Hi all,
Here's an idea I have been thinking, so I do apologise for the below which can be wrong etc.
I am not a lawyer, but I had done 2 commercial law papers back in uni. One principle I've remembered from those courses was the "duty of care" in the common law. In the perspective of "tax avoidance schemes" where HMRC is contesting the legality of it, would it be fair to say the followings:
I found this old case of which it won at the Court of Appeal (Court finds taxpayers can sue HMRC for damages | AccountingWEB). The point which I am trying focus on is, the mistakes or inaction HMRC has on with us at the moment ties to the principle of duty of care where to put it bluntly, they have taken their sweet time and hold most of us in ransom/emotional prison; and to a lot of us the potential of bankruptcy because they didn't do their job properly or lack of duty of care.
Coming back to visit the timely concept, I just watched the news the government is being sued for delay (or inaction) for over a year for sickness/benefit approval Government in High Court over benefit payments delay - BBC News. This is over a yr (although I have to say our pain might not be as serious as some of them) we suffered quite a lot physiologically, for me is every bloody day!!!
Here's my thought, is a catch 22 for HRMC. IF they say what we had done is illegal in court in other cases. Can we argue they owe us a duty of care where they should have told us at the first place in a better timely manner as we didn't know we were committing a crime (although we were transparent in telling them via tax returns)? As a result we suffer duress and other mental (maybe physical) damaged because they lack their duty of care on us and to the public?
If my argument has any validity, I am sure we won't struggle to find victims!
Thoughts?
Here's an idea I have been thinking, so I do apologise for the below which can be wrong etc.
I am not a lawyer, but I had done 2 commercial law papers back in uni. One principle I've remembered from those courses was the "duty of care" in the common law. In the perspective of "tax avoidance schemes" where HMRC is contesting the legality of it, would it be fair to say the followings:
- If the schemes were illegal and where the schemes had been isused DOTAS numbers, doesn't HMRC owes us a duty of care to investigate the legality of those schemes at the FIRST place before the numbers were issued?
- Park the first point aside, most of us had done our tax returns of which we had clearly stated the DOTAS number, again shouldn't HMRC have the duty of care to notify us about the legality of those schemes in a more timely manner? (I would expand the argument of timely further below)
- Due to the effect (I am sure most of us agrees here) with the lack of action from HRMC to STOP the schemes being marketed to us (maybe even with the FCA); don't they have a duty of care to look after the public where we are blindingly committed a crime? Which they said we have commit.
- Since it took them over 2 years (and counting) where most of us might have put our lives on hold for this ticking time bomb, again don't they owe us a duty of care to rectify the situation much sooner (think about the people we are still waiting to be settled)? As we can't appeal now which I am sure it adds more duress to most of us, it has compounded the matter worse. I think the financial damage may outweigh the "cost" of the tax they claim we owe; if we can sue them successfully for their incompetence.
I found this old case of which it won at the Court of Appeal (Court finds taxpayers can sue HMRC for damages | AccountingWEB). The point which I am trying focus on is, the mistakes or inaction HMRC has on with us at the moment ties to the principle of duty of care where to put it bluntly, they have taken their sweet time and hold most of us in ransom/emotional prison; and to a lot of us the potential of bankruptcy because they didn't do their job properly or lack of duty of care.
Coming back to visit the timely concept, I just watched the news the government is being sued for delay (or inaction) for over a year for sickness/benefit approval Government in High Court over benefit payments delay - BBC News. This is over a yr (although I have to say our pain might not be as serious as some of them) we suffered quite a lot physiologically, for me is every bloody day!!!
Here's my thought, is a catch 22 for HRMC. IF they say what we had done is illegal in court in other cases. Can we argue they owe us a duty of care where they should have told us at the first place in a better timely manner as we didn't know we were committing a crime (although we were transparent in telling them via tax returns)? As a result we suffer duress and other mental (maybe physical) damaged because they lack their duty of care on us and to the public?
If my argument has any validity, I am sure we won't struggle to find victims!
Thoughts?
Comment