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Finance Act 1989

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CHAPTER IU.K. General

Income tax rates and allowancesU.K.

30 Charge and rates of income tax for 1989-90.U.K.

(1)Income tax shall be charged for the year 1989-90, and the basic rate of tax shall be 25 per cent.

(2)The higher rate at which income tax is charged for the year 1989-90 in respect of so much of an individual’s total income as exceeds the basic rate limit (20,700) shall be 40 per cent.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C1 For earlier years see Table C, Vol. 1

31 Age allowance.U.K.

(1)In section 257 of the Taxes Act 1988—

(a)in subsection (3) (increased allowance for those aged 80 and over) for “80”, wherever occurring, there shall be substituted “75”, and

(b)in subsection (5) (age allowance withdrawn by two-thirds of amount by which income exceeds a specified limit) for “two-thirds” there shall be substituted “one half”.

(2)This section shall have effect for the year 1989-90.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C2 For earlier years see Table E(1), Vol. 1

32 Operative date for PAYE.U.K.

For the year 1989-90, sections 1(5) and 257(10) of the Taxes Act 1988(which specify the date from which indexed changes in the basic rate limit and in allowances are to be brought into account for the purposes of PAYE) shall have effect as if for the reference to 5th May there were substituted a reference to 18th May.

33 Married couples. U.K.

(1)Sections 257 to 257F and 265 of the M1Taxes Act 1988,as inserted for the year 1990-91 and subsequent years by the Finance Act 1988,shall be amended as follows.

(2)In section 257(1) for “£2,605” there shall be substituted “£2,785”.

(3)In section 257(2) for “£3,180” there shall be substituted “£3,400”.

(4)In section 257(3)—

(a)for “80” there shall be substituted “75”, and

(b)for “£3,310” there shall be substituted “£3,540”.

(5)In section 257(5)—

(a)for “£10,600” there shall be substituted “£11,400”,and

(b)for “two-thirds” there shall be substituted “one half”.

(6)In section 257A(1) for “£1,490” there shall be substituted “£1,590”.

(7)In section 257A(2) for “£1,855” there shall be substituted “£1,985”.

(8)In section 257A(3)—

(a)for “80” there shall be substituted “75”, and

(b)for “£1,895” there shall be substituted “£2,025”.

(9)In section 257A(5)—

(a)for “£10,600” there shall be substituted “£11,400”,and

(b)for “two-thirds” there shall be substituted “one half”.

(10)In sections F1. . . 257D(8) and 265(3) after paragraph (b) there shall be inserted or

(c)on account of any payments to which section 593(2) or 639(3) applies,.

(11)In section 257E(1)(b) for “80” there shall be substituted “75”.

(12)In section 257E(2)(a) for “£3,180” there shall be substituted “£3,400”.

(13)In section 257E(2)(b) for “£3,310” there shall be substituted “£3,540”.

Textual Amendments

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C3 See Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (c. 1,SIF 63:1), s. 257for 1989–1990and see Income andCorpartion Taxes Act 1988 (c. 1, SIF 63:1), 257–257Ffor1990–1991

Marginal Citations

Corporation tax rates etc.U.K.

34 Charge and rate of corporation tax for financial year 1989. U.K.

Corporation tax shall be charged for the financial year 1989 at the rate of 35 per cent.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C4 For earlier years see Table K, Vol. 1

35 Corporation tax: small companies.U.K.

(1)For the financial year 1989—

(a)the small companies’ rate shall be 25 per cent., and

(b)the fraction mentioned in section 13(2) of the Taxes Act 1988 (marginal relief for small companies) shall be one fortieth.

(2)In section 13(3) of that Act (limits of marginal relief), in paragraphs (a) and (b)—

(a)for “£100,000” there shall be substituted “£150,000”, and

(b)for “£500,000” there shall be substituted “£750,000”.

(3)Subsection (2) above shall have effect for the financial year 1989 and subsequent financial years; and where by virtue of that subsection section 13of the Taxes Act 1988 has effect with different relevant maximum amounts in relation to different parts of a company’s accounting period, then for the purposes of that section those parts shall be treated as if they were separate accounting periods and the profits and basic profits of the company for that period shall be apportioned between those parts.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C5 For earlier years see Table K, Vol. 1

C6 For earlier years see Table L, Vol. 1

Receipts basis etc.U.K.

36 Schedule E: revised Cases.U.K.

(1)The Taxes Act 1988 shall be amended as follows.

(2)In paragraph 1 of section 19(1) the following Cases shall be substituted for Cases I, II and III—

Case I: any emoluments for any year of assessment in which the person holding the office or employment is resident and ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom, subject however to section 192 if the emoluments are foreign emoluments (within the meaning of that section) and to section 193(1) if in the year of assessment concerned he performs the duties of the office or employment wholly or partly outside the United Kingdom;

Case II: any emoluments, in respect of duties performed in the United Kingdom, for any year of assessment in which the person holding the office or employment is not resident (or, if resident, not ordinarily resident) in the United Kingdom, subject however to section 192 if the emoluments are foreign emoluments (within the meaning of that section);

Case III: any emoluments for any year of assessment in which the person holding the office or employment is resident in the United Kingdom (whether or not ordinarily resident there) so far as the emoluments are received in the United Kingdom;.

(3)The following paragraph shall be inserted after paragraph 4 of section19(1)—

4A

Where (apart from this paragraph) emoluments from an office or employment would be for a year of assessment in which a person does not hold the office or employment, the following rules shall apply for the purposes of the Cases set out in paragraph 1 above—

(a)if in the year concerned the office or employment has never been held, the emoluments shall be treated as emoluments for the first year of assessment in which the office or employment is held;

(b)if in the year concerned the office or employment is no longer held, the emoluments shall be treated as emoluments for the last year of assessment in which the office or employment was held.

(4)Subsection (2) above shall apply where the year of assessment mentioned in the substituted Case I, II or III is 1989-90 or a subsequent year of assessment.

(5)Subsection (3) above shall apply where each of the years mentioned in the new paragraph 4A(a) or (b) (as the case may be) is 1989-90 or a subsequent year of assessment.

37 Schedule E: assessment on receipts basis.U.K.

(1)The following sections shall be inserted immediately before section 203of the Taxes Act 1988—

202A Assessment on receipts basis.

(1)As regards any particular year of assessment—

(a)income tax shall be charged under Cases I and II of Schedule E on the full amount of the emoluments received in the year in respect of the office or employment concerned;

(b)income tax shall be charged under Case III of Schedule E on the full amount of the emoluments received in the United Kingdom in the year in respect of the office or employment concerned.

(2)Subsection (1) above applies—

(a)whether the emoluments are for that year or for some other year of assessment;

(b)whether or not the office or employment concerned is held at the time the emoluments are received or (as the case may be) received in the United Kingdom.

(3)Where subsection (1) above applies in the case of emoluments received, or(as the case may be) received in the United Kingdom, after the death of the person who held the office or employment concerned, the charge shall be a charge on his executors or administrators; and accordingly income tax—

(a)shall be assessed and charged on the executors or administrators, and

(b)shall be a debt due from and payable out of the deceased’s estate.

(4)Section 202B shall have effect for the purposes of subsection (1)(a)above.

202B Receipts basis: meaning of receipt.

(1)For the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) emoluments shall be treated as received at the time found in accordance with the following rules (taking the earlier or earliest time in a case where more than one rule applies)—

(a)the time when payment is made of or on account of the emoluments;

(b)the time when a person becomes entitled to payment of or on account of the emoluments;

(c)in a case where the emoluments are from an office or employment with a company, the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company and sums on account of the emoluments are credited in the company’s accounts or records, the time when sums on account of the emoluments are so credited;

(d)in a case where the emoluments are from an office or employment with a company, the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company and the amount of the emoluments for a period is determined before the period ends, the time when the period ends;

(e)in a case where the emoluments are from an office or employment with a company, the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company and the amount of the emoluments for a period is not known until the amount is determined after the period has ended, the time when the amount isdetermined.

(2)Subsection (1)(c), (d) or (e) above applies whether or not the office or employment concerned is that of director.

(3)Paragraph (c), (d) or (e) of subsection (1) above applies if the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company at any time in the year of assessment in which the time mentioned in the paragraph concerned falls.

(4)For the purposes of the rule in subsection (1)(c) above, any fetter on the right to draw the sums is to be disregarded.

(5)In subsection (1) above “director” means—

(a)in relation to a company whose affairs are managed by a board of directors or similar body, a member of that board or similar body,

(b)in relation to a company whose affairs are managed by a single director or similar person, that director or person, and

(c)in relation to a company whose affairs are managed by the members themselves, a member of the company.

(6)In subsection (1) above “director”, in relation to a company, also includes any person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the company’s directors (as defined in subsection (5) above) are accustomed to act; and forthis purpose a person is not to be deemed to be a person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the company’s directors are accustomed to act by reason only that the directors act on advice given by him in a professional capacity.

(7)Subsections (1) to (6) above shall have effect subject to subsections (8)to (11) below.

(8)In a case where section 141(1)(a), 142(1)(a), 143(1)(a) or 148(4) treats a person as receiving or being paid an emolument or emoluments at a particular time, for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) the emolument or emoluments shall be treated as received at that time; and in such a case subsections (1) to (6)above shall not apply.

(9)In a case where section 145(1) treats a person as receiving emoluments, for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) the emoluments shall be treated as received in the period referred to in section 145(1); and in such a case subsections (1) to (6) above shall not apply.

(10)In a case where section 154(1), 157(1), 158(1), 160(1), 160(2), 162(6) or164(1) treats an amount as emoluments, for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a)the emoluments shall be treated as received in the year referred to in section154(1) or the other provision concerned; and in such a case subsections (1)to (6) above shall not apply.

(11)In a case where—

(a)emoluments take the form of a benefit not consisting of money, and

(b)subsection (8), (9) or (10) above does not apply,

for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) the emoluments shall be treated as received at the time when the benefit is provided; and in such a case subsections (1) to (6) above shall not apply.

(2)This section shall apply where the year of assessment mentioned in the new section 202A(1) is 1989-90 or a subsequent year of assessment even if the emoluments concerned are for a year of assessment before 1989-90.

(3)This section shall not apply in the case of emoluments of an office or employment held by a person who died before 6th April 1989.

38 Schedule E: unpaid emoluments.U.K.

(1)This section applies to emoluments of an office or employment if—

(a)they are emoluments for a year of assessment (a relevant year) before1989-90,

(b)they fall within Case I or II of Schedule E as the Case applies for years before 1989-90,

(c)they have not been paid before 6th April 1989, and

(d)they have been received on or after 6th April 1989 and before 6th April1991;

and section 202B of the Taxes Act 1988 shall apply for the purposes of paragraph (d) above as it applies for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) of that Act.

(2)The emoluments shall be charged to income tax only by reference to the year of assessment in which they are received.

(3)Any adjustments consequential on this section (such as the amendment of assessments or the repayment or setting-off of tax paid) shall be made.

(4)This section shall not apply to emoluments of an office or employment held by a person who died before 6th April 1989.

(5)This section shall not apply if the only emoluments of the office or employment not paid before 6th April 1989 are emoluments for a period consisting of or falling within the period beginning with 5th March 1989 and ending with 5th April 1989.

(6)This section shall not apply unless—

(a)written notice that it is to apply is given to the inspector before 6thApril 1991,

(b)the notice is given by or on behalf of the person who holds or held the office or employment concerned, and

(c)the notice states the amount of the emoluments falling within subsection(1) above.

(7)Subsection (8) below applies where emoluments of an office or employment have been or fall to be computed by reference to the accounts basis as regards the year 1987-88 or years of assessment including that year.

(8)In deciding for the purposes of subsection (1)(a) above whether emoluments are emoluments for a particular year, the emoluments of the office or employment for the year or (as the case may be) years mentioned in subsection(7) above, and for the year 1988-89, shall be computed by reference to that basis.

(9)In deciding whether subsection (8) above applies in a particular case, any request to revoke the application of the accounts basis shall be ignored if—

(a)it is made after 5th April 1989, or

(b)it is made before 6th April 1989 otherwise than in writing.

(10)In the application of this section to emoluments of an office or employment under or with a person carrying on business as an authorised Lloyd’s underwriting agent, the references in subsections (1)(d) and (6)(a)above to 6th April 1991 shall be construed as references to 6th April 1994.

(11)Subsection (10) above shall not apply unless the duties of the office or employment relate wholly or mainly to the underwriting agency business.

(12)The reference in subsection (10) above to an authorised Lloyd’s underwriting agent is to a person permitted by the Council of Lloyd’s to act as an underwriting agent at Lloyd’s.

(13)If in a particular case it appears to the Board reasonable to do so they may direct that subsections (1)(d) and (6)(a) above shall have effect in relation to that case as if for the references to 6th April 1991 or (as the case may be) 6th April 1994 there were substituted references to such later date as they may specify in the direction.

(14)In this section “the accounts basis” means the basis commonly so called (under which emoluments for a year of assessment are computed by reference to the emoluments for a period other than the year of assessment).

39 Schedule E: unremitted emoluments.U.K.

(1)This section applies to emoluments of an office or employment if—

(a)they are emoluments for a year of assessment (a relevant year) before1989-90,

(b)they are received in the United Kingdom after 5th April 1989, and

(c)had this Act not been passed they would have fallen within Case III of Schedule E.

(2)The emoluments shall be treated as if they were not emoluments for the relevant year.

(3)But they shall be treated as if they were emoluments for the year of assessment in which they are received in the United Kingdom and as if they fell within Case III as substituted by section 36 above; and accordingly income tax shall be charged, in accordance with section 202A of the Taxes Act1988, by reference to the year of assessment in which the emoluments are received in the United Kingdom.

40 Schedule E: emoluments already paid.U.K.

(1)Subsection (2) below applies to emoluments of an office or employment if—

(a)they are emoluments for a year of assessment after 1988-89,

(b)they have been paid before 6th April 1989, and

(c)they fall within Case I or II of Schedule E as substituted by section 36above.

(2)The emoluments shall be treated as if they were received, within the meaning of section 202B of the Taxes Act 1988, on 6th April 1989; and accordingly income tax shall be charged, in accordance with section 202A ofthat Act, by reference to the year 1989-90.

(3)Subsection (4) below applies to emoluments of an office or employment if—

(a)they are emoluments for a year of assessment after 1988-89,

(b)they have been received in the United Kingdom before 6th April 1989, and

(c)they fall within Case III of Schedule E as substituted by section 36above.

(4)The emoluments shall be treated as if they were received in the United Kingdom on 6th April 1989; and accordingly income tax shall be charged, in accordance with section 202A of the Taxes Act 1988, by reference to the year1989-90.

41 Schedule E: pensions etc.U.K.

(1)This section applies in relation to the following pensions and other benefits—

(a)a pension, stipend or annuity chargeable to income tax under Schedule E by virtue of paragraph 2, 3 or 4 of section 19(1) of the Taxes Act 1988;

(b)a pension or annual payment chargeable to income tax under Schedule E by virtue of section 133 of that Act (voluntary pensions);

(c)income support chargeable to income tax under Schedule E by virtue of section 151 of that Act;

(d)a pension chargeable to income tax under Schedule E by virtue of section597 of that Act (retirement benefit schemes);

(e)a benefit chargeable to income tax under Schedule E by virtue of section617(1) of that Act (social security benefits).

(2)As regards any particular year of assessment income tax shall be charged on the amount of the pension or other benefit accruing in respect of the year; and this shall apply irrespective of when any amount is actually paid in respect of the pension or other benefit.

(3)This section shall apply where the year of assessment mentioned in subsection (2) above is 1989-90 or a subsequent year of assessment.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C7S. 41 extended (3.5.1994) by 1994 c. 9, s. 139(3)

42 Schedule E: supplementary.U.K.

(1)The Taxes Act 1988 shall be amended as follows.

(2)In section 131(2) (interaction of Cases) the words “for the same or another chargeable period” shall be omitted.

(3)In section 149(1) (sick pay chargeable as emoluments of employment for a certain period) the words “for that period” and the words “for that or any other period” shall be omitted.

(4)Section 170 (profit-related pay charged for year of assessment in which it is paid) shall cease to have effect.

(5)In paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 12 (foreign earnings) for the words from “emoluments from” to “year of assessment” there shall be substituted the words “emoluments for the year of assessment from the relevant employment in respect of which such a deduction is allowed”.

(6)This section shall apply for the year 1989-90 and subsequent years of assessment.

43 Schedule D: computation.U.K.

(1)Subsection (2) below applies where—

(a)a calculation is made of profits or gains which are to be charged under Schedule D and are for a period of account ending after 5th April 1989,

(b)relevant emoluments would (apart from that subsection) be deducted in making the calculation, and

(c)the emoluments are not paid before the end of the period of nine months beginning with the end of that period of account.

(2)The emoluments—

(a)shall not be deducted in making the calculation mentioned in subsection(1)(a) above, but

(b)shall be deducted in calculating profits or gains which are to be charged under Schedule D and are for the period of account in which the emoluments are paid.

(3)Subsections (4) and (5) below apply where—

(a)a calculation such as is mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above is made,

(b)the calculation is made before the end of the period of nine months beginning with the end of the period of account concerned,

(c)relevant emoluments would (apart from subsection (2) above) be deducted in making the calculation, and

(d)the emoluments have not been paid when the calculation is made.

(4)It shall be assumed for the purpose of making the calculation that the emoluments will not be paid before the end of that period of nine months.

(5)But the calculation shall be adjusted if—

(a)the emoluments are paid after the calculation is made but before the end of that period of nine months,

(b)a claim to adjust the calculation is made to the inspector, and

(c)the claim is made before the end of the period of two years beginning with the end of the period of account concerned.

F2(6). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F2(7). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(8)In a case where the period of account mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above begins before 6th April 1989 and ends before 6th April 1990, the references in subsections (1)(c), (3)(b), (4) and (5)(a) above to nine months shall be construed as references to eighteen months.

(9)In this section “period of account” means a period forwhich an account is made up.

(10)For the purposes of this section “relevant emoluments” are emoluments for a period after 5th April 1989 allocated either—

(a)in respect of particular offices or employments (or both), or

(b)generally in respect of offices or employments (or both).

(11)This section applies in relation to potential emoluments as it applies in relation to relevant emoluments, and for this purpose—

(a)potential emoluments are amounts or benefits reserved in the accounts of an employer, or held by an intermediary, with a view to their becoming relevant emoluments;

(b)potential emoluments are paid when they become relevant emoluments which are paid.

(12)In deciding for the purposes of this section whether emoluments are paidat any time after 5th April 1989, section 202B of the Taxes Act 1988 (time when emoluments are treated as received) shall apply as it applies for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) of that Act, but reading “paid” for “received” throughout.

(13)In section 436(1)(b) of the Taxes Act 1988 (profits to be computed in accordance with provisions of that Act applicable to Case I of Schedule D) the reference to that Act shall be deemed to include a reference to this section.

Textual Amendments

F2S. 43(6)(7) repealed (27.7.1993 with effect in relation to periods of account ending on or after 30.6.1993) by 1993 c. 34, ss. 181, 184(3), 213, Sch. 23 Pt. III(12) Note 3

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C8S. 43 applied (31.7.1998 with effect as mentioned in s. 38(2)(3) of 1998 c. 36) by 1988 c. 1, s. 21A(2) (as substituted by 1998 c. 36, s. 38(1), Sch. 5 Pt. I paras. 4, 73)

S. 43 excluded (31.7.1998) by 1998 c. 36, s. 38, Sch. 5 Pt. IV paras. 66(2), 69

44 Investment and insurance companies: computation.U.K.

(1)Subsection (2) below applies where—

(a)a calculation is made for the purposes of corporation tax of the profits of an investment company for an accounting period ending after 5th April 1989,

(b)relevant emoluments would (apart from that subsection) be deducted in making the calculation, and

(c)the emoluments are not paid before the end of the period of nine months beginning with the end of the relevant period of account.

