- Latest available (Revised)
- Original (As enacted)
This is the original version (as it was originally enacted).
This Chapter provides that in certain circumstances where a transfer is made regarding land, and the transferor or an associate becomes liable to make a payment connected with the land, corporation tax relief for the payment is restricted.
(1)Section 838 has effect if—
(a)land, or an estate or interest in land, is transferred,
(b)the transferor, or a company associated with the transferor, becomes liable to make a payment of rent under a lease of the land or part of it, and
(c)a deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief (see section 837) is allowed for the payment.
(2)Section 839 has effect if—
(a)land, or an estate or interest in land, is transferred,
(b)the transferor, or a company associated with the transferor, becomes liable to make a payment of rent under a lease of the land or part of it, and
(c)a deduction under section 76 of ICTA (expenses of insurance companies) is allowed for the payment.
(3)The reference in subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a) to a transfer of an estate or interest in land includes a reference to any of the following—
(a)the granting of a lease or another transaction involving the creation of a new estate or interest in the land,
(b)the transfer of the lessee’s interest under a lease by surrender or forfeiture of the lease, and
(c)a transaction or series of transactions affecting land or an estate or interest in land, such that some person is the owner or one of the owners before and after the transaction or transactions but another person becomes or ceases to be one of the owners.
(4)In relation to a transaction or series of transactions mentioned in subsection (3)(c), a person is to be regarded as a transferor for the purposes of this Chapter if the person—
(a)is an owner before the transaction or transactions, and
(b)is not the sole owner afterwards.
(5)The liability mentioned in subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b) is one resulting from—
(a)a lease, of the land or part of it, granted (at the time of the transfer or later) by the transferee to the transferor, or
(b)another transaction or series of transactions affecting the land or an estate or interest in it.
(6)The liability mentioned in subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b) is one arising at the time of the transfer or later.
(7)The reference in subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a) to a transfer does not include a transfer on or before 14 April 1964.
(1)Section 838 has effect if—
(a)land, or an estate or interest in land, is transferred,
(b)the transferor, or a company associated with the transferor, becomes liable to make a payment which is not rent under a lease but is otherwise connected with the land or part of it (whether it is a payment under a rentcharge or under some other transaction), and
(c)a deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief (see section 837) is allowed for the payment.
(2)Section 839 has effect if—
(a)land, or an estate or interest in land, is transferred,
(b)the transferor, or a company associated with the transferor, becomes liable to make a payment which is not rent under a lease but is otherwise connected with the land or part of it (whether it is a payment under a rentcharge or under some other transaction), and
(c)a deduction under section 76 of ICTA (expenses of insurance companies) is allowed for the payment.
(3)The reference in subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a) to a transfer of an estate or interest in land includes a reference to any of the following—
(a)the granting of a lease or another transaction involving the creation of a new estate or interest in the land,
(b)the transfer of the lessee’s interest under a lease by surrender or forfeiture of the lease, and
(c)a transaction or series of transactions affecting land or an estate or interest in land, such that some person is the owner or one of the owners before and after the transaction or transactions but another person becomes or ceases to be one of the owners.
(4)In relation to a transaction or series of transactions mentioned in subsection (3)(c), a person is to be regarded as a transferor for the purposes of this Chapter if the person—
(a)is an owner before the transaction or transactions, and
(b)is not the sole owner afterwards.
(5)The liability mentioned in subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b) is one resulting from a transaction or series of transactions affecting the land or an estate or interest in it.
(6)The liability mentioned in subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b) is one arising at the time of the transfer or later.
(7)The reference in subsection (1)(a) or (2)(a) to a transfer does not include a transfer on or before 14 April 1964.
For the purposes of this Chapter each of the following is a deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief—
(a)a deduction in calculating profits or losses of a trade for corporation tax purposes,
(b)a deduction in calculating the profits of a UK property business for corporation tax purposes,
(c)a deduction in calculating any loss for which relief is given under section 91 (losses from miscellaneous transactions), or in calculating profits or gains chargeable to corporation tax under or by virtue of any provision to which section 1173 (miscellaneous charges) applies, and
(d)a deduction under section 1219 of CTA 2009 (expenses of management of a company’s investment business).
(1)The rules in subsection (3) apply to the calculation of the deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief allowed in an accounting period—
(a)for the non-excluded element of the payment within section 835(1) or 836(1), or
(b)if there are two or more such payments, for the non-excluded elements of those payments.
