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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Metelerkamp v Revenue & Customs [2012] UKFTT 171 (TC) (06 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2012/TC01867.html Cite as: [2012] UKFTT 171 (TC) |
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[2012] UKFTT 171 (TC)
TC01867
Appeal number: TC/2011/06815
Income tax – surcharge for late payment of tax – whether HMRC’ s earlier repayment of payment on account a reasonable excuse – no – whether family member’s illness a reasonable excuse – no – appeal dismissed and surcharge confirmed
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
CHARLES ROGER METELERKAMP Appellant
- and -
TRIBUNAL: ANNE REDSTON (PRESIDING MEMBER)
DUNCAN McBRIDE (TRIBUNAL MEMBER)
Sitting in public at 30-31 Friar Street, Reading on 7 February 2012
The Appellant in person
Mrs E Gardiner of HM Revenue & Customs’ Appeals and Reviews Unit, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2012
DECISION
3. If Mr Metelerkamp has a reasonable excuse, the Tribunal can set aside the surcharge[1]. The statute does not define a reasonable excuse. It has recently been held by this Tribunal that “an excuse is likely to be reasonable where the taxpayer acts in the same way someone who seriously intends to honour their tax liabilities and obligations would act.” B&J Shopfitting Services v R&C Commrs [2010] UKFTT 78 (TC) at [14].
4. The Tribunal was provided with a bundle of documents. This included the correspondence between the parties in relation to the appeal, along with a number of other documents, including the following:
(1) Page 5 of Mr Metelerkamp’s 2008-09 tax return as originally submitted.
(2) The self-calculation page for Mr Metelerkamp’s 2008-09 return as originally submitted and the self-calculation page of the amendment to that return.
(3) The 2008/09 SA Return Summary.
(4) A page headed “Tax returns due/received” displaying the summary for the 2008-09 tax year.
5. Shortly before the hearing, HMRC provided the following extra documents:
(1) Two versions of Mr Metelerkamp’s 2008-09 Tax Calculation for 2008-09, amended in manuscript with the words “1st version” and “2nd version”.
(2) A document headed “View Statement” showing Mr Metelerkamp’s SA transactions as at 10 November 2010.
7. Mr Metelerkamp also gave oral evidence to the Tribunal and was cross-examined by Mrs Gardiner.
9. In February 2009 Mr Metelerkamp, who had previously been a partner with KPMG, left that firm.
25. On 13 March 2011, Mr Metelerkamp appealed the surcharge.
26. Mr Metelerkamp submitted that he was “way over the threshold” for a reasonable excuse, for the following reasons:
(1) If HMRC had not repaid him the payment on account of £65,069.90 in February 2010, this would have more than covered the extra tax arising from the later amendment. When he put the X in Box 9 of the calculation page of the 2008-09 return, he meant only to stop future payments on account: he “did not know that this would cause [HMRC] to refund an amount that I have now had to pay again.” He says that “an average person such as me would assume that the request relates only to future payments...so the original cause of this whole situation was HMRC. I had paid the tax and HMRC paid it back to me, so as to give me a surcharge for not paying it is wholly inappropriate.”
(2) He called HMRC “to query the payment made to me by HMRC and to ask whether this was mine to keep if I had overpaid in the previous periods or whether I needed to pay it again. The person I spoke to did not know.” The Tribunal notes that there appears to be some inconsistency around the date of this call: in his appeal notice to HMRC it is stated as taking place on 14 July 2010; his letter of June 2011 says it was made in April 2010. However, we accept as a fact that at least one call was made.
(3) His daughter was seriously ill and therefore “I did not work during this period due to the effort required to look after my daughter and support the other members of my family.”
(4) Because of his daughter’s illness, his wife “is unable to always stay on top of the administration. This has impacted...the whole issue in relation to payments on account.”
(5) He said that at the time HMRC sent out the Statement of Account showing the tax due, he had moved house, and the fact that there was “probably” a post forwarding arrangement with the post office “doesn’t mean that the mail was opened or kept.”
(6) He did not receive an instruction from HMRC to pay the extra tax within 30 days of the amendment and was not told that if he did not pay within 58 days he would suffer a surcharge.
28. However, she emphasised that this repayment was something of a distraction. The main issue was that Mr Metelerkamp’s 2008-09 return had been amended on 6 October 2010. She said that:
(1) if a taxpayer amends a return after the due date, any tax arising must be paid within 30 days of the amendment: this is a statutory obligation.
(2) HMRC allow a further six days for posting and processing delays. As a result the further tax should have been paid by 11 November 2010. Mr Metelerkamp had not paid the extra tax within this statutory time limit.
(3) The surcharge trigger date does not arise for a further 28 days: in this case, 2 December 2010. Had Mr Metelerkamp paid the extra tax by that date, there would have been no surcharge.
