Director banned for poor record keeping
A company director has been disqualified from being involved in the management of any company for eleven years. What went on and why should directors take notice of the circumstances?
The High Court issued a disqualification order lasting eleven years to the sole director of Magnetic Push Ltd. The company was purportedly operating as a payroll services company, and entered voluntary liquidation within a year of being formed. However, the liquidator found the director completely unco-operative when requesting the company’s statutory records. This was reported to the Insolvency Service, which investigated and found that the company was acting as an umbrella company in part of a tax avoidance scheme.
This is obviously an extreme case, but there are wider implications for company owners. It should serve as a reminder that companies are subject to strict conditions when it comes to the records that must be kept, both in respect of the company itself and its financial and accounting information. Failure to keep accounting records can lead to a £3,000 fine and/or disqualification from acting as a director. In short, good record keeping should be a priority for any company director. The information provided here is a good reference point for what you need to be keeping.
Related Topics
-
HMRC launches new R&D advance assurance process
HMRC has introduced a new advance assurance process for research and development (R&D) tax relief claims, aimed at giving eligible companies greater certainty before submitting a claim. What does the new process involve?
-
Dodging tax and NI on 2025/26 benefits
If you had taxable benefits in kind in 2025/26 then you’ll have to pay income tax on the value. Your company also has to pay 15% NI. Now the tax year has passed is there any way you can reduce or eliminate this tax liability?
-
Selling spare items to your company
You’re short of cash but if you use the traditional methods to take more money out of your company you’ll pay higher rate taxes. Is there another way to extract profits without paying income tax or NI?