(2)For the purposes of this section the non-excluded element of a payment is the element of the payment not excluded under section 843 (service charges etc).
(3)The rules are—
Rule 1 —meaning of amount E
For any accounting period, amount E (which may be nil) is the expense or total expenses to be brought, in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice, into account in the period in respect of—
the non-excluded element of the payment, or
the non-excluded elements of the payments.
Rule 2 — calculations
For every accounting period—
calculate the total of amount E for the period and amount E for every previous accounting period ending on or after the date of the transfer mentioned in section 835(1)(a) or 836(1)(a),
calculate the total of the deductions by way of relevant corporation tax relief for every previous accounting period ending on or after the date of that transfer, and
subtract the total at (b) from the total at (a) to give the cumulative unrelieved expenses for the period.
Rule 3 — meaning of post-spread period
An accounting period is a post-spread period if for that accounting period, and every later accounting period, there are no payments within section 835(1) or 836(1).
Rule 4 — the deduction allowed in an accounting period
If an accounting period is not a post-spread period, the deduction allowed for the period is equal to the cumulative unrelieved expenses for the period, but is equal to the commercial rent for the period if that is less (see section 844 or 845).
Rule 5 — accounting periods in which no deduction allowed
If an accounting period is a post-spread period, no deduction is allowed for the period.
(1)Subsection (3) applies to the calculation of the deduction under section 76 of ICTA allowed for the non-excluded element of the payment within section 835(2) or 836(2).
(2)For the purposes of this section the non-excluded element of a payment is the element of the payment not excluded under section 843 (service charges etc).
(3)The deduction must not exceed the commercial rent for the period for which the payment is made (see section 844 or 845).
(1)This section applies if—
(a)section 839 has effect, and
(b)conditions A and B are met.
(2)Condition A is that under section 839 part of a payment which would otherwise be allowed as a deduction under section 76 of ICTA is not allowed.
(3)Condition B is that one or more later payments are made, by the transferor or a person associated with the transferor, under—
(a)the lease (if section 839 has effect because of section 835(2)), or
(b)the rentcharge or other transaction mentioned in section 836(2)(b) (if section 839 has effect because of section 836(2)).
(4)The part of the payment mentioned in subsection (2) may be carried forward and treated for the purposes of a deduction under section 76 of ICTA as if it were made—
(a)when the next of the later payments is made, and
(b)for the period for which that later payment is made.
(5)So far as a part of a payment carried forward under this section is not allowed as a deduction under section 76 of ICTA, it may be carried forward again under this section.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of section 839.
(2)If more than one payment is made for the same period the payments must be taken together.
(3)If payments are made for periods which overlap—
(a)the payments must be apportioned, and
(b)the apportioned payments which belong to the common part of the overlapping periods must be taken together.
(4)References in subsections (2) and (3) to payments include references to parts of payments which under section 840 are treated as if made later than they were made.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of sections 839 to 841.
(2)For the purposes of this section the relevant year, in relation to a payment, is the year which begins with the date it is made.
(3)If a payment is made for a period all of which is after the relevant year, it must be treated as made for the relevant year.
(4)If a payment is made for a period part of which is after the relevant year, it must be treated as if a corresponding part of it was made for the relevant year (and no part for a later period).
(1)This section applies for the purposes of sections 838 and 839.
(2)A payment must be excluded so far as it is in respect of any of the following—
(a)services,
(b)the use of relevant assets, and
(c)rates usually borne by the tenant.
(3)The amount excluded must be just and reasonable.
(4)If a lease or agreement contains provisions fixing the payments or parts of payments which are in respect of services or the use of assets, those provisions are not conclusive.
(5)A relevant asset is any description of property or rights other than land or an interest in land.
(1)Subsection (3) applies—
(a)for the purpose of making a comparison under rule 4 of section 838(3) if section 838 has effect because of section 835(1), and
(b)for the purpose of making a comparison under section 839(3) if section 839 has effect because of section 835(2).
(2)In this section “the actual lease” means the lease mentioned in section 835(1)(b) or (2)(b).
(3)The commercial rent is the rent which might be expected to be paid under a lease, of the land in respect of which the payment mentioned in section 835(1)(b) or (2)(b) is made, which—
(a)was negotiated in the open market when the actual lease was created,
(b)is of the same duration as the actual lease,
(c)is subject to the terms and conditions of the actual lease as respects liability for maintenance and repairs, and
(d)provides for rent payable at uniform intervals and at an appropriate rate.
