fbpx

Couples Who Keep Separate Finances May Still Need to Discuss Tax Affairs

9th February 2024 By

Even in long-term or married relationships, couples very often operate separate bank accounts and keep their personal finances private from one another. However, as a case concerning the High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) showed, such confidentiality can occasionally have very unfortunate consequences.

HICBC was introduced in 2013 and, in broad terms, renders those whose adjusted net income exceeds £50,000 a year liable to Income Tax on child benefit payments received by them – or, crucially, by their partners. The advent of the charge was the subject of a publicity campaign and high-earning parents were given the choice of either ceasing to claim child benefit or continuing to receive it, subject to tax.

A husband whose income was above the £50,000 threshold in a number of tax years was assessed by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) for back tax of £10,397 in respect of child benefit paid to his wife during the relevant period. He also received a £1,900 penalty on the basis that he had failed to notify HMRC that his income rendered him liable to HICBC.

Ruling on his challenge to those bills, the First-tier Tribunal (FTT) noted that he and his wife kept their finances separate and private. They had no shared bank account. Child benefit payments made into the wife’s account were a legacy of a previous relationship and she began receiving them long before their marriage. The FTT accepted that he only became aware that she was receiving child benefit when HMRC’s tax demand landed on their doormat.

The couple contended that HICBC operates in an unfair and capricious manner in that a couple, one of whom was claiming child benefit, who each earned £49,000 a year would not be subject to the charge, whereas a couple one of whom earned £50,001 a year would be required to pay it.

The FTT observed, however, that it has no jurisdiction to consider the fairness or otherwise of primary legislation. HMRC, also, cannot question the will of Parliament and its duty is to collect tax in accordance with the law as enacted. The tax assessment had been properly raised and served and the FTT had no alternative but to uphold it.

In overturning the penalty, however, the FTT emphasised that financial confidentiality between partners is both understandable and wholly proper. The wife was under no moral or legal obligation whatsoever to inform her husband that she was claiming child benefit until he was put on actual notice of his liability to HICBC. They were both clearly honest and honourable people who were very upset to have fallen foul of the tax authorities and who were keen to rectify matters.

Source: Concious

Latest News

Award That Requires Borrowing Made Into Court Order

17th May, 2024 By

Disagreements between separating couples all too often result in litigation that substantially reduces the assets available to them, as was illustrated by a case that recently reached the High Court. At issue was whether awards made by arbitrators in financial remedy proceedings can be made into court orders even if that would require one of the parties to borrow money. The couple had previously had a relationship lasting a few years before resuming their relationship in 2015. They had two children before separating again in 2019. Following their separation, the...

Inheritance Disputes – Costs Risks Can Be Reduced

15th May, 2024 By

Arguments about what someone promised before their death can lead to significant legal costs. However, if faced with a claim against the estate, there may be steps the beneficiaries or executors can take to reduce the risks, as a recent High Court case illustrated. A man had left a farmhouse and agricultural land in Cornwall to his wife, with whom he had also jointly owned a neighbouring area of land. After his death, one of the couple's daughters and her husband claimed that he had told them he wanted them...

Share Rounding Error Does Not Prevent CGT Relief

13th May, 2024 By

There are often very specific rules that must be complied with in order to claim tax reliefs, but if a small mistake arises, the courts may be able to provide assistance. In a recent case, the First-tier Tribunal (FTT) found that an investor was entitled to Entrepreneurs' Relief on the disposal of his shares in a company, despite owning one share fewer than he needed to qualify for it. The investor had agreed to purchase 5 per cent of the shares in the company for £500,000. He wished to own...

Wife Entitled to Maintenance Until Sale of Family Home

10th May, 2024 By

When divorcing couples disagree on how assets should be divided, the courts will seek to arrive at a fair outcome for both parties. In deciding how the proceeds of sale of a former couple's home should be apportioned, the Family Court agreed with the wife that she should receive maintenance payments until the sale took place. The couple had married in 2006. Following a brief separation, they had reconciled for two years before finally separating in 2022. The husband and wife both contended that they should be entitled to about...