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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Ali v The Commissioners of Customs and Excise [2004] UKVAT V18482 (12 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2004/V18482.html Cite as: [2004] UKVAT V18482 |
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18482
Value Added Tax; Registration; partnership; jurisidiction; appeal by individual asserting that she was not a partner; Value Added Tax Act 1994 section 83(a)
EDINBURGH TRIBUNAL CENTRE
- and -
Tribunal Chairman: J Gordon Reid, QC., FCIArb
Tribunal Members: Mrs Heidi Poon
Ian M P Condie, CA
Sitting in Edinburgh on 24 and 25 November 2003
For the Appellants Fiona Glen of Flynn & Co
For the Respondents Bernard Haley
Introduction
This is an appeal to determine whether the Appellant was a partner in the business trading as the Benazir Restaurant, Carnoustie, from 14/12/94, being the effective date of registration of that business, until 1/7/00 being the effective date of the cancellation of that registration. Miss Fiona Glen of Flynn & Co., solicitors, Dundee, appeared on behalf of the Appellant and led the evidence of the Appellant and her mother, Mrs Irene Ali. Bernard Haley, a Customs official, appeared on behalf of the Respondents ("Customs") and led the evidence of Gail Samson and Deborah Wilson, both Band 6 Customs Officers. Parties lodged a joint bundle of productions. By agreement, Customs led at the Hearing on 24/11/03 which concluded on 25/11/03.
At the outset, we expressed doubts about our jurisdiction to determine this appeal. It was explained to us that an assessment in a sum exceeding £200,000, which includes substantial statutory penalties, has been issued against the partnership which traded as the Benazir Restaurant. That assessment has not been appealed and an action has been raised in the Sheriff Court against the Appellant and her mother, as partners in that business, for the amount of the assessment. Mrs Irene Ali has not defended that action and decree has apparently passed against her. In her defences, the Appellant has denied that she was a partner. It seems that, at the suggestion of the learned Sheriff, the action has been sisted to enable the partnership issue to be determined by this Tribunal. Both parties invited us to accept jurisdiction. Neither made any significant submission to support the invitation other than to refer us to section 45(2) [which deals with notification of change in the constitution of a partnership] and section 83(a) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994, [which confers a right of appeal in respect of the registration or cancellation of registration of any person under the Act]. We have serious doubts whether we have jurisdiction to deal with this matter even although, at an earlier stage in proceedings, a differently constituted Tribunal appeared expressly to accept jurisdiction, but without giving reasons. It seems to us that the logical and appropriate way of dealing with this issue is by proceedings for declarator in the Sheriff Court, whether by separate action or by counterclaim in Customs' action. We doubt whether the issue falls within the scope of section 83(a). Nevertheless, in spite of these misgivings, we decided to hear the appeal and give our decision thereon, for what that may ultimately be worth.
Facts
Submissions
Mr Haley referred us to some of the documents in general terms and emphasised the terms of the interviews in 2000. He drew our attention to Regulation 5 of the Value Added Tax Regulations 1995 which deals with registration and notification and the relative forms. However, these regulations came into force on 20/10/95 and were accordingly not applicable to the Benazir application for registration. He also drew our attention to section 45 of the 1994 Act, which provides that where a partner ceases to be a partner he continues to be liable for VAT until the change in the partnership is notified to Customs. He did not address us on the law of partnership.
Miss Glen referred us to sections 1, 2, and 14 of the Partnership Act of 1890. She submitted that there was no single test to determine the existence of a partnership. She submitted that "holding out" can never create a partnership under reference to Miller on Partnership 2nd edition page 121. The search was for the real intention of the parties. Here, the running of the business was a shambles and therefore the true intent of the Appellant and Mrs Ali had not been established. The Alis had no real idea of what a partnership meant. Some of the documents produced showed that there were many aspects of the business in which the Appellant had no involvement, but others, such as Zaheer, did. The Appellant had no business training and would have been very young to be a partner in 1994.
Discussion
We are asked to determine whether a partnership existed between the Appellant and her mother. A partnership is a contract. Whether a contract has come into existence depends upon whether there is consensus. One must therefore ascertain from all the available evidence the true intention of the parties and the legal effect of their conduct. We agree with Miss Glen that there is no single test to determine the existence of a partnership. Statutory guidance is given in relation to particular aspects of conduct such as the receipt by a person of a share of the profits of a business. The evidence of the parties themselves is not conclusive. Thus a denial by a person that he was a partner may be rejected by a court where other evidence of sufficient weight points to him being a partner. Likewise, an assertion by a person that he was or is a partner in a business is not conclusive. However, where two individuals both state that they are the partners in a business on separate occasions several years apart, little further evidence, if any, will be required to conclude that a partnership existed and that they are or were the partners.
The evidence in this appeal was unsatisfactory in many respects. Mrs Ali's evidence was contradictory in a number of areas. Our impression was that she was willing to agree to anything if she thought it would assist her daughter's appeal.
