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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> HM Revenue & Customs, Re Raj Restaurant & Ors [2008] ScotCS CSIH_68 (30 December 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_68.html
Cite as: 2009 GWD 2-41, [2009] STC 729, [2009] BVC 37, 2009 SC 204, [2009] BTC 5037, [2008] CSIH 68, [2008] ScotCS CSIH_68, [2009] STI 195

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Nimmo Smith

Lord Reed

Lord Drummond Young

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] CSIH 68

XA68/07

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD REED

 

in

 

APPEAL

 

by

 

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Appellants;

 

against

 

A DECISION OF THE V.A.T. AND DUTIES TRIBUNAL

 

 

(THE RAJ RESTAURANT AND OTHERS)

Respondents:

_______

 

 

For the appellants: Artis; Shepherd & Wedderburn, LLP

For the respondents: Ghosh; Beveridge & Kellas

 

30 December 2008

 

Introduction


[1] This appeal against a decision of the VAT and Duties Tribunal concerns the validity of a VAT assessment and of a related penalty assessment. The Tribunal held that the assessments were not referable to any prescribed accounting period or periods and were therefore invalid. The Commissioners appeal against the decision.

The factual circumstances


[2]
From 18 September 1995 onwards a succession of companies were registered for VAT purposes as carrying on the business of the Raj Restaurant in Edinburgh. Goa 1510 Limited was so registered between 18 September 1995 and 31 March 1998; The Spice Aroma Limited between 1 April 1998 and 7 January 2001; and On The Shore Limited from 8 January 2001 onwards. In 2002 the Commissioners came to the view that those companies were mere shams, and that the business was in reality being conducted by four members of the Miah family in partnership. That partnership, and the individual partners, are the respondents to this appeal.


[3]
By letter dated 28 June 2002 the Commissioners informed the respondents that they had commenced action to register the respondents for VAT with effect from 18 September 1995. The Commissioners also stated that they had evidence that sales at the premises had been understated. Any VAT paid by the companies would be deemed to have been met by the new registration, but the Commissioners would transfer to the new registration any outstanding liabilities of the various companies and assess the new registration for any VAT calculated as underdeclared. The matter of any penalty would also be dealt with.


[4]
By notice dated 1 July 2002 the Commissioners notified the respondents that they had been registered for VAT with effect from 18 September 1995.


[5]
By letter dated 22 July 2002 the Commissioners repeated that all liabilities of the entities previously registered for VAT, including unpaid tax and penalties, would be transferred to the new registration. In relation to such liabilities, the Commissioners maintained that the true level of sales of the business was not reflected in its records. The letter continued:

"Please refer to the enclosed schedules and notes in relation to the amounts deemed due by the new registration ...

...

Please note that the Commissioners, in exercise of their powers, require that VAT Returns be rendered on a monthly basis. The enclosed schedule covers the period 18 September 1995 - 31 May 2002. You will be required to account for the amounts due for June and July 2002 on your first VAT Return."

 

The schedule or schedules referred to are not before us, and no reliance is placed upon them for the purposes of this appeal.


[6]
By letter dated 10 September 2002 the Commissioners wrote to the respondents in the following terms:

"As intimated in my previous letter, all liabilities of the entries previously registered for VAT will be transferred to the new registration. These include

·        Amounts declared but unpaid by previous entities

·        Further amounts which the Commissioners consider are properly due following enquiries made.

Since you have failed to render a VAT return for period 07/02 (18th September 1995 to 31st July 2002) an assessment to VAT has been made under s 73, VAT Act 1994.

The assessment encompasses

·        Declarations made by the businesses of GOA 1501 Ltd, Spice Aroma Ltd and On The Shore Ltd.

·        Amounts which the Commissioners have previously made assessments for in respect of the businesses referred to.

·        Amounts which the Commissioners consider are due as a result of underdeclared sales at the premises.

The assessment, which covers the period 18th September 1995 to 31st July 2002, in the sum of £400,217.16 is enclosed

...

Please refer to Schedules 1 and 2 (enclosed) which detail the method of calculation.

...

Please note that the Commissioners, in exercise of their powers, require that VAT returns be rendered on a monthly basis."

