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Businessman convicted and fined for tax evasion
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Magistrate Woo Huey-fang of Tsuen Wan
Magistrate's Court today (April 18) sentenced a construction timber
businessman for 4 counts of tax evasion offences to a fine of $6,000
and a further fine of $806,000 which was equivalent to 90% of the
total tax evaded.
The defendant, Kan Tak-chu, aged 58, was
prosecuted on 4 counts of making incorrect tax returns to evade
tax without reasonable excuse by understating the assessable profits
of a business in the name of Yau Shing Kan Kee in his tax returns
for the years of assessment 1994/95, 1995/96, 1996/97 and 1997/98,
contrary to section 80(2)(a) of the Inland Revenue Ordinance. The
defendant pleaded guilty to all the 4 charges.
The Court heard that during the relevant
years, the defendant was the sole-proprietor of Yau Shing Kan Kee
which was engaged in the trading of timber used for construction
purposes. The amounts of assessable profits of Yau Shing Kan Kee
as reported by the defendant in the submitted returns for each of
the 4 years of assessment ranged from $54,933 to $975,269, totalling
about $1.4 million for the 4 years. On the basis of these returned
profits, the tax payable by the defendant would have been about
$130,000 in total.
Investigation by the Inland Revenue Department
(IRD) of the defendant's tax affairs revealed that the assessable
profits of Yau Shing Kan Kee for the said 4 years of assessment
were in the region of $1.4 million to $2.5 million a year and the
total tax payable should exceed $1 million. The Court also heard
that satisfactory accounting records were kept by Yau Shing Kan
Kee at all relevant times from which the correct profits of the
business could be readily ascertained.
In his tax returns for the years of assessment
1994/95, 1995/96, 1996/97 and 1997/98, the defendant had understated
the assessable profits of Yau Shing Kan Kee by $5,547,784 and the
resultant tax undercharged was $897,073 in total. The understatement
represented 73% of the business' total assessable profits or 81%
of the total tax payable by the defendant for the 4 years.
An IRD spokesman said that tax evasion
is a criminal offence with the maximum sentence of 3 years' imprisonment
and a fine of $50,000 on each charge, plus a further fine equivalent
to three times the amount of tax undercharged.
End/Wednesday, April 18, 2001
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