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118

The Gazette of the Incorporated Law Society of Ireland".

[APRIL, 1909

and correct list, declaration, or statement, shall

refuse or neglect so to do." The result would

be that any error or omission, however slight

or however innocent, involves a liability to

treble duty and

£20

penalty at the hands of the

Commissioners, or a penalty of ^50 from the

High Court. On the other hand, it is contended

that the section applies only to non-delivery,

as distinct from delivery of an imperfect or

inaccurate statement.

1 think the latter is the

preferable view

for

several

reasons:—(i)

The Act in other sections speaks of a person as

having delivered " such account as aforesaid " ;

although it is false: see sections 68 and 178.

(2) The words "as aforesaid" naturally refer

to section 48, where the words are " make out

such lists, declarations, or statements as may

be applicable to such person "—that is to say,

lists, declarations, or statements of the cha

racter appropriate to the particular person, and

nothing more.

To avoid misconception, I

may add that a document may be so illusory

that the tribunal would be justified in holding

that there had been no delivery, but no such

case arises here.

(3) The Act contains provi

sions not of a penal character for rectifying

any omission or wrong statement in a state

ment or schedule; see section 129.

(4) The

Act imposes a penalty on a false or fraudulent

statement which is less severe than that which,

on the other hypothesis, is imposed upon an

honest mistake;

see section 178.

(5) The

proviso in the middle of section 55, dealing

only with the case of the trustees acting on

behalf of parties chargeable, pre-supposes non

delivery of any statement and then authorizes a

delivery, after prosecution, of an imperfect

list.

(6) The Revenue is protected by the

power possessed by

the Commissioners to

assess a person making default (section 113),

and to surcharge (sections 161, 162).

I am

aware that there are some provisions of the

Act which support the opposite view.

The

most weighty seems to be found in section 50,

the section which requires a person to give a

list of his lodgers and

employes,

with a proviso

exempting him from a penalty in one event

only.

Section 129 does not, it seems to me,

apply to such a list, nor does section 113 or

section 161.

Notwithstanding the difficulty

caused by section 50 and by several other sec

tions, I think the better view is that which I

have already expressed. Thus far I have dealt

with the case apart from authority, and in

truth there is singularly little authority. After

fifty-five years—viz., in 1897, the question was

raised

in the Scotch Courts

in

the case

of

The Lord Advocate

v.

Sawcrs

(35

Sc.

L.R.,

190, 3 Tax Cases, 617).

There the

Lord Ordinary and

the Judges of the First

Division of the Inner House held that the-

penalty of ,£50 was incurred if the statement

delivered was untrue or incorrect. Now, with

the utmost respect for the learned Judges who

decided that case, and notwithstanding my

strong sense of the importance of uniformity

of decision in

fiscal matters

in all parts of

the United Kingdom, I feel unable to decide

the present case in accordance with the view

adopted in the Scotch Courts.

I am not satis

fied that the arguments addressed to us were

so fully presented to them. The Lord Chief

Justice followed the decision in the Scotch

Courts, and, I think, expressed his own con

currence with their view, but he did not sub

stantially add to their reasoning. Upon the

whole, I think this appeal must be allowed,

with costs here and below.

LORD JUSTICE FLETCHER MOULTON also

read a written judgment, discussing and re

viewing the same sections, and the decision in

the Scotch Courts, which he also declined to

accept, and continued :—A large portion of the

contention on behalf of the Crown was that it

was no hardship in enacting these penalties,

which are so utterly out of proportion to the

gravity of the offence, because the Commis

sioners had power to relieve against them.

I

confess that this argument has very little effect

in reconciling me to an interpretation which

would make the penalties of an unnecessary and

almost barbarous severity.

I have no doubt

that the Commissioners do their duty to the

best of their ability, and that in most cases

they would exercise their power of relief equit

ably ; but there is a great temptation to use

powers of this kind for an indirect purpose, an

example of which is given in the present case.

The action is for a penalty of

£50,

and if the

contention of the Crown be correct, the Court

has no jurisdiction to lessen the amount, how

ever trivial-the inaccuracy may be. Now in

the present case, where no fraud is suggested,

the appellant offered to pay the difference in

the assessment, but the Income-tax officers

refused to stay their hands, unless he would

also pay sums for which he would have been

liable under a similar mistake in previous

years, but which were barred by the provisions

as to limitation of time.

It was on his refusal

to do so, on the ground that the Legislature

had provided that these sums were not re

coverable under the Statute, that this action

for the penalty of ^50 was brought, and it