The UN Convention on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration (the “Mauritius Convention on Transparency”) gained its first seven signatories at a ceremony in Port Louis, Mauritius on 17 March 2015.
The Convention’s purpose is to broaden the use of the new UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration. These Rules are designed to provide a high level of transparency and public accessibility in investor-state disputes.
Under their own terms, these Rules apply only to UNCITRAL arbitrations that arise out of treaties “concluded” (i.e., typically, signed) after 1 April 2014. As the vastly greater proportion of the roughly 3,000 investment treaties currently in force were concluded prior to this date, the Transparency Rules will be of extremely limited application for a very long time unless either the state parties to treaties or the parties to individual disputes adopt additional instruments to apply them.
The Mauritius Convention is an important means to expand the use of the Rules to treaties initiated under this enormous raft of pre–Transparency Rules treaties. It provides a simple mechanism to apply the Transparency Rules to any investor-State arbitration, whether or not initiated under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, in which both the investor’s “Home State” and the Respondent “Host State” are parties to the Convention. The Convention allows state parties who do so to make a limited number of reservations, excluding the application of the Transparency Rules to disputes arising out of certain particular investment treaties, or to all arbitrations under a particular set of Rules, or to any arbitration in which that state is the Respondent state.
The Convention was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly last December (2014). Its first seven signatories are Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Mauritius, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. However, it has not yet entered into force. This will first happen six months after the date that the first three signatories have deposited their instruments of ratification at the UN in New York.
Here is a copy of the URL of the official text of the treaty: Official UN text of Treaty
On 12 March 2015 the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) held a rare open hearing to consider any remedies it should provide on the hypothetical possibility that UK intelligence agencies had unlawfully intercepted privileged communication between Libyan nationals and their lawyers.
The details and outcome of the hearing have not yet been made available. The IPT’s Order of 26 February 2015 states as follows:
The pleas in law of DenizBank in its annulment application against the sanctions in view of Russia’s actions in Ukraine have been published in the OJ on 16 March 2015.
What is unique about the pleas is that they allege a breach of the Ankara Agreement between the EU and Turkey, which aims towards the accession of Turkey to the EU (Agreement Establishing an Association between the European Economic Community and Turkey and the Additional Protocol).
The annulment action refers to Council Decision 2014/659/CFSP and Council Regulation (EU) No 960/2014 (both of 8 September 2014). The details of the pleas in law are as follows:
Case T-798/14 DenizBank v Council, action brought on 5 December 2014
On 5 March 2015 the CJEU handed down its judgment in EIH v Council. This was an appeal brought by Europäisch-Iranische Handelsbank (EIH) against the General Court’s refusal to remove it from the list of sanctions against Iran. The CJEU rejected the appeal.
EIH had been listed on grounds of assisting Iranian banks with alternative options for completing transactions disrupted by EU sanctions, and had its assets frozen.
The most interesting part of the judgment concerns the validity of general licences in the context of exceptions to sanctions, and highlights the need to exercise caution in relying on such licences in circumstances where the relevant legal instruments mandate obtaining specific licences before engaging in otherwise prohibited acts.
The main findings of the CJEU were as follows:
Case C‑585/13 P Europäisch-Iranische Handelsbank v Council, 5 March 2015
On 5 March 2015 the CJEU handed down its judgment in the appeal brought by Ezz following the General Court’s refusal to annul his sanctions listing.
Ezz and three of his wives were listed on the following grounds: “[p]erson subject to judicial proceedings by the Egyptian authorities in respect of the misappropriation of State Funds on the basis of the United Nations Convention against corruption”.
The main findings of the CJEU were as follows:
Last year the Office of Tax Simplification was commissioned by the Government to produce a report on employment status. The OTS’s terms of reference commissioned it “to examine the dividing line between employment and self-employment and whether it is drawn in the right place and in the right way”. These terms of reference also expressly instructed the OTS not to consider IR35, the construction industry scheme and the expenses rules for employed and self-employed people. The OTS report has just been published (see link below).
The report contains a range of simplification proposals, but is expressed to be a part of a “long range project”. The report does not purport to suggest a “solution” to the employment status issue. The OTS recognises that the report will be something for Treasury Ministers in the next Government. However, the authors of the report anticipate an immediate reaction in next week’s Budget.
