Originally posted by screwthis
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BN66 - Court of Appeal and beyond
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'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch. -
Originally posted by smalldog View Postdoesnt give me any confidence the Supreme court will make any difference in that case if all we are doing is bleating on about HR...sorry to be negative but unless we give the whole and ugly story I cant see the judges overturning this.Comment
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Originally posted by DonkeyRhubarb View Post"...Taxing measures must satisfy the requirements of proportionality, but the threshold of justification to be met by the State is very much lower than in relation to other ECHR rights..."
"The principle of proportionality requires that there be a reasonable relationship between a particular objective to be achieved and the means used to achieve that objective."
OK, so what is the means & what is the objective? Is it...
Objective : To close a tax-avoidance scheme.
Means : HMRC to sit on its hands for several years; to wait until the amount of later-to-be-disputed potential revenue has reached a staggeringly large value; to change an existing Law; to develop some absurd sophistry for persuading Parliament to make this Brand New Law retrospective.
If so, then wouldn't one would be inclined to think it just a little disproportionate (whatever the threshold)?Comment
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Proportionality
Originally posted by Disgusted of Coventry View PostCan someone (ie. you, DR) explain this?
"The principle of proportionality requires that there be a reasonable relationship between a particular objective to be achieved and the means used to achieve that objective."
OK, so what is the means & what is the objective? Is it...
Objective : To close a tax-avoidance scheme.
Means : HMRC to sit on its hands for several years; to wait until the amount of later-to-be-disputed potential revenue has reached a staggeringly large value; to change an existing Law; to develop some absurd sophistry for persuading Parliament to make this Brand New Law retrospective.
If so, then wouldn't one would be inclined to think it just a little disproportionate (whatever the threshold)?Comment
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Originally posted by Disgusted of Coventry View PostCan someone (ie. you, DR) explain this?
"The principle of proportionality requires that there be a reasonable relationship between a particular objective to be achieved and the means used to achieve that objective."
OK, so what is the means & what is the objective? Is it...
Objective : To close a tax-avoidance scheme.
Means : HMRC to sit on its hands for several years; to wait until the amount of later-to-be-disputed potential revenue has reached a staggeringly large value; to change an existing Law; to develop some absurd sophistry for
persuading Parliament to make this Brand New Law retrospective.
If so, then wouldn't one would be inclined to think it just a little disproportionate (whatever the threshold)?
It might have been different if the scheme had been hidden from the authorities and HMRC had only discovered it in 2007. However, every single user declared it on every one of their tax returns. As soon as DOTAS came in, the scheme was even registered with HMRC and was given a scheme reference number (SRN). Thereafter, tax returns included this SRN.
If it is proportionate to use 7-year retrospective legislation to close a scheme which HMRC had known about for 7 years, then I don't know what proportionate means.
Was there something special/peculiar/unique about this scheme that warranted such an unprecedented response?
I don't think so. Surely it's no different to any other tax avoidance scheme which exploits a loophole in the tax system?
There is a more fundamental question here though.
If using 7-year retrospection is a proportionate response to a (fully disclosed) tax avoidance scheme then how much further would the authorities have to go for something to become disproportionate?
Think about it. If BN66 is ok what wouldn't be ok? How far could they push it? What could they get away with?Last edited by DonkeyRhubarb; 19 January 2012, 09:17.Comment
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Originally posted by DonkeyRhubarb View PostYou got me there. I can't explain it.
It might have been different if the scheme had been hidden from the authorities and HMRC had only discovered it in 2007. However, every single user declared it on every one of their tax returns. As soon as DOTAS came in, the scheme was even registered with HMRC and was given a scheme reference number (SRN). Thereafter, tax returns included this SRN.
If it is proportionate to use 7-year retrospective legislation to close a scheme which HMRC had known about for 7 years, then I don't know what proportionate means.
Was there something special/peculiar/unique about this scheme that warranted such an unprecedented response?
I don't think so. Surely it's no different to any other tax avoidance scheme which exploits a loophole in the tax system?
There is a more fundamental question here though.
If using 7-year retrospection is a proportionate response to a (fully disclosed) tax avoidance scheme then how much further would the authorities have to go for something to become disproportionate?
Think about it. If BN66 is ok what wouldn't be ok? How far could they push it? What could they get away with?
As the stamp duty loophole involves millions more £££s than ours and there are likely to be more people doing it, surely HMRC's attitude to us is dis-proportionate.
I wonder if there is a channel where we could formally request the same treatment is given to bigger tax avoidance schemes. And when they refuse, that is the proof we were treated unfairly.'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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Originally posted by SantaClaus View PostIf 7 year retrospection is "proportionate" for our tax scheme, then surely the same retrospection should be applied to the stamp duty tax avoidance scheme on property purchases (which the govt. have signalled they will act against).
As the stamp duty loophole involves millions more £££s than ours and there are likely to be more people doing it, surely HMRC's attitude to us is dis-proportionate.
I wonder if there is a channel where we could formally request the same treatment is given to bigger tax avoidance schemes. And when they refuse, that is the proof we were treated unfairly.
And can the legislation they recently passed stating there would be no more retrospective action by retrospectively applied to say 2007?Comment
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Originally posted by DonkeyRhubarb View PostIf it is proportionate to use 7-year retrospective legislation to close a scheme which HMRC had known about for 7 years, then I don't know what proportionate means.
Is A1P1 as much about the definitions of concepts as it is of Law? And is the Margin of Appreciation there to respectfully allow each country to interpret those definitions in a way that is consistent with its own political & economic framework?
So, to decide if BN66 is 'proportionate', would it be appropriate to ask...
"Was there an alternative 'means' by which HMRC could have`achieved the same 'objective'? One which would have had a less harmful impact upon those affected?"
Is this how A1P1 is supposed to work?Comment
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Originally posted by Disgusted of Coventry View PostI think this is beginning to make a few small molecules of sense.
Is A1P1 as much about the definitions of concepts as it is of Law? And is the Margin of Appreciation there to respectfully allow each country to interpret those definitions in a way that is consistent with its own political & economic framework?
So, to decide if BN66 is 'proportionate', would it be appropriate to ask...
"Was there an alternative 'means' by which HMRC could have`achieved the same 'objective'? One which would have had a less harmful impact upon those affected?"
Is this how A1P1 is supposed to work?
If the 'objective' was to try and collect tax from people who had used the scheme during the past 7 years then the obvious 'alternative means' would have been to take us to court, rather than legislating with retrospective effect. They could still have legislated prospectively to protect future revenues.Comment
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Originally posted by DonkeyRhubarb View PostPossibly.
If the 'objective' was to try and collect tax from people who had used the scheme during the past 7 years then the obvious 'alternative means' would have been to take us to court, rather than legislating with retrospective effect. They could still have legislated prospectively to protect future revenues.Last edited by moira under the stairs; 20 January 2012, 14:26.MUTS likes it HotComment
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