MEETING HIGH REVENUE TARGETS; A TALE OF NOTHINGNESS AND THE GRA’S RUSH FOR FOOL’S GOLD Bobby Banson, Esq., MCIArb
- Sep 10, 2018
- 0 Comments
- INTRODUCTION
- ACCESS TO INFORMATION AND ASSETS
- For the purpose of a tax law, the Commissioner–General shall for reasonable cause, have without prior notice, full and free access to premises, documents or assets
- Every person has the right to own property either alone or in association with others.
- No person shall be subjected to interference with the privacy of his home, property, correspondence or communication except in accordance with law and as may be necessary in a free and democratic society for public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the protection of health or morals, for the prevention of disorder or crime or for the protection of the rights or freedoms of others.
- POWER OF SEARCH, SEIZURE OR ARREST
- Where a tax officer has reason to believe that a person
- has committed an offence under a tax law,
- will abscond before the person is prosecuted for an offence under a tax law, or
- will destroy, tamper with or otherwise dispose of evidence of an offence under a tax law,
- Where the magistrate is satisfied that there is a serious risk to the collection of tax or the administration of justice, the magistrate may make an order authorising the tax officer, with the assistance of the police, to
- enter a premises or place and distrain assets that may reasonably provide evidence that an offence has been committed under a tax law;
- distrain and search a premises, place, vehicle or other asset on or in which the tax officer believes on reasonable grounds that there is evidence of an offence under a tax law;
- interrogate and search or cause to be interrogated and searched a person who the tax officer believes on reasonable grounds has committed an offence under a tax law or is in possession of assets mentioned in paragraph (a);
- arrest a person who the tax officer believes on reasonable grounds has committed an offence under a tax law; or
- use reasonable force for the purpose of the preceding paragraphs including by way of breaking into a premises, place or asset that may reasonably contain evidence referred to in paragraph (a).
- Unlike section 33, any officer of the GRA can invoke section 88.
- Whereas Section 88 can be invoked upon an application to a Magistrate, section 33 can be invoked without the assistance of a court.
- SEIZURE OF VEHICLE BY CUSTOMS
- A vehicle licensing authority established under an enactment shall not register a motor vehicle unless the applicant produces to the vehicle licensing authority the customs entry and other related customs documents.
- The Commissioner-General shall issue a Certificate of Payment of Duties and any other document as specified by the Commissioner-General to a person who purchases a motor vehicle at an auction sale under the Act, for the purpose of registration of that motor vehicle.
- A person shall no import a right-handed steering motor vehicle into the country unless approved by the Minister
- Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Commissioner-General shall seize a prohibited motor vehicle imported into the country and the motor vehicle shall be forfeited to the state.
- A conveyance used in the importation, attempted importation, landing, removal ,movement, exportation or attempted exportation of un-customed , forfeited, prohibited or restricted goods is liable to forfeiture to the State
- Where goods are forfeited or become liable to forfeiture under this Act, a person who is involved in the act or omission that renders the goods forfeited or liable to forfeiture shall incur the penalty provided by law in respect of the act or omission or, where no penalty is provided shall incur a penalty in a sum equal to two hundred percent the duty payable on the goods seized or forfeited.
- SUPERVISORY JURISDICTION OF THE HIGH COURT
-
- Where a person alleges that a provision of this Constitution on the fundamental human rights and freedoms has been, or is being or is likely to be contravened in relation to him, then, without prejudice to any other action that is lawfully available, that person may apply to the High Court for redress.
- The High Court may, under clause (1) of this article, issue such directions or orders or writs including rites or orders in the nature of herbs as corpus, certiorari, mandamus, prohibition, and quo warranto as it may consider appropriate for the purposes of enforcing or securing the enforcement of any of the provisions on the fundamental human rights and freedoms to the protection of which the person concerned is entitled .Order 55 Rule 1(a) of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2004 (C.I. 47) also provides for the means by which an applicant can invoke the review jurisdiction of the High Court as enshrined in the 1992 constitution.
- CONCLUSION
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