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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Chua ((t/a New Young Cheung Restaurant) v Revenue & Customs [2006] UKVAT V19517 (29 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2006/V19517.html Cite as: [2006] UKVAT V19517 |
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19517
ASSESSMENT – Whether assessment excessive – Appeal dismissed – VATA 1994 section 83(p)
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
MS SHIRLEY CHUA (T/A NEW YOUNG CHEUNG RESTAURANT) Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: CHARLES HELLIER (Chairman)
TONY RING CTA(F)
Sitting in public in London on 27 February 2006
Mr F F C Wong of Wong Lang & Co, for the Appellant
Jonathan Holl, instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HMRC, for the Respondents
The Evidence
(i) The Appellant's premises were situated on two floors. When Mr Heath visited the ground floor had 10 tables with seating for a maximum of 26 customers, and the basement floor 12 tables with seating for a maximum of a further 35 customers.
(ii) Mr Phillips conducted an external observation of the restaurant between 6 p.m. and 6.30 p.m. on 29 October 1998. During that period he observed 29 customers enter the premises.
(iii) Mr Phillips' external observations were part of a series of observations of the premises managed by Mr Heath conducted on Thursday 29 October 1998 between 6.00 p.m and 8.00 p.m. by officers of the Respondents. Mr Heath's record of the reports of those officers showed that 137 persons entered the restaurant in that period, and 6 takeaways were taken away.
(iv) Following those observations the Respondents decided to carry out a more extensive observation. This was managed by Mr Heath. Officers of the Respondents visited the premises to take meals throughout the day. Each of them was required to keep a record of the meal he or she consumed (and its price) and of the customers entering the premises throughout his or her stay. The officers paid in cash. The observations were undertaken on two days, Tuesday 6 April 1999 and Saturday 24 April 1999.
(v) On 24 April 1999 Mr Phillips and a colleague visited the restaurant and ate a meal there as part of that programme of investigation.. They were there between 9.45 and 11.25 p.m. and were charged £28.90 for their meal. They paid in cash and left a tip of £1.10. They were seated on the ground floor and noted the number of customers who entered the restaurant and whether they dined or took a take-away. They left the bill behind.
(vi) Following the visits Mr Heath collated the information from the officers. This collation showed that on 6 April 1999 a minimum of 107 bills had been issued for meals for 435 customers and on 24 April a minimum 186 bills for 442 customers. The summary schedule for each of the days had some unexplained gaps. For 6 April the schedule covered only 5 hours 10 minutes out of a 9 hour 40 minute day. For 24 April no information was recorded from which the number of bills could be ascertained in the period 1.50 to 3.50 p.m. The figure of 186 bills for that day excludes therefore any bills delivered relating to customers who entered the restaurant in that period. Mr Ring pointed out arithmetical errors in Mr Heaths' summary schedule in relation to the periods 12.30 to 13.50 and 18.40 to 20.10 on 24 April for which Mr Heath could provide no convincing explanation.
(vii) Mr Heath made a formal visit to the restaurant on 18 May 1999. At that visit he made a record of the bills recorded in the restaurant's books for 24 April 1999 and 6 April 1999 and noted details of the cash purchases by the restaurant, wages paid, cash drawings, and bankings from the restaurant's books.
(viii) Of the 8 purchases made by the Respondents' officers on 24 April 1999 - 6 appeared on the Respondent's records and 2 did not. Of the purchases so made on 6 April, 7 appeared on the records and 1 did not, and in addition purchase made on that day by another customer, details of which were recorded by an officer, were not in the Appellant's declared records. This information suggested to Mr Heath that the true level of bills might be 18 - 23% higher than the level in the records used for the VAT returns.
(ix) Mr Heath also conducted an exercise in which he looked at the drinks component of the bills for 6 April and 24 April which he had examined on his visit to the premises. He calculated the fraction of the total bills which related to drinks. Using the figure of the input VAT claimed in relation to drink and the mark-up applied to it he estimated the total drink sales for the quarter. From this and the drinks fraction calculated above he estimated what the total sales should have been. His estimate suggested sales had been under-stated by about 13%.
(x) Mr Heath's notes for 6 April 1999 indicate that 141 bills appeared in the records. This number he compared with the observed total of 101 bills for approximately 5/9ths of the day. Mr Heath calculated that if bills had been issued evenly over a day, the figure of 101 for 5/9ths of a day would suggest 182 bills during the day: a figure 28% higher than those in the records produced to him. The missing periods were between 12.35 and 2.50 p.m., and 5 and 7.15 p.m.
(xi) For 24 April 1999 Mr Heath's manuscript note of his inspection of the Appellant's records shows 162 bills together with their amounts. These bills included Mr Phillips' bill of £28.90. The number of bills which the results of the Respondent's observations suggested (186) was therefore 15% more than the number disclosed in the Appellant's records for that day.
(xii) Mr Heath also extracted the following figures from the cash book for the period to 31 January 1999:
£ | |
Cash purchases | 33,995.16 |
Wages paid | 20,252.31 |
Drawings taken | 3,900.00 |
Bankings | 82,477.57 |
(xiii) The total of these amounts, being the use to which cash received was recorded as having been put, should, he considered, be the amount of the receipts of the business in the period - in other words the value of the supplies made by it. The total is £140,625.04; the supplies recorded on the VAT return were £114,392.48.
(xiv) Following Mr Heath's visits to the premises he wrote to Mr Wong. There followed a meeting with Mr Wong and further correspondence. Thereafter an assessment for £21,722 plus interest was notified to the Appellant on 26 August 1999. The assessment represented an assumed under declaration of supplies equal to 15%of the declared supplies.
Mr Wong's Submissions
(i) he accepted the accuracy of Mr Heath's figures set out above at paragraph (xii);
(ii) he explained that although the sum of those figures was the cash which left the business during the period, the amount of the cash inflow could only be determined by taking account of the cash in hand at the beginning and end of the period. The cash in hand at the beginning of the period was £11,353.03, and at the end was £4,645.11; thus the total cash received in the period was £140,625.04 + £4,645.11 - £11,353.03 = £133,917.12;
(iii) from this sum there needed to be deducted £17,350.00. This was an amount received in respect of an insurance claim. After deducting this amount the net cash inflow from sales was £116,567.12.
Discussion
(a) The assessment
(b) Best Judgment
Costs
LON/02/746