(4)Rent is payable at an appropriate rate if—
(a)it is payable at a uniform rate, or
(b)in a case where the rent payable under the actual lease is rent at a progressive rate (and such that the amount of rent payable for a year is never less than the amount payable for a previous year), it progresses by gradations proportionate to those provided by the actual lease.
(1)Subsection (2) applies—
(a)for the purpose of making a comparison under rule 4 of section 838(3) if section 838 has effect because of section 836(1), and
(b)for the purpose of making a comparison under section 839(3) if section 839 has effect because of section 836(2).
(2)The commercial rent is the rent which might be expected to be paid under a lease, of the land in respect of which the payment mentioned in section 836(1)(b) or (2)(b) is made, which—
(a)was negotiated in the open market when the rentcharge or other transaction mentioned in section 836(1)(b) or (2)(b) was effected,
(b)is a tenant’s repairing lease, and
(c)is of an appropriate duration.
(3)A tenant’s repairing lease is a lease where the lessee is under an obligation to maintain and repair the whole (or substantially the whole) of the premises comprised in the lease.
(4)To see whether a lease is of an appropriate duration, take the period over which payments are to be made under the rentcharge or other transaction, and—
(a)if that period is 200 years or more (or the obligation to make the payments is perpetual) an appropriate duration is 200 years, or
(b)if that period is less than 200 years, an appropriate duration is the same duration as that period.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)A reference to a lease includes a reference to any of the following—
(a)an underlease, sublease, tenancy or licence, and
(b)an agreement for a lease, underlease, sublease, tenancy or licence, and
(c)in the case of land outside the United Kingdom, an interest corresponding to a lease (as defined here).
(3)A reference to rent includes a reference to any payment under a lease.
(4)A reference to rent under a lease includes a reference to expenses which the tenant under the lease is treated as incurring in respect of the land subject to the lease under any of—
(a)sections 63 to 67 of CTA 2009 (land occupied for trade purposes), and
(b)sections 232 to 234 of that Act (taxed leases).
(5)Expenses within subsection (4) must be treated as having been paid as soon as they were incurred.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)The following persons are associated with one another—
(a)the transferor in an affected transaction and the transferor in another affected transaction, if the two persons are acting in concert or if the two transactions are in any way reciprocal, and
(b)any person who is an associate of either of those associated transferors.
(3)Two or more bodies corporate are associated with one another if they participate in, or are incorporated for the purposes of, a scheme—
(a)for the reconstruction of any body or bodies corporate, or
(b)for the amalgamation of any two or more bodies corporate.
(4)Persons are associated with one another if they are associates as defined in section 882 (relatives, settlements, persons controlling bodies, joint owners etc).
(5)In subsection (2) “affected transaction” means a transaction within—
(a)section 835(1) or (2) or 836(1) or (2), or
(b)section 681AA(1) or (2) or 681AB(1) or (2) of ITA 2007.
In the case of land outside the United Kingdom, expressions in this Chapter relating to interests in land and their disposition must be taken to relate to corresponding interests and dispositions.
(1)This Chapter provides that in certain circumstances where a lease of land is assigned or surrendered and another lease is granted or assigned—
(a)consideration received for the assignment or surrender of the first lease is taxed as a trade receipt or charged to corporation tax on income, and
(b)tax relief is allowed for rent under the other lease.
(2)The Chapter provides that in certain circumstances where a lease is varied it is treated as surrendered and another lease is treated as granted.
(1)This Chapter has effect if each of conditions A to E is met.
(2)Condition A is that—
(a)a company (“L”) is a lessee of land under a lease which has 50 years or less to run (“the original lease”), and
(b)L is entitled in respect of the rent under the original lease to a deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief.
(3)Condition B is that—
(a)L assigns the original lease to another person or surrenders it to L’s landlord, and
(b)the consideration for the assignment or surrender would not (apart from this Chapter) be taxable except as capital in L’s hands.
(4)Condition C is that—
(a)another lease (“the new lease”) is granted, or assigned, to L or a person linked to L, and
(b)the new lease is for a term of 15 years or less.
(5)Condition D is that the new lease—
(a)is of all or part of the land which was the subject of the original lease, or
(b)includes all or part of the land which was the subject of the original lease.
(6)Condition E is that neither L nor a person linked to L had, before 22 June 1971, a right enforceable at law or in equity to the grant of the new lease.
(7)If each of conditions A to D is met but condition E is not met, see the relevant provisions in Schedule 2 to this Act and Schedule 9 to TIOPA 2010.
