SPC469
ASSESSMENT – whether loss of tax on account of negligence – yes – whether taxpayer has satisfied burden of disproving the assessment – adjourned to allow the Inspector to comment on the taxpayer’s contentions – penalty issued for non-compliance with directions
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
MRS SHILPA DOSHIAppellant
- and -
MARK DAVID ANDREW
(HM INSPECTOR OF TAXES)Respondent
Special Commissioner: DR JOHN F. AVERY JONES CBE
Sitting in public in London on 14 to 17 March 2005
Dhiren Doshi, husband of the Appellant, for the Appellant
Barry Williams, Inland Revenue Appeals Unit London, for the Respondent
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2005
1
INTERIM DECISION
1.This is an appeal by Mrs Shilpa Doshi against a discovery assessment for 1996-97 and a closure notice making an amendment to her self-assessment for 1997-98 in relation to her business carried on as a sole trader under the name of Doshi & Co Accountants. The Appellant was represented by her husband Mr Dhiren Doshi; and the Inspector was represented by Mr Barry Williams.
2.The issues in this appeal are whether for 1996-97 there was loss of tax attributable to negligence enabling the out-of-time assessment; and for both periods what were the Appellant’s trading profits for tax purposes.
3.I had separate bundles of documents from each party. I heard evidence from the Appellant, the Respondent, Mr Doshi, Mr Sudarshan Alagaratnam, Mr Mohannad Rafiq Yacub, and (in response to a witness summons) Mr Kishor Shah.
4.I find the following facts:
(1)Mr Doshi started an accounting firm in 1995 with two qualified accountants. His idea was for a one-stop professional firm and so he founded Doshi & Co Chartered Accountants, Doshi Financial Services Limited, Doshi Chartered Surveyors, an association with a firm of solicitors, and Doshi Computer Services Limited.
(2)Doshi & Co Chartered Accountants ran until July 1996 when five of the principals (I do not know whether they were actually partners) left taking the clients and many of the accounting records. The Appellant firm, owned by Mrs Doshi, started on 1 August 1996 and ran to 31 December 1997. The Appellant provided a bookkeeping service. A VAT form relating to the transfer of a business while retaining the same VAT number dated 14 January 1997 states that the business was transferred from Mr to Mrs Doshi on 1 November 1996, a date that was used by Mr Alagaratnam for preparing management accounts for the Appellant, and which I find to be incorrect.
(3)From 1 September 1996 Doshi & Co Registered Auditors (“Registered Auditors”) existed with three principals from the former Chartered Accountants firm, Mr SP Dubb, Mr K Doshi (who is not related to the Appellant) and Mr K Shah. Registered Auditors was registered with the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants and was able to give audit reports. Effectively the former chartered accountants firm was split into two with the Appellant providing bookkeeping services and Registered Auditors providing accountancy services. Eventually these three left taking the clients and many of the accounting records. Mr Doshi attempted to obtain the accounting records but failed. The Appellant is therefore in a difficulty about the loss of many of the records that would enable her to prove her case. The problem is compounded by another related company, Doshi Group Limited, having been wound up and the Official Receiver has destroyed the records.
(4)Mrs Doshi does not know anything about accounting. She leaves it to qualified accountants and Mr Doshi.
(5)The accounts of the Appellant for the period 1 August 1996 to 31 December 1997 accompanying the tax return show:
Income / 538628Expenditure
Wages / 141566
Other (itemised) / 247471
Finance costs / 24199
Depreciation / 44236
Loss on disposal of motor vehicles / 79898
Profit / 1258
There was also a claim for capital allowances summarised in paragraph 4(13) below.
(6)Despite being an accounting firm it is admitted that the accounting records have been poor and that accounts are wrong. Mr Doshi contends that the fee income is 95% correct but that the expenses are overstated because of expenditure incurred by other related firms not being recharged to them. The staff were employed by Doshi Group Limited from September 1996 and there is also an issue about what charge was made to the Appellant for their services.
