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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> James Paul (Car Sales) Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT V20833 (17 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2008/V20833.html Cite as: [2008] UKVAT V20833, [2008] V & DR 399 |
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20833
LON 2005/ 0569
MONEY LAUNDERNG – whether appellant a high value dealer – When appellant required to register - whether penalty appropriate for failing to register before acting as a high value dealer- Money Launderng Regs 2003, reg 9
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
JAMES PAUL (CAR SALES) LTD Appellant
V
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMES Respondents
Tribunal DR DAVID WILLIAMS (chairman)
C R SHAW FCA
Sitting in London on 7 August 2006 and 24 July 2008
Paul Noon, director of the Appellant (on 24 July 2008)
Amanda Tipples counsel, instructed by the Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents; Phillip Webb, advocate appeared on 7 August 2006
@ CROWN COPYRIGHT 2008
DECISION
The Money Laundering Regulations
High value dealers
"a person who carries on the activity mentioned in paragraph (2)(n)".
Paragraph 2(2) provides that:
"For the purposes of these regulations, "relevant business" means -
…
(n) the activity of dealing in goods of any description by way of business (including dealing as an auctioneer) whenever a transaction involved accepting a total cash payment of 15,000 euro or more."
The paragraph defines cash as:
"Notes, coins or traveller' cheques in any currency"
Paragraph 2(3) sets out a number of exclusions from paragraph 2(2). None apply in this case.
The decision under appeal
The facts
The power to impose penalties
"(1) The Commissioners may impose a penalty of such amount as they consider appropriate, not exceeding £5,000, on a person to whom regulation 10 (requirement to be registered) applies, where that person fails to comply with regulation 3 (system and training etc to prevent money laundering), 10, 11 (supplementary information), 14 (fees) or 15 (entry, inspection, etc).
(2) The Commissioners must not impose a penalty on a person where there are reasonable grounds for them to be satisfied that the person took all reasonable steps for securing that the requirement would be complied with."
Applying the penalty to the Company
Retrospective registration
"The Commissioners may charge under paragraph (1) such fees as they consider will enable them to meet any expenses incurred by them in carrying out any of their functions under these Regulations or for any incidental purpose."
The tribunal does not consider that as a matter of national law this directly authorises HMRC both to collect a fee retrospectively and at the same time to impose a penalty on someone in such a way that a full penalty is imposed in addition to a full fee being paid retrospectively. In this case the tribunal accepts that the decision to impose a penalty was taken before the Company applied to be registered. It also accepts that HMRC rebated the penalty from £5,000 to £1,000 after registration had occurred. So no specific point arises at this stage of the appeal. The tribunal also considers that, in considering the level of the penalty, it is a relevant, if minor, factor that the Company accepted HMRC's amendment to its application and obligation to pay; and that it paid a fee from the start of the scheme rather than the date which was the date on which it was registered or, on the evidence, was the date on which it should have been registered.
The nature of the appeal
Specifically, that left in place the requirement in subsection (2) that "an appeal shall not be entertained" unless the appellant has made all the VAT returns he was required to make and has paid the amounts shown in those returns. This provision is factually irrelevant to an appeal under these Regulations but was nonetheless left in place.
What penalty should be imposed?
David Williams
Chairman
ISSUED: 17 October 2008