[2023] UKSC 40
On appeal from: [2022] EWCA Civ 234
JUDGMENT
Skatteforvaltningen (the Danish Customs and Tax Administration) (Respondent) v Solo Capital Partners LLP (in special administration) and others (Appellants)
before
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Briggs
Lord Hamblen
Lord Richards
8 November 2023
Heard on 5 and 6 July 2023
Appellants
Kieron Beal KC
Nigel Jones KC
Lisa Freeman
Laurence Page
(Instructed by Meaby & Co LLP)
Respondent
Lord Pannick KC
James Goldsmith KC
Andrew Scott KC
Jonathan Schwarz
Abra Bompas
James Ruddell
KV Krishnaprasad
(Instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP (London))
LORD LLOYD-JONES (with whom Lord Hodge, Lord Briggs, Lord Hamblen and Lord Richards agree):
This appeal concerns the admissibility of claims made in the Commercial Court in London by Skatteforvaltningen, the Danish Customs and Tax Administration, (“the respondent”) against Mr Sanjay Shah and companies related to Mr Shah (“the appellants”). The appellants contend that the claims seek to enforce, directly or indirectly, the revenue laws or the public laws of the Kingdom of Denmark.
Dicey, Morris & Collins, The Conflict of Laws, 16th ed (2022), states the general principle as follows (at para 8R-001):
for the enforcement, either directly or indirectly, of a penal, revenue or other public law of a foreign State; …”
“Rule 20 – English courts have no jurisdiction to entertain an action:
The essential questions arising on this appeal are the scope of Rule 20(1) and whether it has any application to the facts of the present case. In its application to the tax laws of a foreign State the principle is often referred to as “the revenue rule”. For convenience, its application to public laws of a foreign State will be referred to in this judgment as “the sovereign authority rule”.
Factual background
Mr Shah was a founding member of Solo Capital Partners LLP (“SCP”) which was established in 2011. SCP was until 2015 a Financial Conduct Authority-regulated custodian claiming to specialise in tax structured financial products. It purported to provide custodian services to clients including US Pension Plans (“USPPs”), companies registered in the International Business and Financial Centre, Malaysia (“Labuan companies”) and finance brokers.
The respondent is an independent ministerial authority established under Danish law. It is part of the sovereign authority of the Kingdom of Denmark which is a single legal personality. It is recognised in Danish law as having sufficient legal capacity to bring claims in its own name.
A number of other defendants to the consolidated Commercial Court claims (CL-2018-000297, 000404, 000690, CL-2019-000487 and 000369) are not appellants before the Supreme Court. The respondent accepts that, subject to the precise terms of this judgment, the claims against these other defendants will be dismissed if the appellants’ appeal is allowed.
The case concerns certain applications in which claims were made for the refund of Danish dividend withholding tax (“WHT”). Non-residents of Denmark who receive dividends from Danish companies are liable to pay 27% tax which is withheld at source. Non-residents of Denmark who meet the requirements set out in the Danish Withholding Tax Act (“WHT Act”) and applicable double taxation treaties are entitled to a partial or full refund of the tax so withheld.
Non-residents of Denmark are liable to tax under either section 2 of the WHT Act or section 2 of the Danish Corporation Taxation Act on dividends they have a right to receive from Danish companies. The Danish company must withhold 27% of the dividend it has declared pursuant to section 65 of the WHT Act and pay this to the respondent pursuant to section 66 of the WHT Act, to discharge the tax liability described above. As reflected in section 69B(1) of the WHT Act, a non-resident shareholder who is liable to tax (under section 2 of the WHT Act or section 2 of the Danish Corporation Taxation Act) and who has a right to receive dividends, from which tax has been withheld by the Danish company, may claim repayment if the tax withheld exceeds the final tax that Denmark is permitted to levy in accordance with the terms of a relevant double taxation treaty.
Danish public companies distribute the dividend declared, net of tax withheld, to the accounts of custodians or individuals as designated by the Danish central securities depositary based on the information in its register. A custodian registered with the central securities depositary may have clients who are themselves custodians.
Non-residents of Denmark usually hold shares via a custodian, rather than directly with the central securities depositary.
Dividend tax refund applications were made by the USPPs and Labuan companies who were clients of SCP and three related custodians (“the Solo WHT Applications”).
