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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 >> Financial Institution No 4 v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKSPC SPC00583 (09 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2007/SPC00583.html Cite as: [2007] UKSPC SPC583, [2007] UKSPC SPC00583 |
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SPC00583
NOTICES UNDER TMA 1970 s.20 without naming the taxpayer – whether subs (8A) satisfied – yes – whether consent should be given to the Notices – yes
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
APPLICATION BY THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS TO SERVE A SECTION 20 NOTICE ON FINANCIAL INSTITUTION No.4 IN RESPECT OF CUSTOMERS WITH UK ADDRESSES HOLDING NON-UK ACCOUNTS
Special Commissioner: DR JOHN F. AVERY JONES CBE
Sitting in private in London on 14 December 2006
An Assistant Director, Special Civil Investigations, and [a member of the] Solicitor's Office, for the Applicant
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
ANONYMISED DECISION
"…(3) Subject to this section, an inspector may, for the purpose of enquiring into the tax liability of any person ("the taxpayer"), by notice in writing require any other person to deliver to the inspector or, if the person to whom the notice is given so elects, to make available for inspection by a named officer of the Board, such documents as are in his possession or power and as (in the inspector's reasonable opinion) contain, or may contain, information relevant to any tax liability to which the taxpayer is or may be, or may have been, subject, or to the amount of any such liability; and the persons who may be required to deliver or make available a document under this subsection include the Director of Savings.
…
(6) The persons who may be treated as "the taxpayer" for the purposes of this section include a company which has ceased to exist and an individual who has died; ...
(7) Notices under subsection (1) or (3) above are not to be given by an inspector unless he is authorised by the Board for its purposes; and—
(a) a notice is not to be given by him except with the consent of a General or Special Commissioner; and
(b) the Commissioner is to give his consent only on being satisfied that in all the circumstances the inspector is justified in proceeding under this section.
(8) Subject to subsection (8A) below, a notice under subsection (3) above shall name the taxpayer with whose liability the inspector (or, where section 20B(3) below applies, the Board) is concerned.
(8A) If, on an application made by an inspector and authorised by order of the Board, a Special Commissioner gives his consent, the inspector may give such a notice as is mentioned in subsection (3) above but without naming the taxpayer to whom the notice relates; but such a consent shall not be given unless the Special Commissioner is satisfied—
(a) that the notice relates to a taxpayer whose identity is not known to the inspector or to a class of taxpayers whose individual identities are not so known;
(b) that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the taxpayer or any of the class of taxpayers to whom the notice relates may have failed or may fail to comply with any provision of the Taxes Acts;
(c) that any such failure is likely to have led or to lead to serious prejudice to the proper assessment or collection of tax; and
(d) that the information which is likely to be contained in the documents to which the notice relates is not readily available from another source.
(8B) A person to whom there is given a notice under subsection (8A) above may, by notice in writing given to the inspector within thirty days after the date of the notice under that subsection, object to that notice on the ground that it would be onerous for him to comply with it; and if the matter is not resolved by agreement, it shall be referred to the Special Commissioners, who may confirm, vary or cancel that notice."
Section 127 of the Finance Act 1988 provides:
"(1) Any provision made by or under the Taxes Acts which requires a person—
(a) to produce, furnish or deliver any document or cause any document to be produced, furnished or delivered; or
(b) to permit the Board, or an inspector or other officer of the Board—
(i) to inspect any document, or
(ii) to make or take extracts from or copies of or remove any document,
shall have effect as if any reference in that provision to a document were a reference to anything in which information of any description is recorded and any reference to a copy of a document were a reference to anything onto which information recorded in the document has been copied, by whatever means and whether directly or indirectly.
(2) In connection with tax, a person authorised by the Board to exercise the powers conferred by this subsection—
(a) shall be entitled at any reasonable time to have access to, and inspect and check the operation of, any computer and any associated apparatus or material which is or has been in use in connection with any document to which this subsection applies; and
(b) may require—
(i) the person by whom or on whose behalf the computer is or has been so used, or
(ii) any person having charge of, or otherwise concerned with the operation of, the computer, apparatus, or material,
to afford him such reasonable assistance as he may require for the purposes of paragraph (a) above.
(3) Subsection (2) above applies to any document, within the meaning given by subsection (1) above, which a person is or may be required by or under any provision of the Taxes Acts—
(a) to produce, furnish or deliver, or cause to be produced, furnished or delivered; or
(b) to permit the Board, or an inspector or other officer of the Board, to inspect, make or take extracts from or copies of or remove.
…
(6) This section shall be construed as if it were contained in the Taxes Management Act 1970."
Section 20D(3) of the Taxes Management Act 1970 provides:
"(3) Without prejudice to section 127 of the Finance Act 1988, in sections 20 to 20CC above "document" means, subject to sections 20(8C) and 20A(1A) [which relate to personal records and journalistic material], anything in which information of any description is recorded."
(1) The Financial Institution operates in a number of countries. It holds information on its computers in the UK on an estimated [number withheld] customers with UK addresses and non-UK bank accounts.
(2) The Revenue are currently investigating the use of offshore accounts by UK residents, which they consider presents a significant risk to the proper collection of UK tax.
(3) The Revenue are aware from information obtained from a source (the identity of which was given to me) relating to debit cards of a number of customers of the Financial Institution with offshore accounts of whom 23% have completed the foreign income pages in their tax returns.
(4) Out of the names identified by this source a sample, which is intended to be representative, has been chosen of 461 cases (not only customers of the Financial Institution) out of circa 11,000 taxpayers who have made self-assessment returns, are UK resident and domiciled, and have not declared any foreign income. As part of a trial agreed with some of the accountancy bodies, letters based on one of four types of standard letter were sent to them in July 2005. Of these 461 cases, 252 enquiries have been opened, and in 113 cases (of which 9 are being dealt with by Special Civil Investigations, which deals with larger cases) further tax liability has arisen or can be estimated. Five further cases have been settled by a minor query approach. This makes a total of 118 cases (26% of the total sample of 461) with an expected yield (references herein to yield include interest and penalties) of £1.9m (an average of £16,100 per case), and many payments on account have been made. If granted, these Notices will also provide further information about transactions entered into by such people. The remaining 204 cases in the sample have been closed with no tax liability.
(5) I was given full details of Special Civil Investigations and local tax office investigations of 10 cases relating to customers of the Financial Institution involving offshore accounts. The total yield was, £3,849,500 an average of £384,950 per case. In all cases there was undeclared offshore bank interest and also undeclared trading profits. The Inspector accepts that these are unrepresentative and the yield from them is not included in his estimate of the yield if consent to these Notices is granted. However, they demonstrate the likely connection between undeclared foreign bank interest and other undeclared profits.
Evidence
Class
Possession or power
Information or documents
Time for compliance
Conclusion
JOHN F. AVERY JONES
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
RELEASE DATE: 9 January 2007
SC 2061/06