BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
First-tier Tribunal (Tax) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> T Singh Limited v Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs [2009] UKFTT 37 (TC) (02 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00015.html Cite as: [2009] UKFTT 37 (TC), [2009] UKFTT 00015 (TC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
TC00015
Value added tax whether assessment made to best judgement s 73(1) VATA 1994 retail scheme application of direct calculation scheme 1 use of mark-ups to determine expected selling prices adjustment of expected selling prices to take account of wastage and loss of stock time limit for making assessment s 77(1)(a) VATA 1994 assessment made to best judgement but reduced by application of three year "capping" rule appeal dismissed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
T SINGH LIMITED Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: EDWARD SADLER (Chairman)
MOHAMMED FAROOQ
Sitting in public in Birmingham on 24 March 2009
The Appellant did not appear and was not represented
Mrs P Crinnion, advocate, from the office of the General Counsel and Solicitor to Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
Appeal heard in the absence of the Appellant under Rule 26 (2) of the Value Added Tax Tribunals Rules 1986
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
Introduction
Hearing the appeal in the absence of the Appellant
The evidence and the findings of fact
(1) The Appellant carries on business as a retailer operating a supermarket in Worcester. The business is of substance, and its accounts filed at the Companies Registry show a turnover of £1.190 million for the 12 months to 31 January 2005 and £1.397 million and £1.723 million for each subsequent year. The Appellant was registered for VAT with effect from February 2001. It makes both standard-rated and zero-rated supplies for VAT purposes. Its VAT returns for the period relevant to this appeal were prepared and submitted on its behalf by Doshi & Co, a firm of accountants.
(2) On 19 January 2005 Mrs Drew visited the premises of the Appellant to inspect their books and records. She interviewed Mr Tirath Singh, a director of the Appellant. From the information relating to preceding VAT returns provided by Doshi & Co subsequent to the visit Mrs Drew noted that the Appellant was using the Direct Calculation Scheme 1 as the method available to retailers to calculate the value of standard-rated retail sales (and hence the amount of output tax in making its VAT returns). She also noted that in applying this scheme the Appellant had used mark-ups of purchase prices in calculating its zero-rated sales based on what Doshi & Co claimed were industry averages (rather than the actual mark-ups achieved in the Appellant's business); that mark-ups were not reviewed quarterly; and that no adjustments had been made for wastage, loss, theft or price mark-downs of stock. In these respects Mrs Drew concluded that the Appellant had not applied the Direct Calculation Scheme 1 in accordance with the requirements of that scheme.
(3) Mrs Drew also noted that the Appellant operated a full electronic point of sale system, but did not use that system (or the information it recorded) for the purposes of compiling information for its VAT returns (Doshi & Co said that the Appellant found it difficult to use). The Appellant did not retain a daily Z reading from the EPOS system to record gross daily takings.
(4) The Direct Calculation Scheme 1 is not available to a retailer whose tax exclusive retail turnover exceeds £1 million. Mrs Drew noted that during the Appellant's VAT quarterly accounting period 01/04 the Appellant's turnover exceeded that threshold, at which point the Appellant should have opted to use another scheme for determining the value of its taxable supplies, but had not done so.
(5) Mrs Drew concluded from her enquiry that the Appellant had understated the VAT due in its returns by reason of its failure to apply correctly the Direct Calculation Scheme 1, and she first proceeded to make a "best judgement" assessment to recover the understated VAT by using a different retailer scheme, namely the Apportionment Scheme. She did so for two reasons: first, Doshi & Co had made calculations using the Apportionment Scheme to give the Appellant an indication of the different position if that Scheme were used in place of the Direct Calculation Scheme 1 (and since the result of using the Apportionment Scheme was less favourable to the Appellant, it was not used); and secondly, because the Appellant was not, by reason of its turnover, eligible to use Direct Calculation Scheme 1.
(6) However, upon review by the Commissioners in September 2005, this first assessment (made in July 2005) was withdrawn, the Commissioners taking the view that since they did not have the power to direct a retailer to adopt a particular retail scheme they could not proceed to make a "best judgement" assessment on the basis of a scheme different from that actually used by the Appellant. The Commissioners, in withdrawing the first assessment, advised the Appellant that it would have to select a different retail scheme for which it was eligible.
