Goods and Services
Tax (Jersey) Law 2007
A LAW for an indirect tax on goods
and services.
Commencement [see endnotes]
PART 1
PRELIMINARY
1 Interpretation[1]
In this Law, unless the
context otherwise requires –
“approved”
means, in relation to something, approved by the Comptroller in a general
direction;
“authorized person”
means an officer within the meaning of Article 3 of the Revenue
Administration (Jersey) Law 2019;
“belong” has,
in relation to a country and a supplier or recipient of services, the meaning
set out in Article 4;
“business” has
the meaning set out in Article 2;
“Comptroller”
means the Comptroller of Revenue under the Revenue
Administration (Jersey) Law 2019;
“connected” shall
be construed, in relation to a person, in accordance with Article 3;
“direction”
means a direction given under this Law or the Regulations by the Comptroller,
and includes a general direction;
“document”
includes a deed, writing and a record;
“establishment”
means business establishment or fixed establishment;
“exempt
supply” means a supply specified as an exempt supply in Schedule 5;
“function”
includes power, authority and duty;
“gaming
machine” has the same meaning as in the Gambling (Gaming and Lotteries)
(Jersey) Regulations 1965;
“general direction”
means a direction given under this Law or the Regulations by the Comptroller to
the public or a section of the public or a group of persons;
“GST” means the
goods and services tax under this Law;
“GST credit” means
an amount payable by the Comptroller as a GST credit under Article 34(3)
or (4);
“GST invoice” means
an invoice issued as referred to in Article 42(1);
“GST
principal” means a person who, under Article 14, appoints a second
person as a GST representative to act on the first person’s behalf in relation
to GST;
“GST representative”
means a person appointed under Article 14;
“input tax”
has the meaning set out in Article 33;
“land” means
any corporeal hereditament, including a building, and land covered with water,
and also includes any interest in land or water and servitudes or rights in, on
or over land or water;
“money”
includes sterling and other currencies and money’s worth in sterling and
other currencies;
“online
marketplace” has the meaning given by Article 21B;
“open-market
value” means, in relation to a supply of goods or services, or to goods
that are imported, the amount (together with the GST chargeable on the supply
or the importation) that would be payable for the supply or the goods if the
supply or importation were for such a consideration in money as would be
payable, for the supply or the importation, by a person standing in no such
relationship with any person as would affect that consideration;
“operator”, in
relation to an online marketplace, has the meaning given by Article 21B;
“output tax”
has the meaning set out in Article 33;
“penalty tax”
means penalty tax imposed under Part 14;
“prescribed
accounting period” means an accounting period referred to in Article 40(2);
“quarter”
means a period of 3 months ending at the end of March, June, September or
December;
“record”
includes an account, and other information, recorded in any form, whether or
not legible to the naked eye;
“recipient”
means, in relation to a supply, the person to whom the supply is made;
“register”,
whether as verb or noun, means register under Part 3;
“registered
person” means a person registered under Part 3;
“Regulations”
means Regulations made under this Law;
“service” does
not include a service rendered to an employer under a contract of employment;
“supplier”
means, in relation to a supply, the person who makes the supply;
“supply” has
the meaning set out in Article 21;
“surcharge”
means a surcharge imposed under Part 14;
“taxable person”
means a person who is registered or liable to be registered;
“taxable supply”
means a supply other than an exempt supply;
“trade”
includes a trade, manufacture or venture, or a concern in the nature of trade;
“usual place of
residence”, in relation to a body corporate, shall be construed in
accordance with Article 5(1);
“zero-rated”
means, in relation to a supply of goods or services or to goods that are
imported, zero-rated for the purposes of Article 49.
2 Business
(1) For
the purposes of this Law “business” includes any trade, profession
or vocation.
(2) For
the purposes of this Law, the carrying on of a business includes the following
activities –
(a) the
provision by a club, association or organization (for a subscription or another
consideration) of facilities or advantages available to its members;
(b) the admission,
for a consideration, of persons to any premises.
(3) If
a club, association, organization or other body has objects that are in the
public domain and are of a political, religious, educational, philanthropic,
philosophical or patriotic nature, it shall not be taken for the purposes of
this Law to be carrying on a business only because its members subscribe to it,
if a subscription obtains no facility or advantage for the subscriber other
than the right to participate in its management or to receive reports on its
activities.[2]
(3A) If
an association is a trade union or professional association, it shall not be
taken for the purposes of this Law to be carrying on a business only because
its members subscribe to it, if a subscription obtains no facility or advantage
for the subscriber other than one or both of the following rights –
(a) the
right to participate in its management or to receive reports on its activities;
or
(b) the
right to receive professional literature that relates to the relevant trade or
profession.[3]
(4) If,
in the course of or furtherance of a business, a person accepts any office,
then the services supplied by the person for the performance of the functions
of that office shall be taken for the purposes of this Law to be supplied in
the course of or furtherance of the business.
(5) Anything
done in connection with the termination or intended termination of a business
shall be taken for the purposes of this Law to be done in the course of or
furtherance of the business.
(6) The
disposition (whether or not in connection with its reorganization or winding
up) of a business as a going concern, or of its assets or liabilities, shall be
taken for the purposes of this Law to be a supply in the course of or
furtherance of the business.
3 Connected
persons
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the question whether a person is connected with
another shall be determined in accordance with this Article.
(2) A
person is connected with an individual if that person is the individual’s
wife, husband or civil partner, or is a relative, or the wife, husband or civil
partner of a relative, of the individual or of the individual’s wife,
husband or civil partner.[4]
(3) A
person is connected with a person with whom the person is in partnership, and
with the wife, husband or civil partner or relative of any individual with whom
the person is in partnership.[5]
(4) A
company is connected with another company –
(a) if
the same person has control of both companies, or a person has control of one company
and persons connected with the person, or the person and persons connected with
the person, have control of the other company; or
(b) if a
group of 2 or more persons has control of each company, and the groups either
consist of the same persons or could be regarded as consisting of the same
persons by treating (in one or more cases) a member of either group as replaced
by a person with whom the member is connected.
(5) A
company is connected with another person if that person has control of it or if
that person and persons connected with that person together have control of it.
(6) In
this Article, “relative” means brother, sister, ancestor or
descendant.
4 Where
a supplier or recipient belongs[6]
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, a person who supplies goods or services shall be
treated as belonging in a country if –
(a) the person
has an establishment there and no fixed establishment elsewhere in the world;
(b) the person
has no establishment anywhere in the world but the person’s usual place
of residence is in the country; or
(c) the person
has establishments both in that country and elsewhere in the world and the person’s
establishment that is most directly concerned with the supply of the goods or
services is in the country.[7]
(2) If
a supply of services is made to an individual and received by the individual
otherwise than for the purposes of any business carried on by the individual, the
individual shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as belonging in the
country in which the individual has his or her usual place of residence.
(3) If
a supply of services is made to a person who is not an individual, or the
supply is received for the purposes of a business carried on by the person, the
person shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as belonging in a country
if –
(a) the person
has an establishment there and no fixed establishment elsewhere in the world;
(b) the person
has no establishment anywhere in the world but the person’s usual place
of residence is in the country; or
(c) the person
has establishments both in that country and elsewhere in the world and the
person’s establishment at which, or for the purposes of which, the
services supplied to the person are most directly used or to be used is in that
country.
5 Residence,
branch and country
(1) For
the purposes of this Law –
(a) the
usual place of residence of a body corporate or of any other person that is not
an individual is the place where its business is managed and controlled;[8]
(b) a
person carrying on a business through a branch or agency in a country shall be
treated as having an establishment there.
(2) For
the purposes of this Law, Jersey shall be taken to be a country.
(3) The
States may by Regulations amend paragraph (2).
PART 2
IMPOSITION OF GST
6 Charge
to GST
(1) GST
shall be charged –
(a) on
the supply of goods or services in Jersey, if the supply is a taxable supply
made by a taxable person in the course or furtherance of any business carried
on by the person;
(b) on
the importation into Jersey of goods from outside Jersey; and
(c) to
the extent specified in Article 30, on the supply of a service outside
Jersey if –
(i) the supply is a
taxable supply,
(ii) the
service is specified in Schedule 3,
(iii) the
recipient belongs in Jersey, and
(iv) the
service is performed in connection with a person, place or thing in Jersey, or
is taken to be so performed.
(1A) Paragraph (1)(b)
does not apply in relation to the importation into Jersey of goods from outside
Jersey if –
(a) the
goods are treated as supplied in Jersey by reason of Article 23(3)(a); and
(b) the
supply of the goods is a taxable supply made by a taxable person,
(and accordingly
paragraph (1)(a) applies instead).[9]
(2) GST
on the importation of goods shall be charged and payable as if it were customs
duty on the goods under the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999.
(3) The
States may by Regulations specify, for the purposes of paragraph (1)(c)(iv),
circumstances in which services are to be taken, or not to be taken, to be
performed in connection with a person, place or thing in Jersey.
(4) Despite
paragraph (1), the disposition (whether or not in connection with its
reorganization or winding up) of a business as a going concern shall not be
chargeable to GST if, at the time when the disposition takes effect, the party
whose business is disposed of and the party to whom the business is disposed of
are both registered persons.[10]
(5) However,
paragraph (4) shall not apply to the disposition of any liabilities or
fixed assets of a business otherwise than as part of the disposition of the
business as a going concern.[11]
7 Liability
for GST
(1) GST
on a supply of goods or services shall be a liability of the supplier and
becomes due at the time of the supply.
(2) GST
on an importation of goods shall be a liability of the person who imports them.
8 The
general rate of GST
(1) GST
shall be charged at the rate of 5%.[12]
(2) GST
shall be charged –
(a) on
the supply of goods or services, by reference to the value of the supply;
(b) on
the importation of goods, by reference to the value of the goods.
(3) The
States may amend paragraph (1) by Regulations.
(4) The
power in paragraph (3) shall not be exercised before the third anniversary
of the day on which paragraph (1) comes into force.
PART 3
REGISTRATION and
responsibility under law
9 Requirement
to register and registration procedure
(1) Schedule 1
shall have effect.
(2) The
Comptroller shall maintain a register of registrations and of exemptions from
registration.
(3) The
Comptroller shall from time to time make the changes necessary to keep the
register up to date.
10 Partnerships,
whether registered or not
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, all the members of a partnership shall be taken to
have supplied any goods or services supplied by one or more partners in the
partnership.
(2) A
direction, or notice, given to or served on a member of partnership in
accordance with this Law shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as given
to or served on all the members of the partnership.
(3) If
a person ceases to be a member of a partnership during a prescribed accounting
period, a direction, or notice, that –
(a) is
given to or served on any member of the partnership in accordance with this
Law; and
(b) relates
to, or to any matter arising in, that period or any earlier period during the
whole or part of which the person was a member of the partnership,
shall for the purposes of
this Law be taken to have been served on the person as well as the members of
the partnership.
(4) If
a person is a member of a partnership during part only of a prescribed
accounting period, the person’s liability for GST on the supply, by one
or more members of the partnership, of goods and services during the prescribed
accounting period shall, for the purposes of this Law, be such proportion of
the total liability as may be just and equitable.
(5) The
treatment under Article 11 of a partnership as a person shall not affect
the operation of this Article.
(6) In
this Article, “partnership” includes a limited partnership but not
a limited liability partnership.
11 Partnership
treated as person
(1) The
Comptroller may, on application by a member of a partnership, decide to treat
the partnership for the purposes of this Law as if it were a person.
(2) The
Comptroller shall serve notice of that decision on the applicant.
(3) On
and from service of the notice, or on and from such later date as is specified
instead in the notice, the partnership shall be treated for the purposes of
this Law as if it were a person and references in this Law to taxable supplies
shall, where appropriate, include the taxable supplies made by all the members
of the partnership, as if the supplies were made by the partnership.
(4) If
by virtue of this Article a partnership is registered as if it were a person, a
direction, or notice, addressed to the partnership by the name in which it is
registered, and given or served in accordance with this Law to or on any member
of the partnership, shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as given to
or served on the partnership and given to or served on the members of the
partnership.
(5) Each
member of the partnership shall be under an obligation to comply with the
direction or notice, and with any other requirement of or under this Law that
applies to the partnership, as if the member were the same person as the
partnership.
(6) If
the direction, notice or requirement is not complied with, each member of the
partnership shall be guilty of the same offence, and liable to the same penalty,
as the partnership.
(7) If
the direction, notice, or requirement, is complied with in relation to the
partnership, all the members of the partnership shall be taken to have complied
with the direction, notice, or requirement.
(8) A
person who is a member of a partnership at any time while the partnership is
registered shall for the purposes of this Law be regarded as continuing to be a
member of the partnership until notice that the person has ceased to be a
member is served on the Comptroller.
(9) In
this Article, “partnership” includes a limited partnership, but not
a limited liability partnership.
12 Registration
in name of association
(1) The
Comptroller may, on application on behalf of an unincorporated association,
decide to treat the association for the purposes of this Law as if it were a
person.
(2) The
Comptroller shall serve notice of that decision on the applicant.
(3) The
Comptroller may by general direction specify that unincorporated associations
of a specified class are to be treated as persons for the purposes of this Law.
(4) On
and from –
(a) service
of the notice or the giving of the general direction; or
(b) such
later date as is specified instead in the notice or general direction,
an unincorporated
association referred to in the notice, or that is of a class specified in the
general direction, shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as if it were
a person.
(5) No
account shall then be taken for the purposes of this Law of any change from
time to time in the membership of the association.
(6) References
in this Law to taxable supplies shall then, where appropriate, include the
taxable supplies made in the name of the association, as if the supplies were
made by the association.
(7) If
by virtue of this Article an association is registered as if it were a person,
a direction, or notice, addressed to the association by the name in which it is
so registered, and given or served in accordance with this Law to or on a
director, manager, secretary, or other similar officer, of the association,
shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as given to or served on each
director, manager, secretary, and other similar officer, of the association.
(8) Each
director, manager, secretary, and other similar officer, of the association
shall be under an obligation to comply with any such direction or notice, and
with any other requirement of or under this Law that applies to the
association, as if he or she were the same person as the association.
(9) If
the direction, notice or requirement is not complied with, each director,
manager, secretary, and other similar officer, of the association shall be
guilty of the same offence, and liable to the same penalty, as the association.
(10) If
the direction, notice, or requirement, is complied with in relation to the
association, each director, manager, secretary, and other similar officer, of
the association shall be taken to have complied with the direction, notice, or
requirement, in relation to the association.
(11) If
the affairs of an association treated as a person for the purposes of this Law
are managed by its members, paragraphs (7) to (10) shall apply in relation
to a member in connection with the member’s functions of management as if
the member were a director of the association.
13 Agents
for non-taxable principals
(1) If
goods are imported by a taxable person who –
(a) supplies
them as agent for a principal who is not a taxable person; and
(b) acts
in relation to the supply in his or her own name,
the goods shall be treated
as both imported and supplied by the taxable person as principal.
(2) If
services are supplied through an agent who acts in his or her own name in
relation to the supply, the Comptroller may, but is not required to, treat the
supply both as a supply to the agent and as a supply by the agent.
14 Appointment
of GST representatives
(1) The
Comptroller may by direction require a person to ensure that the person has, at
any time while the direction is in force, a GST representative, if –
(a) the
person is not an individual, is a taxable person or makes taxable supplies, and
does not have a business establishment or other fixed establishment in Jersey;
or
(b) the
person is an individual, is a taxable person or makes taxable supplies, does
not have a business establishment or other fixed establishment in Jersey, and
does not have his or her usual place of residence in Jersey.
(2) In
the absence of such a direction, but with the agreement of the Comptroller, a
person who satisfies the condition set out in sub-paragraph (a) or (b) of
paragraph (1) may appoint a GST representative from time to time while the
agreement is in force.
(3) A
person’s appointment as a GST representative, or a person’s ceasing
to be a GST representative, shall not take effect until the time when, on
application by or on behalf of the person, the Comptroller records the
appointment or cessation in the register, or from such other time instead as
the Comptroller may specify by direction.
(4) A
person who is the subject of a direction under paragraph (1) and who does
not take reasonable steps to ensure that the person has, at any time while the
direction is in force, a GST representative shall be guilty of an offence and
liable to a fine of level 3 on the standard scale.[13]
(5) If
a person fails to comply with a direction under paragraph (1), the
Comptroller may by direction require the person to give such security, or
further security, as the Comptroller thinks appropriate for the payment of any
GST that is or may become due from the person.
15 Functions
of GST representative
(1) While
a direction or agreement is in force under Article 14, any obligation,
duty or liability imposed by or under this Law on a person shall, if the person
has a GST representative, be imposed jointly and severally on the GST
representative and the person.
(2) A
GST representative, subject to any conditions that the Comptroller imposes in a
direction under Article 14(1) or any conditions contained in an agreement under
Article 14(2) –
(a) may
act on his or her GST principal’s behalf for any of the purposes of this
Law;
(b) shall
secure the GST principal’s compliance with any obligation, and discharge of
any duty or liability, under any provision of or under this Law, including,
where appropriate, by acting as referred to in sub-paragraph (a);
(c) shall
be personally liable in respect of anything that he or she does on the GST principal’s
behalf for any of the purposes of this Law;
(d) shall
be personally liable in respect of his or her failure to secure the compliance
or discharge referred to in sub-paragraph (b); and
(e) shall
have such other powers, duties, and liabilities, as the States may prescribe by
Regulations.
(3) A
GST representative shall not because of paragraph (2) be guilty of an
offence against a provision of or under this Law except in so far
as –
(a) the
offence is committed by his or her GST principal and the GST representative has
consented to, or connived in, the commission of an offence;
(b) the
offence is committed by his or her GST principal and the commission of the
offence by the GST principal is attributable to any neglect on the part of the
GST representative; or
(c) the
offence consists in a failure by the GST representative to comply with an
obligation, or a failure by the GST representative to discharge a duty or
liability, being an obligation, duty, or liability, that, by virtue of paragraph (1),
is imposed both on the GST representative and the GST principal.
16 Business
temporarily run by representative
(1) This
Article applies where a person carries on a business, without being registered,
for or on behalf of a second person who –
(a) in
the case of an individual, has died, is bankrupt or is incapable of managing
his or her own affairs; or
(b) in the
case of a body corporate, is bankrupt or is in receivership or under
administration.
(2) The
first person shall give notice to the Comptroller that the person is carrying
on the business for or on behalf of the second person.
(3) If
the Comptroller sees fit, he or she may give a direction that the first person
shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as the registered person.
(4) If
the Comptroller so specifies by direction, the first person shall be taken to
be a registered person for those purposes during such period as the Comptroller
specifies in the direction.
(5) If,
by virtue of a declaration made in accordance with the Bankruptcy
(Désastre) (Jersey) Law 1990, the property of a person who is
carrying on a business is vested in the Viscount –
(a) the
property shall, for the purposes of this Law, be taken to remain the property
of the person until sold by or on behalf of the Viscount;
(b) the
Viscount shall be taken to have given notice under paragraph (2); and
(c) the
Viscount shall be taken to be a registered person in respect of the business
until the Viscount has discharged his or her duties in respect of the property
of the person under the Bankruptcy
(Désastre) (Jersey) Law 1990.
(6) The
States may by Regulations make provision for a person to be treated as
registered temporarily if the person carries on a business, without being
registered, for or on behalf of a second person who –
(a) in
the case of an individual, has died, is bankrupt or is incapable of managing
his or her own affairs; or
(b) in
the case of a body corporate, is bankrupt or is in receivership or under
administration.
(7) Those
Regulations may modify the provisions of this Law in their application to the
first or second person so as to secure continuity in the application of this
Law to the business.
17 Transfer
of a going concern
(1) If
a business carried on by a taxable person is transferred to another person as a
going concern, then for the purpose of determining whether the transferee is a
taxable person, the transferee shall be taken to have carried on the business
before (as well as after) the transfer.
(2) If
a business carried on by a taxable person is transferred to another person as a
going concern –
(a) the
taxable person shall hand over to the transferee any accounts and records
relating to the business that were required to be kept under Article 40
immediately before the transfer;
(b) the
transferee shall keep those accounts and records; and
(c) the
transferor shall no longer be required to keep those accounts and records.
(3) Paragraph (2)
shall not apply if the Comptroller, on application by the transferor, by direction
otherwise specifies.
(4) If
such a direction is made, the requirement under Article 40 that the
taxable person (whose business is transferred) keep the accounts and records
shall be unaffected by the transfer.
(5) The
States may by Regulations make provision for securing continuity in the
application of this Law in cases where a business carried on by a taxable
person is transferred to another person as a going concern.
(6) If
a business carried on by a taxable person is transferred to another person as a
going concern and both the transferor and the transferee are registered
persons, then except to the extent that the States by Regulations otherwise
provide –
(a) if
the transferor and the transferee so agree, and so notify the Comptroller, any
obligation, duty, or liability, under a provision of this Law or the
Regulations (other than any liability for a penalty tax or surcharge or any
criminal liability), of the transferor shall become an obligation, duty, or
liability, of the transferee; and
(b) any right
of either the transferor or the transferee to repayment or credit in respect of
GST may be satisfied by repayment or credit to the other.[14]
PART 4
Public sector
18 Interpretation
In this Part –
“parish” means
any of the 12 parishes of Jersey;
“States”,
except in relation to the power of the States to make Regulations, means the
States as an administration, and includes any Minister, department or
administration of the States.
19 Application
to the States of Jersey
(1) This
Law shall not apply to the supply of goods or services by the States, being a
supply that is not in the course of or furtherance of a business.[15]
(2) For
the purposes of this Law –
(a) the
States are liable to be registered and the Comptroller shall register them;
(b) the
States shall be registered as one person;
(c) the
States however shall be a taxable person only to the extent that the States
prescribe by Regulations;
(d) a
Minister, department, or administration, of the States shall be taken to be the
same person as the States; and
(e) the
States shall keep the same accounts and records, and provide to the Comptroller
the same information, as a taxable person.
20 Regulations
about treatment of public sector
The States may by
Regulations –
(a) prescribe
that a person shall be treated as the States, or as a parish, for the purposes
of this Law, whether or not the person has any connection with the States or a
parish;
(b) prescribe
the extent of that treatment;
(c) prescribe
the extent to which a parish is to be treated as a taxable person for the
purposes of this Law;
(d) require
a parish to be registered whether or not it is a taxable person for the
purposes of this Law;
(e) prescribe
that a supply shall be treated as a supply to or by the States, or to or by a
parish, for the purposes of this Law;
(f) modify
the operation of this Law in relation to the States or a parish;
(g) prescribe
exemptions from the operation of this Law in relation to the States or a
parish;
(h) make
provision for enabling or requiring the remission or refund of GST payable by
the States or a parish, or the giving of relief from GST so payable, in such
circumstances as the Regulations prescribe;
(i) make
provision for the exemption, zero-rating, or other treatment, of supplies of
goods or services by the States or by a parish, or the zero-rating, or other
treatment, of importations of goods by the States or by a parish; or
(j) generally
make provision for or with respect to the treatment, for the purposes of this
Law, of the States or a parish.
