hmrc beats 135m stamp duty avoidance scheme

HM Revenue & Customs has won a tribunal to have a scheme avoiding stamp duty land tax shut down.

hmrc beats 135m stamp duty avoidance scheme

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The government office said the tribunal’s decision will save the Exchequer £135m in tax.

According to a statement issued by HMRC, the company which tested the scheme in court, called Project Blue, now faces a bigger tax bill than it would have faced, had it not entered into the arrangement.

The SDLT sub-sale and alternative finance scheme had been notified by Clifford Chance under the Disclosure of Tax Avoidance Schemes (DOTAS) regulations, and attempted to eliminate all of the SDLT due on the purchase of Chelsea Barracks in London.

The First-tier Tribunal agreed with HMRC that £50m was owed in SDLT and that without the scheme the purchasers would have only paid £38m. The judgment affects 24 similar commercial cases and around 900 mass market residential cases,"protecting" £85m.

Project Blue argued the transactions had been carried out for commercial reasons and not to avoid tax. However, the tribunal ruled that the company had failed “to put forward evidence of all the factors that may have been taken into account” and failed to establish that tax avoidance was not a factor in their decision to proceed.

This important case is the first to test a targeted anti-avoidance rule in the SDLT legislation.

David Gauke, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, said: “This is another important success for HMRC at a tax tribunal. The message is clear that entering into a tax avoidance scheme can cost more than paying the original tax bill.

“Avoidance is complex, expensive and self defeating. We are cracking down on tax avoidance and evasion, with a £4.6bn package.”

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