fbpx

You Are Entitled to Rely on Professional Tax Advice – Even If it is Wrong

9th July 2021 By

Professional tax advice, however carefully considered, cannot always be correct, but you are generally entitled to rely on it. A tribunal made that point in relieving a retired executive of a tax bill that would have had a devastating impact on his pension.

The Finance Act 2004 imposed a highly controversial charge to Income Tax known as the lifetime allowance charge (LAL). As from 6 April 2006, a threshold was imposed on lifetime pension savings. Any savings in excess of that threshold were subject to LAL when pension benefits were taken, often many years in the future.

The new regime was, however, tempered by transitional arrangements whereby enhanced protection could be applied for by those whose existing pension arrangements would result in the lifetime allowance being exceeded. Such applications were required to be made by 5 April 2009.

Following his retirement, the executive applied for and received a lifetime allowance of £1.5 million. His then financial advisors, however, failed to bring to his attention his entitlement to claim enhanced protection in 2006 or at any time thereafter. Only after he sought advice elsewhere was he informed in writing, in August 2016, that he could make a late application for enhanced protection.

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) conceded that his reliance on professional tax advice afforded him a reasonable excuse for most of the delay. However, in refusing to grant him enhanced protection, it argued that he had delayed too long between the date on which he became aware of his entitlement to make the late application and the date on which he actually lodged it.

In upholding his challenge to that decision, the First-tier Tribunal found that the relevant period of delay was three months. Once he had good cause to believe that he faced serious and wholly unexpected tax difficulties, he acted promptly, diligently and with sufficient speed. Overall, he had behaved as an objectively reasonable taxpayer would have done in his situation.

Source: Concious

Latest News

Company Owner's Negligible Value Claim Unsuccessful

29th April, 2024 By

When an asset falls in value to the point that it is almost worthless, it may be possible to make a negligible value claim under Section 24 of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992. The asset will then be treated as if it had been sold and immediately acquired again, so that the loss can be set off against other income. For a claim to succeed, however, the asset must have become of negligible value during the time the claimant owned it. On 30 September 2017, a woman who...

Court Sanctions Leg Amputation for Man Lacking Mental Capacity

24th April, 2024 By

The courts are often called upon to sanction treatment for patients whose ability to make decisions for themselves is impaired. In a recent case on point, the Court of Protection had to decide whether it was in the best interests of a man with mental health issues to have his right leg amputated above the knee. The man, aged 60, was taken to hospital by his niece. He was found to have an ulcerated leg. He had a history of paranoid schizophrenia, and believed that the sores on his leg...

High Court Grants Parental Order Despite Previous Adoption

18th April, 2024 By

In law, adopted children are regarded as having been born to their adoptive parents. The Family Division of the High Court recently considered whether that fact precluded a parental order being granted under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (HFEA) in respect of a child born via surrogacy. A couple who lived in the USA had entered into a surrogacy arrangement with another woman. An adoption order naming the couple as the child's parents had been made by a US court and was automatically recognised under UK law. However,...

Flat Owner Not Liable for Pre-existing Structural Issues

16th April, 2024 By

When building owners carry out works on their property, are they liable for damage to adjoining properties that results from pre-existing structural issues? The Court of Appeal recently provided welcome clarification on that question. The owner of a ground-floor flat wished to extend it by building out into his garden. He served notices on owners of adjoining properties, as required by the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. The works caused the rear wall of two adjoining properties to drop by about 2 mm, which led to internal walls and floor...