(1)An appropriate amount must be found under subsection (3) or (4) of—
(a)the consideration received by L for the assignment or surrender, or
(b)each instalment of the consideration (if it is paid in instalments).
(2)For the purposes of the Corporation Tax Acts the appropriate amount must be treated in accordance with subsections (6) to (8) and not as a capital receipt.
(3)If the term of the new lease is one year or less, the appropriate amount of the consideration or instalment is the whole of it.
(4)If the term of the new lease is more than one year, the appropriate amount of the consideration or instalment is the proportion of it found by the formula—
(5)In subsection (4) N is the term of the new lease expressed in years (taking part of a year as an appropriate proportion of a year).
(6)The way the appropriate amount must be treated depends on whether the following conditions are met—
(a)the consideration is received by L in the course of a trade, and
(b)the rent payable by L, or a person linked to L, under the new lease is allowable as a deduction in calculating profits or losses of a trade, profession or vocation for tax purposes.
(7)If the conditions are met the appropriate amount must be treated as a receipt of the trade mentioned in subsection (6)(a).
(8)If the conditions are not met the appropriate amount must be treated as an amount chargeable to corporation tax under the charge to corporation tax on income.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of section 851 if the property which is the subject of the new lease does not include all the property which was the subject of the original lease.
(2)The consideration received by L must be treated as reduced to the portion of it found under subsection (3).
(3)The portion is that which is reasonably attributable to such part of the original property as—
(a)consists of the property which is the subject of the new lease, or
(b)is included in the property which is the subject of the new lease.
(4)The original property is the property which was the subject of the original lease.
(1)This section applies if the rent under the new lease is payable by a company within the charge to corporation tax.
(2)This section also applies if—
(a)Chapter 2 of Part 12A of ITA 2007 (provision for income tax corresponding to this Chapter) has effect, and
(b)the rent under the new lease is payable by a company within the charge to corporation tax.
(3)Any provision of CTA 2009 or ICTA providing for deductions or allowances by way of corporation tax relief in respect of payments of rent applies in relation to the rent under the new lease.
(4)In subsection (2), and in subsection (3) as applied by subsection (2), references to the new lease and rent are to be read as in Chapter 2 of Part 12A of ITA 2007.
(1)Sections 855 to 857 treat the new lease as ending in certain circumstances for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)If any of those provisions apply in a given case, and the new lease is treated as ending on different dates, it must be treated as ending on the earlier or earliest of them.
(1)If the rent for a relevant period exceeds the rent for the following comparable period, the term of the new lease must be treated as ending on the date when the relevant period ends.
(2)For the purposes of this section—
(a)a relevant period is a rental period of the new lease ending before its fifteenth anniversary,
(b)the following comparable period (in relation to a relevant period) is the rental period which is of the same duration as the relevant period and which begins on the day following the end of the relevant period,
(c)the rent for a period is the total rent payable under the new lease in respect of the period,
(d)a rental period is a period in respect of which a payment of rent is to be made, and
(e)the fifteenth anniversary of the new lease is the fifteenth anniversary of the date on which its term begins.
(3)For the purposes of this section—
(a)all rental periods of a quarter must be treated as being of the same duration, and
(b)all rental periods of a month must be treated as being of the same duration.
(1)This section applies if under the new lease the lessor, or L or a person linked to L, has power to end the lease before the end of the term for which it was granted.
(2)The term of the lease must be treated as ending on the earliest date with effect from which the lessor, or L or a person linked to L, could end the lease by exercising the power.
(1)This section applies if under the new lease L, or a person linked to L, has power to vary, in a manner beneficial to L or a person linked to L, obligations under the lease that are obligations of L or a person linked to L.
(2)The term of the lease must be treated as ending on the earliest date with effect from which L, or a person linked to L, could vary the obligations by exercising the power.
(1)Subsection (2) applies if a rentcharge payable by L, or a person linked to L, is secured on all or part of the property subject to the new lease.
(2)For the purposes of sections 855 to 857 the rent payable under the new lease must be treated as equal to the sum of the rentcharge and the rent payable under the lease.
(1)This section applies if each of conditions A to D is met.
(2)Condition A is that—
(a)a company (“the lessee”) is a lessee of land under a lease which has 50 years or less to run (“the original lease”), and
(b)the lessee is entitled in respect of the rent under the original lease to a deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief.
(3)Condition B is that (by agreement with the landlord) the lessee varies the original lease.
