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| December 14, 2021

The Extended Chamber of the Supreme Administrative Court will consider the deadline for filing a supplementary tax return for lower tax

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According to article 141 paragraph 1 of Act No. 280/2009 Coll., Code of Tax Procedures, as amended, the tax subject is obliged to file additional tax return for higher tax liability

i)    within the subjective time limit, by the end of the month following the date, on which the grounds for its submission were established,

ii)    and this obligation to file tax return continues as long as the tax assessment period – the objective period – is running.

Paragraph 2 of the above-mentioned provision of the Tax Code stipulates that the taxpayer is entitled to submit additional tax return for lower tax within the same time limit.

The Supreme Administrative Court (SAC) has already dealt with the issue of the assessing the subjective time limit for filing supplementary tax return for a lower tax liability, concluding that the subjective time limit for filing supplementary tax return for a lower tax liability is a lapse period, after which a supplementary tax return can no longer be filed (SAC Decision No. 5 Afs 237/2018-41 of 23 November 2020, No. 1 Afs 238/2014-52 of 27 August 2015).

The Second Chamber of the Supreme Administrative Court (SAC) intends to depart from this legal opinion. In its Resolution No.2 Afs 363/2019-39 of 30 November 2021, by which it referred the above question to the Enlarged Chamber of the SAC for consideration, the Second Chamber stated that, upon closer examination, it concluded that the reasons for the above conclusion of the SAC were not sufficiently convincing. In its detailed reasoning, the Second Chamber of the SAC took into account, the stipulation of article 144 paragraph 2 of the Code of Tax Procedures, among others, according to which in the case of late filing of a supplementary tax return (it is not distinguished whether it is a supplementary return for higher or lower tax), a fictitious payment assessment is served on the date of late filing of the supplementary tax return. Logically, the delay cannot be linked to the expiry of an objective time limit, since the tax cannot be assessed after the expiry of that time limit.

In the Resolution in question, the Second Chamber concludes that, in its view (supported by the detailed reasoning set out in the Resolution), the only time limit on the filing of a supplementary tax return for a lower tax is the objective time limit associated with the assessment period.

It is therefore up to the judgment of the Extended Chamber of the SAC whether to follow the legal opinion of the Second Chamber of the SAC or to support the existing case law of the SAC in this matter.

We will keep you informed about any further development.