The thrust of the Appellant's evidence was that she was never a partner; her parents had been in partnership and ran the business from 1994. In the interview in 2000 she had said what she thought was best for her mother. She signed documents without realising what they were, and claimed that she never received any profit from the business. She claimed not to have signed accounts or self assessment tax returns. According to the Appellant, Zaheer played an active role in the business; he paid the bills and was in charge of the staff. She thought her mother and her brother were partners. According to Mrs Ali, Zaheer was an alcoholic and was very unreliable, although she also said he was experienced in the restaurant business and was the guiding hand. According to the Appellant, she had no real knowledge of the business affairs of the restaurant. She never opened any mail relating to the business. She did not recall the 1996 visit. She accepted that she or her mother cashed up; she did not qualify this statement as she did in her 2000 interview. She did not discuss accounts or business with Mr Martin. She had no real explanation for her statements in her interview in June 2000 to the effect that she was a partner and that her mother was the other partner. Apart from stating several times in the course of that interview that she and her mother were the partners, she put forward a robust resistance to the serious allegations of under-declaration of sales. She spoke as if it was her business. She gave a detailed account of its operation. All this is entirely consistent with what was said in 1996 in the presence of Gail Sampson, who said that the Appellant seemed to know more about the business than her mother. The Appellant gave no satisfactory explanation of why she said she was a partner in 1996. We have no hesitation in accepting Gail Sampson's evidence in its entirety to the effect that the Appellant and Mrs Ali stated to her that they were the partners.
Mr Martin did not give evidence. However, we consider that in the absence of any evidence to the contrary we are entitled to assume that in his dealings with the business he was acting professionally and properly, and that before submitting partnership accounts and income tax returns and engaging in correspondence on behalf of the Appellant and her mother he would have satisfied himself that they were in partnership. It is within the knowledge of the Tribunal that both the Appellant and Mrs Ali must have signed the partnership self assessment returns produced; it is also good practice for an accountant to ensure that the partners of a business, such as the one under consideration, sign the accounts he has prepared on their behalf signifying acceptance of their accuracy. We cannot assume that Mr Martin did not act in accordance with such practice in his dealings with the Benazir Restaurant and the Inland Revenue.
Mrs Ali began her evidence by stating that she was the owner of the Benazir Restaurant. She swiftly departed from that line by stating that she, her husband, Mr Malook and Zaheer were in partnership; subsequently she said she did not think of them as partners. She gave the impression that the business was chaotic, documents were signed by whoever happened to be around when a signature was needed; that her son was unreliable and that she herself had no idea how to run a business. According to Mrs Ali she received no profits, yet the reality was she helped herself to cash from the takings whenever she wanted money. She had no satisfactory explanation for her statements in the interviews in 1996 and 2000. Her statements in the interview in 2000 that she and the Appellant were the partners are the clearest parts of her evidence.
The business seemed to run principally on a cash basis. How or why Zaheer came to have an account with the Royal Bank trading as Benazir Restaurant was a mystery on the evidence. We note that the account referred to in the 1999 investigation is a different account from that mentioned in the record of the 1996 interview. Again this was not explored in the evidence. Zaheer did not give evidence.
Our findings-in-fact set out above contain our assessment of the evidence. What conclusions do we draw from those primary findings? The Appellant denies ever having been a partner. Her motive for doing so is to avoid liability for a large tax assessment. We do not believe her. There was no such motive in 1996 and the extent of the business's liability in 2000 was not, at the time of the interviews, fully ascertained.
We consider that the statements by both the Appellant and her mother that they were the partners, coupled with their substantial involvement in the running of the business over a number of years is amply sufficient to conclude that they were indeed the partners in the business between December 1994 and at least July 2000. However, before finally determining the issue against the Appellant, we have considered whether there is evidence pointing away from that conclusion, either pointing to others rather than the Appellant being partners, or pointing to the absence of any partnership at all. The denials by the Appellant and her mother carry little weight when balanced against the living they have made out of the business over the years and the income tax documents. We do not overlook the Appellant's tender years in 1994. However, she had left home and school at the age of 16 and had a number of jobs by 1994/1995. She also had a very good command of the business by 1996 when interviewed by Gail Sampson. We also do not overlook that between 1997 and 1999 she was a full-time student nurse. This of itself does not mean that she could not still be a partner. No argument was presented that even if she were a partner in 1994, she resigned when she took up full-time nursing. That she was a partner then is consistent with Mrs Langlands' letter dated 27/12/95.
As for the series of documents running in the name of one or more members of the Ali family, we consider that viewed collectively they are equivocal. Each of the documents was not considered in any detail and such explanation as there was, was vague. Most of the documents can be regarded as, at best for the Appellant, neutral. We consider that they simply indicate the general disregard the Ali family had for record keeping and the signing of documents.
If the facts were to be considered from a different angle i.e. on the basis that it was in the Appellant's interests to assert that she was in partnership with her mother, we consider that she would have a very strong case.
We have noted a number of gaps in the evidence and matters left in the air. While the Tribunal considers that it is entitled to take a more active role at a Hearing than a judge might at a proof, it is not for this Tribunal to conduct the Hearing on behalf of the parties and seek to fill all gaps in the evidence. Our task is to determine matters on the evidence on a balance of probabilities, and this, we have attempted to do. It is unnecessary to consider the applicability of section 14 of the Partnership Act 1890 to the present circumstances. However, it seems to us that facts supporting holding out may, in appropriate circumstances, be deployed to determine that a person is not only holding himself out as a partner but in fact is or was a partner.
Conclusion
Insofar as we have jurisdiction to do so, we determine that the Appellant was a partner in the business trading as the Benazir Restaurant, Carnoustie, from 14/12/94 being the effective date of registration of that business for the purposes of VAT, and 1/7/00 being the effective date of the cancellation of that registration.
Result
The appeal is dismissed. Unless any representations in writing are made to us within twenty-eight days of the date of release of this Decision, no expenses will be deemed to have been found due to or by either party.
J. GORDON REID Q.C. F.C.I.Arb.
CHAIRMAN
Release Date: 12 February 2004.
EDN/03/55