 

Two schedules were enclosed with the letter, but no separate assessment.


[7]
Schedule 1 bore to be a calculation of the VAT due by Goa 1510 Ltd, The Spice Aroma Ltd and On The Shore Ltd. In the case of Goa 1510 Ltd, the VAT due was calculated for that company's first prescribed accounting period, ending on 31 December 1995, and for the subsequent quarterly periods up to and including the period ending on 31 December 1997. There was in addition a further figure which was not attributed to any quarterly period but was, we were informed by counsel for the Commissioners, a calculation of further VAT liabilities of that company. The resultant total for Goa 1510 Ltd was £174,372.67. In the case of The Spice Aroma Ltd the VAT due was calculated for that company's first prescribed accounting period, ending on 30 June 1998, and for the subsequent quarterly periods up to and including the period ending on 31 December 2000. There was in addition a further figure, as in the case of Goa 1510 Ltd. The resultant figure for The Spice Aroma Ltd was £153,371.46. In the case of On The Shore Ltd, the VAT due was calculated for that company's first prescribed accounting period, ending on 31 March 2001, and for the subsequent monthly periods up to and including the period ending on 31 May 2002. The resultant figure for On The Shore Ltd was £65,333.04. Schedule 1 also stated that the average net tax calculated as being due by On The Shore Ltd in respect of the months from February to May 2002 inclusive would be applied to the respondents for the months of June and July 2002. Schedule 2 carried forward from Schedule 1 the amounts calculated as being due by Goa 1510 Ltd, The Spice Aroma Ltd and On The Shore Ltd, together with the amount of £7,140.00 calculated as being due by the respondents for June and July 2002. The aggregate amount totalled £400,217.16.


[8]
By letter dated 20 December 2002 the Commissioners notified the respondents that it had been reported

"that you have failed to account for the full amount of Value Added Tax which was due on the period from 18 September 1995 to 31 May 2002".

 

This, it was said, had resulted from "the deliberate suppression of cash sales from your business leading to an under declaration of tax on your VAT returns". The respondents were in consequence liable to a penalty under section 60(1) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994

"for an evasion, through dishonesty, of Value Added Tax in the sum of £203,223 ... for the period from 18 September 1995 to 31 May 2002".

 

After making a reduction under section 70(1) of the 1994 Act, to reflect the degree of co-operation received, the Commissioners had decided to make a penalty assessment in the sum of £40,632.


[9]
A table contained in the letter explained how the penalty assessment had been calculated. The first line in the table set out the VAT registration number of Goa 1510 Ltd, the first prescribed accounting period of that company, a figure beneath the heading "Tax amount liable to penalty (ie max. penalty)", a percentage reduction for co-operation, and a figure beneath the heading "Penalty". The following lines set out the corresponding figures for the subsequent quarterly periods of Goa 1510 Ltd, with a final line in respect of that company setting out figures which were not attributed to any specific quarterly period. The figures under the heading "Tax amount liable to penalty" corresponded to figures stated for the same period (or, in the case of the last figure, a figure stated for the corresponding calculation of further liabilities) in Schedule 1 to the letter dated 10 September 2002. The next line in the table set out the VAT registration number of The Spice Aroma Ltd, and dealt in a similar way with figures relating to that company's first accounting period. The following lines set out the corresponding figures for that company's subsequent quarterly periods up to and including the period ending on 30 June 1999. The next line in the table set out the VAT registration number of One The Shore Ltd, but the period was stated as the quarter ending on 30 September 1999 (On the Shore Ltd not being registered for VAT until 8 January 2001, as explained above), and the figure for tax corresponded to that attributed to The Spice Aroma Ltd in relation to that period in Schedule 1 to the earlier letter. The next line in the table dealt with a period ending on 30 June 2000 - there was no line relating to the quarters ending on 31 December 1999 and 31 March 2000 - and again gave the registration number of On The Shore Ltd, although the figure for tax corresponded to a figure attributed to The Spice Aroma Ltd in relation to that period in the earlier Schedule. The next line in the table dealt with a period ending on 31 March 2001 - there was no line relating to the periods ending on 30 June 2000, 30 September 2000 and 31 December 2000 - and again gave the registration number of On The Shore Ltd. The figure for tax corresponded to a figure attributed to that company's first accounting period in the earlier Schedule. The remaining lines set out the corresponding figures for that company's subsequent monthly periods up to and including the period ending on 31 May 2002.