(4)Condition C is that under the variation—
(a)the lessee agrees to pay a rent greater than that payable under the original lease, and
(b)the lessee agrees to pay the greater rent in return for a consideration which would not (apart from this Chapter) be taxable except as capital in the lessee’s hands.
(5)Condition D is that under the variation the period during which the greater rent is to be paid ends 15 years or less after the date on which—
(a)the consideration is paid to the lessee, or
(b)the last instalment of the consideration is paid to the lessee (if it is paid in instalments).
(6)If this section applies the lessee must be treated for the purposes of this Chapter—
(a)as having surrendered the original lease for the consideration mentioned in subsection (4)(b), and
(b)as having been granted a new lease for a term of 15 years or less but otherwise on the terms of the original lease varied as mentioned in subsection (3).
For the purposes of this Chapter each of the following is a deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief—
(a)a deduction in calculating profits or losses of a trade for corporation tax purposes,
(b)a deduction in calculating the profits of a UK property business for corporation tax purposes,
(c)a deduction in calculating any loss for which relief is given under section 91 (losses from miscellaneous transactions), or in calculating profits or gains chargeable to corporation tax under or by virtue of any provision to which section 1173 (miscellaneous charges) applies,
(d)a deduction under section 76 of ICTA (insurance companies), and
(e)a deduction under section 1219 of CTA 2009 (expenses of management of a company’s investment business).
(1)In this Chapter references to a person linked to L are to a person who is—
(a)a partner of L,
(b)an associate of L, or
(c)an associate of a partner of L.
(2)“Associate” must be read in accordance with section 882 (relatives, settlements, persons controlling bodies, joint owners etc).
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)“Lease” includes—
(a)an agreement for a lease, and
(b)any tenancy.
(3)“Lease” does not include a mortgage.
(4)A reference to a lessee or lessor—
(a)is to be read in accordance with subsections (2) and (3), and
(b)includes a reference to the successors in title of a lessee or lessor.
(5)“Rent” includes a payment by a tenant for work to maintain or repair leased premises which the lease does not require the tenant to carry out; and “premises” here includes land.
This Chapter provides that, in certain circumstances where a payment is made under a lease of a trading asset, corporation tax relief for the payment is restricted.
(1)Section 865 has effect if—
(a)condition A is met, and
(b)condition B or C is met.
(2)Condition A is that—
(a)a payment is made by a company under a lease of a relevant asset, and
(b)a deduction is allowed for the payment in calculating the profits of a trade for corporation tax purposes.
(3)Condition B is that—
(a)at a time before the lease’s creation the asset was used for the purposes of the trade, and
(b)when it was so used it was owned by the person then carrying on the trade.
(4)Condition C is that—
(a)at a time before the lease’s creation the asset was used for the purposes of another trade, or for the purposes of a profession or vocation,
(b)when it was so used it was owned by the person then carrying on the other trade, or the profession or vocation, and
(c)when it was so used, or later, that person was carrying on the trade mentioned in subsection (2).
(5)The reference in subsection (2)(a) to a lease does not include a lease created on or before 14 April 1964.
(6)In this section references to a person carrying on a trade, profession or vocation are to the person carrying on the trade, profession or vocation for the time being.
(1)The rules in subsection (3) apply to the calculation of the deduction by way of relevant corporation tax relief allowed in an accounting period—
(a)for the non-excluded element of the payment within section 864(2), or
(b)if there are two or more such payments, for the non-excluded elements of those payments.
(2)For the purposes of this section the non-excluded element of a payment is the element not excluded under section 866 (long funding finance leases).
(3)The rules are—
Rule 1 — meaning of amount E
For any accounting period, amount E (which may be nil) is the expense or total expenses to be brought, in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice, into account in the period in respect of—
the non-excluded element of the payment, or
the non-excluded elements of the payments.
Rule 2 — calculation of amount E
For every accounting period—
calculate the total of amount E for the period and amount E for every preceding accounting period ending on or after the date of the creation of the lease mentioned in section 864(2)(a),
calculate the total of the deductions by way of relevant corporation tax relief for every previous accounting period ending on or after that date, and
subtract the total at (b) from the total at (a) to give the cumulative unrelieved expenses for the period.
Rule 3 — meaning of post-spread period
An accounting period is a post-spread period if for that accounting period, and every later accounting period, there are no payments within section 864(2).
Rule 4 — the deduction allowed in an accounting period
If an accounting period is not a post-spread period, the deduction allowed for the period is equal to the cumulative unrelieved expenses for the period, but is the commercial rent for the period if that is less (see section 867).
