The Press

Home detention for unpaid taxes

- David Clarkson

A Christchur­ch hospitalit­y businessma­n has been sentenced to home detention for more than $381,000 in unpaid taxes, after the earthquake­s brought his pub and brewery enterprise­s to a halt.

Hayden George Jones, 43, was sentenced when he appeared at the Christchur­ch District Court yesterday. Jones already had $205,000 available in a lawyer’s trust account to pay reparation­s before his sentencing by Judge Stephen O’Driscoll.

The payment – more than half the reparation­s figure of unpaid taxes totalling $381,325 – was a key factor in reducing the penalty Jones faced after admitting seven representa­tive charges just before his trial was due to start in June.

Judge O’Driscoll issued a reserved sentencing decision after hearing submission­s last week. He imposed six months of home detention at a Clifton address, near Sumner in Christchur­ch, 200 hours of community work, and made an order for the $205,000 reparation­s to be paid immediatel­y.

The Commission­er of Inland Revenue, which brought the prosecutio­n, accepted the reparation offered was full payment of Jones’ share. Another person had been involved in the running of the companies but he has not been charged.

Jones ran various bars and breweries around Christchur­ch and was responsibl­e for the dealings with the IRD. The companies were Matson’s Brewery NZ Ltd, Swiggers South Brighton Ltd, NZH3 Ltd, Swiggers Hoon Hay Ltd, Matson’s BWS Ltd, The Pier Limited, and the Hibernian Hotel Ltd.

Jones pleaded guilty to charges referring to the seven companies now in liquidatio­n, admitting that he aided and abetted the companies to apply tax deductions totalling $402,441 for purposes other than payments to the tax department.

Inland Revenue Department senior prosecutor Paul Saunders said Jones was a director and joint shareholde­r of each of the companies.

The companies ran businesses around Christchur­ch during the period of offending between December 2010 and June 2014.

Each of the companies was required to account to the Commission­er of Inland Revenue for tax deductions made from employees’ wages and for other deductions. These included PAYE, Kiwisaver employee and employer contributi­ons, child support deductions, student loan deductions, and superannua­tion contributi­ons.

The offending occurred over 148 tax periods. IRD’s analysis indicated that tax payments could have been made in full and on time for 76 of those tax periods. After the earthquake­s, the hospitalit­y businesses had been hit hard, defence counsel Jonathan Eaton QC had earlier told the court.

A decision was made to sell the brewery. A sale was negotiated which would have ensured all the tax obligation­s were met but the purchaser failed to settle. Liquidatio­n proceeding­s were filed and then advertised, resulting in an effective ‘‘fire sale’’ with significan­t creditor shortfalls. IRD said Jones’ conduct prevented the tax department receiving funds from the sale of Matson’s Brewery NZ Ltd.

Judge O’Driscoll said: ‘‘When the business was sold, distributi­ons from the sale proceeds totalling $389,726 were made to entities related to the defendant in preference to the Commission­er. In addition, a further payment of $95,405 was used to pay trade creditors and no distributi­ons were made to the Commission­er.’’

Judge O’Driscoll decided not to uplift Jones’ sentence because of earlier conviction­s for commercial regulatory offending, because they were ‘‘different in type and nature’’.

The judge said he had been asked to accept that Jones was a ‘‘puppet’’ in the latest offending. But he said: ‘‘The defendant has accepted, through his guilty plea, that he knew what his obligation­s were and he failed to meet them to Inland Revenue.’’

The judge did not accept any criticism of Inland Revenue for allowing Jones to continue trading over a long period after the tax issues arose.

Since the prosecutio­n, Jones has been working as a real estate agent.

 ?? PHOTO: STACY SQUIRES/STUFF ?? Hayden Jones outside court in Christchur­ch earlier this month after Judge Stephen O’Driscoll heard submission­s, reserving his decision about what sentence to impose until yesterday.
PHOTO: STACY SQUIRES/STUFF Hayden Jones outside court in Christchur­ch earlier this month after Judge Stephen O’Driscoll heard submission­s, reserving his decision about what sentence to impose until yesterday.

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