In HMRC v Peter, Stephen and Anne Fisher [2021] EWCA Civ 1438, the Court of Appeal (CoA) found that the Transfer of Assets Abroad provisions applied to the transfer of a UK business to a Gibraltar company for two of the three shareholders. The profits of the company were subject to Income Tax. 

The First Tier Tribunal held:

Both HMRC and the taxpayers appealed to the Upper Tribunal which found:

HMRC appealed to the Court of Appeal. Two of the three judges agreed that:

The dissenting judge, Lord Justice Phillips, concluded that HMRC’s appeal should be dismissed on the basis that the taxpayers had not procured the transfer of assets so the anti-avoidance provisions could not apply:

Useful guides on this topic

Transfer of Assets Abroad (TAA)
What are the TAA rules? When do they apply? Is there any defence against the rules?

Discovery Assessments
When can HMRC issue an assessment outside of the normal statutory time limits? What conditions must be met? What are your rights of appeal and defences?

How to appeal an HMRC decision
Disagree with an HMRC decision? How to appeal, what type of decision can you appeal and what are your different options when you disagree with HMRC? What are the key steps in making an appeal?

External links

HMRC v Peter, Stephen and Anne Fisher [2021] EWCA Civ 1438


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