(7) Mrs Drew then proceeded to prepare an assessment using the Direct Calculation Scheme 1. After writing on several occasions to Doshi & Co seeking information from them about mark-ups used for the purposes of the VAT returns made, and receiving no satisfactory response, she made a further visit to the Appellant's premises on 6 March 2006. Mr Singh was not present, and Mrs Drew discussed the matter with Ms Kaur, another director of the Appellant. She also spoke on the telephone on that occasion to the accountant at Doshi & Co to repeat her requests for information (the information requested in the previous correspondence and in this telephone call has to date not been provided). Ms Kaur provided certain information as to the wastage records of the business for the three months to the date of the visit (all records for prior periods were said to be with the accountants). At Mrs Drew's request, Ms Kaur also provided a sample of invoices from various suppliers for different categories of zero-rated goods supplied by the Appellant in its business together with selling prices of those goods. Mrs Drew took the detailed figures for one week, but made a check to ensure that the volumes of sales and prices for that week were consistent with other weeks in the quarter for which Ms Kaur supplied the information.
(8) On 31 March 2006 Ms Kaur sent to Mrs Drew stock writedown reports produced from the EPOS system used by the Appellant showing all goods written down for wastage, loss and other reasons for the period 7 to 30 March 2006.
(9) Using the information supplied by Ms Kaur (and, for calculating wastage, using the EPOS stock writedown records rather than the incomplete information provided at the time of the visit), Mrs Drew proceeded to calculate the VAT due on standard-rated supplies applying the Direct Calculation Scheme 1 for the VAT quarters 07/03 to 01/06 inclusive. The detail of the method she applied is described below. Her calculations as to mark-ups and wastage (the two areas she had identified as being incorrect in the VAT returns made) were based on information relating to March 2006, that is, after the quarterly periods for which the Assessment was eventually made, but that was the only information available to Mrs Drew the Appellant told her that all records and information relating to the quarterly periods assessed was held by the accountants, and they failed to provide it to the Commissioners, despite a number of requests made by Mrs Drew.
(10) On 28 June 2006 Mrs Drew wrote to the Appellant explaining in detail the calculations she had made using the Direct Calculation Scheme 1, identifying those items where she accepted the mark-ups used by the Appellant and those where she had calculated a reduced weighted mark-up. She also explained her calculations as to zero-rated sales after provision for wastage or other loss (based on the stock writedown reports). Finally, she explained how these calculations showed that the Appellant had understated its output tax in its returns for each of the quarters under review, and stated that she proposed to make an assessment for the aggregate amount of understated VAT (£10,789) plus interest unless she received any evidence to refute her calculations.
(11) The Appellant made no response to Mrs Drew's letter, and accordingly in July 2006 she prepared an assessment in those sums which was issued as the Assessment on 11 August 2006.
Direct Calculation Scheme 1
The methodology and calculations used in making the Assessment
The relevant statutory provisions
Where a person has failed to make any returns required under this Act or to keep any documents and afford the facilities necessary to verify such returns or where it appears to the Commissioners that such returns are incomplete or incorrect, they may assess the amount of VAT due from him to the best of their judgement and notify it to him.
In the present case the Commissioners contend that the Appellant has made returns required under VATA 1994, but that such returns are incorrect, so that they are entitled to assess the amount of VAT due from the Appellant to the best of their judgement.
An assessment under subsection (1) above of an amount of VAT due for any prescribed accounting period must be made within the time limits provided for in section 77 and shall not be made after the later of the following
(a) 2 years after the end of the prescribed accounting period; or
(b) one year after the evidence of facts, sufficient in the opinion of the Commissioners to justify the making of the assessment, comes to their knowledge .
Section 77(1) VATA 1994 also makes provision as to time limits in the case of an assessment under section 73 VATA 1994, as follows:
Subject to the following provisions of this section, an assessment under section 73 shall not be made -
(a) more than 3 years after the end of the prescribed accounting period concerned.
The parties' submissions
Decision
EDWARD SADLER
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 2 April 2009
LON/2007/0743