Can they do it the "Pompey" way
Well Greece are so I guess it is possible outside of football but despite its reputation to the contrary Financial Services to tend to protect the customer more.
Can they do it the "Pompey" way
What I am questioning which I hoped ILOVEBHA could comment on is can the government and IR came after this tax for property purchases that have completed that has been avoided with this loophole and if so how may years back can they go or is the loophole being closed for new purchases.
The fact my clients have been written to demanding the SD plus interest suggests they can and will be tracking down all these people which will be easy to do.
The clients also paid the company over £ 3000 for this " service ". I know of 1 other client who got £ 30k back through one of these companies he did himself and again paid them over £ 3000. Will he be written to as well ? No doubt the clients have spent the money so if they cannot pay it now what happens ? It could be a serious situation for them.
The government were looking into this a while back, and as always it was/is about interpretation. A lot of key people agreed that the legislation was pretty damn clear and that any intepretation to the contrary was fanciful. Given Osborne has come out with his statements I can only presume that his legal advisors agree the legislation is clear and he can recoup these taxes. At the top end he will be dealing with people/entities which have access to quality advice so he must be confident he can get the dollar back.
I personally do not think you/we will hear from [MENTION=2631]ILOVEBHA[/MENTION] again.
I am here just got back from 2 weeks in sunny Thailand so sorry for missing this reincarnation of an old post.
Any questions shoot away
Welcome back, how are things in the office this morning then?
I love the fact everyone gets excited by paper talk and that is exactly what HMRC want to happen when they do these press releases.
So far Mr Tubthumper we are still here, practicing, advising clients and not one case has ever been lost.
I thank you
It's called tax evasion
As well as the offshore angle this announcement also made. Will be some nervous individuals I would think.
No it doesn't. You have shown no existing (prior to the budget) law that says what ILOVEBHA was offering was illegal. They may stop it for future transactions, they may even prosecutes people who didn't do things correctly in the first place.I imagine he is starting to shit his pants as well as look for a new career.
It has been most amusing looking back over this thread; it looks like I (well, the people who advised me) am going to be 100% correct on this issue.
I do dislike people getting away without paying their tax, and it's usually the very rich that do it - like the Labour Party. That said, if they've followed the rules, it's not their fault that there were loop-holes in the law, so dislike them as I do, you can't ask them to pay something they don't legally owe.These people knew what they were doing and it is only right they pay up in my view.
If the loophole was there, and the clients did things correctly, the government can never get the money back, because they were never due it. If someone uses one of these schemes and tells the government, and the government later prove (or a court decides) that the tax return is incorrect (loophole doesn't exist, scheme is not allowed), then the government would have 7 years for income tax - not sure if it's different for stamp duty? If someone has lied in their return though, it is fraudulent, and there is no cut off date for the government.What I am questioning which I hoped ILOVEBHA could comment on is can the government and IR came after this tax for property purchases that have completed that has been avoided with this loophole and if so how may years back can they go or is the loophole being closed for new purchases.
Good. Now we just have to find out if their schemes used the law correctly or not.The fact my clients have been written to demanding the SD plus interest suggests they can and will be tracking down all these people which will be easy to do.
Like when Labour didn't pay stamp duty on their multi million pound London property deals.The government were looking into this a while back, and as always it was/is about interpretation. A lot of key people agreed that the legislation was pretty damn clear and that any intepretation to the contrary was fanciful.
I doubt it. The budget is about new laws, not chasing underpayments, so these comments are more about looking good in the speech than the reality of what's to follow.Given Osborne has come out with his statements I can only presume that his legal advisors agree the legislation is clear and he can recoup these taxes.
You're really trying to gloat, but it seems far too early for that.ILOVEBHA one of them. He was rather bullish and cocksure when he first logged on today. But once he had absorbed some of his work emails from when he was away his mood had changed by post #194.
Well the one thing we can all agree on is that you were wrong there.I personally do not think you/we will hear from [MENTION=2631]ILOVEBHA[/MENTION] again.
'A new 15 per cent tax will also be imposed on all properties over £2million which are bought via a company in an attempt to close a loophole'
Reading the above, am I correct in thinking that purchases beow 2 million would still be able to use the existing scheme/loophole?. I know that companies were actively marketing stamp duty mitigation for properties in excess of 250K?