Donate SIGN UP

Tax return £100 fine

Avatar Image
bpoolmecca | 20:57 Thu 03rd Mar 2011 | Law
11 Answers
My accountant requested the interest i recieved during the year,..I emailed the details third week in jan to his firm with his name in the subject bar,whilst on holiday in late jan/early feb he contacted work to say he hadnt recieved them luckily i had kept a copy.He said that he hadnt recieved the email.Should i pay the £100 or should his firm
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 11 of 11rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by bpoolmecca. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Did you ask for a Read Receipt for the email, for something as important as this? Otherwise you can't prove he received it.
Question Author
Boxtops we seem to be having two conversations!!!
Question Author
No but the email clearly states the day and time sent i cant be responsible if they dont open it
But isn't that like when you send something by post and it says 'proof of posting is not proof of receipt'?
We are indeed, bpool!

As sherrard says, sending is not proof of receipt. Their server might have been down. Perhaps he didn't recognise the importance of the email because you put his name in the subject box, rather than "My interest Return" or similar, and deleted it, or it went in his Junk folder. A Read Receipt request lets you know that they received the email and opened it.
Question Author
I suppose so just assumed that a sent email was a recieved email Doh!
to late now for you - but if I send something by email that is important - I just add a footer saying please confirm you have received
Question Author
So thats £100 out of my pocket,A valuble lesson learned! Snail mail still rules!!
and with snail mail make sure it is recorded delivery - lol
Why leave it for over 9 months before giving your accountant the required information, giving him only a week to finalise and lodge your tax return?
The £100 is always going to be your problem, even if the accountant was in any way liable (which all indications in the thread re that he wasn't). It's YOUR responsibility to complete a tax return and ensure it meets the deadline and no amount of hiring an accountant to do it for you removes that responsibility from you. You have to pay the £100.

If he's a responsible accountant and accepts it's his fault he should offer to reimburse you of course, though as I say, from everything supplied, I can't see how it's the accountant's fault.

1 to 11 of 11rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Tax return £100 fine

Answer Question >>