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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Wickersham v Revenue And Customs [2016] EWHC 2956 (Ch) (30 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2956.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2956 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
MR MARK WICKERSHAM |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendant |
____________________
Ms A Nathan for the Defendant
Hearing date: 28 and 29 September 2016
Date draft circulated to the Parties 7 October 2016
Date handed down 30 November 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Saffman:
Introduction
i. The claim for relief was not quantified and thus was not a claim that accords to the legislative provisions. (the Lack of Quantification Defence)
ii. That it did complete, in time, the legislative formalities to open an enquiry under Schedule 1A. (The Notice Served Defence)
iii. That, because there is an enquiry on foot in relation to a claim for relief based on the same loss for 2011/2012, the claim is premature. (The Prematurity Defence)
iv. If this claim is in fact not for a repayment but rather a claim for a credit in the form identified in paragraph 2 above then the claim cannot succeed on a true interpretation of the relevant legislation. This argument is based upon the effect of Schedule 1A paragraph 4(4) Taxes Management Act 1970 (TMA). (The paragraph 4(4) Defence).
The Lack of Quantification Defence
"……….. A claim for a relief, an allowance or repayment of tax shall be for an amount which is quantified at the time when the claim is made"
Schedule 1B para 2(4) states;
"Subject to subparagraph (5), the claim (for loss relief) shall be for an amount equal to the difference between-
(a) the amount in which the person is chargeable to tax for the early year (amount A); and
(b) the amount in which he would be so chargeable on the assumption that effect could be, and were, given to the claim in relation to that year (amount B)
"Enter in box 3 the amount of the 2011/2012 trading (or possibly certain capital) losses you are claiming for……".
The Notice Served Defence.
"……….. An officer of the Board or the Board shall, as soon as possible after a claim….. is made……. give effect to the claim………. by discharge or repayment of tax"
"Where any………… claim ….. as is mentioned in subparagraph (1)………is enquired into by an officer of the Board (paragraph 4(1)) shall not apply until the date on which ……the enquiry is completed"
"To protect HMRC's position I am opening alternative enquiries in respect of your claim to relief for this loss. I will be opening an enquiry into your claim under Schedule 1A TMA 1970 (by separate letter): in case the Supreme Court or a Tax Tribunal decides that you did not make the claim by including it in a return.
I am also enquiring under s9A TMA 1970 into this claim into in this notice of enquiry into your tax return for the year ending 5 April 201 (sic) in case the Supreme Court or a Tax Tribunal decides you made the claim by including it in that return"[3]
"My enquiry under s9A TMA includes an enquiry into your share loss relief claim…………
As your claim relates to 2011/2012 and was made outside the 2011/12 return, The Supreme Court or Tax Tribunal may decide this is a claim made outside of the return. As such, an enquiry under Schedule 1A TMA 1970 is also required. In circumstances such as this the Court of Appeal confirmed that HMRC can, and should, open enquiries under both Schedule 1A and s9A on a protective basis"
"It does not seem to me that s12AC requires particular formality about the giving of notice. Chambers English Dictionary (7th edition) defines "notice" as intimation, announcement, information, warning. It seems to me that the purpose of the notice to be given is to warn the taxpayer that an enquiry is underway so that he knows questions may be asked and what time limits may be affected and to provide a mechanical activation of the enquiry procedure. It does not require anything formal: all that is needed is something in writing which informs the taxpayer that an enquiry is underway."
"To my mind, the parliamentary intention behind that provision is to ensure that the taxpayer knows in writing of the enquiry and so has the opportunity to put its case. There is no particular form prescribed for a notice of enquiry and so long as the taxpayer knows of HMRC's decision to conduct an enquiry that is sufficient. In this regard Flaxmode Limited is, in my view, correct.