(2)The emoluments—

(a)shall not be deducted in making the calculation mentioned in subsection(1)(a) above, but

(b)shall be deducted in calculating for the purposes of corporation tax the profits of the company concerned for the accounting period in which the emoluments are paid.

(3)Subsections (4) and (5) below apply where—

(a)a calculation such as is mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above is made,

(b)the calculation is made before the end of the period of nine months beginning with the end of the relevant period of account,

(c)relevant emoluments would (apart from subsection (2) above) be deducted in making the calculation, and

(d)the emoluments have not been paid when the calculation is made.

(4)It shall be assumed for the purpose of making the calculation that the emoluments will not be paid before the end of that period of nine months.

(5)But the calculation shall be adjusted if—

(a)the emoluments are paid after the calculation is made but before the end of that period of nine months,

(b)a claim to adjust the calculation is made to the inspector by or on behalf of the company concerned, and

(c)the claim is made before the end of the period of two years beginning with the end of the period of account concerned.

(6)In a case where the accounting period mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above begins before 6th April 1989 and ends before 6th April 1990, the references in subsections (1)(c), (3)(b), (4) and (5)(a) above to nine months shall be construed as references to eighteen months.

(7)In this section “investment company” has the same meaning as in Part IV of the Taxes Act 1988.

(8)For the purposes of this section “relevant emoluments” are emoluments for a period after 5th April 1989 allocated either—

(a)in respect of particular offices or employments (or both), or

(b)generally in respect of offices or employments (or both).

(9)This section applies in relation to potential emoluments as it applies in relation to relevant emoluments, and for this purpose—

(a)potential emoluments are amounts or benefits reserved in the accounts of an employer, or held by an intermediary, with a view to their becoming relevant emoluments;

(b)potential emoluments are paid when they become relevant emoluments which are paid.

(10)For the purpose of this section the relevant period of account is the period of account which—

(a)includes the accounting period concerned, or

(b)begins when the accounting period concerned begins and ends when the accounting period concerned ends.

(11)In deciding for the purposes of this section whether emoluments are paid at any time after 5th April 1989, section 202B of the Taxes Act 1988 (time when emoluments are treated as received) shall apply as it applies for the purposes of section 202A(1)(a) of that Act, but reading “paid” for “received” throughout.

(12)Where the profits of a company carrying on life assurance business are not charged under Case I of Schedule D, this section shall apply in calculating the profits as it applies in calculating the profits of an investment company; but the effect of section 86 below shall be ignored in construing subsection(1)(b) above.

(13)In a case where, apart from this subsection and by virtue of subsection(2)(b) above as it applies by virtue of subsection (12) above, emoluments fall to be deducted in calculating profits for a particular accounting period—

(a)subsection (2)(b) above shall have effect subject to section 86 below;

(b)in construing section 86 the emoluments shall be treated as expenses for that accounting period.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C9S. 44 modified (23.3.1999 with effect with respect to accounting periods of insurance companies ending on or after 1.7.1999) by S.I. 1999/498, regs. 1, 9

45 PAYE: meaning of payment.U.K.

(1)The Taxes Act 1988 shall be amended as follows.

(2)The following section shall be inserted after section 203—

203A PAYE: meaning of payment.

(1)For the purposes of section 203 and regulations under it a payment of, or on account of, any income assessable to income tax under Schedule E shall be treated as made at the time found in accordance with the following rules(taking the earlier or earliest time in a case where more than one rule applies)—

(a)the time when the payment is actually made;

(b)the time when a person becomes entitled to the payment;

(c)in a case where the income is income from an office or employment with a company, the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company and sums on account of the income are credited in the company’s accounts or records, the time when sums on account of the income are so credited;

(d)in a case where the income is income from an office or employment with a company, the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company and the amount of the income for a period is determined before the period ends, the time when the period ends;

(e)in a case where the income is income from an office or employment with a company, the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company and the amount of the income for a period is not known until the amount is determined after the period has ended, the time when the amount is determined.

(2)Subsection (1)(c), (d) or (e) above applies whether or not the office or employment concerned is that of director.

(3)Paragraph (c), (d) or (e) of subsection (1) above applies if the holder of the office or employment is a director of the company at any time in the year of assessment in which the time mentioned in the paragraph concerned falls.

(4)For the purposes of the rule in subsection (1)(c) above, any fetter on the right to draw the sums is to be disregarded.

(5)Subsections (5) and (6) of section 202B shall apply for the purposes of subsection (1) above as they apply for the purposes of section 202B(1).

(3)Section 203(4) (regulations may define payment) shall cease to have effect.

(4)Subsection (2) above shall have effect to determine whether anything occurring on or after the day on which this Act is passed constitutes a payment for the purposes mentioned in the new section 203A.

(5)But if an event occurring before the day on which this Act is passed constituted a payment of or on account of income for the purposes mentioned in the new section 203A, nothing occurring on or after that day shall constitute a payment of or on account of the same income for those purposes.

InterestU.K.

46 Relief for interest.U.K.

For the year 1989-90 the qualifying maximum defined in section 367(5) of the Taxes Act 1988 (limit on relief for interest on certain loans) shall be£30,000.

47 Close company loans: business expansion scheme.U.K.

In section 360 of the Taxes Act 1988 (loans to buy interest in close company), after subsection (3) there shall be inserted—

(3A)Interest shall not be eligible for relief under section 353 by virtue of paragraph (a) of subsection (1) above in respect of shares acquired on or after 14th March 1989 if at any time the person by whom they are acquired, or that person’s husband or wife, makes a claim for relief in respect of the munder Chapter III of Part VII.

48 Close company loans: material interest.U.K.

(1)In section 360 of the Taxes Act 1988 for subsection (4) there shall be substituted—

(4)Subject to section 360A, in this section expressions to which a meaning is assigned by Part XI have that meaning.

(2)The following section shall be inserted after that section—

360A Meaning of “material interest” in section 360.

(1)For the purposes of section 360(2)(a) an individual shall be treated as having a material interest in a company—

(a)if he, either on his own or with one or more of his associates, or if any associate of his with or without other such associates, is the beneficial owner of, or able (directly or through the medium of other companies or by any other indirect means) to control, more than 5 per cent. of the ordinary share capital of the company, or

(b)if, on an amount equal to the whole distributable income of the company falling to be apportioned under Part XI for the purpose of computing total income, more than 5 per cent. of that amount could be apportioned to him together with his associates (if any), or to any associate of his, or any such associates taken together.

(2)Subject to the following provisions of this section, in subsection (1)above “associate”, in relation to an individual, means—

(a)any relative or partner of the individual;

(b)the trustee or trustees of a settlement in relation to which the individual is, or any relative of his (living or dead) is or was, a settlor(“settlement” and “settlor” having the same meaning as in section 681(4)); and

(c)where the individual is interested in any shares or obligations of the company which are subject to any trust, or are part of the estate of a deceased person, the trustee or trustees of the settlement concerned or, as the case may be, the personal representative of the deceased.

(3)In relation to any loan made after 5th April 1987, there shall be disregarded for the purposes of subsection (2)(c) above—

(a)the interest of the trustees of an approved profit sharing scheme (within the meaning of section 187) in any shares which are held by them in accordance with the scheme and have not yet been appropriated to an individual; and

(b)any rights exercisable by those trustees by virtue of that interest.

(4)In relation to any loan made on or after the day on which the Finance Act1989 was passed, where the individual has an interest in shares or obligations of the company as a beneficiary of an employee benefit trust, the trustees shall not be regarded as associates of his by reason only of that interest unless subsection (6) below applies in relation to him.

(5)In subsection (4) above “employee benefit trust” has the same meaning as in paragraph 7 of Schedule 8, except that in its application for this purpose paragraph 7(5)(b) shall have effect as if it referred to the day on which the Finance Act 1989 was passed instead of to 14th March 1989.

(6)This subsection applies in relation to an individual if at any time on or after the day on which the Finance Act 1989 was passed—

(a)the individual, either on his own or with any one or more of his associates, or

(b)any associate of his, with or without other such associates,

has been the beneficial owner of, or able (directly or through the medium of other companies or by any other indirect means) to control, more than 5 percent. of the ordinary share capital of the company.

(7)Sub-paragraphs (9) to (12) of paragraph 7 of Schedule 8 shall apply for the purposes of subsection (6) above in relation to an individual as they apply for the purposes of that paragraph in relation to an employee.

(8)In relation to any loan made before 14th November 1986, where the individual is interested in any shares or obligations of the company which are subject to any trust, or are part of the estate of a deceased person, subsection (2)(c) above shall have effect as if for the reference to the trustee or trustees of the settlement concerned or, as the case may be, the personal representative of the deceased there were substituted a reference to any person (other than the individual) interested in the settlement or estate, but subject to subsection (9) below.

(9)Subsection (8) above shall not apply so as to make an individual an associate as being entitled or eligible to benefit under a trust—

(a)if the trust relates exclusively to an exempt approved scheme as defined in section 592; or

(b)if the trust is exclusively for the benefit of the employees, or the employees and directors, of the company or their dependants (and not wholly or mainly for the benefit of directors or their relatives), and the individual in question is not (and could not as a result of the operation of the trust become), either on his own or with his relatives, the beneficial owner of more than 5 per cent. of the ordinary share capital of the company;

and in applying paragraph (b) above any charitable trusts which may arise on the failure or determination of other trusts shall be disregarded.

(10)In this section “relative” means husband or wife, parent or remoter forebear, child or remoter issue or brother or sister.

Benefits in kindU.K.

49 Car benefits.U.K.

(1)In Schedule 6 to the Taxes Act 1988 (taxation of directors and others in respect of cars) for Part I (tables of flat rate cash equivalents) there shall be substituted—

Part IU.K. Tables of Flat Rate Cash Equivalents
table A
cars with an original market value up to £19,250 and having a cylinder capacity
Cylinder capacity of car in cubic centimetresAge of car at end of relevant year of assessment
Under 4 years4 years or more
1400 or less£1,400£950
More than 1400 but not more than 2000£1,850£1,250
More than 2000£2,950£1,950
table B
Cars with an original market value up to £19,250 and not having a cylinder capacity
Original market value of carAge of car at end of relevant year of assessment
Under 4 years4 years or more
Less than £6,000£1,400£950
£6,000 or more but less than £8,500£1,850£1,250
£8,500 or more but not more than £19,250£2,950£1,950
table B
Cars with an original market value of more than £19,250
Original market value of carAge of car at end of relevant year of assessment
Under 4 years4 years or more
More than £19,250 but not more than £29,000£3,850£2,600
More than £29,000£6,150£4,100

(2)This section shall have effect for the year 1989-90 and subsequent years of assessment.

50 Security assets and services.U.K.

(1)For the purposes of this section a security asset is an asset which improves personal security, and a security service is a service which improves personal security.

(2)In a case where—

(a)a security asset or security service is provided for an employee by reason of his employment, or is used by an employee, and

(b)the cost is wholly or partly borne by or on behalf of a person (the provider) other than the employee,

in charging tax under Schedule E on the emoluments from the employment a deduction shall be allowed of an amount equal to so much of the cost so borne as falls to be included in the emoluments of the employment.

(3)In a case where—

(a)a security asset or security service is provided for or used by an employee,

(b)expenses in connection with the provision or use are incurred out of the emoluments of the employment, and

(c)the expenses are reimbursed by or on behalf of a person (the provider)other than the employee,

in charging tax under Schedule E on the emoluments from the employment a deduction shall be allowed of an amount equal to the amount of the expenses.

(4)Subsection (2) or (3) above shall not apply unless the asset or service is provided for or used by the employee to meet a threat which—

(a)is a special threat to his personal physical security, and

(b)arises wholly or mainly by virtue of the particular employment concerned.

(5)Subsection (2) or (3) above shall not apply unless the provider has the meeting of that threat as his sole object in wholly or partly bearing the cost or reimbursing the expenses (as the case may be).

(6)Subsection (2) or (3) above shall not apply in the case of a service unless the benefit resulting to the employee consists wholly or mainly of an improvement of his personal physical security.

(7)Subsection (2) or (3) above shall not apply in the case of an asset unless the provider intends the asset to be used solely to improve personal physical security.

51 Assets used partly for security.U.K.

(1)In a case where—

(a)apart from section 50(7) above, section 50(2) above would apply in the case of an asset, and

(b)the provider intends the asset to be used partly to improve personal physical security,

section 50(2) shall nevertheless apply, but only so as to allow a deduction of the appropriate proportion of the amount there mentioned.

(2)For the purposes of subsection (1) above the appropriate proportion of the amount mentioned in section 50(2) above is such proportion of that amount as is attributable to the provider’s intention that the asset be used to improve personal physical security.

(3)In a case where—

(a)apart from section 50(7) above, section 50(3) above would apply in the case of an asset, and

(b)the provider intends the asset to be used partly to improve personal physical security,

section 50(3) shall nevertheless apply, but only so as to allow a deduction of the appropriate proportion of the amount there mentioned.

(4)For the purposes of subsection (3) above the appropriate proportion of the amount mentioned in section 50(3) above is such proportion of that amount as is attributable to the provider’s intention that the asset be used to improve personal physical security.

52 Security: supplementary.U.K.

(1)If the provider intends the asset to be used solely to improve personal physical security, but there is another use for the asset which is incidental to improving personal physical security, that other use shall be ignored in construing section 50(7) above.

(2)The fact that an asset or service improves the personal physical security of any member of the employee’s family or household, as well as that of the employee, shall not prevent section 50(2) or (3) above from applying.

(3)In sections 50 and 51 above and this section—

(a)references to an asset do not include references to a car, a ship or an aircraft,

(b)references to an asset or service do not include references to a dwelling, grounds appurtenant to a dwelling, or living accommodation,

(c)references to an asset include references to equipment and a structure(such as a wall),

(d)references to an employee are to a person who holds an employment, and

(e)references to an employment include references to an office.

(4)For the purposes of sections 50 and 51 above and this section in their application to an asset, it is immaterial whether or not the asset becomes affixed to land (whether constituting a dwelling or otherwise).

(5)For the purposes of sections 50 and 51 above and this section in their application to an asset, it is immaterial whether or not the employee is or becomes entitled to the property in the asset or (in the case of a fixture)an estate or interest in the land concerned.

(6)Sections 50 and 51 above and this section apply where expenditure is incurred on or after 6th April 1989 in or towards bearing a cost or in reimbursing expenses (as the case may be).

53 Employees earning £8,500 or more and directors.U.K.

(1)For section 167 of the Taxes Act 1988 (which defines “director’s or higher-paid employment” for the purposes of Chapter II of Part V)there shall be substituted—

167 Employment to which this Chapter applies.

(1)This Chapter applies—

(a)to employment as a director of a company (but subject to subsection (5)below), and

(b)to employment with emoluments at the rate of £8,500 a year or more.

(2)For this purpose emoluments are to be calculated—

(a)on the basis that they include all such amounts as come, or would but for section 157(3) come, into charge under this Chapter or section 141, 142, 143or 145, and

(b)without any deduction under section 198, 201 or 332(3).

(3)Where a person is employed in two or more employments by the same employer and either—

(a)the total of the emoluments of those employments (applying this section)is at the rate of £8,500 a year or more, or

(b)this Chapter applies (apart from this subsection) to one or more of those employments,

this Chapter shall apply to all the employments.

(4)All employees of a partnership or body over which an individual or another partnership or body has control are to be treated for the purposes of this section (but not for any other purpose) as if the employment were an employment by the individual or by that other partnership or body as the case may be.

(5)This Chapter shall not apply to a person’s employment by reason only of its being employment as a director of a company (without prejudice to its application by virtue of subsection (1)(b) or (3) above) if he has no material interest in the company and either—

(a)his employment is as a full-time working director; or

(b)the company is non-profit making (meaning that neither does it carry on a trade nor do its functions consist wholly or mainly in the holding of investments or other property) or is established for charitable purposes only.

(2)In consequence of subsection (1) above—

(a)for the heading to Chapter II of Part V of the Taxes Act 1988 there shall be substituted “EMPLOYEES EARNING £8,500 OR MORE AND DIRECTORS”;

(b)the words “ employment to which this Chapter applies ” shall be substituted for the words “director’s or higher-paid employment” in sections 153(1), 154(1), 157(1), 158(1), 160(1) and (2), 162(1), 163(1) and165(6)(b) of that Act;

(c)for section 160(3) of that Act there shall be substituted—

(3)Where—

(a)there was outstanding, at any time when a person was in employment to which this Chapter applies, the whole or part of a loan to him (or a relative of his) the benefit of which was obtained by reason of his employment, and

(b)that employment has terminated or ceased to be employment to which this Chapter applies,

subsection (2) above applies as if the employment had not terminated or, as the case may be, had not ceased to be employment to which this Chapter applies.;

(d)in section 162(5) of that Act, after the words “section 160(2)” there shall be inserted the words “(and where appropriate section 160(3))”;

(e)for section 162(7) of that Act there shall be substituted—

(7)If at the time of the event giving rise to a charge by virtue of subsection (6) above the employment in question has terminated, that subsection shall apply as if it had not.

(f)the words “ employment to which Chapter II of Part V applies ”shall be substituted for the words from “director’s” to “section167)” in sections 332(2)(c) and 418(3)(a) of that Act;

(g)the words “ employment to which Chapter II of Part V of the principal Act applies ” shall be substituted for the words “director’s or higher paid employment” in section 15(3)(a) of the M2TaxesManagement Act 1970.

Marginal Citations

Medical insuranceU.K.

54 Relief.U.K.

(1)This section applies where—

(a)on or after 6th April 1990 an individual makes a payment in respect of a premium under a contract of private medical insurance (whenever issued),

(b)the contract meets the requirement in subsection (2) below as to the person or persons insured,

(c)at the time the payment is made the contract is an eligible contract,

(d)the individual making the payment does not make it out of resources provided by another person for the purpose of enabling it to be made, and

(e)the individual making the payment is not entitled to claim any relief or deduction in respect of it under any other provision of the Tax Acts.

(2)The requirement mentioned in subsection (1)(b) above is that the contracti nsures—

(a)an individual who at the time the payment is made is aged 60 or over and resident in the United Kingdom,

(b)individuals each of whom at that time is aged 60 or over and resident in the United Kingdom, or

(c)two individuals who are married to each other at that time, at least one of whom is aged 60 or over at that time, and each of whom is resident in the United Kingdom at that time.

(3)If the payment is made by an individual who at the time it is made is resident in the United Kingdom (whether or not he is the individual or one ofthe individuals insured by the contract) it shall be deducted from or set offagainst his income for the year of assessment in which it is made; but reliefunder this subsection shall be given only on a claim made for the purpose,except where subsections (4) to (6) below apply.

(4)In such cases and subject to such conditions as the Board may specify in regulations, relief under subsection (3) above shall be given in accordance with subsections (5) and (6) below.

(5)An individual who is entitled to such relief in respect of a payment may deduct and retain out of it an amount equal to income tax on it at the basic rate for the year of assessment in which it is made.

