Derby Telegraph

Takeaway boss cooked his books to underpay the taxman by £20k

- By MARTIN NAYLOR martin.naylor@reachplc.com

A CHADDESDEN takeaway owner deliberate­ly underpaid more than £20,000 in VAT.

Derby Crown Court heard how Paramdeep Kaila siphoned money from the Pizza Kitchen in Nottingham Road via his business bank account and instead moved it through his personal one.

An investigat­ion was launched by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs which showed he was not declaring to them the true sales he was taking at the Nottingham Road restaurant.

The 37-year-old, of Littleover, wound up the company in 2018 and is now working in what the hearing was told was “a completely different sphere of activity”.

The restaurant is currently under new ownership that has nothing at all to do with him

Handing him a 12-month jail sentence, suspended for a year, Recorder Adrian Reynolds said: “Mr Kaila, self-employed people, whether it is what you used to do or what your defence counsel does, are under an obligation to behave honestly in relation to accounting, VAT and dealing with the HMRC.

“If people don’t behave honestly it encourages people to behave dishonestl­y and the tax system turns into chaos.

“Everything I have read and heard about you tells me you are a decent family man and you have let yourself down badly. I am going to suspend your sentence because I am entirely confident you will not behave like this again.

“You have a good job now in a completely different sphere of activity and provided you don’t re-offend again in the next 12 months that will be the end of matters.”

Jonathan Dunne, prosecutin­g, said Kaila owned The Pizza Kitchen between August 1, 2014, and January 31, 2017. He said during that time, Kaila under-reported the true sales figures he achieved to HMRC to the tune of £23,407.48.

Mr Dunne said: “It works out at around £3,000 each reporting quarter. The turnover was siphoned off and instead of the money going to his business account it went into his personal account.

“In short, he under-reported the true business turnover on that restaurant.

“Matters came to light, an investigat­ion was launched and in interview he gave ‘no comment’ answers to the questions he was asked.”

Kaila, of Moorway Croft, pleaded guilty to one count of fraudulent­ly evading to pay VAT. He has no previous conviction­s of any kind.

Justin Wigoder, mitigating, said his client “had never engaged in the restaurant business before” and that the firm was wound up in 2018.

He said: “It was a fraud but there were periods when it was being done properly.”

As well as the suspended sentence, Recorder Reynolds ordered Kaila to pay £3,000 towards the costs of HMRC’s investigat­ion.

Speaking after sentence, Nick Stone, assistant director for the fraud investigat­ion service at the HMRC, said: “Kaila attempted to steal money from honest taxpayers at the expense of our public services.

“Anyone with informatio­n about tax fraud can report it online or by calling our Fraud Hotline on 0800 788 887.”

 ??  ?? Paramdeep Kaila ran the Pizza Kitchen in Nottingham Road, Chaddesden. The business is now under new ownership
Paramdeep Kaila ran the Pizza Kitchen in Nottingham Road, Chaddesden. The business is now under new ownership

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