Presumably HAD you been driving a company car, you would have had to be insured for it.
Was the company the usual buyer of insurances, or was it left to employees?
If it WAS left to employees, then the company should have required proof you had insured it. Do they have this?
Who would have been the registered keeper of said vehicle?
Quote:
as far as we can tell you did have car so we're going to do absolutely nothing about it
I would refuse to pay the taxman, and use the doubt implied in the above - i.e. they would appear not to have any proper records to refer to - to bolster your case, along with the possesion of two cars (on finance) of your own.
"The P11d was obviously issued by the company in error - they are unable to back it up with ANY other paperwork."
You are supposedly innocent until proven guilty - the revenue MUST be able to prove you are liable for the money.
Do you have service receipts for your own cars? It might help to show they were in use at the time. Did you travel abroad in either of them, or anywhere that your vehicle might have been recorded. Most Hotels record registration numbers, AND have to keep the registration cards for more than the time elapsed so far!
Finally, in a dispute with the Inland Revenue, there is a recourse to an Independant Revue panel. Not sure how you get to go on it - I made a real nuisance of myself with the IR, and recorded ALL contact with them, showing how they were not taking ANY measures to resolve the issues I had. They then moved the case to the tribunal, where
they got steamrollered by a panel who displayed remarkable common sense, and gave them a dressing down for their behaviour.