(6)The person to whom the payment is made—

(a)shall accept the amount paid after deduction in discharge of the individual’s liability to the same extent as if the deduction had not been made, and

(b)may, on making a claim, recover from the Board an amount equal to the amount deducted.

(7)The Treasury may make regulations providing that in circumstances prescribed in the regulations—

(a)an individual who has made a payment in respect of a premium under a contract of private medical insurance shall cease to be and be treated as not having been entitled to relief under subsection (3) above; and

(b)he or the person to whom the payment was made (depending on the terms of the regulations) shall account to the Board for tax from which relief has been given on the basis that the individual was so entitled.

(8)Regulations under subsection (7) above may include provision adapting or modifying the effect of any enactment relating to income tax in order to secure the performance of any obligation imposed under paragraph (b) of that subsection.

(9)In this section—

(a)references to a premium, in relation to a contract of insurance, are to any amount payable under the contract to the insurer, and

(b)references to an individual who is resident in the United Kingdom at anytime include references to an individual who is at that time performing duties which are treated by virtue of section 132(4)(a) of the Taxes Act 1988 as performed in the United Kingdom.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C10 For regulations see S.I. 1989/2387andS.I. 1989/2389 (in Part III Vol. 5under “Private medicalinsurance”)

55 Eligible contracts.U.K.

(1)This section has effect to determine whether a contract is at a particular time (the relevant time) an eligible contract for the purposes of section 54above.

(2)A contract is an eligible contract at the relevant time if—

(a)it was entered into by an insurer who at the time it was entered into was a qualifying insurer and was approved by the Board for the purposes of this section,

(b)the period of insurance under the contract does not exceed one year(commencing with the date it was entered into),

(c)the contract is not connected with any other contract at the relevant time and has not been connected with any other contract at any time since it was entered into,

(d)no benefit has been provided by virtue of the contract other than an approved benefit, and

(e)the contract meets one or more of the three conditions set out below.

(3)The first condition is that the contract is certified by the Board under section 56 below at the relevant time.

(4)The second condition is that, at the time the contract was entered into, it conformed with a standard form certified by the Board as a standard form of eligible contract.

(5)The third condition is that, at the time the contract was entered into, it conformed with a form varying from a standard form so certified in no other respect than by making additions—

(a)which were (at the time the contract was entered into) certified by the Board as compatible with an eligible contract when made to that standard form, and

(b)which (at that time) satisfied any conditions subject to which the additions were so certified.

(6)Where a contract is varied, and the relevant time falls after the time the variation takes effect, subsections (1) to (5) above shall have effect as if “entered into” read “varied” in each place where it occurs in subsections (4) and (5) above.

(7)For the purposes of this section a contract is connected with another contract at any time if—

(a)they are simultaneously in force at that time,

(b)either of them was entered into with reference to the other, or with aview to enabling the other to be entered into on particular terms, or with a view to facilitating the other being entered into on particular terms, and

(c)the terms on which either of them was entered into would have been significantly less favourable to the insured if the other had not been entered into.

(8)For the purposes of this section each of the following is a qualifying insurer—

(a)an insurer lawfully carrying on in the United Kingdom business of any of the classes specified in Part I of Schedule 2 to the M3Insurance Companies Act 1982;

(b)an insurer not carrying on business in the United Kingdom but carrying on business in another member State and being either a national of a member State or a company or partnership formed under the law of any part of the United Kingdom or another member State and having its registered office, central administration or principal place of business in a member State.

(9)For the purposes of this section a benefit is an approved benefit if it is provided in pursuance of a right of a description mentioned in section56(3)(a) below.

Marginal Citations

56 Certification of contracts.U.K.

(1)The Board shall certify a contract under this section if it satisfies the conditions set out in subsection (3) below; and the certification shall be expressed to take effect from the time the conditions are satisfied, and shal ltake effect accordingly.

(2)The Board shall revoke a certification of a contract under this section if it comes to their notice that the contract has ceased to satisfy the conditions set out in subsection (3) below; and the revocation shall be expressed to take effect from the time the conditions ceased to be satisfied, and shall take effect accordingly.

(3)The conditions referred to above are that—

(a)the contract either provides indemnity in respect of all or any of the costs of all or any of the treatments, medical services and other matters for the time being specified in regulations made by the Treasury, or in addition to providing indemnity of that description provides cash benefits falling within rules for the time being so specified,

(b)the contract does not confer any right other than such a right as is mentioned in paragraph (a) above or is for the time being specified in regulations made by the Treasury,

(c)the premium under the contract is in the Board’s opinion reasonable, and

(d)the contract satisfies such other requirements as are for the time being specified in regulations made by the Treasury.

(4)The certification of a contract by the Board under this section shall cease to have effect if the contract is varied; but this is without prejudice to the application of the preceding provisions of this section to the contract as varied.

(5)Where the Board refuse to certify a contract under this section, or they revoke a certification, an appeal may be made to the Special Commissioners by—

(a)the insurer, or

(b)any person who (if the policy were certified) would be entitled to relief under section 54 above.

(6)Where a contract is certified under this section, or a certification is revoked or otherwise ceases to have effect, any adjustments resulting from the certification or from its revocation or ceasing to have effect shall be made.

(7)Subsection (6) above applies where a certification or revocation takes place on appeal as it applies in the case of any other certification or revocation.

(8)In this section the reference to a premium, in relation to a contract of insurance, is to any amount payable under the contract to the insurer.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C11 For regulations see S.I. 1989/2389 (inPart III Vol. 5under “Private medical insurance”)

57 Medical insurance: supplementary.U.K.

(1)The Board may by regulations—

(a)provide that a claim under section 54(3) or (6)(b) above shall be made in such form and manner, shall be made at such time, and shall be accompanied by such documents, as may be prescribed;

(b)make provision, in relation to payments in respect of which a person is entitled to relief under section 54 above, for the giving by insurers in such circumstances as may be prescribed of certificates of payment in such form as may be prescribed to such persons as may be prescribed;

(c)provide that a person who provides (or has at any time provided) insurance under contracts of private medical insurance shall comply with any notice which is served on him by the Board and which requires him within a prescribed period to make available for the Board’s inspection documents (of a prescribed kind) relating to such contracts;

(d)provide that persons of such a description as may be prescribed shall, within a prescribed period of being required to do so by the Board, furnish to the Board information (of a prescribed kind) about contracts of private medical insurance;

(e)make provision with respect to the approval of insurers for the purposes of section 55 above and the withdrawal of approval for the purposes of that section;

(f)make provision for and with respect to appeals against decisions of the Board with respect to the giving or withdrawal of approval of insurers for the purposes of section 55 above;

(g)make provision with respect to the certification by the Board of standard forms of eligible contract and variations from standard forms of eligible contract certified by them;

(h)make provision for and with respect to appeals against decisions of the Board with respect to the certification of standard forms of eligible contractor variations from standard forms of eligible contract certified by them;

(i)provide that certification, or the revocation of a certification, under section 56 above shall be carried out in such form and manner as may be prescribed;

(j)make provision with respect to appeals against decisions of the Board with respect to certification or the revocation of certification under section 56 above;

(k)make provision generally as to administration in connection with sections 54 to 56 above.

(2)The words “ Regulations under section 57 of the Finance Act 1989 ” shall be added at the end of each column in the Table in section 98 of the M4Taxes Management Act 1970 (penalties for failure to furnish information etc.).

(3)The following provisions of the Taxes Management Act 1970, namely—

(a)section 29(3)(c) (excessive relief),

(b)section 30 (tax repaid in error etc.),

(c)section 88 (interest), and

(d)section 95 (incorrect return or accounts),

shall apply in relation to the payment of an amount claimed under section 54(6)(b) above to which the claimant was not entitled as if it had been income tax repaid as a relief which was not due.

(4)In sections F3. . . 257D(8) and 265(3) of the Taxes Act 1988 after paragraph (c) there shall be inserted or

(d)on account of any payments to which section 54(5) of the Finance Act 1989 applies.

(5)In subsection (1) above—

  • eligible contract” has the meaning given by section 55 above, and

  • prescribed” means prescribed by or, in relation to form, under the regulations.

Textual Amendments

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

Marginal Citations

CharitiesU.K.

58 Payroll deduction scheme.U.K.

(1)In section 202(7) of the Taxes Act 1988 (which limits to £240 the deductions attracting relief) for “£240” there shall be substituted “£480”.

(2)This section shall have effect for the year 1989-90 and subsequent years of assessment.

59 Covenanted subscriptions.U.K.

(1)In determining whether a payment made to a charity within subsection (2)below is —

(a)an annual payment for the purposes of the Tax Acts, or

(b)a payment to which section 125(1) of the Taxes Act 1988 applies, or

(c)a covenanted payment to charity within the meaning given by section 660(3)of that Act,

there shall be disregarded any consideration for the payment which is ofa kind described in subsection (3) below.

(2)A charity is within this subsection if its sole or main purpose is—

(a)the preservation of property for the public benefit, or

(b)the conservation of wildlife for the public benefit.

(3)The consideration referred to in subsection (1) above is the right ofadmission—

(a)to view property the preservation of which is the sole or main purpose ofthe charity, or

(b)to observe wildlife the conservation of which is the sole or main purposeof the charity.

(4)In subsection (3) above “right of admission” refers to admission ofthe person making the payment (or of any member of his family who may beadmitted because of the payment) either free of the charges normally payablefor admission by members of the public, or on payment of a reduced charge.

(5)Subsection (1) above shall not apply unless the opportunity to makepayments of the kind in question is available to members of the public.

(6)For the purposes of this section—

(a)charity” means a body of persons or trust established forcharitable purposes only, and

(b)the bodies mentioned in section 507 shall each be treated as having beenso established.

(7)This section shall apply to payments due on or after 14th March 1989.

60 British Museum and Natural History Museum.U.K.

(1)In subsection (1) of section 507 of the Taxes Act 1988 (which gives tax exemption to the National Heritage Memorial Fund and the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission) after paragraph (b) there shall be inserted—

(c)the Trustees of the British Museum;

(d)the Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History);and subsection (2) of that section (which gives partial tax exemption to those Trustees) shall cease to have effect.

(2)In section 339(9) of that Act, for the words from “the Trustees”(where those words first occur) to “History) and” there shall be substituted the words “each of the bodies mentioned in section 507, and in subsections (1) to (5) above includes”.

(3)In section 660(4) of that Act, for the words from “the Trustees” to “England” there shall be substituted the words “the bodies mentionedin section 507”.

(4)Subsection (1) above shall apply in relation to accounting periods ending on or after 14th March 1989, and subsections (2) and (3) above shall apply to payments due on or after that day.

Profit-related pay, share schemes etc.U.K.

61 Profit-related pay.U.K.

Schedule 4 to this Act (which amends the provisions of the Taxes Act 1988 relating to profit-related pay) shall have effect.

62 Savings-related share option schemes.U.K.

(1)Part III of Schedule 9 to the Taxes Act 1988 (requirements applicable to savings-related share option schemes) shall be amended as follows.

F4(2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(3)In paragraph 25(b) (requirement that price at which share may be acquired under scheme be not less than 90 per cent. of market value), for the words “90 per cent.” there shall be substituted the words “80 per cent.”.

(4)Subsection (2) above shall come into force on such day as the Treasury may by order made by statutory instrument appoint.

Textual Amendments

F563 Profit sharing schemes.U.K.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Textual Amendments

F5S. 63 repealed(having effect for the year 1991-92 and subsequent years of assessment) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 123, Sch. 19 Pt.V Note 6.

64 Share option and profit sharing schemes: shares of consortium member.U.K.

In paragraph 10 of Schedule 9 to the Taxes Act 1988, paragraph (c)(ii)(which requires a consortium member to hold not less than three-twentieths of share capital of grantor company etc. if member’s shares are to qualify as scheme shares) shall cease to have effect.

65 Employee share schemes: material interest.U.K.

In Schedule 9 to the Taxes Act 1988 the following paragraph shall be inserted after paragraph 39—

Shares subject to an employee benefit trust

40(1)Where an individual has an interest in shares or obligations of the company as a beneficiary of an employee benefit trust, the trustees shall not be regarded as associates of his by reason only of that interest unless sub-paragraph (3) below applies in relation to him.

(2)In this paragraph “employee benefit trust” has the same meaning as in paragraph 7 of Schedule 8.

(3)This sub-paragraph applies in relation to an individual if at any time on or after 14th March 1989—

(a)the individual, either on his own or with any one or more of his associates, or

(b)any associate of his, with or without other such associates,

has been the beneficial owner of, or able (directly or through the medium of other companies or by any other indirect means) to control, more than 25per cent., or in the case of a share option scheme which is not a savings-related share option scheme more than 10 per cent., of the ordinary share capital of the company.

(4)Sub-paragraphs (9) to (12) of paragraph 7 of Schedule 8 shall apply for the purposes of this paragraph in relation to an individual as they apply for the purposes of that paragraph in relation to an employee.

66 Priority share allocations for employees etc.U.K.

(1)In relation to offers made on or after 11th October 1988, section 68 of the M5Finance Act 1988 (which provides for the benefits derived from priority rights in share offers to be disregarded in certain circumstances) shall have effect with the following amendments.

(2)In subsection (1), the words from “at the fixed price” to “tendered” shall be omitted.

(3)After that subsection there shall be inserted—

(1A)Where the price payable by the director or employee is less than the fixed price or the lowest price successfully tendered, subsection (1) above shall not apply to the benefit represented by the difference in price.

(4)In subsection (2), for paragraph (a) (priority shares not to exceed 10 percent. of shares subject to the offer) there shall be substituted—

(a)that the aggregate number of shares subject to the offer that may be allocated as mentioned in subsection (1)(b) above does not exceed the limit specified in subsection (2A) below or, as the case may be, either of the limits specified in subsection (2B) below.

(5)After subsection (2) there shall be inserted—

(2A)Except where subsection (2B) below applies, the limit relevant for the purposes of subsection (2)(a) above is 10 per cent. of the shares subject to the offer (including the shares that may be allocated as mentioned in subsection (1)(b) above).

(2B)Where the offer is part of arrangements which include one or more other offers to the public of shares of the same class, the limits relevant for the purposes of subsection (2)(a) above are—

(a)40 per cent. of the shares subject to the offer (including the shares that may be allocated as mentioned in subsection (1)(b) above), and

(b)10 per cent. of all the shares of the class in question (including the shares that may be so allocated) that are subject to any of the offers forming part of the arrangements.

Marginal Citations

Employee share ownership trustsU.K.

67 Tax relief. U.K.

(1)This section applies where—

(a)a company expends a sum in making a payment by way of contribution to the trustees of a trust which is a qualifying employee share ownership trust at the time the sum is expended,

(b)at that time, the company or a company which it then controls has employees who are eligible to benefit under the terms of the trust deed,

(c)at that time the company is resident in the United Kingdom,

(d)before the expiry of the expenditure period the sum is expended by th etrustees for one or more of the qualifying purposes, and

(e)before the end of the claim period a claim for relief under this section is made.

(2)In such a case the sum—

(a)shall be deducted in computing for the purposes of Schedule D the profits or gains of a trade carried on by the company, or

(b)if the company is an investment company or a company in the case of which section 75 of the Taxes Act 1988 applies by virtue of section 76 of that Act, shall be treated as expenses of management.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (1)(b) above, the question whether one company is controlled by another shall be construed in accordance with section840 of the Taxes Act 1988.

(4)For the purposes of subsection (1)(d) above each of the following is a qualifying purpose—

(a)the acquisition of shares in the company which established the trust;

(b)the repayment of sums borrowed;

(c)the payment of interest on sums borrowed;

(d)the payment of any sum to a person who is a beneficiary under the terms of the trust deed;

(e)the meeting of expenses.

(5)For the purposes of subsection (1)(d) above the expenditure period is the period of nine months beginning with the day following the end of the period of account in which the sum is charged as an expense of the company, or such longer period as the Board may allow by notice given to the company.

(6)For the purposes of subsection (1)(e) above the claim period is the period of two years beginning with the day following the end of the period of account in which the sum is charged as an expense of the company.

(7)For the purposes of this section the trustees of an employee share ownership trust shall be taken to expend sums paid to them in the order in which the sums are received by them (irrespective of the number of companies making payments).

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C13 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

68 Principal charges to tax. U.K.

(1)This section applies where a chargeable event (within the meaning of section 69 below) occurs in relation to the trustees of an employee share ownership trust.

(2)In such a case—

(a)the trustees shall be treated as receiving, when the event occurs, annual profits or gains whose amount is equal to the chargeable amount (within the meaning of section 70 below),

(b)the profits or gains shall be chargeable to tax under Case VI of Schedule D for the year of assessment in which the event occurs, and

(c)the rate at which the tax is chargeable shall be [F6the rate applicable to trusts] for the year of assessment in which the event occurs.

(3)If the whole or any part of the tax assessed on the trustees is not paid before the expiry of the period of six months beginning with the day on which the assessment becomes final and conclusive, a notice of liability to tax under this subsection may be served on a qualifying company and the tax or the part unpaid (as the case may be) shall be payable by the company on service of the notice.

(4)Where a notice of liability is served under subsection (3) above—

(a)any interest which is due on the tax or the part (as the case may be) and has not been paid by the trustees, and

(b)any interest accruing due on the tax or the part (as the case may be)after the date of service,

shall be payable by the company.

(5)Where a notice of liability is served under subsection (3) above and any amount payable by the company (whether on account of tax or interest) is not paid by the company before the expiry of the period of three months beginning with the date of service, the amount unpaid may be recovered from the trustees(without prejudice to the right to recover it instead from the company).

(6)For the purposes of this section each of the following is a qualifying company—

(a)the company which established the employee share ownership trust;

(b)any company falling within subsection (7) below.

(7)A company falls within this subsection if, before it is sought to serve a notice of liability on it under subsection (3) above—

(a)it has paid a sum to the trustees, and

(b)the sum has been deducted as mentioned in section 67(2)(a) above or treated as mentioned in section 67(2)(b) above.

Textual Amendments

F6Words in s. 68(2)(c) substituted (27.7.1993 with effect for the year 1993-94 and subsequent years of assessment) by 1993 c. 34, s. 79, Sch. 6 paras.20, 25(1)

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C14 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employee share ownership trusts

69 Chargeable events. U.K.

(1)For the purposes of section 68 above each of the following is a chargeable event in relation to the trustees of an employee share ownership trust—

(a)the transfer of securities by the trustees, if the transfer is not a qualifying transfer;

(b)the transfer of securities by the trustees to persons who are at the time of the transfer beneficiaries under the terms of the trust deed, if the terms on which the transfer is made are not qualifying terms;

(c)the retention of securities by the trustees at the expiry of the period of seven years beginning with the date on which they acquired them;

(d)the expenditure of a sum by the trustees for a purpose other than a qualifying purpose.

(2)For the purposes of subsection (1)(a) above a transfer is a qualifying transfer if it is made to a person who at the time of the transfer is a beneficiary under the terms of the trust deed.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (1)(a) above a transfer is also a qualifying transfer if—

(a)it is made to the trustees of a scheme which at the time of the transfer is a profit sharing scheme approved under Schedule 9 to the Taxes Act 1988, and

(b)it is made for a consideration which is not less than the price the securities might reasonably be expected to fetch on a sale in the open market.

