TOO MUCH INFORMATION: WHEN THE UK
GETS IT WRONG
The constitutional fallout
of flawed UK decisions in the area of tax transparency
Filippo
Noseda
Two recent articles published in the Jersey and Guernsey Law Review revisited the Crown Dependencies’
evolving relationship with the UK Parliament following two Supreme Court
decisions in the long-running feud between the Barclay brothers and the Island
of Sark in the Bailiwick of Guernsey. Those articles look at the mechanisms for
the UK to impose its will on the Dependencies. But what if the UK gets it wrong
in an area of central importance for the Islands’ economy, such as
financial services? The first part of this article discusses recent UK
intervention in the Crown Dependencies’ affairs in the field of taxation.
It then highlights the flaws of the underlying UK policy decisions and asks
what the Crown Dependencies should do in these circumstances.
Recent work
1 Over the past two years, I have written a
number of articles on the Common Reporting Standard (“CRS”) and the
EU’s Registers of Beneficial Ownership in which I raised a number of
concerns on the compatibility of the proposed framework with existing human
rights and data protection laws. I was also able to elaborate my concerns
before the Council of Europe’s consultative committee for the protection
of data (“T-PD”) and the EU’s data protection working party
established under art 29 of the EU’s data protection directive to advise
the EU on data protection issues (“Article 29 Working Party” or “WP
29”).
2 That work culminated in December 2016 with a
strongly worded letter from the WP 29 to the OECD and the EU in which—
“the WP
29 reiterates its
strong concerns regarding the repercussions on fundamental rights of mechanisms
entailing major data processing and exchange operations such as those envisaged
by the CRS. In particular, the
WP 29 recommends that
the OECD . . . ensure that tax evasion is countered without hampering
individuals’ rights”.[2]
3 Shortly afterwards (on 2 February 2017),
the European Data Protection Supervisor (“EDPS”) issued an equally
strongly worded opinion on the proposed EU’s
public registers of beneficial ownership under the draft 5th EU anti-money-laundering
directive.[3] In
that opinion, the EDPS decried the unclear objectives pursued by the proposal
and, more generally, the invasive nature and lack of proportionality of the
proposed registers.[4]
The
importance of history
4 As a Swiss lawyer turned English solicitor
some 15 years ago, I have always been deeply fascinated by the Channel Islands’
unique constitutional position, an interest that I was able to feed thanks to
the copious material published by the Jersey
and Guernsey Law Review.[5]
5 At the beginning, as a novice and an
outsider, my interest was aroused by such pub quiz trivia as to whether the
Queen exerts her power qua English
sovereign or Duke of Normandy.[6] However, I
soon discovered that such questions were capable of influencing modern legal
history, as evidenced by the 1950s dispute between the UK and France over the
islets and rocks of the Ecrehos and the Minquiers groups (mainly, about fishing
rights).[7]
6 More recently, the relevance of history for
the outcome of a modern case was brought home to me by the long-running dispute
between the Barclay brothers and the government of Sark.[8] At one
point (when they were disputing Sark’s inheritance law of primogeniture),
the brothers claimed that the Island of Brecqhou may not be part of Sark at
all, because Brecqhou was not mentioned in Sark’s
earliest constitutional documents (including the letters patent issued by
Queen Elizabeth I in 1565 granting perpetual lease of the Island of Sark to the
first seigneur).
Keeping up with modernity
7 On the other hand, the
feud between the Barclay brothers and Sark is also a clear indication of the
need for local legal systems—no matter how old and steeped in history
they might be—to adapt to modernity. Indeed, the main tactic deployed by
the Barclay brothers has been to claim that the laws of Sark (in their existing
and reformed shape) were in breach of a number of fundamental rights enshrined
in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). These have been incorporated
in the domestic laws of the Channel Islands by the Human Rights (Jersey) Law
2000 and the Human Rights (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Law 2000 respectively. In a
nutshell, these laws (a) require all local legislation to be interpreted as far
as possible in a way which is compatible with the ECHR; and (b) require public
authorities not to act in any way which is not compatible with the ECHR.
