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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Vela Fishing Ltd v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue (New Zealand) [2003] UKPC 32 (14 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2003/32.html Cite as: [2003] STI 886, [2003] STC 732, [2003] UKPC 32 |
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Vela Fishing Ltd v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue (New Zealand) [2003] UKPC 32 (14 April 2003)
ADVANCE COPY
Privy Council Appeal No. 36 of 2002
Vela Fishing Limited Appellant
v.
The Commissioner of Inland Revenue Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 14th April 2003
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Steyn
Lord Nolan
Lord Hutton
Lord Scott of Foscote
Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe
[Delivered by Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe]
------------------
"to re-enact the law, excluding certain administrative provisions, contained in the Income Tax Act 1976 in a reorganised form within soundly based and coherent structures of Parts and Subparts."
The other statute was the Tax Administration Act 1994 ("TAA 1994"). Its purpose was (section 2(1)):
"to re-enact the administrative provisions contained in the Income Tax Act 1976 and the Inland Revenue Department Act 1974 in a reorganised form."
Both statutes were described in their long titles as Acts "to reorganise and consolidate the law". They explicitly disavowed (in sections AA1(2) and 2(2) respectively) any intention to change the interpretation or effect of the existing law.
"When any person has made returns and has been assessed for income tax for any year, it shall not be lawful for the Commissioner to alter the assessment so as to increase the amount thereof after the expiration of 4 years from the end of the year in which the assessment was made."
Section 25(2) made an exception for fraudulent or wilfully misleading returns.
"Any express or implied reference in any enactment, instrument, or document (including this Act) to any provision of this Act, or to things done or to be done or failing to be done under or for the purposes of any provision of this Act, shall, if and so far as the nature of the reference permits, be construed as including, in relation to the times, circumstances, or purposes in relation to which the corresponding provision in the repealed enactments has or had effect, a reference to, or to things done or to be done or failing to be done under or for the purposes of, that corresponding provision."
Subsection (5) is a sort of mirror-image of subsection (4), and subsection (6) relates to the punishment of offences.
"Except as specified in this section or in section 108B, if -
(a) A taxpayer provides a tax return and is assessed for tax for the return period; and
(b) 4 years have passed from the end of the income year in which the taxpayer provides the tax return, -
the Commissioner may not alter the assessment so as to increase the amount assessed."
It did not therefore make any radical change. Its effect was to keep the normal four-year time bar (in the absence of fraud or serious default) but to make the four-year period run from the end of the tax year in which the taxpayer filed his return, rather than the tax year in which the Commissioner first made an assessment. Mr Milne QC (for the Commissioner) told their Lordships, without dissent from Mr Cranston QC (for Vela), that in most cases this would make no practical difference, since normally returns are made in July or August and are followed by assessments within a matter of weeks. However in some cases (and especially if a taxpayer filed his return during the month of March) the change could mean that the time bar was accelerated by a whole year. There is no dispute but that the new section 108 amounted to an amending provision.
"A taxpayer may, before the expiry of the period of 4 years applicable under section 108 or section 108A, sign a waiver in the prescribed form to extend the applicable time bar by up to a further 6 months." (Section 108A is not relevant.)
"Any … reference in … [section 108B] to [the new section 108] … shall, if and so far as the nature of the reference permits, be construed as including, in relation to the times, circumstances or purposes in relation to which the corresponding provision in the repealed enactments [sc. section 25 as well as the old section 108] has … effect, a reference to … that corresponding provision [section 25 or the old section 108]."
"He confined his argument exclusively to the submission that the sections were not 'corresponding' sections. This submission was founded upon the proposition that the 1970 provisions, taken as a whole, were different from those of 1968. But this must be so whenever a new statutory provision is substituted for an old one. We read 'corresponding' in s 20A as including a new section dealing with the same subject matter as the old one, in a manner or with a result not so far different from the old as to strain the accepted meaning of the word 'corresponding' as given in the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary – 'answering to in character and function; similar to'."