5. Mr O’s business has been trading for many years. The business is VAT registered and claims repayments with HMRC annually.
6. In October 2018, Mr O filed a repayment for VAT for the period ending September 2018. He expected this to be around £11,000.
7. HMRC responded to Mr O the following month and said the VAT repayment had been processed, but that part of it had been used to cover outstanding PAYE debt. This meant he would receive about £6,000. HMRC also kept around £40,000 of VAT repayments to settle other unpaid taxes.
8. Mr O disputed this with HMRC. HMRC maintained that there was an outstanding PAYE debt that needed to be paid.
9. Mr O then complained to HMRC. He disputed the outstanding amount owed and said he first raised concerns with the accuracy of HMRC’s records in 2014. He said that in 2015, HMRC’s records showed a zero balance.
10. HMRC told Mr O there was an outstanding amount owed relating to the 2013/14 tax year, and that this was collected from the VAT repayment.
11. Mr O responded the next day and said he had no outstanding debt from 2013/14. He listed all the payments he made to HMRC.
12. In response, HMRC confirmed that all the payments had been received. It added that the amount owed came from a tax determination (a decision made on the amount of tax owed) issued sometime in 2013/14. HMRC spoke to the team that issued the determination and confirmed it was still active.
13. Mr O responded and said the determination had been withdrawn many years ago, and he was told this verbally. He said his business did not owe any money from 2013/14 and that he had overpaid HMRC in previous years.
14. Mr O then complained to the Adjudicator's Office (AO). It decided that the AO could not consider the issues because Mr O had the right to appeal to a tribunal because he was disputing how much tax his business owed.