The
deep reach of modernity—impact on constitutional relations
8 The relationship between
the Crown Dependencies and the UK is not immune from the clutches of modernity,
at least in the eyes of the judiciary. My reading of the recent articles on the
Barclay cases[9]
is that of a shift from the traditional orthodoxy of Parliamentary Supremacy
(espoused by the Royal Commission Report of 1973) to a more modern approach
based on consent on domestic matters, and consultation in international
matters.
9 From the uninformed
perspective of a practitioner of continental European origins (and putting
aside technicalities for a moment), the judicial approach taken by the highest
judges in the land (by which I mean the UK) reflects the predominant
post-colonial sentiment that permeates 21st century society.
10 Of course, the Crown Dependencies
have never been colonies—as Lady Hale succinctly pointed out in Barclay (No 2)[10]—and the relationship between the
Crown Dependencies and the UK has very different roots. However, to paraphrase
the House of Commons Justice Committee,[11]
in the absence of any “extreme
circumstances” or a “fundamental breakdown in public order or
endemic corruption” of the kind that led to direct rule in the Turks
& Caicos Islands in 2009,[12] it is difficult to envisage a situation
in which a modern government elected somewhere else can legitimately impose its
will on a separate territory without obtaining the consent of, or at the very
least consulting with, the local authorities.
11 It is therefore
unsurprising that illustrious authors writing for this review have already
downgraded the UK’s relationship with the Crown Dependencies as a matter
of “practical power”, i.e. not something that rests on a legitimate
source of law, but rather on the fact that the Crown acts on the advice of
ministers sitting in the UK cabinet.
12 One should be pleased
with the Supreme Court’s approach which is in line with modernity whilst
recognising the Crown Dependencies’ unique history.
Really?
13 In light of the most
recent case law, the approach taken by the UK government (as well as the
opposition) in relation to the whole business of tax transparency leaves one
speechless. The same applies to the reaction (or lack thereof) of the governments
of the Crown Dependencies.
14 It all started, of
course, with the “Panama Papers”, a scandal exploded at the
beginning of 2016 that reached the doorstep of Downing Street because of
allegations concerning the late father of the then Prime Minister, David
Cameron. It turned out that Mr Cameron did nothing wrong but in the
class-ridden society that is Britain, the accusation that the Prime Minister
might be “a bit of a rich toff” [13]
is an accusation that needs shaking off immediately. The extent of the crisis
for Mr Cameron’s reputation was exemplified by the Daily Mirror, who on 5 April 2016 ran a full-page cover story
entitled “Questions Cam must answer: so do you STILL have family money
stashed in a secret offshore tax haven, Prime Minister?”[14]
15 Even serious newspapers
questioned the Prime Minister’s stance on tax transparency. Thus, on 6
April 2016, the Financial Times ran a
first-page story entitled “David Cameron’s EU intervention on trust
set up tax loophole”[15]that
inferred that the then Prime Minister might have had something to gain from
allegedly pulling punches in relation to the registration of trusts. The Financial Times article referred to an
old (and very public)[16]
letter that the then UK Prime Minister sent to the President of the European
Council in relation to the proposed EU registers of beneficial ownership on the
basis that trusts were different from companies.[17]
The newspaper’s innuendo was abundantly clear—
“The
disclosure of the prime minister’s resistance to opening up trusts to
full scrutiny comes as he faces intense pressure to make clear whether his
family stands to benefit from offshore assets linked to his late father.”
Other serious newspapers and
news outlets in the UK ran similar stories[18],
adding to the pressure on Mr Cameron.
