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First-tier Tribunal (Tax) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Sinter Site Services Ltd v ommissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (INCOME TAX - Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme - assessments under para. 9 Schedule 16 FA 2020 - claims for support payments based on future agreed earnings which were never paid rather than using the look back or averaging methods permitted by para. 7.2 of the relevant Coronavirus Direction) [2024] UKFTT 995 (TC) (31 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2024/TC09343.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 995 (TC) |
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Appeal reference: TC/2023/10257 |
TAX CHAMBER
Judgment Date: 31 October 2024 |
B e f o r e :
MISS PATRICIA GORDON
____________________
SINTER SITE SERVICES LIMITED | Appellant | |
and | ||
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS | Respondents |
____________________
For the Appellant: David Seymour, Director of the Appellant
For the Respondents: Louise Hartstill, litigator of HM Revenue and Customs' Solicitor's Office
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
INCOME TAX - Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme – assessments under paragraph 9 Schedule 16 FA 2020 –claims for support payments based on future agreed earnings which were never paid rather than using the look back or averaging methods permitted by Paragraph 7.2 of the relevant Coronavirus Direction – appeal dismissed
INTRODUCTION
THE LAW
EVIDENCE AND FINDINGS OF FACT
(1) Mr Seymour and his sons are skilled craftsmen. They work in the construction industry as structural steel workers, and work on jobs as large as football stadia as well as on domestic houses. Up until 2016, they were employees of an independent employer.
(2) In 2016 Mr Seymour left that employer, only to find that after his departure his sons, who continued in employment with that employer, were being poorly treated.
(3) And so, the employees set up the appellant (or "the company") as a family company, which then employed them.
(4) The terms of that employment were never reduced to writing.
(5) The appellant was a small business. Characteristically, therefore, money was tight. It was capitalised by Mr Seymour and his wife. They purchased two vans on a leasing basis. Payments for these vans under the leasing arrangements was paid off by Christmas 2019.
(6) Because money was tight, the employees were paid well below the market rate which they could have obtained if they had exploited their skills on the open market. The idea was that when trading picked up, so too would their remuneration. Until then the money generated by the activities of the appellant should be retained in the business.
(7) It was not until Christmas 2019 that this became possible. Mr Seymour's evidence was that because of their respective personal positions, his sons were keen for their remuneration to be increased and wanted to take more money from the company.
(8) Between 2016 and 2019, the company was growing. All VAT and direct taxes were paid on time.
(9) Mr Seymour's evidence was that at Christmas 2019, at a family meeting (and we think this is probably the meeting which is reflected by the minutes which we have seen dated 22 November 2019) it was agreed that with effect from April 2020, his sons will be paid an increased wage plus an increased rate of overtime (although his wage would remain the same) (the "increased wages"). This was financially feasible as the van leases would have been paid off by then and the company was profitable. We accept Mr Seymour's evidence that had Covid not happened in March 2020, it was likely that the company could afford and would have paid the increased wages.
(10) The increased wages reflected the skills of the employees and were commensurate with the quality of the work that they were doing with effect from April 2020. Up until then they were being paid well below the going rate. They were, however, never actually paid due to the onset of Covid in March 2020.
(11) The claims for the support payments were based on the increased wages which Mr Seymour, who made the claims, calculated at 80% of the increased wages subject to a maximum of £2,500.
(12) HMRC's RTI records for 2019 show that the employees were paid on a weekly basis, and that the amounts varied from week to week.
(13) Officer Leung was tasked, in November 2021 to undertake a compliance check in relation to the appellant's claims for support payments.
(14) It was his view that the employees were variable rather than fixed rate employees. This was based on his analysis of HMRC's RTI information which showed that the employees were paid weekly, that weekly pay fluctuated, and there was no evidence that they were paid by reference to an annual salary. If there had been an annual salary, albeit paid weekly, he would have expected the weekly amounts to be of consistent and equal amounts.
(15) In these circumstances, it was his opinion that the claim should have been based on the provisions of Paragraph 7.2. This provides that claims can be based on the higher of two methods. Firstly the "averaging method" in Paragraph 7.2(a). And secondly the "look back" method in Paragraph 7.2(b). In simple terms the averaging method means using the average weekly pay for the tax year 2019-2020, whilst the look back method means looking at the actual amount paid to the employee in the corresponding calendar period in the previous year. The claim can then be the higher of 80% of these amounts subject to a maximum of £2,500.
(16) Using HMRC's RTI information, Officer Leung recalculated the support payment claims. It was his view that those claims overstated the justifiable amounts.
(17) He shared this initial view with Mr Seymour from whom he sought further information regarding the terms of service of the employees and the payments made and due to be made.
(18) Following correspondence in 2022 and 2023, and the provision of further information by Mr Seymour, Officer Leung revised his figures and on 23 May 2023 notified the company that he intended to issue assessments for £87,958.82 to recover overclaimed support payments. He raised these assessments on 10 August 2023 for the three accounting periods mentioned above. It was Officer Leung's evidence that he made his decision to assess (and by this we take that he made his discovery) on 10 August 2023.
(19) On 30 August 2023 the appellant appealed against these assessments, and on 8 October 2023 notified that appeal to the tribunal.
