[2011] UKFTT 523 (TC)
TC01370
Appeal number
TC/2011/03020
VALUE
ADDED TAX – Default surcharge – Payment received just two days late – HMRC’s
inability to accept faster payments – Whether reasonable excuse – No - Whether
15% scale charge disproportionate – No - Appeal dismissed.
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
POUND
ROAD STORES LIMITED Appellant
-
and -
THE
COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY’S
REVENUE
AND CUSTOMS Respondents
TRIBUNAL: JOHN BROOKS (TRIBUNAL JUDGE)
CHRISTOPHER
JENKINS (MEMBER)
Sitting in public at Vintry
House, Wine Street, Bristol on 5 July 2011.
Mr Christopher Ray, Director
of Appellant Company for the Appellant
Mr D R Bradley, Officer of H M
Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
CROWN COPYRIGHT
2011
DECISION
Introduction
1. Mr
Ray, as the sole Director of the Appellant, prepared the quarterly VAT Return
for the period 12/10 during the weekend of 29 and 30 January 2011, and, having
noted that the “due date for payment” was 7 February, made the on-line
submission and issued on-line payment instructions to the company’s bankers on
Sunday 6 February 2011.
2. Despite
having received several previous Notices and reminders about payment
transmission times, Mr Ray accepted that he had overlooked the fact that the
bank used by HMRC did not participate in the faster payments system – and that
three working days were usually required for a payment to leave the payers bank
and arrive with HMRC.
3. It
was agreed by both parties that the VAT return had been submitted on-line by
the due date and that the full payment due had been sent by the Appellant on
Sunday 6 February and received by HMRC on 9 February 2011 - two days after the
due date. The Appellant made no claim for any reasonable excuse for the late
arrival of the payment, but claimed that the 15% penalty of £1,003.99 was
disproportionate.
The Penalty
4. The
Appellant had a history of late payments and was, at the material time, making
regular weekly instalments of £400 in settlement of earlier quarterly VAT
payments due. Although Penalties had been waived or discharged in the past, the
Default Period had continued to apply at the 15% level until 31 December
2010. The full amount of the VAT due for the quarter 12/10 was £6,693.30 and
therefore the Penalty for late payment, calculated at the 15% level amounted to
£1,003.99.
Proportionality
5. Whilst
both the existence of rate of the surcharge at 15% for the Default Period at
and the lateness of the payment, were agreed by the parties, it was the proportionality
of £1.003.99 for a two day delay which was being challenged by Mr Ray. The
non-availability of Faster Payments was suggested to be an unreasonable
hindrance to payment being made in due time.
6. For
HMRC, Mr Bradley explained that it was not HMRC themselves who were refusing to
accept Faster Payments, but, rather, their recently selected bankers who were
not yet operating that system.
7. We
were referred to the decision of the Tribunal in Enersys Holdings UK Limited
[2010] SFTD 387 in which Judge Colin Bishopp considered proportionality
in relation to a VAT default surcharge saying at [69]:
“I am quite willing to accept—indeed experience of
its operation tells me—that the default surcharge regime, by and large,
produces a fair penalty, or at least one which is not obviously
disproportionate to the offence, albeit I have particular misgivings about the
absence of any correlation between the period of delay and the amount of the
penalty. But, as I have indicated, the penalty imposed in this case is in my
view wholly disproportionate to the gravity of the offence—it is, as Simon
Brown LJ put it in Roth, “not merely harsh but plainly unfair”—and I am
not persuaded, in the absence of any justification of it, that it can be saved
by the state’s margin of appreciation. It is, in my view, one of those
exceptional cases which the tribunal had in mind in Greengate Furniture.”
Conclusion
8. Mr
Ray, on behalf of the Appellant had accepted that the payment had been made
late and did not advance any reasonable excuse for the delay. He had suggested
that the absence of a Faster Payments facility was unsatisfactory, but accepted
that he had been made aware of this in the past. On the basis of Mr Ray’s
evidence we concluded that the Appellant’s circumstances and its trading during
the quarter 12/10 were not exceptional. Accordingly we find that the surcharge
was not “plainly unfair” or disproportionate.
9. We
therefore dismiss the appeal.
10. This document
contains full findings of fact and reasons for the decision. Any party
dissatisfied with this decision has a right to apply for permission to appeal
against it pursuant to Rule 39 of the Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal)
(Tax Chamber) Rules 2009. The application must be received by this Tribunal
not later than 56 days after this decision is sent to that party. The parties
are referred to “Guidance to accompany a Decision from the First-tier Tribunal
(Tax Chamber)” which accompanies and forms part of this decision notice.
JOHN BROOKS
TRIBUNAL JUDGE
RELEASE DATE: 2 AUGUST 2011