Invoices: right of deduction
In Pannon Gép Centrum v APEH Központi Hivatal Hatósági Főosztály Dél-dunántúli Kihelyezett Hatósági Osztály (ECJ Case C-368/09), the ECJ held that Article 167 of Directive 2006/112/EC ‘must be interpreted as precluding national legislation or practice whereby the national authorities deny to a taxable person the right to deduct from the VAT which he is liable to pay the VAT due or paid in respect of services supplied to him on the grounds that the initial invoice, in the possession of the taxable person when the deduction is made, contained an incorrect completion date for the supply of services and the numbering of the subsequently corrected invoice and the credit note cancelling the initial invoice were not sequential, if the material conditions governing deduction are satisfied and, before the tax authority concerned has made a decision, the taxable person has submitted to the tax authority a corrected invoice stating the correct date on which that supply of services was completed, even though the numbering of that invoice and the credit note cancelling the initial invoice are not sequential.’
Why it matters: The ECJ’s conclusion is somewhat convoluted, but indicates that where an error in an invoice was subsequently corrected, the tax authority cannot automatically refuse the right to deduct input tax.
Invoices: right of deduction
In Pannon Gép Centrum v APEH Központi Hivatal Hatósági Főosztály Dél-dunántúli Kihelyezett Hatósági Osztály (ECJ Case C-368/09), the ECJ held that Article 167 of Directive 2006/112/EC ‘must be interpreted as precluding national legislation or practice whereby the national authorities deny to a taxable person the right to deduct from the VAT which he is liable to pay the VAT due or paid in respect of services supplied to him on the grounds that the initial invoice, in the possession of the taxable person when the deduction is made, contained an incorrect completion date for the supply of services and the numbering of the subsequently corrected invoice and the credit note cancelling the initial invoice were not sequential, if the material conditions governing deduction are satisfied and, before the tax authority concerned has made a decision, the taxable person has submitted to the tax authority a corrected invoice stating the correct date on which that supply of services was completed, even though the numbering of that invoice and the credit note cancelling the initial invoice are not sequential.’
Why it matters: The ECJ’s conclusion is somewhat convoluted, but indicates that where an error in an invoice was subsequently corrected, the tax authority cannot automatically refuse the right to deduct input tax.