16 Smelling blood, the
leader of the opposition (Jeremy Corbyn) said that Mr Cameron “should
stop ‘pussyfooting’ on tax havens” and called for the
imposition of direct rule over the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories.[19]
17 Instead of reminding Mr
Corbyn of the modern approach to the issue of Parliament’s intervention
in the affairs of the Crown Dependencies, David Cameron used the pulpit of
Prime Minister’s Question Time (“PMQ”) to launch the
following message[20]—
“We
should bring some consensus to this issue. For years in this country, Labour
governments and Conservative governments had an attitude to the Crown Dependencies
and the Overseas Territories that their tax affairs were a matter for them and
their compliance affairs were a matter for them, and that their transparency
was a matter for them. This government has changed that! We got the Overseas
Territories, we got the Crown Dependencies round the table. We said you’ve
got to have registers of ownership, you’ve got to collaborate with the UK
government, you’ve got to make sure people don’t hide their taxes,
and it’s happening. So when he [Corbyn] gets to his feet he should
welcome the fact that huge progress has been made, raising taxes, sorting out
the Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies, closing the tax gap, getting
businesses to pay more, giving international leadership to this whole issue,
all of which has never happened under Labour.”
18 Compare and contrast
this language with that contained in the Barclay
(No 2) decision a year earlier and one wonders whether the UK’s
judiciary and the UK’s government live on the same constitutional planet.
However, when it comes to tax transparency, there is nothing like a good dose
of bullying to get things done, never mind the constitution.
Gunboat
diplomacy
19 Charged with saving the
then Prime Minister’s reputation at home, the UK government went on the offensive.
In the space of a single week, the UK government managed to strong-arm the
Crown Dependencies and a number of Overseas Territories into signing a series
of exchanges of notes in respect of the sharing of beneficial information.[21]
These exchanges of notes entered into effect on 13 April 2016, in time for PMQ,
thus enabling Mr Cameron to boast before a packed Parliament that he had “sorted
out” the Crown Dependencies and the Overseas Territories.
20 And what a splendid job
the UK government did in “getting the Crown Dependencies and the Overseas
Territories round the table”. Thus, the exchange of notes between the UK
and Jersey, which entered into force on 13 April 2016, provides inter alia that—
“6. The
Participants will hold adequate, accurate and current beneficial ownership
information for corporate and legal entities incorporated in their own
jurisdictions . . .
7. Law
enforcement authorities of the Participants will have the automatic right to
the provision of unrestricted and timely (where urgently required, within one
hour) beneficial ownership information held in the other jurisdiction for the
law enforcement purposes set out in Paragraph 2 above [that is, the prevention
and detection of corruption, money laundering, terrorism financing, financing
of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and other serious and
organised crime].
8. The
Participant in whose jurisdiction the requested beneficial ownership
information is held will be responsible for . . . ensuring that those
interested in or otherwise connected to the corporate and legal entities
concerned are not informed that a search is in progress or has been conducted.”
21 Readers
in the UK might be surprised to learn that Jersey has had a central register of
current beneficial ownership in relation to companies since 1989, long before
such a concept had been dreamed of in the UK, which provides a measure of the
debate between the UK and the Crown Dependencies. Incidentally, similar
considerations apply to some Overseas Territories.
22 The day after the
various exchanges of notes entered into force on 13 April 2016, George Osborne
penned a letter on behalf of the G-5[23]
addressed to the G-20 and the EU calling both for “collective action on
increasing beneficial ownership transparency” and—
“the
development of a system of interlinked registries containing full beneficial
ownership information and [a] mandate [to] the OECD, in cooperation with FATF,
to develop common international standards for these registries and their interlinking.”
23 The reply from the EU’s
Presidency arrived a few days later, in a letter to EU Member States dated 22
April 2016 from the incoming Dutch Presidency[24]—
“We
welcome the fact that all member states will enter into a pilot project for the
automatic exchange of information on ultimate beneficial owners. Furthermore
the Netherlands Presidency will take forward the work on the amendment to the
4th Anti-Money Laundering Directive which, as the Commission announced, will be
submitted to the European Parliament and the Council in June. We want to
advance on this legislative proposal as far as we can before we hand it over to
our Slovak colleagues who, as I understand, also see it as one of their
priorities.