At the relevant time there were various ways in which a WHT reclaim might be made. So far as relevant, a shareholder or its agent could make an application by submitting to the respondent a standardised form seeking a refund of Danish dividend tax, with accompanying documents. In this case the accompanying documents included (i) a covering letter from a tax reclaim agent acting on behalf of the relevant applicant; (ii) a credit advice note issued by a relevant custodian in respect of the purported shares, dividends and tax; and (iii) a document from the relevant foreign tax authority certifying that the applicant was resident in the relevant foreign jurisdiction.
The respondent’s pleaded case is that the Solo WHT applicants owned no shares in any relevant Danish companies, received no dividends on any such shares and suffered no withholding of Danish tax in respect of any such dividends. The respondent alleges that, in respect of each of the 4,590 applications made to it by clients of the custodians in these proceedings, the representations made by the Solo WHT applicants were false and made dishonestly or recklessly. It alleges that it was fraudulently induced to make payments amounting to about DKK 12.09 billion (equivalent to about £1.44 billion) pursuant to these claims.
The defendants deny the claims against them. In particular, they maintain that the trade structures resulted in the USPPs and Labuan companies being entitled under Danish tax law to make bona fide claims pursuant to section 69B(1) of the WHT Act. Alternatively, they maintain that they had a reasonable belief that the trades were lawful and complied with Danish tax law.
Procedural history
The respondent has issued five sets of proceedings in England and Wales which have been consolidated. There are currently 89 defendants. The claim is put primarily on the basis of common law causes of action in the law of England and Wales. The causes of action pleaded against the defendants are principally deceit and unlawful means conspiracy. The respondent also brings claims for dishonest assistance, knowing receipt and unjust enrichment. The respondent seeks equitable relief and restitutionary remedies and asserts a proprietary interest in the sums it paid out and the traceable proceeds thereof. An alternative case is advanced under Danish private law.
At a case management hearing in July 2020 Andrew Baker J delivered a preliminary issues ruling and directed that the claim should be tried in three principal stages: (i) the trial of a first preliminary issue as to whether the claim as pleaded is inadmissible under Dicey, Morris & Collins Rule 20(1); (ii) the trial of a second preliminary issue to consider the parameters of a valid WHT application (“the validity trial”); and (iii) a main trial for the purposes of making findings on liability and quantum: [2020] EWHC 2022 (Comm).
The first preliminary issue trial took place online between 22 and 25 March 2021. On 27 April 2021 Andrew Baker J handed down his judgment on the first preliminary issue, dismissing the claims in their entirety on the basis that they were inadmissible pursuant to Dicey, Morris & Collins Rule 20(1): [2021] EWHC 974 (Comm).
The respondent appealed against the decision of Andrew Baker J on the admissibility issue in respect of all defendants except one. On 25 February 2022 the Court of Appeal (Sir Julian Flaux, Chancellor of the High Court, Phillips and Stuart-Smith LJJ) allowed the appeal: [2022] EWCA Civ 234; [2022] QB 772.
As a result, the validity trial and the main trial were reinstated. The validity trial took place before Andrew Baker J between 17 January and 10 February 2023. In a judgment handed down on 24 March 2023, [2023] EWHC 590 (Comm), the judge upheld the respondent’s pleaded case as to the content of the relevant eligibility requirements under Danish law.
The main trial is listed to commence before Andrew Baker J on 15 April 2024 and to last for nearly four legal terms.
On 28 October 2022 the Supreme Court granted permission to appeal on the admissibility issue.
Ground 1: the Court of Appeal erred in its legal characterisation of the claims advanced by Skatteforvaltningen. It wrongly found the judge had erred in recording the inextricable link between Skatteforvaltningen’s claims and the recovery of tax.
The scope of the revenue rule
The editors of Dicey, Morris & Collins state (at para 8-002 ff) that there is a well-established and almost universal principle that the courts of one country will not enforce the penal and revenue laws of another country. Whether a foreign law falls within the categories of those laws which the English court will not enforce is a matter for English law. Although Rule 20 is expressed in terms of lack of jurisdiction, the editors suggest (at para 8-003) that it is the foreign State which has no international jurisdiction to enforce its law abroad and the English court will not exercise its own jurisdiction in aid of an excess of jurisdiction by a foreign State. (See In re State of Norway’s Application (Nos 1 and 2) [1990] 1 AC 723, 808.) They explain (at paras 8-004 – 8-005) that Rule 20(1) applies to both the direct and indirect enforcement of foreign laws of the type in question.