PART 5
SUPPLY
21 Meaning
of supply
(1) Subject
to this Article, for the purposes of this Law –
(a) “supply”
includes all forms of supply, but not anything done otherwise than for a
consideration;
(b) any
supply that is not a supply of goods is a supply of services.
(2) Subject
to this Article, for the purposes of this Law –
(a) a
supply of goods includes anything that is specified in Schedule 2 as a
supply of goods;
(b) a
supply of services includes anything that is specified in Schedule 2 as a
supply of services.
(3) A
transaction shall be treated for the purposes of this Law –
(a) as a
supply of goods and not as a supply of services;
(b) as a
supply of services and not as a supply of goods; or
(c) as not
a supply,
if the States by
Regulations so provide.
(4) The
States may by Regulations provide that the supply of specified services shall
be treated for the purposes of this Law as a supply by a person in the course
or furtherance of a business carried on by the person, despite the lack of a
consideration for that supply.
(5) In
particular, the States may by Regulations provide that anything done not for a
consideration shall be treated for the purposes of this Law as both a supply of
services to a person for the purpose of a business carried on by the person and
a supply by the same person in the course or furtherance of the business if the
thing –
(a) is
done by the person in the course or furtherance of the business and for the
purpose of that business; and
(b) would
be a supply of services if the thing were done for a consideration.
(6) The
States may by Regulations provide that goods shall be treated for the purposes
of this Law as both supplied to a person for the purpose of a business carried
on by the person, and supplied by the same person in the course or furtherance
of the business, if –
(a) the
person takes possession of the goods or produces them in the course or
furtherance of the business;
(b) the
goods are not supplied to another person and not incorporated in other goods
produced in the course or furtherance of the business; and
(c) the
goods are used by the person for the purposes of the business.
(7) For
the purposes of paragraph (6), if goods are manufactured or produced from
any other goods, those other goods shall be treated as incorporated in the
first-mentioned goods.
21A Supplies of goods
facilitated by online marketplaces: deemed supply[16]
(1) This
Article applies where –
(a) a person (“P”) supplies goods in the
course or furtherance of a business to an individual (“R”) at
an address in Jersey;
(b) that
supply is facilitated by an online marketplace; and
(c) the
supply of goods to R involves those goods being imported.
(2) For
the purposes of this Law, the operator of the online marketplace (and not P)
is to be treated as having supplied the goods to R in the course or
furtherance of a business carried on by the operator.
21B Meaning of
“online marketplace” and “operator”[17]
(1) In this Law, “online marketplace” means a
website, or any other means by which information is made available over the
internet, which facilitates the sale of goods through the website or other
means by persons other than the operator (whether or not the operator also sells
goods through the marketplace).
(2) For
the purposes of paragraph (1), an online marketplace facilitates the sale
of goods if it allows a person to –
(a) offer
goods for sale; and
(b) enter
into a contract for the sale of goods.
(3) In
this Law, “operator”, in relation to an online marketplace, means
the person who controls access to, and the contents of, the online marketplace
provided that the person is involved in –
(a) determining
any terms or conditions applicable to the sale of goods;
(b) processing,
or facilitating the processing, of payment for the goods; and
(c) the
ordering or delivery, or facilitating the ordering or delivery, of the goods.
(4) The
States may by Regulations amend this Article so as to alter the meaning of
“online marketplace” or “operator”.
PART 6
PLACE OF SUPPLY
22 Effect
of Part 6
This Part shall determine,
for the purposes of this Law, whether goods or services are supplied in Jersey.
23 Where
goods supplied
(1) If
the supply of goods does not involve the removal of the goods from or to
Jersey, they shall be treated –
(a) as
supplied in Jersey if they are in Jersey at the time of the supply; or
(b) as
supplied outside Jersey if they are outside Jersey at the time of the supply.
(2) If
the supply of goods involves their removal from Jersey, they shall be treated
as supplied in Jersey.
(3) If
the supply of goods involves their removal to Jersey –
(a) the
goods are treated as supplied in Jersey if Condition A, Condition B
or Condition C is met; and
(b) in
any other case, the goods are treated as supplied outside Jersey.[18]
(3A) Condition A
is met if –
(a) the
goods are supplied by a person (“P”) in the course or
furtherance of a business;
(b) P belongs
in a country other than Jersey; and
(c) the
goods are supplied directly to an individual at an address in Jersey.[19]
(3B) Condition B
is met if –
(a) Condition A
applies to P; and
(b) P supplies
goods directly to a person or business in Jersey that is registered or liable
to be registered for GST.[20]
(3C) Condition C
is met if the supply is treated, under Article 21A, as being made by the
operator of an online marketplace.[21]
(4) For
the purposes of this Article, if goods, in the course of their removal from a
place in Jersey to another place in Jersey, leave and re-enter Jersey the
removal shall not be treated as a removal from or to Jersey.
(5) The
States may by Regulations prescribe exceptions to this Article.
24 Where
service supplied
(1) Services
shall be treated as supplied –
(a) in
Jersey if the supplier belongs in Jersey;
(b) in a
country other than Jersey if the supplier belongs in a country other than
Jersey and does not belong in Jersey.
(2) The
States may by Regulations prescribe exceptions to this Article.
PART 7
time OF suPPLY
25 Effect
of Part 7
This Part shall determine,
for the purposes of this Law, the time when a supply takes place.
26 When
goods supplied
(1) A
supply of goods takes place –
(aa) if the goods are
treated as supplied in Jersey under Article 23(3)(a), at the time the sale
contract is entered into;
(a) in
any other case where the supply involves removal of the goods, at the time when
the goods are removed;
(b) if
the supply does not involve removal of the goods, at the time when the goods
are made available to the person to whom they are supplied.[22]
(2) Despite
paragraph (1), if goods are sent or taken on approval, on sale or return,
or on similar terms and are removed before it is known whether a supply will
take place, the supply of the goods takes place when it becomes certain that
the supply has taken place or, if sooner, 12 months after the day when the
removal occurred.
(3) In
paragraph (1)(aa), the reference to the “sale contract” is a
reference to the contract for the sale of the goods, entered into
between –
(a) the
person supplying the goods (where Condition A in Article 23(3A) or
Condition B in Article 23(3B) is met) or the operator of the online
marketplace (where Condition C in Article 23(3C) is met); and
(b) the
individual to whom the goods are supplied.[23]
27 When
service supplied
A supply of a service takes
place at the time when the service is performed.
28 Variations
on Articles 26 and 27
(1) If,
before the time specified in Article 26 or 27 in respect of a supply, the supplier
provides a GST invoice in respect of the supply, the supply shall, to the
extent that the supply is covered by the invoice, be treated as taking place at
the time when the invoice is issued, and not at the time specified in Article 26
or 27.
(1A) If –
(a) before
the time specified in Article 26 or 27 in respect of any one or more supplies,
the supplier provides a GST invoice in respect of the supplies; and
(b) on or
before the time or times of supply that would have applied to the supplies
under this Part there is a change in the GST chargeable on supplies of the
description to which the invoice relates,
the invoice shall cease to
be treated as a GST invoice in respect of any such supplies for which payments
are due after the change.[24]
(1B) However,
paragraph (1A) does not affect a GST invoice in respect of any supplies
for which payments are received before the change.[25]
(2) If,
before the time specified in Article 26(1) or 27 in respect of a supply,
the supplier receives a payment in respect of the supply, the supply shall, to
the extent covered by the payment, be treated as taking place at the time when
the payment is received, and not at the time specified in Article 26(1) or
27.
(3) However,
if paragraphs (1) and (2) both apply to a supply, the supply shall be
treated as taking place at the earlier of the times specified by those
paragraphs.
(3A) If,
within the same month (and same prescribed accounting period of the supplier)
as the time specified in Article 26 or 27 in respect of a supply, and at
or after the time specified in Article 26 or 27 in respect of the supply, the
supplier provides a GST invoice in respect of the supply, the supply shall, to
the extent that the supply is covered by the invoice, be treated as taking
place at midnight on the earlier of the following days –
(a) the
last day of that month;
(b) the
last day of the prescribed accounting period,
and not at the time
specified in Article 26 or 27.[26]
(4) If
the recipient of goods or services supplied by another person provides a
document to himself or herself, being a document that –
(a) purports
to be a GST invoice in respect of the supply of the goods or services to the
recipient by the supplier; and
(b) is in
accordance with this Law to be treated as the GST invoice to be provided by
that supplier,
a reference in paragraph (1)
to a GST invoice shall include that invoice.
(5) The
Comptroller may, on written application by a supplier, by direction specify that
despite this Article a supply shall be treated as taking place at a specified
time earlier than would otherwise apply, the time being specified by reference
to the occurrence of some event or by reference to the time when some event
would occur in the ordinary course of events.
(6) The
Comptroller may, on written application by a supplier, by direction specify
that a supply shall be treated as taking place, to the extent that neither paragraph (1)
nor (2) applies to the supply, at (according to the direction) the beginning,
or the end, of the relevant working period (as defined in respect of the
supplier in the direction).
29 Exceptions
(1) Despite
Articles 26 to 28, if goods are to be treated as supplied as referred to
in Regulations made under Article 21(6), the supply takes place when the
goods are appropriated to the use mentioned in that paragraph.
(2) Despite
Articles 26 to 28, if goods are supplied within the meaning of paragraph 8
of Schedule 2, the supply takes place when the goods are transferred as referred
to in that paragraph.
(3) Despite
Articles 26 to 28, if services are supplied within the meaning of
paragraph 8 of Schedule 2, the supply takes place when the relevant
goods are appropriated to the use referred to in that paragraph.
(4) The
States may by Regulations make provision with respect to the time at which (despite
this Part) a supply is to be treated as taking place in cases where it is –
(a) a
supply for a consideration the whole or part of which is determined or payable
periodically, or from time to time, or at the start or end of any period;
(b) a
supply of goods for a consideration the whole or part of which is determined or
payable at the time when the goods are appropriated for any use;
(c) a
supply of services by virtue of paragraph 8 of Schedule 2;
(d) a
supply of services referred to in Regulations made under Article 21; or
(e) a
supply of services referred to in Article 30.
(5) Regulations
under paragraph (4) may provide for goods or services to be treated as
separately and successively supplied at times, or intervals, prescribed by the
Regulations.
PART 8
Application of law to
services supplied outside jersey
30 Application
of Law to services supplied outside Jersey
(1) If
the conditions set out in clauses (i) to (iv) of Article 6(1)(c) are
met in relation to a service and its supply, then –
(a) in
the case where the recipient is a taxable person who receives the service –
(i) for the purposes
of any business carried on by the recipient, or
(ii) for
the purposes of any business carried on by a person connected with the
recipient,
this Law shall apply to
the supply and the recipient as if the supply had been made by the recipient as
supplier and in the course or furtherance of any business carried on by the
recipient; or
(b) in
any other case, this Law shall apply to the supply and the recipient to the
extent that the States may prescribe by Regulations.[27]
(2) For
the avoidance of doubt, it is declared that the value of something treated as a
supply by the recipient because of this Article (or Regulations made under this
Article) shall be taken into account as the value of a taxable supply in
deciding whether the recipient is liable to be registered.
(3) However,
in determining any allowance of input tax in the recipient’s case under Article 36,
a supply treated because of this Article (or Regulations made under this Article)
as a supply made by the recipient shall not be taken into account as a supply
made by the recipient.
(4) The
States may by Regulations amend this Article to make provision –
(a) for
the treatment of mixed supplies of goods and services; or
(b) for
supplies to be treated, in accordance with the provision, as supplies partly of
goods and partly of services or entirely of goods or entirely of services.
(5) The
States may by Regulations modify any provision of this Law (including this
Article) for the purposes of ensuring the application of the provision under
paragraph (1)(b).
PART 9
value
31 Value
of supply of goods or services
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the value of a supply of goods or services shall,
except as otherwise provided by or under Article 32 or any other provision
of this Law, be determined in accordance with this Article and with Schedule 4.[28]
(2) If
the supply is for a consideration in money, its value shall be such amount as,
with the addition of the GST chargeable, is equal to the consideration.
(3) If
the supply is for a consideration not consisting or not wholly consisting of money,
its value shall be such amount in money as, with the addition of the GST
chargeable, is equivalent to the consideration.
(4) If
a supply of any goods or services is not the only matter to which a
consideration in money relates, the supply shall be taken to be for such part
of the consideration as is properly attributable to it.
(5) The
States may by Regulations make provision for the evaluation of supplies of
goods and services (including supplies referred to in Article 21(4) or (5))
for the purposes of this Law, including by amending this Article or Schedule 4.
(6) The
Comptroller may, by general direction, make provision about the value of a
supply of goods or services, and such a direction, so far as it is not
inconsistent with this Law or the Regulations, shall be taken into account for
the purposes of this Law and the Regulations.[29]
32 Value
of goods imported or treated as supplied in Jersey under Article 23(3)(a)[30]
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the value of imported goods, or goods treated as
supplied in Jersey under Article 23(3)(a), shall be the sum of the
following –
(a) the
value of the goods determined under the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 as if they were goods subject to a duty under
that Law, whether or not the goods in question are in fact so subject;
(b) so
far as not already included under sub-paragraph (a), all taxes, duties and
other charges levied on the goods either outside or, by reason of importation,
within Jersey (except GST);
(c) all
costs by way of commission, packing, transport and insurance up to the port or
place of importation.[31]
(2) For
the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby declared that the taxes referred to in
paragraph (1)(b) include any value-added tax, or goods-and-services tax, levied
outside Jersey.
(3) The
States may by Regulations make provision for the evaluation of imported goods
for the purposes of this Law, including by amending this Article.
(4) The
Comptroller may, by general direction, make provision for the evaluation of
imported goods, and such a direction, so far as it is not inconsistent with
this Law or the Regulations, shall be taken into account for the purposes of
this Law and the Regulations.[32]
PART 10
PAYMENT OF GST BY TAXABLE
PERSONS
33 Input
tax and output tax
(1) In
this Law, a taxable person’s “input tax”, or “input
tax” in relation to a taxable person, means GST –
(a) on
the supply to the taxable person of goods, or services, used or to be used for
the purpose of any business carried on or to be carried on by the taxable
person; or
(b) paid
or payable by the taxable person on the importation of goods used or to be used
for the purpose of any business carried on or to be carried on by the taxable
person.
(2) In
this Law, a taxable person’s “output tax”, or “output
tax” in relation to a taxable person, means GST on supplies that the
taxable person makes.
34 Credits
for input tax against output tax
(1) A
taxable person is entitled at the end of each prescribed accounting period to
credit for so much of the person’s input tax as is allowable under
Article 36.
(2) The
person may deduct the credit from any output tax that is due at the end of the
prescribed accounting period from the person.
(3) If
no output tax is due at the end of the prescribed accounting period, the
Comptroller shall pay the credit as a GST credit to the taxable person.
(4) If
the credit at the end of the prescribed accounting period exceeds the output
tax at the end of the period the Comptroller shall pay the excess as a GST
credit to the taxable person.
35 Postponement
of GST credit
(1) Despite
Article 34(3) and (4), the Comptroller may –
(a) on
application, agree that the whole or any part of a GST credit be held over to
be credited in and for a subsequent prescribed accounting period in respect of
a person; or
(b) by
direction to a person, or by general direction, require that the whole or any
part of a GST credit be held over to be credited in and for a subsequent
prescribed accounting period in respect of the person to whom the direction (or
general direction) applies.
(2) If
a taxable person has failed to submit a return for a prescribed accounting
period as required by or under this Law, the Comptroller may withhold payment
of a GST credit due at the end of a subsequent prescribed accounting period
until the person has submitted the return.
(3) If
a taxable person has made –
(a) no
taxable supplies in the prescribed accounting period in relation to which the
Comptroller pays a GST credit, or
(b) no
taxable supplies in a previous prescribed accounting period,
the Comptroller may impose
on the payment of the GST credit such conditions as the Comptroller thinks fit,
including conditions requiring repayment of the GST credit in specified
circumstances.
36 Input
tax for purposes of Article 34
(1) The
amount of input tax for which a taxable person is entitled to credit at the end
of any prescribed accounting period shall be so much of the input tax for the
period (that is, input tax on supplies and importations in the period) as is
allowable by, or under directions of, the Comptroller as being attributable to
supplies specified in paragraph (2).
(2) Those
supplies are the following supplies made or to be made by the taxable person in
the course or furtherance of his or her business –
(a) taxable
supplies;
(b) supplies
of services outside Jersey that would be taxable supplies if made in Jersey;
(c) supplies
of services, being supplies to a person outside Jersey, or directly linked to
the export of goods from Jersey, and being exempt supplies (or supplies that
would be exempt supplies if made in Jersey but are specified by direction for
the purposes of this paragraph); or
(d) supplies
of intermediary services in relation to a supply that would come within sub-paragraph (c),
being exempt supplies (or supplies that would be exempt supplies if made in
Jersey but are specified by direction for the purposes of this paragraph).
(3) For
the purposes of this Article, the Comptroller may by direction make provision
for securing a fair and reasonable attribution of input tax to supplies
specified in paragraph (2), including, but not limited to, provision for –
(a) proportions
by reference to which input tax for any prescribed accounting period is to be
provisionally attributed to those supplies;
(b) adjusting
the provisional attribution of input tax among multiple prescribed accounting
periods or in cases where events prove provisional attributions to be wrong;
(c) disallowing
the attribution of input tax to a supply that a person makes to himself or
herself, or to a supply that, under any provision of this Law or the
Regulations, a person is taken to have made to himself or herself;
(d) the
use of estimates where the Comptroller is satisfied that an exact amount of
input tax cannot be calculated.
(4) The
States may by Regulations provide that any GST charged on any supply or
importation is to be excluded from credit referred to in Article 34(1).
(5) Those
Regulations may –
(a) be
expressed to apply in respect of any description of goods or services supplied
or of goods imported, in respect of the person by whom they are supplied or
imported or to whom they are supplied, in respect of the purposes for which
they are supplied or imported, or in respect of any other circumstances or
factors; and
(b) make
provision for consequential relief from output tax.
36A Input tax
disallowed where consideration for supply is not paid[33]
(1) Where –
(a) a
person has become entitled to credit for any input tax; and
(b) the
consideration in money for the supply to which that input tax relates, or any
part of it, is unpaid at the end of the period of 6 months following the
relevant date,
the person shall be taken,
as from the end of that period, not to have been entitled to credit for input
tax in respect of the GST that is referable to the unpaid consideration or
part.
(2) For
the purposes of paragraph (1), the ‘relevant date’ in relation
to any sum representing consideration in money for a supply is whichever is the
later of –
(a) the
date of the supply; and
(b) the
date on which the sum became payable.
(3) General
directions of the Comptroller may make such supplementary, incidental,
consequential or transitional provisions as appear to the Comptroller to be
necessary or expedient for the purposes of this Article.
(4) Directions
under paragraph (3) may, in particular –
(a) provide
for the restoration of the whole or any part of an entitlement to credit for
input tax where there is a payment after the end of the period described in
paragraph (1);
(b) contain
rules for ascertaining whether anything paid is to be taken as paid by way of
consideration in money for a particular supply; and
(c) contain
rules dealing with particular cases, such as cases involving payment of part of
the consideration in money or mutual debts.
37 Input
GST where change of status
The States may by
Regulations provide –
(a) for
a taxable person to count, as the person’s input tax, GST on a supply to
the person, or paid by the person on the importation of goods, even though the
person was not a taxable person at the time of the supply or importation;
(b) for
a taxable person that is a body corporate to count, as its input tax, GST –
(i) on
the supply or importation of goods before the body’s incorporation, being
supply or importation for appropriation to the body or its business, or
(ii) on
the supply of services before the body’s incorporation, being supply for
the body’s benefit or in connection with its incorporation; or
(c) in
the case of a person who has been, but is no longer, a taxable person, for the
person to be paid by the Comptroller the amount of any GST on a supply of
services made to the person for the purpose of any business carried on by the
person when the person was a taxable person.
38 Goods
imported for private purposes
(1) If
goods are imported by a taxable person and –
(a) at
the time of importation they belong wholly or partly to another person; and
(b) the
purposes for which they are to be used include purposes of the taxable person
that are not those of a business carried on by the taxable person or purposes
of the other person that are not those of a business carried on by the other
person,
the GST paid or payable by
the taxable person on the importation of the goods shall not be regarded as
input tax to be deducted or credited under Article 34.
(2) The
taxable person may however make a separate claim to the Comptroller for the repayment
of the GST paid or payable.
(3) The
Comptroller shall allow the claim if the Comptroller is satisfied that it is
necessary to avoid a double charge to GST, but only to the extent that it is so
necessary.
(4) In
considering the claim, the Comptroller may take into account the circumstances
of the importation and the things done with, or occurring in relation to, the
goods at any subsequent time.
(5) The
Comptroller shall pay to the taxable person the amount allowed by the
Comptroller on the claim.
39 Goods
or services for directors’ accommodation, or partly for business purposes
(1) If –
(a) goods
or services are supplied to a body corporate, or goods are imported by a body
corporate; and
(b) the
goods or services are used or are to be used in connection with the provision
of accommodation,
the goods or services
shall not be treated for the purposes of this Part as used or to be used for
the purposes of any business carried on or to be carried on by the body
corporate in the proportion that the accommodation is used or to be used for
domestic purposes by a director of the body corporate, or a person connected
with a director of the body corporate.
(2) In
paragraph (1), “director” means –
(a) in
relation to a body corporate whose affairs are managed by a board of directors
or similar body, a member of that board or similar body;
(b) in
relation to a body corporate whose affairs are managed by a single director or
similar person, that director or person; or
(c) in
relation to a body corporate whose affairs are managed by its members
themselves, a member of the body corporate.
(3) If
goods or services supplied to a taxable person, or goods imported by a taxable
person, are used or are to be used partly for the purposes of a business
carried on or to be carried on by the person and partly for other purposes, the
GST on supplies and importations shall be apportioned for the purposes of this
Part so that only so much as is referable to the business purposes is counted
as the person’s input tax.
39A Goods incorporated
in dwellings[34]
Input tax on the supply
or importation of goods shall be excluded from credit under Article 34
if –
(a) the
goods are not building materials;
(b) a
taxable person, constructing a building or effecting any works to a building,
incorporates the goods in any part of that building or its site; and
(c) that
person constructs the building or effects the works for the purpose of making a
supply falling within any one more of the following clauses of
paragraph 1(1) of Schedule 6 –
(i) clause (a),
but only where the supply is of a major interest (as defined in
paragraph 1A of that Schedule),
(ii) clause (c),
and
(iii) clause (d).
40 GST
accounts, returns and statements
(1) A
taxable person shall account for, and pay, GST in respect of supplies that he
or she makes.
(2) The
person shall do so by reference to accounting periods for which, or with
respect to which, provision is made under Article 41.
(3) A
taxable person shall keep accounts, and other records, in accordance with any
requirements for which, or with respect to which, provision is made under
Article 41.
(4) A
taxable person shall make returns and statements in accordance with any
requirements for which, or with respect to which, provision is made under Article 41.
