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LATEST NEWS

Failing to Keep Accurate Accounts is Like a Red Rag to the Tax Authorities

8th January, 2020 By

Failing to take professional advice and keep accurate accounts is like holding a red rag up to the HM Revenue and Customs bull. In a case on point, an international businessman who claimed to keep details of his income and expenditure 'in his brain' was landed with a £40,000 tax bill. The man operated as a sole trader providing project and business advisory services to overseas clients. In his tax return for one year, he self-assessed his liability for Income Tax and National Insurance Contributions at £884. However, following an...

High Court Assists Husband in Drawing a Line Under His Divorce

6th January, 2020 By

Litigation can be long and bitter, but it is the prime objective of the justice system to eventually bring it to a satisfactory end. In a case on point, the High Court came to the aid of a husband in drawing a line under his divorce. The case concerned a middle-aged couple who were self-employed in the IT world, each of them earning enough to support themselves. The wife had a child from a previous relationship who was treated as a child of the family. In dividing the marital assets...

Judge upholds Will in dementia dispute

2nd January, 2020 By

For a Will to be valid, the testator (the one making the Will) must be ‘of sound mind’ at the time of making and signing the Will. This means that they must be capable of understanding and approving of the contents and effects of the Will. With health conditions such as dementia becoming an increasing issue for our ageing population, this can present a problem when making a Will. If a testator is diagnosed with dementia before or shortly after making a Will, this can provide potential grounds for a...

Don't Wait Until You're Old and Frail to Make a Will

2nd January, 2020 By

The older you are when you make or change your will, the greater the risk that your loved ones will become embroiled in dispute after you are gone. The point was proved by a case in which the onset of dementia very nearly thwarted a retired nurse's wish to divide her estate equally between her four children. The woman was in her 80s and in frail health when she signed her final will, by which she bequeathed her estate – which was worth up to £900,000 – in equal parts...