Statutory Instruments
2009 No. 1916
Revenue And Customs
The Information Notice: Resolution of Disputes as to Privileged Communications Regulations 2009
Made
16th July 2009
Laid before the House of Commons
17th July 2009
Coming into force
7th August 2009
The Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs make the following Regulations, in exercise of the powers conferred by paragraph 23(3) and (4) of Schedule 36 to the Finance Act 2008( 1 ).
Citation and commencement
1. These Regulations may be cited as the Information Notice: Resolution of Disputes as to Privileged Communications Regulations 2009 and come into force on 7th August 2009
Interpretation
2. In these Regulations—
“document” means information, a document or part of a document;
a “document in dispute” is a document over which there is a dispute between HMRC and a person who has been given an information notice as to whether the document is privileged;
“officer” means an officer of Revenue and Customs;
a “person acting on behalf of” a taxpayer or a third party means any person who is acting on behalf of a taxpayer or third party in relation to an information notice;
“Schedule 36” means Schedule 36 to the Finance Act 2008;
“taxpayer” means a person who is given a notice under paragraph 1 of Schedule 36;
“third party” means a person who is given a notice under paragraph 2 or paragraph 5 of Schedule 36;
“working day” means any day except a Saturday, Sunday, Christmas Day, Good Friday or a bank holiday under section 1 of the Banking and Financial Dealings Act 1971( 2 ).
Application of these Regulations
3. These Regulations apply where there is a dispute between HMRC and a person to whom an information notice has been given either—
(a) during the course of correspondence, or
(b) during the course of an inspection of premises under Schedule 36,
as to whether a document is privileged.
Requirement to provide information and produce documents not in dispute
4. Nothing in these Regulations shall affect—
(a) the requirement under an information notice to provide information or produce a document, which is not in dispute; or
(b) the power under Schedule 36 to inspect premises.
Procedure where information notice given in correspondence is in dispute
5. —(1) The following procedure applies where there is a dispute falling within regulation 3(a).
(2) On receipt of the information notice, the taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf shall—
(a) by the date given in the notice for providing information or producing documents, specify in a list each document, required under the information notice, which is in dispute, with a description of the nature and contents of that document;
(b) serve that list on HMRC.
(3) But no description of a document or type of document is required where such description would itself give rise to a dispute over privilege.
(4) Within twenty working days of receiving the list referred to in sub-paragraph (2), HMRC must notify the person who served the list of any documents on the list that it requires to be produced and which it considers are not privileged.
(5) On receipt of notification under paragraph (4), the taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf must make an application to the First-tier Tribunal to consider and resolve the dispute and must include copies of the documents which remain in dispute with that application.
(6) The taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf shall provide HMRC with proof of service under paragraph (2)(b).
(7) Service for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b) must take place within a reasonable time to be agreed between the taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf and HMRC but in any event no later than twenty working days after the date given in the notice for providing information or producing documents.
(8) An application under paragraph (5) must be made within a reasonable time to be agreed between the taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf and HMRC but in any event no later than twenty working days of the date of the notification required under paragraph (4).
Procedure where information notice given during inspection of premises is in dispute
6. —(1) The following procedure applies where there is a dispute falling within regulation 3(b).
(2) On receipt of the information notice, the taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf shall indicate to the officer carrying out the inspection each document, required under the information notice, which is in dispute.
(3) The taxpayer, third party or person acting on their behalf must place the document or documents in dispute, or a copy of such document or documents, in an appropriate container which prevents the contents being visible.
(4) The container shall be—
(a) sealed, labelled and signed by that person;
(b) countersigned by the officer; and
(c) given into the custody of the officer.
(5) The officer shall deliver the container to the First-tier Tribunal with the seal intact within forty-two working days of having taken custody of it together with an application to that Tribunal to consider and resolve the dispute.
Compliance with information notice
7. Where a taxpayer or third party who has received an information notice, or a person acting on their behalf, complies with the procedure set out in regulation 5 or, as the case may be, regulation 6, those persons shall be treated as having complied with the information notice in relation to the documents in dispute until the First-tier Tribunal decides the status of the document or until an agreement has been reached under regulation 10.
Finding of the First-tier Tribunal
8. When an application is made under regulation 5(5) or 6(5), the First-tier Tribunal shall—
(a) resolve the dispute by confirming whether and to what extent the document, is or is not privileged;
(b) direct which part or parts of a document (if any) shall be disclosed.
9. The First-tier Tribunal must ensure that any document in dispute, or any copy of such document, is not inappropriately disclosed to any person pending the Tribunal’s consideration of the status of the document.
Resolution of disputes by agreement
10. A dispute falling within regulation 3 may be resolved at any time by HMRC and the person to whom an information notice has been given reaching an agreement, whether in writing or otherwise.
Dave Hartnett
Bernadette Kenny
Two of the Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs
16th July 2009