Equity in Tax—All Change after 1873?

Authors

  • Chris Thorpe

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14296/ac.v6i1.5728

Abstract

Until the late 19th century, equity and common law courts were separate. Tax courts emerged from equity, and today equitable principles and maxims govern the tax legislation, as well as His Majesty’s Revenue & Customs guidance and the tribunals. Even though the equity and common law courts “fused” in 1873, there has only ever been one law: common law tempered by equity. Only the courts, remedies and procedures were different prior to 1873 (though a unified Court of Exchequer with equity and common law jurisdiction existed before 1841). The law was already a single entity by the late 19th century. There was no fusion of actual laws in 1873, only of courts and procedure. Equity already moderated tax law, with beneficial ownership being all that mattered for tax purposes then and today.

Keywords: equity; common law; fusion; tax; beneficial ownership; Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873.

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Published

2024-11-04

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Section

Articles