Tax War: ICAN, CITN Claim Victory from Court Ruling
President of CITN, Mr. Sunday Jegede
Even with the recent ruling by the Appeal Court sitting in Lagos, the
last has not been heard on the raging taxation practice jurisdictional
dispute between the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN)
and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN).
Both parties have been celebrating the ruling of recent, claiming the
same ruling was in their favour and as such, they are laying respective
claims to be the umbrella organisation regulating taxation practice in
the country.
While the former claims the pronouncement by the learned jury has
reaffirmed that it is the only professional body empowered by government
to regulator taxation practice in the country, the latter insists that
the jury did not restrain its members from practicing taxation.
CITN opposed ICAN’s continued regulation of taxation practice in 2004 and approached the Lagos High Court the following year to make a declaration that it is only CITN that can regulate taxation profession in the country by virtue of its enabling Act.
CITN opposed ICAN’s continued regulation of taxation practice in 2004 and approached the Lagos High Court the following year to make a declaration that it is only CITN that can regulate taxation profession in the country by virtue of its enabling Act.
In 2007, Justice Lateefat Okunnu ruled that taxation is recognised as a
legal profession separate from accounting and as such the power to
regulate taxation practice and profession is vested in only CITN and not
jointly with ICAN.
She also ruled that it is illegal for any member of ICAN who is not
also a member of CITN to practice taxation in return for a fee in the
country.
The above decision did not go down well with the leadership of ICAN, which appealed the decision of the court, giving rise to the latest ruling in CITN’s favour by the Appeal Court in Lagos recently.
The above decision did not go down well with the leadership of ICAN, which appealed the decision of the court, giving rise to the latest ruling in CITN’s favour by the Appeal Court in Lagos recently.
Speaking on the ruling, the President of CITN, Mr. Sunday Jegede, said:
“We are happy with the outcome of the appeal as the Court of Appeal has
restated that taxation is a separate and distinct profession from
accountancy in Nigeria.”
The court, he said, reaffirmed that “CITN is the only professional body
vested with the powers to regulate and control taxation in all its
ramifications to the exclusion of ICAN and any other professional body
in Nigeria and only members of CITN can present themselves as tax
practitioners and administrators.”
Also claiming victory from the ruling, the President of ICAN, Mr. Doyin Owolabi, who claimed to be setting the records straight, said: “The court’s judgment did not restrain ICAN members who are not CITN members from practising taxation in Nigeria.”
Also claiming victory from the ruling, the President of ICAN, Mr. Doyin Owolabi, who claimed to be setting the records straight, said: “The court’s judgment did not restrain ICAN members who are not CITN members from practising taxation in Nigeria.”
This, according to him, is the kernel of the controversy between the
two bodies, adding that the court did not grant the third and fifth
reliefs sought by CITN to the extent that only its members can practice
taxation for a fee in the country.
Owolabi pointed out that the court declined to make “a declaration that
it is illegal for any member of the defendant (ICAN) who is not a
member of CITN to practice or hold himself out to practice as a tax
administrator or practitioner for or in expectation of reward in
Nigeria.”
Also the court, according to him, refused to issue “an order restraining members of ICAN who are not members of CITN from practicing, representing or holding themselves out as tax administrators or practitioners in violation of the CITN Act, 2004.”
Also the court, according to him, refused to issue “an order restraining members of ICAN who are not members of CITN from practicing, representing or holding themselves out as tax administrators or practitioners in violation of the CITN Act, 2004.”
The ICAN president observed that the other three reliefs granted by the
lower court were not in dispute including that taxation is legally
recognised in Nigeria as a profession separate and distinct from the
accountancy profession.
Also not disputed is the fact that CITN is vested with power to
regulate and control the practice of taxation in all its ramifications
to the exclusion of ICAN or any other professional body or institution
in Nigeria and that it is unlawful for ICAN to forestall or impede
CITN’s efforts to regulate tax practice, he stressed.
He noted that Okunnu had in 2007, granted the three reliefs among
others, adding that the recent pronouncement by the Court of Appeal has
resolved all the issues.
Meanwhile, CITN has said that going forward, chartered accountants would not be admitted into its membership automatically, saying the privilege which qualified accountants used to enjoy before is now a thing of the past.
Meanwhile, CITN has said that going forward, chartered accountants would not be admitted into its membership automatically, saying the privilege which qualified accountants used to enjoy before is now a thing of the past.
It added that chartered accountants, who want to practice taxation in
addition to accounting and auditing, would only be exempted from writing
some subjects in the CITN’s qualifying examinations.
Jegede, who made the position of the institute known, offered an olive branch to ICAN.
“We are happy with the outcome of the appeal. However, CITN is willing and ready for peaceful settlement of this matter. We have said so from the word go. CITN is not fighting ICAN; it is ICAN that is fighting CITN. I am calling on the leadership of ICAN to please respect the judgment and respect the sanctity of the law,” he said.
“We are happy with the outcome of the appeal. However, CITN is willing and ready for peaceful settlement of this matter. We have said so from the word go. CITN is not fighting ICAN; it is ICAN that is fighting CITN. I am calling on the leadership of ICAN to please respect the judgment and respect the sanctity of the law,” he said.
I think settlement out of court is be the best... They all know where they meet!
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