[10]
The respondents appealed against their registration for VAT, as notified on 1 July 2002; against the VAT assessment notified on 10 September 2002; and against the penalty assessment notified on 20 December 2002. The appeal against registration was refused by the Tribunal on 21 February 2006. The respondents did not appeal against that decision. The appeals against the VAT and penalty assessments were heard together by a differently constituted Tribunal. The Tribunal considered, as a preliminary issue, the question whether the assessments had been competently made in accordance with the relevant legislation, in respect that they were not referable to any prescribed accounting period or periods. On 22 March 2007 the Tribunal issued their decision determining that question in favour of the respondents.


[11]
It is necessary to mention one further factual circumstance. Shortly before the hearing before the Tribunal of the appeals against the assessments, in February 2007, the accountant acting on behalf of the respondents requested a copy of the respondents' statutory certificate of registration, the respondents' position being that they had never received one. The solicitor acting on behalf of the Commissioners then sent the respondents' accountant a copy certificate, stating:

"I also attach the VAT registration certificate and corresponding Record of Traders Particulars as requested (VAT 3 and VAT 4). Please note that the date of issue is given as 30 January 2007 for the VAT 4 and 31 January 2007 for the VAT 3. By way of explanation, the system is set up in such a way that when a VAT certificate is instructed to be printed, it automatically inserts the current date. The relevant date is the effective date which is 18 September 1995."

 

The attached certificate bore the words:

"EFFECTIVE DATE 18 SEPTEMBER 1995

CERTIFICATE ISSUED ON 30 JANUARY 2007

RETURNS TO BE MADE IN RESPECT OF PERIOD ENDING 28 FEBRUARY 2007 AND MONTHLY THEREAFTER".

 

Before this court, counsel for the Commissioners explained that the computer system operated by the Commissioners did not store any copy or other record of the issue of a certificate of registration. The Commissioners were therefore unable either to confirm or deny the respondents' statement that they had not received any certificate prior to the certificate issued on 30 January 2007. It was accepted, in these circumstances, that the court should proceed on the basis that that had been the only certificate issued. The computer system automatically entered on the certificate a date of issue which was the current date, and an accounting period which ended after the current date.

 

The VAT assessment


[12]
Section 73(1) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 as amended provides:

"Where a person has failed to make any returns required under this Act ... the Commissioners ... may assess the amount of VAT due from him to the best of their judgment and notify it to him".

 

It was common ground before this court that, for an assessment of VAT under section 73(1) of the 1994 Act to be valid, it must be of an amount due for one or more prescribed accounting periods. That appears to follow from section 73(1), since the amount to be assessed is the amount due by a person who has failed to make one or more returns; and, by virtue of section 25(1) of the 1994 Act and regulation 25(1) of the Value Added Tax Regulations 1995 (SI 1995 No. 2518), returns are required in respect of prescribed accounting periods. Section 25(1) provides:

"A taxable person should -

...

account for and pay VAT by reference to such periods (in this Act referred to as 'prescribed accounting periods') ... as may be determined by or under regulations ... ".

 

Regulation 2(1) of the 1995 Regulations defines the expression "prescribed accounting period" as meaning (subject to an exception which does not apply to the present case) "a period such as is referred to in regulation 25". Regulation 25(1) provides:

"Every person who is registered or was or is required to be registered shall, in respect of every period of a quarter or in the case of a person who is registered, every period of 3 months ending on the dates notified either in the certificate of registration issued to him or otherwise, not later than the last day of the month next following the end of the period to which it relates, make to the Controller a return on the form numbered 4 in Schedule 1 to these Regulations showing the amount of VAT payable by or to him and containing full information in respect of the other matters specified in the form and a declaration, signed by him, that the return is true and complete;

provided that -

(a) the Commissioners may allow or direct a person to make returns in respect of periods of one month and to make those returns within one month of the periods to which they relate;

(b) the first return shall be for the period which includes the effective date determined in accordance with Schedules 1, 2 and 3 to the Act upon which the person was or should have been registered, and the said period shall begin on that date;

(c) whether the Commissioners consider it necessary in any particular case to vary the length of any period or the date on which any period begins or ends or by which any return shall be made, they may allow or direct any person to make returns accordingly, whether or not the period so varied has ended ... ".