(5) A
person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with this Article shall
be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on the standard scale.[35]
41 Substantiation
of amounts
(1) The
Comptroller may, by general direction, make provision for or with respect to
the following matters for the purposes of Article 40 and the other
provisions of this Part –
(a) accounting
periods;
(b) the
keeping of accounts and records;
(c) the
making of returns and statements;
(d) the use
of estimates of input tax where it is not practicable to provide precise
accounts of input tax;
(e) the use
of estimates of output tax where it is not practicable to provide precise
accounts of output tax.
(2) For
the purposes of this Part, GST on the supply of goods or services to a taxable
person or GST paid or payable by a taxable person on the importation of goods shall
be treated as the person’s input tax only to the extent that the relevant
charge to GST is substantiated as prescribed by Regulations.
(3) The
Comptroller may, as a condition of allowing or repaying any input tax to any
person, require the production to the Comptroller of such documents relating to
GST as are prescribed by Regulations.
42 GST
invoices
(1) A
registered person who supplies goods or services shall issue to the recipient
an invoice in respect of the supply, except to the extent that it is otherwise
provided under Article 43(1).[36]
(2) An
invoice is not an invoice for the purposes of paragraph (1) unless the invoice –
(a) states
the particulars of the supply that are required by any directions that apply to
the invoice or, in the absence of such directions, particulars of the supply
that allow the nature of the supply to be ascertained;
(b) names
the persons by and to whom the goods or services are supplied;
(c) indicates
whether GST is chargeable on the supply; and
(d) sets
out the particulars of the GST that are required by any directions that apply
to the invoice or, in the absence of such directions, particulars of the GST
that allow the amount of the GST to be ascertained.
(3) The
States may by Regulations make provision for or with respect to –
(a) the
treatment, as a GST invoice for the purposes of this Law, of a document issued
in respect of a supply of goods or services, being a document issued otherwise
than by the supplier; or
(b) matters
of time in respect of GST invoices (and other documents referred to in
sub-paragraph (a)), including the time when a GST invoice or other
document shall be issued for the purposes of this Law and the time when a GST
invoice or other document is taken to be issued for the purposes of this Law.
(4) A
person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with paragraph (1)
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on the
standard scale.[37]
43 Special
provision
(1) The
States may by Regulations make special provision for the purposes of this Law
for taxable supplies by retailers of goods or services, including in respect of
any of the following matters –
(a) the
determination of the value of their supplies in any period whether or not that
period coincides with a prescribed accounting period;
(b) the
treatment, as a prescribed accounting period, of a period that does not
coincide with a prescribed accounting period;
(c) the
proportion of the value of their supplies that is to be attributed to any
description of supplies;
(d) adjustments
in that value or that proportion;
(e) providing
that any or all of the requirements of Article 42 shall not apply in
respect of retail supplies of goods or services.[38]
(2) The
States may by Regulations make provision –
(a) for
GST in respect of a supply to be accounted for or paid by reference to the time
when a consideration for the supply is received or by reference to matters of
time concerning the relevant GST invoice;
(b) for
treating GST chargeable in one prescribed accounting period as chargeable in
another prescribed accounting period;
(c) with
respect to the making of entries in accounts for the purpose of making
adjustments, whether for the correction of errors or otherwise; or
(d) for
the making of financial adjustments in connection with the making of entries in
accounts for that purpose.
(3) The
Comptroller may, by general direction, make provision for or with respect to any
of the matters referred to in paragraph (1) or make provision as referred
to in paragraph (2).
(4) The
States may, to the extent necessary for the purposes of any provision made
under paragraph (1), (2) or (3), by Regulations modify any provision of
this Law relating to the time when GST is to be accounted for or paid, to the time
when a consideration for a supply is received, or to any other matter referred
to in that paragraph.
(5) The
States may by Regulations in cases where goods are treated as supplied by a
taxable person by virtue of paragraph 9 of Schedule 2 require GST
chargeable on the supply to be accounted for and paid, and particulars of the
GST to be provided, by such other person and in such manner as may be specified
by the Regulations.
44 Trivial
amounts
(1) If,
at the end of a prescribed accounting period, the amount of GST due from any
person or the amount of any GST credit of a person would be less than
£10, that amount shall be added to the amount of GST credit, or GST
debit, of the person in the next prescribed accounting period.[39]
(2) The
States may by Regulations replace the amount in paragraph (1) with one or
more amounts for all, one or several purposes of this Law.
45 Payments
on account of GST
(1) The
Comptroller may by direction require a taxable person to pay amounts on account
of any GST that the person may become liable to pay in respect of a prescribed
accounting period.
(2) A
person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with a direction under
paragraph (1) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of
level 3 on the standard scale.[40]
46 Security
for payment and evidence for input tax
(1) The
Comptroller may, if the Comptroller thinks it necessary for the protection of GST
revenue, by direction require, as a condition of allowing or paying any GST
credit, the giving of such security for the amount of the GST credit as appears
appropriate to the Comptroller.
(2) The
Comptroller may, if the Comptroller thinks it necessary for the protection of
GST revenue, by direction require a taxable person, as a condition of the
person’s supplying goods or services under a taxable supply, to give
security, or further security, of such amount and in such manner as the
Comptroller determines, for the payment of any GST that is or may become due
from the person.
47 Recovery
of GST and other amounts due under this Law
(1) GST
due from any person shall be recoverable as a debt due to the States.
(2) If
an invoice shows a supply of goods or services as taking place with GST
chargeable on it, there shall be due from the person who issued the invoice an
amount equal to that which is shown on the invoice as GST or, if GST is not
separately shown, to so much of the total amount shown as payable as would
represent GST on the supply.
(3) Paragraph (2)
applies whether or not –
(a) the
invoice is a GST invoice;
(b) the
invoice meets the requirements set out by or under this Law for GST invoices;
(c) the
supply shown on the invoice actually takes place;
(d) the
amount shown as GST, or any amount of GST, is chargeable on the supply; or
(e) the
person issuing the invoice is a taxable person.
(4) An
amount due from a person under paragraph (2) shall be recoverable as a
debt due to the States even if it is not GST.
(5) An
amount due from a person, under security that is given, or required to be
given, under a provision of this Law or the Regulations, by the person to the
Comptroller, shall be recoverable from the person as a debt due to the States.
(6) Any
other amount due under this Law or the Regulations, or required under this Law
or the Regulations to be paid or provided, by a person to the Comptroller shall
be recoverable from the person as a debt due to the States.
(7) Where
the Royal Court has granted –
(a) an
application made by any person to place his or her property under the control
of the Court (de remettre ses biens entre les mains de la Justice); or
(b) an
application for the holding of a bénéfice d’inventaire on
the estate of any deceased person,
the autorisés or
the Viscount, as the case may be, shall pay, out of the property of such person
or the estate of such deceased person, any GST or other amount due under this
Law or the Regulations by such person, or such deceased person or his or her
estate, at the time of the granting of the application and having become due
and payable within 12 months next before that time.[41]
(8) In
the event of any composition with creditors, désastre,
dégrèvement, réalisation or other bankruptcy, any GST or
other amount due from the debtor under this Law or the Regulations in the year
in which that event occurs or in the preceding year shall rank for payment pari
passu with other privileged debts and in priority to all other debts.[42]
PART 11
EXEMPTIONS, ZERO-RATING,
RELIEFS AND
AND REPAYMENTS
48 Exempt
supplies
Schedule 5 shall have
effect.
49 Zero-rating
(1) If
a taxable person supplies goods or services and the supply is zero-rated, then,
whether or not the supply would, but for this Article, have been chargeable to
GST –
(a) the
supply shall be a taxable supply; and
(b) the
rate at which GST shall be charged on the supply shall be nil.
(2) If
goods of a description specified as zero-rated are imported, no GST shall be
charged on their importation.
(3) A
supply of goods or services, or goods that are imported, shall be zero-rated for
the purposes this Article if the supply is, or the goods are, specified in
Schedule 6 or 9 as zero-rated.
50 Failure
to export goods
(1) If
a supply of goods would fall within clause (a) or (b) of paragraph 4(1)
of Schedule 6 and –
(a) the
goods are in Jersey after the day on which they were to have been exported; or
(b) any
condition prescribed or imposed under paragraph 4(1) of Schedule 6 has
not been complied with in relation to the goods or the export,
the recipient and any
person in whose possession the goods are found in Jersey shall be jointly and
severally liable to pay the GST that would have been chargeable on the supply
but for the operation of Article 49.
(2) The
Comptroller may, by direction to the recipient or any person in whose
possession the goods are found in Jersey –
(a) declare
that the presence of the goods in Jersey or failure to comply with the
condition shall –
(i) not affect the
zero-rating of the supply, and
(ii) not
have the effect that the supply is not a taxable supply; and
(b) exempt
the recipient, or person in whose possession the goods are found in Jersey,
from the operation of paragraph (1).
(3) The
Comptroller may waive payment of the whole or part of any amount of GST referred
to in paragraph (1) if it appears to the Comptroller that to do so would
be fair and equitable in all the circumstances.
51 Refund
of GST: DIY dwelling
(1) The
Comptroller shall refund GST to a person if the following conditions are
satisfied –
(a) the
person is constructing, or has constructed, a dwelling lawfully and otherwise
than in the course of or furtherance of any business;
(b) the
GST is chargeable on the supply of goods to the person or on the importation of
goods by the person;
(c) the
goods are builder’s hardware, sanitary ware or other articles of a kind
ordinarily installed by builders as fixtures, or are builder’s materials;
(d) the
goods are incorporated in the dwelling or its site;
(e) the
person has made a claim to the Comptroller for the refund;
(f) the
claim is made within the approved time or, if no time has been approved, within
12 months after the day when the supply or importation occurred;
(g) the
claim is in the approved form, or if no form has been approved, in any form
sufficient to show that the conditions set out in this Article (other than in
this sub-paragraph) are satisfied;
(h) the
GST has actually been paid;
(i) such
other conditions as the States may prescribe by Regulations.
(2) The
references in paragraph (1)(a) to the construction of a dwelling shall not
include a reference to –
(a) the
alteration, conversion, enlargement, improvement, reconstruction or repair of
an existing building; or
(b) the
making of an extension of, or annexe to, an existing building, being an
extension, or annexe –
(i) that provides for
internal access to the existing building, or
(ii) of
which the separate use, letting or disposal is prevented by a restrictive
agreement or covenant, or by permission under the Planning and
Building (Jersey) Law 2002.
(3) For
the purpose of paragraph (2) –
(a) the
references to an existing building include any part of a building that remains
above ground level; and
(b) any
works carried out on a site that includes such an existing building are to be
treated as falling within paragraph (2)(a) or (b) unless the existing
building is demolished completely to ground level.[43]
(4) Paragraph (3)
does not apply if –
(a) the
person started constructing the dwelling before the date on which that
paragraph came into force; and
(b) the
supply or importation of the goods takes place within 2 years after that
date.[44]
52 Relief
on supply or importation of certain second-hand goods
(1) The
States may by Regulations make provision for securing a reduction of the GST
chargeable on –
(a) a
supply of goods where the previous supply or importation of the same goods was
not chargeable to GST;
(b) an
importation of goods where the previous importation of the same goods was not
chargeable to GST; or[45]
(c) a
supply, or importation, of second-hand goods.
(2) A
reference in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) to a supply or importation that was
not chargeable to GST includes –
(a) a
supply, or importation, when this Law was not in force;
(b) a
supply that was zero-rated or exempt from GST; or
(c) an
importation of zero-rated goods.
(3) Provision
may be made under this Article on the basis of the marginal value of a supply
or of goods, or on any other basis.
53 Refunds
of GST for public sector and other cases
(1) The
Comptroller shall refund GST to a person to whom this Article applies if the
following conditions are satisfied –
(a) GST
is chargeable on the supply of goods or services to the person or on the
importation of any goods by the person;
(b) the
supply or importation is not for the purpose of any business carried on by the person;
(c) the
person has made a claim to the Comptroller for the refund;
(d) the
claim is made within the approved time or, if no time has been approved, within
12 months after the day when the supply or importation occurred;
(e) the
claim is in the approved form, or if no form has been approved, in any form
sufficient to show that the conditions set out in this paragraph (other
than in this sub-paragraph) are satisfied;
(f) the
GST has actually been paid.
(2) If
goods or services so supplied to or imported by the person cannot be
conveniently distinguished from goods or services supplied to or imported by
the person for the purpose of a business carried on by the person, the amount
to be refunded under this Article shall be such amount as remains after
deducting from the whole of the GST chargeable on the supply or importation
such proportion of the GST as appears to the Comptroller to be attributable to
the supply or importation for the purpose of the business.
(3) However,
if –
(a) the
GST attributable to the supply or importation for the purpose of the business
is or includes GST attributable to supplies referred to in Article 36(2)(c)
or (d); and
(b) the
GST attributable to those supplies is in the opinion of the Comptroller an
insignificant proportion of the GST chargeable on the supply or importation,
the Comptroller may
include the GST attributable to the exempt supplies in the GST refunded under
this Article.
(4) This
Article applies to the following persons –
(a) the
12 parishes of Jersey;
(b) the
States;
(c) any
person that the States may prescribe by Regulations.
(5) References
in this Article to GST chargeable do not include any GST that, by virtue of
Regulations under Article 36(4), is excluded from credit referred to in
Article 34(1).
54 Bad
debts of supplier
(1) The
Comptroller shall refund GST to a person if the following conditions are
satisfied at the time when a claim for the refund is made to the Comptroller –
(a) a
person has supplied goods or services for a consideration in money and has
accounted for and paid GST on the supply;
(b) all
or part of the consideration for the supply has been written off in the
person’s accounts as a bad debt;
(c) a period
of at least 6 months has elapsed since the supply;
(d) the
value of the supply did not exceed its open-market value;
(e) in
the case of a supply of goods, the property in the goods has passed to the recipient,
whether or not the recipient still has property in the goods;
(f) the
claim is by the person who made the supply;
(g) the
claim is made within the approved time or, if no time has been approved, within
12 months after the day when the last writing-off (as referred to in
sub-paragraph (b)) occurred in respect of the consideration for the
supply;
(h) the
claim is in the approved form, or if no form has been approved, in any form
sufficient to show that the conditions set out in this paragraph (other
than in this sub-paragraph) are satisfied.
(2) The
claimant shall keep, for the approved period and in the approved form and approved
manner, a record of information relating to the claim and to any payments by
way of a consideration.
(3) The
claimant shall repay an amount paid by way of refund of GST under this Article
if the claimant fails to comply with paragraph (2) in respect of the claim.
(4) If
the claimant subsequently receives payment by way of part or all of the
consideration written off, the claimant shall repay such part of the refund
under this Article as would correspond to the GST on the payment.
(5) The
Comptroller may, by general direction, specify principles for the purposes of
this Article, including principles as to the evidence necessary to substantiate
claims.
(6) Those
principles shall be taken into account in deciding for the purposes of this
Article whether any payment or other value is to be counted against a
consideration and whether a consideration has been written off.
55 Relief
from GST on importation of goods
(1) The
States may by Regulations make provision for remitting or repaying the whole or
part of the GST chargeable on the importation of any goods that have previously
been exported from Jersey.
(2) The
States may by Regulations make provision for remitting or repaying the whole or
part of the GST chargeable on the importation of any goods that have, after
their importation, been exported from Jersey.
(3) The
States may by Regulations make provision for securing relief from the whole or
part of the GST chargeable on the importation of goods to the extent that the
relief appears to the States to be necessary or expedient, having regard to any
international agreement, or international arrangement, that concerns Jersey
directly or indirectly.
(4) The
States may by Regulations impose conditions prohibiting or restricting the
disposal of, or dealing with, goods referred to in paragraph (1) or (3)
after their importation.
(5) If
those conditions are not complied with, any GST on the importation, being GST
that has been the subject of relief under Regulations under paragraph (3),
shall, to the extent that the Regulations so prescribe, become due from the
person who had the benefit of the relief.
(6) If –
(a) it is
proposed that goods imported by any person with the benefit of relief under
Regulations made under this Article be transferred to another person; and
(b) on an
application made by the second person, the Comptroller so directs by direction
given to the second person,
this Law shall have effect
as if, on the date of the transfer of the goods (and in place of the transfer),
the goods were exported by the first person and imported by the second person,
so that relief under Regulations made under this Article shall apply in
relation to the GST chargeable on the importation of the goods by the second
person.
56 Other
relief
(1) The
States may by Regulations make provision for enabling or requiring the
remission or refund of GST, or the giving of relief from GST, in such
circumstances as the Regulations prescribe.
(2) The
Comptroller may, by direction, make provision for enabling or requiring the
remission or refund of GST, or the giving of relief from GST, in such
circumstances as the direction specifies.[46]
PART 12
INTERNATIONAL
SERVICES ENTITIES
56A International services entity[47]
For the purposes of this Part, an entity is an “international
services entity” while its name is listed under Article 59(1) or
(5).
57 GST
not chargeable on supplies to international services entity
(1) GST shall, despite
anything else in this Law, not be chargeable on the supply of goods, or of a
service, to an international services entity if –
(a) the
conditions set out in paragraph (2) are satisfied; and
(b) any
requirements that the States may by Regulations prescribe for the purposes of
this Article are met in relation to the goods or service, the supply and the
international services entity.
(2) In the case of the
supply of –
(a) goods,
the goods are to be used, or held, wholly and exclusively for the purpose of
any business carried on by or through the international services entity; or
(b) a
service, the service is supplied wholly and exclusively for the purpose of any
business carried on by or through the international services entity.[48]
57A International
services entity not taxable person[49]
A supply of goods or of a service, being a supply made by an
international services entity, shall not be a taxable supply unless any
requirements that the States may by Regulations prescribe for the purposes of
this Article are not satisfied in relation to the goods or service, the supply
or the international services entity.
58 Article 57
does not affect GST nature of supply
The operation of Article 57
shall not have the effect, for the purposes of paragraph 1 of Schedule 1
or for the purposes of any other provision of this Law, that a taxable supply
becomes other than a taxable supply, an exempt supply becomes other than an
exempt supply or a zero-rated supply becomes other than a zero-rated supply.
59 Listing
of international services entities
(1) The
Comptroller shall enter the name of an entity on a list kept by the Comptroller
for the purposes of this Part if –
(a) application
is made to the Comptroller for the entry;
(b) the
Comptroller is satisfied that the entity meets the requirements of Article 60;
and
(c) the
prescribed fee has been paid in respect of the application.
(2) The
Comptroller shall remove the name of an entity from that list if –
(a) the
entity applies to the Comptroller for the name to be removed;
(b) any
periodic or other sum prescribed by the Regulations is not paid in respect of
the entity by the date prescribed by the Regulations; or
(c) the
Comptroller is not satisfied that the entity meets the requirements of Article 60.
(3) An
international services entity the name of which is on the list kept by the
Comptroller for the purposes of this Part may keep its own list of entities if
authorized under paragraph (4) to do so.
(4) The
Comptroller shall, by annotation against the name of an international services
entity on the list kept by the Comptroller for the purposes of this Part,
authorize the entity to keep its own list of entities if –
(a) application
is made to the Comptroller for authority for the international services entity
to maintain its own list;
(b) the
Comptroller is satisfied that the international services entity is registered
to carry on trust company business under the Financial
Services (Jersey) Law 1998; and
(c) any
requirements that the States may by Regulations prescribe for the purposes of
this Article are met in relation to the international services entity.
(5) An
international services entity while so authorized may include on its own list
the name of any entity –
(a) in
relation to which the international services entity carries on trust company
business within the meaning of the Financial
Services (Jersey) Law 1998;
(b) that
meets the requirements of Article 60; and
(c) that
is not a person or arrangement prescribed by Regulations, or specified by
direction, under Article 60(1)(h) unless the Regulations otherwise provide
or the direction otherwise provides.[50]
(6) The
Comptroller shall revoke that authority of an international services entity
if –
(a) the
international services entity applies to the Comptroller for the revocation of
the authority; or
(b) the
Comptroller is not satisfied that the international services entity meets the
conditions referred to in paragraph (4)(b) or the requirements (if any )
referred to in paragraph (4)(c).
(7) If
the fee referred to in paragraph (1)(c) or the sum referred to in
paragraph (2)(b) is calculated on the basis of numbers (or other
characteristics) of entities, the Comptroller may accept what he or she
considers to be a fair estimate, or reasonable prediction, of the fee or sum in
cases where the precise calculation of the fee may be impracticable.[51]
60 Entities eligible for listing as international services entities[52]
(1) An
entity meets the requirements of this Article if it is –
(a) a
body corporate that meets the conditions set out in paragraph (2);
(b) a
trustee (in the trustee’s capacity as a trustee of one or more trusts
within the meaning of the Trusts (Jersey)
Law 1984) that meets the conditions set out in paragraph (2);
(c) a
partnership (which, in this Article, includes a limited partnership and a
limited liability partnership) that meets the conditions set out in paragraph (2);
(d) an
Anstalt, Stiftung, or foundation, that meets the conditions set out in
paragraph (2);
(e) a
collective investment fund;
(f) an
unregulated fund;
(g) an
alternative investment fund;
(ga) a limited
liability company that meets the conditions set out in paragraph (2); or
(h) a
person or arrangement prescribed by Regulations made by the States, or
specified by direction, that meets the conditions set out in paragraph (3).[53]
(2) Those
conditions are, in respect of any entity referred to in paragraph (1)(a),
(b), (c), (d) or (ga) –
(a) except
as provided in sub-paragraph (b), that all of the following requirements
are met –
(i) not more than 10%
in value of all the supplies made by the entity of goods and services are made
to individuals who belong in Jersey,
(ii) to
the extent that the value of all the supplies of goods or services made by the
entity in Jersey exceeds 10% of the value of all supplies of goods and services
made by the entity, the supplies in Jersey are made only to an international
services entity,
(iii) no
individual who belongs in Jersey has the effective use, or the effective
enjoyment, of any asset owned or administered by the entity,
(iv) no
individual who belongs in Jersey has the effective use, or the effective
enjoyment, of any goods, or service, supplied to or by the entity,
(v) such other requirements
in respect of the entity as the States may prescribe by Regulations; or
(b) if
not all of the requirements set out in sub-paragraph (a) are met in
respect of the entity, that both of the following requirements are
met –
(i) the Comptroller
is satisfied that the main purposes and main functions of the
entity –
(A) are
substantially consistent with the requirements set out in sub-paragraph (a),
and
(B) are
not the avoidance, or reduction, of the liability to GST of an individual who
belongs in Jersey,
(ii) the
Comptroller approves the entity for the purposes of this Article.[54]
(3) Those
conditions are, in respect of any entity referred to in paragraph (1)(h),
that both of the following requirements are met –
(a) the
Comptroller is satisfied that the main purposes and main functions of the
entity are not the avoidance, or reduction, of the liability to GST of an
individual who belongs in Jersey;
(b) the
Comptroller approves the entity for the purposes of this Article.[55]
(4) The
condition set out in paragraph (2)(a)(iii) or (iv) shall be taken to be
satisfied in a case or circumstances where, despite the fact that that clause
would not, but for this paragraph, be satisfied, the Comptroller specifies by
direction that the condition shall be taken to be satisfied.
