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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 >> Dawkins & Anor (t/a Scandanavia Coffee House) v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT V20843 (24 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2008/V20843.html Cite as: [2008] UKVAT V20843 |
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20843
Value Added Tax - Assessment to reduce the percentage of zero-rated take-away sales at a coffee house - Whether Inspector's review and decision were made "to best judgment" - Appeal allowed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
DEREK ANDREW DAWKINS & MONICA ELIZABETH DAWKINS Appellants
T/A SCANDANAVIA COFFEE HOUSE
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: HOWARD M NOWLAN (Chairman)
MRS R S JOHNSON
Sitting in public in London on 13 October 2008
Derek Dawkins in person, on behalf of the Appellant partnership
Gloria Orimoloye of HM Revenue & Customs Solicitor's Office, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2008
DECISION
Introduction
The expression of % figures in this decision
The evidence and the facts
Our decision
• She accepted first, though she had not made this clear in her initial statement, that when she undertook her test, the Customer Receipts indeed tallied with the daily and weekly totals. We obviously appreciate that since the Appellants were on notice that the two would be compared, it would have been stupid, had the Appellants been earlier destroying inconsistent Customer Receipts, for the Appellants to have allowed any inconsistencies to continue during the test period. No-one made the point, however, that for this reason the test sample was fairly useless. It admittedly might have achieved the point of preventing the Appellants from boosting the daily and weekly totals to inflated figures and we accept that the percentage of zero-rated sales for the 08/2007 period was below those for any other period except one. However the fact remains that there was not shown to be any discrepancy between the Customer Receipt figures and the daily and weekly totals.
• We were not initially shown the HMRC records for the VAT periods that covered the sample period, and indeed the results for the four remaining periods that covered the period from February 2007 to February 2008 when the business was sold. When these were faxed to us we noted, again with interest, that the figures returned by the Appellants for the period covering the test period tallied with the results obtained by Gillian Parkes in her test sample. It may again be said that they obviously would do but they certainly did. Thus all that Gillian Parkes knew was that the figures were lower for the test period, and not that any inconsistency of any sort had actually been detected.
• In the light of the first two points, and of the fact that the various percentages and turnover figures generally had fluctuated quite markedly, we consider that Gillian Parkes, in exercising best judgment, should have done much more in terms of trying to discover whether take-away turnover had genuinely fallen in the test period, and notably in the five periods preceding the test period, against the levels prevailing in the period when she made her adjustments. We consider it to be very significant that the percentage of take-away sales in the 7 periods adjusted were at the levels 40%, 47%, 47%, 44.6%, 49.3%, 58.4% and 43%. In the following four periods, all of which pre-dated the first contact made by Gillian Parkes, those figures had changed to 34%, 42%, 43% and 42%. Gillian Parkes chose to confine her adjustment to the first 7, and not the next 4, but appeared to give no thought to the clear fact that if the Appellants had been mis-recording figures in the 7 periods (effectively "fiddling the books"), it is odd that they had the foresight to stop the practice at least a year before Gillian Parkes first contacted them. This must, or at least should, have revealed that the low figure in the test period may have been part of a pattern of declining take-away turnover, rather than an indication that the Appellants were no longer able to fiddle the books in the test period.
• One of the points made by the Appellants was that Gillian Parkes entered into no dialogue with them, and just went away with her figures and eventually made the assessments. She might legitimately say that the Appellants had an opportunity to advance all sorts of arguments, but failed to do so. However, we are quite satisfied that Mr. Dawkins, first and foremost the chef, never quite appreciated what Gillian Parkes was planning. Thus their failure to advance arguments, before the adjusted figures had resulted in the assessment, stemmed largely from bemusement. By contrast we consider that Gillian Parkes failed to seek to verify whether take-away turnover was genuinely declining, or whether she had caught the Appellants out, so that they had had to terminate their practice of inflating that turnover, rather oddly beginning this process at least a year before she approached them.
• The chance remark that led Gillian Parkes to assume that take-away turnover was actually increasing, rather than falling, was a remark made without follow-up by Mrs. Dawkins, to the effect that she was trying to boost and increase take-away turnover, and she mentioned that she was chasing the coach companies. On the supposition thus that take-away turnover was being boosted, Gillian Parkes took that to be a major indicator that the low figure for the test period must have revealed that the take-away turnover in the earlier "adjusted" period, although recorded as being higher, would actually have been lower. It was perfectly clear from their evidence that the reason the Appellants were chasing up the coach companies was that this turnover had fallen off, and the chasing exercise was an effort, in the event a totally unsuccessful effort, to reverse that decline. Gillian Parkes advanced this point as possibly the main reason for suspecting that the percentages for the "adjusted" period had been manipulated, whereas we consider that had she engaged in any proper dialogue in this context, she would have seen that Mrs. Dawson's chance remark and reference to chasing up the coach companies, demonstrated the reverse of the conclusion she drew from it.
• Whilst Gillian Parkes had gathered that there was competition from one identified "household name" coffee business, of which she had been disputing the date, we heard in evidence that about 30 competitors had opened and that Bury St. Edmunds was awash with coffee-shops with both pavement seating, and take-away businesses. One take-away business had opened opposite the Appellants' premises. No thought appears to have been given to the increase in the competition generally.
• Gillian Parkes adjusted the take-away percentage of turnover for all seven "adjusted periods" to the single figure of 35.6%. This seems very arbitrary when there was a disparity in the declared percentage of take-away turnover in the adjusted years from 40% to 58.4%. Unless it was supposed that there was more rampant fiddling in the latter period, the adjustment of all figures down to 35.6% seems extraordinarily arbitrary. It also seems odd that in the period prior to that for which adjustments were made, in other words the period already reviewed by Gillian Parkes' predecessor, there were some years with higher percentages than those in the adjusted period. Gillian Parkes may have considered that her colleague failed to spot the fraud, and that she could not go back to earlier periods. This would still leave unexplained why two of the periods adjusted had lower or equal take-away turnover percentages than some of the four following periods when she chose not to adjust. Plainly take-away percentages were then falling, a year before her visit, but two of the adjusted periods were at no higher level.
• We finally make possibly the most important point. Mr. and Mrs. Dawkins struck as both as being honest. The first two bullet points above illustrate that there is actually no evidence that they have miss-recorded anything. Mr. Dawkins may have failed to keep records as he should have done, and again we note that had been really been fraudulent, he could have manipulated the primary records, kept them, and rendered Gillian Parkes' exercise to be as difficult as it was. But we do not believe that this couple were fraudulent.
HOWARD M NOWLAN
CHAIRMAN
RELEASED: 24 October 2008
LON 2007/1605