On appeal from: [2010] EWCA Civ 1480

The Supreme Court has unanimously allowed this long-awaited appeal arising in the course of long-running proceedings known as the Franked Investment Income (“FII”) Group Litigation. The FII Group Litigation brings together many claims concerning the way in which advance corporation tax and corporation tax used to be charged on dividends received by UK-resident companies from non-resident subsidiaries. The respondents to this appeal are claimants within the FII Group Litigation whose cases have been selected to proceed as test claims on certain common issues (“the Test Claimants”). These issues are being determined in phases, with the courts’ decisions affecting not just the other claims within the FII Group Litigation, but potentially also a number of other sets of proceedings brought by corporate taxpayers against the appellant, the Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (“HMRC”).

The respondents’ case is that the differences between their tax treatment and that of wholly UK-resident groups of companies breached the EU Treaty provisions which guarantee freedom of establishment and free movement of capital. They seek repayment by the appellant of the tax wrongly paid, together with interest, dating back to the UK’s entry to the EU in 1973.

Restitutionary claims for the recovery of money must normally be brought within six years from the date on which the money was paid. As an exception to that general rule, section 32(1)(c) of the Limitation Act 1980 provides that, in respect of an “action for relief from the consequences of a mistake”, the limitation period only begins to run when the claimant “has discovered the … mistake … or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it.”

Before the Court of Appeal, the respondents argued that, where a claimant is seeking to recover money paid under a mistake of law, the effect of section 32(1)(c) is to postpone the commencement of the limitation period until such time as the true state of the law is established by a judicial decision from which there lies no right of appeal. In their cases, the respondents said that this was when, in 2006, the Court of Justice of the European Union decided that relevant aspects of the UK tax regime were incompatible with EU law. The appellant argued that time instead began to run in 2001, when the Court of Justice decided that other aspects of the UK tax regime breached EU law. The Court of Appeal found in favour of the respondents on this issue.

On appeal to the Supreme Court, the appellant argued that section 32(1)(c) of the Limitation Act 1980 applies only to mistakes of fact and not to mistakes of law, or alternatively that the respondents could reasonably have discovered their mistake more than six years before they issued their claims in 2003. On either approach, a proportion of the claims would be time-barred.

The Supreme Court unanimously allowed the appeal, but for differing reasons. The majority (Lord Reed, Lord Hodge, Lord Lloyd-Jones and Lord Hamblen) held that section 32(1)(c) of the Limitation Act 1980 applies to claims for the restitution of money paid under a mistake of law, with time beginning to run when the claimant discovers or could with reasonable diligence have discovered their mistake in the sense of recognising that they have a worthwhile claim. It leaves the application of that test to the facts of this case for the High Court, after the parties have had an opportunity to amend their pleadings. The minority (Lord Carnwath, Lord Briggs and Lord Sales) would have held that section 32(1)(c) has no application to mistakes of law.

Lord Reed and Lord Hodge gave the main judgment, with which Lord Lloyd-Jones and Lord Hamblen agreed. Lord Briggs and Lord Sales gave a partially dissenting judgment, with which Lord Carnwath agreed.

Should the appellant be allowed to argue that section 32(1)(c) does not apply to mistakes of law?

The Court rejects the respondents’ various objections to the appellant arguing at this stage of the proceedings that section 32(1)(c) of the Limitation Act 1980 does not apply to mistakes of law.

“Cause of action estoppel” is a legal doctrine which stops a party from raising points which might have been but were not raised and decided in earlier proceedings. As it operates only to prevent the raising of points which were essential to the existence or non-existence of a cause of action, and the effect of limitation instead is to render an otherwise valid claim unenforceable, this doctrine does not prevent the appellant from making their current challenge.

“Issue estoppel” is a related legal doctrine which stops a party from raising points which were not raised in earlier proceedings or were raised unsuccessfully. As the question of when the limitation period commenced was not argued or determined in the first phase of the FII Group Litigation, and as it would not have been possible for the appellant to make their current limitation challenge before the lower courts, this doctrine does not prevent the appellant from making that challenge now.

Further, the appellant’s challenge does not amount to an abuse of process, when seen in the context of group litigation which raises novel issues of unparalleled complexity, and which was the subject of case management decisions as to the order in which these issues were to be addressed. It is readily understandable why in the first phase of the litigation the appellant focused on arguments which, if successful, would have made it unnecessary to mount this wider challenge.

On the basis of those factors, as well as the substantial value of the claims, the importance of the issue to other claimants both within and outside the FII Group Litigation, and the potential to remedy any prejudice through an order for costs, the Supreme Court allows the appellant to withdraw their concession that section 32(1)(c) applies to mistakes of law, and now to make the contrary case. That case places in question two of the most important decisions on the law of limitation of recent times: Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group Plc v Inland Revenue Comrs [2006] UKHL 49 (“Deutsche Morgan Grenfell”) and Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council [1999] 2 AC 349 (“Kleinwort Benson”).

What is the test for the discoverability of a mistake under section 32(1)(c)?

In Deutsche Morgan Grenfell, the House of Lords tied the date of discoverability of a mistake of law to the date when “the truth” as to whether the claimant has a well-founded cause of action is established by a decision of a court of final jurisdiction. Section 32(1)(c) cannot be intended to have that effect, as limitation periods apply regardless of whether the substance of the claim is disputed, and regardless of whether there is in truth a well-founded cause of action. Such an approach also has the illogical consequence that mistakes are not discoverable by a claimant until after he has issued a claim on the basis of the mistake, and perpetuates the problems associated with distinguishing between matters of fact and matters of law.

Given those very unfortunate consequences, for which there is currently no prospect of Parliament enacting a legislative solution, it is appropriate for the Supreme Court to depart from the decision in Deutsche Morgan Grenfell in relation to discoverability. The correct approach is that time begins to run under section 32(1)(c) when the claimant discovers, or could with reasonable diligence discover, his mistake in the sense of recognising that a worthwhile claim arises. That approach brings section 32(1)(c) into line with section 32(1)(a), and with other analogous provisions of the 1980 Act.

Does section 32(1)(c) apply to mistakes of law?

Section 32(1)(c) applies to mistakes of law, as the House of Lords decided in Kleinwort Benson. Although that decision was not supported by convincing reasoning, and although when section 32(1)(c) was enacted it was not contemplated that it might extend to actions for the restitution of money paid under a mistake of law, the ordinary meaning of the words of that provision include such actions. Excluding claims based on a mistake of law would frustrate the purpose of section 32(1)(c), which is to relieve claimants from the necessity of complying with a time limit at a time when they cannot reasonably be expected to do so. Including such claims does not have unacceptable consequences for legal certainty, particularly now that the approach to discoverability in Deutsche Morgan Grenfell is departed from.

How should the test for discoverability of a mistake under section 32(1)(c) be applied to the facts of this case?

The Court of Appeal applied the approach to discoverability wrongly established in Deutsche Morgan Grenfell, such that the appellant’s appeal must be allowed. The Supreme Court cannot, however, determine in the abstract the point in time when the respondents could with reasonable diligence have discovered their mistake. That question is left for the High Court to determine, after the parties have had an opportunity to amend their pleadings.

For judgment, please see: Judgment

For press summary, please see: Press Summary

 

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27 Jun 2019 Morning session

 

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18 Feb 2020 Morning session Afternoon session
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