 


[13]
In the present case, the assessment notified by the letter dated 10 September 2002 was expressly made in consequence of the respondents' failure to make a return "for period 07/02 (18th September 1995 to 31st July 2002)", and was said to cover "the period 18th September 1995 to 31st July 2002". The validity of the assessment therefore depends on whether the period from 18 September 1995 to 31 July 2002 was a prescribed accounting period, as counsel for the Commissioners maintained. That question turns on the application of regulation 25(1).


[14]
The effect of the opening part of regulation 25(1) is to establish a default position: namely, that a return must be made in respect of every quarter (i.e. every period of three months ending on 31 March, 30 June, 30 September and 31 December: section 96(1) of the 1994 Act), by a person who is registered for VAT or was or is required to be so registered, unless some other period of three months has been notified to the person registered. That default position is however subject to the provisos contained in paragraph (1)(a), (b) and (c), so far as applicable. In particular, if a direction has been made (or permission has been granted) under regulation 25(1)(a), returns must be made in respect of periods of one month. If regulation 25(1)(c) applies, the length of any accounting period can be lengthened or shortened with the permission of the Commissioners or at their direction. In all cases, whether returns are made in respect of quarters or months or some other period allowed or directed by the Commissioners, regulation 25(1)(b) requires that the first period should begin on the date when the person was or should have been registered.


[15]
In the present case, subject to the application of the provisos, the respondents were required by regulation 25(1) to make returns, as from the point in time at which they were persons "required to be registered", in respect of every period of a quarter. Since they were required to be registered as from 18 September 1995, they were required, prima facie, to make returns in respect of the quarters ending on 30 September 1995, 31 December 1995 and so on and so forth. By virtue of regulation 25(1)(b), however, their first return did not require to cover the part of the quarter ending on 30 September 1995 which preceded their effective date of registration: in consequence, their first accounting period was prima facie the period from 18 to 30 September 1995.


[16]
Where a person is registered late for VAT, it is open to the Commissioners to make a "long period" direction under regulation 25(1)(c), directing that the first return should cover the entire period from the date when the person ought to have been registered until a point in time after the date of registration. The practice is illustrated by such cases as Bjellica v Customs and Excise Commissioners [1995] STC 329 and Hindle v Customs and Excise Commissioners [2004] STC 412. By issuing such a direction the Commissioners can avoid periods becoming out of time for assessment under provisions of the 1994 Act (such as sections 73(6) and 77(1)) which allow an assessment to be made only within a specified period following the end of a prescribed accounting period. Such a direction might be communicated by the certificate of registration. In the present case, however, the Commissioners concede, in view of the limitations of their computer system and the consequent absence of any record of a certificate being issued, that no certificate was issued until 2007, being after the notification of the assessments appealed against. They concede that no direction was made under regulation 25(1)(c). That proviso therefore does not apply.


[17]
There remains the proviso contained in regulation 25(1)(a). The Commissioners maintain that a direction was given under regulation 25(1)(a) by means of the letter dated 22 July 2002, and that it operated only prospectively, so as to impose a requirement to make a return in respect of a period ending on 31 July 2002. They then argue that, since that was to be the first return actually made by the respondents, and since the respondents' first accounting period began on 18 September 1995 (by virtue of regulation 25(1)(b)), it follows that the first period ran from 18 September 1995 to 31 July 2002.