“Direct enforcement occurs where a foreign State or its nominee seeks to obtain money or property, or other relief, in reliance on the foreign rule in question.” (para 8-004)
“Indirect enforcement occurs where the foreign State (or its nominee) in form seeks a remedy, not based on the foreign rule in question, but which in substance is designed to give it extra-territorial effect; or where a private party raises a defence based on the foreign law in order to vindicate or assert the right of the foreign State.” (para 8-006)
However, the Rule does not prevent recognition of a foreign law of the type in question and where direct or indirect enforcement does not arise a foreign law of this type will be recognised if it is relevant to the issue and provided it is not contrary to public policy (paras 8-004, 8-011). The revenue rule is, furthermore, subject to exceptions where there exists a contrary agreement by treaty or convention and the editors note that substantial inroads have been made into the revenue rule by international agreement, for example international arrangements for mutual assistance in the collection of tax debts (paras 8-009, 8-012).
In Government of India v Taylor [1955] AC 491, where the Government of India sought to enforce in this jurisdiction an Indian tax debt, Lord Keith of Avonholm identified two possible rationales for the revenue rule. The first he described (at p 511) as follows:
“One explanation of the rule thus illustrated may be thought to be that enforcement of a claim for taxes is but an extension of the sovereign power which imposed the taxes, and that an assertion of sovereign authority by one State within the territory of another, as distinct from a patrimonial claim by a foreign sovereign, is (treaty or convention apart) contrary to all concepts of independent sovereignties.”
An alternative rationale, he considered, was to be found in the risk that the enforcement of such a foreign liability might be contrary to the public policy of this country and that for a domestic court to rule on such a foreign law might result in inter-State embarrassment. The former view is, in my view, to be preferred. Today courts in this jurisdiction frequently have to express critical views on the conduct of foreign countries or their public institutions, for example in deportation, asylum or extradition cases or in cases concerning forum non conveniens. (See the observations of Lord Sumption in Belhaj v Straw [2017] UKSC 3; [2017] AC 964, at para 241.) The risk of embarrassing the executive in the conduct of international relations does not, in my view, provide a satisfactory basis for the revenue rule. (I note, however, that the latter view, inspired by Judge Learned Hand in Moore v Mitchell, 30 F 2d 600, 604 (2d Cir 1929), (cited by Kingsmill Moore J in Peter Buchanan Ld v McVey [1955] AC 516 at p 528 and by Lord Keith in Government of India v Taylor [1955] AC 491 at p 511) still finds favour in the United States. See Attorney General of Canada v R J Reynolds 268 F 3d 103 (2d Cir 2001) per Judge Katzmann at pp 112-113; European Community v R J R Nabisco Inc (2005) 8 ITLR 323 per Judge Sotomayor at p 328, both considered below. Cf Banco Nacional de Cuba vSabbatino (1964) 376 US 398, 448 per White J dissenting on other grounds.) By contrast, the former view provides a principled basis which has found favour in the subsequent authorities in this jurisdiction (In re State of Norway’s Application (Nos 1 and 2) [1990] 1 AC 723 per Lord Goff at p 808; Webb v Webb [2020] UKPC 22 per Lord Kitchin at paras 32, 55) and among commentators (Dicey, Morris & Collins, para 8-002).
The competing submissions of the parties on this ground have focussed on the submission on behalf of the respondent that the authorities establish that the revenue rule applies only if the claim under consideration is one made directly or indirectly for the payment of tax which is due and that if no tax is due the claim cannot be within the revenue rule.
In this jurisdiction the revenue rule was applied in three first instance cases decided early in the twentieth century. In Municipal Council of Sydney v Bull [1909] 1 KB 7 Grantham J held inadmissible an action to enforce a liability under the law of New South Wales to contribute to municipal improvements on the basis that it was “in the nature of an action for a penalty or to recover a tax” (at p 12). In King of the Hellenes v Brostrom (1923) 16 LI L Rep 190 Rowlatt J held that “a foreign government cannot come here … and sue a person found in [this] jurisdiction for taxes levied and which he is declared to be liable to by the country to which he belongs” (at p 193). In In re Visser [1928] Ch 877, where the Queen of Holland sued the estate of a deceased Dutch national for unpaid succession duty, Tomlin J observed during the course of argument that the question was whether the English courts were to be “collectors of taxes” for foreign governments (at p 879) and concluded (at p 884):
“My own opinion is that there is a well-recognized rule, which has been enforced for at least 200 years or thereabouts, under which these courts will not collect the taxes of foreign States for the benefit of the sovereigns of those foreign States; and this is one of those actions which these courts will not entertain.”
In each case the formulation of the rule is consistent with the respondent’s submission, although the question as to the ambit of the rule was not in issue.