Rule 5 — accounting periods in which no deduction allowed
If an accounting period is a post-spread period, no deduction is allowed for the period.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of section 865.
(2)A payment must be excluded so far as, in the case of the lessee, it is to be regarded in accordance with Chapter 6A of Part 2 of CAA 2001 as a payment under a lease which is a long funding finance lease for the purposes of that Part.
(1)Subsection (3) applies for the purpose of making a comparison under rule 4 of section 865(3).
(2)In this section “the actual lease” means the lease mentioned in section 864(2)(a).
(3)The commercial rent is the rent which might at the relevant time be expected to be paid under a lease of the asset if—
(a)the lease were for the rest of the asset’s expected normal working life,
(b)the rent were payable at uniform intervals and at a uniform rate, and
(c)the rent gave a reasonable return for the asset’s market value at the relevant time, taking account of the actual lease’s terms and conditions.
(4)The relevant time is the time when the actual lease was created.
(5)An asset’s expected normal working life is the period which might be expected, when it is first put into use, to pass before it is finally put out of use as being unfit for further use.
(6)In applying subsection (5) it must be assumed that the asset will be used in the normal way, and to the normal extent, throughout the period.
(7)If the asset is used at the same time partly for the purposes of the trade mentioned in section 864(2)(b) and partly for other purposes, the commercial rent as defined in subsection (3) is to be determined by reference to what would be paid for such partial use.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)A lease is (in relation to an asset) an agreement or arrangement under which payments are made for the use of or otherwise in respect of the asset.
(3)In particular it includes an agreement or arrangement under which the payments (or any of them) represent instalments of a purchase price or payments towards it.
For the purposes of this Chapter a relevant asset is any description of property or rights other than land or an interest in land.
This Chapter provides that in certain circumstances where a payment is made under a lease of an asset, and a capital sum is obtained in respect of an interest in the asset, corporation tax is charged on an amount not greater than the capital sum.
This Chapter applies if—
(a)condition A is met (see section 872), and
(b)condition B, C, D or E is met (see section 873).
(1)Condition A is that—
(a)a payment is made under a lease of a relevant asset, and
(b)the payment is one for which a deduction by way of relevant tax relief is allowed.
(2)Condition A is not met if section 865 (leased trading assets: tax deductions)—
(a)applies to the payment, or
(b)would apply to it but for its being excluded under section 866 (long funding finance leases).
(3)Condition A is not met if section 681CC of ITA 2007 (provision for income tax corresponding to section 865)—
(a)applies to the payment, or
(b)would apply to it but for its being excluded under section 681CD of that Act (long funding finance leases).
(4)The reference in subsection (1)(a) to a lease does not include a lease created on or before 14 April 1964.
(1)Condition B is that the person making the payment—
(a)obtains a capital sum in respect of the lessee’s interest in the lease, and
(b)is a company within the charge to corporation tax.
(2)Condition C is that an associate of the person making the payment—
(a)obtains a capital sum by way of consideration in respect of the lessee’s interest in the lease, and
(b)is a company within the charge to corporation tax.
(3)Condition D is that—
(a)the lessor’s interest in the lease, or any other interest in the asset, belongs to an associate of the person making the payment,
(b)the associate obtains a capital sum in respect of the interest, and
(c)the associate is a company within the charge to corporation tax.
(4)Condition E is that—
(a)the lessor’s interest in the lease, or any other interest in the asset, belongs to an associate of the person making the payment,
(b)an associate of that associate obtains a capital sum by way of consideration in respect of the interest, and
(c)the associate obtaining the sum is a company within the charge to corporation tax.
(5)Condition B, C, D or E may be met before, at or after the time when the payment is made.
(6)Condition B or C is not met if—
(a)the lease is a hire-purchase agreement for plant or machinery, and
(b)the capital sum is required to be brought into account as the whole or part of the disposal value of the plant or machinery under section 68 of CAA 2001.
(7)Condition D or E is not met if—
(a)the capital sum is obtained in respect of the lessee’s interest in the lease,
(b)the lease is a hire-purchase agreement for plant or machinery, and
(c)the capital sum is required to be brought into account as the whole or part of the disposal value of the plant or machinery under section 68 of CAA 2001.
(1)The company obtaining the capital sum is to be treated as receiving, at the time the sum is obtained, an amount—
(a)which is equal to the chargeable amount, and
(b)to which the charge to corporation tax on income applies.
(2)The chargeable amount is—
(a)the amount of the payment for which a deduction by way of relevant tax relief is allowed, or
(b)the total amount of such payments (if more than one).
