ILOVEBHA
Member
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 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.
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.
Good. Now we just have to find out if their schemes used the law correctly or not.
Like when Labour didn't pay stamp duty on their multi million pound London property deals.
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.
You're really trying to gloat, but it seems far too early for that.
Well the one thing we can all agree on is that you were wrong there.
Here Here well said that man