Ministers are of the opinion that the upcoming revision should go beyond
amendments announced by the Commission in February, which are largely geared
towards tackling terrorist financing. We therefore invited the Commission to
consider improvements to address certain issues linked specifically to money
laundering, in particular to enhance accessibility of beneficial ownership
registers on corporate and other legal entities, as well as on trusts and
similar legal arrangements, to clarify the registration requirements for
trusts, to speed up the interconnection of national beneficial ownership
registers, promote automatic exchange of information on beneficial ownership
between authorities, and strengthen customer due diligence rules.”
24 Since then, the EU has
been locked in negotiations for the creation of fully public registers that
would also extend to trusts. The latest draft of the so-called 5th Anti-Money-Laundering
Directive was approved by the European Parliament on 28 February 2017 with the
following commentary[25]—
“EU
citizens could access registers of beneficial owners of companies without
having to demonstrate a ‘legitimate interest’, and trusts would
have to meet the same transparency requirements as firms, under amendments.”
25 Supporters of the UK’s
power to intervene in the Crown Dependencies’ affairs will no doubt feel
that the actions of the UK government in relation to the issue of transparency
were appropriate. Supporters may even argue that the imposition of the Common
Reporting Standard (CRS) and inter-linked registers holding beneficial
ownership falls in the category of “public interest” and “good
government” which are accepted grounds for the UK to impose its will on
the Dependencies. Supporters of UK interventionism will also point out the fact
that the Crown Dependencies were consulted on these issues, and that the
changes came about with their full consent, as evidenced by the exchanges of
notes.
26 In terms of
consultation and consent, it is noteworthy that the exchange of notes stand in
open contrast with previous pronouncements by local governments, see e.g. the polite rebuke from the Chief
Executive of Guernsey Finance[26] to
another letter from David Cameron on beneficial ownership which was sent to all
British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies on 25 April 2014[27]—
“Guernsey
is ahead of the curve and we look forward to other jurisdictions stepping up to
the mark so that we can help create a level playing field on beneficial
ownership. Whether that will include a truly public register remains to be seen
given the significant implications, for example in respect of data privacy and
human rights as well as the potential negative impact on inward investment for
any jurisdictions which adopt measures that are not global in reach.”
27 One can only speculate
as to what led the Crown Dependencies to waive their concerns and bend to the
will of the UK government, although the EU presidency’s reply to Mr
Osborne’s letter on beneficial ownership registers may provide some
useful clues—
“It
emerged from the discussion that ministers support the establishment of an EU
list of noncooperative jurisdictions and coordinated defensive measures to be
defined by the Council, working closely and in parallel with the OECD to draw
the international criteria in this area. The Presidency aims for consensus on
the method for setting up such listing and will propose conclusions to be
adopted at the May Ecofin.”
What if
the UK gets it wrong?
28 Diplomacy is the art of
persuasion and if “gentle massaging” is what it takes for the UK to
impose its will on the Crown Dependencies whilst staying within the
constitutional parameters laid out in the Barclay
cases, then what is the problem?
29 The answer may depend on
whether policies pursued by the UK in its interaction with the
Crown Dependencies are clearly flawed. Consider this. Ever since the Conseil Constitutionnel (the highest
constitutional authority in France) declared (a few months after David Cameron’s
well-documented change of direction) that a public trust register introduced in
2013 violated the legitimate right to privacy of citizens,[28]
the 5th EU anti-money-laundering directive has been in disarray.
On
the issue of public registers
30 As mentioned above, the
European Data Protection Supervisor issued an opinion as recently as 2 February
2017[29] in
which it criticised the lack of clarity on the nature of the public objective
being pursued and “a lack of proportionality, with significant and
unnecessary risks for the individual rights to privacy and data protection”.
Interestingly, this opinion was published before the European Parliament voted
for a wider access to public registers (this happened on 28 February), showing
a clear disdain for, or sheer ignorance of, data protection issues.
31 I have seen the minutes of a
meeting between the European Commission, the European Parliament and the
European Council dated 21 March 2017 in which—
“The
Commission pointed to the need to avoid that the Directive be annulled by the
ECJ should a case be brought to the court on grounds of non-respect of the data
protection principles.”
