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United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> Bryant v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKSPC SPC00623 (30 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2007/SPC00623.html Cite as: [2007] UKSPC SPC623, [2007] UKSPC SPC00623 |
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Spc00623
Income tax – self assessment – closure notice under s 28A TMA 1970 – whether evidence to displace conclusions – no appearance by Appellant – representatives resigned – absence of any such evidence – appeal dismissed
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
JOHN BRYANT Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Special Commissioner: JOHN CLARK
Sitting in public in London on 11 July 2007
The Appellant did not appear and was not represented
Nicola Parslow of HM Revenue and Customs' Appeals Unit, London and Anglia, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
DECISION
The facts
Arguments for the Revenue
"It is well settled by authority that this places the onus of discharging the assessment on the taxpayer. If the commissioners, having heard his case, are uncertain where the truth lies, they must dismiss the appeal and uphold the assessment."
"A conclusion by the commissioners that they are unable to decide whether the taxpayer's explanation is true or false has the result that the explanation carries no weight."
" . . . and that is why, of course, the Taxes Management Act 1970 throws on the taxpayer the onus of showing that the assessments are wrong. It is the taxpayer who knows and the taxpayer who is in a position (or, if not in a position, who certainly should be in a position) to provide the right answer . . . "
He continued:
"It is the duty of every individual taxpayer to make his own return and, if challenged, to support the return he has made, or, if that return cannot be supported, to come completely clean; and if he gives no evidence whatsoever he cannot be surprised if he is finally lumbered with more than he has in fact received. It is his own fault that he is so lumbered."
" . . . the onus was on him to satisfy them [ie the commissioners], which he failed to do, notably because he did not give any evidence."
Conclusions
JOHN CLARK
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
RELEASE DATE: 30 July 2007
SC/3172/2006