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What is meant by the spirit of the law?

December 14th, 2009

http://taxadvicenetwork.blogspot.com/2009/12/what-is-meant-by-spirit-of-law.html.

Mark Lee throws in his pennyworth - which is worth reading.

From my perspective this has rarely been difficuklt to determine - but there are none so blind as those who do n0t want to see.

That’s most accountants when it comes to this issue.

Richard Murphy Tax compliance

  1. eugene
    December 15th, 2009 at 00:16 | #1

    Richard - extract from Mark Lee article

    “the interpretation of “spirit of the law” and “intention of Parliament” should remain with the courts. HMRC should not become responsible for legal interpretation, as this confers a quasi-legislative and judicial function on them that contravenes the principle of separation of powers.”

    To understand your stance - for clarification, do you agree with the above statement - eminently reasonable to me( but I’m a CA who’s worked offshore for 25 yrs - which makes me beyond the pale I guess)

  2. December 15th, 2009 at 10:22 | #2

    @eugene

    Nit picking

    No one is saying a taxpayer is denied the right to challenge HMRC

    As a matter of fact HMRC has always interpreted the will of parliament in deciding what cases to take

    And so, as a matter of fact, in 99.9% of cases where the courts are not used HMRC will prevails

    The Code changes neither fact

    What it does make clear is that deliberate breach will be viewed very much more harshly - i.e the cost of being wrong goes up

    And rightly so

    Richard

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