On 15 August 2018, the First-tier Tribunal released its decision in Hastings Insurance Services Ltd and HMRC v KPMG LLP (Third Party) and allowed an application by KPMG for inspection of the parties’ pleadings and skeleton arguments in the underlying appeal. The decision is the first time that the tribunal has clearly set out the status and accessibility of documents filed in the course of a tax appeal and it clarifies a murky area of law which had been left unaddressed by the tribunal rules. The tribunal’s decision that some documents can be inspected after a hearing if a third party can establish a ‘legitimate interest’ has significant ramifications for open justice, taxpayers’ privacy and practitioners’ drafting, especially given the broad nature of what precisely constitutes a ‘legitimate interest’.
Amanda Brown and Chris Leigh (KPMG) discuss the implications of the recent decision in the leading case of Hastings Insurance Services Ltd and HMRC v KPMG LLP (Third Party).
On 15 August 2018, the First-tier Tribunal released its decision in Hastings Insurance Services Ltd and HMRC v KPMG LLP (Third Party) and allowed an application by KPMG for inspection of the parties’ pleadings and skeleton arguments in the underlying appeal. The decision is the first time that the tribunal has clearly set out the status and accessibility of documents filed in the course of a tax appeal and it clarifies a murky area of law which had been left unaddressed by the tribunal rules. The tribunal’s decision that some documents can be inspected after a hearing if a third party can establish a ‘legitimate interest’ has significant ramifications for open justice, taxpayers’ privacy and practitioners’ drafting, especially given the broad nature of what precisely constitutes a ‘legitimate interest’.
Amanda Brown and Chris Leigh (KPMG) discuss the implications of the recent decision in the leading case of Hastings Insurance Services Ltd and HMRC v KPMG LLP (Third Party).