(5) In
this Article, a reference –
(a) to a
collective investment fund is a reference to a collective investment fund
within the meaning of the Collective
Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988;
(b) to an
unregulated fund is a reference to an unregulated fund within the meaning of
the Collective
Investment Funds (Unregulated Funds) (Jersey) Order 2008;
(c) to an
alternative investment fund is a reference to a scheme or arrangement which is
an AIF within the meaning given by Regulation 3 of the Alternative
Investment Funds (Jersey) Regulations 2012;
(d) to a
limited liability company is a reference to a limited liability company within
the meaning of the Limited
Liability Companies (Jersey) Law 2018.[56]
(6) For
the purposes of this Article, an individual shall be treated as belonging in
Jersey if –
(a) the
individual has an establishment there and no fixed establishment elsewhere in
the world;
(b) the
individual has no establishment anywhere in the world but the
individual’s usual place of residence is in Jersey; or
(c) the
individual has establishments both in Jersey and elsewhere in the world and the
individual’s establishment at which, or for the purposes of which, goods,
services or assets are most directly used or enjoyed or to be used or to be
enjoyed is in Jersey.[57]
61 [58]
62 [59]
63 Notice
(1) The
Comptroller shall serve notice on a person who applies for the entering of a
name on a list kept by the Comptroller for the purposes of this Part, being
notice in writing that specifies whether the Comptroller has entered the name
and the date when the entry (if any) has effect.
(2) The
Comptroller shall serve notice on an international services entity if the
Comptroller proposes (otherwise than in a response to an application from the
international services entity) to remove the entity’s name from a list
kept by the Comptroller for the purposes of this Part, being notice in writing
of that proposal and the date when the removal is to have effect.
(3) The
Comptroller shall serve notice on a person who applies for authority under
Article 59(4), being notice in writing that specifies whether the
Comptroller has granted the authority and the date when the authority (if any)
takes effect.
(4) The
Comptroller shall serve notice on an international services entity if the
Comptroller proposes (otherwise than in a response to an application from the
international services entity) to revoke the entity’s authority granted
under Article 59(4), being notice in writing of that proposal and the date
when the revocation is to have effect.[60]
64 Changes
to be notified
(1) A
person shall notify the Comptroller of any change in the circumstances of the
person that means that a detail is no longer up to date in respect of the
person if the detail –
(a) appears
in information given (whether by notice, application or otherwise) to the
Comptroller under this Part; and
(b) is of
a class that the Comptroller has specified by general direction.
(2) The
person shall do so within 30 days after the day when the change occurs.
(3) A
person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with this Article shall
be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on the standard
scale.[61]
65 Evaluating
supplies
The value of a supply of
goods or services shall be determined for the purposes of this Part on the
basis that no GST is chargeable on the supply.
66 Opportunity
to be heard
(1) The
Comptroller shall not refuse to enter a name on, and shall not (otherwise than
in response to an application from the relevant international services entity)
remove a name from, a list kept by the Comptroller for the purposes of this
Part without first giving either the person who applied for its entry on the
list or the relevant international services entity an opportunity to be heard
on the question whether the name should be on the list.
(2) The
Comptroller shall not refuse to grant authority under Article 59(4), and
shall not (otherwise than in response to an application from the relevant
international services entity) revoke any such authority, without first giving
either the person who applied for the authority or the relevant international
services entity an opportunity to be heard on the question whether the
authority should be granted or revoked (as the case requires).[62]
PART 13
ADMINISTRATION
67 [63]
68 [64]
69 Application
of Customs and Excise (Jersey)
Law 1999
(1) An
expression in any provision of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 (to the extent that the provision applies to
or in respect of the importation of goods or imported goods), being an
expression that is, or means –
(a) customs,
shall include the administration of GST on the importation of the goods;
(b) customs
duty, duty chargeable on goods, or duty on or in respect of imported goods, shall
include GST on the importation of the goods; or
(c) dutiable
goods, or goods dutiable under the Customs and Excise
(Jersey) Law 1999, shall include goods the importation of which is
chargeable to GST.
(2) Notwithstanding
Article 5(2) of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, the Agent of the Impôts and his or her
officers shall be subject to the general control of the Minister for Treasury
and Resources in their discharge of functions in relation to GST.
(3) Notwithstanding
anything in this Law or in any other enactment –
(a) the Comptroller may disclose information to
the Agent of the Impôts, for the purposes of the
administration of GST on the importation of goods and the administration of GST
in general; and
(b) the Agent of the Impôts may disclose
information to the Comptroller for the same purposes.[65]
(4) A
person to whom information is disclosed pursuant to paragraph (3) shall
use it only for the purposes for which it is disclosed.
(5) A
reference in paragraphs (3) and (4) to information shall include personal
data within the meaning of the Data Protection
(Jersey) Law 2018.[66]
(6) The
States may by Regulations amend or modify the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 (or this Law) for ensuring the application of
the Customs
and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 to or in respect of GST on the
importation of goods, including for avoiding any conflict or duplication in
provisions that apply to or in respect of GST on the importation of goods.
70 Details
of application of Customs and Excise (Jersey)
Law 1999
Without affecting the
operation of Article 69, Schedule 7 shall have effect for the
purposes of the application and interpretation of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 in relation to GST.
PART 14
failure to comply
71 Penalty
tax where conduct involving dishonesty
(1) If
for the purpose of evading GST, a person does anything or fails to do anything
and that conduct involves dishonesty (whether or not it is such as to give rise
to criminal liability), the person shall be liable to penalty tax equal to the
amount of GST evaded or sought to be evaded by the conduct.
(2) If
for the purpose of obtaining a credit in respect of, or refund of, GST in
circumstances where he or she is not entitled to that credit or refund, a
person does anything or fails to do anything and that conduct involves
dishonesty (whether or not it is such as to give rise to criminal liability),
the person shall be liable to penalty tax equal to the amount of the credit or
refund obtained or sought to be obtained by the conduct.
(3) But
a person is not liable to a penalty tax under paragraph (1) or (2) in
respect of conduct for which the person has been convicted of an offence.[67]
(4) The
Comptroller may assess –
(a) as
GST an amount of GST lost because of conduct giving rise to a penalty tax under
paragraph (1) or (2); and
(b) as
penalty tax an amount corresponding to a liability to penalty tax under paragraph (1)
or (2).
(5) On
an appeal against such an assessment, the burden of proof as to the matters
specified in paragraph (1) or (2) shall lie on the Comptroller.
72 Liability
of partners and officers for penalty tax where corporate dishonesty
(1) If
the Comptroller has reasonable cause to believe that –
(a) a partnership
treated as a person under Article 11, an association treated as a person
under Article 12, a limited liability partnership or a body corporate is
liable to penalty tax under Article 71; and
(b) the
conduct giving rise to that penalty tax was, in whole or in part, attributable
to the dishonesty of –
(i) a person who is a
member of the partnership or limited liability partnership, or a director,
manager, secretary or other similar officer of the association or body
corporate, or
(ii) any
person purporting to act in any such capacity,
the Comptroller may
recover from the person referred to in sub-paragraph (b) any portion
(including the whole) of the penalty tax assessed under Article 71 as if
the person were personally liable to the penalty tax.
(2) If
the affairs of an association treated as a person under Article 12, or the
affairs of a body corporate, are managed by its members, paragraph (1)
shall apply in relation to such a member in connection with the member’s
functions of management as if the member were a director of the association or body
corporate.
(3) The
Comptroller shall not recover an amount from a person under this Article
without first serving notice on the person and on the partnership, association,
limited liability partnership or body corporate –
(a) stating
the amount of the penalty tax and of the portion;
(b) stating
that the Comptroller proposes to recover that portion from the person.
(4) Once
notice is served under this Article, the relevant partnership, association, limited
liability partnership or body corporate shall be treated as discharged from
liability for so much of the penalty tax assessed under Article 71 as is so
notified.
73 Penalty
tax if failure to notify or unauthorized issue of invoices
(1) If
a person –
(a) fails
to comply with a requirement to give a notice under Schedule 1;
(b) fails
to comply with Article 40; or
(c) not
being a registered person, issues one or more invoices showing an amount as
being GST or as including an amount attributable to GST,
the person shall be liable
to penalty tax of the higher of the following amounts –
(i) £200;
(ii) 10%
of the relevant GST (if any).
(2) In
this Article, “relevant GST” means –
(a) in
relation to a person’s failure to give notice under paragraph 3 of
Schedule 1 of the person’s liability to be registered, the GST for
which the person is liable for the period from when the person became liable to
be registered to the date on which the Comptroller received notice of that
liability or the date on which the Comptroller in fact registered the person
(whichever is the earlier date);
(b) in
relation to a person’s failure to give notice under paragraph 20(3)
or (4) of Schedule 1 of a change, the GST for which the person, if not
exempted under that paragraph, would have been liable for the period starting with
the change and ending on the date on which the Comptroller received notice of the
change or the date on which the Comptroller in fact knew about the change (whichever
is the earlier date); or
(c) in
relation to the issue of one or more invoices referred to in paragraph (1)(c),
the sum of the amounts shown on the invoices as GST, or taken as representing
GST.
(3) If
a person is convicted of an offence (whether under this Law, under the
Regulations or otherwise) because of any conduct or is assessed to penalty tax
referred to in Article 71 because of any conduct, the conduct shall not
also give rise to liability to penalty tax under this Article.
74 Surcharge
if GST not paid or return not made
(1) If
a person fails to pay an amount of GST on time the person shall be liable to
pay a surcharge of 10% of the amount.[68]
(2) If
a person fails to furnish on time a return that is required by or under this
Law in respect of a prescribed accounting period that applies to the person,
the person shall be liable to pay a surcharge of £100 on the amount of
GST that the person is required to pay in respect of that period.[69]
(2A) If
a person fails to furnish on time a return described in paragraph (2) by
midnight on the specified date, the person is liable to pay a further surcharge
of £100 in respect of each month after the specified date that the return
is not furnished up to a maximum of 9 months.[70]
(2B) In
paragraph (2A), the specified date is the date that is 3 months after the
date on which a return is required by or under this Law.[71]
(2C) For
the purposes of paragraph (2A) a return is not furnished in respect of a
month if it has not been furnished by midnight on the final day of that month.[72]
(3) If
a person is convicted of an offence (whether under this Law, under the
Regulations or otherwise) or is assessed to penalty tax referred to in Article 71
or 73 because of any failure, the failure shall not also give rise to liability
to a surcharge under this Article.
75 Assessment
and surcharge if returns or paperwork inadequate
(1) To
the extent that a taxable person has failed to meet the requirements of or
under this Law in respect of the making of returns or the provision of
information, the Comptroller may, to the best of the Comptroller’s
judgment –
(a) assess
the amount of GST due from the person; and
(b) determine
the relationship between any supply, or any credit or other amount, and one or
more prescribed accounting periods.[73]
(2) If
the Comptroller exercises the power under paragraph (1) in respect of a
person for a prescribed accounting period that falls immediately after a
prescribed accounting period for which the Comptroller has already exercised on
an earlier occasion the same power in respect of the same person, the
Comptroller may assess an amount of £200 by way of surcharge on the
amount of GST assessed for the later period.
(3) For
the purpose of paragraph (2) it makes no difference if the amount of GST
assessed is zero.
76 Direction
to account for goods or assessment of goods
(1) If
a taxable person has, in the course or furtherance of a business carried on by the
person, been supplied with, or imported, any goods or otherwise obtained
possession or control of any goods, the Comptroller may by direction require the
person to account for the goods.
(2) If
the person fails within the time specified in the direction to show that the
goods –
(a) have
been or are available to be supplied by the person;
(b) have
been exported or otherwise removed from Jersey without being exported or so
removed by way of supply; or
(c) have
been lost or destroyed,
the Comptroller may assess
to the best of the Comptroller’s judgment the amount of GST that would
have been chargeable in respect of the supply of the goods if they had been
supplied by the person.
(3) The
assessment shall relate the supply to one or more prescribed accounting periods.
(4) A
person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with a direction under
paragraph (1) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of
level 3 on the standard scale.[74]
77 Assessment
if overpayment by Comptroller
(1) If
the Comptroller has repaid an amount of GST to a person, or credited an amount
of GST to a person, for a prescribed accounting period, and the Comptroller
should not have done so, the Comptroller may by direction given to the person
assess that amount as being GST due from the person for that period.
(2) The
amount shall be payable within the prescribed accounting period during which
the assessment is actually made, or within such later prescribed accounting
period as the Comptroller specifies by direction given to the person.
(3) This
Article applies –
(a) whether
the fact that the Comptroller should not have repaid or credited the amount would
have been plain to the Comptroller on the facts at or before the time of doing
so or came to be known to the Comptroller only later;
(b) whether
or not there was a failure or error on the part of the person; and
(c) whether
or not there was a failure or error on the part of the Comptroller.
(4) This
Article also applies if an amount becomes due for repayment by a person to the
Comptroller only because the person’s registration is cancelled after the
Comptroller repays or credits an amount to the person.
78 Time
limits on assessments
(1) An
assessment under Article 75 or 76 of an amount of GST shall not be made
after the latest of the following anniversaries –
(a) the
fifth anniversary of the last day of the prescribed accounting period to which
the assessment relates;
(b) the
anniversary of the day when the Comptroller has evidence of facts sufficient,
in the opinion of the Comptroller, to justify the making of the assessment;
(c) the
anniversary of the day when the Comptroller has further evidence (if any) of a
person’s conduct sufficient, in the opinion of the Comptroller, to
justify the making of a further assessment after the making of a previous
assessment under Article 75 or 76 in respect of the person’s same
conduct (whether or not the previous assessment was made under the same Article
as the further assessment).[75]
(2) An
assessment under Article 77 of an amount of GST shall not be made after
the second anniversary of the day when the Comptroller has evidence of facts
sufficient, in the opinion of the Comptroller, to enable the making of the
assessment.
(3) An
assessment under this Part (except under Article 71(4), 75, 76 or 77) of
an amount of GST shall not be made after –
(a) in
the case of an assessment in respect of an importation of goods, the fifth
anniversary of the day when the importation occurred; or
(b) in
the case of any other assessment, the fifth anniversary of the last day of the last
prescribed accounting period to which the assessment relates.
(4) An
assessment under this Part (except under Article 71(4)) of penalty tax or
of a surcharge shall not be made –
(a) in
respect of a person who was a taxable person at the time when the conduct
giving rise to the liability to the penalty tax or surcharge occurred, after
the fifth anniversary of the last day of the prescribed accounting period in
which that conduct occurred; or
(b) in
respect of a person who was not a taxable person at the time when the conduct
giving rise to the liability to the penalty tax or surcharge occurred, after
the fifth anniversary of the last day on which that conduct occurred.[76]
(5) An
assessment, under Article 71(4), of GST or penalty tax may be made at any
time.
(6) Despite
this Article, in respect of an individual who has died, the Comptroller shall
not assess under this Part an amount of GST, or of penalty tax or of a
surcharge, after the third anniversary of the death.
79 Factors
in determining penalty tax or surcharge
(1) Penalty
tax or a surcharge specified in any provision of this Part is a maximum, and
the penalty tax or surcharge assessed or imposed in any case may be less than
that amount or zero.
(2) In
determining a penalty tax or surcharge, the Comptroller –
(a) may
take into account such matters as the States may by Regulations prescribe as
matters that may be taken into account; and
(b) shall
take into account such matters as the States may by Regulations prescribe as
matters that shall be taken into account.
(3) To
the extent that it would not be inconsistent with this Law or the Regulations
to do so, the Comptroller may take into account such matters as he or she
thinks fit in determining penalty tax or a surcharge.
80 General
(1) The
cessation of any conduct giving rise to penalty tax or a surcharge under this
Part shall not affect the liability to the penalty tax or surcharge.
(2) The
Comptroller may waive a person’s liability to penalty tax or a surcharge
under this Part if the person satisfies the Comptroller that there is a
reasonable excuse for the failure that gave rise to the liability and that the
failure did not involve dishonesty.
(3) The
Comptroller may make more than one assessment under this Part, or under more
than one provision of this Part, in respect of the same person, the same
prescribed accounting period or the same set of facts.
(4) For
the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby stated that liability in any case to penalty
tax, or to a surcharge, under this Part shall be in addition to any liability
in that case to GST under any other Part.
(5) Liability
to penalty tax or to a surcharge under this Part in any case shall not be
affected by any absence in that case of a charge to GST under any other Part.
81 Notice
of assessment
(1) If
a person is liable to penalty tax or a surcharge under this Part, the
Comptroller may assess the penalty tax or surcharge.
(2) The
Comptroller shall serve notice on a person of an assessment (whether of an
amount of GST or of penalty tax or of a surcharge) made in respect of the
person under this Part and of the amount of GST or penalty tax or surcharge
assessed in the assessment.
(3) The
notice shall specify the date to which any amount of GST, and any penalty tax
or surcharge, has been assessed in the assessment.
(4) An
amount of GST, or penalty tax or surcharge, assessed and notified to a person
under this Part shall be recoverable as GST due from the person.
PART 15
late refunds
82 Loading
on late payments and refunds
(1) If
a person is entitled to a GST credit and the conditions set out in paragraph (3)
are satisfied, any payment or refund to the person of the credit or refund
shall be increased by 5% or £50, whichever is the greater amount.
(2) If
a person is entitled to a refund under Article 53 or under Regulations
under Part 4, and the conditions set out in paragraph (3) are satisfied,
the refund shall be increased by 5% or £50, whichever is the greater
amount.
(3) The
conditions are –
(a) that
a return or claim has been made under this Law or the Regulations and the
return or claim shows that an amount is due by way of payment or refund;
(b) that
the amount does not exceed the payment or refund in fact due by more than 5% or
£250, whichever is the greater;
(c) that,
in the case of a return, the return has been made in accordance with any
requirements of or under this Law; and
(d) that
the Comptroller has failed to make the payment or refund within 30 days after
the day on which the Comptroller received the return or claim, or if the States
prescribe another period by Regulations, that other period instead.
(4) An
amount to which a person is entitled under paragraph (1) shall be treated
as an amount due by way of credit under Article 34.
(5) An
amount to which a person or body is entitled under paragraph (2) shall be
treated as an amount due by way of refund under Article 53, or under
Regulations under Part 4, as the case requires.
83 Refund
of excess amounts accounted for as output tax[77]
(1) If
a person has accounted for an amount as output tax to the Comptroller that
exceeds the amount actually due to the Comptroller, the Comptroller shall, on a
claim by the person made within a period of 5 years from the date on which
the return for the tax period became due, be liable to refund the excess amount
to the person.
(2) Despite
any other law, the Comptroller shall not be liable to refund the excess amount
except as required under this Article.
(3) The
Comptroller shall not in any case be liable to refund the amount to the extent
that the refund would unjustly enrich the claimant.
PART 16
Appeals
84 Appeal
against decisions
(1) An
appeal shall lie in accordance with this Part to the Commissioners under Part 6
of the Income
Tax (Jersey) Law 1961 against –
(a) a
direction referred to in paragraph (2);
(b) a
decision of the Comptroller not to give a direction that has been applied for;
or
(c) a
decision of the Comptroller in relation to any of the matters referred to in paragraph (2)
other than a direction.
(2) The
directions and other matters are the following –
(a) the
registration, or cancellation of the registration, of a person;
(b) an
application under Part 3;
(c) a
direction under Article 14(1) to appoint a GST representative;
(d) a
direction under Article 14(5) or 46 to give security;
(e) the
GST chargeable on the supply of goods or services;
(f) the
amount of any input tax credited to a person;
(g) the
attribution of input tax under Article 36;
(h) a
claim by a taxable person under Article 38;
(i) a
direction concerning payment on account under Article 45;
(j) a
claim for a refund under Article 51;
(k) a
claim for a refund under Article 53;
(l) a
claim for a refund under Article 54;
(m) an
application, removal of a name, revocation of an authority, or acceptance of an
estimate or prediction under Part 12;
(n) penalty
tax or a surcharge under Part 14;
(o) whether
for the purposes of Article 71 conduct involves dishonesty;
(p) whether
for the purposes of Article 72 conduct is, in whole or in part,
attributable to the dishonesty of a person;
(q) the
portion recoverable under Article 72 from a person;
(r) an
assessment or determination under Article 75;
(s) a
direction to account, or an assessment, under Article 76;
(t) an
assessment under Article 77;
(u) a
claim for a refund under Article 83;
(v) a
direction under paragraph 8 or 10 of Schedule 1;
(w) a
supplementary direction under paragraph 9 of Schedule 1;
(x) a
refusal to register a group under paragraph 13 of Schedule 1;
(y) a
refusal to vary the registration of a group under paragraph 15 of Schedule 1;
(z) the removal,
under paragraph 16 of Schedule 1, of an entity from the registration
of a group;
(aa) a cancellation
under paragraph 19 of Schedule 1;
(ab) a refusal to
exempt a person under paragraph 20 of Schedule 1;
(ac) a direction under
paragraph 2 or 3 of Schedule 4;
(ad) any other direction,
other than a general direction;
(ae) the imposition of
any condition under this Law or the Regulations;
(af) any other matter
relating to this Law or the Regulations, being a matter that the States
prescribe by Regulations for the purposes of this Article.[78]
85 Application
of Part 6 of Income Tax (Jersey)
Law 1961
(1) Articles 27,
28(1), 29(1) to (3) and (6) and (7), 29A and 31 to 36 of the Income Tax
(Jersey) Law 1961 shall apply to an appeal under this Part as if it
were an appeal against an assessment within the meaning of those provisions of
the Income
Tax (Jersey) Law 1961.
(2) In
the application of those provisions of the Income Tax
(Jersey) Law 1961 to an appeal under this Law –
(a) a
reference to an assessment shall be taken to be a reference to the relevant direction,
or decision, of the Comptroller against which an appeal is made under this Law;
(b) a
reference in Article 27(1) of the Income Tax
(Jersey) Law 1961 to 40 days of the notice of the assessment
shall be taken to be a reference to 40 days following the service of
notice of the direction, or decision, against which the appeal is being made;
(c) Article 31(1)
of the Income
Tax (Jersey) Law 1961 shall read as if there were substituted for it
the following paragraph –
“(1) If the Commissioners have
received notice of appeal against a direction or decision, they may issue a
precept to the appellant ordering the appellant to deliver to them, within the
time limited by the precept, a schedule containing such particulars, for their
information, as they may demand respecting any transactions that concern the
appellant, or any matter relating to GST that concerns the appellant, and the
Commissioners are empowered to demand those particulars at their discretion
whenever it appears to them necessary to do so for the purposes of the appeal.”;
(d) Article 34(1)
of the Income
Tax (Jersey) Law 1961 shall read as if there were substituted for it
the following paragraph –
“(1) Whenever the Commissioners
require further information relating to a schedule, they may, at any time and
from time to time, by precept, put any questions in writing concerning the
schedule, or any matter that is contained or ought to be contained in the
schedule, or concerning any matter relating to GST that concerns the appellant,
and may require true and particular answers, signed by the appellant, to be
given within 7 days after the service of the precept.”.