[F7(3A)For the purposes of subsection (1)(a) above a transfer is also a qualifying transfer if it is made by way of exchange in circumstances mentioned in section 85(1) of the Capital Gains Tax Act 1979 or section 135(1) of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992.]

(4)For the purposes of subsection (1)(b) above a transfer of securities is made on qualifying terms if—

(a)all the securities transferred at the same time are transferred on similar terms,

(b)securities have been offered to all the persons who are beneficiaries under the terms of the trust deed when the transfer is made, and

(c)securities are transferred to all such beneficiaries who have accepted.

(5)For the purposes of subsection (1)(d) above each of the following is a qualifying purpose—

(a)the acquisition of shares in the company which established the trust;

(b)the repayment of sums borrowed;

(c)the payment of interest on sums borrowed;

(d)the payment of any sum to a person who is a beneficiary under the terms of the trust deed;

(e)the meeting of expenses.

(6)For the purposes of subsection (4) above, the fact that terms vary according to the levels of remuneration of beneficiaries, the length of their service, or similar factors, shall not be regarded as meaning that the terms are not similar.

(7)In ascertaining for the purposes of this section whether particular securities are retained, securities acquired earlier by the trustees shall be treated as transferred by them before securities acquired by them later.

(8)For the purposes of this section trustees—

(a)acquire securities when they become entitled to them (subject to the exceptions in subsection (9) below);

(b)transfer securities to another person when that other becomes entitled to them;

(c)retain securities if they remain entitled to them.

(9)The exceptions are these—

(a)if securities are issued to trustees in exchange in circumstances mentioned in section [F8135(1) of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992], they shall be treated as having acquired them when they became entitled to the securities for which they are exchanged;

(b)if trustees become entitled to securities as a result of a reorganisation, they shall be treated as having acquired them when they became entitled to the original shares which those securities represent (construing “reorganisation” and “original shares” in accordance with section [F8126] of that Act).

(10)If trustees agree to take a transfer of securities, for the purposes of this section they shall be treated as becoming entitled to them when the agreement is made and not on a later transfer made pursuant to the agreement.

(11)If trustees agree to transfer securities to another person, for the purposes of this section the other person shall be treated as becoming entitled to them when the agreement is made and not on a later transfer made pursuant to the agreement.

(12)For the purposes of this section the following are securities—

(a)shares;

(b)debentures.

Textual Amendments

F7S. 69(3A) inserted (16.7.1992, the amending provision applying in relation to exchanges made on or after 1.1.1992) by Finance (No. 2) Act 1992 (c. 48), s. 36(1)(2)

F8Words in s. 69(9) substituted (in relation to tax for the year 1992-1993 and subsequent years subject as mentioned in s. 289 of the substituting Act) by Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (c. 12), ss. 289, 290, Sch. 10 para. 19(1) (with s. 60, 101(1), 171, 201(3))

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C15 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

C16 Definition employed for purposes of Finance Act1990 (c. 29) s. 36—roll-over relief where replacement assetowned

70 Chargeable amounts. U.K.

(1)This section has effect to determine the chargeable amount for the purposes of section 68 above.

(2)If the chargeable event falls within section 69(1)(a), (b) or (c) above the following rules shall apply—

(a)if the event constitutes a disposal of the securities by the trustees for the purposes of the [F9Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992], the chargeable amount is an amount equal to the sums allowable under section [F938(1)(a)] and (b) of that Act;

(b)if the event does not constitute such a disposal, the chargeable amount is an amount equal to the sums which would be so allowable had the trustees made a disposal of the securities for the purposes of that Act at the time the chargeable event occurs.

(3)If the chargeable event falls within section 69(1)(d) above the chargeable amount is an amount equal to the sum concerned.

Textual Amendments

F9Words in s. 70(2) substituted (6.3.1992 with effect as mentioned in s. 289(1)(2) of the substituting Act) by Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (c. 12), ss. 289, 290, Sch. 10 para. 19(2) (with ss. 60, 101(1), 201(3))

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C17 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

71 Further charges to tax: borrowing. U.K.

(1)This section applies where—

(a)a chargeable event (within the meaning of section 69 above) occurs in relation to the trustees of an employee share ownership trust,

(b)at the time the event occurs anything is outstanding in respect of the principal of an amount or amounts borrowed at any time by the trustees, and

(c)the chargeable event is one as regards which section 72(2)(b) below applies.

(2)In the following provisions of this section—

(a)the initial chargeable event” means the event referred to in subsection (1)(a) above, and

(b)the total outstanding amount” means the total amount outstanding, at the time the initial chargeable event occurs, in respect of the principal of an amount or amounts borrowed at any time by the trustees.

(3)If any of the total outstanding amount is repaid after the initial chargeable event occurs, a further chargeable event shall occur in relatio nto the trustees at the end of the year of assessment in which the repayment is made.

(4)In such a case—

(a)the trustees shall be treated as receiving, when the further event occurs, annual profits or gains whose amount is equal to the chargeable amount,

(b)the profits or gains shall be chargeable to tax under Case VI of Schedule D for the year of assessment at the end of which the further event occurs, and

(c)the rate at which the tax is chargeable shall be [F10the rate applicable to trusts] for the year of assessment at the end of which the further event occurs.

(5)Subject to subsection (6) below, for the purposes of subsection (4) above the chargeable amount is an amount equal to the aggregate of the total outstanding amount repaid in the year of assessment.

(6)In a case where section 72(2)(b) below had effect in the case of the initial chargeable event, for the purposes of subsection (4) above the chargeable amount is an amount equal to the smaller of—

(a)the aggregate of the total outstanding amount repaid in the year of assessment, and

(b)an amount found by applying the formula A-B-C.

(7)For the purposes of subsection (6) above—

(a)A is the amount which would be the chargeable amount for the initial chargeable event apart from section 72(2) below,

(b)B is the chargeable amount for the initial chargeable event, and

(c)C is the amount (if any) found under subsection (8) below.

(8)If, before the further chargeable event occurs, one or more prior chargeable events have occurred in relation to the trustees by virtue of the prior repayment of any of the total outstanding amount found for the time the initial chargeable event occurs, the amount found under this subsection is an amount equal to the chargeable amount for the prior chargeable event or to the aggregate of the chargeable amounts for the prior chargeable events (as the case may be).

(9)In a case where—

(a)a chargeable event (within the meaning of section 69 above) occurs in relation to the trustees in circumstances mentioned in subsection (1) above,

(b)a sum falls to be included in the total outstanding amount found for the time the event occurs,

(c)another chargeable event (within the meaning of that section) occurs in relation to the trustees in circumstances mentioned in subsection (1) above, and

(d)the same sum or a part of it would (apart from this subsection) fall to be included in the total outstanding amount found for the time the event occurs,

the sum or part (as the case may be) shall not be included in the total outstanding amount found for the time the other chargeable event occurs.

(10)In ascertaining for the purposes of this section whether a repayment is in respect of a particular amount, amounts borrowed earlier shall be taken to be repaid before amounts borrowed later.

(11)Subsections (3) to (7) of section 68 above shall apply where tax is assessed by virtue of this section as they apply where tax is assessed by virtue of that section.

Textual Amendments

F10Words in s. 71(4)(c) substituted (27.7.1993 with effect for the year 1993-94 and subsequent years of assessment) by 1993 c. 34, s. 79, Sch. 6 paras.20, 25(1)

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C18 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

72 Limit on chargeable amount. U.K.

(1)For the purposes of this section each of the following is a chargeable event in relation to the trustees of an employee share ownership trust—

(a)an event which is a chargeable event by virtue of section 69 above;

(b)an event which is a chargeable event by virtue of section 71 above.

(2)If a chargeable event (the event in question) occurs in relation to the trustees of an employee share ownership trust, the following rules shall apply—

(a)the amount which would (apart from this subsection) be the chargeable amount for the event in question shall be aggregated, for the purposes of paragraph (b) below, with the chargeable amounts for other chargeable events(if any) occurring in relation to the trustees before the event in question,

(b)if the amount which would (apart from this subsection) be the chargeable amount for the event in question (or the aggregate found under paragraph (a)above, if there is one) exceeds the deductible amount, the chargeable amount for the event in question shall be the amount it would be apart from this subsection less an amount equal to the excess, and

(c)section 70(2) and (3) and section 71(5) above shall have effect subject to paragraph (b) above.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (2) above the deductible amount (as regards the event in question) is an amount equal to the total of the sums falling within subsection (4) below.

(4)A sum falls within this subsection if it has been received by the trustees before the occurrence of the event in question and—

(a)it has been deducted as mentioned in section 67(2)(a) above, or treated as mentioned in section 67(2)(b) above, before the occurrence of that event, or

(b)it would fall to be so deducted or treated if a claim for relief under section 67 above had been made immediately before the occurrence of that event.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C19 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

73 Information. U.K.

(1)An inspector may by notice in writing require a return to be made by the trustees of an employee share ownership trust if they have at any time received a sum which has been deducted as mentioned in section 67(2)(a) above or treated as mentioned in section 67(2)(b) above.

(2)Where he requires such a return to be made the inspector shall specify the information to be contained in it.

(3)The information which may be specified is information the inspector needs for the purposes of sections 68 to 72 above, and may include information about—

(a)sums received (including sums borrowed) by the trustees;

(b)expenditure incurred by them;

(c)assets acquired by them;

(d)transfers of assets made by them.

(4)The information which may be required under subsection (3)(a) above may include the persons from whom the sums were received.

(5)The information which may be required under subsection (3)(b) above may include the purpose of the expenditure and the persons receiving any sums.

(6)The information which may be specified under subsection (3)(c) above may include the persons from whom the assets were acquired and the consideration furnished by the trustees.

(7)The information which may be included under subsection (3)(d) above may include the persons to whom assets were transferred and the consideration furnished by them.

(8)In a case where a sum has been deducted as mentioned in section 67(2)(a)above, or treated as mentioned in section 67(2)(b) above, the inspector shall send to the trustees to whom the payment was made a certificate stating—

(a)that a sum has been so deducted or so treated, and

(b)what sum has been so deducted or so treated.

(9)In the Table in section 98 of the M6Taxes Management Act1970 (penalties for failure to comply with notices etc.) at the end of the first column there shall be inserted— “ Section 73 of the Finance Act 1989 ”.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C20 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

Marginal Citations

74 Interpretation. U.K.

Schedule 5 to this Act shall have effect to determine whether, for the purposes of sections 67 to 73 above, a trust is at a particular time—

(a)an employee share ownership trust;

(b)a qualifying employee share ownership trust.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C21 See Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) ss.31–40—.roll-over relief for disposal of assets to employeeshare ownership trusts

Pensions etc.U.K.

75 Retirement benefits schemes.U.K.

Schedule 6 to this Act (which relates to retirement benefits schemes)shall have effect.

76 Non-approved retirement benefits schemes.U.K.

(1)In computing the amount of the profits or gains to be charged under Case I or Case II of Schedule D, no sum shall be deducted in respect of any expenses falling within subsection (2) or (3) below; and no expenses falling within either of those subsections shall be treated for the purposes of section 75 of the Taxes Act 1988 (investment companies) as expenses of management.

(2)Expenses fall within this subsection if—

(a)they are expenses of providing benefits pursuant to a relevant retirement benefits scheme, and

(b)the benefits are not ones in respect of which a person is on receipt chargeable to income tax.

(3)Expenses fall within this subsection if—

(a)they are expenses of paying any sum pursuant to a relevant retirement benefits scheme with a view to the provision of any benefits, and

(b)the sum is not one which when paid is treated as the income of a person by virtue of section 595(1) of the Taxes Act 1988 (sum paid with a view to the provision of any relevant benefits for an employee).

(4)No sum shall be deducted in respect of any expenses falling within subsection (5) or (6) below—

(a)in computing the amount of the profits or gains to be charged under Case I or Case II of Schedule D, or

(b)by virtue of section 75 of the Taxes Act 1988,

unless the sum has actually been expended.

(5)Expenses fall within this subsection if—

(a)they are expenses of providing benefits pursuant to a relevant retirement benefits scheme, and

(b)the benefits are ones in respect of which a person is on receipt chargeable to income tax.

(6)Expenses fall within this subsection if—

(a)they are expenses of paying any sum pursuant to a relevant retirement benefits scheme with a view to the provision of any benefits, and

(b)the sum is one which when paid is treated as the income of a person by virtue of section 595(1) of the Taxes Act 1988.

(7)In this section—

  • retirement benefits scheme” has the same meaning as in Chapter I of Part XIV of the Taxes Act 1988, and

  • references to a relevant retirement benefits scheme are references to a retirement benefits scheme which is not of a description mentioned in section596(1)(a), (b) or (c) of the Taxes Act 1988.

(8)This section has effect in relation to expenses incurred on or after the day on which this Act is passed.

77 Personal pension schemes.U.K.

Schedule 7 to this Act (which relates to personal pension schemes) shall have effect.

Unit trusts etc.U.K.

78, 79.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . F11U.K.

Textual Amendments

80 Gilt unit trusts.U.K.

(1)Where, in the case of a certified unit trust and apart from thissubsection, section 468(5) of the Taxes Act 1988 would apply as regards adistribution period beginning after 31st December 1989, section 468(5) shallnot apply in the case of the trust as regards that period.

(2)Where by virtue of subsection (1) above the last distribution period asregards which section 468(5) applies in the case of a certified unit trust isone beginning on or before, and ending after, 31st December 1989, thetrustees’ liability to income tax in respect of any source of incomechargeable under Case III of Schedule D shall be assessed as if they hadceased to possess the source of income on the last day of that distributionperiod.

(3)But where section 67 of the Taxes Act 1988 applies by virtue of subsection(2) above, it shall apply with the omission from subsection (1)(b) of thewords from “and shall” to “this provision”.

(4)For the purposes of this section “certified unit trust”means, as respects a distribution period, a unit trust scheme in the case ofwhich—

(a)an order under section 78 of the M7 Financial ServicesAct 1986 is in force during the whole or part of the accounting period inwhich the distribution period falls, and

(b)a certificate under section 78(8) of that Act, certifying that the scheme complies with the conditions necessary for it to enjoy the rights conferredby the UCITS directive, has been issued before or at any time during thataccounting period.

(5)In this section—

“distribution period” has the same meaning as in section 468 of the Taxes Act 1988,

the UCITS directive” means the directive of the Council of the European Communities, dated 20th December 1985, on theco-ordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating toundertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (No.85/611/EEC), and

“unit trust scheme” has the same meaning as in section 469 of theTaxes Act 1988.

Marginal Citations

81 Offshore funds operating equalisation arrangements.U.K.

(1)In section 758 of the Taxes Act 1988 (offshore funds operating equalisation arrangements) in subsection (6) (reference to section 78 of the M8 Capital Gains Tax Act 1979 not to include reference to it as applied by section 82) for the words “but not” there shall be substituted the words “and a reference to section 78”.

(2)This section shall apply where a conversion of securities occurs on or after 14th March 1989; and “conversion of securities” here has the same meaning as in section 82 of the Capital Gains Tax Act 1979.

Marginal Citations

Life assuranceU.K.

82 Calculation of profits.U.K.

(1)Where the profits of an insurance company in respect of its life assurance business are, for the purposes of the Taxes Act 1988, computed in accordance with the provisions of that Act applicable to Case I of Schedule D, then, in calculating the profits for any period of account,—

(a)there shall be taken into account as an expense (so far as not so taken into account apart from this section) any amounts which [F12are allocated to, and any amounts of [F13tax or] foreign tax which are expended on behalf of, policy holders or annuitants in respect of the period]; and

(b)if, at the end of the period, the company has an unappropriated surplus on valuation, as shown in its return for the purposes of the M9 Insurance Companies Act 1982, then, subject to subsection (3) below, the closing liabilities of the period may include such amount, forming part of that surplus, as is required to meet the reasonable expectations of policyholders or annuitants with regard to bonuses or other additions to benefit of a discretionary nature.

(2)For the purposes of this section an amount is allocated to policy holders or annuitants if, and only if,—

(a)bonus payments are made to them; or

(b)reversionary bonuses are declared in their favour or a reduction is made in the premiums payable by them;

and the amount of the allocation is, in a case within paragraph (a)above, the amount of the payments and, in a case within paragraph (b) above, the amount of the liabilities assumed by the company in consequence of the declaration or reduction.

(3)The amount which, apart from this subsection, would be included in the closing liabilities of a period of account by virtue of subsection (1)(b)above shall be reduced or, as the case may be, extinguished by deducting there from the total of the amounts which—

(a)for periods of account ending before 14th March 1989 have been excluded, by virtue of section 433 of the Taxes Act 1988, as being reserved for policyholders or annuitants, and

(b)have not before that date either been allocated to or expended on behalf of policy holders or annuitants or been treated as profits of an accounting period on ceasing to be so reserved.

(4)Where the closing liabilities of a period of account include an amount by virtue of subsection (1)(b) above, the like amount shall be included in the opening liabilities of the next following period of account.

(5)This section has effect with respect to periods of account ending on or after 14th March 1989; and the following provisions of this section shall apply for the purposes of the application of this section to any such period which begins before that date (in this section referred to as a “straddling period”).

(6)For the purposes referred to in subsection (5) above, it shall be assumed that the straddling period consists of two separate periods of account,—

(a)the first beginning at the beginning of the straddling period and ending on 13th March 1989 (in this section referred to as “the first notional period”); and

(b)the second beginning on 14th March 1989 and ending at the end of the straddling period (in this section referred to as “the second notional period”);

and any reference in subsection (7) or subsection (8) below to a time apportionment is a reference to an apportionment made by reference to the respective lengths of the two notional periods.

(7)To determine the profits of the first notional period and the amount excluded from the profits of that period by virtue of section 433 of the Taxes Act 1988 as being reserved for policy holders or annuitants,—

(a)in the first instance the profits of the straddling period and the amount so excluded from those profits shall be computed as if subsections (1) to (4)above did not apply with respect to any part of the straddling period; and

(b)there shall then be determined that part of the profits and the amount computed under paragraph (a) above which, on a time apportionment, is properly attributable to the first notional period.

(8)To determine the profits of the second notional period,—

(a)in the first instance the profits of the straddling period shall be computed as if subsections (1) to (4) above applied to the whole of the straddling period; and

(b)there shall then be determined that part of the profits computed under paragraph (a) above which, on a time apportionment, is properly attributable to the second notional period.

Textual Amendments

F12Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) s. 43(1)(3)—deemed always to have had effect. Previously

“, in respect of the period, are allocated to or expended on behalf of policy holders or annuitants”

F13 Words

“tax or”

omitted when s.82(1)(2)(4) and s. 83applied to profits chargeable under ScheduleD (see Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (c. 1, SIF 63:1) s. 441)

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C22S. 82 modified (31.7.1992 with effect for accounting periods beginning on and after 1.1.1990) by S.I. 1992/1655, regs. 1,17

S. 82 modified (23.3.1999 with effect with respect to accounting periods of insurance companies ending on or after 1.7.1999) by S.I. 1999/498, regs. 1, 10

C23S. 82 subs. (1)(2) and (4) and s. 83apply to profits chargeable under Schedule D (see Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (c. 1, SIF 63:1), s. 441)

S. 82(1)(2)(4) applied (with modifications) (1.5.1995) by 1988 c. 1, s. 439B(3)(a) (as inserted (1.5.1995) by 1998 c. 36, s. 51, Sch. 8 Pt. I para. 27(1) (with Sch. 8 paras. 55(2), 57(1))

C24 See S.I. 1989/2417, reg. 5 (in PartIII Vol.5)for modification applicable to life or endowment businesscarried on by registered friendly societies (but S.I. 1989/2417 was revoked (31.7.1992) by S.I. 1992/1655, regs. 1, 22 and deemed never to have had effect).

