The Last Post (for 2009)
DR, you make a valid point. Of course HMRC needed to remove that text as BN66 made it obsolete. Yet they could have left the text that referred to applying retrospective legislation there except that was never part of the text. So for anyone organising their affairs inline with legislation at the time or HMRC guidelines would have seen before 2008 that the scheme could not fail and that retrospection was not part of HMRC's remedy.
So if in say 2006 you consulted HMRC guidelines and referenced all return inquiries that had been closed, checked HMRC's position on the specific context of the scheme via their own documents, looked for any reference to 1987 or IR35, confirmed that transparency was key to all avoidance, found out that HMRC had never seen such a scheme in practice before 2001, you're legitimate expectation would allow you to use the scheme in such a context without the fear that BN66 was coming down the road.
Well, retrospectivley (or in hindsight) that is clearly not the case. God help those who go about arranging their affairs transparently only to find that years later, HMRC decide to apply new rules back-dated.
So, Happy New Year to all and let's hope that 19th Jan gets some fair and proportionate justice applied to this whole sorry story. And in doing so, Democracy and transparency will be shown to prevail.
Originally posted by DonkeyRhubarb
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So if in say 2006 you consulted HMRC guidelines and referenced all return inquiries that had been closed, checked HMRC's position on the specific context of the scheme via their own documents, looked for any reference to 1987 or IR35, confirmed that transparency was key to all avoidance, found out that HMRC had never seen such a scheme in practice before 2001, you're legitimate expectation would allow you to use the scheme in such a context without the fear that BN66 was coming down the road.
Well, retrospectivley (or in hindsight) that is clearly not the case. God help those who go about arranging their affairs transparently only to find that years later, HMRC decide to apply new rules back-dated.
So, Happy New Year to all and let's hope that 19th Jan gets some fair and proportionate justice applied to this whole sorry story. And in doing so, Democracy and transparency will be shown to prevail.
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