(3)But subsections (1) and (2) have effect subject to—
(a)subsections (4) to (7), and
(b)section 875(3) (hire-purchase agreements).
(4)The chargeable amount is not to exceed the capital sum (but see section 875(4)).
(5)Subsection (6) applies if—
(a)the charge to corporation tax on income is applied by this section in respect of a capital sum, and
(b)a payment or part of a payment is taken into account in deciding the chargeable amount in respect of the sum.
(6)The payment or part must be left out of account in deciding—
(a)whether the charge to corporation tax on income is to be applied by this section in respect of another capital sum, and
(b)the chargeable amount in respect of the other sum (if the charge is to be applied in respect of the other sum).
(7)The order in which subsections (5) and (6) are applied is the order in which capital sums are obtained.
(1)This section applies if—
(a)the lease is a hire-purchase agreement (as defined in section 1129), and
(b)the capital sum is obtained in respect of the lessee’s interest in the lease (whether it is obtained by the person making the payment or by an associate).
(2)Find the total of the following amounts—
(a)so much of any payment made under the lease by the company obtaining the capital sum as is not a payment for which a deduction by way of relevant tax relief is allowed, and
(b)if the lessee’s interest was assigned to the company obtaining the capital sum, any capital payment made by that company as consideration for the assignment.
(3)If the total of the amounts found under subsection (2) is equal to or greater than the capital sum, the charge to corporation tax on income is not applied by section 874 in respect of the capital sum.
(4)If the total of those amounts is less than the capital sum, in applying section 874(4) that total must be deducted from the capital sum.
(5)If the capital sum is the consideration for part only of the lessee’s interest in the lease—
(a)any amount found under subsection (2) (and still unallowed) must be reduced to a just and reasonable proportion of it, and
(b)in calculating that proportion account must be taken of the degree to which the payments mentioned in subsection (2) have contributed to the value of what is disposed of in return for the capital sum.
(6)Subsection (7) applies if—
(a)more than one capital sum is (or is treated as) obtained by the same company in respect of the lessee’s interest in the lease, and
(b)in arriving at a total under subsection (2) a payment is taken into account in respect of one of the capital sums.
(7)So far as the payment is so taken into account it must not be taken into account in applying subsection (2) to another of the capital sums.
(8)The order in which subsections (6) and (7) are applied is the order in which capital sums are obtained.
(1)This section applies if a capital sum is obtained as mentioned in section 873 and later a payment is made as mentioned in section 872.
(2)Adjustments must be made if they are needed to give effect to the application by section 874 of the charge to corporation tax on income in respect of the capital sum.
(3)An adjustment may be made within the period of 6 years which starts at the end of the accounting period in which the payment is made.
(4)Subsection (3) applies despite any time limit specified in the Corporation Tax Acts.
A reference in this Chapter to a sum obtained in respect of an interest in an asset (whether the lessee’s interest in a lease of the asset or the lessor’s interest or any other interest) includes a reference to—
(a)insurance money obtained in respect of the interest, and
(b)sums representing money or money’s worth obtained in respect of the interest by a transaction or series of transactions disposing of it.
(1)This section applies to a reference in this Chapter to a sum obtained in respect of the lessee’s interest in a lease of an asset.
(2)The reference includes a reference to sums representing the consideration in money or money’s worth obtained on any of the following occasions—
(a)a surrender of the interest to the lessor,
(b)an assignment of the lease, and
(c)the creation of a sublease or another interest out of the lease.
(3)The reference also includes a reference to sums representing money or money’s worth obtained in respect of the interest by a transaction or series of transactions under which the lessee’s rights are merged in any way with the lessor’s rights or with any other rights as respects the asset.
(4)Subsection (3) applies so far as the money or money’s worth is attributable to the lessee’s rights under the lease.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter if a company disposes of an interest in an asset to a person who is the company’s associate (and the interest may be the lessee’s interest in a lease of the asset or the lessor’s interest or any other interest).
(2)The company disposing of the interest must be treated as obtaining in respect of it the greatest of—
(a)the sum in fact obtained by the company,
(b)the value of the interest in the open market, and
(c)the value of the interest to the person to whom it is in effect transferred.
(3)The disposal—
(a)may be direct or indirect, and
(b)may be effected by a transaction or series of transactions described in section 877(b) or 878(3).
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)Subsection (3) applies if—
(a)a payment is made,
(b)it is one for which a deduction by way of relevant tax relief is allowed, and
(c)it is made by persons carrying on a trade, profession or vocation in partnership.