(4) In fact, the tax was not paid until 21 December 2010, nineteen days after the surcharge trigger date.
31. The Tribunal asked Mr Metelerkamp the following questions:
(1) Who filed the return on 30 January 2010? Mr Metelerkamp said he completed it, having spoken to George Venn at KPMG.
(2) Who made the amendment to his tax return in October 2010? Mr Metelerkamp said he “couldn’t remember anything” about the amendment.
(3) When he thought the extra tax arising from the amendment was due for payment? He said he “wasn’t clear” and “didn’t know”.
(4) Why he thought that HMRC should not have repaid the £65,069.90? He said George Venn had indicated that there would be some further liability on partnership profits. Mr Metelerkamp had expected that the X on the return would stop future payments on account, not trigger a repayment. It was a surprise when the payment on account was all repaid.
Lack of awareness of the due date
The repayment
Mr Metelerkamp’s calls to HMRC
The alleged non-receipt of the Statements of Account
45. We find his submissions on what happened to the post during this period to be unconvincing. On the balance of probabilities we find that both Statements were delivered, for the following reasons:
(1) they were posted to his address;
(2) he said he “probably” had a forwarding arrangement in place; and
(3) Mr Metelerkamp and/or his wife visited the house weekly and were likely to collect any post.
His daughter’s illness
48. Mr Metelerkamp also submits that his daughter’s illness provided him with a reasonable excuse.
49. The Tribunal fully accepts that this has been an extremely painful and distressing experience for the whole family. However, we did not find that his daughter’s illness provided Mr Metelerkamp with a reasonable excuse, for the following reasons:
(1) From February 2010 onwards, he was working full time at an extremely demanding job. We found it to be inconsistent with that role that he was, because of the stress of his daughter’s illness, unable to organise his affairs so as to pay the tax he owed by the surcharge trigger date.
(2) In August 2010, the family decided to move house so that their listed building could be restored. Mr Metelerkamp was clear that this was move was wholly discretionary: he called it “optional”. He moved out and let the builders in because it was a financially sensible thing to do in a depressed market, where builders were relatively cheap and available. In our judgment, this voluntary disruption to the family’s normal pattern of life is difficult to reconcile with the picture of a man whose daughter’s illness was preventing him from carrying out his statutory responsibilities.
(3) Mr Metelerkamp said that the day-to-day care of his daughter was in his wife’s hands. This weakens his reasonable excuse claim, in that it is clear that the primary burden rested on Mrs Metelerkampf. However, he sought to argue that this extra burden made his wife less able to cope with the household administration, including his payments on account.
(4) Mr Metelerkamp did not go so far as to say that responsibility for paying his tax rested with his wife. Even had this been the case, we would not have found reliance on Mrs Metelerkamp to be a reasonable excuse. As this Tribunal said in B&J Shopfitting Services v R&C Commrs [2010] UKFTT 78 (TC) at [12], “reliance on a third party as a matter of policy will not normally be a reasonable excuse because a taxpayer should not be able to avoid his liabilities by passing them on to someone else”.
Lack of knowledge of the quantum of the surcharge
THE LEGISLATION
Taxes Management Act 1970, Sch 3ZA Schedule 3ZA
Date By Which Payment to be Made After Amendment or Correction Of Self-Assessment
(1) This paragraph applies where an amount of tax is payable or repayable as a result of the amendment of a self-assessment under section 9ZA of this Act (amendment of personal or trustee return by taxpayer).
(2) ...the amount is payable (or repayable) on or before the day following the end of the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which the notice of amendment was given.
Taxes Management Act 1970, s 59C
Surcharges on unpaid income tax and capital gains tax
(1) This section applies in relation to any income tax or capital gains tax which has become payable by a person (the taxpayer) in accordance with section 55 or 59B of this Act.
(2) Where any of the tax remains unpaid on the day following the expiry of 28 days from the due date, the taxpayer shall be liable to a surcharge equal to 5 per cent of the unpaid tax.
(3) Where any of the tax remains unpaid on the day following the expiry of 6 months from the due date, the taxpayer shall be liable to a further surcharge equal to 5 per cent of the unpaid tax.
(4)-(6) …
(7) An appeal may be brought against the imposition of a surcharge under subsection (2) or (3) above within the period of 30 days beginning with the date on which the surcharge is imposed.
(8) ...
(9) On an appeal under subsection (7) above that is notified to the tribunal section 50(6) to (8) of this Act shall not apply but the tribunal may—
(a) if it appears that, throughout the period of default, the taxpayer had a reasonable excuse for not paying the tax, set aside the imposition of the surcharge; or
(b) if it does not so appear, confirm the imposition of the surcharge...