[18]
This argument cannot be accepted. In the first place, as counsel for the respondents observed, the letter dated 22 July 2002 is by no means clear. It, and the Commissioners' subsequent communications, are based on the misconception that tax liabilities can be "transferred" from one person to another. Although the letter contains the statement that the Commissioners "require that VAT Returns be rendered on a monthly basis", it also states that an enclosed schedule "covers the period 18th September 1995 - 31st May 2002", and that "You [the respondents] will be required to account for the amounts due for June and July 2002 on your first VAT Return". As we have explained, the Commissioners concede that the letter cannot be construed as containing an implicit long period direction under regulation 25(1)(c). Absent such a direction, the period from 18 September 1995 to 31 May 2002 cannot, on any view, be an accounting period of the respondents. Nor can the respondents' first period be in respect of June and July 2002, since their first period must begin on 18 September 1995.


[19]
Assuming, however, that the statement that the Commissioners required returns to be made on a monthly basis can properly be construed, in its context, as a direction under regulation 25(1)(a) that returns were to be made in respect of periods of one month, and assuming further that the Commissioners are correct in their contention that a direction under regulation 25(1)(a) operates only prospectively (presumably on the basis that it would otherwise retrospectively place the person in question in breach of the consequent obligation to render returns within a month of the end of each monthly period), then it follows, as the Commissioners contend, that the respondents were required to make a return in respect of a period ending on 31 July 2002. It does not follow, however, that that return related to the respondents' first accounting period. The effect of a direction under regulation 25(1)(a) is to require a person to make returns "in respect of periods of one month". If such a direction operates only prospectively, then the default position continues to apply so far as a person requires to make returns in respect of past periods during which he was required to be registered but was not. Such returns should therefore be made "in respect of every period of a quarter", subject to the proviso that the first period is less than an entire quarter, by virtue of regulation 25(1)(b), where the effective date falls at some point during the quarter. The fallacy in the Commissioners' argument is to assume that, where there has been a delay in registration, with the consequence that the first return can only be rendered late, it follows that the first accounting period must extend until after registration has actually occurred. That is not the effect of the legislation: the obligation to submit returns "in respect of every period of a quarter" applies not only to a person who is registered, but also to a person who was required to be registered but was not in fact registered. That is made clear by the language of regulation 25(1), which makes explicit what was held in the Bjellica case (at page 339, per Neill LJ) to be implicit in a previous regulation.


[20]
It follows from the foregoing that there was no prescribed accounting period lasting from 18 September 1995 to 31 July 2002: the respondents were, instead, required to make returns in respect of each quarterly period, and for the final period of one month, which elapsed between those dates (the first period being somewhat shorter by virtue of regulation 25(1)(b)). If the Commissioners considered it necessary that a single return should be made in respect of the entire period from 18 September 1995 to 31 July 2002, it was open to them to make a direction to that effect under regulation 25(1)(c). They did not do so.


[21]
An alternative argument was presented somewhat faintly on behalf of the Commissioners, to the effect that the assessment had been made in respect of the quarterly prescribed periods which (it was said) applied during the time when the respondents should have been registered but were not, together with the monthly prescribed period which applied after registration: the assessment, in other words, was a global assessment of the aggregate amount of VAT due in respect of a number of accounting periods. We do not doubt that it was open to the Commissioners to make an assessment on that basis (cf. House v Customs and Excise Commissioners [1996] STC 154). The contention that they did so in the present case is however inconsistent with the terms of the notice of assessment, which bore to give notice of an assessment in respect of a single indivisible period, namely "period 07/02 (18th September 1995 to 31st July 2002)". Nor is the argument supported by the calculations contained in the schedules which accompanied the assessment. Although the calculations related in part to a number of individual accounting periods, they were the accounting periods of the companies in question, rather than those of the respondents. That approach reflected the mistaken idea, expressed in the letter of 10 September 2002 which gave notice of the assessment, that the tax liabilities of those companies could be transferred to the respondents. Thus, for example, the accounting periods used in the calculations included three periods of non-standard length, which were the first periods of each of the companies in question. The respondents could not have had three such periods. Furthermore, the accounting periods of On The Shore Ltd between April 2001 and May 2002 were periods of one month, whereas the Commissioners do not contend that the respondents were obliged to make returns in respect of monthly periods prior to July 2002. Moreover, as we have explained, the calculations included figures in respect of Goa 1510 Ltd and The Spice Aroma Ltd which were not attributed to any identified accounting period.