32 And
in a strongly worded note dated 17 March 2017, a copy of which I have also
seen, the Commission went further and stated that—
“The
Commission cannot, at
this stage, accept the amendments proposing wider transparency and access to
the beneficial ownership registers without a prior analysis of the
proportionality and necessity of such extension, as well as its impact on
fundamental rights and data protection.”
33 The
exchange of notes between the UK and the Crown Dependencies stops short of
introducing a system of wholly public registers. Therefore, some of the
concerns that attach to the EU registers of beneficial ownership do not apply
to the system introduced by the Crown Dependencies at the behest of the UK.
However, it is quite clear that the notes raise complex legal issues, not only
in relation to data protection, but also in relation to fair trial—e.g. because of the prohibition to
inform the party subject to the request or the speed of the exchange of
information procedure (possibly as short as an hour!) which makes it arduous or
even practically impossible to carry out a proper review of the request to
ensure that it meets the statutory requirements.
34 Contrast
this approach with the procedure contained in the various Tax Information
Exchange Agreements (“TIEAs”)[30]
which have already been the subject-matter of court proceedings in Jersey,[31] but also
in the Cayman Islands[32] and
Bermuda.[33] Those
proceedings raised complex legal issues, including the interaction of
information requests with fundamental human rights. Thus, for example, in the
Cayman case mentioned above,[34] the Court
of Appeal pointed out that in the light of the Cayman Islands Bill of Rights,
the court should apply “a more anxious level of scrutiny and standard of
review, just as the Human Rights Act influenced the approach adopted by the
Courts in England and Wales”.
35 Speaking of the Human
Rights Act, it is common knowledge that the current UK Prime Minister has
indicated on several occasions her intention to denounce the European
Convention on Human Rights.[35] The
potential repercussions for the Crown Dependencies should not be underestimated
and were aptly discussed in a previous article in this Review.[36] In
any event, the unilateral introduction, by the UK, of a public register of “Persons
with Significant Control” (“PSC”) is a clear indication of
the diverging path taken by the UK and the rest of Europe (including the Crown
Dependencies), when it comes to human rights and data protection. This does not
appear to be an isolated case, as the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism
Legislation pointed out in a recent report prepared by the UK Parliament Joint
Human Rights Committee in relation to the new Investigatory Powers Bill (now
the Investigatory Powers Act 2016)[37]—
“I
think we are right to be concerned that there are differences in the way our
judges look at [security] issues. On the retention of DNA . . . for
example, all our judges in three courts . . . said that it was fine
to retain indefinitely the data of people who had been arrested but not
charged. Seventeen judges in Strasbourg to nil took the opposite view, and
there are judges from Germany and countries of Eastern Europe who had a rather
different experience in the 20th century and who are more privacy-minded and
less inclined to tolerate these powers than people are here. I hope we are not
heading for a bust-up on that, but from the lawyers’ point of view that
remains a major issue.”
36 It follows from the
above that there is an abundance of evidence that the UK did not get the
balance right in relation to public registers or the protection of confidentiality
more generally. Worse still, the evidence indicates very clearly that the UK
government changed its approach in relation to the registration of trusts as a
result of domestic politics (notably
the need to extricate the then UK Prime Minister Cameron from a great deal of
embarrassment following personal revelations in the midst of the “Panama
Papers” scandal and the EU referendum campaign).
Common Reporting Standard—what if the UK got
it wrong here too?
37 The UK has been a
champion of tax information exchange ever since the G-20 organised in 2009 by
the then UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Those were difficult days for the
world economy and the heads of state of the world’s biggest economies
flocked to London to resolve the crisis ignited by the “credit crunch”.
Unsurprisingly, the final communiqué contained very strong messages
aimed at restoring confidence, as well as refilling depleted treasury coffers
following a prolonged period of “quantitative easing”[38]—
“13 Major
failures in the financial sector and in financial regulation and supervision
were fundamental causes of the crisis. Confidence will not be restored until we
rebuild trust in our financial system . . .
15 To
this end we are implementing the Action Plan agreed at our last meeting . . .
