I recently had to convey a difficult message to a
client who found himself in a pickle because of a tax ruling. A couple
of years back he wrote to the tax authority seeking clarification on an
ambiguous tax provision
In the letter, he disclosed and described all the facts in
he transaction that he had planned to undertake. He also highlighted the
ambiguity that was present in the particular provision that he sought
to rely on and sought guidance.
The tax authority responded with its interpretation
of the ambiguous provision and provided guidance on how it would view
my client’s transaction in light of its interpretation.
A few years later while examining my client’s
books, a team from the tax authority noted my client’s transaction which
had already taken place and this time they had a different view about
its tax treatment.
Prudently, my client had kept his correspondence
with the tax authority back then to support his position. Unfortunately,
even after reading the correspondence, the tax audit team’s position
has not budged.
Their position now is that my client’s letter
seeking clarification was factually incorrect and in addition the
guidance provided in the response letter contravened the law and
therefore should not have been relied upon.
After fruitless arguments with the tax team, my client sought my help and the first thing that came to mind was estoppel.
Estoppel is a legal defence which provides that
where person A through his actions or words gives another person B
reason to believe a certain set of circumstances or position upon which B
relies and adjusts his position accordingly, A cannot later deny those
facts or say that his earlier actions or words were improper.
Estoppel is meant to prevent people from being unjustly wronged by the inconsistencies of another person’s words or actions.
Tax disputes revolve around questions of fact or
questions of law. Facts are subjective and will often depend on a
particular set of circumstances or factual situation.
A dispute revolving around a question of fact is
resolved with reference to the facts, evidence and inference supporting
all these. Questions of fact are capable of proof or disproof by
reference to a certain standard of proof depending on the nature of the
matter.
In criminal cases, the standard is usually ‘beyond
reasonable doubt’ while in civil disputes a lower ‘balance of
probabilities’ standard applies – that there is more evidence supporting
the existence of a certain fact than there is against it.
Questions of fact are straightforward and should
be fairly easy to resolve but often the lack of evidence can hurt a
taxpayer’s position. I have seen taxpayers loss millions because they
did not have evidence to support their tax position.
Most tax disputes revolving around abusive tax
planning and sham transactions are often questions of fact and they
stand or fall based available evidence. Remember though that evidence
is not just about creating a paper-trail; substance will very often
trump form.
Dispute on questions of law arises where two
people while referring to the same legislative provision interpret and
apply the provision differently to support the merits of their polar
opposite positions.
The genesis of the legislative process is usually an intention or an idea, which is ultimately reflected in a written law.
This process involves a chain of people each playing
important roles in the chain until the statute becomes a living document
– we have the legislators, the draftsman and ultimately the person
implementing the law.
This entire process requires the use of words which
unfortunately are known to be fragile. Words are not perfect and it is
not uncommon to find that the intentions of the legislators are lost
during the legislation process.
As long as the draftsman has to use words to reduce
Parliament’s intention into a written law, people’s understanding and
application of that law will always be as different and as diverse as
the people who read it and will be influenced in large part by their own
interpretation of Parliament’s intention through the draftsman’s choice
of words.
Rulings by the tax authority should reflect its
official interpretation and should be published for the information and
guidance of taxpayers.
They are meant to promote uniform application of
the tax laws by revenue officers and to assist taxpayers with voluntary
compliance.
Ideally, the rulings should be relied on as
precedent by all taxpayers though is most cases some tax authorities
argue that these are private rulings only binding the authority and the
taxpayer who sought the ruling.
Remember that any response by the tax authority
would only be the authority’s interpretation of the law and might not
necessarily be the correct position.
Given my client’s predicament, one of the difficult
truths that I have had to share with him is that estoppel cannot
operate to prevent the operation of a written law; a taxpayer cannot
rely on a ruling by the tax authority especially if the ruling
contravenes the law (Roshani Meghjee & Co Ltd versus Commissioner
General Tanzania Revenue Authority).
Mr Thogo works with Deloitte East Africa. jthogo@deloitte.com
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