Marginal Citations

83 Receipts to be brought into account. U.K.

(1)Where the profits of an insurance company in respect of its life assurancebusiness are, for the purposes of the Taxes Act 1988, computed in accordancewith the provisions of that Act applicable to Case I of Schedule D, then, sofar as referable to that business, the following items, as brought intoaccount for a period of account (and not otherwise), namely,—

(a)the company’s investment income from the assets of its long-term businessfund, and

(b)any increase in the value (whether realised or not) of those assets,

shall be taken into account as receipts of the period; and if for anyperiod of account there is a reduction in the value referred to in paragraph(b) above (as brought into account for the period), that reduction shall betaken into account as an expense of that period.

(2)Except in so far as regulations made by the Treasury otherwise provide,in subsection (1) above “brought into account” means broughtinto account in the revenue account prepared for the purposes of the M10 Insurance Companies Act 1982.

(3)Subject to subsection (5) below, this section has effect with respect toperiods of account ending on or after 1st January 1990; and the followingprovisions of this section shall apply for the purposes of the application ofthis section to any such period which begins before that date (in this sectionreferred to as a “straddling period”).

(4)Subject to subsection (5) below, for the purposes referred to insubsection (3) above, it shall be assumed that the straddling period consistsof two separate periods of account,—

(a)the first beginning at the beginning of the straddling period and endingon 31st December 1989 (in this section referred to as “the first notionalperiod”); and

(b)the second beginning on 1st January 1990 and ending at the end of thestraddling period (in this section referred to as “the second notionalperiod”);

and any reference in subsection (6) or subsection (7) below to a timeapportionment is a reference to an apportionment made by reference to therespective lengths of the two notional periods.

(5)In the case of any company which, by notice in writing given to theinspector on or before 31st December 1992, so elects,—

(a)subsections (3) and (4)(b) above shall have effect as if for “1stJanuary 1990”there were substituted “14th March 1989”; and

(b)subsection (4)(a) above shall have effect as if for “31st December”there were substituted “13th March”.

(6)To determine the profits of the first notional period,—

(a)in the first instance the profits of the straddling period shall becomputed as if subsections (1) and (2) above did not apply with respect to anypart of that period; and

(b)there shall then be determined that part of the profits computed under paragraph (a) above which, on a time apportionment, is properly attributable to the first notional period.

(7)To determine the profits of the second notional period,—

(a)in the first instance the profits of the straddling period shall be computed as if subsections (1) and (2) above applied with respect to the wholeof that period; and

(b)there shall then be determined that part of the profits computed under paragraph (a) above which, on a time apportionment, is properly attributableto the second notional period.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C25S. 82 subs. (1)(2) and (4) and s. 83apply to profitschargeable under Schedule D (see Income and Corporation TaxesAct 1988 (c. 1, SIF 63:1), s. 441)

C26S. 83 modified (retrospective to 1.1.1995) by S.I. 1997/473, regs. 1(2), 33, 34

C27 See Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (c. 1,SIF 63:1), s. 432B to E—rules for determining amounts referable tolife assurance business

C29 See S.I. 1989/2417, reg. 5 (in PartIII Vol. 5)for the omission of subs. (2)in the case of life endowment business carried on by registered friendly societies (but S.I. 1989/2417 was revoked (31.7.1992) by S.I. 1992/1655, regs. 1, 22 and deemed never to have had effect).

S. 83(2) modified (31.7.1992 with effect for accounting periods beginning on and after 1.1.1990) by S.I. 1992/1655, regs. 1,18.

Marginal Citations

M101982c. 50.

Valid from 01/05/1995

[F1483A Meaning of “brought into account”.U.K.

(1)In section 83 “brought into account” means brought into account in an account which is recognised for the purposes of that section.

(2)Subject to the following provisions of this section and to any regulations made by the Treasury, the accounts recognised for the purposes of that section are—

(a)a revenue account prepared for the purposes of the Insurance Companies Act 1982 in respect of the whole of the company’s long term business;

(b)any separate revenue account required to be prepared under that Act in respect of a part of that business.

Paragraph (b) above does not include accounts required in respect of internal linked funds.

(3)Where there are prepared any such separate accounts as are mentioned in subsection (2)(b) above, reference shall be made to those accounts rather than to the account for the whole of the business.

(4)If in any such case the total of the items brought into account in the separate accounts is not equal to the total amount brought into account in the account prepared for the whole business, there shall be treated as having been required and prepared a further separate revenue account covering the balance.

(5)Where a company carries on both ordinary long term business and industrial assurance business, the references above to the company’s long term business shall be construed as references to either or both of those businesses, as the case may require.]

Textual Amendments

F14SS. 83, 83A substituted for s. 83 (1.5.1995) by 1995 c. 4, s. 51, Sch. 8 Pt. I para. 16(1) (with Sch. 8 paras. 55(2), 57(1))

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C30S. 83A modified (retrospective to 1.1.1995) by S.I. 1997/473, regs. 1(2), 36, 37

Valid from 29/04/1996

[F1583AA Amounts added to long term business fund of a company in excess of that company’s loss.U.K.

(1)If one or more relevant amounts are brought into account for a period of account of a company and either—

(a)the aggregate of those amounts exceeds the loss which, after the making of any reduction under subsection (6) below but before any application of section 83(3) above in relation to that period, would have arisen to the company in that period in respect of its life assurance business, or

(b)no such loss would have so arisen,

the surplus for that period shall be applied in accordance with the following provisions of this section and section 83AB below.

(2)In this section—

  • relevant amount” means so much of any amount which is added to the long term business fund of a company as mentioned in subsection (3) of section 83 above as does not fall within any of the paragraphs of subsection (4) of that section;

    surplus”, in relation to a period of account of a company, means (subject to section 83AB(2) below)—

(a)if the aggregate of the relevant amounts brought into account for that period exceeds the amount of any loss which, after the making of any reduction under subsection (6) below but before any application of section 83(3) above in relation to that period, would have arisen to the company in that period in respect of its life assurance business, the amount of the excess; or

(b)if no such loss would have so arisen, the aggregate of the relevant amounts brought into account for that period.

(3)Where, apart from section 83AB(2) below, there is a surplus for a period of account of a company for which there are brought into account one or more relevant amounts which were added to the company’s long term business fund as part of, or in connection with, a particular transfer of business, the appropriate portion of the surplus for that period shall be treated as reducing (but not below nil) so much of any loss arising to the transferor company in the relevant accounting period as, on a just and reasonable apportionment of the loss, is referable to the business which is the subject of that particular transfer.

(4)For the purposes of subsection (3) above, the appropriate portion of the surplus for a period of account of a company is, in the case of any particular transfer of business, the amount which bears to that surplus (apart from any additions by virtue of section 83AB(2) below) the proportion which A bears to B, where—

  • A is the aggregate of such of the relevant amounts added to the company’s long term business fund as part of, or in connection with, that particular transfer of business as are brought into account for that period, and

  • B is the aggregate of the relevant amounts brought into account for that period.

(5)Any reduction pursuant to subsection (3) above of the loss arising to the transferor company in the relevant accounting period shall be made after—

(a)the making of any reduction under subsection (6) below, and

(b)any application of section 83(3) above,

in relation to the period of account of that company in which falls the date of the particular transfer of business in question.

(6)Any loss arising to a company in respect of its life assurance business in a period of account subsequent to one for which there is a surplus shall be reduced (but not below nil) by so much of that surplus as cannot be applied—

(a)under subsection (3) above;

(b)under this subsection, in the reduction of a loss arising to the company in an earlier period of account; or

(c)under section 83AB below, in relation to a transfer of business from the company in that or any earlier period of account.

(7)Any reduction pursuant to subsection (6) above of a loss arising to a company in a period of account shall be made—

(a)before any application of section 83(3) above in relation to that period, and

(b)if the company is also the transferor company in relation to a particular transfer of business, before the making of any reduction under subsection (3) above in relation to that one of its accounting periods which is the relevant accounting period in relation to that transfer.

(8)A surplus in respect of an earlier period of account shall be applied under subsection (6) above before a surplus in respect of a later period of account.

(9)All such adjustments to the liability to tax of any person shall be made, whether by assessment or otherwise, as may be required to give effect to this section.

(10)In this section—

  • add” has the same meaning as in section 83 above;

    the relevant accounting period” means the accounting period of the transferor company which—

(a)ends on the date of the transfer of business mentioned in subsection (3) above, or

(b)if that transfer of business falls within section 83(6)(c) above and no accounting period of the transferor company ends on that date, ends next after that date;

transfer of business” has the same meaning as in section 83(3) above;

the transferor company” means the company from which the transfer of business mentioned in subsection (3) above is effected.

(11)A transfer of business falling within section 83(6)(c) above shall be treated for the purposes of this section as a transfer of business from the company which is the reinsured under the contract of reinsurance.]

Textual Amendments

F15Ss. 83AA, 83AB inserted (29.4.1996 with effect as mentioned in Sch. 31 paras. 9(1), 10(2) of the amending Act) by 1996 c. 8, s. 163, Sch. 31 para. 5

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C31S. 83AA modified (29.4.1996) by 1996 c. 8, s. 163, Sch. 31 para. 9(1)

C32S. 83AA restricted (29.4.1996) by 1996 c. 8, s. 163, Sch. 31 para. 9(3)

Valid from 29/04/1996

[F1683AB Treatment of surplus where there is a subsequent transfer of business from the company etc.U.K.

(1)If an amount is added to the long term business fund of a company as part of or in connection with a transfer of business to the company, or a demutualisation of the company not involving a transfer of business, and—

(a)there is a surplus for the period of account of the company for which that amount is brought into account,

(b)at any time after the transfer of business or demutualisation, there is a transfer of business from the company (the “subsequent transfer”), and

(c)at the end of the relevant period of account there remains at least some of the surplus mentioned in paragraph (a) above which cannot be applied—

(i)under subsection (3) of section 83AA above,

(ii)under subsection (6) of that section, in the reduction of a loss arising to the company in an earlier period of account, or

(iii)under this section, in relation to an earlier subsequent transfer,

so much of the surplus falling within paragraph (c) above as, on a just and reasonable apportionment, is referable to business which is the subject of the subsequent transfer shall be applied under this section.

(2)An amount of surplus which is to be applied under this section shall be so applied by being treated as an amount of surplus (additional to any other amounts of surplus) for the period of account of the transferee company which last precedes the period of account of that company in which the subsequent transfer is effected, whether or not there is in fact any such preceding period of account.

(3)If, in a case where an amount is treated under subsection (2) above as an amount of surplus for a period of account of a company, the period is not one for which there is brought into account an amount added to the company’s long term business fund in connection with the subsequent transfer, subsection (1) above shall have effect in relation to any transfer of business from the company subsequent to that transfer as if an amount had been so added and had been brought into account for that period.

(4)Any question as to what is a just and reasonable apportionment in any case for the purposes of subsection (1) above shall be determined by the Special Commissioners who shall determine the question in the same manner as they determine appeals; but any person affected by the apportionment shall be entitled to appear and be heard or make representations in writing.

(5)A surplus in respect of an earlier period of account shall be applied under this section before a surplus in respect of a later period of account.

(6)All such adjustments to the liability to tax of any person shall be made, whether by assessment or otherwise, as may be required to give effect to this section.

(7)In this section—

  • add” has the same meaning as in section 83 above;

    demutualisation” has the same meaning as in section 83 above;

    the relevant period of account” means the period of account of the company from which the subsequent transfer is effected which consists of or includes the accounting period of that company which—

(a)ends with the day on which the subsequent transfer is effected; or

(b)if the subsequent transfer is a transfer of business falling within section 83(6)(c) above and no accounting period of the company ends on that day, ends next after that day;

  • surplus” has the same meaning as in section 83AA above;

  • transfer of business” has the same meaning as in section 83(3) above;

  • transferee company” means the company to which the subsequent transfer of business is effected.

(8)Where it is necessary for any purpose of this section to identify the time at which a demutualisation of a company takes place, that time shall be taken to be the time when the company first issues shares.

(9)A transfer of business falling within section 83(6)(c) above shall be treated for the purposes of this section as a transfer of business from the company which is the reinsured under the contract of reinsurance to the company which is the reinsurer under that contract.]

Textual Amendments

F16SS. 83AA, 83AB inserted (29.4.1996 with effect as mentioned in Sch. 31 paras. 9(1), 10(2) of the amending Act) by 1996 c. 8, s. 163, Sch. 31 para. 5

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C33S. 83AB modified (29.4.1996) by 1996 c. 8, s. 163, Sch. 31 para. 9(1)

84 Interpretation of sections 85 to 89 and further provisions about insurance companies.U.K.

[F17(1)In sections 85 to 89 below “basic life assurance and general annuity business” has the same meaning as in Chapter I of Part XII of the Taxes Act 1988.]

(2)Any reference in the sections referred to in subsection (1) above or the following provisions of this section to a straddling period is a reference to an accounting period which begins before 1st January 1990 and ends on or after that date.

(3)For the purposes of the sections referred to in subsection (1) above and for the purposes of subsection (5)(b) below it shall be assumed that a straddling period consists of two separate accounting periods—

(a)the first beginning at the beginning of the straddling period and ending on 31st December 1989; and

(b)the second beginning on 1st January 1990 and ending at the end of the straddling period;

and in those sections and subsection (5)(b) below the first of those two notional accounting periods is referred to as “the 1989 component period” and the second is referred to as “the 1990 component period”.

(4)Chapter I of Part XII of the Taxes Act 1988 (insurance companies) shall have effect subject to the amendments in Schedule 8 to this Act, being—

(a)amendments relating to franked investment income, loss relief and group relief; and

(b)amendments consequential on or supplemental to sections 82 and 83 above and sections 85 to 89 below.

(5)Subject to subsection (6) below, in Schedule 8 to this Act,—

(a)paragraphs 2 and 6 shall be deemed to have come into force on 14th March1989; and

(b)the remainder shall have effect with respect to accounting periods beginning on or after 1st January 1990 (including the 1990 component period).

(6)Nothing in subsection (5) above affects the operation, by virtue of any provision of sections 82 and 83 above and sections 85 to 89 below, of any enactment repealed or amended by Schedule 8 to this Act and, so long as the provisions of that Schedule do not have effect in relation to sections 434 and435 of the Taxes Act 1988, nothing in subsection (5)(a) above affects the continuing operation of section 433 of that Act for the purpose only of determining the fraction of the profits referred to in subsection (6) of section 434 and subsection (1)(b) of section 435.

Textual Amendments

F17S. 84(1) substituted(for accounting periods beginning on or after 01.01.1992) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 48, Sch. 7 paras.11, 18

85 Charge of certain receipts of basic life assurance business.U.K.

(1)Subject to subsection (2) below, where the profits of an insurance company in respect of its life assurance business are not charged under Case I of Schedule D, there shall be chargeable under Case VI of that Schedule any receipts referable to the company’s [F18basic life assurance and general annuity business]

(a)which, if those profits were charged under Case I of Schedule D, would betaken into account in computing those profits; and

(b)which would not be within the charge to tax (except under Case I of Schedule D) apart from this section;

and for the purposes of paragraph (a) above, the provisions of section 83 above as to the manner in which any item is to be taken into account shall be disregarded.

(2)The receipts referred to in subsection (1) above do not include—

(a)any premium; or

(b)any sum received by virtue of a claim under an insurance contract(including a re-insurance contract); or

(c)any repayment or refund (in whole or in part) of a sum disbursed by the company as acquisition expenses falling within paragraphs (a) to (c) of subsection (1) of section 86 below; or

[F19(ca)any reinsurance commission; or]

(d)any sum which is taken into account under section 76(1)(a) of the Taxes Act 1988 as a deduction from the amount treated as expenses of management of the company; or

(e)any sum which is not within the charge to tax (except under Case I of Schedule D) because of an exemption from tax.

(3)This section has effect with respect to the receipts of accounting periods beginning on or after 1st January 1990 (including the 1990 component period).

Textual Amendments

F18Words in s. 85(1) substituted(for accounting periods beginning on or after 01.01.1992) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 48, Sch. 7 paras.12, 18.

F19Finance Act 1990 (c. 29), s. 44(1)(4)deemedalways to have had effect

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C34S. 85(1) modified (retrospective to 1.1.1995) by S.I. 1997/473, regs. 1(2), 38

86 Spreading of relief for acquisition expenses.U.K.

(1)For the purposes of this section, the acquisition expenses for any period of an insurance company carrying on life assurance business are such of the following expenses of management as are for that period attributable to the company’s [F20basic life assurance and general annuity business],—

(a)commissions (however described), other than commissions in respect of industrial life assurance business carried on by the company,

(b)any other expenses of management which are disbursed solely for the purpose of the acquisition of business, and

(c)so much of any other expenses of management which are disbursed partly for the purpose of the acquisition of business and partly for other purposes as are properly attributable to the acquisition of business,

less any such repayments or refunds falling within section 76(1)(c) ofthe Taxes Act 1988 as are received in the period [F21and less any reinsurance commission falling withinsection 76(1)(ca) of that Act].

(2)The exclusion from paragraph (a) of subsection (1) above of commissions in respect of industrial life assurance business shall not prevent such commissions constituting expenses of management for the purposes of paragraph(b) or paragraph (c) of that subsection.

(3)Nothing in subsections (1) and (2) above applies to commissions (however described) in respect of insurances made before 14th March 1989, but without prejudice to the application of those subsections to any commission attributable to a variation on or after that date in a policy issued in respect of an insurance made before that date; and, for this purpose, the exercise of any rights conferred by a policy shall be regarded as a variation of it.

[F22(3A)Nothing in subsection (1), (2) or (3) above applies to commissions (however described) in respect of annuity contracts made in accounting periods beginning before 1st January 1992, but without prejudice to the application of subsections (1) and (2) above to any commission attributable to a variation, in an accounting period beginning on or after that date, of an annuity contract so made; and for this purpose the exercise of any rights conferred by an annuity contract shall be regarded as a variation of it.]

(4)In subsection (1) above “the acquisition of business” includes

[F23(a)]the securing on or after 14th March 1989 of the payment of increasedor additional premiums in respect of a policy of insurance issued in respect of an insurance already made (whether before, on or after that date) [F24and

(b)the securing, in an accounting period beginning on or after 1st January 1992, of the payment of increased or additional consideration in respect of an annuity contract already made (whether in an accounting period beginning before, or on or after, that date)].

(5)In relation to any period, the expenses of management attributable to a company’s [F20basic life assurance and general annuity business] are expenses—

(a)which are disbursed for that period (disregarding any treated as so disbursed by section 75(3) of the Taxes Act 1988); and

(b)which, disregarding subsection (6) below, are deductible as expenses of management in accordance with sections 75 and 76 of the Taxes Act 1988.

(6)Notwithstanding anything in sections 75 and 76 of the Taxes Act 1988 but subject to subsection (7) below, only one-seventh of the acquisition expenses for any accounting period (in this section referred to as “the baseperiod”) shall be treated as deductible under those sections for the base period, and in subsections (8) and (9) below any reference to the full amount of the acquisition expenses for the base period is a reference to the amount of those expenses which would be deductible for that period apart from this subsection.