(3)The payment must be apportioned in a manner which is just and reasonable.
(4)Subsection (5) applies if—
(a)a sum is obtained in respect of an interest in an asset,
(b)the sum is obtained by persons carrying on a trade in partnership, and
(c)the asset is and continues to be used for the purposes of the trade.
(5)The sum must be apportioned between the partners in the shares in which they are entitled to the profits of the trade at the time the sum is obtained.
(6)Subsection (7) applies if—
(a)a sum is obtained in respect of an interest in an asset, and
(b)the sum is obtained by persons jointly entitled to the interest.
(7)The sum must be apportioned according to their respective rights in the interest.
(8)Subsections (6) and (7) are subject to subsections (4) and (5).
(1)Subsections (2) and (3) apply if—
(a)a payment or sum is to be apportioned under section 880 or under section 681DJ of ITA 2007,
(b)at the time of the apportionment it appears that it is material to the liability to tax (whether corporation tax or income tax, and for whatever period) of two or more persons (in this section referred to collectively as “the set”),
(c)a question arises as to the manner in which the payment or sum is to be apportioned, and
(d)at the time of the apportionment, it appears that the apportionment is material to the corporation tax liability (for whatever period) of—
(i)a person, or some two or more persons, in the set, or
(ii)all the persons in the set.
(2)For the purposes of corporation tax of the person or persons mentioned in subsection (1)(d), the question is to be determined in the same way as an appeal.
(3)All the persons in the set are entitled to be a party to the proceedings.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)Persons are associates if they are associated with each other.
(3)The following are associated with each other—
(a)an individual and the individual’s spouse or civil partner or relative,
(b)an individual and a spouse or civil partner of a relative of the individual,
(c)an individual and a relative of the individual’s spouse or civil partner,
(d)an individual and a spouse or civil partner of a relative of the individual’s spouse or civil partner.
(4)The following are associated with each other—
(a)a person as trustee of a settlement and an individual who (in relation to the settlement) is a settlor,
(b)a person as trustee of a settlement and a person associated with an individual who (in relation to the settlement) is a settlor.
(5)The following are associated with each other—
(a)a person and a body of persons of which the person has control,
(b)a person and a body of persons of which persons associated with the person have control,
(c)a person and a body of persons of which the person and persons associated with the person have control,
(d)two or more bodies of persons associated with the same person under paragraphs (a) to (c).
(6)In relation to a disposal by joint owners, the joint owners and any person associated with any of them are associated with each other.
(7)For the purposes of this section—
(a)a relative is a brother, sister, ancestor or lineal descendant,
(b)a body of persons includes a partnership, and
(c)“settlement” and “settlor” have the meanings given by section 620 of ITTOIA 2005.
For the purposes of this Chapter a capital sum is any sum of money, or any money’s worth, except so far as it or any part of it—
(a)is to be treated for corporation tax purposes as a receipt to be taken into account in calculating the profits or losses of a trade, or
(b)is (apart from this Chapter) chargeable to corporation tax under or by virtue of any provision to which section 1173 applies (miscellaneous charges).
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2)A lease is (in relation to an asset) an agreement or arrangement under which payments are made for the use of or otherwise in respect of the asset.
(3)In particular it includes an agreement or arrangement under which the payments (or any of them) represent instalments of a purchase price or payments towards it.
For the purposes of this Chapter a relevant asset is any description of property or rights other than land or an interest in land.
For the purposes of this Chapter each of the following is a deduction by way of relevant tax relief—
(a)a deduction in calculating profits or losses of a trade for corporation tax purposes,
(b)a deduction in calculating any loss for which relief is given under section 91 (losses from miscellaneous transactions), or in calculating profits or gains chargeable to corporation tax under or by virtue of any provision to which section 1173 applies (miscellaneous charges),
(c)a deduction under section 76 of ICTA (insurance companies),
(d)a deduction under section 1219 of CTA 2009 (expenses of management of a company’s investment business),
(e)a deduction in calculating profits or losses of a trade, profession or vocation for income tax purposes,
(f)a deduction in calculating any loss for which relief is allowed under section 152 of ITA 2007 (losses from miscellaneous transactions), or in calculating profits or other income or gains chargeable to income tax under or by virtue of any provision to which section 1016 of that Act applies, and
(g)a deduction from earnings allowed under section 336 of ITEPA 2003 (expenses) or allowed in calculating losses in an employment for income tax purposes.
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