Follower notices, introduced in Finance Act 2014, can in certain avoidance situations be served on a taxpayer by HMRC (the UK revenue authority) where HMRC is of the opinion that the principles or reasoning of a decided case would deny the tax advantage in dispute. Such a taxpayer, who persists with the dispute, is then exposed to a tax-geared penalty of up to 50 percent and can be required to pay the tax in dispute before the litigation is determined. The follower notice regime was considered by the UK Supreme Court in R (on the application of Haworth) v HMRC. The Supreme Court judgment addresses fundamental issues concerning access to the courts, the doctrine of precedent and balancing taxpayer rights against the public interest in the co...
Decisions taken by trustees have consequences. When trustees make mistakes, especially mistakes that...
Rules targeting specific known schemes are not the only tools available in the battle against tax av...
The United Kingdom (UK) is typical of many common law jurisdictions at present, in that the revenue ...
Follower notices, introduced in Finance Act 2014, can in certain avoidance situations be served on a...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available via Westlaw UKIntroduction: ...
To operate efficiently and effectively revenue authorities require discretion, but processes must be...
A recent decision of the House of Lords in England, Woolwich Building Society v Inland Revenue Commi...
To operate efficiently and effectively revenue authorities require discretion, but processes must be...
The joint appeals in Cavendish Square Holdings v El Makdessi and Beavis v ParkingEye 1 offered the U...
Courts have opened tax guidance to procedural attack. Consequently, taxpayers who are found to owe t...
Taxation statutes often provide opportunities for tax avoidance by taxpayers who exploit the provisi...
[Extract] The "Reasonably Arguable Position" ("RHP") provisions were introduced in the Taxation Laws...
The question of how much deference courts should accord agency interpretations of statutes is a high...
Professor Peter Willoughby examines the issues which arose in his appeal against assessments made by...
Outside the tax area, the law of standing reflects the general proposition that a citizen not direct...
Decisions taken by trustees have consequences. When trustees make mistakes, especially mistakes that...
Rules targeting specific known schemes are not the only tools available in the battle against tax av...
The United Kingdom (UK) is typical of many common law jurisdictions at present, in that the revenue ...
Follower notices, introduced in Finance Act 2014, can in certain avoidance situations be served on a...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available via Westlaw UKIntroduction: ...
To operate efficiently and effectively revenue authorities require discretion, but processes must be...
A recent decision of the House of Lords in England, Woolwich Building Society v Inland Revenue Commi...
To operate efficiently and effectively revenue authorities require discretion, but processes must be...
The joint appeals in Cavendish Square Holdings v El Makdessi and Beavis v ParkingEye 1 offered the U...
Courts have opened tax guidance to procedural attack. Consequently, taxpayers who are found to owe t...
Taxation statutes often provide opportunities for tax avoidance by taxpayers who exploit the provisi...
[Extract] The "Reasonably Arguable Position" ("RHP") provisions were introduced in the Taxation Laws...
The question of how much deference courts should accord agency interpretations of statutes is a high...
Professor Peter Willoughby examines the issues which arose in his appeal against assessments made by...
Outside the tax area, the law of standing reflects the general proposition that a citizen not direct...
Decisions taken by trustees have consequences. When trustees make mistakes, especially mistakes that...
Rules targeting specific known schemes are not the only tools available in the battle against tax av...
The United Kingdom (UK) is typical of many common law jurisdictions at present, in that the revenue ...