IHTM24051 - Character appropriate:
Farmhouses
The factors that might be applied when determining whether a
farmhouse is of a ‘character appropriate’ have been
considered in a number of cases before the Special Commissioners,
most recently in
Antrobus [2002] STC (SCD) 468 and Arnander and
others(executors of McKenna, deceased) v Revenue and Customs
Commissioners andrelated appeal SpC 565 etc.
The main factors to be applied when determining whether a
farmhouse is of a ’character appropriate’ are
considered to be
- Is the farmhouse appropriate when judged
by ordinary ideas of what is appropriate in size, layout, content,
and style and quality of construction in relation to the associated
land and buildings?
- Is the farmhouse proportionate in size and
nature to the requirements of the agricultural activities conducted
on the agricultural land? You should bear in mind that different
types of agricultural operation require different amounts of
land.This is an aspect on which the VOA will be able to give
advice.
- Within the agricultural land does the land
predominate so that the farmhouse is ancillary to the land?
- Would a reasonable and informed person
regard the property simply as a house with land or as a
farmhouse?
- Applying the “elephant test”,
would you recognise this as a farmhouse if you saw it? Although
this test involves some subjectivity it can be useful in ruling out
extremes at either end of the scale.
- How long has the farmhouse and
agricultural property been associated and is there a history of
agricultural production? The matter has to be decided on the facts
that existed as at the date of death or transfer but evidence of
the farmhouse having previously been occupied with a larger area of
land may be relevant evidence.
- Considering the relationship between the
value of the house and the profitability of the land, would the
house attract demand from a commercial farmer who has to earn a
living from the land, or is its value significantly out of
proportion to the profitability of the land? If business accounts
have been supplied, copies should be forwarded to the VOA. Business
accounts can give a useful indication of the extent of the
agricultural activity being carried on. , although a loss making
enterprise is not on its own considered to be a determinative
factor).
- Considering all other relevant factors,
including whether any land is let out and on what terms, is the
scale of the agricultural operations in context?
- There must be some connection or nexus
between “such cottages, farm buildings and farmhouses,
together with the land occupied with them” and the property
to which they must be of a character appropriate. The argument that
the nexus must be derived from common ownership rather than common
occupation was accepted by the Special Commissioner in
Rosser v Inland Revenue Commissioners[2003] STC (SCD) 311.
For the purposes of IHTA84/S115 (2) you should in particular
note that property can include
- the deceased's/transferor’s interest
in an agricultural tenancy or farm business tenancy, even though
the tenancy may be treated as of negligible value as an asset in
the deceased’s estate, and
- agricultural land or pasture owned by a
company controlled by the deceased/ transferor, or owned by a
partnership of which the deceased/transferor was a partner.
You should be aware that for character appropriate (
IHTM24050) purposes land leased by the
deceased may increase the likelihood of any farmhouse being within
IHTA48/S115 (2). But, it may work in the opposite direction
regarding the occupation of the farmhouse for the purposes of
agriculture (
IHTM24060) if the farming operations
and management were being conducted by others from elsewhere.