there is a conflict between the decision letter recording the decision under challenge and the decision-maker’s evidence as appears in her witness statement. I consider that in the circumstances of this case, limited cross-examination is necessary for the fair and just disposal of the claim.
The judicial review, in relation to which permission was granted by the Administrative Court and then transferred to the Upper Tribunal, is against the lawfulness of HMRC’s decision refusing the claimants’ requests for repayment under the Disguised Remuneration Repayment Scheme (“Repayment Scheme”). A more detailed summary of the background to that appears in R (Sensor Solutions Ltd) v HMRC [2024] EWHC 1119 (Admin) (at [4]) but in outline the repayments sought related to sums previously settled by agreement with HMRC to avoid the application of the Loan Charge legislation (Finance (No. 2) Act 2017).
The Repayment Scheme was established pursuant to s20 Finance Act 2020. One of the relevant criteria for repayment concerned whether there had been “reasonable disclosure” and in particular, under s20(5)(d), whether certain information had been provided:
“…as was sufficient for it to be apparent that a reasonable case could have made that the amount concerned was payable to the Commissioners”.
One of the challenges raised by the claimants is that that the relevant HMRC decision maker misapplied the above requirement requiring instead, as shown by the wording in her letter, that there was a “clear indication that an earnings charge should have been applied”. It is argued this misapplication was an error of law. HMRC accept a test of “clear indication” is not the right test but they do not accept, that the decision maker applied such test. They refer to a witness statement of the decision maker in which the HMRC decision maker disagrees with the claimants’ allegation that she “put the threshold of what is needed for reasonable disclosure too high, by using the phrasing [she] did”. In the statement she explains “I was looking for a clear indication that an earnings charge should have been applied because the amount of tax concerned was an earnings charge, being the PAYE and NIC that had been included in the settlement agreement”. She goes on to say “the reference to the “earning charge” [was] a comment from me rather than me considering it to be part of the test under section 20(5)”.
The claimants argue that cross-examination is necessary to assist the tribunal in determining whether or not the decision maker applied the correct test in her decision pointing out that the documentary evidence contradicts the witness evidence relied on by HMRC.
HMRC emphasise the exceptionality of cross-examination in judicial review proceedings and argue that there is no relevant dispute of primary fact requiring resolution. As regards the issue of whether the test that was applied, HMRC point out the claim will only succeed if the Upper Tribunal can be persuaded by the claimants the disclosure provided at the time met the requirement for reasonable disclosure under the Repayment Scheme as properly interpreted. That will require an objective assessment of the documents by the Upper Tribunal and is not dependent on the Upper Tribunal resolving what test was in fact applied. In other words the claim would fail irrespective of the approach the decision maker had actually taken. HMRC point out this follows from their reliance on s 31(2A) Senior Courts Act 1981 (Footnote: 1) pursuant to which the court must refuse relief on an application for judicial review if it appears highly likely that the outcome for the applicant would not have been substantially different if the conduct complained of had not occurred.
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