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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Vital Touch Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKVAT V20409 (24 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2007/V20409.html Cite as: [2007] UKVAT V20409 |
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20409
VAT – default surcharge – section 59 VATA 1994 – mistake by Appellant in setting the date for internet banking transfer – reasonable excuse – appeal dismissed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
VITAL TOUCH LTD Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: CHARLES HELLIER (Chairman)
RICHARD CORKE FCA
Sitting in public in Plymouth on 6 September 2007
Martin Oakes-Monger, director of the Appellant, for the Appellant
Gloria Orimoloye, solicitor, instructed by the Acting solicitor for HMRC, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
DECISION
The Statutory Provisions
"(a) the return, or as the case may be, the VAT shown on the return, was dispatched at such a time and in such a manner that it was reasonable to expect that it would be received by the Commissioners within the appropriate time limit, or
(b) there is a reasonable excuse for the return or VAT not having been so dispatched."
then he shall not be liable to the surcharge and shall be treated as not having been in default in respect of the period in question.
(a) an insufficiency of funds to pay any VAT due is not a reasonable excuse; and
(b) where reliance is placed on any person to perform any task, neither the fact of that reliance nor any dilatoriness or inaccuracy on the part of the person relied upon is a reasonable excuse."
(i) Regulation 25(1) requires a person who accounts quarterly to make his return no later than the last day of the month after the end of each VAT period. Regulations 25(4A) to (4K) permit a return to be made by certain electronic means. Regulation 25(4L) provides that
"Additional time is allowed to make a return for which any related payment is made solely by means of electronic communications … That additional time is only as the Commissioners may allow in a specific or general direction, and such a direction may allow different times for different means of payment."
(ii) Regulation 40(2) requires the VAT payable for the period to which a return relates to be paid no later than the date on which the return is required to be made. Where a return is made by electronic means Regulation 40(2A) requires the payment of the VAT to be made by acceptable electronic means. Regulation 40(3) permits the Commissioners to allow or direct otherwise, and Regulation 40(4) makes clear that such a direction may allow additional time for a payment made by electronic means.
The Commissioners' directions
"If you chose to pay the VAT shown as due on your return by Bankers Automated Clearing System (BACS), Bank Giro Credit Transfer, or Clearing House Automated Payment System (CHAPS), you may receive up to 7 extra calendar days for the return and the payment to reach us. Here are some important facts you need to know if you want to benefit from this concession –
…
- Payment must be in our bank account on or before the 7th calendar day. If the 7th day falls on a weekend, we must receive payment by the Friday …
- To make sure that your payment reaches us in time, you should check with your bank how many days they need to complete the transaction …"
The evidence and the facts
(1) The Appellant has been in business for 5 or 6 years. It markets aromatherapy products. Its directors are Mr Oakes-Monger, his wife and a third person who takes little active part in the business. Mr Oakes-Monger deals with the VAT returns;
(ii) For the periods ending 31 January 2006 ("01/06") onwards the Appellant has submitted its VAT returns electronically. Mr Oakes-Monger normally arranges electronic payment of the VAT via the Appellant's internet banking facility at the same time as he electronically submits the return for a period.
(iii) For the period 01/06 the VAT return was submitted electronically on 7 March 2006; it was thus received within the 7 days extension allowed by the Commissioners pursuant to Regulation 40 and was on time. The VAT however, although its payment was initiated on the same day as the return, did not reach the Respondents' account until 9 March 2006 because the banking system did not provide same day credit for internet banking payments between different banks. It was therefore 2 days late. The Commissioners, however, did not serve a Surcharge Liability Notice in respect of this default, instead they wrote to the Appellant suggesting that it sought help and warning of the possibility of the surcharge regime applying in future. The letter noted the possibility of the Appellant being eligible for the cash accounting scheme.