DISCUSSION
Submissions
(1) Using the increased wages as a basis for calculating the support payments was a reasonable basis, something which was permitted by the legislation.
(2) The purpose of the scheme was to assist businesses such as the company who were struggling because of the onset of Covid.
(3) It was clear from the evidence that the company intended to pay the increased wages with effect from April 2020. There is no need to have terms of employment written down. They can be agreed orally.
(4) The employees were entitled to be paid an amount commensurate with their skills and considerably more than the national minimum wage.
(1) The claims must be based on the statutory formula for the calculation of an employee's reference salary. In the case of these variable rate employees, that is in accordance with Paragraph 7.2.
(2) There is no room in the legislation for any alternative basis of calculation no matter how reasonable.
(3) The claims made by the appellant for support payments were based on anticipated future earnings which were never paid. This is not consistent with the statutory formula.
(4) The legislation does not permit a claimant to calculate an employee's reference salary on a "reasonable" basis. It can only be calculated in accordance with the statutory formula. It is, however, reasonable for a claimant to choose between the averaging and look back methods to enable the claimant to maximise its claim.
(5) The method of calculation may mean that the support payment is below the national minimum wage. That is permissible.
(6) The tribunal has no jurisdiction to consider whether the appellant had a legitimate expectation that the scheme should apply to it, nor that it has been treated unfairly.
Our view
"7.2 Except in relation to a fixed rate employee, the reference salary of an employee or a person treated as an employee for the purposes of CJRS by virtue of paragraph 13.3(a) (member of a limited liability partnership) is the greater of-
(a) the average monthly (or daily or other appropriate pro-rata) amount paid to the employee for the period comprising the tax year 2019-20 (or, if less, the period of employment) before the period of furlough began, and
(b) the actual amount paid to the employee in the corresponding calendar period in the previous year".
DECISION
RIGHT TO APPLY FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL
(a) relate to an employee
(i) to whom the employer made a payment of earnings in the tax year 2019-20 which is shown in a return under Schedule A1 to the PAYE Regulations that is made on or before a day that is a relevant CJRS day,
(ii) in relation to whom the employer has not reported a date of cessation of employment on or before that date, and
(iii) who is a furloughed employee (see paragraph 6).
(b) meet the relevant conditions in paragraphs 7.1 to 7.15 in relation to the furloughed employee.
7.1 Costs of employment meet the conditions in this paragraph if-
(a) they relate to the payment of earnings to an employee during a period in which the employee is furloughed, and
(b) the employee is being paid-
(i) £2500 or more per month (or, if the employee is paid daily or on some other periodic basis, the appropriate pro-rata), or
(ii) where the employee is being paid less than the amounts set out in paragraph 7.1(b)(i), the employee is being paid an amount equal to at least 80% of the employee's reference salary.
7.2 Except in relation to a fixed rate employee, the reference salary of an employee or a person treated as an employee for the purposes of CJRS by virtue of paragraph 13.3(a) (member of a limited liability partnership) is the greater of-
(a) the average monthly (or daily or other appropriate pro-rata) amount paid to the employee for the period comprising the tax year 2019-20 (or, if less, the period of employment) before the period of furlough began, and
(b) the actual amount paid to the employee in the corresponding calendar period in the previous year.
In calculating the employee's reference salary for the purposes of paragraphs 7.2 and 7.7, no account is to be taken of anything which is not regular salary or wages.
7.4 In paragraph 7.3 "regular" in relation to salary or wages means so much of the amount of the salary or wages as–
(a) cannot vary according to any of the relevant matters described in paragraph 7.5 except where the variation in the amount arises as described in paragraph 7.4(d),
(b) is not conditional on any matter,
(c) is not a benefit of any other kind, and
(d) arises from a legally enforceable agreement, understanding, scheme, transaction or series of transactions.
7.6 A person is a fixed rate employee if–
the person is an employee or treated as an employee for the purposes of CJRS by virtue of paragraph 13.3(a) (member of a limited liability partnership),
(a) the person is entitled under their contract to be paid an annual salary,
(b) the person is entitled under their contract to be paid that salary in respect of a number of hours in a year whether those hours are specified in or ascertained in accordance with their contract ("the basic hours"),
(c) the person is not entitled under their contract to a payment in respect of the basic hours other than an annual salary,
(d) the person is entitled under their contract to be paid, where practicable and regardless of the number of hours actually worked in a particular week or month in equal weekly, multiple of weeks or monthly instalments ("the salary period"), and
(e) the basic hours worked in a salary period do not normally vary according to business, economic or agricultural seasonal considerations.
the reference salary of a fixed rate employee is the amount payable to the employee in the latest salary period ending on or before 19 March 2020.
(a) in the period beginning on 1 March 2020 and ending on the third day after the making this direction an amount by way of wages or salary is paid in respect of a period of employment ("the original payment") to an employee,
(b) the original payment is less than the amount required by paragraph 7.1(b)(ii) for the purpose of claiming CJRS,
(c) before making a CJRS claim in respect of the original payment the employer pays the employee a further amount ("the further amount") in respect of the period of employment to which the original payment relates, and
(d) the sum of the original payment and the further amount meets the requirements of paragraph 7.1(b)(ii).