(7)I saw a summary of the VAT returns plus a voluntary disclosure (all for VAT registration No.649 7920 84, the registration transferred to the Appellant on 1 November 1996 (except that the figures for the quarter ended October 1996 are for VAT registration No.662 8365 12 (“Doshi & Co”), with a nil return for the former number for that quarter)). The outputs (income) total £548,479.80 net of VAT, but Mr Doshi said that the voluntary disclosure of £62,545.34 omitted outputs has been incorrectly included as a net figure whereas it should be gross. Correcting this gives £539,165 which is close to the £538,628 figure in the tax return. The voluntary disclosure figure was calculated by Mr Yaqub and arose from his review of the quarter to October 1997. From the VAT working papers the outputs are the fees from clients on a cash basis, and do not include any other income from related entities. Mr Yaqub was told to include the fees from clients and to ignore any transfers between related entities. I also saw a note to Mr Doshi dated 3 December 1996 stating that “Shilpa Doshi to take over billings from 1/11/96 for VAT purposes. The Registered Auditors do not have a separate VAT number and therefore all VAT accounting must go through Shilpa Doshi.”
(8)The VAT inputs (expenditure), which are categorised, total £840,140.05 net after adding a voluntary disclosure (which was not made by Mr Yaqub) increasing the figures by £91,008.06. I would expect that these figures were reliable as they were used to reclaim VAT but I notice that the input figures for the quarter ended October 1997 are identical with those for the two months ended December 1997 (except that the total VAT and gross figures are calculated as different amounts), which means that these figures cannot be relied upon. Mr Doshi accepts that many of these expenses should be shared with the related entities. Comparing the total with the expenses of £247,471 charged in the Appellant’s accounts, means that £592,670 of the inputs must have been charged to other entities, or £451,103 if the recharge also takes the wages into account (although there are no outputs reflecting any such recharges). This, Mr Doshi points out, is of the same order of magnitude as the £461,942.71 invoiced to Doshi Group Limited which was found in that company’s records but not in the Appellant’s records (see paragraph 4(12)). Mr Doshi listed 25 invoices that were charged to the Appellant but were incurred either wholly or partly for other related entities.
(9)Mr Yaqub drew my attention to an invoice dated 30 January 1998 (ie after the Appellant’s business had ceased) from Registered Auditors to the Appellant for “Consultancy & Accountancy Services” for £59,365 plus VAT. He found it strange that there were no other similar invoices.
(10)The documents include statements for the business bank accounts, which for convenience I shall identify by the last three digits of the account numbers. These are NatWest account No.926 (“Doshi & Co Accountants”); NatWest No.372 (“Doshi & Co Accountants Number 2 A/C (professional group)”); NatWest No.504 (“Doshi & Co” in the heading and “Mr SP Dubb, Mr K Doshi & Mr K Shah” at the bottom of each page); and Barclays No.291 (“Doshi & Co”). All these accounts continued despite the termination of the Appellant’s business on 31 December 1997. Statements are missing for No.926 for 30 August to 6 November 1996 and 4 July to 22 October 1997; for No.372 for 1 August to 8 November 1996; for No.504 for 1 August 1996 to 3 February 1997 and 22 July to 29 October 1997; and for No.291 for 1 August to 30 October 1996 and also sheet 80. There are also statements for a Doshi Group Limited account except for 1 August to 3 October 1996, 14 March to 30 April 1997, and 10 July to 31 December 1997.
