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Murray Group decision 5th July
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Murray Group decision 5th July
Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.
(No, me neither). -
I should add, courtesy of a BG member who spotted it before I did.Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.
(No, me neither). -
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I have previously stuck my neck out on this and have £100 to charity riding on the outcome.
My view is that the Court will uphold the liability shown in the Reg 80 assessments.
I'm more interested in why that is the case than the actual decision.
I can see that the taxpayer may win if the Supreme Court holds that the late argument made by HMRC should be excluded, i.e. a technicality. That would be more interesting than an HMRC victory as it would possibly push back a lot of ground HMRC think they have made in recent years.Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.
(No, me neither).Comment
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Originally posted by webberg View PostI have previously stuck my neck out on this and have £100 to charity riding on the outcome.
My view is that the Court will uphold the liability shown in the Reg 80 assessments.
I'm more interested in why that is the case than the actual decision.
I can see that the taxpayer may win if the Supreme Court holds that the late argument made by HMRC should be excluded, i.e. a technicality. That would be more interesting than an HMRC victory as it would possibly push back a lot of ground HMRC think they have made in recent years.
Understand if you can't/won't answer on a public forumComment
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Originally posted by WalterWhite View PostWhat would this mean for the people already with APN's and those that have settled?
Understand if you can't/won't answer on a public forum
If you have had an APN and paid it, that is a much more difficult question.
I do have a view and it's one that I think is strongly pointing towards making a claim on HMRC for a repayment. However the detail and reasoning is why I get paid elsewhere and I cannot really go further here.Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.
(No, me neither).Comment
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Originally posted by webberg View PostThose who have settled have settled. The decision will not affect them at all.
If you have had an APN and paid it, that is a much more difficult question.
I do have a view and it's one that I think is strongly pointing towards making a claim on HMRC for a repayment. However the detail and reasoning is why I get paid elsewhere and I cannot really go further here.
that really would put the cat among the pigeonsComment
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Originally posted by WalterWhite View PostWow! Interesting stuff, thanks for giving as much information as you have, it is appreciated.
that really would put the cat among the pigeonsComment
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Originally posted by webberg View PostThose who have settled have settled. The decision will not affect them at all.
If you have had an APN and paid it, that is a much more difficult question.
I do have a view and it's one that I think is strongly pointing towards making a claim on HMRC for a repayment. However the detail and reasoning is why I get paid elsewhere and I cannot really go further here.
For the majority of contractors using the typical EBT structure (ie payment from a UKCo to an offshore trust, loan to UK resident), this judgement will have little to no bearing on their case.
We went through this when everyone got excited with the UTT result.
This particular case has a very defined set of circumstances, where the only similarity is that the players were paid via an EBT Loan. The trust set-up was certainly quite different to most of the EBT Contractor schemes I have heard detail on (AML, Cascade etc).
The other point to note, is that this case makes no reference to Transfer of Assets Abroad, which is the key piece of legislation that HMRC were looking to deploy against the typical EBT scheme.
As such, whilst this judgement "may" solidify the courts view of whether a specific EBT structured "loan" is a loan in law, I doubt it will have much bearing on the point of law that HMRC will argue against the typical contractor EBT structure. It'll certainly be helpful, but if HMRC are looking to ping you on the payment to the trust, then whatever happens post that point is irrelevant, no?Comment
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Originally posted by CDJ View PostWith respect Webberg, I disagree.
For the majority of contractors using the typical EBT structure (ie payment from a UKCo to an offshore trust, loan to UK resident), this judgement will have little to no bearing on their case.
We went through this when everyone got excited with the UTT result.
This particular case has a very defined set of circumstances, where the only similarity is that the players were paid via an EBT Loan. The trust set-up was certainly quite different to most of the EBT Contractor schemes I have heard detail on (AML, Cascade etc).
The other point to note, is that this case makes no reference to Transfer of Assets Abroad, which is the key piece of legislation that HMRC were looking to deploy against the typical EBT scheme.
As such, whilst this judgement "may" solidify the courts view of whether a specific EBT structured "loan" is a loan in law, I doubt it will have much bearing on the point of law that HMRC will argue against the typical contractor EBT structure. It'll certainly be helpful, but if HMRC are looking to ping you on the payment to the trust, then whatever happens post that point is irrelevant, no?Comment
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