TC00062
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> March v Revenue & Customs [2009] UKFTT 94 (TC) (07 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00062.html Cite as: [2009] UKFTT 94 (TC) |
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[2009] UKFTT 94 (TC)
TC00062
FIRST TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX Reference No: LON 2007/739
VAT – FLAT RATE SCHEME – denial of input tax claim on construction costs of a riding arena – Appellant not entitled to recover input tax under flat rate scheme except on capital expenditure goods exceeding £2,000 – was the denial of the input tax in the correct form – yes – were the disputed supplies goods or services – services except haulage which was part of a single supply of goods – was the decision to refuse retrospective withdrawal reasonable – no – Appeal allowed in part
SALLY MARCH Appellant
- and -
HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE and CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE (Chairman)
RICHARD CORKE FCA (Member)
Sitting in public in Bristol on 20 February 2009
Nigel Ferrington VAT consultant for the Appellant
Richard Smith counsel instructed by the Solicitor's office of HM Revenue & Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
The Appeal
The Background
The Dispute
(1) The Respondents' letter amending the VAT return 12/06 was not in the correct form and stated the wrong period.
(2) The disallowed VAT claim related to supplies of goods not services.
(3) The Respondents acted unreasonably in not allowing the Appellant to withdraw retrospectively from the flat rate scheme.
First Dispute: Incorrect Notification
Second Dispute: Goods not Services
"it would be wholly unrealistic to treat the construction work otherwise than as the acquisition of capital goods".
"any goods of a capital nature but does not include any goods acquired by a flat rate trader (whether before he was a flat rate trader or not) –
a) for the purpose of resale or incorporation into goods supplied by him;
b) for consumption by him within one year, or
c) to generate income by being leased, let or hired".
"For any prescribed accounting period of a flat rate trader, he is entitled to credit for input tax in respect of a relevant purchase of his of capital expenditure goods with a value, together with VAT chargeable of more than £2,000".
Dispute Three: Retrospective Withdrawal from the Flat Rate Scheme
Background
The Disputed Decision
"Initially, I was asked by our policy team to consider whether to allow your client retrospective withdrawal from the flat rate scheme using similar principles to those applied in the Wadlewski case and this was why I asked you to provide the accounting information given in your fax of 8 November 2007.
On receipt of the figures I referred the case back to policy for advice and they have confirmed that the request for retrospective withdrawal from the flat rate scheme is to be refused.
Firstly an examination of the figures shows that the loss in gross profit for VAT periods 09/06 to 06/07 would be 23 per cent which falls short of the 40 per cent in the Wadlewski case and suggests that your client did not suffer hardship.
Secondly and more importantly the Wadlewski case dealt with long term hardship during day to day trading, whereas in your client's case the difference in figures between normal accounting and the flat rate scheme was only for a short period of time based on the abnormal transactions relating to the construction of the new riding arena".
" In considering retrospective withdrawal it should be borne in mind that the aim of the scheme is to save time and compliance costs through reduced record keeping. Recalculating previously rendered returns would negate the benefits of the scheme. From the Commissioners' perspective the fact that your client would be better off financially is in itself not sufficient reason to agree to retrospective withdrawal.
Having said the above, it could be that by refusing retrospective withdrawal the difference between the amount of VAT your client pays under the flat rate scheme exceeds that under normal accounting to such an extent that they would suffer hardship.
In this respect, the Commissioners follow the principles established in the tribunal case of A and C Wadlewski VTD 13340. Although this case concerned retrospective change of retail scheme, the general principles of hardship apply to the flat rate scheme.
In the Wadlewski case …………..
The Tribunal found that in exercising their discretion to allow retrospective recalculation of a retail scheme, consideration must be had to any exceptional circumstances pertaining to the case.
Although not considered by the Commissioners prior to their decision to refuse recalculation, the tribunal found that a significant reduction in profit caused by the payment of VAT using one retail scheme as opposed to another one was sufficient exceptional circumstance to allow recalculation.
In the Wadlewski case, the reduction in profits of the business caused by the use of retail scheme G as opposed to retail scheme F amounted to some 40 per cent.
As a matter of principle, the Commissioners have, therefore, accepted that where a taxpayer chooses to use a particular retail scheme as opposed to another for which they were equally eligible, and the choice affects their profit by reducing it by 40 per cent or more, then this is an exceptional circumstance. In such a case, retrospective recalculation using the alternative retail scheme would be allowed.
My referral to policy in this case was to establish whether the principles above would equally apply to a choice between the flat rate scheme and normal accounting. I have now been informed that this is the case".
The Appellants' Case
"If you buy a single capital asset with an invoice value including VAT of £2,000 or more you can claim the input tax on your VAT return in the normal way".
"As discussed, you may wish to consider leaving the flat rate scheme retrospectively from 1 July 2006, in order to claim the input tax on services relating to the new indoor riding school and any capital assets less than £2,000 in value".
The Respondents' Case
"to consider whether the Commissioners had acted in a way in which no reasonable panel of Commissioners could have acted or whether they had taken into account some irrelevant matter or had disregarded something to which they should have given weight. The tribunal may also have to consider whether the commissioners have erred on a point of law".
Reasons for Our Decision
"If you wish to leave the scheme you must write and tell us. We would expect most business to leave at the end of the accounting period. However you may leave voluntarily at any time. We will confirm the date you left the scheme in writing".
"The Tribunal concludes therefore, in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction, that in the process in which the Commissioners exercised their discretion there was a degree of confusion, and that without any fault being attributed to any person, there was an insufficient consideration of the fact that the Commissioners' policy and the criteria laid down in Public Notice. 727 were subject to an overriding discretion on the part of the Commissioners, in exceptional circumstances. Furthermore in exercising that discretion the Commissioners clearly disregarded the amount of the overpayment which the use of one scheme produced by comparison with another, because they considered the amount of that overpayment to be irrelevant, simply because that it was the taxpayer who chose the scheme and different schemes would produce different results. It was unreasonable for the Commissioners not to consider whether a very high proportion of "over-payment" might not be an exceptional circumstance justifying an exercise of their discretion beyond the criteria they had laid down" (Wadlewski VTD 13340 at page 10).
(1) The Respondents' policy on retrospective withdrawal unreasonable in that it denied a proper exercise of discretion by the Officer reviewing the individual circumstances of the case, which in effect amounted to an error of law within John Dee principles.
(2) Mr Priest's decision of 22 January 2008 was based on an unreasonable policy and as a result he placed too much weight on irrelevant matters in particular the 40 per cent gross profit benchmark and disregarded relevant matters.
Decision
(1) Dispute One: Incorrect Notification: there was no substance to the Appellant's contention that the Respondents' refusal to repay VAT incurred in the 12/06 period did not follow the correct procedure.
(2) Dispute Two: Goods or Services: the supplies of NJ Popham and Dunstan House were supplies of services which meant that the Appellant was not entitled to recover the VAT on those supplies under the flat rate scheme as they did not constitute capital expenditure goods. The Appellant was, however, entitled to the recover in full the VAT incurred on the supplies made by Martin Collins more particularly described in the invoice dated 24 October 2006.
(3) Dispute Three: Retrospective Withdrawal: the Respondents' refusal to agree to the Appellants' request to withdraw from the flat rate scheme with effect from 1 July 2006 was unreasonable.
MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE
TRIBUNAL JUDGE
RELEASE DATE: 7 May 2009
LON/
Notes