Particulars 1-34B and 34H-39 (Establishment and Promotion of the Bank)
13 The relevant particulars are as follows:
14 These particulars contain a series of allegations about the establishment of the Bank, first in St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) (particular 1) and then in Puerto Rico (particulars 24-25), the manner in which the Bank's services were promoted (particulars 10-10A, 28-37A), and Mr Schiff's personal views on taxation (particulars 38-38J).
15 The applicant first criticises these particulars for not identifying Mr Schiff's precise role within the Bank. The applicant refers to particular 3 where it is alleged that Mr Schiff has at all times been a "person responsible for the management and administration of the bank, and, with others, has directed and controlled the bank". The submission is made that these particulars do not specify the nature or extent of Mr Schiff's responsibilities, or his relationship with the others who direct and control the Bank and the division of responsibilities between them. The applicant submits that the problem occurs again at particular 10(a), where it is alleged that the Bank represented that "the bank was founded by Schiff, and its structure and benefits were attributable in part to Schiff's input as a founder". It is submitted that this allegation begs questions as to the nature and extent of Mr Schiff's input and which specific part of the structure and benefits of the Bank were attributable to his input.
16 While I accept that there is a degree of imprecision in relation to those matters, in my opinion these particulars are sufficiently specific and precise to enable the applicant to know the case he is required to meet. It is to be noted that particular 2 refers to Mr Schiff as the founder of the Bank and, at all material times, having been a director and a shareholder with a controlling interest. In addition, particular 36 states that Mr Schiff "has represented to the world at large that he was the founder of the bank, that he holds a controlling interest in the bank, and that he controls and runs the bank, and that he makes decisions regarding the bank's operations". It is sufficiently clear that the respondents will contend at the trial that Mr Schiff ultimately controls the decision making of the Bank. It should be noted, however, that the particulars do not suggest that Mr Schiff was engaged in every operational matter concerning the Bank's day-to-day administration, or that he was familiar with any of its customers or with the Bank's processes for accepting customers.
17 The applicant next draws attention to the emphasis placed by the particulars on the assertion that SVG and Puerto Rico are jurisdictions with "a relatively lenient framework of laws and regulations governing financial institutions by global standards": particulars 5, 19-21. From this, the applicant submits, the respondents invite the following inferences:
(a) That an actuating purpose of Mr Schiff in establishing the Bank in SVG was to promote the products and services of the Bank "to persons who wish to maintain privacy over their financial account information from the government and agencies responsible for enforcing tax avoidance and anti-money laundering laws and regulations": particular 13;
(b) That Mr Schiff intended to attract business from those who wish to maintain privacy over their financial account information: particulars 14 and 33;
(c) That Mr Schiff "knew that those persons would include tax evaders and other criminals seeking to take advantage of the fact that the bank was not subject to tax reporting obligations": particulars 14 and 33;
(d) That an actuating purpose of Mr Schiff in moving the Bank from SVG to Puerto Rico was to help customers maintain privacy over their financial account information and to avoid disclosure obligations to regulatory authorities: particular 27; and
(e) That Mr Schiff "knew or ought to have known that, by moving the bank's operations to Puerto Rico, he would facilitate the use of the bank by customers involved in illegally evading tax": particular 27.
I note at this point that Senior Counsel for the respondent in the course of his oral submissions did not press the words "ought to have known" in particular 27.
18 The applicant submits that the foundation for these inferences is, in substance, simply the fact that Mr Schiff chose to establish the Bank in jurisdictions which may have been perceived as having a favourable regulatory environment from the perspective of privacy. That is, the applicant submits, Mr Schiff is said to have taken advantage of benefits which were legitimately available under the laws of those jurisdictions. The respondent says that the foundation for those inferences is more than the establishment of the Bank in tax havens, and also includes the promotion of the features of banking in those jurisdictions, which features would be attractive to customers looking to cheat tax and use the Bank as a vehicle to commit crimes, being features which were promoted by the Bank: particulars 10, 10A, 31, 31A, and 32.