(iv) For the period 04/06, the VAT return was submitted electronically on 9 June 2006, 2 days late, and the VAT payment reached the Commissioners on 13 June 2006. (The extra delay in the receipt of the payment was again due to the time taken for the banking system to clear the payment to the Commissioners' account.)
The reasons for the delay in the submission of the return and the electronic order to pay the VAT were these:
(a) Mr Oakes-Monger paid the VAT (via the internet facility) at the same time as he made the electronic filing of the return;
(b) at the end of May 2006 the business had cashflow problems: it had spent a lot of money developing the business;
(c) eventually Mr Oakes-Monger made a personal advance to the Appellant of £5k: his payment cleared on 9 June 2006;
(d) only after this was the Appellant able to pay the VAT, and it made the internet banking transfer on the same day, submitting the VAT return at the same time.
The Respondents issued a surcharge liability notice in respect of this period specifying the period ending 12 months after 30 April 2006. That notice referred to the possibility that the Appellant might use the cash accounting scheme.
(v) The Appellant's return for 10/06 was submitted on 4 December 2006, 3 days before the deadline. Mr Oakes-Monger initiated the internet banking funds transfer to pay the VAT on the same day but the cleared funds were received on 8 December 2006, one day late again because of the vagaries of the banking system.
The Respondents issue a notice extending the surcharge period but did not assess the 2% surcharge. In their notice they said "The Commissioners do not propose to surcharge you on this occasion … If you default again … you may become liable to a surcharge assessment calculations at the rate of 5%." Again the notice referred to schemes which might ease the burden on the Appellant.
(vi) The Appellant's return for the following period, 01/07 was submitted electronically on 28 February 2007, 7 days early. Its payment of the VAT did not however reach the Commissioner's bank account until 8 March 2007, one day late. The Commissioners assessed a default surcharge of 5%.
During February 2007 the Appellant had been expecting a cheque for £23k from its largest customer. That customer usually paid on time but this month it was late. Without that receipt the Appellant did not have the funds to make the VAT payment. The money was received by cheque on 28 February. Mr Oakes-Monger then knew that when that cheque had cleared he would have the funds to pay the VAT. He checked with his bank and learned that he should allow 5 working days for the cheque to clear. He submitted his VAT return that very day. He gave instructions for the VAT payment to be made from the bank account on 6 March. This VAT payment took 2 days to clear and arrived at HMRC's bank account on 8 March.
(vii) On Friday, 2 March 2007 Mr Oakes-Monger telephoned the VAT telephone helpline. He explained that he could not make the VAT payment before Tuesday 6 March because he was waiting for a cheque to clear and that he usually paid by internet banking. This was the telephone conversation referred to in paragraph 8 above. Justin Gough advised Mr Oakes-Monger to make the payment by a CHAPS transfer: such a transfer he indicated would ensure that the funds arrived at the Commissioner's account on the same day they left the Appellant's account. He said that if the funds got there by Wednesday 7 March, the receipt would be on time.
The Parties' Arguments
(i) the fact that Mr Oakes-Monger mistook the advice to pay by CHAPS – even though it might be a genuine mistake made when acting in good faith – was not enough to support a reasonable excuse;
(ii) the Appellant had been notified of two previous defaults which had arisen because his internet banking payments had taken several days to clear. It must have been aware that internet banking payments had that result and that the method actually adopted would result in late payment;
(iii) the Appellant had been alerted to the cash accounting scheme on several occasions. The use of that scheme would have avoided the problems with the 01/07 VAT payment. The Appellant by not taking up that scheme was the author of its own misfortune. That was not a reasonable excuse;
(iv) the late payment by the particular customer was a normal hazard of business and not so sudden or exceptional to support a finding of reasonable excuse; and
(v) before a trader can submit returns online it has to accept (by clicking a button) the Terms and Conditions of internet payment. Those make clear that a CHAPS payment is the only method of electronic payment which secures same day receipt.
Discussion and Decision
CHARLES HELLIER
CHAIRMAN
RELEASED: 24 October 2007
LON/2007/0770