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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Martin v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT V20626 (18 March 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2008/V20626.html
Cite as: [2008] UKVAT V20626

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Gerald Patrick Houston Martin v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT V20626 (18 March 2008)

    20626

    Notice of requirement to give security – Reasonableness of notice – whether it ought to have been considered at time of registration – relevancy of subsequent trading history

    Appeal dismissed

    MANCHESTER TRIBUNAL CENTRE REF: LON/07/0566

    GERALD PATRICK HOUSTON MARTIN
    Trading as The Hillside

    Appellant

    -and-
    THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

    Respondents

    Tribunal : Mr. Ian Huddleston (Chairman)

    Mrs. Joan Whiteside (OBE)

    Sitting in public in Belfast on 21st February 2008

    Appellant in Person

    Mr. B. Haley for the Respondents


     

    DECISION

    The Appeal

  1. This is an Appeal under Section 83(1) of the Value Added Tax Act (1994) against the Respondent's Notice of Requirement for Security issued pursuant to Schedule 11, paragraph 4(2)(a) of the VAT Act 1994 requiring the Appellant to give security in the sum of £46,607 (if quarterly returns were to be submitted) or £31,071 (if monthly returns were to be submitted).
  2. The decision which the Appellant appealed was contained in a letter from the Respondents dated the 5th February 2007.
  3. The Notice of Appeal was served on the 3rd March 2007 and listed four grounds of appeal, namely (and here they are paraphrased):
  4. (a) that the decision to ask for security should have been made during the application process at a point when, in the Appellant's opinion, all historical information was already available;

    (b) that the Appellant had not been in business for a period of over two and a half years (the implication being that his previous history was "spent");
    (c) that the Appellant had no borrowings and that the business was running satisfactorily and that returns to the date of the February 07 letter had been paid;

    (d) that the Appellant would have to sell the business in order to afford to pay the security sought.

  5. The Tribunal heard evidence from the Appellant and from Mr. Edward Joseph MacMahon, a higher officer in HMRC, attached to the Belfast Office and who had responsibility for the issue of the Notice of Requirement.
  6. Evidence

  7. Mr. MacMahon gave evidence on behalf of the Respondents. He gave evidence as to the Appellant's previous association with two failed businesses, namely:
  8. The Appellant gave sworn evidence. As confirmed by his appeal notice, the crux of his case centred on two issues, namely:
  9. Submissions

  10. Mr. Haley, on behalf of HMRC, submitted that:
  11. Conclusion

  12. In exercising its jurisdiction in such matters as this, this Tribunal is obliged to consider only those facts which existed at the time when the challenged decision was taken (Peachtree Enterprises (1994) STC 747 and BE Silcock Co. Limited applied). The decision against which the Appellant had appealed in this case was taken in February 2007. At that point, as the Appellant himself conceded in cross examination, not only was there a risk but a "proven" risk that the Appellant might default – given the two failed enterprises in which he had been involved.
  13. The timing of issue of the Notice of Requirement was something in relation to which, under the VATA 1994, the Respondents had absolute discretion and the fact that it issued after the Appellant's registration did not make it unreasonable. Indeed, the Notice of Request could, if the circumstances justified it, be issued at any time.
  14. Equally, as the Appellant now acknowledges, the subsequent trading history, however good, was not relevant to the question of "reasonableness" as it applied at the time of the February 2007 decision to issue.
  15. Having considered all of the documents available and having heard the evidence, the Tribunal was satisfied that the Respondents did act reasonably when they issued the Notice Requiring Security and that they had not taken account of any irrelevant material or otherwise acted unreasonably. On that basis the appeal fails and is dismissed.
  16. The Respondent made no application for costs, and we make no order.
  17. Chairman : Ian Huddleston
    Release Date : 18 March 2008


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2008/V20626.html