(7)In the case of the acquisition expenses for an accounting period or part of an accounting period falling wholly within 1990, subsection (6) above shall have effect as if for “one-seventh” there were substituted “five-sevenths”; and, in the case of the acquisition expenses for an accounting period or part of an accounting period falling wholly within 1991,1992 or 1993, the corresponding substitution shall be “four-sevenths”, “three-sevenths” or “two-sevenths” respectively.

(8)Where, by virtue of subsection (6) (and, where appropriate, subsection(7)) above, only a fraction of the full amount of the acquisition expenses for the base period is deductible under sections 75 and 76 of the Taxes Act 1988 for that period, then, subject to subsection (9) below, a further one-seventh of the full amount shall be so deductible for each succeeding accounting period after the base period until the whole of the full amount has become so deductible, except that, for any accounting period of less than a year, the fraction of one-seventh shall be proportionately reduced.

(9)For any accounting period for which the fraction of the full amount of the acquisition expenses for the base period which would otherwise be deductible in accordance with subsection (8) above exceeds the balance of those expenses which has not become deductible for earlier accounting periods, only that balance shall be deductible.

(10)This section has effect for accounting periods beginning on or after 1stJanuary 1990 (including the 1990 component period).

Textual Amendments

F20Words in s. 86(1) and (5) substituted(for accounting periods beginning on or after 01.01.1992) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 48, Sch. 7 paras. 13(1), 18.

F21Finance Act 1990 (c. 29), s. 44(2)(4)(5)deemed always to have had effect but not to apply to commissions in respect ofreinsurance liabilites in respect of insurances made before 14 March 1989: the amendment may apply to any reinsurance commission attributable to any variation, or exercise of rights, made on or after 14 March 1989

F22S. 86(3A) inserted(for accounting periods beginning on or after 01.01.1992) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 48, Sch. 7 paras. 13(2), 18.

F23S. 86(4)"(a)" inserted(for accounting periods beginning on or after 01.01.1992) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 48, Sch. 7 paras. 13(3), 18.

F24S. 86(4)(b) and word preceding it inserted(for accounting periods beginning on or after 01.01.1992) by Finance Act 1991 (c. 31, SIF 63:1), s. 48, Sch. 7 paras. 13(3), 18.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C35S. 86 modified (retrospective to 1.1.1995) by S.I. 1997/473, regs. 1(2), 39

87 Management expenses.U.K.

(1)Section 76 of the Taxes Act 1988 shall be amended in accordance with subsections (2) and (3) below.

(2)In subsection (1), after paragraph (b) there shall be inserted and

(c)there shall be deducted from the amount treated as the expenses of management for any accounting period any repayment or refund (in whole or in part) of a sum disbursed by the company (for that or any earlier period) as acquisition expenses; and

(d)the amount treated as expenses of management shall not include any amount in respect of expenses referable to general annuity business or pension business; and

(e)the amount of profits from which expenses of management may be deducted for any accounting period shall not exceed the net income and gains of that accounting period referable to basic life assurance business;

and for this purpose “net income and gains” means income and gains after deducting any reliefs or exemptions which fall to be applied before taking account of this section.

F25(3). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(4)In consequence of the amendment made by subsection (2) above, section 436(3)(b) of the Taxes Act 1988 (no deduction of expenses of management in certain cases) shall cease to have effect.

(5)This section has effect with respect to accounting periods beginning on or after 1st January 1990; and, in relation to a straddling period, sections75, 76 and 436 of the Taxes Act 1988—

(a)shall have effect in relation to the 1989 component period without regard to the amendments made by subsections (2) to (4) above; and

(b)shall have effect in relation to the 1990 component period as amended by those subsections.

(6)If, for the 1989 component period, there is an amount of expenses of management available to be carried forward to the 1990 component period under section 75(3)(a) of the Taxes Act 1988 (as applied by section 76thereof),—

(a)that amount shall form a pool to which the following provisions of this section shall apply and to which section 75(3)(b) of that Act (in this subsection referred to as “the carry-forward provision”)shall apply only to the extent specified in paragraph (c) below;

(b)if, for the 1990 component period or any subsequent accounting period, the amount which (disregarding the pool) may be deducted in respect of expenses of management is less than the amount of the profits from which, disregarding section 76(1)(e) of that Act (as set out in subsection (2) above), the expenses of management are deductible, paragraph (c) below shall apply for that period; and in that paragraph the difference between the amount which maybe so deducted and that amount of profits is referred to as “the potential deficiency” for the period;

(c)where this paragraph applies for an accounting period (including the 1990 component period) the carry-forward provision shall be taken to have had effect to carry forward to the accounting period (as if disbursed as expenses for that period) so much of the pool as does not exceed the potential deficiency for the period and is permitted under section 76(2) of the Taxes Act 1988; and the amount of the pool shall be reduced accordingly.

(7)In the case of a company which has an accounting period beginning on 1stJanuary 1990, subsection (6) above shall apply as if—

(a)any reference therein to the 1989 component period were a reference to the accounting period ending on 31st December 1989; and

(b)any reference therein to the 1990 component period were a reference to the accounting period beginning on 1st January 1990.

88 Corporation tax: policy holders’ fraction of profits.U.K.

(1)Subject to subsection (2) below, in the case of a company carrying on life assurance business, the rate of corporation tax chargeable for any financial year on

[F26(a)the policy holders’ share of the relevant profits for any accounting period, or

(b)where the business is mutual business, the whole of those profits,

shall] be deemed to be the rate at which income tax at the basic rate is charged for the year of assessment which begins on 6th April in the financial year concerned.

(2)Subsection (1) above does not apply in relation to profits charged under Case I of Schedule D.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (1) above, the relevant profits of acompany for an accounting period are the total profits of its life assurancebusiness, less any deduction due under section 76 of the Taxes Act 1988, butbefore allowing any relief under Chapter II or Chapter IV of Part X of thatAct.

(4)In determining for the purposes of section 13 of the Taxes Act 1988 (small companies’ relief) the profits and basic profits (within the meaning of that section) of an accounting period of a company carrying on life assurance business, the policy holders’ [F27share] of the company’s relevant profits for that period [F28, or where the business is mutual business the whole of those profits,] shall be left out of account.

(5)This section has effect with respect to the profits of a company for accounting periods beginning on or after 1st January 1990 (including the 1990 component period); and, for this purpose, the profits of the 1990 component period shall be taken to be that portion of the profits of the straddling period which the length of the 1990 component period bears to the length of the straddling period.

Textual Amendments

F26Finance Act 1990 (c. 29), s. 45(1)(10)deemedalways to have had effect. Previously

“the policy holders' fractionof its relevant profits for any accounting period shall”

F27Finance Act 1990 (c. 29), s. 45(2)(10)deemedalways to have had effect. Previously

“fraction”

F28Finance Act 1990 (c. 29), s. 45(2)(10)deemedalways to have had effect

Valid from 29/04/1996

[F2988A Lower corporation tax rate on certain insurance company profits.U.K.

(1)Subject to subsection (2) below, in the case of a company carrying on basic life assurance and general annuity business, the rate of corporation tax chargeable for any financial year on so much of the company’s BLAGAB profits for any accounting period as represents the company’s lower rate income for the period shall be deemed to be the rate at which income tax at the lower rate is charged for the year of assessment which begins on 6th April in the financial year concerned.

(2)Subsection (1) above does not apply in relation to profits charged under Case I of Schedule D.

(3)In this section, references to a company’s lower rate income for any accounting period are references to so much of the income and gains of its basic life assurance and general annuity business for the period as consists in income of any of the following descriptions—

(a)income falling within paragraph (a) of Case III of Schedule D, as that Case applies for the purposes of corporation tax;

(b)purchased life annuities to which section 656 of the Taxes Act 1988 applies or to which that section would apply but for section 657(2)(a) of that Act;

(c)any such dividends or other distributions of a company not resident in the United Kingdom as would be chargeable under Schedule F if the company were resident in the United Kingdom;

(d)so much of—

(i)any dividend distribution (within the meaning of section 468J of the Taxes Act 1988), or

(ii)any foreign income distribution (within the meaning of section 468K of that Act),

as is deemed by subsection (2) of section 468Q of that Act (or by that subsection as applied by section 468R(2) of that Act) to be an annual payment.

(4)Where for any period—

(a)an insurance company’s basic life assurance and general annuity business is mutual business,

(b)the policy holders’ share of the company’s relevant profits is equal to all those profits, or

(c)the policy holders’ share of the company’s relevant profits is more than the company’s BLAGAB profits,

the amount to be taken for the purposes of this section as the amount of the company’s BLAGAB profits for that period representing its lower rate income for that period shall be the amount equal to the applicable proportion of its BLAGAB profits.

(5)Where subsection (4) above does not apply in the case of an insurance company for any period, the amount to be taken for the purposes of this section as the amount of the company’s BLAGAB profits for the period representing its lower rate income for that period shall be the amount produced by multiplying the following, that is to say—

(a)the applicable proportion of those profits; and

(b)the fraction given by dividing the policy holders’ share of the relevant profits of the company for the period by its BLAGAB profits for that period.

(6)For the purposes of this section the applicable proportion of a company’s BLAGAB profits for any period is the amount which bears the same proportion to those profits as the aggregate amount of the company’s lower rate income for that period bears to the total income and gains for that period of the company’s basic life assurance and general annuity business.

(7)For the purposes of this section, the BLAGAB profits of a company for an accounting period are the income and gains of the company’s basic life assurance and general annuity business reduced by the aggregate amount of—

(a)any non-trading deficit on the company’s loan relationships,

(b)expenses of management falling to be deducted under section 76 of the Taxes Act 1988, and

(c)charges on income,

so far as referable to the company’s basic life assurance and general annuity business.

(8)Section 88(3) above applies for the purposes of this section as it applies for the purposes of section 88(1) above.]

Textual Amendments

F29S. 88A inserted (29.4.1996 with effect for the financial year 1996 and subsequent financial years) by 1996 c. 8, s. 73, Sch. 6 paras. 26(2)(4)

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C36S. 88A modified (retrospective to 1.1.1996) by S.I. 1997/473, regs. 1(2), 40

[F3089 Policy holders’ share of profits.U.K.

(1)The references in section 88 above to the policy holders’ share of the relevant profits for an accounting period of a company carrying on life assurance business are references to the amount arrived at by deducting from those profits the Case I profits of the company for the period in respect ofthe business, reduced in accordance with subsection (2) below.

(2)For the purposes of subsection (1) above, the Case I profits for a period shall be reduced by—

(a)the amount, so far as unrelieved, of any franked investment income arisingin the period as respects which the company has made an election under section438(6) of the Taxes Act 1988, and

(b)the shareholders’ share of any other unrelieved franked investment income arising in the period from investments held in connection with the business.

(3)For the purposes of those section “the shareholders’ share” in relation to any income is so much of the income as is represented by the fraction

where—

  • A is an amount equal to the Case I profits of the company for the period in question in respect of its life assurance business, and

  • B is an amount equal to the excess of the company’s relevant non-premium income and relevant gains over its relevant expenses and relevant interest for the period.

(4)Where there is no such excess as is mentioned in subsection (3) above, or where the Case I profits are greater than any excess, the whole of the income shall be the shareholders’ share; and (subject to that) where there are no Case I profits, none of the income shall be the shareholders’ share.

(5)In subsection (3) above the references to the relevant non-premium income, relevant gains, relevant expenses and relevant interest of a company for an accounting period are references respectively to the following items as brought into account for the period, so far as referable to the company’s life assurance business,—

(a)the company’s investment income from the assets of its long-term businessfund together with its other income, apart from premiums;

(b)any increase in the value (whether realised or not) of those assets;

(c)expenses payable by the company;

(d)interest payable by the company;

and if for any period there is a reduction in the value referred to in paragraph (b) above (as brought into account for the period), that reduction shall be taken into account as an expense of the period.

(6)Except in so far as regulations made by the Treasury otherwise provide, in this section “brought into account” means brought into account in the revenue account prepared for the purposes of the Insurance Comanies Act 1982; and where the company’s period of account does not coincide with the accounting period, any reference to an amount brought into accoun tfor the accounting period is a reference to the corresponding amount brought into account for the period of account in which the accounting period is comprised, proportionately reduced to reflect the length of the accounting period as compared with the length of the period of account.

(7)In this section “Case I profits” means profits computedin accordance with the provisions of the Taxes Act 1988 applicable to Case Iof Schedule D.

(8)For the purposes of this section franked investment income is unrelievedif—

(a)it has not been excluded from charge to tax by virtue of any provision,

(b)no tax credit comprised in it has been paid, and

(c)no relief has been allowed agaist it by deduction of set-off].

Textual Amendments

F30S. 89 substituted retrospectively by Finance Act 1990 (c. 29) {s. 45(3)}

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C37S. 89 amended (27.7.1993 with application as mentioned in s. 78(11) of the amending Act) by 1993 c. 34, s. 78(6)(11)

C38S. 89(8) amended (27.7.1993) by 1993 c. 34, s. 78(7)

[F3189A Modification of sections 83 and 89 in relation to overseas life insurance companies.U.K.

Schedule 8A to this Act (which makes modifications of sections 83 and 89 in relation to overseas life insurance companies) shall have effect.]

Textual Amendments

F31S. 89A inserted (27.7.1993) by 1993 c. 34, s. 101(1)

90 Life policies etc. held by companies.U.K.

Schedule 9 to this Act (which imposes tax on certain benefits relating to life policies, life annuities and capital redemption policies held by companies, and makes related provision) shall have effect.

UnderwritersU.K.

91 Premiums trust funds: stock lending.U.K.

(1)In section 725 of the Taxes Act 1988 (Lloyd’s underwriters) the following subsections shall be inserted after subsection (9)—

(10)Subsection (11) below applies where the following state of affairs exists at the beginning of 1st January of any year or the end of 31st December of any year—

(a)securities have been transferred by the trustees of a premiums trust fund in pursuance of an arrangement mentioned in section 129(1) or (2),

(b)the transfer was made to enable another person to fulfil a contract or to make a transfer,

(c)securities have not been transferred in return, and

(d)section 129(3) applies to the transfer made by the trustees.

(11)The securities transferred by the trustees shall be treated for the purposes of subsections (1) to (6) above as if they formed part of the premiums trust fund at the beginning of 1st January concerned or the end of 31st December concerned (as the case may be).

F32(2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(3)This section applies where the transfer by the trustees of a premiums trust fund is made after the date specified as mentioned in section 129(6) of the Taxes Act 1988.

Textual Amendments

F32s. 91(2) repealed (6.3.1992 with effect as mentioned in s. 289(1)(2) of the repealing Act) by Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (c. 12), ss. 289, 290, Sch.12 (with ss. 201(3), Sch. 11 paras. 22, 26(2), 27)

92 Regulations about underwriters etc.U.K.

(1)In section 451(1A) of the Taxes Act 1988 (regulations about underwriters)for the words from “with respect to” to the end there shall be substituted the words “with respect to any year or years of assessment; and the year (or any of the years) may be the one in which the regulations are made or any year falling before or after that year.”

(2)The following subsection shall be inserted after section 451(1A) of that Act—

(1B)But the regulations may not make provision with respect to any year of assessment which precedes the next but one preceding the year of assessment in which the regulations are made.

F33(3). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F34(4). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F34(5). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F34(6). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F34(7). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Textual Amendments

F33S. 92(3) repealed (6.3.1992 with effect as mentioned in s. 289(1)(2) of the repealing Act) by Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (c. 12), ss. 289, 290, Sch. 12 (with ss. 201(3), Sch. 11 paras. 22, 26(2), 27)

F34S. 92(4)-(7) repealed (27.7.1993 with effect for the year 1992-93 and subsequent years of assessment) by 1993 c. 34, s. 213, Sch. 23 Pt. III(12) Note 5

SecuritiesU.K.

93 Deep discount securities: amendments.U.K.

Schedule 10 to this Act (which amends Schedule 4 to the Taxes Act 1988) shall have effect.

94 Deep gain securities.U.K.

Schedule 11 to this Act (which contains provisions about securities capable of yielding a deep gain) shall have effect.

95 Treasury securities issued at a discount.U.K.

(1)Section 126 of the Taxes Act 1988 (tax not to be charged on certain securities in respect of discount under Case III of Schedule D) shall be amended as mentioned in subsections (2) and (3) below.

(2)In subsection (2) (the securities affected) for the words “except Treasury bills” there shall be substituted the words except—

(a)Treasury bills,

(b)relevant deep discount securities, and

(c)deep gain securities.

(3)The following subsection shall be inserted after subsection (2)—

(3)For the purposes of subsection (2) above—

(a)a relevant deep discount security is a security falling within paragraph1(1)(dd) of Schedule 4 to this Act, and

(b)a deep gain security is a security which is a deep gain security for the purposes of Schedule 11 to the Finance Act 1989.

(4)The preceding provisions of this section shall apply—

(a)in the case of a deep discount security, where there is a disposal (within the meaning of Schedule 4 to the Taxes Act 1988) on or after 14th March 1989;

(b)in the case of a deep gain security, where there is a transfer within the meaning of Schedule 11 to this Act, or a redemption, on or after 14th March1989.

(5)Subsection (7) below applies where—

(a)by virtue of paragraph 19(2) of Schedule 4 to the Taxes Act 1988, a security falls to be treated as a deep discount security as there mentioned, and

(b)after the time mentioned in paragraph 19(1)(d) of that Schedule there is a disposal (within the meaning of that Schedule) of the security.

(6)Subsection (7) below also applies where—

(a)by virtue of paragraph 20(2) of Schedule 11 to this Act, a security falls to be treated as a deep gain security as there mentioned, and

(b)after the time mentioned in paragraph 20(1)(d) of that Schedule there is a transfer (within the meaning of that Schedule) or a redemption of the security.

(7)In a case where this subsection applies, section 126 of the Taxes Act 1988 shall not apply in the case of the disposal, transfer or redemption (as the case may be).

96 Securities: miscellaneous.U.K.

(1)In section 452(8) of the Taxes Act 1988 (special reserve funds) for the words from “In paragraph (a) above” to the end there shall be substituted— In paragraph (a) above “income” includes—

(a)annual profits or gains chargeable to tax by virtue of section 714(2) or716(3),

(b)amounts treated as income chargeable to tax by virtue of paragraph 4 of Schedule 4, and

(c)amounts treated as income chargeable to tax by virtue of paragraph 5 of Schedule 11 to the Finance Act 1989.

(2)In section 687 of the Taxes Act 1988 (payments under discretionary trusts)the following shall be inserted after subsection (3)(g)—

(h)the amount of any tax on an amount which is treated as income of the trustees by virtue of paragraph 4 of Schedule 4 and is charged to tax at a rate equal to the sum of the basic rate and the additional rate by virtue of paragraph 17 of that Schedule;

(i)the amount of any tax on an amount which is treated as income of the trustees by virtue of paragraph 5 of Schedule 11 to the Finance Act 1989 and is charged to tax at a rate equal to the sum of the basic rate and the additional rate by virtue of paragraph 11 of that Schedule;.

F35(3). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(4)The new paragraphs (b) and (c) inserted by subsection (1) above, and subsection (2) above, shall apply—

(a)in the case of a deep discount security, where there is a disposal (within the meaning of Schedule 4 to the Taxes Act 1988) on or after 14th March 1989;

(b)in the case of a deep gain security, where there is a transfer within the meaning of Schedule 11 to this Act, or a redemption, on or after 14th March1989.