The report recognises that an individual’s status as an employee or not is something that affects issues beyond tax such as employee rights, national minimum wage, benefits and credits and pensions auto-enrolment. Indeed, the report recognises that it is often the potential employer that is most interested in knowing the answer; employee or not.
The key recommendations of the report are:
This is the last formal project of the OTS in its current form, and it will be interesting to see if and how the report is picked up in next week’s Budget. However, in his Foreword to the report, John Whiting, Tax Director of the OTS, does say that the OTS hopes to participate in a conference in the summer on the issues raised in the report.
On 6 March 2015 Switzerland updated the measures that it introduced to prevent circumvention of international sanctions against Russia. At present the Ordinance is only available in the official languages of the Swiss Confederation (see here for the German and French versions), although a press release is available in English (see link below). The amendment came into force on 6 March 2015 at 18:00.
In brief:
The Finance Act 2014 (High Risk Promoters Prescribed Information) Regulations 2015, which come into force on 27 March 2015, were laid before the House of Commons on 6 March 2015. These Regulations implement certain aspects of the regime created by Part 5 of the Finance Act 2015 applying enhanced disclosure obligations to certain promoters of tax avoidance schemes, as well as their intermediaries and clients.
The Regulations prescribe:
A technical consultation on this instrument ran from 16 December 2014 under 27 January 2015. Taking account of comments received, the conditions in the final version for producing copies of documents now make it clear that it is permissible to redact copies of documents where necessary to preserve legal professional privilege. See paragraph (3) of Regulation 11.
HMRC issued a press release publicising these Regulations on 7 March 2015. According to the press release, HMRC has already written to a number of promoters warning them of the consequences if they do not change their behaviour and has also sent the first Conduct Notice to a promoter. Promoters who fail to comply with the terms of a Conduct Notice can be issued with a “Monitoring Notice”. As “monitored promoters” they then fall within the terms of these Regulations.
The Finance Act 2014 (High Risk Promoters Prescribed Information) Regulations 2015
On 4 March 2015 the Court of Appeal handed down judgment in R (Ingenious Media Holdings plc) v HMRC. Sir Robin Jacob delivered the judgment of the court. This was an appeal from Sales J’s judgment in this matter.
Ingenious Media Holdings plc (“Ingenious”) and its subsidiaries conducted, inter alia, a business of promoting investment schemes in the form of partnerships intended to allow participating taxpayers to take advantage of certain tax reliefs and exceptions associated with films. HMRC maintain that all or most of these film schemes are ineffective for tax purposes, a matter that is currently being litigated. This case concerned statements made by HMRC’s then Permanent Secretary for Tax, Dave Hartnett, to two Times journalists in what Mr. Hartnett thought was an off-the-record briefing on tax avoidance schemes. The disclosure made to the journalists was that HMRC did not accept that the Appellants’ film schemes generated the tax reliefs claimed and that HMRC was going to challenge their validity. Mr. Hartnett acknowledged that he was aware of Patrick McKenna, the founder of Ingenious. Mr. Hartnett said that he thought that HMRC would be ultimately successful in defeating film schemes. This was information of HMRC’s own creation, not information given to it by taxpayers or by the Appellants in this case. Following the disclosure, various comments made by Mr. Hartnett were published in The Times, albeit attributed only to a “senior Revenue official”, in apparent breach of Mr. Hartnett’s understanding that they would not be published at all.
In brief, the Court of Appeal has held that:
R (Ingenious Media Holdings plc) v HMRC [2015] EWCA Civ 173, 4 March 2015
On 27 February 2015 the Court of Appeal held that it had jurisdiction to order a beneficiary under a discretionary trust to disclose details of the trust.
The court also dismissed the claimant liquidator’s appeal against an unlimited sum cross-undertaking in damages, but allowed the liquidator to appeal against the fortification of the cross-undertaking.
The case concerned a freezing order under which the defendant had to inform the claimants of his assets. The defendant disclosed that he was a discretionary beneficiary under certain named trusts, but did not give further details of the trusts. The defendant applied for an order discharging the freezing order unless the claimants gave an unlimited cross-undertaking fortified by an appropriate payment into a bank account in England to be held to the order of the court.
The Court of Appeal held as follows: