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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Huan v Revenue & Customs [2011] UKFTT 626 (TC) (22 September 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2011/TC01468.html Cite as: [2011] UKFTT 626 (TC) |
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[2011] UKFTT 626 (TC)
TC01468
Appeal number: TC/2011/03070
Income tax – Application for enquiry closure notice – s 28A TMA 1970 – Joint working of enquiries into income tax, VAT and employer compliance – Investigation covering several taxes and closure application covering only one aspect of the enquiries - Whether income tax enquiry should be closed
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
Mrs SAU KWAN HUAN Applicant
- and -
TRIBUNAL: MR PETER KEMPSTER (JUDGE)
MR JOHN RITCHIE (MEMBER)
Sitting in public at 45 Bedford Square, London WC1 on 19 July 2011
Mr Michael Feng (Feng & Co) for the Applicant
Mr Paul Reeve (HMRC Appeals Unit) for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2011
DECISION
(1) Her colleagues dealing with VAT compliance had investigated takeaway meal sales from Mrs Huan’s business and as a result of test purchases in October 2009 had evidence leading them to suspect significant understatement of sales. That led Ms Daniells to have concerns about unreported sales in the business accounts used for income tax reporting purposes.
(2) On 21 June 2010 Mrs Huan and her then agent attended a meeting with Mrs Daniells and her VAT compliance colleague. Mrs Huan had stated that the business had been run on the same basis since approximately 2000. Sources of capital amounting to £10,000 were unexplained. Copies of the note of the meeting were provided to Mrs Huan and amendments invited but no comments were received.
(3) Mrs Huan had accepted that some takings had not been recorded. There had been unresolved negotiation as to the appropriate amount of adjustment to the accounts. In April 2011 HMRC had written requesting further information and when Mr Feng objected to the extent of information requested HMRC had reissued the request (on 11 July 2011) in shortened form.
5. For HMRC Mr Reeve submitted:
(1) Information has been requested by HMRC to check apparent irregularities in the records underlying the 2008-09 income tax return. Mrs Huan has admitted irregularities in record keeping but the extent of those irregularities has not yet been established.
(2) HMRC are not yet in receipt of sufficient information to form a view regarding the tax liability of Mrs Huan for the year under enquiry. There are ongoing enquiries into other aspects of Mrs Huan’s tax affairs – for example, employer compliance - and the results of those enquiries could affect the profits to be assessed. To issue a closure notice before the results of those enquiries are known could prejudice the collection of taxes rightfully due.
6. For Mrs Huan Mr Feng submitted:
(1) The enquiry which was the subject of the application related to the tax year 2008-09. The accounts that formed the basis for that tax year were those for the year ended 31 July 2008. The test purchases made by the VAT officers were conducted in the year ended 31 July 2010, and the results of any necessary adjustment might be relevant to the income tax return for the tax year 2010-11. But any such adjustment was not relevant to the 2008-09 tax return, which was the subject of the enquiry for which a closure notice was requested.
(2) HMRC were keeping the s 9A enquiry open pending the outcome of the VAT enquiry. But as stated above, any adjustments resulting from the VAT enquiry would not affect the income tax return that was the subject of the s 9A enquiry. If subsequently HMRC were not satisfied that the 2008-09 return was correct then the correct course for them was to issue discovery assessments under s 29 TMA at that time.
(3) Mrs Huan’s acceptance that there were unrecorded takings was confined to the period February 2009 to October 2010. The business accounts for that period are not relevant to the 2008-09 income tax return.
12. The Application is REFUSED.