Western Daily Press

Millionair­e loses court battle over Ukip tax bill

- JESS GLASS news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

WEST-BASED millionair­e Brexit-backing businessma­n Arron Banks has lost his Court of Appeal fight over a sixfigure inheritanc­e tax bill on his donations to Ukip.

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) assessed Mr Banks – one of the selfstyled “Bad Boys of Brexit” – as owing just over £160,000 on almost £1 million in donations to Ukip between October 2014 and March 2015.

Donations to political parties which had at least two MPs elected at the last General Election, or one MP elected and a total of 150,000 votes, are exempt from inheritanc­e tax.

While Ukip received 919,471 votes across the UK in the 2010 election, the party did not return a single MP to the House of Commons, prompting HMRC to bill Mr Banks for £162,945.34.

However, Mr Banks, from South Gloucester­shire, challenged the decision at two tribunals, arguing that the law on political donations being exempt from inheritanc­e tax breached his human rights and EU law.

He claimed the provisions of the Inheritanc­e Tax Act were unlawfully discrimina­tory under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), as well as breaching his – and Ukip’s – right to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly under the ECHR.

After both the first-tier tribunal (FTT) and the upper tribunal dismissed his claim, Mr Banks brought a Court of Appeal challenge in May.

However, in a judgment handed down yesterday, three judges found that he had failed to establish a breach of his human rights and dismissed the appeal.

Lord Justice Henderson, sitting with Sir Julian Flaux and Lady Justice Nicola Davies, said: “There is nothing about Ukip or its supporters which places them in a different category from all other supporters of political parties who are denied exemption for their gifts.”

The Court of Appeal heard that, while Ukip did not win any seats in the 2010 General Election, it did obtain two MPs in by-elections in 2014.

However, Lord Justice Henderson ruled: “The requiremen­t that the party should have at least one MP at Westminste­r cannot possibly be stigmatise­d as irrational.

“Similarly, the exclusion of MPs elected at by-elections or who defect from other parties reflects the different, and possibly more volatile, political circumstan­ces in which a party may acquire such MPs.”

Lord Justice Henderson later accepted that the law did discrimina­te against Mr Banks directly “on the basis that he was a supporter of a party that had secured no seats in the House of Commons at the 2010 General Election”.

However, the judge concluded that he had “no hesitation” in finding that HMRC had justified the difference in treatment, meaning it was still lawful.

 ?? ?? > Millionair­e Arron Banks
> Millionair­e Arron Banks

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