Originally posted by nuffsaid
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BN66 - JR Judgement Day
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Originally posted by nuffsaid View PostI was there, I didn't hear the Judge hint at this???Comment
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Originally posted by ready_to_leave View PostMy Taxation revenue will benefit some other state, which hopefully will not splurge it away on keeping a benefit system going for 20% of the adult population in order to keep their voting base.
Um - isn't the point of the case that you don't really pay much taxation revenue?Comment
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Originally posted by nuffsaid View PostI was there, I didn't hear the Judge hint at this???Originally posted by NickFitz View PostThat seems to be a reference to paragraphs 87 and 88 of the judgement.Comment
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Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
Um - isn't the point of the case that you don't really pay much taxation revenue?
Of course this country also benefited from the trickle down effect of our earnings.Comment
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2p worth
Well. I've read the judgement and I'll not cherry pick from it. Very risky to take anything in isolation.
It does seem to me that it was finely balanced. He did appear to say that the outcome of an individual case was far from certain. He did appear to state the the defence argument (part of it) that it was not a partnership was strong. He did say that the case law relied upon was strong and had stood for a long time. He did also say that an applicant would have a reasonable prospect of success in terms of arguing a case at the commissioners.
What the judge has said is that parliament were entitled to redefine retrospectively their view of what a partnership was under the DTA. He has said that he felt this was proportionate.
What he has NOT said is that the claims to relief under the definition are invalid.
Just my view of course from reading the judgement.Comment
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An election may solve this sooner...
Wonder if its worth writing to our MPs again... Is a guarantee to halt this process worth a guarantee of 2500 votes? I know I'd vote any mainstream party who promised me that. Are you listening Tory snoopers????Lord Clyde in 1929: ‘No man is under the smallest obligation, moral or other, so to arrange his legal relations to his business or to his property as to enable the Revenue to put the largest possible shovel into his stores. The Revenue is not slow to take every advantage which is open to it under the taxing statutes for the purpose of depleting the taxpayer’s pocket. And the taxpayer is entitled to be astute to prevent, so far as he honestly can, the depletion of his means by the Revenue.’Comment
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Originally posted by javacoder View PostGittins has already spotted errors in the judgement and that looks like one of them. MP did everything to bring this before the commissioners. I know our silk praised the judge but looks like he was talking nonsense.
Don't know how important this is for the proportionality argument, but surely this knocks one of the props supporting the judgement.
Also, and I believe the judge touched on this in the judgement - when Padmore was enacted, Padmore and the others who had claimed the same exemption but were lumped together for the commissioners case were exempted from the retrospection.
There seems to be a lack of consistency both in the application of BN66 and the judgement.Comment
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Originally posted by nick4notax View PostWonder if its worth writing to our MPs again... Is a guarantee to halt this process worth a guarantee of 2500 votes? I know I'd vote any mainstream party who promised me that. Are you listening Tory snoopers????When is comes to the HMRC and Gordy. Im a fighter not a loverComment
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