LexGo

Human rights also applies on VAT litigations
18/12/2017

The ruling of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) of 5 December 2017 on case C-42/17 "M.A.S. and M.B." is remarkable, as it went as far as placing the European Charter of Fundamental Rights and especially the European Convention on Human Rights as procedural guarantees in favour of VAT contributors.

This case originated from criminal proceedings in Italy concerning a form of VAT carousel fraud.

The outcome of these proceedings was uncertain, because although the Italian criminal proceedings were clear in declaring the legal action as time-barred, the strict enforcement of a previous CJEU ruling of 16 October 2015 (case C-105/14, "Tarrico") conversely resulted in the lapse being considered unenforceable in accordance with Article 325 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), according to which:

"1. The Union and the Member States shall counter fraud and any other illegal activities affecting the financial interests of the Union through measures [...] which shall act as a deterrent and be such as to afford effective protection in the Member States, and in all the Union's institutions, bodies, offices and agencies.

2. Member States shall take the same measures to counter fraud affecting the financial interests of the Union as they take to counter fraud affecting their own financial interests."

In addition, the "Tarrico" precedent de facto ordered the criminal courts not to "take rules under domestic law into consideration which obstruct the imposition of effective deterrent sanctions in a considerable number of serious fraud cases that jeopardise the financial interests of the European Union or which stipulate shorter limitation periods for serious fraud cases that jeopardise the aforementioned interests solely for those that jeopardise the financial interests of the Member State involved."

Despite the clarity of this ruling, on 5 December 2017 the Court of Justice decided not to sacrifice the basic principle of legality of criminal offences and penalties for the sake of the financial interests of the European Union.

It has been decided that the requirements for predictability, precision and non-retroactivity of criminal law:

ensue from the principle of legality of criminal offences and penalties established in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and in the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and hence
oppose the indiscriminate enforcement of the tax effectiveness sought by TFEU Article 325.

Related : CMS Luxembourg ( Mr. William Jean-Baptiste ,  Mr. Jérôme Guillot )

[+ http://www.cms-db.com]

Mr. William Jean-Baptiste Mr. William Jean-Baptiste
Partner
[email protected]
Mr. Jérôme Guillot Mr. Jérôme Guillot
Counsel
[email protected]

All articles Corporate tax

Lastest articles Corporate tax

The Arm’s Length Principle And Profit Participating Loans: First Decision By Luxembourg Courts ...
24/09/2021

Our tax litigation team recently had the opportunity to assist a taxpayer in an appeal for the reversal of a decision issu...

The Arm’s Length Principle And Profit Participating Loans: First Decision By Luxembourg Courts - Tax Case Study Read more

Property companies holding real estate assets in Germany – state of play on the input VAT deduc...
17/09/2021

The case concerned a Jersey-based company, Titanium Ltd (‘Titanium’), involved in real estate and asset manage...

Read more

Direct taxation - AG Kokott opines on the ‘expected interest’-criterium (État luxembourgeois)
14/09/2021

The French tax authorities made a request for exchange of information to the Luxembourg tax authorities aiming at the...

Direct taxation - AG Kokott opines on the ‘expected interest’-criterium (État luxembourgeois) Read more

Clarification on losses carry forward and social security deductions
10/09/2021

On 10 August 2021, the Luxembourg Tax Authorities issued a new circular I.C.C n° 31 clarifying the application of carr...

Clarification on losses carry forward and social security deductions Read more

Lastest articles by Mr. William Jean-Baptiste

Brexit relocations: The view from CMS Luxembourg
26/11/2018

Luxembourg’s well-established reputation as a leading financial centre makes it a natural candidate for financial co...

Read more

Luxembourg has started the MLI ratification procedure
10/09/2018

On 7 June 2017 Luxembourg and more than 70 other jurisdictions signed the multilateral instrument (“MLI”) to i...

Read more

Transfer pricing: new requirements in 2017 tax returns
03/07/2018

The Luxembourg Tax Authorities (“LTA”) inserted in Form 500 “Corporate income tax, municipal business an...

Read more

The Luxembourg ATAD bill of law has been published
29/06/2018

Council Directive (EU) 2016/1164, the “Anti Tax Avoidance Directive” or «ATAD 1 » published o...

Read more

Lastest articles by Mr. Jérôme Guillot

LexGO Network