86 Further
provisions relating to appeals
(1) The
Commissioners may, on an appeal, make such determinations as they think fit,
and those determinations may include –
(a) upholding
the direction, or decision, appealed against;
(b) revoking
the direction, or decision, appealed against and referring the matter to the
Comptroller for a fresh determination;
(c) revoking
the direction, or decision, appealed against and substituting their own
direction, or decision, as if they were exercising the powers of the
Comptroller under this Law and the Regulations;
(d) varying
the direction, or decision, appealed against; or
(e) giving
any direction that the Comptroller could have done in relation to the matter
that was the subject of the direction, or decision, appealed against.
(2) The
Commissioners may at any time refuse to hear an appeal unless the
appellant –
(a) has
made all the returns that the appellant is required by or under this Law to
make;
(b) has
paid the amounts that the appellant is required to pay by or under this Law,
except any amount that is the subject of a direction, or decision, against
which the appeal is brought;
(c) has
deposited with the Comptroller any amount that is the subject of a direction,
or decision, against which the appeal is brought;
(d) complies
with any precept of the Commissioners under Article 31 of the Income Tax
(Jersey) Law 1961 as applied for the purposes of this Part; and
(e) furnishes
such information as the Commissioners may demand under Article 34 of the Income Tax
(Jersey) Law 1961 as applied for the purposes of this Part.
(3) If –
(a) an
appeal is brought against a direction, or decision, of the Comptroller with
respect to, or to so much of any assessment as concerns, the amount of input
tax that may be credited to any person or the proportion of input tax allowable
under Article 36;
(b) the
appeal relates, in whole or in part, to a determination by the Comptroller as
to the purposes for which any goods or services were or were to be used by any
person, or as to whether or to what extent the matters to which any input tax
was attributable were or included matters other than the making of supplies referred
to in Article 36(2)(b); and
(c) GST
for which, in pursuance of the determination, there is no entitlement to a
credit is GST on the supply or importation of something in the nature of a
luxury, amusement or entertainment,
the Commissioners shall
not allow the appeal, or, as the case may be, so much of the appeal as relates
to the determination, unless they consider that the determination was
unreasonable or would have been unreasonable if information brought to the
attention of the Commissioners had been available to be taken into account by
the Comptroller when the determination was made.
(4) If,
on an appeal against a decision about an assessment, the Commissioners find
that the amount specified in the assessment is less than it ought to have been,
they may make an order specifying the correct amount to be paid by the
appellant to the Comptroller.
(5) If
the Commissioners find on an appeal that a sum is due to the appellant
corresponding –
(a) to
the whole or part of an amount deposited as referred to in paragraph (2)(c);
or
(b) to
the whole or part of any GST credit,
they may order the
Comptroller to pay the sum to the appellant with interest at such rate as is
payable under Part 5 of the Revenue
Administration (Jersey) Law 2019.[79]
(6) If
the Commissioners find on an appeal that a sum is due from the appellant they
may, to the extent that the sum has not been deposited as referred to in paragraph (2)(c),
order the appellant to pay the sum to the Comptroller with interest at such
rate as they determine.
(7) If
the Commissioners make an order under this Article specifying an amount to be
paid by the appellant to the Comptroller, the order shall have effect for the
purposes of Part 14 as an assessment of that amount notified under that
Part.
87 Settling
appeals by agreement
(1) If,
before an appeal is determined by the Commissioners, the Comptroller and the
appellant agree in writing that the direction, or decision, appealed against is
to be treated as upheld, varied in a way so agreed, or revoked, the agreement
shall be treated as if, at the time when it was made, the Commissioners had
determined the appeal exactly as so agreed.
(2) If,
before an appeal is determined by the Commissioners, the Comptroller and the
appellant agree orally that the direction, or decision, appealed against is to
be treated as upheld, varied in a way so agreed, or revoked, and the agreement
is later set down in writing served by the Comptroller on the appellant or by
the appellant on the Comptroller, the agreement shall be treated as if, at the
time when the writing was so served, the Commissioners had determined the
appeal exactly as so agreed.
(3) The
agreement may include such terms, including terms as to costs, as the
Commissioners could have set out in any determination of the appeal.
(4) Paragraph (1)
shall not apply if, within 30 days after the day when the agreement was made,
the appellant gives notice in writing to the Comptroller that the appellant
revokes the agreement.
(5) Paragraph (2)
shall not apply if, within 30 days after the day when the writing was served,
the appellant gives notice in writing to the Comptroller that the appellant
revokes the agreement.
(6) If
a person who has given a notice of appeal serves further notice on the
Comptroller that the person does not want to proceed with the appeal, this
Article shall have effect as if, at the time of the service, the appellant and
the Comptroller had made a written agreement that the direction, or decision,
under appeal should be upheld without variation, being an agreement that shall
be treated as if, at the time of the service, the Commissioners had determined
the appeal exactly as so agreed.
PART 17
OFFENCES
88 Fraudulent
evasion of GST
(1) A person who is
knowingly concerned in, or in the taking of steps with a view to, the
fraudulent evasion of GST by the person or by any other person, shall be guilty
of an offence.
(2) If a person’s
conduct during any specified period must have involved the commission by him or
her of one or more offences under paragraph (1), then, whether or not the
particulars of that offence or those offences are known, the person shall, by
virtue of this paragraph, be guilty of an offence.
(3) Without limiting the
generality of paragraph (1), a reference in that paragraph to the fraudulent
evasion of GST includes a reference to –
(a) the
fraudulent obtaining of a refund of GST, of a repayment of GST or of a GST
credit;
(b) the
fraudulent over-statement of an amount of input tax; and
(c) the
fraudulent under-statement of an amount of output tax.
(4) A person who is guilty
of an offence against this Article shall be liable to imprisonment for a term
of 15 years and to a fine.
89 False
information
(1) Any
person who knowingly or recklessly provides the Comptroller, or any other
person entitled to information under this Law or the Regulations, with
information that is false or misleading in a material particular shall be
guilty of an offence if the information is provided –
(a) in
purported compliance with a requirement imposed by or under this Law; or
(b) otherwise
than as mentioned in sub-paragraph (a) but in circumstances in which the
person providing the information intends, or could reasonably be expected to
know, that the information would be used by the Comptroller, or the other
person entitled to the information, for the purpose of carrying out his or her
functions under this Law or the Regulations.
(2) Any
person who knowingly or recklessly provides the Comptroller, or any other
person entitled to information under this Law or the Regulations, with
information that is false or misleading in a material particular shall be
guilty of an offence if the information is provided in connection with an
application under this Law or the Regulations.
(3) A
person who is guilty of an offence against this Article shall be liable to
imprisonment for a term of 5 years and to a fine.
90 Obstructing
authorized person
(1) A person shall be
guilty of an offence if, without reasonable excuse, the person –
(a) fails
to comply with a lawful requirement of an authorized person, being a
requirement imposed under this Law or the Regulations;
(b) obstructs
an authorized person in the execution of the authorized person’s functions
under this Law or the Regulations; or
(c) fails
to provide such reasonable assistance as an authorized person may require when
the authorized person is carrying out his or her functions under this Law or
the Regulations on premises occupied by the first-mentioned person.
(2) A person who is guilty
of an offence against paragraph (1) shall be liable to imprisonment for a
term of 6 months and to a fine.
91 Dealing
in goods or using services where GST evaded
If a person deals with any goods or accepts the supply of any
services, having reason to believe that GST on the supply of the goods or
services, or on the importation of the goods, has been or will be evaded, the
person shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine.
92 Partners,
directors, aiders and abettors
(1) Where
an offence under this Law or the Regulations, committed by a partnership
treated as a person under Article 11, an association treated as a person
under Article 12, a limited liability partnership or a body corporate, is
proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be
attributable to any neglect on the part of –
(a) a
person who is a partner of the partnership or limited liability partnership, or
a director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the association or body
corporate; or
(b) any
person purporting to act in any such capacity,
the person shall also be
guilty of the offence and liable in the same manner as the partnership,
association, limited liability partnership or body corporate to the penalty
provided for that offence.
(2) If
the affairs of an association treated as a person under Article 12, or the
affairs of a body corporate, are managed by its members, paragraph (1)
shall apply in relation to acts and defaults of a member in connection with the
member’s functions of management as if the member were a director of the association
or body corporate.
(3) A
person who aids, abets, counsels or procures the commission of an offence under
this Law or the Regulations shall also be guilty of the offence and liable in
the same manner as a principal offender to the penalty provided for that
offence.
PART 18
MISCELLANEOUS
93 Entry
and search of premises and persons
Schedule 8 shall have effect.
94 Display
of retail prices
(1) The States may by
Regulations make provision for or with respect to the display, disclosure, or
other publication, otherwise than on GST invoices, of GST chargeable on the
supply of goods or services or importation of goods.
(2) Those Regulations may
require that, in advertisements, labels, receipts, or other things, that are or
include expressions or indications of retail prices for goods or services
supplied, a retail price be expressed or indicated as a global price that
includes GST without separate mention of GST.
(3) Regulations under paragraph (1)
may specify that any amount of GST, or any amount that includes GST, be rounded
to the nearest penny and may specify rules for that rounding.[80]
(4) Paragraphs (2) and
(3) are included for the avoidance of doubt and do not limit the generality of paragraph (1).[81]
95 Evidence
by certificate, etc.
(1) A certificate of the
Comptroller shall be sufficient evidence of any of the following matters set
out in the certificate until the contrary is proved –
(a) that
a person was or was not, at any date, registered under this Law;
(b) that
a return required by or under this Law to be made had or had not been made at
any date;
(c) that
a statement or notification required by or under this Law to be submitted or
given to the Comptroller had been or had not been submitted or given at any
date;
(d) that
any GST shown as due in any return or assessment under this Law or the
Regulations had or had not been paid at any date.
(2) A copy of a document submitted,
given, served or otherwise furnished to the Comptroller for the purposes of
this Law, being a copy that is the subject of a certificate by the Comptroller
to the effect that it is such a copy, shall be admissible in any proceedings,
whether civil or criminal, to the same extent as the document itself.
(3) Something that purports
to be a certificate of the Comptroller and appears to correspond to a
certificate referred to in paragraph (1) or (2) shall be taken to be a
certificate of the Comptroller given under that sub-paragraph until the
contrary is proved.
96 Statement
admissible despite certain statements by Comptroller
(1) Statements made or
documents produced by or on behalf of a person shall not be inadmissible in any
proceedings to which this Article applies by reason only that one or more of
the matters set out in paragraph (2) have been drawn to the person’s
attention and the person was or may have been induced by that to make the
statements or produce the documents.
(2) The matters are the
following, however expressed when they were drawn to the person’s
attention –
(a) that
the Comptroller may assess an amount of GST by way of penalty tax or surcharge
instead of instituting criminal proceedings;
(b) that
the Comptroller may take into account the fact that a person has made a full
confession of any dishonest conduct to which the person has been a party or has
facilitated the Comptroller’s investigation of the conduct;
(c) that
the Comptroller or, on appeal, the Commissioners have power to reduce penalty
tax or a surcharge.
(3) This Article applies
to –
(a) criminal
proceedings against the person in respect of an offence (whether under this Law
or the Regulations or otherwise) in connection with or in relation to GST; and
(b) proceedings
against the person for the recovery of any sum due from the person in
connection with or in relation to GST.
97 Comptroller
may impose procedural requirements
(1) The
Comptroller may, by general direction, specify –
(a) the
form of instruments, being applications, claims, demands, notices or
notifications or other instruments, served on or given to the Comptroller for
the purposes of this Law;
(b) the
manner in which those instruments are to be served or given.
(2) For
the purposes of this Article, the form of an instrument extends to the
documents or information that are to be served or given to the Comptroller
along with or following the instrument, whether or not on separate demand by
the Comptroller.
(3) The
States may by Regulations prescribe the fees that shall accompany the service
or giving of instruments, documents, or information, referred to in this
Article, as well as any other fee, sum or amount for which this Law makes
provision.[82]
(4) In
prescribing such fees, sums or amounts, the States may take into consideration
such matters as they think fit, and such fees, sums or amounts may be
prescribed so as to raise income in excess of the amount necessary to cover the
expenses of the Comptroller, and of the Agent of the Impôts, in
discharging their functions in respect of GST.[83]
(5) An
instrument, document, or information, referred to in this Article is not duly
served or given if –
(a) it is
not in accordance with any requirements relating to it of this Law, of the
Regulations, or of a general direction under paragraph (1);
(b) it is
not served or given in accordance with any requirements relating to it of this
Law, of the Regulations, or of a general direction under paragraph (1); or
(c) it is
not accompanied by such fee as is prescribed in respect of it, or the service
or giving, by the Regulations.
(6) The
Comptroller may refuse to carry out any function under this Law or the
Regulations that relates to an instrument, document, or information, referred
to in this Article if the instrument, document, or information is not duly
served or given.
98 Directions
and notices
(1) A
direction, notice, approval, consent, condition, or determination, under this
Law or the Regulations by, or imposed by, the Comptroller may apply to all
cases, to specified classes of cases, or to specified cases.
(2) A
power under this Law or the Regulations of the Comptroller to make a
determination or assessment, to give a direction, notice, approval or consent,
or to impose a condition, includes a power to amend or revoke the determination,
assessment, direction, notice, approval, consent or condition.
(3) However,
any requirement imposed by or under this Law to give notice of a direction, approval,
consent, condition, or determination, under this Law or the Regulations, or to
give notice of the making, giving, or imposition, of such a direction, approval,
consent, condition or determination, shall apply also to the amendment or
revocation.
(4) A
direction shall be of no effect to the extent that it is inconsistent with this
Law or the Regulations.
99 Service
or notice of directions
(1) A
direction for the purposes of this Law by the Comptroller to a person shall be given,
except where this Law or the Regulations otherwise provide, by written notice
served on the person.
(2) However,
if service of such a direction has failed or is not possible, the direction
may, except where this Law or the Regulations otherwise provide, be given to
the person by any means that are reasonably likely to bring the matter of the
direction to the attention of the person.
(3) A
general direction for the purposes of this Law by the Comptroller shall be
given in accordance with the Regulations or, if no Regulations make provision
for that, by any means that are reasonably likely to bring the matter of the
direction to the attention of members of the public affected or concerned by
the matter.
100 Regulations
(1) The
States may by Regulations make provision for the purpose of carrying this Law
into effect and, in particular, but without prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing, for or with respect to any matter that may be prescribed under this
Law by Regulations.
(2) The
States may in particular by Regulations –
(a) make
further provision about the consequences, for the purposes of this Law, of the
registration of an unincorporated association, including the consequences for
the association or its officers or members;
(b) generally
make further provision about the treatment, for the purposes of this Law, of
unincorporated associations and their officers and members;
(c) make
further provision about the consequences, for the purposes of this Law, of the
registration of a partnership, including the consequences for the partnership
or its members;
(d) generally
make further provision about the treatment, for the purposes of this Law, of
partnerships and their members;
(e) make further
provision for or in respect of the inclusion and correction of information in
the register;
(f) amend
Schedule 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7;
(g) prescribe
formal or procedural requirements in relation to applications, claims, demands,
notices, notifications, records and other instruments and other matters for the
purposes of this Law; or
(h) amend,
in any provision of this Law other than Article 8, any expression of time,
amount of money, percentage or proportion.
(2A) A
reference in paragraph (2)(c) or (d) to a partnership includes a limited
partnership and a limited liability partnership.[84]
(3) A
reference in paragraph (2)(h) to any expression of time, amount of money,
percentage or proportion includes penalty tax and a surcharge, but does not
include any fine or term of imprisonment.
(4) Regulations
may contain such transitional, consequential, incidental or supplementary
provisions as appear to the States to be necessary or expedient for the
purposes of the Regulations.
(5) Regulations
that amend a Schedule may make the application of the Schedule to something, or
the application of this Law to something specified in the Schedule, conditional
upon the fulfilment of any conditions prescribed in the Regulations or any
conditions imposed by the Comptroller by direction.
(6) Regulations,
other than Regulations amending a provision of this Law, may –
(a) allow
a matter specified in the Regulations to be determined by the Comptroller; or
(b) make
a matter specified in the Regulations the subject of an approval or decision of
the Comptroller or agreement with the Comptroller or subject to a condition
imposed by the Comptroller or the subject of a direction given by the
Comptroller.
(6A) Regulations,
other than Regulations amending a provision of this Law, may –
(a) allow
a matter specified in the Regulations that relates to GST on the importation of
goods to be determined by the Agent of the Impôts; or
(b) make
a matter specified in the Regulations that relates to GST on the importation of
goods the subject of an approval or decision of the Agent of the Impôts
or agreement with the Agent of the Impôts or subject to a condition
imposed by the Agent of the Impôts.[85]
(6B) Article 98
shall apply to a determination, approval, or condition, made, given, or
imposed, by the Agent of the Impôts in the same way as it applies to a
determination, approval, or condition, made, given, or imposed, by the
Comptroller.[86]
(6C) Paragraphs (6A)
and (6B) do not exclude the application of paragraph (6) in relation to a
matter that relates to GST on the importation of goods.[87]
(7) Regulations
may create an offence punishable by a fine up to level 3 on the standard scale.[88]
101 Transitional
provisions and savings
Schedule 9 shall
have effect.
102 Citation
This Law may be cited as
the Goods and Services Tax (Jersey) Law 2007.
Schedule 1[89]
(Article 9(1))
REGISTRATION
1 Liability to be registered
(1) A
person who makes taxable supplies becomes liable to be registered –
(a) at
the end of any month, if the value of the taxable supplies made by the person in
the 12 months then ending has exceeded £300,000; or
(b) on
any day, if there are reasonable grounds for believing that the value of the taxable
supplies made by the person in the 12 months after that day will exceed
£300,000.
(2) This
paragraph is subject to Article 57A in relation to supplies made by an
international services entity, being an international services entity within
the meaning of that Article.
(3) If
a business carried on by a taxable person is transferred to another taxable
person as a going concern, the transferee becomes liable to be registered
if –
(a) the
value of the taxable supplies made by the transferor in the 12 months ending on
the day when the business is transferred has exceeded £300,000; or
(b) there
are reasonable grounds for believing that the value of the taxable supplies made
by the transferee in the 12 months after the day when the business is
transferred will exceed £300,000.
(4) In
determining the value of the taxable supplies made by a person for the purposes
of this paragraph, supplies of goods or services that are capital assets of the
business in the course or furtherance of which they are supplied shall be
disregarded.
(5) In
this paragraph, and in the other provisions of this Schedule, references to
taxable supplies are references to taxable supplies of goods or services in
Jersey or of services on which GST is charged under Article 6(1)(c).
(6) In
sub-paragraph (5) the reference to supplies of goods or services in Jersey
includes supplies of goods that are treated as supplied in Jersey under Article 23(3)(a)
by virtue of meeting Condition A or Condition C, but does not include
supplies of goods that are treated as supplied in Jersey under Article 23(3)(a)
only by virtue of meeting Condition B.
2 Evaluating supplies
(1) The
value of a supply of goods or services shall be determined for the purposes of
this Schedule on the basis that no GST is chargeable on the supply.
(2) References
in this Schedule to supplies are references to supplies made in the course of
or furtherance of business.
3 Notification
(1) A
person who becomes liable under paragraph 1(1)(a) shall notify the
Comptroller of the liability within 30 days after the end of the month
referred to in that clause.
(2) A
person who becomes liable under paragraph 1(1)(b) shall notify the
Comptroller of the liability within 30 days after the day when it arises.
(3) A
person who becomes liable under paragraph 1(3) shall notify the
Comptroller of the liability within 30 days after the day when the
business is transferred.
(4) However,
if a person is the subject of registration that is in effect under
paragraph 5 when the person becomes liable under paragraph 1, this
paragraph shall not apply to that person.
(5) A
person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with this paragraph
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on the
standard scale.
4 Registration
(1) Where
the Comptroller is satisfied that a person is liable to be registered, the
Comptroller must register the person (whether or not the person has notified
liability in accordance with paragraph 3).
(2) The
registration of the person shall take effect –
(a) in
the case of liability under paragraph 1(1)(a), at the end of the month
following the month referred to in that clause in relation to the person or, if
an earlier date is agreed to between the Comptroller and the person, at that
date instead;
(b) in
the case of liability under paragraph 1(1)(b), on the date on which the
liability arose in relation to the person; or
(c) in
the case of liability under paragraph 1(3), on the date on which the business
was transferred to the person.
(3) If
a person becomes liable under paragraph 1(1)(a) and (b) at the same time,
sub-paragraph (2)(b), and not sub-paragraph (2)(a), shall apply to
the registration of the person.
(4) If
a person becomes liable under paragraph 1(1) and (3) at the same time,
sub-paragraph (2)(c), and not sub-paragraph (2)(a) or (b), shall
apply to the registration of the person.
(5) Registration
under this paragraph shall remain in force until cancelled.
5 Voluntary registration
(1) If
a person who is not liable to be registered satisfies the Comptroller that the
person –
(a) makes
taxable supplies; or
(b) is
carrying on a business and intends to make taxable supplies in the course of or
furtherance of that business,
the Comptroller may, on
application by the person, register the person.
(2) That
registration shall take effect on and from the day on which the application is
made or, if an earlier or later date is agreed to by the Comptroller and the
person, on and from that date instead.
(3) The
registration shall expire at the end of the period specified in respect of the
registration in the notice of it under paragraph 6 unless –
(a) the
registration is cancelled sooner under this Schedule; or
(b) the
person becomes liable under paragraph 1 during the period.
(4) If
the person becomes liable under paragraph 1 during that period, the
registration shall continue in force until it is cancelled.
(5) In
the case of registration under this paragraph, the notice of registration that
the Comptroller is required to serve on the person under paragraph 6 shall
specify, in addition to the matters set out in paragraph 6, how long the
registration is to have effect.
(6) In
sub-paragraph (1), references to a person who makes, or intends to make, taxable
supplies include references to a person who carries out, or intends to carry
out, activities that would, on or after 1st January 2023, be treated as making
taxable supplies of goods in Jersey under Article 23(3)(a) (as inserted by
the Finance (2022 Budget) (Jersey) Law 2022).
6 Notice of registration
The Comptroller shall
serve on a person whom the Comptroller registers (whether under paragraph 4
or under paragraph 5) notice in writing specifying that the person is
registered and the date when the registration has effect.
7 Changes to be notified
(1) A
registered person shall give notice to the Comptroller of any change in the
circumstances of the person that means that any detail of information about the
person is no longer up to date, if the detail –
(a) appears
in information given (whether by notice, application or otherwise) to the
Comptroller under this Schedule; and
(b) is of
a class that the Comptroller has specified by general direction.
(2) The
person shall give the notice within 30 days after the day when the change
occurred.
(3) A
person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with this paragraph
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on the
standard scale.
