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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 >> Singh (t/a Borealis) v Revenue & Customs [2009] UKVAT V20956 (11 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2009/V20956.html Cite as: [2009] UKVAT V20956 |
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20956
Value Added Tax – Appeal against the disallowance of input tax and appeal against the Commissioners' decision to cancel a trader's registration – spurious invoices produced by the Appellant purporting to be in respect of services rendered to him - Appeal dismissed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
KULWANT AJAY SINGH T/A BOREALIS Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: HOWARD M NOWLAN (Chairman)
SHAHWAR SADEQUE
Sitting in public in London on 14 January 2009
The Appellant in person
Richard Smith, counsel, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
Introduction
The facts in more detail, the Appellant's contentions, and the evidence.
The relevant law
The Appellant's initial grounds of appeal, and subsequent contentions
"I humbly submit that the time-honoured techniques of building a personally and socially constructive life & business, as demonstrated by such illustrious entrepreneurs as Sir Richard Branson, and Sir Philip Green, are ones which HMRC have a moral duty to accept on an equal basis.
More specifically, I am disputing the decisions made at Wembley VAT office, to:
- De-register myself, Kulwant Ajay Singh, as a trading individual for VAT;
- Adjust the return to nil i.e. refuse my claim for input tax
- To not ask, and discuss with me, my underlying motives (and, if desired, take legal undertakings about these) since, despite individual liberty, there is undoubtedly a legitimate interest of the state's in knowing the activities of the private sector, and I believe that this is a key basis on which some massive infringements of draconian VAT laws are allowed (some would say encouraged)".
- a trader receiving services is in certain circumstances entitled to make out an invoice in respect of services supplied to him;
- a trader can value services received by himself;
- in this case the essence of the transactions was that all the transactions were barter transactions, where those businesses rendering services to the Appellant themselves received services in return from the Appellant;
- in response to the obvious observation that were this so on the facts, it should result in matching increases in both the Appellant's outputs and inputs, it was suggested that "perhaps there were bad debts in relation to the liability of those rendering services to the Appellant in paying the invoices in respect of the services rendered in return by the Appellant";
- the services rendered in return by the Appellant were variously described as being IT services or the service of being "nice and courteous".
• a BBC television programme had made some references to Sir Richard Branson's companies having received favourable VAT treatment, and implicitly a number of high-profile businessmen had also received such treatment so that the Appellant should do likewise;
• HMRC were stupid not to appreciate what was meant by "constructive accounting" and such accounting was readily accepted by all the large firms of accountants, and that was all that he had done in the present case;
• the Appellant was only asking for the small sum of approximately £190,000, and if HMRC would not give it to him, or at least make a down payment of £100,000, he would not be able to take up some critical course on computers at Oxford University; and that
• since the government had recently given billions to the banks in the City, it was absurd that HMRC was wasting its time, and his time (that they ought to be paying for at £500 an hour) in debating this minor claim.
Our decision
HOWARD M NOWLAN
CHAIRMAN
RELEASED: 11 February 2009
LON 2008/1352