Tribunal ruling halts charity tax relief abuse
16 May 2014 03:55 PM
Another attempted abuse
of the tax relief available when shares are gifted to charities has been
blocked by a tribunal.
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC)
successfully challenged the tax avoidance scheme used by Nicholas Green and
designed by Afortis Limited as part of an ongoing crackdown on charitable tax
relief abuse. This First-tier
Tribunal (FTT) ruling and its impact on similar schemes could make
sure over £35 million of tax is paid.
Under the scheme, shares were
listed on the Channel Islands Stock Exchange at a value significantly more than
their real worth. The shares were then gifted to charity at the inflated value.
The scheme was designed to allow Mr Green to claim tax relief on the amount
that the shares had been listed for, rather than on the much lower amount that
the shares were worth.
The tribunal ruled that the
relief claimed should be reduced significantly from that claimed by those using
the scheme.
This latest decision
follows HMRC’s defeat of another scheme using charitable reliefs,
promoted by NT Advisors, at a tax tribunal
last week.
Nicky Morgan, Financial
Secretary to the Treasury, said:
The government wants to
encourage more people to give to charity and has provided tax relief to
incentivise this, but we will not tolerate abuse of the system. This case is
further evidence of HMRC’s tough action to tackle tax avoidance
schemes that seek to abuse charitable giving tax reliefs.
Taxpayers entering into these
arrangements are not only damaging their own reputations, they are harming the
reputations of charities that may not be aware they are being used to avoid
tax. Anyone thinking of getting involved in a tax avoidance scheme does so at
their risk and should know that HMRC will pursue them in collecting
the tax that is due.