(11)In relation to the charge for wages, I saw three invoices from Doshi Group Limited dated 1 October 1996, 1 November 1996 and 1 December 1996 all for £15,000 and all for wages; none of these separately stated any VAT figure. I also saw a list headed “Salary. Cross Charge from Doshi Group Ltd” to which is added in manuscript “for the year to 31/10/97” which listed 13 names under the heading PA (which I was told was partner’s assistant, which I interpret loosely as there were no partners in the Appellant firm) and 13 names under the heading Processing, all which were familiar names to Mr Alagaratnam and Mr Yacub. The total is £384,900.66 plus employer’s National Insurance of £37,205.89. For comparison, if the £15,000 per month invoices had continued the total would have been £180,000. I also saw a nominal ledger for the Appellant for the year ended 31 December 1997 headed wages which has two debit items, one credit item and a debit for “expenses recharged” of £105,207.86 (suggesting that this had been charged by Doshi Group Limited), giving a closing balance of £141,565.73, which corresponds to the wages figure rounded to £141,566 in the profit and loss account accompanying the tax return. The summary of the VAT returns includes inputs (expenditure) on wages of £8,000 in the quarter ended 30 April 1997 and £2,000 in the quarter ended 31 July 1997, total £10,000, suggesting a further charge from Doshi Group Limited. An earlier version of the summary produced by Mr Alagaratnam shows an input for wages of £45,844.20 in the period ended January 1997 with a manuscript deduction of £45,000 (the same as the total of the three invoices), which does not appear in the later version. The figures in the document headed Cross Charge from Doshi Group Limited are not wholly and exclusively expended because Mr Alagaratnam and Mr Yacub agreed that some of the employees were also working for Registered Auditors and for Doshi Group Limited. Some of the other figures quoted above may represent an estimate of wages for work done for the Appellant but I have no method of determining whether any of these is correct.
(12)When Mr Andrew visited the Official Receiver in February 2000 he saw papers relating to Doshi Group Limited. His witness statement records:
“Details of invoices from Doshi & Co to Doshi Group Ltd for December 1996 and from April 1997 to March 1998 in respect of a labour charge. Copies of all of the invoices excluding December 1997 are in the bundle, but I do not know why the copy for December 1997 invoice is missing. I do however include a copy of a manuscript note made by me during my visit, showing the amount charged by the December 1997 invoice. The invoices total £461,942.71. I noted that the accounts in respect of Doshi Group Ltd were likely to be incorrect as they did not appear to include the expenditure of £16,000 shown on the invoices for December 1996 and April 1997.”
I deduce that, apart from the two mentioned in the last sentence, such invoices were included in the accounts of Doshi Group Limited. I saw copies of the invoices except for the December 1996 one. They are for £1,000 (December 1996), £15,000, £21,500, £42,019.45, £26,500, £22,000, £9,000, £62,500, £57,561.54, £126,000, £8,772.85, £50,088.87, £20,000 (monthly from April 1997 to March 1998 respectively) and they all say “labour charge”. They are not included in the Appellant’s accounts. Since Doshi Group Limited employed the staff and the Appellant had no staff it is clear that the description of labour charge is incorrect. Another puzzling feature is that the invoices continue until March 1998 whereas the Appellant ceased trading in December 1997. Mr Doshi contended that it represented a recharge to Doshi Group Limited of expenses which had been invoiced to the Appellant. It is of the same order of magnitude as the difference between the inputs (expenditure) in the VAT returns (£840,140.05, see paragraph 4(8)) and the amount claimed as expenditure in the accounts (£247471, difference £592,670 or £451,103 if the recharge also takes the wages into account.). I also record that although a VAT number is stated no VAT is shown separately on any of the invoices.
(13)In relation to capital allowances, originally £84,391 was claimed in respect of 18 cars but during the hearing this was abandoned except as to two cars, a Mercedes (£10,000) and a Renault (£7,493). There was no evidence of use of either of these in the Appellant’s business. As to plant and machinery, there are inputs claimed in the VAT returns totalling £14,596.43 for equipment and £45,255.09 for computers, which would result in a claim for allowances on £26,277. The tax return claims plant and machinery allowances on £64,000 which does not tie in with the fixed assets schedule in the accounts. The nominal ledger shows computer equipment of £30,455.98 (compared to £143,322 in the fixed assets schedule in the accounts), fixtures and fittings of £1,513.43 (compared to £7,122 in the accounts), and plant and machinery of £28,572 (the same as the fixed assets schedule in the accounts). I am unable to find what amount was expended by the Appellant on plant and machinery and what was used in the Appellant’s business.
(14)The discovery assessment and closure notice was made by taking the total receipts in the four business bank accounts (£1,354,994.30 exclusive of VAT) and deducting the declared takings of £538,628, and disallowing the capital allowances claim. This gives a revised profit of £942,982 apportioned as to £451,466 to 1996-97 and £491,516 to 1997-98.
