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 £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) >> Lee Patterson Ltd v Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs [2009] UKFTT 45 (TC) (08 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00023.html Cite as: [2009] UKFTT 00023 (TC), [2009] UKFTT 45 (TC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
TC00023
VAT – Default surcharge – Reasonable excuse
FIRST-TAX TRIBUNAL
TAX
LEE PATTERSON LTD Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS (VAT) Respondents
Tribunal: CHARLES HELLIER (Chairman)
KEITH DUGDALE FCA
Sitting in public in Norwich on 12 March 2009
Lee Patterson for the Appellant
Pauline Crinnion, instructed by the solicitor to HMRC for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
(1) Mr Patterson is a golf professional. He is the principal of the Appellant and through the Appellant provides golf services to the members of the Royal Cromer Golf Club.
(2) Partly as the result of an ill-fated venture with Land of Golf Ltd the Appellant was late in rendering its VAT return and paying the associated VAT for the quarters 06/07 (to 30 June 2007) and 12/07 (to 31 December 2007). A surcharge liability notice was issued in respect of the first period and a surcharge liability extension notice in respect of the second of those periods. No surcharge was levied in respect of the second period.
(3) The surcharge liability notice indicated clearly that the Appellant:
"[might] be liable to a surcharge if you are in default in respect of a [period ending before 30 June 2008]",
the extension notice in respect of the 12/07 default indicated that no surcharge was proposed in respect of that default but that if it defaulted again in respect of any period ending before 31 December 2008
"a surcharge assessment may be made".
(4) The VAT return sent to the appellant for the 06/08 period bore the legend in bold print:-
"if this return and any tax due are not received by the due date you may be liable to a surcharge."
(5) The 06/08 VAT return was due to be submitted by 31 July 2008. The Appellant's bookkeeper prepared the VAT return in good time and gave it to Mr Patterson about a fortnight before that date. All Mr Patterson needed to do was to sign the return and the cheque for the VAT due and send it to HMRC.
(6) At the end of July – on Tuesday 29th July – Mr Patterson went with his wife to the Glenmore Golf club in Leeds to play at the Glenmore Club Pros Championship. He had intended to send off the VAT return and the cheque before he departed but forgot and left it at home.
(7) The golf tournament lasted from Thursday 31 July to Sunday 3 August with a practice day on Wednesday 30 July. During his practice round Mr Patterson remembered his VAT return. He spoke about it to his wife. His wife suggested he phone HMRC.
(8) He then dialled a directory enquiry service asking for Customs and Excise and was given a number which he phoned. He spoke to a lady who told him not to worry because they could not process all the returns they received at once.
(9) So Mr Patterson took no further action until he got home when on Tuesday 5 August he signed and posted the return and the cheque. They were received by HMRC on 8 August 2008, eight days late.
(10) But, unbeknown to him, the number which Mr Patterson rang was not that of the UK's HMRC enquiry line, but that of Isle of Man Customs & Excise. Thus the advice he received came not from HMRC, but from the service in a different jurisdiction.
(11) Apparently when a person phones a directory enquiry service and asks for Customs and Excise, the Isle of Man number (which is not an "00" prefixed number) tends to be given out. The Isle of Man Customs and Excise receive a number of enquiries in this way from UK traders who we suspect have asked for Customs and Excise rather than HMRC.
(12) The e-mail correspondence kindly produced by Mrs Crinnion between a UK HMRC officer and an officer of the Isle of Man Customs and Excise indicated that if a call is received from a caller they suspect to be a UK trader they give the trader the UK VAT National Advice Number, and that if the caller said that his return was going to be late he would be put in contact with their Debt Management Unit which would ask for the relevant VAT number first. Whilst we accept that this may be the recommended procedure generally in the Isle of Man, we accept Mr Patterson's evidence that he was told not to worry by the person to whom he spoke on this occasion.
(13) The evidence from the Appellant's bank statements indicated that had the VAT been paid on time, there were sufficient funds available (taking into account the available overdraft facility) to meet the payment.
(14) Had Mr Patterson been told in his phonecall that a surcharge would have been levied, he would have made arrangements to ensure that the return and payment would have been received in time. Mrs Crinnion submitted that even if Mr Patterson had made arrangements for the return and VAT cheque to have been posted on 30 July, there would be no guarantee that they would have arrived on 31 July (the due date). But both those days were weekdays and it seems to us reasonable to expect that a letter despatched first class on 30 July would arrive the following day. Mr Patterson made his call to 'Customs and Excise' at 12.11; had he received a different answer we believe he would have arranged despatch in time for the letter to arrive the next day.
The Law
The Parties' Contentions
Conclusion
CHARLES HELLIER
TRIBUNAL JUDGE
RELEASED:8 April 2009
LON 2008/2155