19 In my opinion, even taking into account the respondents' submission as to a broader basis for those inferences, the applicant is correct in his submission that these particulars do not suggest that the benefits which Mr Schiff is alleged to have taken advantage of were not lawfully available under the laws of the relevant jurisdictions, namely SVG and Puerto Rico. The question then arises, taking the particulars at their highest, whether it should be inferred that Mr Schiff knew that the Bank's customers would include tax evaders and other criminals (particulars 14 and 33) and that Mr Schiff knew that by moving the Bank's operations to Puerto Rico, he would facilitate the use of the Bank by customers involved in illegally evading tax (particular 27). The knowledge alleged in paragraphs 14 and 33 is said to arise from particulars 2 and 3 (ie Schiff's direction and control of the Bank) and the statements made by Schiff particularised in paragraphs 38A to 38J (ie promoting tax avoidance). I read the latter references as also being intended to refer to particular 38, although that is not expressly stated. The knowledge alleged in particular 27 is said to be based on the reason for moving the Bank from SVG to Puerto Rico being avoidance of reporting obligations under the CRS. While I accept that the particulars would provide a basis for an allegation that Mr Schiff should have been aware that tax evaders might be amongst the customers, or that he could facilitate tax evasion by establishing the Bank in those jurisdictions, I do not regard the particulars as providing a basis for alleging that Mr Schiff actually knew that those things would in fact occur; that is, as a matter of probability. That strikes me as a substantially different matter from the question of mere possibilities of what might occur, and would require more by way of factual basis than is currently provided in the particulars.
20 That point became starker during oral argument in which Senior Counsel for the respondents stated repeatedly that the respondents' case was that Mr Schiff knew that it was "inevitable" that a sub-set of the Bank's customers would be tax evaders and other criminals: T47.10-48.40; T50.25-51.2; T51.47-52.5; T55.43-45; and T117.2-9. The word "inevitable" does not appear in any of particulars 14, 27 and 33, but if that is the allegation then the particulars must allege facts which demonstrate that inevitability. As presently formulated, the particulars fall short of that demanding contention.
21 I should note that the applicant also makes the criticism that the particulars do not demonstrate that the only relevant benefit conferred by the applicable jurisdictions was avoidance of tax reporting obligations, and that the particulars failed to exclude the possibility that there was some other reason for incorporating the Bank in those jurisdictions, such as lower tax rates or reduced compliance costs. I do not regard that as a valid objection. The particulars do amount to an allegation as to a substantial purpose of Mr Schiff, which I regard as sufficient.
22 The final criticism made by the applicant concerning these particulars relates to the public statements by Mr Schiff in which he is said to have expressed views antipathetic to the legitimacy of taxation (particulars 38-38J), which then culminate in an inference expressed in particular 39 that it may reasonably be concluded that:
(a) Schiff endorses, permits and condones avoidance of the payment of tax;
(b) Schiff, at all material times, has known that the Bank provides a vehicle for its customers to illegally avoid the payment of tax, with minimal risk of enforcement action.
The applicant contends that those serious allegations do not follow from the basis set out in the particulars. Whether Mr Schiff has expressed political views antipathetic to taxation does not support an assertion that he in fact endorses, permits and condones the illegal avoidance of tax in practice, or that he knows as a fact that this occurs through the medium of his bank.
23 In my opinion, that submission is well founded. None of the statements in particulars 38-38J condone or encourage illegal conduct, as distinct from the lawful minimisation of tax liabilities, together with some political views (such as those in sub-paragraphs 38(a) and (d)) which would widely be regarded as idiosyncratic, extreme and possibly irrational. The way in which particular 39 is expressed is infelicitous, in that tax avoidance is ordinarily understood to refer to transactions which comply with the letter of the relevant revenue law, whereas tax evasion is ordinarily understood to refer to the illegal non-payment of tax. Paragraph 39(a) thus alleges no more than that Schiff encourages the lawful minimisation of tax, and paragraph 39(b) is internally contradictory in alleging the illegal minimisation of tax permitted by the letter of the law. That is a matter of expression in particular 39 which might readily be cured. However, the real problem with particular 39 is more fundamental and concerns the inadequacy of the matters particularised at 38-38J to support the inference which is alleged in particular 39(b). In saying that, I have taken into account the principle referred to above that the cumulative effect of the particulars must be considered. I have also taken into account that the word "foregoing" at the beginning of particular 39 may be intended to refer to everything alleged in particulars 1-38J, although that literal meaning is not clear from the context.