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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Coll & Anor v Revenue & Customs (Rev 1) [2009] UKFTT 61 (TC) (21 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00028.html Cite as: [2009] UKFTT 61 (TC), [2009] SFTD 101, [2009] STI 1835, [2009] UKFTT 00028 (TC) |
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[2009] UKFTT 61 (TC)
TC00028
CAPITAL GAINS TAX – Disposal of shares for loan notes – whether the exchange formed part of a scheme or arrangements of which the main purpose or one of the main purposes, is avoidance of liability to capital gains tax– Yes – section 137 Taxation of Capital Gains Act 1992 – Appeal dismissed
PENALTY ASSESSMENT – Whether 1997/98 return containing incorrect statement about the status of clearance application was made fraudulently or negligently – made negligently – quantum of penalty reduced from 85 per cent of tax due to 30 per cent – Appeal allowed in part.
Appeal Number: SC/3165-6/2007
FIRST TIER TRIBUNAL TAX
JOHN P COLL and MARIAN COLL Appellants
Tribunal: MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE
Sitting in public in London on 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 November 2008, 5 January 2009, final submissions on section 36 Taxes Management Act 1970 received 10 February 2009
David Southern, counsel instructed by Gelberg & Co solicitors appeared for the Appellants
Sam Grodzinski counsel instructed by the Solicitor's office of HM Revenue & Customs, for the Respondents
The Appeal
The Structure of the Decision
The Dispute
(1) The initiative for the use of loan notes came from Nestor.
(2) The original arrangement which involved the transfer of shares to Mr Coll with him emigrating to the Republic of Ireland was not motivated by tax avoidance but reflected the perilous state of their marriage.
(3) Prior to the sale of Grosvenor on 20 November 1997 the Appellants decided to give their marriage another go with Mr Coll abandoning his plans to move to the Republic of Ireland.
(4) Their decision to become non-resident in Belgium was solely attributable to later tax advice received from PwC, and had no connection with the disposition of Grosvenor shares.
Summary of the Decision
Burden of Proof
Section 137 Dispute
The Penalty Dispute
The Statutory Provisions
Capital Gains Tax
Section 126: Application of sections 127 to 131
(1) For the purposes of this section and sections 127 to 131 "reorganisation" means a reorganisation or reduction of a company's share capital and in relation to a reorganisation –
(a) "original shares" means shares held before and concerned in the reorganisation,
(b)"new holding" means, in relation to any original shares, the shares in and debentures of the company which as a result of the reorganisation represent the original shares (including such, if any, of the original shares as remain).
Section 127: Equation of original shares and new holding
Subject to sections 128 to 130, a reorganisation shall not be treated as involving any disposal of the original shares or any acquisition of the new holding or any part of it, but the original shares (taken as a single asset) and the new holding (taken as a single asset) shall be treated as the same asset acquired as the original shares were acquired.
Section 135: Exchange of Securities for those in another company
(1) Subsection (3) below has effect where a company ("company A") issues shares or debentures to a person in exchange for shares in or debentures of another company ("company B") and –
(a) company A holds, or in consequence of the exchange will hold, more than one-quarter of the ordinary share capital (as defined in section 832(1) of the Taxes Act) of company B, or
(b) company A issues the shares or debentures in exchange for shares as the result of a general offer –
(i) which is made to members of company B or any class of them (with or without exceptions for persons connected with company A), and
(ii) which is made in the first instance on a condition such that if it were satisfied company A would have control of company B, or
(c) company A holds, or in consequence of the exchange, will hold the greater part of the voting power in company B.
(2) …
(3) Subject to sections 137 and 138, sections 127 to 131 shall apply with any necessary adaptations as if the 2 companies mentioned in subsection (1) above or, as the case may be, in section 136 were the same company and the exchange were a reorganisation of its share capital.
