CCM12355 - Opening and Working Enquiries: Completion applications - following Revenue delay
If the claimant(s) has provided all the information you
requested but has not heard from you, they may apply for a
direction that you must complete your enquiry. In these
circumstances claimants will naturally expect to receive a
substantive response (i.e. more than simply an acknowledgement)
from the Revenue within a reasonable time scale. If there is
Revenue delay, the claimant(s) may try to force a response by
applying for a direction. It is therefore very important for you to
avoid any unreasonable delay in dealing with the information the
claimant(s) has supplied because it is more likely that the
tribunal will give a direction in these circumstances. What
constitutes unreasonable delay will depend on the amount of the
information and how complex it is.
If the claimant(s) applies for a direction that the enquiry
should be completed, and you have not yet considered the
information provided, it should be possible for you to do so before
the application is referred to the tribunal. In most cases it will
take some time for the application to be referred to the tribunal.
You should wherever possible consider the information the
claimant(s) has provided before the case is referred to the
tribunal. It is particularly important that you do this, because a
proper consideration of the information may enable you to draw some
conclusions about the claimant’s entitlement and the amount
of their award. If the tribunal does direct you to complete your
enquiry immediately you will then be able to present these
conclusions to the claimant(s) when you inform them of the outcome
of your enquiry. If you have not by this stage considered the
information you may have no option but to decide that the
entitlement and the amount of the award were correct.
If you have not been able to consider the information before
the date of the tribunal meeting, you may still be able to do so
after the meeting and before you make your enquiry decision.
However, you will not be able to ask for any more information. If
you have been unable to consider the information up to this point
it is perhaps unlikely that you will be able to now within the 30
day time scale. But you should make every effort to do so, or you
will have wasted the opportunity of establishing whether the
entitlement and the amount of the award were correct.
See
CCM12390 for guidance on referring the
case to the tribunal.
