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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> Colley & Anor v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKSPC SPC00585 (22 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2007/SPC00585.html Cite as: [2007] UKSPC SPC585, [2007] UKSPC SPC00585 |
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SPC00585
CAPITAL GAINS – ALLOWABLE LOSS – Appellants claimed loss relief for irrecoverable loan against assessed capital gains – Appellants purportedly loaned their company monies to purchase goodwill from the partnership -Appellants maintained in evidence that the goodwill was gifted – no finding of fact by special commissioner in previous appeal that a loan was created – Appellants not adduced sufficient evidence of the existence of the loan – Appeal dismissed.
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
PETER COLLEY Appellants
NICHOLAS SIMON HILLBERG
- and -
HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE and CUSTOMS Respondents
Special Commissioner: MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE
Sitting in public in Cardiff on 17 October 2006, further written representations received 21 November 2006
John Brooks Counsel instructed by Carston Chartered Accountants for the Appellants
Colin Williams HM Inspector of Taxes for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
DECISION
The Appeal
The Background
The Issues to be Determined
(1) Whether, and to what extent, any debt due to the Appellants that arose as a result of their sale of goodwill to a limited company, Hacker Limited became irrecoverable in 1999/2000.
(2) Whether any part of a debt due to the Appellants, that arose out of their sale of goodwill to Hacker Limited, that became irrecoverable in consequence of the loan, of the arrangements of which the loan forms part or of an act or omission of the lender so that relief would be precluded by section 253(12) TCGA 1992.
(3) Whether any loss is to be deducted under section 2(2) TCGA 1992 from the capital gains included in each Appellant's self assessment for 1999/2000.
(1) Do the parties accept that I am bound by the findings of fact of Dr David Williams, Special Commissioner, in his decision involving the Appellants released on 7 June 2005 that there was a transfer of goodwill from the Appellants to Hacker Limited for consideration?
(2) Do the parties accept that Dr Williams found in paragraph 37 of his decision that the Appellants in their capacity of directors loaned Hacker Limited the monies necessary to purchase the goodwill from the partnership, as evidenced by the credit against the entry of directors' loans accounts in the original 2000 accounts for Hacker Limited?
(3) If the parties do not accept that Dr Williams made a finding on whether a loan was created between Hacker Limited and its directors, how am I as a tribunal of fact expected to resolve the facts on this issue.
The Evidence
The Background Facts
"Our client (each Appellant) sold his share of goodwill ……. to Hacker Limited for £125,000 which was credited to his director's loan account".
"The goodwill was gifted to Hacker Limited by our clients (the Appellants) under the provisions of section 165 TCGA 1992.
No consideration has been received by our clients (the Appellants) in respect of the transfer of goodwill and there has been no credit to our clients directors loan account in Hacker Limited in respect of the goodwill. The accounts of Hacker Limited for the year ended 31 August will be restated to that effect".
(1) A note of the statutory provision under which the loss was being claimed or confirmation that the claim was under section 253 TCGA 1992.
(2) Copies of any documentation or minutes of meetings etc detailing with the loan.
(3) A note of any steps taken by the Appellants to recover the loan.
(4) A brief explanation of the circumstances showing why it was now considered that the loan gave rise to a loss on 1 September 1999, which was the first day on which the company began trading.
(5) Copies of any evidence held in support of the Appellant's claim that the principal of the loan had become irrecoverable by 1 September 1999.
(1) The loss was being claimed under section 253 TCGA 1992.
(2) There were no board meetings detailing the loan.
(3) It was not possible for the Appellants to recover the loan as the accounts for Hacker Limited have been restated with the effect that no balance was due to the Appellants.
(4) The accounts of Hacker Limited have been restated with effect from 1 September 1999 and as a consequence the loss arose on this date.
(5) Hacker Limited has submitted five years accounts to both Companies House and the Inland Revenue since commencement of trade. None of these sets of accounts acknowledge a debt to the Appellants, and as a consequence the loan was irrecoverable.