Section 137: Restriction on application of sections 135 and 136
(1) Subject to subsection (2) below, and section 138, neither section 135 nor section 136 shall apply to any issue by a company of shares in or debentures of that company in exchange for or in respect of shares in or debentures of another company unless the exchange, reconstruction or amalgamation in question is effected for bona fide commercial reasons and does not form part of a scheme or arrangements of which the main purpose or one of the main purposes, is avoidance of liability to capital gains tax or corporation tax.
Section 138: Procedure for clearance in advance
(1) Section 137 shall not affect the operation of section 135 or 136 in any case where, before the issue is made, the Board have, on the application of either company mentioned in section 137(1), notified the company that the Board are satisfied that the exchange or scheme of reconstruction will be effected for bona fide commercial reasons and will not form part of any such scheme or arrangements as are mentioned in section 137(1).
(2) Any application under subsection (1) above shall be in writing and shall contain particulars of the operations that are to be effected and the Board may, within 30 days of the receipt of the application or of any further particulars previously required under this subsection, by notice require the applicant to furnish further particulars for the purpose of enabling the Board to make their decision; and if any such notice is not complied with within 30 days or such longer period as the Board may allow, the Board need not proceed further on the application.
(3) The Board shall notify their decision to the applicant within 30 days of receiving the application or, if they give a notice under subsection (2) above, within 30 days of the notice being complied with.
(4) If the Board notify the applicant that they are not satisfied as mentioned in subsection (1) above or do not notify their decision to the applicant within the time required by subsection (3) above, the applicant may within 30 days of the notification or of that time require the Board to transmit the application, together with any notice given and further particulars furnished under subsection (2) above, to the Special Commissioners; and in that event any notification by the Special Commissioners shall have effect for the purposes of subsection (1) above as if it were a notification by the Board.
5) If any particulars furnished under this section do not fully and accurately disclose all facts and considerations material for the decision of the Board or the Special Commissioners, any resulting notification that the Board or Commissioners are satisfied as mentioned in subsection (1) above shall be void.
Penalties
b(i) if it appears to them that no penalty has been incurred, set the determination aside,
ii) if the amount determined appears to them appropriate, confirm the determination,
iii) if the amount determined appears to them to be excessive, reduce it to such other amount (including nil) as they consider appropriate, or
iv) if the amount determined appears to them insufficient, increase it to such amount not exceeding the permitted maximum as they consider appropriate.
Assessments
(1) If an officer of the Board or the Board discover, as regards to any person (the taxpayer) and a year of assessment:
(a) that any chargeable gains which ought to have been assessed to capital gains tax have not been assessed'
the officer ……. may subject to sections (2) and (3) below make an assessment in the amount, or the further amount which ought in his or their opinion to be charged in order to make good to the Crown to the loss of tax.
(2) ………..
(3) Where the taxpayer has made and not delivered a return under section 8 or 8A of this Act in respect of the relevant year of assessment, he shall not be assessed under subsection 1 above –
(a) in respect of the year of assessment mentioned in that subsection and
(b) ….. in the same capacity as that in which he made and delivered the return
unless one of the two conditions mentioned below is fulfilled.
(4) The first condition is that the situation mentioned in subsection(1) above is attributable to the fraudulent or negligent conduct on the part of the taxpayer or a person acting on his behalf.
(5) The second condition is that at the time when an Officer of the Board –
(a) ceased to be entitled to give notice of his intention to enquire into the taxpayer's return under section 8 or 8A of this Act in respect of the relevant year of assessment; or
(b) informed the taxpayer that he had completed his enquiries into that return,
the officer could not have been reasonably expected on the basis of the information made available to him before that time, to be aware of the situation mentioned in subsection (1) above.
(1) An assessment on any person (in this section referred to as "the person in default") for the purpose of making good to the Crown a loss of income tax or capital gains tax attributable to his fraudulent or negligent conduct or the negligent or fraudulent conduct of a person acting on his behalf may be made at any time not later than 20 years after the 31st January next following the year of assessment to which it relates.