The Prematurity Defence
"Even if HMRC were subsequently to conclude (at the end of the s9A enquiry) that the loss relief had been wrongly claimed, that conclusion would be relevant only for the purposes of the 2012 return itself; it cannot and could not affect the stand alone claim previously made. For example, as some of the losses were set against 2011/2012 income, that particular set off might be capable of revision by HMRC at the conclusion of the enquiry. However, to the extent that the losses have already been claimed outside the return in relation to income levels in 2010/2011, the only means of challenge would have been an enquiry into the stand alone claim itself. The outcome of any challenge arising from the s9A enquiry into the 2012 return cannot alter the effect of the standalone claim"
"Where an individual partner makes a claim to utilise partnership losses arising in a later period by setting them off against his income in an earlier period, I do not think that it is properly to be regarded as a simple stand alone claim for relief made outside the return. It is an inchoate claim for relief which as a matter of substance will only be validated when the partnership losses are included in the partners' individual return for the later period"
"The carryback claims were made on the basis of what it was expected and estimated losses attributable to the taxpayer for those later periods would be. But the claims for relief could, as a matter of substance, only ultimately be made good if the (taxpayer) also eventually included their shares of the partnership trading losses in their own individual returns for the period in which those losses arose. In those circumstances I see nothing wrong or unorthodox in the judge's characterisation of those claims as "inchoate".
"Cotter was an entirely different case on its facts, where the Supreme Court was addressing a situation in which clearly a stand-alone claim, outside any tax return, had been made for carry back relief. Moreover, no claim for carry back relief had been made, or intimated, either in the tax return for the earlier year (2007/2008) or in the relevant later year (2008/2009) in which the losses had actually been incurred"
17 Income tax is an annual tax, and liability to such tax is calculated in relation to a particular tax year………. Mr Gordon, who appeared for Mr Cotter, did not argue in this court that he was entitled to deduct the relief against income and gains in 2007/2008. He accepted that paragraph 2 (6) of Schedule 1B to the 1970 Act provides that the effect is to be given to the claim in year 2. He was correct to make that concession. Accordingly, the claim did not affect the amount of tax which was chargeable or payable in relation to 2007/2008. There was therefore no issue between the parties as to the correct assessment to tax in that year.
18 The revenue's use of the taxpayer's income tax liability in 2007/2008 in quantifying his obligation to make payments to account for 2008/2009………. does not affect the finality of the 2007/2008 assessment. Whatever rights claim for relief might have given the taxpayer in relation to a payment to account for 2008/2009, if the revenue had accepted its validity, it did not affect his obligation to pay the tax payable for 2007/2008."
The paragraph 4(4) Defence
"Nothing in this paragraph applies in relation to a claim or an amendment of a claim if the claim is not one for discharge or repayment of tax."
Conclusion
Final Remarks
I am grateful to counsel for their very able assistance in this matter.
H H Judge Saffman
Note 1 As he was in principle entitled to do pursuant to S132 (1) (b) [Back] Note 2 s9A TMA sets out a code as to enquiries by HMRC in respect of relief claimed when the claim for relief is inside the return i.e. where the loss coincides with the tax year in respect of which relief is claimed. In this case since the claimant made a claim for relief in 2011/2012 in respect of the losses incurred in that year (insofar as he had not sought to relate them back to the previous year) s9A is engaged. That section provides that the Board may enquire into a personal tax return if it gives notice of its intention to do so by a deadline stipulated in s9A (2). The code runs parallel to the Schedule 1A code. As I have indicated, Mr Gordon does not dispute that a s9A enquiry was opened in time in respect of the2010/2011 and 2011/2012 claim.
[Back] Note 3 This letter was written before the Supreme Court in Cotter clarified the position to the effect that such a claim was not made in the return (even though made in the tax return form) [Back] Note 4 Subject to defences referred to in para 63 below [Back] Note 5 See Sales J at paragraph 57 of the judgment of first instance approved by Gloster LJ at paragraph 53 of her judgment [Back] Note 6 See Sales J para 56 and Gloster LJ para 30 [Back] Note 7 this case was heard before De Silva reached the Court of Appeal [Back]