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It's quite straightforward really. This is the same club, with all its history, and no one walked away... except from the debts, possible tax evasion, and anything else which the current peepul want to forget about.
View Poll Results: What is your attitude to a new "Rangers" entering at Div1?
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Opposed - and will walk away from Scottish professional football
537 52.85% -
Opposed - but will continue to support the game.
454 44.69% -
In favour.
25 2.46%
Results 23,881 to 23,910 of 45185
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25-02-2014 11:41 AM #23881
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25-02-2014 11:42 AM #23882This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
However, this is about the old company. It's nothing to do with the company that bought the assets of the old company.Last edited by CropleyWasGod; 25-02-2014 at 11:47 AM.
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25-02-2014 11:49 AM #23883This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
No witnesses will be called as it is merely HMRC challenging the legal reasons given by the two 'majority' judges in the FTT case.
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25-02-2014 11:51 AM #23884
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25-02-2014 12:08 PM #23885
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Grant Russell @STVGrant 2m Imran Ahmad had failed in his attempt at court to arrest £620,000 of money from Rangers he contests is owed to him in bonuses.
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25-02-2014 12:11 PM #23886
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Grant Russell @STVGrant
Lord Tyre satisfied case to answer but says insufficient evidence that Rangers' finances have deteriorated to point of near insolvency.
Clearly Lord Tyre needs to start reading hibs.net
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25-02-2014 12:13 PM #23887
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Grant Russell @STVGrant 5m Ahmad v The Rangers FC Ltd will be heard in April. Lord Tyre says no evidence to suggest any debt arising from that wouldn't be satisfied.
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25-02-2014 12:18 PM #23888
Correct decision. Their assets far exceed their liabilities so even if they went into admin, then Ahmed would still get paid.
What they have is a massive cash flow problem and they are trading at a loss. Both fixable.
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25-02-2014 12:35 PM #23889This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
As I found out when taking a train to Glasgow one Saturday mid-morning for work purposes and it was populated by currant buns. They're not dead, they are in fact the same if not worse and ever so paranoid.
A truly horrendous bunch of troglodytes.
Apparently their troubles are all he work of Scotland's "fenian team conspiracy" comprising of Celtic, Aberdeen, Hibs and Dundee United. That was news to me too.
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25-02-2014 12:50 PM #23890
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My recollection on the 'big tax case' was that the two in the 2-1 decision made their choice on very technical legal points rather than the spirit of the law. I think everyone knows that the whole thing was a scam to avoid tax, it's just that the two lawyers who weren't tax experts felt that RFC acted within the letter of the law.
It is entirely possible (perhaps even likely) that the next tier will not agree with that positioning. Where it could get most amusing would be if the 'loans' were recalled. Man, that would almost be as funny as The (New) Rangers entering administration once the Easdale/Laxey Facility has been burned on pre-match luxury hotels ...
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25-02-2014 12:50 PM #23891
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25-02-2014 12:51 PM #23892This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 12:59 PM #23893This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 01:03 PM #23894This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It's an established practice of HMRC that, in instances where a payroll scheme has been operated incorrectly, it always falls on the employer/operator to make good any tax lost; that's even when the employee has benefited.
The only way that HMRC would go after the beneficiaries would be if they thought there was collusion between RFC/the Trusts/ the beneficiaries to evade tax.
That would be very difficult to prove. The basis of the defence would be "Billy Dodds colluding in a tax avoidance scheme? He's thick as pigsht, m'lud. I rest my case."
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25-02-2014 01:07 PM #23895
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25-02-2014 01:09 PM #23896This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 01:14 PM #23897This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 01:15 PM #23898This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 01:24 PM #23899This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 01:35 PM #23900
Re that EBT money
If it was a loan, then it still requires repaid?
Would it not be in order for the liquidators to go after it to help repay creditors and, of course, their own fees?
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25-02-2014 01:38 PM #23901This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 01:41 PM #23902This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The money paid by RFC was a contribution to the Trust(s). In other words, an expense, not a loan, and not recoverable.
The money paid by the Trust(s) to the players etc. was a loan. If there was any recovery in those situations, it would be by the Trustees of each individual Trust.
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25-02-2014 03:10 PM #23903
Transcript from TSFM of today's proceedings of the UTTT
John Clarke TSFM
ohn clarke says:
February 24, 2014 at 7:32 pm
9 0 Rate This
Nothing of any great substance to report from today’s UTTT hearing.
I was there for 9.30 , but the kick-off wasn’t till 10.00. That gave time for a little bit of socialising: I didn’t meet the Grant Russell chap from STV, but only a chap from the ‘Sun’, and a director from Murray Group, and Mr Thornhill (QC for the respondents,i.e the MG),who came to make himself known to me and another TSFM person.
A big surprise to me was that it was not Lord Bishopp presiding, but Lord Docherty ( which, of course, kept the business within the Scottish house)
Apparently, the respondents had appealed against the time allocation set by Judge Bishopp, and it was reduced from 20 to 10 days, and Judge Bishopp stood down for some reason.
At kick-off, there were ,besides Judge Docherty and the clerical officer, there were 15 persons in the Tribunal room.