The Evidence
(1) Marion Coll, the first Appellant;
(2) John Coll, the second Appellant;
(3) Lynne Pearson, Chartered Tax Adviser with BDO Stoy Hayward LLP (BDO). Ms Pearson gave evidence of the various meetings with the Appellants and the tax advice given to them in respect of the proposed sale of Grosvenor.
(4) Walter Wood, an Inspector of Taxes and a member of the SCI department, who made the assessments and penalty determinations against the Appellants.
(5) David Collison FCA, Group Financial Controller and Company Secretary of Nestor Healthcare Group PLC. Mr Collison was not employed by Nestor in 1997 and had no personal knowledge of the negotiations leading to the acquisition of Grosvenor by Nestor. His evidence consisted of a review of Nestor's published accounts and supporting documents for the relevant period, and details of acquisitions made by Nestor from 1988 to 2007.
Dispute Three: Burden of Proof
(1) The Appellants stated incorrectly that clearance had been granted for the Grosvenor transaction in their 1997/98 tax returns. The incorrect statement was:
"The disposal of shares in Grosvenor Nursing Agency Limited was made as an approved paper for paper transaction under section 138 TCGA 1992 which received Inland Revenue clearance during November 1997 (ref no: CGT248/2193/97)".
(2) The incorrect statements were attributable either to their own fraud or negligence or to the negligence of person acting on their behalf.
"It is, however, submitted that the concept of a shifting burden has another meaning, relative to what is called the 'evidentiary burden of proof'. Although this term is widely used, it has often been pointed out that it simply expresses a notion of practical common sense and is not a principle of substantive or procedural law. It means no more than this, that during the trial of an issue of fact there will often arrive one or more occasions when, if the judge were to take stock of the evidence so far adduced, he would conclude that, if there were to be no more evidence, a particular party would win. It would follow that, if the other party wished to escape defeat, he would have to call sufficient evidence to turn the scale. The identity of the party to whom this applies may change and change again during the hearing and it is often convenient to speak of one party or the other as having the evidentiary burden at a given time. This is, however, no more than shorthand, which should not be allowed to disguise the fact that the burden of proof in the strict sense will remain on the same party throughout--which will almost always mean that the party who relies on a particular fact in support of his case must prove it. I do not see how this fact of forensic life bears on the present case. It is a commonplace that, if there is a disputed question of fact admitting of only two possible solutions, X and Y, with party A having the burden of proving X in order to establish his case, if A produces credible evidence in favour of X and B produces none in favour of Y, it is very likely that A will win. B must therefore exert himself if he wishes to avoid defeat. But this does not mean that B ever has the burden of proof. So also here. It may well be that, if the taxpayer companies' version does not correspond with the true facts, it must follow that someone was guilty of fraud. This does not mean that, by traversing the taxpayer companies' case the Revenue have taken on the burden of proving fraud. Naturally, if they produce no cogent evidence or argument to cast doubt on the taxpayer companies' case, the taxpayer companies will have a greater prospect of success. But this has nothing to do with the burden of proof, which remains on the taxpayer companies because it is they who, on the law as it has stood for many years, are charged with the task of falsifying the assessment. The contention that, by traversing the taxpayer companies' version, the Revenue are implicitly setting out to prove a loss by fraud, overlooks the fact that, in order to make good their case, the Revenue need only produce a situation where the commissioners are left in doubt. In the world of fact there may be only two possibilities: innocence or fraud. In the world of proof there are three: proof of one or other possibility, and a verdict of not proven. The latter will suffice, so far as the Revenue are concerned".
Decision on Burden of Proof
The Facts
Agreed Facts and Chronology
(1) A copy of the Inland Revenue letter of 27 October 1997 stating that the Board was not satisfied that section 137(1) TCGA 1992 would not prevent section 135 TCGA 1992 from applying to the proposed disposal of Grosvenor and related transactions.
(2) A draft reply to Inland Revenue requesting that the application for clearance made under section 138(1) be referred to the Special Commissioners pursuant to section 138(4) TCGA 1992.
