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Section 1077E Penalty for deliberately or carelessly making incorrect returns, etc

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Amendments

Section 1077E inserted by Finance (No. 2) Act 2008 section 98 and Schedule 5 Part 1 para 1 from 24 December 2008.

(1) In this section—

"the Acts" means the Tax Acts, the Capital Gains Tax Acts and Parts 18A and 18B of this Act;

"carelessly" means failure to take reasonable care;

"liability to tax" means a liability to the amount of the difference specified in subsection (11) or (12) arising from any matter referred to in subsection (2), (3), (5) or (6);

"period" means a year of assessment or accounting period, as the context requires;

"prompted qualifying disclosure", in relation to a person, means a qualifying disclosure that has been made to the Revenue Commissioners or to a Revenue officer in the period between—

(a) the date on which the person is notified by a Revenue officer of the date on which an investigation or inquiry into any matter occasioning a liability to tax of that person will start, and

(b) the date that the investigation or inquiry starts;

"qualifying disclosure", in relation to a person, means—

(a) in relation to a penalty referred to in subsection (4), a disclosure that the Revenue Commissioners are satisfied is a disclosure of complete information in relation to, and full particulars of, all matters occasioning a liability to tax that gives rise to a penalty referred to in subsection (4), and full particulars of all matters occasioning any liability to tax or duty that gives rise to a penalty referred to in section 27A(4) of the Value-Added Tax Act 1972, section 134A(2) of the Stamp Duties Consolidation Act 1999 and the application of subsection (4) to the Capital Acquisitions Tax Consolidation Act 2003, and

(b) in relation to a penalty referred to in subsection (7), a disclosure that the Revenue Commissioners are satisfied is a disclosure of complete information in relation to, and full particulars of, all matters occasioning a liability to tax that gives rise to a penalty referred to in subsection (7) for the relevant period under whichever of the Acts the disclosure relates to,

made in writing to the Revenue Commissioners or to a Revenue officer and signed by or on behalf of that person and that is accompanied by—

(i) a declaration, to the best of that person’s knowledge, information and belief, made in writing that all matters contained in the disclosure are correct and complete, and

(ii) a payment of either or both of the tax and duty payable in respect of any matter contained in the disclosure and the interest on late payment of that tax and duty.

"Revenue officer" means an officer of the Revenue Commissioners;

"tax" means income tax, corporation tax, capital gains tax, income levy or parking levy;

"unprompted qualifying disclosure", in relation to a person, means a qualifying disclosure that the Revenue Commissioners are satisfied has been voluntarily furnished to them—

(a) before an investigation or inquiry had been started by them or by a Revenue officer into any matter occasioning a liability to tax of that person, or

(b) where the person is notified by a Revenue officer of the date on which an investigation or inquiry into any matter occasioning a liability to tax of that person will start, before that notification.

What is the new Revenue code of practice for penalties?

(1) This section puts the Revenue audit code of practice, in so far as it relates to penalties, into legislation....

to read the full commentary

(2) Where any person—

(a) delivers any incorrect return or statement of a kind mentioned in any of the provisions specified in column 1 of Schedule 29 which contains a deliberate understatement of income, profits or gains or a deliberately false or overstated claim in connection with any allowance, deduction, relief or credit,

(b) makes any incorrect return, statement or declaration in connection with any claim for any allowance, deduction, relief or credit and does so deliberately, or

(c) submits to the Revenue Commissioners, the Appeal Commissioners or a Revenue officer any incorrect accounts which contain a deliberate understatement of income, profits or gains or a deliberate overstatement of any claim in connection with any allowance, deduction, relief or credit,

that person shall be liable to a penalty.

Am I liable to a penalty if I deliberately file an incorrect return or statement in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(2) Yes. You are liable to a penalty if you:...

to read the full commentary

(3) Where any person deliberately fails to comply with a requirement to deliver a return or statement of a kind mentioned in any of the provisions specified in column 1 of Schedule 29, that person shall be liable to a penalty.

Am I liable to a penalty if I deliberately fail to file a return or statement in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(3) Yes.

(4) The penalty referred to—

(a) in subsection (2), shall be the amount specified in subsection (11), and

(b) in subsection (3), shall be the amount specified in subsection (12),

reduced, where the person liable to the penalty cooperated fully with any investigation or inquiry started by the Revenue Commissioners or by a Revenue officer into any matter occasioning a liability to tax of that person, to—

(i) 75 per cent of that amount where subparagraph (ii) or (iii) does not apply,

(ii) 50 percent of that amount where a prompted qualifying disclosure is made by that person, or

(iii) 10 per cent of that amount wherean unprompted qualifying disclosure is made by that person.

