A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief R.O. Balogun, SAN, has sued the federal government at a Federal High Court in Ilorin, Kwara State, seeking an order of the court to nullify a provision in the 2020 Value Added Tax (VAT) Modification Order, which approved the collection and remittance of VAT on basic food items sold by restaurants and hotels in Nigeria.
The VAT Modification Order 2020, now being challenged, had included basic food items (agro and aqua-based staple food) among the extended list of items exempted from Value Added Tax at the time.
However, the order stated that VAT exemption did not cover basic food items sold in restaurants, hotels, eateries, lounges, and other similar premises, as well as by contractors, caterers, and similar vendors.
The VAT order was approved by former Minister of Finance, Budget, and National Planning, Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, to provide clarity in interpreting the VAT Act.
Balogun in the suit before the court, seeks an order nullifying the proviso introduced on Order 33 of the VAT Modification Order 2020, which states that basic food items sold in restaurants, hotels, eateries, lounges, and similar premises are subject to VAT.
He is challenging the constitutionality of that part of the VAT Modification Order 2020 and has the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Attorney General of the Federation as joinders in the suit.
He argued that the said order allegedly contravenes the VAT exemption on basic food items listed in the First Schedule of the VAT Act and other relevant laws.
EFCC’s alleged lack of jurisdiction and the call for restraint
Balogun also accused the EFCC of relying on the order to demand VAT remittance details from his client, Ibigbemi Oloruntobi, owner of a business enterprise named Item 7 Go, under the guise of a money laundering probe.
According to him, his client’s failure to collect VAT on basic food items does not amount to tax evasion or an economic crime under the law, adding that the EFCC lacks jurisdiction to investigate VAT compliance.
“Assuming, without conceding, that the order of the Honourable Minister is valid, our submission is that failure to collect VAT has not been criminalised.
“What has been criminalised is tax evasion, not non-collection of VAT,” he stated.
The senior lawyer also seeks the court’s protection from the EFCC’s alleged harassment of his client and business.
“A declaration that the invitation and alleged harassment of the plaintiff and his staff by EFCC operatives regarding banking transactions and VAT collection on food items amount to a gross abuse of office, as the banker-customer relationship is contractual, and failure to collect VAT is not equivalent to tax evasion or an economic crime.”
Balogun further argued that, at best, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) should take appropriate steps to recover any uncollected VAT through civil proceedings before the appropriate court or tax tribunal.
He noted that VAT compliance or any tax compliance probe is domiciled with the FIRS and the EFCC has no legal basis to investigate whether VAT on food items was deducted when his client had already made it clear that he does not collect VAT from customers, in line with the supposed VAT exemption on rice and other basic food items.
The case is scheduled for hearing on March 3, 2025, and hearing notices have been ordered to be served on the respective parties.