(3) A copy of the Inland Revnue letter dated 10 October 1997 granting the clearance sought that section 703(3) ICTA 1988 would not apply.
"The disposal of the shares in Grosvenor Nursing Agency Limited was made as an approved 'paper for paper' transaction under s138 TCGA 1992, which received Inland Revenue clearance during November 1997 (ref no:- CGT248/2193/97)."
The Disputed Facts
(1) The initiative for the use of loan notes came from Nestor.
(2) The original arrangement which involved the transfer of shares to Mr Coll with him emigrating to the Republic of Ireland was not motivated by tax avoidance but reflected the perilous state of their marriage culminating in their divorce.
(3) Prior to the sale of Grosvenor on 20 November 1997 the Appellants decided to give their marriage another go with Mr Coll abandoning his plans to move to the Republic of Ireland.
(4) Their decision to become non-resident in Belgium was solely attributable to later tax advice received from PwC, and had no connection with the disposition of Grosvenor shares.
The Loan Notes
"I will obviously do my very best to ensure a smooth and successful sale of your business. With this in mind I would suggest another meeting to discuss strategy and tactics.
Before and not after, reaching agreement with a potential buyer you should have the advice of a specialist accountant on the avoidance of capital gains tax. To this end I would suggest Howard Scott of BDO Stoy Hayward in Baker Street W1 ….."
Additionally you may care to take pre-negotiation advice from a firm of solicitors who specialise in this type of transaction and here I would suggest John Rayman of Clyde & Co in EastCheap".
"I write following our telephone conversation earlier today, and my meeting yesterday with the Appellants ………… I understand that they (the Appellants) are looking for a significant proportion of the consideration to be satisfied by loan notes and we have discussed how the interests of the vendors can be protected. My proposal is that these be semi-secured which means that they would have the benefit of a charge, ranking behind the bank over the assets or share capital of a substantially wholly owned subsidiary of Corporate Services Group ……….
I also understand that the vendors are looking for at least a proportion of the loan notes for a period of as long as twelve years and at the meeting I indicated that it would be appropriate after perhaps two years for the semi-secured status to be replaced by bank guarantees. We are in general happy to co-operate with any tax planning arrangements that the vendors may wish to put in place, and I would like to be as flexible as possible regarding how the consideration is satisfied. Perhaps there should be a package which comprises cash, loan notes and possibly shares in Corporate Services Group".
"I would also be interested to learn about the preferred form and timing of the consideration. Once we have that, perhaps we can discuss the total picture and all the outstanding issues".
5.2.3: However receipt of the proceeds in the form of bank guaranteed loan notes provides an opportunity to crystalise the gain in a later year when the vendor may be non-UK resident. Non UK residents do not currently pay UK capital gains tax, even on the redemption of loan notes issued by a UK company.
5.5.1: By taking loan notes the gain on the shares in Grosvenor is deferred until the loan notes are redeemed (assuming clearance is given).
5.5.2: As a result it is possible to redeem the loan notes over a number of years to utilise the capital gains tax annual exemption, currently £6,500.
7.1: Breaking UK residence and ordinary residence is the most well known tried and tested method of avoiding capital gains tax absolutely, but it does involve a certain disruption of the vendor's domestic life.
9: In view of Mr Coll's intention to emigrate to Eire, which would hopefully avoid capital gains tax on 80 per cent of the sale proceeds, we have not considered in detail some of the other tax planning options which are currently available. In addition at present there is a great deal of uncertainty about the application of capital gains tax in the future as the Government is currently carrying out a detailed review of the tax and results are expected to be announced in time for legislation to be introduced in the Budget in Spring of 1998. Therefore loan notes have been recommended which provide a means of deferring the capital gain, which would enable the position to be reviewed following the Budget to establish whether any planning could be implemented at that time.
