GREIT08120 - Distributions: administration: quarterly returns: mistakes
If the company becomes aware that they have omitted something
from the return, included something in error or made some other
mistake in completing the return, they have to deliver an amended
return correcting the mistake(s) (regulation 12 SI 2006/2867). The
amended return should be sent in as soon as the company becomes
aware of the mistake.
The company must also make any adjustments to payments,
repayments, setoffs etc as are necessary to reflect what the
position would have been if a correct return had been delivered in
the first place.
For example, company C (the principal company of a Group
REIT) believed shareholder A was a company that was UK resident for
tax purposes, and paid a PID of 100 gross to A on 5 January 2008.
However A ceased to be UK-resident on 31 December 2007 so was not
entitled to gross payment: C became aware of this in May 2008. The
return for quarter ending 31 March 2008 showing that 100 paid gross
was therefore incorrect. C sends in an amended return for QE 31
March 2008 on 7 June 2008, showing 78 payable to A and 22 tax due,
accompanied by 22 tax. It is up to C to decide whether or how to
seek reimbursement of the 22 paid in error to A.
Where the company has paid a shareholder net when they were
entitled to gross payment, the consequences depend on what the
company could have reasonably believed about the shareholder. For
information on the meaning of ‘reasonable belief’ see
GREIT08125. If the company might reasonably have known that gross
payment was due (for example, a charity has sent in details of its
Charity Registration number but the information has not been acted
on) then the company should make an amended return and pay over the
tax deducted in error to the shareholder. How the company recovers
the tax from HMRC depends on how the tax was accounted for in the
original return.
If however the company had no reason to believe gross payment
was appropriate, it is up to the shareholder to claim the tax back
as part of their SA return or as a repayment claim in the normal
way. If the shareholder is entitled to gross payment it is for that
shareholder, or an intermediary acting on their behalf, to provide
the company with assurances that can form the basis of reasonable
belief.