The same is true of Government of India v Taylor, the first authoritative statement of the principle by the House of Lords. Viscount Simonds described the issue as “whether there is a rule of law which precludes a foreign State from suing in England for taxes due under the law of that State” (at p 503). Referring to the three first instance decisions described above, he expressed his surprise that it should be suggested “that the courts of this country would and should entertain a suit by a foreign State to recover a tax” (at p 503). Lord Morton, Lord Reid and Lord Keith concurred with Viscount Simonds. Similarly, Lord Somervell in his speech identified the issue as “whether a foreign State can use the courts of this country for the collection of its taxes” (p 513). Once again, the formulation of the rule is consistent with the respondent’s submission, although the question as to the ambit of the rule was not directly in issue. Lord Pannick KC, on behalf of the respondent, has, however, drawn to our attention a concession in the argument of counsel for the respondent taxpayer in Government of India (at p 500) which he says is analogous to the present case:
“Penal, revenue and confiscatory laws deal with public claims by the sovereign and not private rights. The position would not be the same as the present if after the Indian Government had obtained possession of a taxpayer’s money it was stolen by a thief; the Government could sue to recover it in this country.”
In his speech in Government of India Lord Keith commended the judgment of Kingsmill Moore J in the High Court of Eire in Peter Buchanan Ld v McVey (21 July 1950) which is reported as a note to the decision of the House of Lords [1955] AC 516. Buchanan provides an example of an attempt indirectly to enforce a foreign revenue law. A tax debt was due to the Revenue from a Scottish company which had been asset stripped. The Revenue, the only creditor of the company, took steps to wind up the company, appoint a liquidator and recover the tax debt. The liquidator brought a claim in the Irish High Court against Mr McVey claiming an account as a director and also a claim for money had and received. Kingsmill Moore J held that Mr McVey’s whole object had been to defeat the tax claims of the Revenue. He concluded that the Irish court was not precluded from expressing an opinion on whether the arrangement in question operated as a fraud on the Revenue under Scots law or as to its validity under that law (at p 523). However, he went on to hold that, since the substance and natural effect of the liquidator’s claim was to recover a revenue debt, the claim was inadmissible. In coming to this conclusion he emphasised that:
“In every case the substance of the claim must be scrutinized, and if it then appears that it is really a suit brought for the purpose of collecting the debts of a foreign revenue it must be rejected.” (at p 529)
The question whether the exclusionary rule applies where the claim is not one made directly or indirectly for the payment of tax which is due was expressly considered by the House of Lords in Williams & HumbertLtd v W & H Trade Marks (Jersey) Ltd [1986] AC 368. For present purposes, it is not necessary to refer in any detail to the facts of that case which was concerned with the effect of Spanish expropriatory decrees. The defendants pleaded that the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief sought because the proceedings were an attempt to enforce a foreign law which was penal or which otherwise ought not to be enforced by the court. The decision is relevant because it was submitted in that case that Buchanan supported a general principle that even when an action is raised at the instance of a legal person distinct from the foreign government and even where the cause of action relied upon does not depend to any extent on the foreign law in question, nevertheless if the action is brought at the instigation of the foreign government and the proceeds of the action would be applied by the foreign government for the purposes of a penal, revenue or other public law of the foreign State relief cannot be given. (See Lord Mackay at p 440D-E).
In rejecting this submission, Lord Mackay, with whose speech Lords Scarman, Bridge and Brandon concurred, observed in relation to the facts of Buchanan:
“Most important there was an outstanding revenue claim in Scotland against the company which the whole proceeds of the action apart from the expenses of the action and the liquidation would be used to meet. No other interest was involved.” (at p 440F-G)
“Having regard to the questions before this House in Government of India v Taylor [1955] AC 491 I consider that it cannot be said that any approval was given by theHouse to the decision in the Buchanancase except to the extent that it held that thereis a rule of law which precludes a state from suing in another state for taxes due underthe law of the first state. No countenance was given in Government of India v Taylor,in Rossano’scase [1963] 2 QB 352 nor in Brokaw v Seatrain UK Ltd[1971] 2QB 476 to the suggestion that an action in this country could be properly describedas the indirect enforcement of a penal or revenue law in another country when noclaim under that law remained unsatisfied. The existence of such unsatisfied claim to the satisfaction of which the proceeds of the action will be applied appears to me tobe an essential feature of the principle enunciated in the Buchanan case [1955] AC516 for refusing to allow the action to succeed.”