9.8: Reinvestment relief: ………… Mrs Coll mentioned that she may be interested in investing in property but unfortunately does not qualify as a trade for the purposes of reinvestment relief (but property development does). However, if loan notes are taken rather than cash then this relief would still be available on the disposal of loan the loan notes and could be considered at that time.
"I agree completely that the redemption of the loan notes should be tax efficient but I have some problems with a possible shortening of the timescale, unless necessary for tax purposes, and also some difficulty with them being capable of being called early on demand again unless necessary for tax purposes".
"This is to confirm that even if the application to the Inland Revenue for clearance under section 138 TCGA 1992 is rejected, it remains our opinion that the provisions of section 135 TCGA 1992 will apply to the transaction.
This would mean that John and Marion Coll would, for capital gains tax purposes, not be treated as disposing of their shares in Grosvenor Nursing Agency Ltd and the loan notes received from Nestor would be treated for CGT purposes as having been acquired on the same day and for the same consideration as the shares in Grosvenor Nursing Agency Limited.
In other words, the capital gain on selling GNA would not arise until the Nestor Loan notes were redeemed and this would hopefully be in a year of assessment when capital gains tax rates are lower than they are now.
The aspect of the original clearance to which the Inland Revenue took exception was John's stated intention to move to Southern Ireland thus potentially avoiding UK tax and it is solely on the basis of this that the clearance application was rejected.
If John and Marion remain in the UK, it is our opinion that the provisions of section 135 will apply ……."
The Evidence of David Collison
The Separation
"The Appellants cannot agree with your view that inaccurate facts regarding their marriage difficulties had been presented to the Revenue, in the clearance application made by BDO. At our meeting on 29 June, Mrs Coll did not feel comfortable with discussing matters of such personal nature in front of so may people. Having discussed this matter further with the Appellants, we are advised at the time of the application there were in fact difficulties in their marriage, although we understand that these were subsequently resolved after receiving professional counselling from Ms Duthie ……. Mrs Coll also obtained legal advice in this matter from Mr Taylor of Gelberg & Co.
The Sale of the Family Home
The Belgian Route
" It was agreed by all present that the Appellants would review all planning options available at the moment and may decide on a mixed portfolio of planning options. The Appellants stated that that while they were normally conservative, they would be prepared to stagger their attitude towards risk, and some of ideas which may be risky.
In addition the Appellants were particularly interested in the Belgian route".
" Mr Renehan stated that he and Mr Rayman had agreed that Mr Rayman would approach BDO to discuss their tax planning ideas. Mrs Coll stated that she should have dealt with PwC from day one. Mrs Coll got involved with BDO as one partner at Clyde & Co had recommended BDO. However, subsequently Mr Rayman had recommended PwC to Mrs Coll.
(1) The UK tax returns reporting the gain would be incorrect.
(2) Payments of tax would not be made by due dates.
(3) Interest could be chargeable.
"The instructions should provide comprehensive background information pertinent to the planning issues being considered. I should be grateful if you would review the instructions insert any details that require confirmation or further explanation from yourselves and suggest any further information that should be included. Please note that none of the documents referred to in the instructions have been attached except appendix 1.
There are a number of points contained within the instructions which specifically require further detail from yourselves in particular, paragraphs 16 – 18 and 21 -23. However, you do also need to review the document as a whole, in order to ascertain whether there are any other matters that need to be addressed.
The instructions have been prepared for counsel's information and therefore some of the terminology is rather technical with regard to references to tax legislation etc. However, the main points that need to be reviewed by you are the factual details relating to your personal circumstances".
"Clearance has been obtained from Inland Revenue under section 135 TCGA 1992 and section 707 ICTA 1988 regarding the exchange of the shares in Grosvenor for the above mentioned loan notes. The clearance application under these sections was submitted by BDO Stoy Hayward who acted for the Appellants at that time. As a result of the clearance no CGT liability will crystallise until redemption of the loan notes. A copy of the clearance is attached (attachment 3).
"The disposal of the shares in Grosvenor Nursing Agency Limited was made as an approved paper for paper transaction under section 138 TCGA 1992, which received Inland Revenue clearance during November 1997 (ref no: CGT248/2193/97)".
