The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Najib must pay taxes, IRB tells court

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KUALA LUMPUR: A notice of tax assessment from the Inland Revenue Board (IRB) which requires payment to be made to the board is applied to all including former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, the High Court was yesterday heard.

IRB’s deputy revenue solicitor Abu Tariq Jamaluddin said it was unfair to other taxpayers if Najib, who was named as the defendant in the suit, was exempted to do so.

He submi ed that the IRB had issued the notice to the defendant asking him to pay the amount.

“However, there was no request from the defendant for an arrangemen­t of the payment and therefore, we filed the suit to recover the money.

“If there was no payment, the suit will be filed. It applies to all taxpayers,” he said in his submission­s in IRB’s applicatio­n for summary judgment against Najib over payment of RM1.69 billion in income tax. Summary judgment is where a court decides a case without hearing the testimony of witnesses.

Abu Tariq further said the court should have allowed the applicatio­n as provided under Section 106 (3) of the Income Tax Act 1967 (Act 53).

The section reads: “In any proceeding­s under this section, the court shall not entertain any plea that the amount of tax sought to be recovered is excessive, incorrectl­y assessed, under appeal or incorrectl­y increased.”

Najib’s counsel Tan Sri Muhammad Shafee Abdullah countered that there were no special circumstan­ces for the court to grant the IRB’s applicatio­n for summary judgment through Order 14 of the Rules of Court 2012.

“The plaintiff (IRB) is depriving the court of looking at the merits of the case when they applied for summary judgment.

“They sued us, but we cannot fight the case (through a trial). Isn’t this an intrusion to the judiciary power that the court cannot do anything?,” he said adding that the Order 14 is a draconian law and Section 106 (3) raised a monster out of the law.

The lawyer also questioned why the IRB was in a hurry to seek the summary judgment against his client saying that it amounted to being oppressive against Najib.

“If Your Honour allowed the applicatio­n, they (IRB) can oppressive­ly move to get the RM1.69 billion taxes against my client, whereas my client doesn’t owe even a single cents from them (IRB),” he said.

Justice Datuk Ahmad Bache said he needed a month to decide the ma er. “I will inform the parties a week before the date of the decision,” he said.

The court had on Feb 28 dismissed Najib’s applicatio­n for a stay of proceeding­s of the IRB’s suit seeking him to pay RM1.69 billion in income tax pending an appeal on the tax assessment to IRB.

On August 8, last year, Najib filed an applicatio­n for a stay of proceeding­s of the IRB’s suit.

However, the IRB, in its supporting affidavit, said that the former prime minister still had to pay the total amount of RM1.69 billion even if he had filed an appeal against the tax assessment.

IRB Monitoring Unit assistant director Hisyamuddi­n Mohd Hassan, in his supporting affidavit, said that according to Section 103 of the Income Tax Act 1967, all the assessed tax shall be due and payable on the day the notice of assessment is served, whether or not the person appeals against the assessment.

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