Originally posted by warlord
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BN66 - the road to Judicial Review
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Originally posted by smalldog View PostI find it totally hilarious posts from a public forum were used in HMRC's defense!!!! thats amazing, they could be posts from some lunatic pretending to be on the scheme, or god forbid they could be from someone malicious trying to influence the outcome, not mentioning any names of course...... How on earth can they be credible submissions?? Im surprised the judge didnt laugh Singh out of court to be honest....
You know even if we lose the JR on the grounds of ECHR, now that the judge ruled it as not being a clarification could the commissioners actually enforce it, as it has now been classified as retrospective...??
'..yeah we all know its risky........<SINGH cuts here> .......not because the scheme doesn't work but because of our government and its leglistative processes cannot be trusted to provide certainty in the UK tax system ' ....
Yours sincerely
S. Timms.- SL -Comment
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Originally posted by Toocan View PostIt amazes me that hearsay would be allowed in a court - what if HMRC made those posts? That just can't be taken seriously.
How weak must their case be?Comment
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Originally posted by Alan Jones View Posti aaddressed your HMRC Q b4 u posted - but my posts get vetted & therefore there is a delay for e.g. i am writing this at 7.30pm.
my position is exactly same as you expect my nemesis is not HMRC . I admire the never say die spirit because i will fight my cause to the bitter end.
However for me to win my appeal and save me going bankrupt, R u worried about making some poor inspector redundant or bankrupt. Answer is - if it saves yur skin NO . How many of you have had contracts designing HMRC systems - did you refuse the work on ***** . NO .
The only person fighting for me is me.
Only reason you ever had any money was ripping off montpelier's idea. You hang off the coat-tails of others. You are a leech. Both in behaviour and looks.Comment
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Originally posted by Jools86 View PostJust to wish all you guys the best - long term lurker interested in case...
I hope HMRC gets whats coming to themComment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostWhy are you worried about bankruptcy? Always a bed for you in the looney bin.
If any of you are compelled to reply to his posts or send him a private message; please be very careful what you say.Comment
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Thanks to all who have got us this far
Like so many, many hundreds/thousands?? of people involved with the MP scheme we are totally in debt to everyone who have taken the time and effort in out quest against HMRC with special thanks to DR, I really can't say thank you enough.
I joined the scheme in 2003 and to be honest have been a bit of a coward by not getting involved sooner but AJ sent me over the top, so some good has come out of his mad rants, I am with you all the way now.Comment
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Originally posted by DonkeyRhubarb View PostThe 1987 Padmore legislation only applied to UK resident partners of offshore partnerships. In its strict interpretation, it can't apply to us because we were not partners or members of a firm.
However, this is where the so-called clarification comes in. HMRC want the court to believe that Parliament always intended the legislation to have a wider scope than this, which they say would have included beneficiaries of a trust. This is just wishful thinking, and at the end of the day the law is the law.
In any case, if HMRC had genuinely believed this had been the intention of Parliament then they would have said so in their Manual, and they would have expressed it long before 2007.
I look forward to seeing Timms, MrYouknowWho (TM) and HMRC locked up in the Tower of London.
Maybe Her Majesty will put them in the stocks so I can throw rotten apples at them too.'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.Comment
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Thought for the night
I've been speaking to a Barrister friend this evening about this. The upshot was this:
BN66 applies retrospectively to Padmore legislation.
MTM scheme is not Padmore as per comments made from what the Judge noted and was never referenced by HMRC until 2008.
If there were communications in early 2000's which had opinions that the scheme did not work then that would suffice to be tested via litigation so why was it not unless this is unfounded or unlikely to be successful? And Note 63 supports this.
If Parliament "intended" 1987 to apply to a wider scope, then HMRC would have known that this discretion applied in 2001 and could therefore have applied it via litigation or moved to have it enacted via legislation at the beginning.
Scale of use does not carry since all laws which apply to individuals (namely personal tax) is just that - singular. There is no case to ignore a breach of law by one until it is breached by many. Self Assessment legislation concerns the individual not the collective and the case here is against an individual (Huitson). This view was derived from employment law.
Whether the scheme worked or not is not in legal contention. It is the fact that HMRC never did (or have since) proved this one way or the other despite their claims to do so via the Commissioners. If it is determined that this is not a Padmore case then even allowing some flexibility of "intention", HMRC failed to exercise their obligations to apply this discretion at many points in time.
Forum evidence - If it became necessary to subpoena a forum member to cross examine their comments, who are you going to subpoena? Santa?
Transparency - the whole point of SA.
In short, he does not see how this case holds up to scrutiny other than the larger story of tax avoidance and what it means to future case law. There are perhaps more politics than law in play here but on the evidence as it is seen, the date from which this scheme did not work was 12th March 2008 as per element 2 of BN66. Element 1 on retrospection merely clarifies the Padmore status. If our scheme is to be now brought in scope then this implies the 1987 legislation has been modified to allow it (at the discretion of Parliament) and is therefore a new law which supercedes 1987 and therefore is in conflict via retrospection of Article 1 Protocol 1.Comment
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An Analogy
Missed this bit from my Barrister friend who works in employment law. If an employee kept taking sickies over a number of years and this was know to his bosses and HR and whilst they didn't approve of it and often reminded him of that fact, they allowed it to happen as it did not impact the company overall, then after a few years more and more employees started to do the same until a point was reached where the management said "enough is enough".
So they get together in the boardroom and realise that all these sickies are having a big impact on the company profits. So they send out a misconduct letter to all of them and tell them that their pay will be doct for each day they took a sickie.
So the bloke who as an individual (call him Huitson) did this for a number of years and knowingly to his bosses suddenly finds himself getting a load of money taken away because of the behaviour of others when all along his bosses never once implied that it would happen seems a little less than fair and proportionate not least as some who started at this late in the day will be far less penalised. Huitson has been discriminated against on the basis that the scale of the sickies determines how far back the penalty goes and he had no knowledge nor control of the other individuals behaviour.
Scale cannot be used as an argument as it implies plural. And the behaviour is relevant to the individual. Just as in personal tax.Comment
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