Unlawful dividends.

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Ziggy2024

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Jul 26, 2024
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Are there any accountants out there who would be prepared to provide a statement (paid for of course) regarding unlawful shareholder dividends and how HMRC might handle the matter . It doesnt involve insolvency .
For what purpose? Who are they preparing the statement for?

If the dividends are unlawful then they would be repayable to the company so a loan. HMRC can't really argue anything else.
 
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Daybooks

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  • Sep 29, 2017
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    The director(s) of the company will be able to do this as they would have needed to follow the procedures required. These are (for interim): establish the distributable reserves; determine the total amount to be distributed; calculate the dividend per share; hold a board meeting and prepare minutes approving payment; then make payment to the shareholders and prepare dividend vouchers.

    Establishing the distributable reserves normally require a set of contemporaneous ( management ) accounts proving that there are sufficient reserves after providing for taxes.

    Thus it is really a matter of fact. Directors have a fiduciary and statutory duties under the Companies Act 2006, not to authorise unlawful dividends. S487 Companies Act 2006 gives the consequences. HMRC have to abide by the law too. To the extent that any payment is to be returned then there may be tax consequences until done so.
     
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    Ziggy2024

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    Jul 26, 2024
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    The director(s) of the company will be able to do this as they would have needed to follow the procedures required. These are (for interim): establish the distributable reserves; determine the total amount to be distributed; calculate the dividend per share; hold a board meeting and prepare minutes approving payment; then make payment to the shareholders and prepare dividend vouchers.

    Establishing the distributable reserves normally require a set of contemporaneous ( management ) accounts proving that there are sufficient reserves after providing for taxes.
    To be pedantic, if the correct procedures are followed then the dividend is not unlawful.
    Thus it is really a matter of fact. Directors have a fiduciary and statutory duties under the Companies Act 2006, not to authorise unlawful dividends. S487 Companies Act 2006 gives the consequences. HMRC have to abide by the law too. To the extent that any payment is to be returned then there may be tax consequences until done so.
    I checked the section you refer to and I think you mean S847 rather than S487?
     
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    Daybooks

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    To be pedantic, if the correct procedures are followed then the dividend is not unlawful.

    I checked the section you refer to and I think you mean S847 rather than S487?
    There would be a presumption that establishing the distributable reserves proved there were indeed sufficient reserves and this was done in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Policies; otherwise it could render them unlawful none the less. Thanks for correcting my typo to the Section reference.
     
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    OldSmokey

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    Aug 29, 2023
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    Thanks for the info so far guys. The company has profits to support the dividend .
    Problem is they didnt pass a resolution for the dividend at board meetings , no consultation or vote of acceptance from shareholders, and no dividend voucher .
    Shareholders were told in advance they would receive a dividend and the letter that came with the payment stated shareholder dividend .

    As I understand it , HMRC could class the payment as a salary . If it was classed as a directors loan , it over the 9 month period for repayment .

    For what its worth the company has now got a £70K tax bill due to them undervaluing
    assets for several years .

    One of our committee pointed out to directors that there could be problems over dividend payments. The responce was that those rules only applied to listed trading companys and anyway the payment was for services not a dividend !
     
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    Lisa Thomas

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    I rarely come across companies which have raised board minutes, passed resolutions, and dividend vouchers.
     
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    Did everyone agree to the dividend and they then got it?
     
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    Bobbo

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    Jul 7, 2020
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    For what its worth the company has now got a £70K tax bill due to them undervaluing
    assets for several years .

    What assets were "undervalued"?

    anyway the payment was for services not a dividend !

    So the payments you were concerned were unlawful dividends are in fact not dividends at all???
     
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    MyAccountantOnline

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    Sep 24, 2008
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    Are there any accountants out there who would be prepared to provide a statement (paid for of course) regarding unlawful shareholder dividends and how HMRC might handle the matter . It doesnt involve insolvency .

    Who is the statement needed for?

    I think you'll struggle to find any accountants who will do that as a one-off due to the amount of admin which has to be dealt with when taking on a new client.
     
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    Ziggy2024

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    Jul 26, 2024
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    Thanks for the info so far guys. The company has profits to support the dividend .
    Problem is they didnt pass a resolution for the dividend at board meetings , no consultation or vote of acceptance from shareholders, and no dividend voucher .
    Shareholders were told in advance they would receive a dividend and the letter that came with the payment stated shareholder dividend .
    On the face of it then there is no unlawful dividend.
    As I understand it , HMRC could class the payment as a salary . If it was classed as a directors loan , it over the 9 month period for repayment .
    HMRC (nor the company) can't arbitrarily decide what a payment is. What you have said so far does not, in any way, suggest salary
    For what its worth the company has now got a £70K tax bill due to them undervaluing
    assets for several years .
    OK, so surely you have an increase in your assets to offset this?
    One of our committee pointed out to directors that there could be problems over dividend payments. The responce was that those rules only applied to listed trading companys and anyway the payment was for services not a dividend !
    Seems like there is some confusion here so the first step is establishing facts. If the payments were called dividends then I would assume that's what they are until proven otherwise.
     
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