In particular we agree . . . to take action against non-cooperative
jurisdictions, including tax havens. We stand ready to deploy sanctions to
protect our public finances and financial systems. The era of banking secrecy
is over. We note that the OECD has today published a list of countries assessed
by the Global Forum against the international standard for exchange of tax
information.”
38 I have written a number
of technical articles that show the deficiencies of the Common Reporting
Standard developed by the OECD.[39]
Whilst the policy objective (the fight against tax evasion) is to be applauded,
the mechanics of achieving information exchange raise serious questions
concerning the proportionality of the CRS and, therefore, its compatibility
with art 8(2) of the ECHR, which provides clear requirements for, and
limitations to, the intrusion in any individual’s private sphere (italics
mine):
“There
shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of the [right
to respect for private and family life] except such as is in accordance with
the law and is necessary in a
democratic society . . . for the prevention of disorder or crime
. . .”
39 There are many issues
relating to the proportionality of the CRS, which include the disclosure of the
identity of settlors (in many countries, trusts are taxed as separate tax
subjects), protectors (irrelevant for the tax treatment of trusts in many
countries), beneficiaries of discretionary trusts (clearly covered by the
definition of “Controlling Persons” and “Equity Interest”
holders, although in its commentary the OECD provides for a let out in certain
circumstances) and charities.
40 The privacy and data
protection concerns connected with the CRS have been highlighted by a number of
European data protection authorities, including the EDPS, the Council of Europe’s
T-PD and the WP29. In particular, the EDPS[40]
lamented that—
“the
exchange of information on a certain number of accounts on an annual basis
confirms our view that the information exchange is independent of the detection
of any actual risk of tax evasion, thus questioning the proportionality of the
measure itself. On the other hand, we note that nothing is said of what happens
once tax information is collected and exchanged, namely there is no mention of
any retention period.”
41 More recently, the WP
29 reiterated—
“its
strong concerns regarding the repercussions on fundamental rights of mechanisms
entailing major data processing and exchange operations such as those envisaged
by the CRS.”[41]
When the UK gets it wrong, the Crown
Dependencies should stand their ground.
42 There is no doubt that
the Crown Dependencies have been subjected to a great deal of pressure by the
UK to ensure that they comply with the will of the UK government. However, a
careful analysis of the underlying issues shows that the UK government was
pursuing its own interests, based on
a domestic agenda and the personal problems of its leaders.
Strictly from a legal perspective, there is an abundance of evidence to support
the contention that the UK government got it wrong both in relation to public
registers and the mechanics of the automatic exchange of information.
43 Far from serving a “public
interest” or ensuring “peace, order and good governance”, the
UK government has shown a disdain for the constitutional position of the Crown
Dependencies. Disparaging remarks used by a UK Prime Minister to appease his
domestic audience (“sorting out the Crown Dependencies” and “getting
them round the table”) are at odds with the restraint advocated by
constitutional experts from the publication of the Kilbrandon Report in 1973
all the way to the Supreme Court’s judgment in the Barclay cases.[42]
44 UK governments that
wish to pay no attention to the wider constitutional context in their dealings
with the Crown Dependencies do so at their own peril, especially as Channel
Islands ponder their future after Brexit. By the same token, the evolving
nature of the constitutional relationship between the Crown Dependencies and
the UK is likely to affect the approach of local politicians in the Channel
Islands, who should not feel exposed to the whims of the UK government.
Instead, the Barclay cases remind us
that the assertion of the UK’s will over the Crown Dependencies is
subject to a number of requirements in constant evolution, and that UK
governments should work hard in order to obtain the consent required to extend
the UK’s practical power over the Crown Dependencies. This also means
that local politicians should feel emboldened to adopt a firmer stance in their
dealings with their UK counterparts when there is strong evidence suggesting
that Whitehall and Downing Street got it wrong. In the area of tax
transparency, the same applies to the OECD, which, it would now seem, does not
have the gift of infallibility.
Filippo
Noseda is Joint Head of the Private Client and Tax Department at Withers LLP in
London. Any views expressed herein are the author’s personal views.