Can a penalty for deliberate defaults in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax be reduced if I make a qualifying disclosure?

(4) Yes. The penalty starts off at 100% of the difference between the tax paid and the tax correctly payable (see (11) and (12))....

to read the full commentary

(5) Where any person carelessly but not deliberately—

(a) delivers any incorrect return or statement of a kind mentioned in any of the provisions specified in column 1 of Schedule 29,

(b) makes any incorrect return, statement or declaration in connection with any claim for any allowance, deduction, relief or credit, or

(c) submits to the Revenue Commissioners, the Appeal Commissioners or a Revenue officer any incorrect accounts which contain an understatement of income, profits or gains or an overstatement of any claims in connection with any allowance, deduction, relief or credit,

that person shall be liable to a penalty.

Am I liable to a penalty if I carelessly file an incorrect return or statement in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(5) Yes. You are liable to a penalty if you:...

to read the full commentary

(6) Where any person carelessly but not deliberately fails to comply with a requirement to deliver a return or statement of a kind mentioned in any of the provisions specified in column 1 of Schedule 29, that person shall be liable to a penalty.

Am I liable to a penalty if I carelessly fail to file a return or statement in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(6) Yes.

(7)(a) The penalty referred to—

(i) in subsection (5) shall be the amount specified in subsection (11), and

(ii) in subsection (6) shall be the amount specified in subsection (12),

reduced to 40 per cent in cases where the excess referred to in subparagraph (I) of paragraph (b) applies and to 20 per cent in other cases.

(b) Where a person liable to a penalty cooperated fully with any investigation or inquiry started by the Revenue Commissioners or by a Revenue officer into any matter occasioning a liability to tax of that person, the penalty referred to—

(i) in subsection (5), shall be the amount specified in subsection (11), and

(ii) in subsection (6), shall be the amount specified in subsection (12),

reduced—

(I) where the difference referred to in subsection (11) or subsection (12), as the case may be, exceeds 15 per cent of the amount referred to in paragraph (b) of subsection (11) or paragraph (b) of subsection (12), to—

(A) 30 per cent of the difference referred to in subsection (11) or, as the case may be, subsection (12) (in clauses (B) and (C) referred to as "that amount") where clause (B) or (C) does not apply,

(B) 20 per cent of that amount where a prompted qualifying disclosure is made by that person, or

(C) 5 per cent of that amount where an unprompted qualifying disclosure is made by that person,

or

(II) where the difference referred to in subsection (11) or subsection (12), as the case may be, does not exceed 15 per cent of the amount referred to in paragraph (b) of subsection (11) or paragraph (b) of subsection (12) to—

(A) 15 per cent of the difference referred to in subsection (11) or, as the case may be, subsection (12) (in clauses (B) and (C) referred to as "that amount") where clause (B) or (C) does not apply,

(B) 10 per cent of that amount where a prompted qualifying disclosure is made by that person, or

(C) 3 per cent of that amount where an unprompted qualifying disclosure is made by that person.

Can a penalty for careless default in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax be reduced if I make a qualifying disclosure?

(7) Yes. A careless default carries a penalty as follows:...

to read the full commentary

(8) Where any person deliberately or carelessly furnishes, gives, produces or makes any incorrect return, information, certificate, document, record, statement, particulars, account or declaration of a kind mentioned in any of the provisions specified in column 2 or 3 of Schedule 29, that person shall be liable to—

(a) a penalty of €3,000 where that person has acted carelessly, or

(b) a penalty of €5,000 where that person has acted deliberately.

Am I liable to a penalty if I deliberately or carelessly provide incorrect details in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax to Revenue?

(8) Yes. The penalty is €5,000 if you acted deliberately and €3,000 if you acted carelessly.

(9) Where any return, statement, declaration or accounts mentioned in subsection (2) or (5) was or were made or submitted by a person, neither deliberately nor carelessly, and it comes to that person’s notice that it was or they were incorrect, then, unless the error is remedied without unreasonable delay, the incorrect return, statement, declaration or accounts shall be treated for the purposes of this section as having been deliberately made or submitted by that person.

Can I self-correct an innocent error of statement in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(9) Yes, but you must remedy the error without unreasonable delay.

(10) Subject to section 1077D(2), proceedings or applications for the recovery of any penalty under this section shall not be out of time because they are commenced after the time allowed by section 1063.

Can penalty proceedings be commenced in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax more than six years after the penalty was incurred?

(10) Yes.