Dr David Williams' Decision released 7 June 2005
"What were those arrangements? The only documentation dating before the tax dispute crystallised consists of the original set of accounts and the accompanying directors' report, the self assessment returns, and the letters to and from the Inspector and colleagues. These all point in one direction. Those advising the Appellants advised that the transfer of goodwill was to be taken as at market value - the amount of which is not now in dispute. It was taken as £250,000. It was presented at the time as the valuation of the Appellants. That sum was shown as an intangible fixed asset. This was balanced by adding a credit of £207,221 to the director's loan account, as against a debit of £100 in the previous year. The credit was shown as falling due after one year. If that is correct - and it was not only prepared but also signed as correct in 2001 – then Mr Colley would also be correct in saying that he received no actual cash from the transfer itself. It would be reflected in the existence of credit on the loan account and the value of the shares held in Hacker. This is consistent with the original claim that the Appellants had made a gain on the transfer but were seeking to discharge the tax liability by reference to retirement relief. If there had been no gain, as is now contended, why was retirement relief claimed, however, mistaken the facts about the claimants' ages (as against the transaction causing the gains) that claim might have been? I can see no persuasive explanation for that".
" …… the revision of the accounts took place only after queries had been raised about the earlier accounts by the Inspector. This is not persuasive of an error that, as was contended for the Appellants, arose from accounting considerations at the time of the transfer rather than tax considerations that emerged later. Nor is that contention consistent with the earlier mistake made about the retirement relief claim. Nor was I offered any evidence for (from my italics) the Appellants to explain how that mistake came to be made by them or their advisers".
"The fact that the original accounts of Hacker were replaced by other accounts does not remove those earlier accounts from the evidence. Accounts cannot just be rewritten at whim. It has to be shown that there was a valid reason for restating the accounts before the revised accounts displace the earlier accounts. I am not satisfied that there is a sound reason for regarding the original accounts as needing replacement so far as those accounts are relevant to these appeals. Accordingly I do not accept the revised accounts have displaced the original accounts in these appeals. There is therefore no sound evidence to lead me to question the basis of fact on which the Inspector has approached the self-assessments of either Appellant. Any changes made in those accounts were the result of later considerations or other reasons".
The Appellants' Evidence
The Respondents' Evidence
The Law
1) In this section a qualifying loan means a loan in the case of which –
a) the money lent is used by the borrower wholly for the purposes of a trade carried on by him, not being a trade which consists of or includes the lending of money, and
b) the borrower is resident in the United Kingdom, and
c) the borrower 's debt is not a debt on security as defined in section 132;
and for the purposes of paragraph a) above money used by the borrower for setting up a trade which is subsequently carried on by him shall be treated as used for the purposes of that trade.
Where a person who has made a qualifying loan makes a claim and at that time –
a) any outstanding amount of the principal of the loan has become irrecoverable, and
b) the claimant has not assigned his right to recover that amount, and
c) the claimant and the borrower were not each other's spouses, or companies in the same group, when the loan was made or at any subsequent time,
then to the extent that that amount is not an amount which, in the case of the claimant, falls to be brought into account as a debit given for the purposes of Chapter 11 of Part IV of the Finance Act 1996 (loan relationships) this Act shall have effect as if an allowable loss equal to that amount had accrued to the claimant {at the time of the claim or (subject to subsection (3A) below) any earlier time specified in the claim]
Appellants' Submissions
Respondents' Submissions
Reasons for my decision
"Now of course it is always open to a litigant to advance contentions in the alternative. A good contention is not bad merely because it has a number of fellows that in greater or less degree are inconsistent with it. Nevertheless, inconsistencies may affect weight. If the inconsistency is purely factual, it may tend to mutual self - destruction. It would be a rare motorist who would tender evidence to show not only that at the moment of impact he was ten miles away but also that at that moment he was driving the car with the utmost circumspection".
Decision
MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
RELEASE DATE: 22 January 2007
LON/