On the left, Roderick Thomson QC for HMRC,supported by 6 other lawyers(none of whom actually sat beside him,but behind).
On the right, Andrew Thornhill QC for the respondents, supported by 2 other lawyers (one of whom sat beside him, the other one behind). Behind them was the Finance Director of the Murray group, the chap from the ‘Sun’, and me and a lurker.
On my left were two young women one of whom was there, she told me, as part of her training, as newly qualified and in her first job in a solicitor’s office as a qualified solicitor.
The other took copious notes and was probably a lawyer as well. (Mind you, so did I take copious notes,and I’m no lawyer!) She did not turn up for the second half.
The 17th person must have been Russell of STV, but he was sitting beside the lawyers behind Thomson,QC, so I had clocked him as a lawyer.
Lord Docherty reminded counsel that the names of the HMRC officers who gave evidence at the FTTT should not be disclosed, nor should the names of 3 witnesses who had given evidence on the basis of anonymity. Mr Thomson said he would try to remember that if or when he had occasion to mention their testimony in the course of the hearing.
Mr Thomson invited His lordship
- to overturn the decision of the First Tier Tax Tribunal and uphold HMRC’s assessments. He added that he would later have something to say about ‘unreasonable comments’ made by the FTTT.
or, if His Lordship was not minded to make any additional findings of fact, then to remit the case to a fresh Tribunal.
He gave a very short summary of the background. To wit, that the FTTT had heard evidence for 17 days,
and that the evidence bundles shows that much of the documentation was provided by the MG, and that there had been extensive reference to that documentation.
Put very simply, the MG had argued a) that for earnings to be taxable, there had to be ABSOLUTE legal title to
them, and that under the EBT Trust scheme there was no such absolute title. Payments made under them were something other than bonuses or emoluments and that the recipients of loans had had been no ‘unreserved disposal’ of the money that was on offer as loans.
and b) that the Trust scheme had not been shown to be a sham.
Mr Thomson said that HMRC’s view was that the evidence showed that there had been an underlying tacit agreement between the parties involved that loans would not ever be recalled, that interest due would be rolled up, until death, when the interest and repayment would be able to be offset against inheritance tax.
He said that the idea that the idea that payments under the Trust arrangements were something ‘other’ than taxable earnings was merely an assertion by the MG that did not reflect reality.
The rest of the day was spent by Mr Thomson ripping the FTTT’s whole approach to their hearing apart, and using quite harsh words their failure of duty to examine the evidence, make complete findings of fact, and apply the principles of the Ramsay case and a couple of other relevant cases properly, if at all.
he referred to the minority report of DR Poon as showing how many findings of fact were there to be made, which the majority had missed, and how their understanding and application of the Ramsay and other relevant cases had been erroneous and actually missed the very point of those cases.
He went on to say that the FTTT majority had failed to address the submissions made by HMRC, and that a pattern emerged of the FTTT simply accepting the MG’s submission, and of failing to make findings of fact to support arguments
There was not merely understandable error in law, but deeply flawed submissions by the Majority, wholesale faiure to exercise their judicial duty.
And so on all day till 4.00 pm, with frequent references to the legal authorities and the true interpretation of the case which is, that while there may be all the legal documentation to show that there was a proper, valid Trust, it was necessary to look at whether people in fact worked the Trust properly.
The Trust may be perfectly legal and not a sham, but the Trustees could ( and in this case, did, act beyond their powers) by making loans to people who were not entitled to such under the trust, making loans without requiring evidence of security or requiring repayment or interest payments -and all involved knew this to be the case. And, of course, the Trustees who began to ask for security etc were dismissed and another more compliant lot were brought in.
—–
That all sounds as dry as dust, but I actually quite enjoyed the day, And I’ll be back tomorrow. I still have 18 pages of notes to decipher: I can write legibly, and I can write fast: but not both at the same time!
'Mon the HMRC
Last edited by Tynie01011973; 25-02-2014 at 03:12 PM. Reason: typo
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25-02-2014 05:21 PM #23904This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
That was a good read. Look forward to some more
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25-02-2014 06:44 PM #23905
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Interesting!
Who's TSFM?
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25-02-2014 06:46 PM #23906This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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25-02-2014 08:17 PM #23907
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26-02-2014 07:51 AM #23908
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26-02-2014 08:51 AM #23909This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It's not 1955 and he Rangers are generally looked on with disdain and contempt by those in power in 21st Century Scotland.
Societal and social change over the last few decades has affected Rangers badly. Their inability to tackle the bigotry in their support left Celtic as the trendy establishment club back in the 90s. Without a shadow of a doubt Celtic are the club of the Labour controlled Glasgow City Council, and have benefitted allegedly from both State Aid and definitely from soft loans from the Co-Operative Bank, the Labour Party's bank of choice. BBC Scotland's Sports Department isn't jokingly referred to as PacificQuayCSC#1 for nothing. Rangers are viewed as a stupid anachronism followed by Neanderthals who are presently getting their just desserts.
To try and say that the FTTT went 2:1 against HMRC because of some Rangers influence is frankly ridiculous. HMRC didn't make a good enough case to win outright, plain and simple.
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26-02-2014 09:49 AM #23910This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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