8 Direction about single
taxable person
(1) The
Comptroller may give a direction under this paragraph if satisfied immediately
before giving the direction that –
(a) each
person named in the direction is making or has made taxable supplies;
(b) the
activities in the course of which the person is making or has made those
taxable supplies form only part of certain activities that should properly be
regarded as those of a business described in the direction, the other
activities being carried on concurrently or previously (or both) by one or more
other persons;
(c) if
all the taxable supplies of the business were taken into account, a single
person carrying on that business would, immediately before the direction is
given, be liable to be registered by virtue of paragraph 1; and
(d) the
main reason, or one of the main reasons, for the person’s carrying on the
activities referred to in clause (b) in the way in which the person does
is the avoidance of a liability to be registered, whether that liability would
fall on that person, on another person or jointly on 2 or more persons (whether
or not they include the first person).
(2) A
direction under this paragraph shall be given by written notice served on each
of the persons named in the direction.
(3) The
effect of the direction is that –
(a) the
persons named in the direction shall be treated as members of a single taxable
person that carries on the activities of a business described in the direction;
and
(b) the
single taxable person shall be registered with effect on and from the day when
the direction is given or, if the direction specifies a later date, on and from
the later date instead.
9 Supplementary direction
about single taxable person
(1) If,
after a direction has been given under paragraph 8, it appears to the
Comptroller that a person who was not named in that direction is making taxable
supplies in the course of activities that should be properly regarded as part
of the activities of the business described in the direction, the Comptroller
may give a supplementary direction by notice served on the person and on the
members of the single taxable person.
(2) The
effect of the supplementary direction is that the person shall also be treated
as a member of the single taxable person with effect on and from the later of
the following dates –
(a) the
date on which the person began to make those taxable supplies;
(b) the
date when the registration of the single taxable person took effect.
10 Consequences of registration as single
taxable person
(1) If,
immediately before a direction is given under paragraph 8 or 9, a person
to be named in the direction is a registered person in respect of the taxable
supplies made by the person in the circumstances referred to in paragraph 8(1)
or 9(1), the person shall cease to be so registered with effect on and from the
day when the person began to be treated as a member of the relevant single
taxable person by virtue of the direction.
(2) If
a direction is given under paragraph 8 or 9, then for the purposes of this
Law –
(a) the relevant
single taxable person shall be registered in such name as its members may
jointly specify by notice in writing given to the Comptroller not later than 14 days
after the day when the direction is given or, if they do not specify a name, in
such name as may be specified in a later direction that the Comptroller may
give to the members;
(b) any
supply of goods or services by or to one of the members in the course of the
activities of the single taxable person shall be treated as a supply by or to
the single taxable person;
(c) each
of the members shall be jointly and severally liable for any GST due from the single
taxable person;
(d) a
failure by the single taxable person to comply with any requirement imposed by
or under this Law shall be treated as a failure by each of the members severally;
and
(e) without
affecting clauses (a) to (d), the members shall be treated for the
purposes of this Law as a partnership carrying on the business of the single taxable
person, and any question as to the scope of the activities of that business at
any time shall be determined accordingly.
11 Cessation of membership of single
taxable person
(1) If –
(a) a
member of a single taxable person makes application to the Comptroller to the
effect that the member should no longer be regarded as a member for the purposes
of paragraph 10(2)(b) to (e); and
(b) the
Comptroller is satisfied that the member should no longer be so regarded,
the Comptroller shall, by
notice in writing served on all the members, give a direction that the member
should no longer be so regarded with effect on and from such date as the
Comptroller may specify in the notice.
(2) The
applicant shall not be regarded as a member of the single taxable person on and
from that date and shall not have any liability by virtue of
paragraph 10(2)(b) to (e) for anything done on and from that date.
12 Eligibility for grouping
(1) For
the purposes of this Schedule, 2 or more entities, being –
(a) 2 or
more bodies corporate; or
(b) one
or more partnerships and one or more bodies corporate,
are eligible to be treated
as members of a group if the conditions of sub-paragraphs (3) and (4) are
satisfied.
(2)
(3) The
first condition is that, in the opinion of the Comptroller –
(a) one
of the entities controls all of the others;
(b) one
person (whether or not an individual) controls all of the entities; or
(c) 2 or
more individuals carrying on a business in partnership control all of the
entities.
(4) The
second condition is that each entity satisfies the Comptroller that it is,
taken by itself, liable to be registered by virtue of paragraph 1 or that
it –
(a) makes
taxable supplies; or
(b) is
carrying on a business and intends to make taxable supplies in the course of or
furtherance of that business.
(5) For
the purposes of this paragraph and paragraphs 13 to 16 –
(a) an
entity shall be taken to control an entity if –
(i) the first entity
is empowered by an enactment to control the second entity’s activities,
(ii) the
first entity is the second entity’s holding company, or
(iii) in
the opinion of the Comptroller, the first entity exercises substantial control
in fact over the affairs of the second entity;
(b) one
or more individuals shall be taken to control an entity in the circumstance
that –
(i) if the one or
more individuals were a company, they would be the entity’s holding
company, or
(ii) in
the opinion of the Comptroller, they exercise substantial control in fact over
the affairs of the entity; and
(c) a
partnership includes a limited liability partnership, but excludes a
partnership (within the meaning of Article 11) that is not treated as a
person by virtue of Article 11.
13 Groups
of entities
(1) The
Comptroller may, on application, register as a group 2 or more entities that
are eligible to be treated as members of a group.
(1A)
(2) Where
the Comptroller grants an application for registration under this paragraph,
the Comptroller must give written notice of the registration to the entity that
is to be the representative member of the group.
(3) The
registration shall take effect on and from the beginning of a prescribed
accounting period specified in the notice.
(4) The
entities shall then be treated as members of a registered group for the
purposes of this Law, and one of them, specified in the notice, shall be taken
to be the representative member.
(5) An
application under this paragraph with respect to any entities shall be of no
effect unless made –
(a) by
one of those entities or by the person controlling them;
(b) not
less than 90 days before the day on and from which the registration is to take
effect, or at such later time as the Comptroller may allow; and
(c) in
accordance with any requirements imposed by or under this Law.
(6) The
Comptroller may refuse an application made under this paragraph if it appears
to the Comptroller necessary to do so for the protection of GST revenue, but
shall not otherwise refuse such an application.
14 Consequences
of registration as group
If entities are treated
as members of a registered group for the purposes of this Law, then for the
purposes of this Law –
(a) any
business carried on by a member of the group shall be treated as carried on by
the representative member of the group;
(b) the
supply of goods or services by a member of the group to another member of the
group shall be disregarded;
(c) any
other supply of goods or services by or to a member of a group shall be treated
as a supply by or to the representative member of the group;
(d) GST
paid or payable by a member of the group on the importation of goods shall be
treated as paid or payable by the representative member and the goods shall be
taken to have been imported by the representative member; and
(e) the
members of the group shall be liable jointly and severally for any GST due from
the representative member.
15 Variation
of registration as group
(1) The
Comptroller may, on application, vary the registration of a group by adding,
removing or substituting entities as members of the group, or cancel the
registration of a group.
(2) The
Comptroller shall do so by notice in writing to the entity that is or is to be
the representative member of the group.
(3) An
entity shall not be added or substituted as a member of a group unless eligible
to be treated as a member of the group.
(4) Any
such variation or cancellation shall take effect on and from the beginning of a
prescribed accounting period specified in the notice.
(5) An
application under this paragraph with respect to any entities shall be of no
effect unless made –
(a) by
one of those entities or by the person controlling them;
(b) not
less than 90 days before the day on and from which the variation is to take
effect, or at such later time as the Comptroller may allow; and
(c) in
accordance with any requirements imposed by or under this Law.
(6) The
Comptroller may refuse an application made under this paragraph if it is an
application to add or substitute an entity and it appears to the Comptroller
necessary to refuse the addition or substitution for the protection of GST
revenue.
(7) The
Comptroller shall not otherwise refuse an application made under this
paragraph.
16 Removal
from group where change in circumstances
(1) This
paragraph applies to an entity that is a member of a group registered under
paragraph 13.
(2) If
it appears to the Comptroller that –
(a)
(b) the
entity has ceased to be controlled by the entity, person, or individuals
carrying on business in partnership, that controls or control the other
entities in the group;
(c) the
condition set out in paragraph 12(3) is no longer fulfilled in respect of
the group; or
(d) the
entity does not fulfil the condition set out in paragraph 12(4),
the Comptroller shall, by
notice in writing to the entity and to the entity, person, or individuals
carrying on business in partnership, that controls or control (or, in the case
referred to in clause (c), last controlled) the other entities in the
group, remove the entity from registration of the group.
(3) The
Comptroller shall not do that without first giving the parties that are to be
given that notice an opportunity to be heard on the question of the removal.
(4) The
removal shall have effect on and from such date as the Comptroller specifies in
the notice.
17 Cessation of liability to be
registered
A person who is liable to
be registered shall cease to be so liable at any time if the
person –
(a) has
at that time ceased to make taxable supplies; or
(b) is
not at that time a person in relation to whom any of the conditions specified
in paragraph 1(1)(a) and (b) and (3)(a) and (b) is satisfied.
18 Notification no longer liable to be
registered
(1) A
person who ceases to be liable to be registered shall notify the Comptroller of
the cessation within 30 days after the day when the cessation occurs.
(2) A
person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with sub-paragraph (1)
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on the
standard scale.
19 Cancellation of registration
(1) If
a registered person, by application to the Comptroller, satisfies the
Comptroller that the person is not liable to be registered, the Comptroller
shall cancel the person’s registration with effect on and from the day on
which the application is made or, if an earlier or later date is agreed to between
the Comptroller and the person, on and from that date instead.
(2) If
the Comptroller is satisfied that a registered person has ceased to be liable
to be registered and is not entitled to be registered, the Comptroller may
cancel the person’s registration with effect on and from the day of the
cessation or, if an earlier or later date is agreed to between the Comptroller
and the person, on and from that date instead.
(3) If
the Comptroller is satisfied that on the day on which a registered person was
registered the person was neither liable to be registered nor entitled to be
registered, the Comptroller may cancel the registration with effect on and from
that day.
(4) The
Comptroller shall not under sub-paragraph (1) cancel a person’s
registration with effect on and from any day unless satisfied that on and from
that day the person has not been liable to be registered, whether under the
provision by virtue of which the person is currently registered or another
provision.
(5) The
Comptroller shall not under sub-paragraph (2) or (3) cancel a
person’s registration with effect on and from any day unless satisfied
that on and from that day the person has neither been liable to be registered
nor been entitled to be registered, whether under the provision by virtue of
which the person is currently registered or another provision.
(6) The
Comptroller shall not under sub-paragraph (2) or (3) cancel a
person’s registration without first giving the person an opportunity to
be heard on the question whether the person is liable to be registered or
entitled to be registered.
(7) The
cancellation of a person’s registration under this paragraph shall be by
notice in writing served on the person.
20 Exemption from registration
(1) If
a person who makes or intends to make taxable supplies, by application to the
Comptroller, satisfies the Comptroller that some or all of those supplies are
zero-rated, or would be zero-rated if the person were a taxable person, the
Comptroller may exempt the person from registration.
(2) The
exemption shall be by notice in writing served on the person.
(3) If
there is a material change in the nature of the supplies made by a person
exempted under this paragraph, the person shall notify the Comptroller of the
change –
(a) within
30 days after the day on which it occurred; or
(b) if no
particular day is identifiable as the day on which it occurred, within 30 days
after the end of the quarter in which it occurred.
(4) If
in any quarter there is a material change in the proportion of zero-rated
taxable supplies made by a person exempted under this paragraph, the person
shall notify the Comptroller of the change within 30 days after the end of
the quarter.
(5) A
person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with sub-paragraph (3)
or (4) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 3 on
the standard scale.
(6) The
Comptroller may, by notice in writing served on a person exempted under this
paragraph, cancel the exemption if the grounds for it no longer apply.
(7) The
Comptroller shall not cancel a person’s exemption under this paragraph without
first giving the person an opportunity to be heard on the question whether the
person is entitled to the exemption.
Schedule 2[90]
(Article 21(2))
SUPPLY
1 Transfer of property
(1) The
transfer of the whole property in goods is a supply of the goods.
(2) However,
the transfer of an undivided share of the property in goods, or a transfer of
the possession of goods, in each case without the transfer of the whole
property in the goods, is a supply of services.
2 Issue of face-value
voucher
The issue of a face-value
voucher, or any subsequent supply of it, is a supply of services.
3 Transfer of right
The grant, assignment or
surrender of a right is a supply of services.
4 Transfer of possession
Despite
paragraph 1(2), if the possession of goods is transferred –
(a) under
an agreement for the sale of the goods; or
(b) under
an agreement that expressly contemplates that the property in the goods will also
pass at some time in the future, being a time determined by, or ascertainable
from, the agreement but in any case not later than when the goods are fully
paid for,
the transfer is a supply
of the goods.
5 Treating or processing
If a person produces
goods by applying a treatment or process to goods owned by another person, the
first person shall be taken to supply to the other person the goods so
produced.
6 Supply of energy
The supply of any form of
power, heat, refrigeration or ventilation is a supply of goods.
7 Transfer of major interest
in land
(1) The
grant, assignment, transfer or surrender of a major interest in land is a
supply of goods.
(2) In
this paragraph, “major interest in land” means an interest that
confers an exclusive right on the owner of the interest to enjoyment of the
land (whether or not that right is conditional, deferred or present), but does
not include a lease of land for a term of 9 years or less.
8 Transfer of assets of
business, and samples
(1) Where
goods forming part of the assets of a business are transferred, whether or not
for a consideration, by or under the directions of the person carrying on the
business and as a result no longer form part of those assets, the transfer is a
supply of the goods by the person.
(2) However,
the following is not such a supply –
(a) a
gift of goods made in the course of business carried on by a person if the cost
to the person is not more than £100;
(b) a
gift of a sample of any goods, being a gift made in the course of business carried
on by a person.
(3) However,
sub-paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if the gift is one of a series or
succession of gifts made to the same person on one occasion or on several
occasions.
(4) Despite
sub-paragraph (2)(b), if –
(a) a
person is given a number of gifts of samples by another person (whether on one
occasion or on several occasions) of any goods, and that is done in the course
of business carried on by the other person; and
(b) those
samples are identical or do not differ in any material respect from each other,
sub-paragraph (2)(b)
shall apply only to the first of those samples.
(5) Where
by or under the directions of a person carrying on a business, goods held or
used for the purposes of the business are put to any private use or are used,
or made available to any person for use, for any purpose other than a purpose
of the business, whether or not for a consideration, that is a supply of
services.
(6) The
Comptroller may by general direction provide that sub-paragraph (5) shall
not apply in relation to goods of any description that are used or made
available for use in circumstances specified in the general direction.
(7) Neither
sub-paragraph (1) nor sub-paragraph (5) shall require anything that a
person carrying on a business does, otherwise than for a consideration, in
relation to any goods to be treated as a supply.
(7A) Sub-paragraph (7)
does not apply if –
(a) the
person is entitled to credit for the whole or any part of the GST on the supply
or importation of the goods or of anything comprised in them;
(b) the
person would be so entitled, in relation to an importation, but for the
operation of an approval arrangement; or
(c) the
person received the goods from another person falling within clause (a)
or (b), by way of –
(i) a disposition
that, by virtue of Article 6(4), was not chargeable to GST, or
(ii) a
supply that is to be disregarded by virtue of paragraph 14(b) of Schedule 1.
(7B) In
sub-paragraph (7A)(b) (and in paragraph 10(3)) “approval
arrangement” means an administrative arrangement for approval of persons
by or on behalf of the Comptroller, under which a person approved does not pay
the GST that is to be charged on an importation of goods on the understanding
that no claim will be made to entitlement to credit in respect of that GST.
(8) Anything
that is a supply of goods by virtue of sub-paragraph (1), or of services
by virtue of sub-paragraph (5), shall be treated as made in the course or
furtherance of the business, whether or not under the other provisions of this
Law it would be so treated.
(9) In
the case of a business carried on by an individual –
(a) sub-paragraph (1)
extends to any transfer of goods in favour of the individual personally; and
(b) sub-paragraph (5)
extends to the situation where goods are used, or made available for use, by the
individual personally.
9 Sale of business assets to
recover debt
If, in the case of a
business carried on by a taxable person, goods forming part of the assets of
the business are, under any power exercisable by another person, sold by the
other person in or towards any satisfaction of a debt owed by the taxable
person, they shall be taken to be supplied by the taxable person in the course
or furtherance of the taxable person’s business.
10 Business assets of person ceasing to
be taxable
(1) If
at any time a taxable person ceases to be a taxable person, any goods forming immediately
before that time part of the assets of a business carried on by the person immediately
before that time shall be taken to be supplied at that time by the person in
the course or furtherance of the business, unless –
(a) the
business is transferred at that time as a going concern to another taxable
person;
(b) the
business is carried on from that time by another taxable person; or
(c) the
GST on that supply would not be more than £250.
(2) This
paragraph does not apply to any goods if the person who carried on a business
and ceases to be a taxable person shows to the satisfaction of the Comptroller
that –
(a) no
credit for input tax was allowed to the person in respect of the supply to the
person of the goods or their importation; and
(b) the
goods did not become part of the assets of the business as a result of the
transfer of the business to the person as a going concern by another taxable
person.
(3) This
paragraph does apply, despite sub-paragraph (2), in relation to an
importation of goods, if the sole or main reason why no credit for input tax
was allowed as mentioned in sub-paragraph (2)(a) was the operation of an
approval arrangement (within the meaning of paragraph 8(7B)).
11 Land part of assets of business
(1) Paragraphs
8(1) and (5) to (9), 9 and 10 shall have effect in relation to land forming
part of the assets of a business as if the land were goods forming part of the
assets of the business.
(2) For
the purposes of this paragraph, references in those provisions to any transfer shall
have effect as if they were references to the grant, assignment, or transfer,
of an interest in, right over or licence to occupy the land concerned.
(3) Except
in relation to the grant, assignment, or transfer, of a major interest in land
or a grant, assignment, or transfer, otherwise than for a consideration, in the
application of paragraph 8(1) by virtue of sub-paragraph (1), the
reference to a supply of goods shall have effect as a reference to a supply of
services.
Schedule 3
(Article 6(1)(c)(ii))
reverse charge to GST: services treated as
supplied where received
1. The
transfer or assignment of a copyright, patent, licence or trademark, or of a similar
right that is intellectual property.
2. Advertising
services.
3. Services
of consultants, engineers, consultancy bureaux, solicitors, advocates, notaries,
accountants and other experts or professionals.
4. Data
processing and provision of information (but not data processing, or provision
of information, relating to land).
5. Acceptance
of any obligation or undertaking to refrain from the pursuit, exercise, or
enjoyment, in whole or part, of a business activity or of a copyright, patent,
licence, trademark or of a similar right that is intellectual property.
6. The
provision of access to, and of transmission through, electricity distribution
systems, and the provision of other directly-linked services.
7. Banking,
financial and insurance services (including re-insurance, but not including the
provision of safe-deposit boxes).
8. The
supply of staff.
9. Telecommunications
services, that is, services relating to the transmission, emission, or
reception, of signals, writing, images, or sounds or information, of any nature
by wire, radio, optical or other electromagnetic systems,
including –
(a) the related transfer or assignment of the
right to use capacity for such transmission, emission or reception; and
(b) the
provision of access to global information networks.
10. Radio
and television broadcasting services.
11. Electronically-supplied
services, for example –
(a) website
supply, web-hosting or the distance maintenance of programmes and equipment;
(b) the
supply of software or the updating of software;
(c) the
supply of images, text or information, or the making available of databases;
(d) the
supply of music, films or games (including games of chance and gambling games);
(e) the
supply of political, cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific or entertainment
broadcasts (including broadcasts of events);
(f) the
supply of distance teaching,
but not the communication
per se by e-mail between the supplier of a service and his or her customer.
12. The
letting on hire of goods, other than vehicles and similar goods that are means
of transport.
13. The
services rendered by one person to another in procuring for the other any of
the services referred to in paragraphs 1 to 12.
14. Any
service when supplied to a registered person, not being a service referred to
in any of paragraphs 1 to 13.
Schedule 4
(Article 31)
VALUATION of supply:
SPECIAL CASES
1 Interpretation
(1) In
this Schedule –
“credit
voucher” means a face-value voucher issued on the basis that –
(a) the
voucher allows goods or services to be obtained by the use of the voucher only
from a person other than the person who issued the voucher; and
(b) the
person who issued the voucher will give complete or partial reimbursement for
goods or services obtained by the use of the voucher to the person from whom
the goods or services are obtained;
“face-value
voucher” means a token, stamp or voucher (whether in physical or electronic
form) that represents a right to receive goods or services to the value of an
amount stated on it or recorded in it;
“retailer
voucher” means a face-value voucher issued on the basis that –
(a) the
voucher allows goods or services to be obtained from the person who issued the
voucher; and
(b) if
the terms of the voucher allow goods or services to be obtained from another
person by the use of the voucher, the person who issued the voucher will give
complete or partial reimbursement to the other person for any goods or services
obtained from the other person by the use of the voucher.
(2) References
in this Schedule to the face value of a voucher are to the amount stated on it
or recorded in it.
2 Supply below value between
connected persons
(1) The
Comptroller may give a direction that the value of a supply made by a taxable
person for a consideration in money shall be taken to be its open-market value
if –
(a) the
value of the supply would (but for the direction) be less than its open-market
value;
(b) the supplier
and the recipient are connected; and
(c) in
the case where the supply is a taxable supply, the recipient is not entitled
under Articles 34 to 36 to credit for all of the GST on the supply.
(2) A
direction under this paragraph shall be given by notice in writing to the
supplier.
(3) A
direction shall not be given under this paragraph more than 3 years after
the day when the supply was made.
(4) A
direction given to a person under this paragraph may include a further
direction that the value of any supply made by the person after the direction
is given, or on and from such later date as may be specified in the further
direction, shall be taken to be its open-market value if –
(a) the
value of the supply would (but for the further direction) be less than its
open-market value;
(b) the
supplier and the recipient are connected; and
(c) in
the case where the supply is a taxable supply, the recipient will not be entitled
under Articles 34 to 36 to credit for all of the GST on the supply.
(5) The
value of a supply referred to in this paragraph shall be determined in
accordance with the direction that applies under this paragraph to the supply.
(6) This
paragraph does not apply to a supply to which paragraph 14 applies.
3 Supply for resale where
recipient not taxable
(1) If –
(a) the
whole or part of a business carried on by a taxable person consists of making
to a number of recipients supplies of goods to be sold by retail, whether by
the recipients or other persons; and
(b) the
recipients are not taxable persons,
the Comptroller may by
notice in writing to the taxable person give a direction that the value of any
such supply by the person after the giving of the direction, or on and from
such later date as may be specified in the direction, shall be taken to be its
open-market value on a sale by retail.
(2) The
value of a supply referred to in this paragraph shall be the value determined
in accordance with the direction under this paragraph that applies to the
supply.
4 Value includes duty
If any goods whose supply
involves their importation are charged to duty under the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 in connection with their importation, the
value of the supply shall include the duty.
5 Discount for prompt
payment
(1) If
goods or services are supplied for a consideration in money and on terms
allowing a discount for prompt payment, the value of the supply shall be taken to
be reduced by the discount, whether or not payment is made in accordance with
those terms.
(2) However,
this paragraph does not apply if the terms include any provision for payment by
instalments.
