In Rachel McGreevy v HMRC [2017] TC06109 penalties for a late non-resident capital gains tax return were cancelled; no disposal was proved in the relevant tax year, the taxpayer had a reasonable excuse or special circumstances.

A disposal by a Non-resident of UK residential property:

Rachel McGreevy, resident in Australia, received penalty notices in September 2016 totalling £1,600; £700 in late filing penalties and £900 in daily penalties. The notices stated that the period of assessment was 7 August 2015 to 6 August 2016.

Comments: This is a lengthy judgement for a case where the technical aspects are relatively straightforward. The judge went to great pains to show that the introduction of the NRCGT return had not been well handled by HMRC, saying of the penalties “There is a serious deficiency exhibited here in common sense, proportion and an ability to consider the position of what HMRC calls its customers.” It should give some hope to other taxpayers who have been penalised for late NRCGT returns that the courts will take a lenient approach to penalty appeals.

Links to our practical guides

How to Appeal a Tax Penalty

Penalties: Late filing

Grounds for Appeal: Reasonable Excuse

Non-Resident CGT: UK residential property

The Non-Residents' Tax Toolkit

Non-Resident Landlords Scheme

External links

Links:

Rachel McGreevy v HMRC [2017] TC06109


Wouldn’t it be great and think how much TIME it would SAVE you if someone:

How about if that someone also:

Thousands of firms of accountants and advisers are already using www.rossmartin.co.uk as their primary TAX resource.

At a cost of just £1 per day, it’s a no brainer: FREE up your MIND and your TIME (and your wallet).

And...we run our Virtual Tax Partner support service, if you need assistance with a particular query or technical issue.