Textual Amendments

F35S. 96(3) repealed (6.3.1992 with effect as mentioned in s. 289(1)(2) of the repealing Act) by Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (c. 12), ss. 289, 290, Sch. 12 (with ss. 201(3), Sch. 11 paras. 22, 26(2), 27)

Groups of companiesU.K.

97 Set-off of ACT where companies remain in same group.U.K.

(1)In section 240 of the Taxes Act 1988 (set-off of company’s ACT against subsidiary’s liability to corporation tax) at the end of subsection (5) (set-off not to be made against subsidiary’s liability to corporation tax for any accounting period in which, or in any part of which, it was not a subsidiary of the surrendering company) there shall be added the words “unless throughout that period or part both companies were subsidiaries of a third company”.

(2)This section shall have effect in relation to accounting periods ending on or after 14th March 1989.

98 Restriction on set-off of ACT.U.K.

(1)After section 245 of the Taxes Act 1988 there shall be inserted—

245A Restriction on application of section 240 in certain circumstances.

(1)This section applies if—

(a)there is a change in the ownership of a company (“the relevant company”);

(b)by virtue of section 240 the relevant company is treated as having paid an amount of advance corporation tax in respect of a distribution made by it at any time before the change; and

(c)within the period of six years beginning three years before the change, there is a major change in the nature or conduct of a trade or business of the company which is for the purposes of section 240 the surrendering company in relation to that amount.

(2)No advance corporation tax which the relevant company is treated by virtue of section 240 as having paid in respect of a distribution made by it in anaccounting period beginning before the change of ownership shall be treatedunder section 239(4) as paid by it in respect of distributions made in an accounting period ending after the change of ownership; and this subsection shall apply to an accounting period in which the change of ownership occurs as if the part ending with the change of ownership, and the part after, were two separate accounting periods.

(3)Subsections (4) and (5) of section 245 shall apply also for the purposes of this section and as if the reference in subsection (4) of section 245 to the period of three years mentioned in subsection (1)(a) of that section were a reference to the period mentioned in subsection (1)(c) above.

(4)Sections 768(8) and (9) and 769 shall apply also for the purposes of this section and as if in subsection (3) of section 769 the reference to the benefit of losses were a reference to the benefit of advance corporation tax.

245B Restriction on set-off where asset transferred after change in ownership of company.

(1)Subsection (4) below applies if—

(a)there is a change in the ownership of a company (“the relevant company”);

(b)any advance corporation tax paid by the relevant company in respect of distributions made by it in an accounting period beginning before the change is treated under section 239(4) as paid by it in respect of distributions made by it in an accounting period ending after the change;

(c)after the change the relevant company acquires an asset from another company in such circumstances that section 273(1) of the Taxes Act 1970 applies to the acquisition; and

(d)a chargeable gain accrues to the relevant company on the disposal of the asset within the period of three years beginning with the change of ownership.

(2)Subsection (1)(b) above shall apply to an accounting period in which the change of ownership occurs as if the part ending with the change of ownership, and the part after, were two separate accounting periods.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (1)(d) above an asset acquired by the relevant company as mentioned in subsection (1)(c) above shall be treated as the same as an asset owned at a later time by that company if the value of the second asset is derived in whole or in part from the first asset, and in particular where the second asset is a freehold, and the first asset was a leasehold and the lessee has acquired the reversion.

(4)In relation to the accounting period in which the chargeable gain accrues to the relevant company (“the relevant period”), section 239 shall have effect as if the limit imposed by subsection (2) of that section on the amount of advance corporation tax to be set against the relevant company’s liability to corporation tax were reduced by whichever is the lesser of—

(a)the amount of advance corporation tax that would have been payable (apart from section 241) in respect of a distribution made at the end of the relevant period of an amount which, together with the advance corporation tax so payable in respect of it, is equal to the chargeable gain, and

(b)the amount of surplus advance corporation tax in relation to the accounting period which by virtue of subsection (2) above is treated for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) above as ending with the change of ownership.

(5)Sections 768(8) and (9) and 769 shall apply also for the purposes of this section and as if in subsection (3) of section 769 the reference to the benefit of losses were a reference to the benefit of advance corporation tax.

(2)This section shall have effect where the change in the ownership of the relevant company occurs on or after 14th March 1989.

99 Dividends etc. paid by one member of a group to another.U.K.

(1)Section 247 of the Taxes Act 1988 (dividends etc. paid by one member of a group to another) shall be amended in accordance with this section.

(2)In subsection (1) for paragraph (b) there shall be substituted—

(b)a trading or holding company which does not fall within subsection (1A)below and which is owned by a consortium the members of which include the receiving company,.

(3)After subsection (1) there shall be inserted—

(1A)A company falls within this subsection if—

(a)it is a 75 per cent. subsidiary of any other company, or

(b)arrangements of any kind (whether in writing or not) are in existence by virtue of which it could become such a subsidiary.

(4)After subsection (8) there shall be inserted—

(8A)Notwithstanding that at any time a company (“the subsidiary company”) is a 51 per cent. subsidiary of another company (“the parent company”) it shall not be treated at that time as such a subsidiary for the purposes of this section unless, additionally, at that time—

(a)the parent company would be beneficially entitled to more than 50 percent. of any profits available for distribution to equity holders of the subsidiary company; and

(b)the parent company would be beneficially entitled to more than 50 percent. of any assets of the subsidiary company available for distribution to its equity holders on a winding-up.

(5)For subsection (9)(c) there shall be substituted—

(c)a company is owned by a consortium if 75 per cent. or more of the ordinary share capital of the company is beneficially owned between them by companies resident in the United Kingdom of which none—

(i)beneficially owns less than 5 per cent. of that capital,

(ii)would be beneficially entitled to less than 5 per cent. of any profits available for distribution to equity holders of the company, or

(iii)would be beneficially entitled to less than 5 per cent. of any assets of the company available for distribution to its equity holders on a winding-up,

and those companies are called the members of the consortium.

(6)After subsection (9) there shall be inserted—

(9A)Schedule 18 shall apply for the purposes of subsections (8A) and (9)(c)above as it applies for the purposes of section 413(7).

(7)This section shall have effect in relation to dividends and other sums paid on or after the day on which this Act is passed.

100 Change in ownership of company.U.K.

(1)Section 769 of the Taxes Act 1988 (which contains rules for determining whether for the purposes of sections 245 and 768 of that Act there is a change in the ownership of a company) shall be amended in accordance with this section.

(2)For subsection (6) there shall be substituted—

(6)If there is a change in the ownership of a company, including a change occurring by virtue of the application of this subsection but not a change which is to be disregarded under subsection (5) above, then—

(a)in a case falling within subsection (1)(a) above, the person mentioned in subsection (1)(a) shall be taken for the purposes of this section to acquire at the time of the change any relevant assets owned by the company;

(b)in a case falling within subsection (1)(b) above but not within subsection(1)(a) above, each of the persons mentioned in subsection (1)(b) shall be taken for the purposes of this section to acquire at the time of the change the appropriate proportion of any relevant assets owned by the company; and

(c)in any other case, each of the persons mentioned in paragraph (c) of subsection (1) above (other than any whose holding is disregarded under that paragraph) shall be taken for the purposes of this section to acquire at the time of the change the appropriate proportion of any relevant assets owned by the company.

(6A)In subsection (6) above—

  • the appropriate proportion”, in relation to one of two or more persons mentioned in subsection (1)(b) or (c) above, means a proportion corresponding to the proportion which the percentage of the ordinary share capital acquired by him bears to the percentage of that capital acquired by all those persons taken together; and

  • relevant assets”, in relation to a company, means—

    (a)

    any ordinary share capital of another company, and

    (b)

    any property or rights which under subsection (3) above may be taken into account instead of ordinary share capital of another company.

(6B)Notwithstanding that at any time a company (“the subsidiary company”) is a 75 per cent. subsidiary of another company (“theparent company”) it shall not be treated at that time as such a subsidiary for the purposes of this section unless, additionally, at that time—

(a)the parent company would be beneficially entitled to not less than 75 percent. of any profits available for distribution to equity holders of the subsidiary company; and

(b)the parent company would be beneficially entitled to not less than 75 percent. of any assets of the subsidiary company available for distribution to its equity holders on a winding-up.

(6C)Schedule 18 shall apply for the purposes of subsection (6B) above as it applies for the purposes of section 413(7).

(3)Subsection (7)(b) and (c) shall cease to have effect.

(4)This section shall have effect where the change of ownership of a company would be treated as occurring on or after 14th March 1989.

101 Treatment of convertible shares or securities for purposes relating togroup relief etc.U.K.

(1)Paragraph 1 of Schedule 18 to the Taxes Act 1988 (which containsdefinitions relating to group relief) shall be amended in accordance with thissection.

(2)For sub-paragraph (3)(b) there shall be substituted—

(b)do not carry any right either to conversion into shares or securities ofany other description except—

(i)shares to which sub-paragraph (5A) below applies,

(ii)securities to which sub-paragraph (5B) below applies, or

(iii)shares or securities in the company’s quoted parent company,

or to the acquisition of any additional shares or securities;.

(3)For sub-paragraph (5)(a) there shall be substituted—

(a)which does not carry any right either to conversion into shares orsecurities of any other description except—

(i)shares to which sub-paragraph (5A) below applies,

(ii)securities to which sub-paragraph (5B) below applies, or

(iii)shares or securities in the company’s quoted parent company,

or to the acquisition of any additional shares or securities;.

(4)After sub-paragraph (5) there shall be inserted—

(5A)This sub-paragraph applies to any shares which—

(a)satisfy the requirements of sub-paragraph (3)(a), (c) and (d) above, and

(b)do not carry any rights either to conversion into shares or securities ofany other description, except shares or securities in the company’s quotedparent company, or to the acquisition of any additional shares or securities.

(5B)This sub-paragraph applies to any securities representing a loan of orincluding new consideration and—

(a)which satisfies the requirements of sub-paragraph (5)(b) and (c) above,and

(b)which does not carry any such rights as are mentioned in sub-paragraph(5A)(b) above.

(5C)For the purposes of sub-paragraphs (3) and (5) to (5B) above a company(“the parent company”) is another company’s “quotedparent company” if and only if—

(a)the other company is a 75 per cent. subsidiary of the parent company,

(b)the parent company is not a 75 per cent. subsidiary of any company, and

(c)the parent company’s ordinary shares (or, if its ordinary share capitalis divided into two or more classes, its ordinary shares of each class) arequoted on a recognised stock exchange or dealt in on the Unlisted SecuritiesMarket;

and in this sub-paragraph “ordinary shares” means sharesforming part of ordinary share capital.

(5D)In the application of sub-paragraphs (3) and (5) to (5B) above indetermining for the purposes of sub-paragraph (5C)(a) above who are the equityholders of the other company (and, accordingly, whether section 413(7)prevents the other company from being treated as a 75 per cent. subsidiary ofthe parent company for the purposes of sub-paragraph (5C)(a)), it shall beassumed that the parent company is for the purposes of sub-paragraphs (3) and(5) to (5B) above the other company’s quoted parent company.

(5)In sub-paragraph (6) for the words “to (5)” there shall besubstituted the words “to (5D)”.

(6)This section, so far as relating to Schedule 18 of the Taxes Act 1988 inits application (by virtue of section 138 below) for the purposes ofsubsections (1D) and (1E) of section 272 of the Taxes Act 1970, shall bedeemed to have come into force on 14th March 1989.

102 Surrender of company tax refund etc. within group.U.K.

(1)Subsection (2) below applies where—

(a)there falls to be made to a company (“the surrendering company”)which is a member of a group throughout the appropriate period a tax refundrelating to an accounting period of the company (“the relevant accountingperiod”), and

(b)another company (“the recipient company”) which is a member of thesame group throughout the appropriate period also has the relevant accountingperiod as an accounting period.

(2)Where this subsection applies the two companies may, at any time beforethe refund is made to the surrendering company, jointly give notice to theinspector in such form as the Board may require that subsection (4) below isto have effect in relation to the refund or to any part of the refundspecified in the notice.

(3)In subsection (1) above—

  • appropriate period” means the period beginning with therelevant accounting period and ending on the day on which the notice undersubsection (2) above is given, and

  • tax refund relating to an accounting period” means, inrelation to a company—

(a)a repayment of corporation tax paid by the company for the period,

(b)a repayment of income tax in respect of a payment received by the companyin the period, or

(c)a payment of the whole or part of the tax credit comprised in any frankedinvestment income received by the company in the period.

(4)Subject to subsection (6) below, where this subsection has effect inrelation to any refund or part of a refund—

(a)the recipient company shall be treated for all purposes of the Tax Actsas having paid on the relevant date an amount of corporation tax for therelevant accounting period equal to the amount of the refund or part, and

(b)there shall be treated for all those purposes as having been made to thesurrendering company on the relevant date a repayment of corporation tax orincome tax or a payment of tax credit (as the case may be) equal to the amountof the refund or part;

and where the refund is a repayment of corporation tax, any interestrelating to it which has been paid by the surrendering company shall betreated as having been paid by the recipient company.

[F36(4A)Where subsection (4) above has effect in relation to any amount and there is, by virtue of any of subsections (7) to (7C) of section 826 of the Taxes Act 1988, a period for which the whole or any part of that amount would not, had the refund been made to the surrendering company, have carried interest under that section, that period shall be treated as excluded—

(a)from any period for which any refund made by virtue of subsection (4) above to the recipient company in respect of some or all of that amount or, as the case may be, that part of it is to carry interest under that section; and

(b)from any period for which a sum representing some or all of that amount or part would (apart from this subsection) be treated by virtue of subsection (4) above as not carrying interest under section 87A of the M11Taxes Management Act 1970;

and in determining for the purposes of this subsection which part of any amount is applied in discharging a liability of the recipient company to pay any corporation tax and which part is represented by a refund to the recipient company, it shall be assumed that the part in relation to which there is a period which would not have carried interest under section 826 of the Taxes Act 1988 is applied in preference to any other part of that amount in or towards discharging the liability.]

(5)In subsection (4) above “relevant date”, in relation toa refund, means—

(a)in so far as it consists of a repayment of corporation tax paid by thesurrendering company after the date on which it became due and payable undersection 10 of the Taxes Act 1988, the day on which it was paid by thatcompany, and

(b)otherwise, the date on which corporation tax for the relevant accountingperiod became due and payable.

(6)For the purpose of ascertaining the amount of any penalty to which therecipient company is liable under section 94(6) of the M12Taxes Management Act 1970, the corporation tax which the company istreated as having paid by subsection (4)(a) above shall be treated as paid onthe day on which the notice under subsection (2) above is given (and not onthe relevant date).

(7)A payment for a transferred tax refund—

(a)shall not be taken into account in computing profits or losses of eithercompany for corporation tax purposes, and

(b)shall not for any of the purposes of the Corporation Tax Acts be regardedas a distribution or a charge on income;

and in this subsection “a payment for a transferred taxrefund” means a payment made by the receiving company to thesurrendering company in pursuance of an agreement between them as respects thegiving of a notice under this section, being a payment not exceeding theamount of the refund in question.

(8)For the purposes of this section two companies are members of the samegroup if and only if they would be for the purposes of Chapter IV of Part Xof the Taxes Act 1988.

(9)This section shall not apply unless the relevant accounting period endsafter such day, not being earlier than 31st March 1992, as the Treasury mayby order made by statutory instrument appoint.

Textual Amendments

Marginal Citations

Close companiesU.K.

103 Repeal of apportionment provisions.U.K.

(1)Except as provided by subsection (2) below, Chapter III of Part XI of theTaxes Act 1988 (apportionment of undistributed income etc. of close companies)shall not have effect in relation to accounting periods beginning after 31stMarch 1989.

(2)Section 427(4) of the Taxes Act 1988 (which gives relief to an individualwhere income apportioned to him in an earlier accounting period of a closecompany is included in a distribution received by him in a later accountingperiod), and section 427(5) of, and Part I of Schedule 19 to, that Act so faras they relate to section 427(4), shall continue to have effect in any casewhere the subsequent distribution referred to in section 427(4) is made before1st April 1992.

104 Meaning of “close company”.U.K.

(1)In section 414 of the Taxes Act 1988 for subsection (2) (further case inwhich a company is a close company for the purposes of the Tax Acts) thereshall be substituted—

(2)Subject to section 415 and subsection (5) below, a company resident in theUnited Kingdom (but not falling within subsection (1)(b) above) is also aclose company if five or fewer participators, or participators who aredirectors, together possess or are entitled to acquire—

(a)such rights as would, in the event of the winding-up of the company(“the relevant company”) on the basis set out in subsection (2A) below,entitle them to receive the greater part of the assets of the relevant companywhich would then be available for distribution among the participators, or

(b)such rights as would in that event so entitle them if any rights which anyof them or any other person has as a loan creditor (in relation to therelevant company or any other company) were disregarded.

(2A)In the notional winding-up of the relevant company, the part of the assetsavailable for distribution among the participators which any person isentitled to receive is the aggregate of—

(a)any part of those assets which he would be entitled to receive in theevent of the winding-up of the company, and

(b)any part of those assets which he would be entitled to receive if—

(i)any other company which is a participator in the relevant company and isentitled to receive any assets in the notional winding-up were also wound upon the basis set out in this subsection, and

(ii)the part of the assets of the relevant company to which the other companyis entitled were distributed among the participators in the other company inproportion to their respective entitlement to the assets of the other companyavailable for distribution among the participators.

(2B)In the application of subsection (2A) above to the notional winding-up ofthe other company and to any further notional winding-up required by paragraph(b) of that subsection (or by any further application of that paragraph),references to “the relevant company” shall have effect as references tothe company concerned.

(2C)In ascertaining under subsection (2) above whether five or fewerparticipators, or participators who are directors, together possess or areentitled to acquire rights such as are mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b) ofthat subsection—

(a)a person shall be treated as a participator in or director of the relevantcompany if he is a participator in or director of any other company whichwould be entitled to receive assets in the notional winding-up of the relevantcompany on the basis set out in subsection (2A) above, and

(b)except in the application of subsection (2A) above, no account shall betaken of a participator which is a company unless the company possesses or isentitled to acquire the rights in a fiduciary or representative capacity.

(2D)Subsections (4) to (6) of section 416 apply for the purposes ofsubsections (2) and (2A) above as they apply for the purposes of subsection(2) of that section.

(2)Subsection (3) of that section shall cease to have effect.

(3)In subsection (5)(b) of that section for the words from “paragraph(c)” to “that paragraph” there shall be substituted the words “paragraph (a) of subsection (2) above or paragraph (c) of section 416(2)and it would not be a close company if the references in those paragraphs”.

(4)This section shall be deemed to have come into force on 1st April 1989.

105 Small companies’ rate not available to certain close companies.U.K.

(1)In section 13 of the Taxes Act 1988 (small companies’ relief) insubsection (1) for the words “a company resident in the United Kingdom”there shall be substituted the words a company which—

(a)is resident in the United Kingdom, and

(b)is not a close investment-holding company (as defined in section 13A) atthe end of that period,.

(2)After that section there shall be inserted the following section—

13A Close investment-holding companies.

(1)A close company is for the purposes of section 13(1) a “closeinvestment-holding company” unless it complies with subsection (2) below.