6 Credit voucher
(1) In
determining the value of the supply of a credit voucher, the consideration for
the issue of the voucher shall be disregarded except to the extent that the
consideration exceeds the face value of the voucher.
(2) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall not apply if any of the persons from whom goods or services are obtained
by the use of the voucher fails to account for any of the GST due on the supply
of those goods or services, being supply to the person using the voucher to
obtain them.
7 Retailer voucher
(1) In
determining the value of the supply of a retailer voucher, the consideration
for the issue of the voucher shall be disregarded except to the extent that the
consideration exceeds the face value of the voucher.
(2) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall not apply if –
(a) the
voucher is used to obtain goods or services from one or more persons and at
least one of those persons is not the person who issued the voucher; and
(b) any
of the persons who are not the person who issued the voucher fails to account
for any of the GST due on the supply of any of those goods or services.
(3) The
value of any supply of a retailer voucher subsequent to its issue shall be
determined in accordance with Article 31(2).
8 Postage stamp
In determining the value of
the supply of a face-value voucher that is a postage stamp, the consideration for
the supply of the voucher shall be disregarded for the purposes of this Law
except to the extent that the consideration exceeds the face value of the
stamp.
9 Other vouchers
The value of a supply of
a face-value voucher that is not a credit voucher, a retailer voucher or a
postage stamp shall be determined in accordance with Article 31(2).
10 Free vouchers
If –
(a) there
is a supply of a face-value voucher (other than a postage stamp) together with
another supply to the same person in a composite transaction; and
(b) the
total consideration for the supplies is no different, or not significantly
different, from what it would be if the voucher were not supplied,
the supply of the voucher
shall be treated as being made for no consideration.
11 Prescribed supplies of goods
(1) The
value of a supply shall be determined in accordance with this paragraph if it
is –
(a) something
treated as a supply in Regulations under Article 21(6);
(b) a
supply of goods by virtue of paragraph 8(1) of Schedule 2, not being
a supply for a consideration; or
(c) a
supply of goods by virtue of paragraph 10 of Schedule 2,
but not if it is a supply to
which paragraph 14 of this Schedule applies.
(2) The
value of the supply shall be taken to be –
(a) such a
consideration in money as would be payable by the person making the supply if
the person were, at the time of the supply, to purchase goods identical in
every respect (including age and condition) to the goods supplied;
(b) if such
a purchase were impracticable, such a consideration in money as would be
payable by the person making the supply if the person were, at the time of the
supply, to purchase goods similar to, and of the same age and condition as, the
goods concerned; or
(c) if a
purchase within the terms of neither clause (a) nor clause (b) were
practicable, the cost of producing the goods concerned if they were produced at
the time of the supply.
(3) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (2), it shall be assumed that the purchase
(in the case of a value determined under sub-paragraph (2)(a) or (b))
or the production (in the case of a value determined under sub-paragraph (2)(c))
would be on or for the same market and under the same market conditions as the
supply referred to in sub-paragraph (1).
(4) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (2), the amount of value in money that would
be payable by any person if the person were to purchase any goods shall be
taken to be the amount that would be so payable after the deduction of any
amount included in the purchase price in respect of GST on the supply of the
goods to the person.
12 Prescribed supplies of services
(1) The
value of a supply shall be determined in accordance with this paragraph if it
is –
(a) something
treated as a supply in Regulations under Article 21(5); or
(b) a
supply of services by virtue of paragraph 8(5) of Schedule 2, not being
a supply that is for a consideration,
but not if it is supply to which
paragraph 14 of this Schedule applies.
(2) The
value of the supply shall be the full cost to the taxable person of providing
the services.
13 Service supplied by a supplier who
belongs outside Jersey
If a supply of a service
is charged to GST by virtue of Article 6(1)(c), the value of the supply
shall be taken –
(a) where
the consideration for which the service was in fact supplied to the person was
a consideration in money, to be such amount as is equal to that consideration;
or
(b) where
the consideration for which the service was in fact supplied to the person did
not consist or did not wholly consist of money, to be such amount in money as
is equivalent to that consideration.
14 Accommodation and catering for
employees
(1) This
paragraph applies to a supply of goods or services, whether or not for a
consideration, that is made by an employer and consists of one or both of the
following –
(a) the
provision, in the course of catering, of food and beverages to the
employer’s employee;
(b) the
provision of accommodation for the employer’s employee in a hotel, inn,
boarding house or similar establishment.
(2) The
value of the supply shall be nil unless the supply is for a consideration
consisting wholly or partly of money.
(3) If
the supply is for such a consideration, the value of the supply shall be
determined with regard to the part of the consideration that is money and
without regard to any part of the consideration that is not money.
15 Foreign currency consideration
(1) If –
(a) there
is a supply of goods or services on any day; and
(b) any
sum relevant for determining the value of the supply is expressed in a currency
other than sterling,
then for the purposes of
valuing the supply, the sum is to be converted –
(i) if
the supplier has an option in force under this paragraph, into an amount
calculated in accordance with the rate or method applying under the option;
(ii) if the
supplier does not have such an option, but the Comptroller has by general
direction specified a rate of exchange or method for determining a rate of
exchange, into an amount calculated using that rate or method; or
(iii) in
any other case, into the amount that the recipient would pay in sterling if the
recipient bought the sum at the average telegraphic transfer rate appropriate
to the sum in Jersey on the day, without paying any fee.
(2) The
Comptroller may give a general direction that specifies for the purposes of
this paragraph –
(a) rates
of exchange;
(b) methods
for determining rates of exchange; or
(c) the
manner in which an option to use a rate of exchange, or to use a method for determining
rates of exchange, is to be exercised.
(3) Such
an option –
(a) shall
apply to all such supplies by the supplier as are of a description, or are made
on and from a date, specified by the supplier in the instrument by which the
supplier exercised the option; and
(b) shall
not be withdrawn or varied except with the consent of the Comptroller and in
such manner as the Comptroller may require.
(4) In
specifying a method of determining a rate of exchange, a general direction
under sub-paragraph (2) may make provision for the use, by agreement
between the supplier and the Comptroller and for the purpose of valuing some or
all of the supplies made by the person, of a rate of exchange that is different
from any which would otherwise apply.
16 Gaming machines
(1) If
a person plays a game of chance by means of a gaming machine, for the purposes
of GST the amount paid by the person to play the game shall be treated as the
consideration for a supply of services to the person.
(2) Giving
a person access to a gaming machine (including by the provision to the person
of tokens if these are necessary in order to play) so that the person can play a
game of chance by means of the gaming machine is a supply of services to the
person.
(3) The
value of all supplies referred to in sub-paragraph (2), whether to that
person alone or to that and other persons, in any period shall be determined as
if the consideration for the supplies were reduced by an amount equal to the
wins in the period.
(4) The
insertion of a token into a gaming machine shall be treated for the purposes of
sub-paragraph (1) as payment of an amount equal to that for which a player
can obtain the token.
(5) The
receipt of a token as a win shall be treated for the purposes of sub-paragraph (3) –
(a) if
the token is of a kind used to play the machine, as the receipt of an amount
equal to that for which a player could obtain the token otherwise than as a win;
or
(b) if
the token is not of such a kind but can be exchanged for money, as the receipt
of an amount equal to that for which it can be exchanged by the winner.
(6) In
this Article –
“game of
chance” has the same meaning as in the Gambling (Jersey) Law 1964;
“player” means
a person playing a game of chance by means of a gaming machine;
“win” means
the amount (if any) received by a winner;
“winner” means
a person (other than the person making the supply referred to in sub-paragraph (2))
playing successfully.
Schedule 5[91]
(Article 48)
exempt supplies
1 Group
1 – Finance
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the following supplies shall be exempt
supplies –
(a) the
issue, transfer or receipt of, or any dealing with, money, security for money
or any note or order for the payment of money;
(b) the
making of any advance or the granting of any credit;
(c) the
provision, in connection with the supply of goods by hire-purchase, conditional
sale or credit sale, of credit in instalments, for which provision a separate
charge is made and disclosed to the recipient of the supply of goods;
(d) the
provision of administrative arrangements and documentation and the transfer of
title to the goods in connection with the supply described clause (c), if
the total consideration for that provision is specified in the agreement and
does not exceed £10;
(e) the
making of arrangements for any supply referred to in clause (a), (b), (c)
or (d);
(f) subject
to sub-paragraph (2), the issue, transfer or receipt of, or any dealing
with, any security or secondary security, being –
(i) stock or debenture
stock, or a share, bond, note (other than a promissory note) or debenture, or a
share in an oil royalty,
(ii) a
document relating to money, in any currency, deposited with the issuer or some
other person, being a document that recognizes an obligation to pay a stated
amount to bearer or to order, with or without interest, and being a document by
the delivery of which, with or without endorsement, the right to receive that
stated amount, with or without interest, is transferable,
(iii) a
bill, note or other obligation of the States or of a government in any part of
the world, being a document by the delivery of which, with or without
endorsement, title is transferable, and not being an obligation that is or has
been legal tender in any part of the world,
(iv) a
letter of allotment or rights, a renounceable or scrip certificate or a rights
coupon,
(v) a warrant conferring an
option to acquire a security referred to in this clause, a coupon representing
dividends or interest on such a security, or a bond mandate or other document
conferring or containing evidence of title or rights in respect of such a
security, or
(vi) a
unit or other document conferring rights under any trust established for the
purpose, or having the effect, of providing facilities for the participation by
persons having funds available for investment, as beneficiaries under the trust,
in any profits or income arising from the acquisition, holding, management or
disposal of any property;
(g) the
underwriting of an issue referred to in clause (a) or (f);
(h) the
making of arrangements for, or the underwriting of, an issue, transfer,
receipt, or dealing, referred to in clause (f);
(i) the
operation of a current, deposit or savings account;
(j) the
management of an approved unit trust scheme or of a trust-based scheme;
(k) the
management of the fund property of a collective investment fund (being a collective
investment fund within the meaning of the Collective
Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988).
(2) Sub-paragraph (1)(f)
does not include a supply that is zero-rated by virtue of
paragraph 1(1)(c) or (d) of Schedule 6.
2 Group
2 – Insurance
For the purposes of this
Law, the following supplies shall be exempt supplies –
(a) the
provision of –
(i) insurance
or reinsurance by a person authorized by a permit under the Insurance
Business (Jersey) Law 1996 to carry on insurance business, where the
provision of that insurance or reinsurance forms the whole or part of that insurance
business, or
(ii) insurance
or reinsurance by a person where the provision of that insurance or reinsurance
forms the whole or part of any insurance business that may be carried on
without a permit under that Law;
(b) the
making of arrangements for the provision of insurance, or reinsurance, referred
to in sub-paragraph (a);
(c) the
handling of an insurance claim by an insurance broker, an insurance agent, or
person referred to in sub-paragraph (a), but not the supply, in the
assessment of an insurance claim, of a legal service or of a service typically
provided by a loss adjuster, average adjuster, assessor or surveyor.
3 Group
3 – Postal services
For the purposes of this
Law, the following supplies shall be exempt supplies –
(a) the
conveyance of a postal packet (being a postal packet within the meaning of the Postal Services
(Jersey) Law 2004) by a postal operator (being a postal operator
within the meaning of that Law);
(b) the
supply, by such a postal operator, of a service in connection with the
conveyance of such a postal packet, but not the letting on hire of goods.
4 Group
4 – Medical and paramedical supplies
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the following supplies shall be exempt supplies –
(a) the
supply of any service or goods by a doctor in the course of his or her practice
as a doctor;
(b) the
supply of any service or goods by a dentist in the course of his or her
practice as a dentist;
(c) the
supply of any service or goods by a registered optician (within the meaning of
the Opticians
(Registration) (Jersey) Law 1962), being a supply in the course of his
or her practice as such a registered optician;
(d) the
supply of any service or goods by a person registered under the Health Care
(Registration) (Jersey) Law 1995 in the course of his or her practice in
his or her relevant registrable occupation within the meaning of that Law;
(e) the
supply of any service or goods in a nursing home registered under the Nursing Homes
(Jersey) Law 1994 or in any premises where a regulated activity
described in paragraph 3, 4, 5, 7, 13, 14 or 15 of Schedule 1 to the Regulation of
Care (Jersey) Law 2014 is carried on, being a supply made by or on
behalf of the person carrying on the home or regulated activity to a patient in
the home or person who is a receiver of care provided by the regulated activity
as the case may be;
(f) the
supply of any medical service (within the extended meaning of that expression
given by Article 20A of the Health Insurance
(Jersey) Law 1967) or goods by the contractor under a contract entered
into under Article 20B of that Law.
(2) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (1), if –
(a) a
service is or goods are supplied to a person (“the patient”) by a
person (“the agency”) other than a person (“a
practitioner”) specified in any of clauses (a) to (d) of sub-paragraph (1);
and
(b) the
service is or goods are nevertheless provided by a practitioner to the patient and
in the course of the practitioner’s practice as such a practitioner,
the supply of the service
or goods shall be taken to have been made by the practitioner in the course of
the practitioner’s practice as such a practitioner and as referred to in
the relevant clause.
(3) For
the avoidance of doubt, the descriptions specified in sub-paragraph (2)(a)
in inverted commas are not intended to limit the classes of persons to which
they relate.
5 Group
5 – Supplies by charities
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the supply of any service or goods by a charity shall
be exempt.
(2) For
the purposes of this paragraph, “charity” means a corporation,
association, trust or other entity, the income from the property of which is
exempt from income tax by virtue of Article 115(a), (aa) or (ae) of the Income Tax
(Jersey) Law 1961.
6 Group
6 – Child care
For the purposes of this
Law, the supply of a service, being child care for a child, shall be exempt if –
(a) the
child care is supplied to a person who (within the meaning of the Children
(Jersey) Law 2002) has parental responsibility for the child;
(b) the
child care is supplied in day care accommodation registered under the Day Care of
Children (Jersey) Law 2002; and
(c) the
child care is approved.
7 Group
7 – Education
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the supply of a service, being the education of
children at any of the following schools shall be exempt –
(a) Victoria
College;
(b) Jersey
College for Girls;
(c) Helvetia
House School;
(d) St.
Christopher’s School;
(e) an
approved school.
(1A) For
the purposes of this Law, the supply of a service, being the education of
children below compulsory school age in a nursery school, or nursery class,
established and maintained by the Minister shall be exempt.
(2) For
the purposes of this Law, the supply of a service, being higher education at
Highlands College or an approved college, shall be exempt.
(3) In
sub-paragraph (2), “higher education” has the same meaning as
in the Education
(Jersey) Law 1999.
8 Group
8 – Burial and cremation
(1) For
the purposes of this Law, the supply of a service, being –
(a) the
disposal of the remains of the dead;
(b) the
making of arrangements for or in connection the disposal of the remains of the
dead; or
(c) any
approved service for or in connection with the remains of the dead,
shall be exempt.
(2) For
the purposes of this Law, the supply of goods, being the supply of a coffin, or
other approved goods, in connection with the disposal of the remains of the
dead, shall be exempt.
Schedule 6[92]
(Article 49)
ZERO-RATED supplies
1A Interpretation
In this Schedule –
“aircraft” means an aircraft –
(a) that
is used by an airline operating for reward chiefly on international routes; or
(b) that –
(i) is of a weight of
not less than 8,000 kilograms, and
(ii) is
neither designed nor adapted for use for recreation or pleasure;
“airline” means an undertaking that provides services
for the carriage by air of passengers or cargo (or both);
“co-location”, in relation to computer server equipment,
means the provision of a physical environment for the operation of the computer
server equipment;
“grant” includes assignment, transfer and surrender;
“international route” includes (but is not limited to) a
route between Jersey and any place outside Jersey;
“major interest”, in relation to land, means an interest
that confers an exclusive right on the owner of the interest to enjoyment of
the land (whether or not that right is conditional, deferred or present), but
does not include a lease of land for a term of 9 years or less;
“ship” means a vessel other than a vessel that is
designed or adapted for use for recreation or pleasure;
“use for a relevant charitable purpose” means use by a
charity (within the meaning of paragraph 5(2) of Schedule 5) –
(a) otherwise
than in the course or furtherance of a business; or
(b) as a
village hall or similarly in providing social or recreational facilities for a
local community;
“use for a relevant residential purpose” means use
as –
(a) a
children’s home or other institution providing residential accommodation
for children;
(b) a
home or other institution providing residential accommodation with personal
care for persons in need of personal care by reason of old age, disability,
past or present dependence on alcohol or drugs, or past or present mental
disorder;
(c) a
hospice;
(d) residential
accommodation for students or school pupils;
(e) residential
accommodation for members of any of the armed forces;
(f) a
monastery, nunnery or similar establishment; or
(g) an
institution that is the sole or main residence of at least 90% of its
residents,
except use as a hospital, prison or similar institution or as a
hotel, inn or similar establishment.
1 Supply of dwelling
(1) The following shall be
zero-rated –
(a) the
supply (whether by sale, transfer or lease (of any term)) of an interest in or
right over –
(i) a dwelling, or
(ii) a
building intended solely for use for a relevant residential purpose or solely
for use for a relevant charitable purpose;
(b) the
supply of a licence to occupy a dwelling or such a building.
(c) the
supply by issue, transfer or receipt of, or any dealing with, any share, ownership
of which, by virtue of the articles of association of the company in which the
share is held, confers a right to occupy a dwelling;
(d) the
supply, by issue, transfer or receipt of, or any dealing with, any share,
ownership of which, by virtue of the articles of association of the company in
which the share is held confers a right to use a parking facility associated
with a dwelling (but not the right to occupy the dwelling) provided
that –
(i) the issue,
transfer or receipt of, or dealing with, the share conferring the right to use
a parking facility occurs at the same time as the issue, transfer or receipt
of, or dealing with, a share that confers a right to occupy the associated
dwelling, and
(ii) upon
the issue, transfer or receipt of, or dealing with the shares described in
clause (i), the recipient of the right to use the parking facility is also
the recipient of the right to occupy the associated dwelling.
(2) However, the supply of
food or linen, or any cleaning service, as part of or together with the supply
of an interest in, right over, or licence to occupy, a dwelling or such a
building, shall not be treated as included in a supply referred to in sub-paragraph (1).
(3) Sub-paragraph (1)(a)
or (b) shall not apply to the supply of an interest in, right over, or licence
to occupy, a dwelling, if –
(a) the
relevant sale, transfer or lease prevents the recipient from occupying the
dwelling continuously during the term of the interest or right;
(b) the
relevant interest, right or licence does not extend to the recipient’s occupying
the dwelling continuously during the term of the interest, right or licence;
(c) the
term of the interest, right or licence is less than 3 months; or
(d) a
restrictive agreement or covenant, or permission under the Planning and Building
(Jersey) Law 2002, prevents the use of the dwelling as the recipient’s
principal private residence.
(4) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall not apply to the supply of an interest in, right over, or licence to
occupy, a building intended solely for use for a relevant residential purpose
or solely for use for a relevant charitable purpose, if –
(a) the
relevant sale, transfer or lease prevents the use of the building solely for the
relevant residential purpose, or solely for the relevant charitable purpose,
continuously during the term of the interest or right;
(b) the
relevant interest, right or licence does not extend to the use of the building
for the relevant residential purpose, or the relevant charitable purpose, continuously
during the term of the interest, right or licence;
(c) the
term of the interest, right or licence is less than 3 months; or
(d) a
restrictive agreement or covenant, or permission under the Planning and Building
(Jersey) Law 2002, prevents the use of the building solely for the relevant
residential purpose, or the relevant charitable purpose.
(5) For the purposes of
this paragraph a parking facility –
(a) means
a garage, a parking bay designated for use by one person or a designated
parking place in which a person has a right to use a parking bay; and
(b) a
dwelling and a parking facility are associated if –
(i) the dwelling and
parking facility are reasonably near to each other, and
(ii) the
share conferring the right to occupy the dwelling and the share conferring the
right to use the parking facility must be owned by the same person.
2 Zero-rated supplies of land,
services or material
(1) A
grant of a major interest in, or in any part of, land shall be zero-rated if at
the time of the grant –
(a) the
land or the part is subject to permission under the Planning and
Building (Jersey) Law 2002 for the construction of a dwelling or a
number of dwellings, or of a building intended solely for use for a relevant
residential purpose; or
(b) there
is on the land or the part a completed building –
(i) designed solely
as a dwelling or a number of dwellings, or
(ii) intended
solely for use for a relevant residential purpose or solely for use for a
relevant charitable purpose,
and the land or the
part are within, or coterminous with, the curtilage of the building.
(1A) In
sub-paragraph (1)(b), the reference to “completed” in relation
to a building is a reference to one or both of the following facts in relation
to the building –
(a) that
every dwelling in the building is occupied by one or more persons living in the
dwelling;
(b) that
the notice required by bye-law 13(6) of the Building
Bye-laws (Jersey) 2007 has been given in relation to the building work
by which the building was constructed.
(1B) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall not apply to the grant of a major interest in a part of land to the
extent that that part consists of goods, other than building materials, that
were incorporated in that part for the purpose of making that grant.
(2) A
supply of services (other than services of an architect, surveyor or any person
acting as consultant or in a supervisory capacity) shall be zero-rated if the
supply is in the course of the construction of a building –
(a) designed
solely as a dwelling or number of dwellings; or
(b) intended
for use solely for a relevant residential purpose or a relevant charitable
purpose.
(3) A
supply shall be zero-rated if the supply is to a person of –
(a) materials;
or
(b) articles,
being builder’s hardware, sanitary ware or other articles of a kind
ordinarily installed by builders as fixtures,
by a supplier who also
makes to that person a supply of services described in sub-paragraph (2)
that include the use of those materials or the installation of those articles.
(4) The
references in sub-paragraphs (1) and (2) to the construction of a building
shall not include a reference to –
(a) the
alteration, conversion, enlargement, improvement, reconstruction or repair of
an existing building; or
(b) the
making of an extension of, or annexe to, an existing building, being an
extension, or annexe –
(i) that provides for
internal access to the existing building, or
(ii) of
which the separate use, letting or disposal is prevented by a restrictive
agreement or covenant, or by permission under the Planning and
Building (Jersey) Law 2002.
(4A) Despite
sub-paragraph (4) –
(a) the
reference in sub-paragraph (1)(a) to the construction of a dwelling or
number of dwellings includes a reference to the conversion of one or more
existing buildings that are not dwellings into one or more dwellings; and
(b) the
reference in sub-paragraph (2) to the construction of a building designed
solely as a dwelling or number of dwellings, includes a reference to the
conversion of an existing building that is not so solely designed into one that
is so solely designed.
(4B) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (4), but not for the purposes of
sub-paragraph (4A) –
(a) the
references to an existing building include any part of a building that remains
above ground level; and
(b) any
works carried out on a site that includes such an existing building are to be
treated as falling within sub-paragraph (4)(a) or (b) unless the
existing building is demolished completely to ground level.
(4C) For
the purpose of sub-paragraph (2), sub-paragraph (4B) does not apply
to sub-paragraph (4) if –
(a) the
construction of the building was started before date on which sub-paragraph (4B)
comes into force; and
(b) the
supply of the services takes place within 2 years after that date.
