H546
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Stanley -v- The Revenue Commissioners [2015] IEHC 546 (07 August 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2015/H546.html Cite as: [2015] IEHC 546 |
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Judgment
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Neutral Citation [2015] IEHC 546 THE HIGH COURT [2014 137 JR] BETWEEN ROBERT STANLEY APPLICANT AND
THE REVENUE COMMISSIONERS RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Hedigan delivered on the 7th day of August, 2015 1. In these proceedings the applicant seeks the following orders;
(ii) A declaration that notice of assessment was issued without and/or in excess of the respondents jurisdiction and without any basis in law; (iii) A declaration that the notice of assessment is vitiated by error of law; (iv) Without prejudice to the above, a declaration that the applicant did not fail to deliver a “correct relevant return” within the meaning of s.46 of the Capital Acquisitions Tax Consolidation Act 2003 (CATCA) by reason of having claimed a capital gains tax credit pursuant to s.104 CATCA in his November 2007 CAT return; (v) In consequence of (iv) above, a declaration that the applicant was not guilty of “neglect” within the meaning of s.46 (7B) (b) and, accordingly, the notice of assessment was made outside the time limit specified in s.49 (6A) of CATCA and is thus null and void and without effect in law; (vi) An order staying the statutory appeal pending before the Appeal Commissioners in respect of the impugned notice of assessment; (vii) Such further or other order; (viii) The costs of this application.
(b) In this subsection ‘relevant return’ means … a return or an additional return within the meaning of section 46.”
4. There is no dispute but that the notice of assessment the subject of these proceedings issued outside the four year time limit prescribed by s.49 (6A). By a letter of the 30th of December 2013, the respondents acknowledge that the assessment had been raised “outside the relevant four year time limit” and identified the basis for doing so as “neglect, including negligence or failure to deliver a correct relevant return (within the meaning given in s.49 (6A) (b)).” By a further letter of the 17th February 2014, the respondent made it clear that it considers that it was entitled to raise the assessment when it did because, in its view, the return made by the applicant did not correctly quantify the CAT payable by reason of including a capital gains tax credit to which, in the Revenue’s view, the applicant was not entitled. This letter stated as follows:
…. It is considered that the credit claimed by each of your clients in respect of the Capital Gains Tax paid by their father is therefore disallowed under s.104 (3) of the Capital Acquisitions Consolidation Act 2003 (CATA). A credit for Capital Gains Tax is withdrawn where the asset is disposed of within two years of the gift or inheritance. Enquiries on this issue have been ongoing with the agents for your clients and Mr. Stanley since 2008. On an analysis of the information actually provided as set out above it was considered that the Capital Gains Tax Credit claimed against your client’s CAT liability was not due and should not have been claimed on the forms IT38. Your clients clearly therefore did not deliver a correct relevant return.” 6. Limitation periods are to be found in all common law countries and in most systems of jurisprudence. Where that period has expired the potential defendant should be entitled to assume that he is no longer at risk and to order his affairs accordingly. See Hegarty v. O’Loughran [1991] 1 I.R. 148 at 157. But these limitation periods are subject to conditions e.g. fraud which may set a limitation period aside or cause it to be extended. In this instance, fraud or neglect, which may be manifested by the filing of an incorrect return, is such a condition. The issue between the tax payer and the Revenue Commissioners is the correctness of the return made. If it is correct, then no extension of the limitation period will be allowed and the assessment will fall. 7. I do not believe that any question of statutory interpretation arises in this case. I can find no obscurity or ambiguity nor does any absurdity flow from a literal interpretation of the statute. The statute means what it says i.e. an assessment may issue outside the four year limitation period if the return made by the tax payer is found to be incorrect. The exception does not in my view swallow the general rule as the applicant contends. The reason I think this is because if the tax payer believes that the assessment issued outside the four year limitation period and is not covered by the exemption because it is not incorrect, then he can appeal to the Appeal Commissioners. If after a full hearing they conclude that the return was not incorrect then the assessment falls under the general rule because the exemption does not apply. It is a matter of mixed fact and law as to whether a correct return was filed. That is classically a matter for decision by the Appeal Commissioners who I am satisfied have ample jurisdiction so to do. It is no function of this court in these proceedings to enter into any disputed tax issues concerning a CAT liability of the applicant. That is for the Appeal Commissioners. It is they who will determine whether the CGT tax credit claimed against CAT liability was not due and should not have been claimed on the form IT38. 8. Thus, on what the applicant himself has, I think correctly, described as the core issue in the case, I cannot find with him. The clear interpretation of the exemption clause does not in my view swallow the general rule. Where the Revenue have held that a return was incorrect and the taxpayer disagrees, he may appeal and it is for the Appeal Commissioners to determine, as a matter of mixed law and fact, whether the return was in fact incorrect. If it was, then the four year limitation period does not apply. If the return was correct then the assessment falls because the four year limitation period applies. This was the choice of the Oireachtas and it is clearly expressed in the statutory provisions. In the light of this decision, it is not necessary for the court to address any of the other issues that arose in this case. The application is refused. |