(2)A company (“the relevant company”) complies with this subsection inany accounting period if throughout that period it exists wholly or mainly forany one or more of the following purposes—

(a)the purpose of carrying on a trade or trades on a commercial basis,

(b)the purpose of making investments in land or estates or interests in landin cases where the land is, or is intended to be, let to persons otherthan—

(i)any person connected with the relevant company, or

(ii)any person who is the wife or husband of an individual connected with therelevant company, or is a relative, or the wife or husband of a relative, ofsuch an individual or of the husband or wife of such an individual,

(c)the purpose of holding shares in and securities of, or making loans to,one or more companies each of which is a qualifying company or a companywhich—

(i)is under the control of the relevant company or of a company which hascontrol of the relevant company, and

(ii)itself exists wholly or mainly for the purpose of holding shares in orsecurities of, or making loans to, one or more qualifying companies,

(d)the purpose of co-ordinating the administration of two or more qualifyingcompanies,

(e)the purpose of a trade or trades carried on on a commercial basis by oneor more qualifying companies or by a company which has control of the relevantcompany, and

(f)the purpose of the making, by one or more qualifying companies or by acompany which has control of the relevant company, of investments as mentionedin paragraph (b) above.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (2) above, a company is a “qualifying company”, in relation to the relevant company,if it—

(a)is under the control of the relevant company or of a company which hascontrol of the relevant company, and

(b)exists wholly or mainly for either or both of the purposes mentioned insubsection (2)(a) or (b) above.

(4)Where a company is wound up, it shall not be treated as failing to complywith subsection (2) above in the accounting period that (by virtue ofsubsection (7) of section 12) begins with the time which is for the purposesof that subsection the commencement of the winding up, if it complied withsubsection (2) above in the accounting period that ends with that time.

(5)In this section—

  • control” shall be construed in accordance with section 416,and

  • relative” has the meaning given by section 839(8).

(6)Section 839 shall apply for the purposes of this section.

(3)This section shall have effect in relation to accounting periods beginningafter 31st March 1989.

106 Restriction on payment of tax credits.U.K.

(1)In section 231 of the Taxes Act 1988 (tax credits for certain recipientsof qualifying distributions) in subsection (3) after the words “made and”there shall be inserted the words “subject to subsections (3A) to (3D)below” and after that subsection there shall be inserted—

(3A)Subject to subsection (3B) below, where it appears to the inspector that,in any accounting period of a company at the end of which it is a closeinvestment-holding company—

(a)arrangements relating to the distribution of the profits of the companyexist or have existed the main purpose of which or one of the main purposesof which is to enable payments, or payments of a greater amount, to be madeto any one or more individuals under subsection (3) above in respect of suchan excess as is mentioned in that subsection, and

(b)by virtue of those arrangements, any eligible person—

(i)receives a qualifying distribution consisting of a payment made by thecompany on the redemption, repayment or purchase of its own shares, or

(ii)receives any other qualifying distribution in respect of shares in orsecurities of the company, where the amount or value of the distribution isgreater than might in all the circumstances have been expected but for thearrangements,

the entitlement of the eligible person to have paid to him undersubsection (3) above all or part of a tax credit in respect of anydistribution made by the company in the period shall be restricted to suchextent as appears to the inspector to be just and reasonable.

(3B)Subsection (3A) above does not apply in relation to a tax credit inrespect of a dividend paid by a company in any accounting period in respectof its ordinary share capital if—

(a)throughout the period, the company’s ordinary share capital consisted ofonly one class of shares, and

(b)no person waived his entitlement to any dividend which would have becomepayable by the company in the period or failed to receive any dividend whichhad become due and payable to him by the company in the period.

(3C)In subsection (3A) above—

  • arrangements” means arrangements of any kind whether inwriting or not,

  • close investment-holding company” has the meaning given bysection 13A, and

  • eligible person”, in relation to a qualifying distribution,means an individual resident in the United Kingdom who would (apart fromsubsection (3A) above) be entitled to have paid to him under subsection (3)above all or part of a tax credit in respect of the distribution.

(3D)In determining under subsection (3) above whether a person is entitled tohave any excess of tax credit paid to him in a case where subsection (3A)above applies, tax credits shall be set against income tax in the order thatresults in the greatest payment in respect of the excess.

(2)This section shall have effect in relation to distributions made bycompanies in accounting periods beginning after 31st March 1989.

107 Close companies: consequential amendments.U.K.

Schedule 12 to this Act (in which Part I contains administrativeprovisions relating to close companies and Part II makes amendments connectedwith section 103 above) shall have effect.

Settlements etc.U.K.

108 Outright gifts etc. between husband and wife.U.K.

(1)Section 685 of the Taxes Act 1988 (provisions supplementary to sectionscharging settlor to tax in excess of basic rate on certain settlement income)shall be amended as follows.

(2)In subsection (3), after the word “above” there shall be inserted thewords “and subsection (4B) below”.

(3)At the end of subsection (4) there shall be added the words “, butsubject to subsections (4A) and (4C) below”.

(4)After subsection (4) there shall be inserted—

(4A)References in section 683 to a settlement do not include references to anoutright gift by one spouse to the other of property from which income arisesunless—

(a)the gift does not carry a right to the whole of that income, or

(b)the property given is wholly or substantially a right to income.

(4B)For the purposes of subsection (4A) above a gift is not an outright giftif it is subject to conditions, or if the property given or any derivedproperty is or will or may become, in any circumstances whatsoever, payableto or applicable for the benefit of the donor.

(4C)References in section 683 to a settlement do not include references to theirrevocable allocation of pension rights by one spouse to the other inaccordance with the terms of a relevant statutory scheme (within the meaningof Chapter I of Part XIV).

(5)This section shall have effect for the year 1990-91 and subsequent yearsof assessment.

109 Settlements where settlor retains interest in settled property.U.K.

(1)After section 674 of the Taxes Act 1988 there shall be inserted—

674A Other settlements where settlor retains interest in settled property.

(1)Where, during the life of the settlor, income arising under a settlementis, under the settlement and in the events that occur, payable to orapplicable for the benefit of any person other than the settlor, then, unless,under the settlement and in those events, the income—

(a)consists of annual payments made under a partnership agreement to or forthe benefit of a former member, or the widow or dependants of a deceasedformer member, of the partnership, being payments made under a liabilityincurred for full consideration; or

(b)is of a kind excluded from subsection (1) of section 683 by subsection (6)or (9) of that section; or

(c)is income arising under a settlement made by one party to a marriage byway of provision for the other after the dissolution or annulment of themarriage, or while they are separated under an order of a court or under aseparation agreement or in such circumstances that the separation is likelyto be permanent, being income payable to or applicable for the benefit of thatother party; or

(d)is income from property of which the settlor has divested himselfabsolutely by the settlement; or

(e)consists of covenanted payments to charity (as defined by section 660(3));or

(f)is income which, by virtue of any provision of the Income Tax Acts otherthan this section, is to be treated for all the purposes of those Acts asincome of the settlor;

the income shall be treated for all the purposes of the Income Tax Actsas the income of the settlor and not as the income of any other person.

(2)Subsections (6) to (10) of section 683 shall apply in relation tosubsection (1) above as they apply in relation to subsection (1) of thatsection.

(3)Subsections (1), (2), (3) and (for the year 1990-91 and subsequent yearsof assessment) (4A) to (4C) of section 685 shall have effect for the purposesof this section as they have effect for the purposes of section 683, but withthe omission from subsections (1) and (2) of the words “in the case of asettlement made after 6th April 1965”.

(4)For the year 1990-91 and subsequent years of assessment subsection (1)(a)above shall have effect with the insertion after the word “widow” of theword “widower”.

(5)This section applies in relation to income—

(a)which arises on or after 14th March 1989 under a settlement made on orafter that day, or

(b)which arises on or after 6th April 1990 under a settlement made before14th March 1989, so far as it is payable to or applicable for the benefit ofthe settlor’s husband or wife,

except income consisting of annual payments made under an obligationwhich is an existing obligation for the purposes of section 36(3) of theFinance Act 1988.

(2)In section 125(3) of the Taxes Act 1988, in paragraph (a), for the words “section 683(1)(a) or (c) or (6)” there shall be substituted the words “subsection (1)(a) or (c) of section 674A or 683 or subsection (6) ofsection 683 (including that subsection as it applies in relation to section674A(1))”.

(3)In sections 675(1), (4) and (5) and 676(1)(a) of that Act, for the words “or 674” there shall be substituted the words “674 or 674A”.

(4)In section 677(2)(c) of that Act, after “674” there shall be inserted “674A”.

110 Residence of trustees.U.K.

(1)Where the trustees of a settlement include at least one who is notresident in the United Kingdom as well as at least one who is, then for allthe purposes of the Income Tax Acts—

(a)if the condition in subsection (2) below is satisfied, the trustee ortrustees not resident in the United Kingdom shall be treated as residentthere, and

(b)otherwise, the trustee or trustees resident in the United Kingdom shallbe treated as not resident there (but as resident outside the United Kingdom).

(2)The condition referred to in subsection (1) above is that the settlor or,where there is more than one, any of them is at any relevant time—

(a)resident in the United Kingdom,

(b)ordinarily resident there, or

(c)domiciled there.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (2) above the following are relevant timesin relation to a settlor—

(a)in the case of a settlement arising under a testamentary disposition ofthe settlor or on his intestacy, the time of his death, and

(b)in the case of any other settlement, the time or, where there is more thanone, each of the times when he has provided funds directly or indirectly forthe purposes of the settlement.

(4)For the purposes of this section “settlor”, in relationto a settlement, includes any person who has provided or undertaken to providefunds directly or indirectly for the purposes of the settlement.

(5)In section 824(9) of the Taxes Act 1988 (repayment supplements), for thewords “or a United Kingdom trust (as defined in section 231),” thereshall be substituted the words “the trustees of a settlement”.

(6)Subject to subsections (7) to (9) below, this section shall apply for theyear 1989-90 and subsequent years of assessment.

(7)For the purpose of determining the residence of trustees at any timeduring the year 1989-90, the condition in subsection (2) above shall beregarded as not having been satisfied if none of the trustees of thesettlement is resident in the United Kingdom at any time during the periodbeginning with 1st October 1989 and ending with 5th April 1990.

(8)This section shall not apply for any of the purposes of section 739 of theTaxes Act 1988 in relation to income payable before 15th June 1989, or for thepurposes of subsection (3) of that section in relation to income payable onor after that date if—

(a)the capital sum there referred to is received, or the right to receive itis acquired, before that date, and

(b)that sum is wholly repaid, or the right to it waived, before 1st October1989.

(9)This section shall not apply for any of the purposes of section 740 of theTaxes Act 1988 in relation to benefits received before 15th June 1989; and,in relation to benefits received on or after that date, “relevant income”for those purposes shall include income arising to trustees before 6th April1989 notwithstanding that one or more of them was not resident outside theUnited Kingdom, unless they have been charged to tax in respect of it.

111 Residence of personal representatives.U.K.

(1)Where the personal representatives of a deceased person include at leastone who is not resident in the United Kingdom as well as at least one who is,then for all the purposes of the Income Tax Acts—

(a)if the condition in subsection (2) below is satisfied, the personalrepresentative or representatives not resident in the United Kingdom shall betreated as resident there, and

(b)otherwise, the personal representative or representatives resident in theUnited Kingdom shall be treated as not resident there (but as resident outsidethe United Kingdom).

(2)The condition referred to in subsection (1) above is that the deceasedperson is at his death—

(a)resident in the United Kingdom,

(b)ordinarily resident there, or

(c)domiciled there.

(3)In this section “personal representatives” means—

(a)in relation to England and Wales, the deceased person’s personalrepresentatives as defined by section 55 of the M13Administration of Estates Act 1925;

(b)in relation to Scotland, his executor or the judicial factor on hisestate;

(c)in relation to Northern Ireland, his personal representatives as definedby section 45(1) of the M14Administration of EstatesAct (Northern Ireland) 1955; and

(d)in relation to another country or territory, the persons having inrelation to him under its law any functions corresponding to the functions foradministration purposes of personal representatives under the law of Englandand Wales.

(4)In section 824(9) of the Taxes Act 1988 (repayment supplements), for thewords from “or, in” to “section 701)” there shall be substituted thewords “or personal representatives (within the meaning of section 111 of theFinance Act 1989)”.

(5)Subject to subsections (6) to (8) below, this section shall apply for theyear 1989-90 and subsequent years of assessment.

(6)For the purpose of determining the residence of personal representativesat any time during the year 1989-90, the condition in subsection (2) aboveshall be regarded as not having been satisfied if none of the personalrepresentatives is resident in the United Kingdom at any time during theperiod beginning with 1st October 1989 and ending with 5th April 1990.

(7)This section shall not apply for any of the purposes of section 739 of theTaxes Act 1988 in relation to income payable before 15th June 1989, or for thepurposes of subsection (3) of that section in relation to income payable onor after that date if—

(a)the capital sum there referred to is received, or the right to receive itis acquired, before that date, and

(b)that sum is wholly repaid, or the right to it waived, before 1st October1989.

(8)This section shall not apply for any of the purposes of section 740 of theTaxes Act 1988 in relation to benefits received before 15th June 1989 and, inrelation to benefits received on or after that date, “relevant income”for those purposes shall include income arising to personal representativesbefore 6th April 1989 notwithstanding that one or more of them was notresident outside the United Kingdom, unless they have been charged to tax inrespect of it.

Marginal Citations

MiscellaneousU.K.

112 Security: trades etc.U.K.

(1)This section applies in computing, for the purposes of Case I or Case IIof Schedule D, the profits or gains of a trade, profession or vocation carriedon by an individual or by a partnership of individuals.

(2)In a case where this section applies, nothing in section 74(a) or (b) ofthe Taxes Act 1988 (deductions limited by reference to purposes of trade etc.)shall prevent the deduction of a sum in respect of expenditure incurred inconnection with the provision for or use by the individual, or any of theindividuals, of a security asset or security service.

(3)Subsection (2) above shall not apply unless the asset or service isprovided or used to meet a threat which—

(a)is a special threat to the individual’s personal physical security, and

(b)arises wholly or mainly by virtue of the particular trade, profession orvocation concerned.

(4)Subsection (2) above shall not apply unless the person incurring theexpenditure has as his sole object in doing so the meeting of that threat.

(5)Subsection (2) above shall not apply in the case of a service unless thebenefit resulting to the individual consists wholly or mainly of animprovement of his personal physical security.

(6)Subsection (2) above shall not apply in the case of an asset unless theperson incurring the expenditure intends the asset to be used solely toimprove personal physical security.

(7)But in a case where—

(a)apart from subsection (6) above, subsection (2) above would apply in thecase of an asset, and

(b)the person incurring the expenditure intends the asset to be used partlyto improve personal physical security,

subsection (2) shall nevertheless apply, but only as regards theappropriate proportion of the expenditure there mentioned.

(8)For the purposes of subsection (7) above the appropriate proportion of theexpenditure mentioned in subsection (2) above is such proportion of thatexpenditure as is attributable to the intention of the person incurring itthat the asset be used to improve personal physical security.

113 Security: trades etc. (supplementary).U.K.

(1)For the purposes of section 112 above—

(a)a security asset is an asset which improves personal security,

(b)a security service is a service which improves personal security,

(c)references to an asset do not include references to a car, a ship or anaircraft,

(d)references to an asset or service do not include references to a dwellingor grounds appurtenant to a dwelling, and

(e)references to an asset include references to equipment and a structure(such as a wall).

(2)If the person incurring the expenditure intends the asset to be usedsolely to improve personal physical security, but there is another use for theasset which is incidental to improving personal physical security, that otheruse shall be ignored in construing section 112(6) above.

(3)The fact that an asset or service improves the personal physical securityof any member of the family or household of the individual concerned, as wellas that of the individual, shall not prevent section 112(2) above fromapplying.

(4)For the purposes of section 112 above in its application to an asset, itis immaterial whether or not the asset becomes affixed to land (whetherconstituting a dwelling or otherwise).

(5)For the purposes of section 112 above in its application to an asset, itis immaterial whether or not the individual concerned is or becomes entitledto the property in the asset or (in the case of a fixture) an estate orinterest in the land concerned.

(6)Section 112 above applies where expenditure is incurred on or after 6thApril 1989.

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

C39S. 113 applied (31.7.1998 with effect as mentioned in s. 38(2)(3) of 1998 c. 36) by 1988 c. 1, s. 21A(2) (as substituted by 1998 c. 36, s. 38(1), Sch. 5 Pt. I paras. 4, 73)

114 Relief for pre-trading expenditure.U.K.

(1)In section 401(1) of the Taxes Act 1988 (which gives relief forexpenditure incurred by a person within three years before he begins to carryon a trade, profession or vocation), for the word “three” there shall besubstituted the word “five”.

(2)This section shall have effect where the time when the person begins tocarry on the trade, profession or vocation falls after the end of March 1989.

115 Double taxation: tax credits.U.K.

(1)Where any arrangements having effect by virtue of section 788 of the TaxesAct 1988 provide —

(a)for persons who are resident outside the United Kingdom and who receivedistributions from companies resident in the United Kingdom to be entitled totax credits, and

(b)for the amount paid to such a person by way of tax credit to be determinedby reference to the amount to which an individual resident in the UnitedKingdom would have been entitled, subject to a deduction calculated byreference to the aggregate of the amount or value of the distribution and theamount of the tax credit paid,

the arrangements shall be construed as providing for that deduction tobe calculated by reference to the gross amount or value of the distributionand tax credit, without any allowance for the deduction itself.

(2)This section shall have effect in relation to payments made before thepassing of this Act as well as those made after that time, except that itshall not affect—

(a)the judgment of any court given before 25th October 1988, or

(b)the law to be applied in proceedings on appeal to the Court of Appeal orthe House of Lords where the judgment of the High Court or the Court ofSession which is in issue was given before that date.

116 Interest payments to Netherlands Antilles subsidiaries.U.K.

(1)A payment to which this section applies shall be treated for the purposesof—

(a)section 338 of the Taxes Act 1988 (payment of interest within section 124of that Act to be a charge on income), and

(b)section 349 of that Act (such a payment to be made gross),

as if it were a payment of interest within section 124 of that Act(quoted Eurobonds).

(2)This section applies to a payment of interest if—

(a)it is made on or after 1st April 1989 by a relevant United Kingdom companyto a relevant Netherlands Antilles subsidiary, and

(b)not later than 90 days after the payment is received by the subsidiary,it is applied by the subsidiary in paying interest on quoted Eurobonds issuedby it before 26th July 1984 or in meeting expenses incurred in connection withthe issue of quoted Eurobonds so issued.

(3)In subsection (2) above—

(a)relevant Netherlands Antilles subsidiary” means a companywhich—

(i)at the time when the quoted Eurobonds were issued was resident in theNetherlands Antilles (including Aruba) and was a 90 per cent. subsidiary ofa company resident in the United Kingdom, and

(ii)at the time when the payment is made is resident in the NetherlandsAntilles (but not Aruba) and is a 90 per cent. subsidiary of the relevantUnited Kingdom company; and

(b)relevant United Kingdom company” means a company which isresident in the United Kingdom and which is not a 51 per cent. subsidiary ofa company not resident in the United Kingdom.

(4)For the purpose of determining whether a company is a relevant NetherlandsAntilles subsidiary, its residence (whether before 1st April 1989 or at anylater time) shall be ascertained in accordance with the terms of thearrangements made with the Government of the Kingdom of the Netherlands onbehalf of the Government of the Netherlands Antilles which had effect byvirtue of section 788 of the Taxes Act 1988 immediately before 1st April 1989.

(5)In this section “quoted Eurobond” has the same meaningas in section 124 of the Taxes Act 1988.

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