(5) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall not apply to –
(a) the
grant of a lease, being a grant that is not made for a consideration in the
form of a premium in respect of the lease or of a first payment of rent due
under the lease; or
(b) the
grant of an interest in, or in any part of, a building designed as a dwelling
or number of dwellings, or the grant of an interest in the site of such a
building or of any part of such a building, if a restrictive agreement or
covenant, or permission under the Planning and
Building (Jersey) Law 2002, prevents the use of any of the dwellings
as a principal private residence.
(6) Sub-paragraph (3)
shall not apply to the supply of –
(a) finished
or prefabricated furniture, other than furniture designed to be fitted in
kitchens;
(b) materials
for the construction of fitted furniture, other than of kitchen furniture;
(c) domestic
electrical or gas appliances, other than those designed to provide space
heating or water heating or both; or
(d) carpets
or carpeting material.
(7) If
all or part of a building is intended for use solely for a relevant residential
purpose or a relevant charitable purpose –
(a) a
supply relating to the building (or any part of it) shall not be taken, for the
purposes of sub-paragraph (2) or (3), to relate to a building intended for
such use unless the supply is made to a person who intends to use the building
(or part) for such a purpose; and
(b) a
grant or other supply relating to the building (or any part of it) shall not be
taken to relate to a building intended for such use unless, before it is made
the person to whom it is made has given to the person making it a certificate
in the approved form (or if no form has been approved, in any reasonable form),
specifying that the grant or other supply (or a specified part of it) so
relates.
(8) If
only part of a building is designed solely as a dwelling or number of dwellings
or is intended for use solely for a relevant residential purpose or a relevant
charitable purpose, a grant, or other supply, relating to the building or site
of the building shall be treated as relating to a building so designed or
intended in the proportion that the part bears to the whole.
(9) Such
a part or proportion shall be determined in accordance with any general
direction that the Comptroller may make for the purposes of this paragraph,
and, in the absence of such a direction, on the basis of what is reasonable and
just according to the design or intention referred to in sub-paragraph (8).
(10) For
the purposes of this paragraph, a dwelling includes a garage constructed for
occupation from the same time as, and by the same occupier as, the part of the
dwelling for human habitation.
(11) …
3 Zero-rating of medicines
etc. on prescription
A supply of any goods or
services shall be zero-rated if a person who is an insured person within the
meaning of the Health
Insurance (Jersey) Law 1967 is entitled to claim pharmaceutical
benefit under that Law for the supply.
4 Zero-rating of exports
(1) A
supply of goods shall be zero-rated if the supply –
(a) would
involve their export from Jersey; or
(b) would
involve their being shipped on a ship or aircraft for use –
(i) as stores on a
voyage by that ship or aircraft to a destination outside Jersey, or
(ii) as
merchandise for sale by retail on the ship or aircraft to persons carried on a
voyage by that ship or aircraft to a destination outside Jersey, being sale
during that voyage,
and any conditions imposed by the Comptroller by direction are
fulfilled.
(2) Those conditions may
include conditions as to the minimum or maximum value of the supply or of the
goods and as to any other matter.
5 Supply of international
services zero-rated
(1) A
supply of services shall be zero-rated if it is a supply of international services.
(2) A
supply of services shall be treated as a supply of international services for
the purposes of this paragraph if the supply is or the services are for the
time being of any of the following descriptions –
(a) services
(including ancillary transport activities such as loading, unloading and
handling) consisting in the transport of passengers or goods –
(i) from a place
outside Jersey to another place outside Jersey,
(ii) from
a place in Jersey to a place outside Jersey, or
(iii) from
a place outside Jersey to a place in Jersey;
(b) services
(including ancillary transport activities such as loading, unloading and
handling) consisting in the transport of goods from a place in Jersey to
another place in Jersey to the extent that those services are supplied by the
same supplier as part of the supply of services to which clause (a)
applies in the circumstances described in sub-clause (ii) or (iii) of that
clause;
(c) services
(other than the letting on hire of any means of transport) consisting in the
insurance, or the arranging of the insurance, or the arranging of the
transport, of passengers or goods to whom or to which clause (a) or (b)
applies;
(f) services
supplied directly in connection with goods situated outside Jersey at the time
when the services are performed;
(g) services
supplied directly in connection with goods for export from Jersey and supplied
to a person who, at the time when the services are performed, belongs in a
country other than Jersey;
(h) financial
services supplied directly in connection with goods for export from Jersey,
being services prescribed by the Regulations;
(i) services
that –
(i) are supplied
under a contract with a person who belongs in a country other than Jersey, and
(ii) directly
benefit a person who, at the time when the services are performed, belongs in a
country other than Jersey,
not being services
supplied directly in connection with –
(iii) land
situated in Jersey or any improvements to such land, or
(iv) goods
situated in Jersey at the time when the services are performed, other than
goods for export from Jersey;
(j) pilotage,
salvage or towage services performed in relation to ships or aircraft;
(k) services
consisting in the surveying of any ship or aircraft or the classification of
any ship or aircraft for the purposes of any register;
(l) the
supply (including the letting on hire) of any ship or aircraft;
(m) services
consisting in the repair, maintenance, broking or management of any ship or
aircraft, being services provided to the owner, operator or agent of the ship
or aircraft;
(p) services
that –
(i) are supplied
under a contract with a person who belongs in a country other than Jersey,
(ii) directly
benefit a person who belongs in a country other than Jersey, and
(iii) relate
to or consist in the co-location in Jersey of computer server equipment
belonging to one or both of those persons.
(3) …
(4) …
(5) In
sub-paragraph (2)(i) and (p), the person with whom the contract is made
and the person who directly benefits from the services may be the same person
or different persons.
(6) The
reference in sub-paragraph (2)(l) to the supply of any ship or aircraft
includes a reference to the supply of services under a charter of that ship or
aircraft, except services performed substantially in Jersey and consisting of
any of the following –
(a) transport
of passengers;
(b) accommodation;
(c) entertainment;
(d) catering
of food or beverage;
(e) education.
(7) Something
that is specified as a supply or a service in sub-paragraph (2), but would
not otherwise be a supply or a service for the purposes of this Law, shall, for
the purposes of this Law, be treated respectively as a supply of services in
Jersey or a service supplied in Jersey.
6 …
Schedule 7
(Article 70)
aPPLICATION OF CUSTOMS AND
EXCISE (jERSEY) lAW 1999
1 Article 22
(1) For
the purposes of Article 22(2) of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, a demand for payment of duty in respect of a
postal packet, to the extent that the duty is GST on the importation of goods
in the relevant packet, may be met by the addressee’s making an
arrangement for the payment of the GST to the satisfaction of the proper postal
officer instead of the addressee’s paying the GST to that officer.
(2) If
such an arrangement is made, the GST shall, for the purposes of this Law and the
Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, be taken to have been paid.
(3) Sub-paragraph (2)
shall, however, be taken to have had no effect if at any time the arrangement
is not complied with.
2 Articles 26 and 29
(1) For
the purposes of Articles 26(1) and 29(1) of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, a requirement that duty be paid in respect
of imported goods, to the extent that the duty is GST on the importation of the
goods, may be met by the importer’s making an arrangement for the payment
of the GST to the satisfaction of the proper officer.
(2) If
such an arrangement is made, the GST shall, for the purposes of this Law and
the Customs
and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, be taken to have been paid.
(3) Sub-paragraph (2)
shall, however, be taken to have had no effect if at any time the arrangement
is not complied with.
3 Article 62
Article 62(1) to (3)
of the Customs
and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 shall not apply to or in respect of this
Law.
4 Article 65
(1) If
a penalty has been accepted under Article 65 of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 from a person in respect of any conduct, the
person shall not be assessed to penalty tax under this Law in respect of the
same conduct.
(2) If
a person has been assessed to penalty tax under this Law in respect of any
conduct, a penalty shall not be accepted under Article 65 of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 from the person in respect of the same
conduct.
5 Articles 67 and 70
In Articles 67(2) and
70(1) of the Customs
and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, a reference to customs includes a
reference to GST on the importation of goods.
6 Value of imported goods
Subject to
paragraph 8, in determining under the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 the value of any imported goods for the
purposes of the charge to GST on their importation, Article 32 of this Law
shall apply.
7 Customs Law penalties etc
(1) Article 32
of this Law shall not apply for the purposes of the assessment of any penalty
under Article 18(3), 31(1), 33(3), 36(2), 37(1), 62(4) or 65(1) of
the Customs
and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999, nor the assessment of the value of a
sample under Article 50(3) of that Law, nor the assessment of value for
the purposes of paragraph 4(1)(a) or 7(1)(a) or (2)(c) of Schedule 3
of that Law.
(2) For
the avoidance of doubt it is hereby stated that a reference to customs duty,
being a reference in any provision of the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 that relates to an offence in respect of
customs duty, shall include a reference to GST on importation.
8 Functions of customs officers
and postal officers
The powers and other
functions of officers and postal officers under the Customs and
Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 shall apply in respect of GST on an
importation of goods in the same way as they would in respect of customs duty
on the importation or on the goods imported or on postal packets, whether or
not customs duty is in fact payable on the importation, on those goods or on
the postal packets.
Schedule 8[93]
(Article 93)
powers as to search and
information
1 Interpretation
In this Part –
“occupier” of
premises includes a person in charge of a vessel, vehicle, aircraft or
hovercraft;
“premises”
includes a vessel, vehicle, aircraft or hovercraft;
“warrant”
means a warrant issued under this Schedule.
2 Power to examine goods
(1) An
authorized person may inspect, examine and take account of goods that are –
(a) in or
on a vessel, vehicle, aircraft or hovercraft at any place in Jersey;
(b) brought
to any place in Jersey for supply or exportation or for shipment for
exportation;
(c) anywhere
where goods whose importation is chargeable to GST are unloaded, stored,
deposited, or subjected to any process;
(d) anywhere
where goods whose supply is chargeable to GST are stored, deposited, grown,
manufactured, produced, prepared or subjected to any process;
(e) held
by a person as stock for the person’s business or as materials for
manufacture or processing; or
(f) subject
to any claim, dispute, or appeal, under this Law.
(2) An
authorized person may inspect and examine any record, device, equipment, or
other thing, that is located in Jersey and is associated with the importation,
exportation or supply of goods.
(3) An
authorized person may exercise the power under sub-paragraph (1)
or (2) on premises if he or she is lawfully on the premises.
(4) Circumstances
where a person is lawfully on premises for the purposes of sub-paragraph (3)
include, but are not restricted to, where the person is on the premises in
pursuance of paragraph 7 or in execution of a warrant.
(5) An
authorized person may for the purpose of exercising any power under
sub-paragraph (1) require the person in possession of the
goods –
(a) to
produce them to the authorized person on any premises or other place specified
by the authorized person if it would be practicable for the person in
possession of the goods to do so;
(b) to
open or unpack any container if it would be practicable for the person in
possession of the goods to do so; and
(c) to
provide such facilities or assistance as the authorized person may reasonably
require for the purposes of the exercise of the power.
3 Power to examine services
(1) An
authorized person may examine and take account of services supplied in Jersey
or supplied to a recipient in Jersey.
(2) An
authorized person may inspect and examine any record, device, equipment, or
other thing, that is located in Jersey and is associated with the supply of
services.
(3) An
authorized person may exercise the power under sub-paragraph (1) or (2)
on premises if he or she is lawfully on the premises.
(4) Circumstances
where a person is lawfully on premises for the purposes of sub-paragraph (3)
include, but are not restricted to, where the person is on the premises in
pursuance of paragraph 7 or in execution of a warrant.
4 Examination of record,
device, equipment or other thing
(1) An
authorized person may for the purpose of exercising the power under
paragraph 2(2) or 3(2) –
(a) require
the person in charge of the record, device, equipment or other thing referred
to in that sub-paragraph to produce it to the authorized person on any premises
or other place specified by the authorized person if it would be practicable
for the person in charge of the record, device, equipment or other thing to do
so; and
(b) require
the person in charge of the record, device, equipment or other thing to provide
such facilities or assistance as the authorized person may reasonably require
for the purposes of the exercise of the power.
(2) An
authorized person may at any reasonable time require a person who makes
supplies of services, being supplies referred to in paragraph 16(2) of
Schedule 4 –
(a) to
open any gaming machine in the possession of the latter person; or
(b) to do
anything else necessary to enable the authorized person to ascertain the amount
that, in accordance with paragraph 16(3) of that Schedule, is to be
determined as the value of any supplies referred to in paragraph 16(2) of
that Schedule.
(3) Sub-paragraph (2)
shall not affect the operation of sub-paragraph (1) in relation to those
supplies.
5 Power to take samples etc
(1) An
authorized person may –
(a) take
samples of any goods;
(b) take
extracts, information or copies from any record;
(c) take
information from any device, equipment or other thing;
(d) operate
any device, equipment or other thing and take any output from it under such
operation; or
(e) take
samples, extracts or copies from other things,
being goods, a record, a device,
equipment or another thing, or other things, that the authorized person has
power under this Schedule to examine.
(2) An
authorized person shall dispose of and account for a sample taken under this paragraph
in such manner as the Comptroller, whether by direction to the authorized
person or by general direction, requires.
6 Payment for samples
An authorized person
shall pay to the person in possession of goods from which the authorized person
takes a sample under paragraph 5(1)(a) a sum that reasonably represents
the wholesale value of the sample if –
(a) the
goods have been or are supplied to any person;
(b) the
supply of the goods is chargeable to GST;
(c) the
goods are not subject to any claim, dispute, or appeal, under this Law;
(d) the
authorized person takes the sample after the GST on the supply of the goods has
been paid or otherwise accounted for;
(e) the
authorized person intends to keep the sample; and
(f) the
person in possession of the goods demands payment for the sample.
7 Power to enter
For the purpose of
exercising a power under paragraph 2, 3, 4, or 5, of this Schedule, an
authorized person may at any reasonable hour enter premises used in connection
with the carrying on of a business.
8 Search warrant
(1) If
the Bailiff or a Jurat is satisfied by information on oath supplied by an
authorized person that –
(a) there
are reasonable grounds for suspecting that an offence under this Law or the
Regulations has been, is being, or is about to be, committed on any premises
specified in the information; or
(b) evidence
of the commission of an offence under this Law or the Regulations is to be
found on any premises specified in the information,
the Bailiff or Jurat may
issue a warrant to that or any other authorized person.
(2) The
warrant may authorize any authorized person at any time within 7 days of the
date of the warrant –
(a) to
enter the premises;
(b) to
search the premises;
(c) to
exercise any of the powers of an authorized person under this Schedule on the
premises; and
(d) to
seize any goods, record, device, equipment, or other thing, found on the
premises that may be or contain evidence referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(b)
in relation to which the warrant was issued or that may be or contain evidence
in relation to an offence referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(a) in relation
to which the warrant was issued.
9 Additional conditions for
issue of warrant
(1) The
Bailiff or a Jurat shall not issue a warrant unless satisfied –
(a) that
an authorized person has given 7 days’ notice in writing to the
occupier of the premises to which the warrant would relate demanding access to
the premises;
(b) that –
(i) such access was
demanded at a reasonable hour and was unreasonably refused,
(ii) although
access to the premises was granted, the occupier unreasonably refused to comply
with a request by an authorized person to permit the authorized person to do
any one or more of the things referred to in paragraph 8(2)(b), (c) or
(d), or
(iii) although
access to the premises was granted, the occupier unreasonably refused to comply
with a requirement of an authorized person, being a lawful requirement imposed
under this Schedule; and
(c) that
the occupier, has, after the refusal, been notified by an authorized person of
the application for the warrant and has had an opportunity of being heard by
the Bailiff or Jurat on the question whether or not the warrant should be
issued.
(2) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall not apply if the Bailiff or Jurat is satisfied that the case is one of
urgency or that compliance with that sub-paragraph would defeat the object of
the entry.
10 Force
An authorized person
executing a warrant may use such reasonable force as may be necessary.
11 Police officer may accompany
An authorized person
executing a warrant may be accompanied by a police officer during the execution
of the warrant.
12 Hour
A warrant shall be
executed at a reasonable hour unless it appears to the authorized person
executing it that there are grounds for suspecting that the thing that may be
or contain evidence referred to in paragraph 8(2)(d) for which the warrant
was issued would not be found if the warrant were executed at a reasonable
hour.
13 Warrant to be shown
(1) If
the occupier of the premises to which a warrant relates is present when the
warrant is executed, the authorized person executing it shall show the warrant
to the occupier and supply him or her with a copy of it.
(2) If
the occupier is not present at that time, the authorized person executing the
warrant shall leave a copy of it in a prominent place on the premises.
14 Things seized
(1) An
authorized person seizing anything in pursuance of a warrant shall, if asked to
do so, give a receipt for the thing to the occupier of the premises to which
the warrant relates.
(2) An
authorized person may retain anything so seized for so long as he or she
believes necessary in all the circumstances.
(3) The
authorized person shall give the occupier of the premises a copy of any record
that the authorized person seizes, if the authorized person is asked to do so
and believes it can be done without undue delay.
15 Exempt communications about legal
advice
(1) The
powers referred to in paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5 and 8(2)(d) shall not be exercisable
in respect of –
(a) any
communication between a professional legal adviser and the adviser’s
client made in connection with the giving of legal advice to the client with
respect to the client’s obligations, liabilities or rights under this Law
or the Regulations; or
(b) any
communication between a professional legal adviser and the adviser’s
client, or between such an adviser or such a client and any other person, made
in connection with or in contemplation of proceedings under or arising out of
this Law or the Regulations and for the purposes of those proceedings.
(2) Sub-paragraph (1)
shall apply also to –
(a) a
copy or other record of any such communication; and
(b) any
document or article enclosed with or referred to in any such communication if the
document or article is made in connection with the giving of any advice referred
to in sub-paragraph (1)(a) or, as the case may be, made in connection with
or in contemplation of proceedings referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(b) and
for the purposes of those proceedings.
(3) Sub-paragraphs (1)
and (2) shall not apply to anything in the possession of any person other than
the professional legal adviser or the client or to anything held with the
intention of furthering a criminal purpose.
(4) In
this paragraph references to the client of a professional legal adviser include
references to any person representing such a client.
16 Occupier to furnish what is not exempt
(1) If
the occupier of premises to which a warrant relates objects to the exercise of any
of the powers referred to in paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5 and 8(2)(d) in
respect of anything, that objection being on the ground that the thing consists
partly of matters exempt from those powers, the occupier shall, if the
authorized person executing the warrant so requires, furnish the authorized
person with a copy of so much of the thing as is not exempt from those powers.
(2) The
occupier shall comply with that requirement.
17 Return of warrants
(1) An
authorized person shall return a warrant to the Bailiff or a Jurat after the
authorized person has executed it or if the authorized person has it and it is
not executed within the time authorized for its execution.
(2) The
authorized person by whom the warrant is executed shall make an endorsement on
it stating what powers have been exercised under the warrant.
18 Power to require information
(1) The
Comptroller may by direction require a person –
(a) who
is concerned (in whatever capacity) in the supply of goods or services in the
course or furtherance of a business; or
(b) to
whom a supply of goods or services in the course or furtherance of a business
is made,
to furnish to the
Comptroller such information relating to the goods or services or to the
supply, within such time and in such form and manner, as the Comptroller may
reasonably require.
(2) The
Comptroller may by direction require a person who is concerned (in whatever
capacity) in the importation of goods in the course or furtherance of a
business to furnish to the Comptroller such information relating to the goods
or to the importation, within such time and in such form and manner, as the
Comptroller may reasonably require.
(3) If
information required by direction under sub-paragraph (1) or (2) is furnished
in the form of a record, the Comptroller may keep the record for a reasonable
time and take extracts, information or copies from the record.
(4) No
person shall be required by direction under sub-paragraph (1) or (2) to
furnish a record that the person cannot be compelled to produce in proceedings
before a court or, in complying with any direction under sub-paragraph (1)
or (2), to furnish any information that the person could not be compelled to
give in evidence in proceedings before a court.
(5) Any
person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with a direction under
sub-paragraph (1) or (2) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a
fine of level 3 on the standard scale.
(6) A
person who intentionally alters, suppresses or destroys information that is the
subject of a direction under sub-paragraph (1) or (2), or a record of such
information, shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a
term of 5 years and to a fine.
(7) If
a person fails to comply with a direction under sub-paragraph (1) or (2),
the Court may, on application by the Comptroller, make an order requiring
compliance with the direction, and the order may provide that the costs of, and
incidental to, the application shall be paid by the person who failed to comply
with the direction.
Schedule 9[94]
(Articles 49 and
101)
transitional provisions and
savings
1 Regulations
(1) The
States may, by Regulations, make provision of a saving or transitional nature
consequent on the following –
(a) the
enactment of this Law;
(b) the
coming into force of any provision of this Law or of any provision of the
Regulations;
(c) any
change in the rate of GST that applies to a supply of goods or services or importation;
(d) any coming
into force, or cessation, of zero-rating in respect of a supply of goods or
services or imported goods;
(e) any coming
into force, or cessation, of an exemption in respect of a supply of goods or
services;
(f) any
change in the conditions that apply, under this Law or the Regulations, to a
supply, an importation, a zero-rating or an exempt supply, to a remission,
refund, relief, or repayment, of GST, to goods or services, or to any other
matter;
(g) any
other change in the treatment, under this Law or the Regulations, of a supply, an
importation, a zero-rating or an exempt supply, of a remission, refund, relief,
or repayment, of GST, of goods or services or of any other thing.
(2) Regulations
made under this paragraph may include provision for or in respect of zero-rating,
exemption, remission, refund, relief or repayment.
(3) A
provision of Regulations made under this paragraph may, if the Regulations so
provide, come into force on the day on which this paragraph comes into force or
on a day later than that day (and the later day may be a day that falls before
the provision is made).
(4) To
the extent to which any such provision comes into force on a day that falls
before the day when it is made, the provision does not operate so
as –
(a) to
affect, in a manner prejudicial to any person (other than the States, an administration
of the States or a person in an administration of the States), the rights of
that person existing before the day when the provision is made; or
(b) to
impose liabilities on any person (other than the States, an administration of
the States or a person in an administration of the States) in respect of
anything done or omitted to be done before the day when the provision is made.
2 Long-term contracts
A supply of goods or of
services, or goods that are imported, under a contract entered into before this
paragraph comes into force and not performed, or not fully performed, at that
time, being a contract prescribed by the Regulations, shall be zero-rated for
the purposes of this Law until the first of the following events –
(a) the
contract is varied;
(b) the
contract expires;
(c) the
expiry of the period of 5 years that starts when this paragraph comes into
force;
(d) an
event prescribed by the Regulations.
3 Amendments
made by Goods and Services Tax (Amendment) (Jersey) Law 2008
The amendment of a
provision of this Law by the Goods and Services Tax (Amendment) (Jersey) Law 2008
shall not affect the validity, or prevent the continuation of the operation, of
anything done, or any Regulation made, under the provision before the amendment
takes effect, if the same thing could have been done, or the same Regulation
made, under that provision immediately after that amendment of the provision.