Brothers who ran Grantham restaurant left taxpayers £500,000 out of pocket
By The Editor
8th Jul 2021 | Local News
Three brothers who ran a Grantham restaurant left taxpayers more than £500,000 out of pocket.
The Insolvency services says the brothers operated three Indian restaurants, including the Bombay Brasserie on London Road, and systematically under-reported earnings, leaving taxpayers over half a million pounds out of pocket
Abul Azad, Abul Ashraf, and Abul Khaled, have been banned from acting as company directors for 7 years, 7 years, and 3-and-a-half years respectively.
The three brothers, all from Melton Mowbray, were directors of A & A (Melton Mowbray) Limited and shared the running of the Apurba, Bombay Brasserie and Tandoori Knights Indian restaurants.
However, they deliberately or recklessly destroyed or removed sales records in their company accounts in order to avoid paying the full VAT and corporation tax amounts that were due. In total, £566,749 was owing to HMRC when the brothers placed the company into liquidation.
Throughout the Insolvency Service investigation, the brothers sought to discredit and place blame on the company's accountant, despite receiving written warnings from the accountant in successive years that the company had inadequate record keeping processes in place and that it was obvious that cash and sales records were going missing.
In some cases, sales identified solely through card payment data was found to be more than their total reported sales, which also included cash payments.
Abul Azad and Abul Ashraf signed disqualification undertakings accepting that they caused or allowed the company to suppress its sales over a period of at least 4-and-a-half years, to the detriment of HMRC. Their bans begin on 6 July 2021 and last for 7 years.
Abul Khaled, who was only a director of the company for a short time during the period, admitted to causing or allowing the company to suppress its sales over a period of at least 8 months. His ban of 3-and-a-half years also begins on 6 July 2021.
Cassandra Dowthwaite, Deputy Head of Insolvent Investigations (North) at the Insolvency Service, said: "This ban should serve as a warning to other directors tempted to conceal sales and withhold taxes, which are needed to fund vital public services, for their own benefit.
"Companies have limited liability, which is a privilege, not a right, and The Insolvency Service have strong enforcement powers which we will not hesitate to use to remove that privilege from dishonest or reckless directors."
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