[22]
In these circumstances, we conclude that the VAT assessment does not relate to any prescribed accounting period in respect of which the respondents were required to make a return, and is therefore invalid.

 

The penalty assessment


[23]
Section 60(1) of the 1994 Act renders a person who acts dishonestly for the purpose of evading VAT liable to a penalty equal to the amount of VAT evaded or sought to be evaded. Where a person is so liable, section 76(1) entitles the Commissioners to assess the amount due by way of penalty. Section 76(3) provides that, in such a case,

"the assessment under this section shall be of an amount due in respect of ...

(b) ... the prescribed accounting period for which the VAT evaded was

due".

 


[24]
In the present case, the penalty assessment notified on 20 December 2002 was expressly made in respect of "the period from 18 September 1995 to 31 May 2002". On any view, that period was not a prescribed accounting period of the respondents. It follows that the penalty assessment was not made in accordance with section 76(3), and is therefore invalid. It again appears from the notice of assessment, and particularly from the table showing how the penalty assessment was calculated, that the Commissioners proceeded as though they could simply transfer to the respondents the cumulative penalties which might otherwise have been imposed on the various companies which had previously been registered, without paying regard to the differences between their respective accounting periods.


[25]
The argument presented on behalf of the Commissioners was that the Tribunal had erred in proceeding on the basis that the penalty assessment and the VAT assessment necessarily stood or fell together. It was, however, conceded that that had been the position adopted before the Tribunal on behalf of the Commissioners. We accept that a VAT assessment and a penalty assessment need not in all circumstances stand or fall together: Ali v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2007] STC 618. In the circumstances of the present case, however, the invalidity which vitiates the VAT assessment - that it does not relate to any prescribed accounting period - equally vitiates the penalty assessment.


[26]
In the course of his submissions, counsel for the Commissioners also suggested that an argument, which had not been considered by the Tribunal, might be available to the Commissioners under section 76(4) of the 1994 Act. That subsection provides:

"In any case where the amount of any penalty ... falls to be calculated by reference to VAT which was not paid at the time it should have been and that VAT ... cannot be readily attributed to any one or more prescribed accounting periods, it shall be treated for the purposes of this Act as VAT due for such period or periods as the Commissioners may determine to the best of their judgment and notify to the person liable for the VAT and penalty ... ".

 

It was conceded that no argument had been advanced before the Tribunal in respect of section 76(4). We also note that section 76(4) is not mentioned in the grounds of appeal to this court. More fundamentally, section 76(4) could only apply in a situation where the unpaid VAT "cannot be readily attributed to any one or more prescribed accounting periods", and where in consequence it is treated as due "for such period or periods as the Commissioners may determine to the best of their judgment". There was no evidence before the Tribunal to establish that there was a difficulty in attributing the unpaid VAT to a prescribed accounting period or periods, or that in consequence the period referred to had been determined by the Commissioners to the best of their judgment. In the absence of such evidence, no issue under section 76(4) could properly arise.

 

The certificate


[27]
There was some discussion before the Tribunal, and also before this court, of the question whether the certificate issued on 30 January 2007 affected the validity of the VAT and penalty assessments issued in 2002, assuming for the purposes of the discussion that those assessments were otherwise valid. The Tribunal construed the certificate as directing that the respondents' first prescribed accounting period ended on 28 February 2007, and therefore as retrospectively amending any previously prescribed accounting periods on which the VAT and penalty assessments might have been based. Before this court, counsel for the respondents submitted that the construction of the certificate was a question of fact, and that the Tribunal's decision on this point was not therefore capable of being challenged on appeal. Insofar as counsel for the Commissioners had sought to provide an explanation to this court of how the Commissioners' computer system generated certificates, such an explanation ought to have been the subject of evidence before the Tribunal.


[28]
In view of our decision that the VAT and penalty assessments were invalid ab initio, the question whether the certificate affected the validity of the assessments does not arise. In those circumstances, and bearing in mind the limited evidence before the Tribunal, it is undesirable, as well as unnecessary, that we should express any concluded view as to the effect of the certificate.


Conclusion


[29]
Since we have concluded that the assessments in question are defective, it follows that we must refuse the Commissioners' appeal.

 


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