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First-tier Tribunal (Tax) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Burne v Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (INCOME TAX and NATIONAL INSURANCE CONTRIBUTIONS (NIC) - company failed to pay tax and NIC - Regulation 72, Income Tax (Pay As You Earn) Regulations 2003 - Regulation 86, Social Security (Contributions) Regulations) [2024] UKFTT 945 (TC) (24 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2024/TC09326.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 945 (TC) |
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Appeal reference: TC/2022/11384 |
TAX CHAMBER
Judgment Date: 24 October 2024 |
B e f o r e :
TRIBUNAL MEMBER LESLIE HOWARD
____________________
MICHAEL BURNE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
For the Appellant: The Appellant represented himself.
For the Respondents: Victoria Halfpenny, Litigator of HM Revenue and Customs' Solicitor's Office.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
INCOME TAX and NATIONAL INSURANCE CONTRIBUTIONS (NIC) company failed to pay tax and NIC whether the director received relevant payments knowing that the company had wilfully failed to deduct and pay PAYE no - Regulation 72, Income Tax (Pay As You Earn) Regulations 2003 whether the director knew that the company had wilfully failed to deduct and pay primary NIC no - Regulation 86, Social Security (Contributions) Regulations. Appeal allowed.
Introduction
(a) a Notice dated 1 March 2022 issued to direct the employer, Carbon Managed Services Limited ("the company"), under Regulation 72(5) Condition B of the Income Tax (Pay as You Earn) Regulations 2003, ("the Regulations"), to transfer liability for PAYE from the company to MB for the 2019/20 tax year;
(b) a Section 8 notice that was issued to MB for unpaid primary class 1 National Insurance Contributions under Regulation 86 of the Social Security (Contributions) Regulations 2001 and Section 8(1)(c) of the Social Security (Transfer of Functions) Act 1999 ("Section 8 notice"). in the sum of £3,859.14; and
(c) a discovery assessment issued under Section 29 of the Taxes Management Act 1970 in the sum of £18,550.
Background
a. based on his agent's statements on his behalf, he had been paid an income from his employer but no tax or NIC had been deducted from some payments received,
b. the Insolvency Practitioner had made available a copy of the company bank statements, and
c. HMRC were unable to reconcile payments made from the company to MB as they had still not received evidence of payments which had been requested on several occasions. Copies of the MB's personal bank statements showing all payments from the company to him for the period ending 05 April 2019 and 05 April 2020 tax years were again requested together with an explanation of what the payments were for.
- "Month 8 and 9 payments were not under our client's control as an administration order had been made and the administrators had taken control of Carbon Managed Services' (the company's) bank accounts and all payments. An administration order is only made where there is an expectation of the business continuing as a going concern."
- "The accounts for the year ended 31 March 2019 were finalised on 27 September 2019 at which time the salary was accrued in the accounts with the intention of processing the accounting entries for the salary and the repayment of the director's loan in December 2019."
POINTS AT ISSUE
BURDEN OF PROOF
standard of proof
legislation and authorities
evidence and facts
"the increase in pay month 9 of 2019/20 greatly exceeded the company's available reserves (the negative reserves shown are the latest company accounts ended 31 March 2019 as £1,129,073 and the accounts ended 31 March 2018 of negative reserves of £502,567) there was therefore was little likelihood that the PAYE debt could have been paid in full by the employer",
was misleading, if not incorrect.
mb's submissions
1. HMRC's Officer had not provided any explanations or reasoning for the decision that MB had failed to deduct enough tax.
2. That the decision had been pre-determined, and that information and explanations had not been considered.
3. There had been no basis for the decision that MB acted in a wilful or deliberate manner.
4. Events outside of MB's control resulted in the company not making the required payments to HMRC.
(a) failed to even consider, never mind established, who submitted the M9 payroll which is crucial in establishing an ability to operate Condition B since it must be shown that the company or MB were wilful in their failure to operate payroll correctly;
(b) ignored the differences inherent in a creditors' as opposed to a directors' Administration; and
(c) therefore, relied upon case law that is about directors' Administrations where deliberate acts were taken with knowledge that deductions could not be made or paid when due but which cannot apply to the facts and evidence in this appeal. Yet HMRC make clear that if the deductions were made and paid from the December 2019 payroll "there would have been no issues surrounding this decision".
"You knew no deductions were being made on some payments received from Carbon Managed Services Ltd (the company) and were in a position (as key employee) to arrange payments of your income in this manner. Treating monies previously drawn without operation of PAYE was not the only course of action open to you. Recognising that the company had insufficient profits to vote a dividend (as in previous years) you had a number of options, including (a) leaving the monies in an overdrawn director's loan account, (b) repaying monies previously drawn, or (c) seeking to declare a salary in respect of the amounts drawn. You chose (c) the option that was most financially beneficial to you, as the other two options would have meant having to repay the monies previously drawn to the company. Having chosen (c) had you then paid [MB's emphasis added] the resulting NIC and PAYE Tax liability to HMRC then there would have been no issues surrounding this decision. But you did not, the Tax and NIC on the salary declared for you went unpaid. Furthermore, the available information points to you knowing that the company did not have the means to pay when the salary decision was made whether that was later when the Return was actually submitted to HMRC declaring the salary."
HMRC's submissions
Ground 1
Ground 2
Ground 3
Ground 4
Discovery Tax Assessment
''Having reviewed the authorities, we consider that it is helpful to elaborate the test as to the required subjective element for a discovery assessment as follows: "The officer must believe that the information available to him points in the direction of there being an insufficiency of tax. That formulation, in our judgment, acknowledges both that the discovery must be something more than suspicion of an insufficiency of tax and that it need not go so far as a conclusion that an insufficiency of tax is more probable than not."
''The officer's decision to make a discovery assessment is an administrative decision. We consider that the objective controls on the decision making of the officer should be expressed by reference to public law concepts. Accordingly, as regards the requirement for the action to be "reasonable," this should be expressed as a requirement that the officer's belief is one which a reasonable officer could form. It is not for a tribunal hearing an appeal in relation to a discovery assessment to form its own belief on the information available to the officer and then to conclude, if it forms a different belief, that the officer's belief was not reasonable''.
a. did the officer believe that there was an insufficiency of tax; and
b. was the belief one which a reasonable officer could form?
"the first condition is that the situation mentioned in subsection (1) above was brought about carelessly or deliberately by the taxpayer or a person acting on his behalf."
"(5) the second condition is that at the time when an officer of the board.
a. Ceased to be entitled to give notice of his intention to enquiry into the taxpayer's.
return under section 8 or 8A of this act in respect of the relevant year of assessment;
b. The officer could not have been reasonably expected, on the basis of the information made available to him before that time, to be aware of the situation mentioned in subsection (1) above."
" For a person wilfully to effect a particular legal outcome, it is not necessary for that person to be cognisant of the legal consequences of his or her actions. It is necessary only for that person intentionally or deliberately to put in train the various actions (or knowingly to fail to do so in the case of omissions) that in the event have the material consequences in law".
Conclusion
the tribunal's decision
Right to apply for permission to appeal