Special Civil Investigation
"Well we really had planned initially to go to Europe we thought the children as well it would be better for them". (Mrs Coll)
"We thought it would be good actually to (do) we had a three year restriction after the sale of the business and we couldn't operate in business in the United Kingdom. So we thought we would maybe try and possibly use our any skills we had outside the United Kingdom. We liked the idea of Belgium because it has a very similar climate not that far away, good access for Europe and an opportunity for the kids to learn languages and perhaps help them with University" (Mr Coll).
Findings of Fact
Section 137 Dispute
Loan Notes
Change of Plan
Intention as at 20 November 1997
(1) They knew of the benefits of non-residency as a tax planning tool.
(2) They were prepared to execute tax planning based on the non-residency of Mr Coll.
(3) They were aware before 20 November 1997 that their liability to capital gains tax on the sale proceeds would be deferred until they redeemed the loan notes. They suffered no disadvantage in abandoning their original plan and looking at more suitable options.
(4) They bought themselves time to consider alternative non-resident routes by deferring the first date of redemption for the loan notes.
(5) They were dissatisfied with BDO's tax advice, and decided after consulting their solicitors to seek advice from PwC probably around the time of the Grosvenor sale.
(6) The marketing of their family home soon after the sale of the business was a manifestation of their intention to reside abroad.
(7) The prospect of living abroad held no fears for them.
(8) Their admissions to Mr Wood about living in Europe.
Summary of Findings
(1) The Appellants' evidence of Nestor initiating the consideration for Grosvenor in the form of loan notes was unreliable. On balance it was the Appellants who required the consideration for the sale of Grosvenor to be structured in loan notes. They chose loan notes because of their potential to reduce the significant tax liability on the gains arising from the sale of the shares.
(2) The Appellants' original plan of Mr Coll holding majority shareholding and residence in the Republic of Ireland was abandoned because Inland Revenue clearance was refused.
(3) As at 20 November 1997 the Appellants held an intention of residing outside the UK with a view to redeeming the loan notes when non-resident so as to avoid capital gains tax on the disposal of shares in Grosvenor.
The Application of Section 137 TCGA 1992 to the Facts
"Although the purpose of the legislation was not to tax non-residents, it was one thing for a person to enter into an exchange of shares knowing that the consequence might be that no tax would ultimately de paid, but it was another for a person to enter into the exchange of shares with the main purpose that no tax should be paid as a result of obtaining a particular relief in a later year. If, at the date of the exchange of shares, one of the taxpayer's main purposes was that capital gains tax should not be paid because the loan stocks would be redeemed while he was non-resident, that was avoidance of liability to capital gains tax within s 137".
(1) was the exchange part of a scheme or arrangements and if so what were they?
(2) did the purposes of such scheme or arrangements include the purpose of avoiding a liability to capital gains tax and if so was it a main purpose?
"The ordinary meaning of the word "scheme" is "a plan of action devised in order to attain some end". Similarly an arrangement is "a structure or combination of things for a purpose" … Accordingly, unless Mr Snell had the purpose of becoming non-resident as at 21 December 1996 so as to link the acceptance of loan notes on that day with their redemption when non-resident after 5 April 1997, there cannot be a relevant scheme or arrangement for the purpose of s 137".
"Counsel for Revenue observes that the purpose of Mr Snell is relevant to the identification of the elements of the scheme or arrangements. Once the scheme or arrangements have been identified then it must be ascertained whether their main purpose is the avoidance of liability to capital gains tax. The purpose of Mr Snell may be relevant to the latter question if it is not self evident from the nature of the scheme or arrangements themselves. In neither case ….. is it necessary that the purpose of Mr Snell should be final and unalterable".