5.Mr Andrew, the Inspector, made a detailed proof of evidence running to 13 pages cross-referenced to his documents which ran to 927 pages. After describing the documents that he saw in relation to the accounts, his conclusion was:
- That the figures in respect of expenditure could not be verified and therefore they could not be relied upon
- That the Sales Ledgers held contained significant differences and could not be relied upon
- That in any event the Sales Day Book had not been used to calculate the turnover figure
- That the adjustments made in the Nominal Ledger were not documented and therefore could not be relied upon
- That turnover appeared to be based on bankings, although due to missing statements not having been included, this figure could not be relied upon
- That the turnover figure did not include the invoices issued by Doshi & Co to Doshi Group Ltd, and therefore could not be relied upon
- That due to bankings in the various Doshi & Co accounts exceeding the declared turnover by in excess of £800,000 after taking into account VAT, there may be other invoices to other connected companies or businesses such as those to Doshi Group Ltd, and these may account for the difference. Alternatively, there may be further invoices to Doshi Group Ltd for the months of August to November 1996 and January to March 1997 which were not amongst the records of Doshi Group Ltd and which the payments from MB Wines Ltd were in respect of
- That there was little evidence to support the Capital Allowances claim, and in the absence of such evidence, or even a computation, the claim could not be accepted
- That dates used for commencement and cessation were ambiguous and could not be relied upon
- That with in excess of £356,000 having gone out of the business through items either noted as ‘Cash’ or ‘No details’ there was ample scope for extraction of funds from the business
6.After analysis of bank statements Mr Andrew concludes that:
(1)Bankings into various Doshi & Co accounts exceeded declared turnover by more than £800,000.
(2)Payments out of the Appellant’s business bank accounts to cash, Doshi Financial Services, Doshi & Co, Doshi Group and those with no details amounted to £631,163 of which £186,750 is noted as cash and £170,113.26 with no details.
(3)£271,150.25 was paid out in the last two months of the business, all being marked cash or no details except for £6,900 to Doshi & Co.
(4)Mr and Mrs Doshi had deposits into their private accounts of £344,297 but only £59,959 disclosed income.
7.During the hearing Mr Doshi gave his best estimate of the profit (leaving aside capital allowances for the moment) as follows:
Income / 538628Expenditure
wages / 492457
other / 24741
Registered Auditors / 40000
Loss / 18570
The income is as in the tax return; wages are the total of cross-charge from Doshi Group plus 2 months at same monthly rate (this assumes no wages for August to October 1996); the other expenses are 10% of the expenses in the accounts (on the basis that the rest is charged to other related entities); and the Registered Auditors item is for work done by that firm. (The loss stated above is different from the £21,525 calculated by Mr Doshi but he calculates the wages charge as £492,457 and then lower down adds a figure of £495,412.)
8.It is common ground that the burden of proving neglect is on the Inspector but if this is shown, the burden is on the Appellant to disprove the discovery assessment and closure notice. I also bear in mind Walton J’s statement in Jonas v Bamford 51 TC 1 at 24F:
“But he [the taxpayer] is once again forgetting that the onus falls upon the taxpayer to show that the Revenue’s figure was wrong – an onus which is not discharged merely by showing that there may have been an explanation for the accretion in MrJonas’s wealth, not that there in fact was. Similarly, Mr Jones sought to argue that a sum of £200, the residue of a couple of sweep stake wins omitted in Mr Jonas’s hands, was expended by him upon the affairs of the company; but there was not a scintilla of evidence that this was the case. It is equally fair to say there was not a scintilla of evidence in the contrary direction, but this is precisely why the onus is, in this case, of such vital importance. At the end of the day I should have been more than willing to follow Mr Jones through all the figures if there had been anything concrete upon which to bite: but there was not, and at the end of the whole of Mr Jones’s financial wizardry the simple fact remains that he had not discharged the onus which lay upon the taxpayer of showing that the additional assessments were wrong.”