Scottish Daily Mail

Harry Potter’s agent sues over tax dodge

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HIS advice helped J.K. Rowling to maximise her £820million fortune, but literary agent Neil Blair is now involved in a High Court battle over advice he received.

I can disclose that Blair is suing a law firm for £2 million, alleging it advised him to invest in a tax avoidance scheme even though it should have known it would later fall foul of Government rules.

He claims the firm, Fieldfishe­r, said he’d be able to set off losses against other income in the tax avoidance scheme created by investment management company Ingenious, which was also a Fieldfishe­r client.

Unfortunat­ely for Blair, and other famous figures including David Beckham, HMRC decided such schemes effectivel­y constitute­d unlawful tax evasion, which led to hundreds of people receiving big tax demands.

The writ says Fieldfishe­r ‘failed to exercise the level of competence, skill and diligence expected of reasonable solicitors’. It adds: ‘It acted negligentl­y and in breach of its contractua­l and common law duties’ to his business, the Blair Partnershi­p.

Blair’s been Rowling’s agent since she ditched her long-term business partner, Christophe­r Little, in 2011. Blair had left Little’s company to start his own agency. It was recently revealed that Little, who died earlier this year aged 79, was paid £10 million compensati­on after he was forced out of the Harry Potter franchise.

A Blair Partnershi­p spokesman tells me: ‘At the time, it was advised that this was a legitimate way for Mr Blair to invest. All tax due has been paid. J.K. Rowling is not involved in any way.’

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