CCM10380 - Penalties and Interest: More than one type of Penalty Incurred
Your examination or enquiry might establish more than one offence so that more than one type of penalty is involved. In these circumstances you will need to work out each penalty separately taking the offences in the order in which they occurred. Despite the different offences and types of penalties it will count as one challenge by HMRC.
Example 1
Emily made her first claim for tax credits on 18 April 2004 and
was awarded £5460 for 2004/2005. On 1 November 2004 you open a
S16 examination because you have information that in addition to
her 2003/2004 earnings from the local beauty salon she also worked
at the local supermarket in 2003/2004. It appears that Emily has
understated her 2003/2004 earnings and the potential amount
involved does not allow this to be worked as a discrepancy
examination. Emily agrees to meet you on 20 November 2004 and
during your meeting you establish that not only was her claim
incorrect because she understated her earnings but she also failed
to notify a reduction in her child care costs in June 2004.
As a result of the incorrect claim Emily had over-claimed
credits of £2657.20, her award should have been for
£2802.80. Had she notified the reduction in child care costs
her award would have reduced by a further £1404. Emily has
incurred two different types of penalties.
(This text has been withheld because of exemptions in the
Freedom of Information Act 2000)
(This text has been withheld because of exemptions in the
Freedom of Information Act 2000)
The total penalties will be £250 + £100 =
£350. Emily will be warned that any future incorrect
statements or failure to notify a change of circumstances are
likely to result in much larger penalties.
Example 2
Nigel and Natasha claimed tax credits for 2003/2004 but an
enquiry established the S17 notice was incorrect because Natasha
had failed to disclose her earnings from a second job. The S17
notice which they signed on 29 May 2004 sets the final award for
2003/2004 and the provisional award for 2004/2005. Following
CCM10040 we will only claim the penalty
for 2003/2004.
A separate risk had been identified for 2004/2005 so in
addition to the enquiry for 2003/2004 an examination had been
opened for 2004/2005. In addition to the adjustment for the
2003/2004 income the review of 2004/2005 established that on 31 May
2004 (2 days after the S17 notice) Natasha had reported a change of
circumstances. She had advised they were paying £100 per week
child care costs starting from that day but this turned out to be
false. They were not paying any child care costs and the details
given were fictitious.
There will now be two different S31(1)(a) penalties each of a
maximum of £3,000. One penalty is for the incorrect S17 notice
and the other is for an incorrect notification of a change of
circumstances. Even though the review covered two years this still
counts as a first challenge but there are now two penalties of a
maximum of £3,000 each.