(11) The amount referred to in paragraph (a) of subsection (4) and in paragraph (a)(i) of subsection (7) shall be the difference between—

(a) the amount of tax that would have been payable for the relevant periods by the person concerned (including any amount deducted at source and not repayable) if that tax had been computed in accordance with the incorrect or false return, statement, declaration or accounts as actually made or submitted by or on behalf of that person for those periods, and

(b) the amount of tax that would have been payable for the relevant periods by the person concerned (including any amount deducted at source and not repayable) if that tax had been computed in accordance with the true and correct return, statement, declaration or accounts that should have been made or submitted by or on behalf of that person for those periods,

and for the purposes of this subsection and of subsection (12) references in those subsections to tax payable shall be construed without regard to the definition of "income tax payable" in section 3.

What is the penalty where I deliberately file an incorrect return in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(11) The penalty is 100% of the difference between the tax payable based on the incorrect details and the tax payable on the basis of a correctly completed return.

(12) The amount referred to in paragraph (b) of subsection (4) and in paragraph (b)(ii) of subsection (7) shall be the difference between—

(a) the amount of tax paid by that person for the relevant periods before the start by the Revenue Commissioners or by any Revenue officer of any inquiry or investigation where the Revenue Commissioners had announced publicly that they had started an inquiry or investigation or where the Revenue Commissioners have, or a Revenue officer has, carried out an inquiry or investigation into any matter that would have been included in the return or statement if the return or statement had been delivered by that person and the return or statement had been correct, and

(b) the amount of tax which would have been payable for the relevant periods if the return or statement had been delivered by that person and the return or statement had been correct.

What is the penalty if I deliberately fail to file a return in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(12) The penalty is 100% of the difference between the tax paid before the inquiry started and the tax payable on the basis of a correctly completed return.

(13) Where a second qualifying disclosure is made by a person within 5 years of such person’s first qualifying disclosure, then as regards matters pertaining to that second disclosure—

(a) in relation to subsection (4)—

(i) paragraph (ii) shall apply as if "75 per cent" were substituted for "50 per cent",

(ii) paragraph (iii) shall apply as if "55 per cent" were substituted for "10 per cent", and

(b) in relation to subparagraph (I) of subsection (7)(b)—

(i) clause (B) shall apply as if "30 per cent" were substituted for "20 per cent", and

(ii) clause (C) shall apply as if "20 per cent" were substituted for "5 per cent".

Can a penalty be reduced if it is my second qualifying disclosure in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(13) Yes. If the fault was deliberate, the penalty is reduced:...

to read the full commentary

(14) Where a third or subsequent qualifying disclosure is made by a person within 5 years of such person’s second qualifying disclosure, then as regards matters pertaining to that third or subsequent disclosure, as the case may be—

(a) the penalty referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (4) shall not be reduced, and

(b) the reduction referred to in subparagraph (I) of subsection (7)(b) shall not apply.

Can a penalty be reduced if it is my third qualifying disclosure in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(14) No - not if the disclosure is made within five years of the second qualifying disclosure.

(15) A disclosure in relation to a person shall not be a qualifying disclosure where—

(a) before the disclosure is made, a Revenue officer had started an inquiry or investigation into any matter contained in that disclosure and had contacted or notified that person, or a person representing that person, in this regard, or

(b) matters contained in the disclosure are matters—

(i) that have become known,or are about to become known, to the Revenue Commissioners through their own investigations or through an investigation conducted by a statutory body or agency,

(ii) that are within the scope of an inquiry being carried out wholly or partly in public, or

(iii) to which the person who made the disclosure is linked, or about to be linked, publicly.

When is a disclosure not regarded as a qualifying disclosure in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(15) A disclosure does not qualify as qualifying disclosure if:...

to read the full commentary

(16) The relevant period for the purposes of subsections (11) and (12) shall be, in relation to anything delivered, made or submitted in any period, that period, the next period and any preceding period, and the references in those subsections to the amount of tax payable shall not, in relation to anything done in connection with a partnership, include any tax not chargeable in the partnership name.

What is the relevant period where there is deliberate default in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax?

(16) The relevant period means the period covered by the current period, the next period and the preceding period.

(17) For the purposes of this section, any returns or accounts submitted on behalf of a person shall be deemed to have been submitted by the person unless that person proves that they were submitted without that person’s consent or knowledge.

Can I claim that returns were submitted in relation to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax without my knowledge?

(17) No. Returns or accounts filed in your name are deemed to have been submitted by you unless you can prove that they were filed without your knowledge or consent.

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