" Section 137 is concerned with the terms on which a liability to capital gains tax may be deferred. It provides for a right of deferral to be lost if it is to be used for the purpose not of deferral but of avoidance altogether. If that is a main purpose of the scheme or arrangements it matters not whether the scheme etc was formed for purposes of tax mitigation, avoidance or indeed evasion".
"The ultimate question is whether the relevant statutory provisions, construed purposively, were intended to apply to the transaction, viewed realistically".
The Penalty Dispute
The Respondents' Initial Case
"The Appellants acted fraudulently when they delivered their personal tax returns for 1997/98, in particular:
a) Both returns disclosed the disposal of Grosvenor to Nestor, on the basis that no gain arose in 1997/98.
b) The notes on page 8 of the tax returns the Appellants stated incorrectly that the disposal of the shares in Grosvenor Nursing Agency Limited was made as an approved paper for paper transaction under section 138 TCGA 1992 which received Inland Revenue clearance during November 1997 (ref no CGT248/2193/97)".
"The loan notes were issued as an approved paper for paper transaction under section 138 TCGA 1992. These loan notes were disposed of on two separate occasions, the first on 31 October 1998 for £500,000 each and the second on 31 March 1999 for £750,000 each."
"I have also read and understood the report dated 13 October 2004 prepared on my instructions by P Lavery and adopt it as my full disclosure in accordance with the practice outlined in the Chancellor's reply (Hansard Statement)".
Development of the Respondents' Case on the Evidence
(1) Misleading BDO and Inland Revenue in the clearance application about their separation and divorce. The Appellants perpetuated their deceit by lying under oath on these matters at the hearing.
(2) Misleading BDO and the Respondents about Nestor initiating the loan notes. The Appellants lied to PwC and the Respondents about this in the Appendix 7 statement to the Hansard report.
(3) The Appellants lied to PwC and the Respondents in their Appendix 7 statement in numerous other respects. The most blatant lies concerned the Appellants not receiving any financial advice prior to their meeting with BDO on 15 August 1997.
(4) Mrs Coll lied to Mr Wood during the Hansard interview on 29 June 2005 about receiving tax advice and about her state of knowledge regarding the tax liability on the share sale.
The Appellants' Case
Reasons for Decision
(1) The 1997/98 returns contained a material inaccuracy regarding the status of the clearance application which in turn understated the tax due on the transaction.
(2) PwC drafted the returns with a material inaccuracy.
(3) The Appellants were under an obligation to check the accuracy of their returns, which they were reminded of by their professional advisers.
(4) The Appellants knew that clearance for the transaction under section 138 TCGA 1992 had been refused.
(5) The Appellants saw the statement on clearance in the returns but assumed that it was correct.
(6) The Appellants did not question PwC about the statement before signing the forms.
(1) The size of the penalty should principally be determined by the Appellants' culpability in relation to the incorrect 1997/98 returns.
(2) The Appellants acted negligently rather than fraudulently in completing their 1997/98 returns.
(3) The Appellants disclosed in the 1997/98 returns the disposal of Grosvenor shares. Their error related to the incorrect statement about the clearance application rather than concealing altogether the details of the transaction.
(4) The focus of the Hansard enquiry was on the offshore trusts for which a separate penalty was imposed, and the Belgian Route. The Respondents' concerns about the status of the clearance application emerged after the 29 June 2005 interview, following which the Appellants co-operated with the enquiry by providing a detailed Hansard report.
MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE
LON/
Note 1 In the rest of the decision I have not distinguished between Coopers & Lybrand and PwC. I have used PwC throughout which may include a period when Coopers & Lybrand acted for the Appellants. [Back] Note 2 More commonly known as the Hansard Procedure which permits the Inland Revenue Board to accept a money settlement instead of pursuing a criminal prosecution where serious tax fraud has been committed. [Back] Note 3 The notes referred to John Rayman under the initials JM. I am satisfied that JM was John Rayman. This was clear from note 2 which first mentioned John Rayman. Note 2 stated that “WR stated that he had spoken with John Rayman and that JM would review his files and reply to WR as soon as possible”. [Back]