BIM14050 - Schedule D: Capital or revenue?
The Income Tax Acts, in principle, charge income and nothing
else. To be taxable, a receipt must be of an income nature and not
a capital receipt. Similarly, a deduction in computing profits must
be of a revenue nature and not a capital outgoing. This principle
is not expressly stated in the Acts, which nowhere define 'income',
but it is fundamental to the scheme of the tax charge. The Courts
have endorsed it on many occasions.
The distinction between income and capital is not one on
which the statute provides any guidance; in any particular case it
will turn on the facts of that case. Capital can be likened to the
tree and income to the fruit of the tree. Many refinements of that
simple statement have emerged from decided cases and these are
considered further in
BIM35000+ and
BIM40060.
The treatment of both revenue and capital can be decided by
specific statutory provisions which override any general principles
which would otherwise apply. Capital sums, which on ordinary
principles are not chargeable to Income Tax, are sometimes
specifically brought into tax. An example of this is the treatment
of profits from certain land transactions in ICTA88/S776 (see
BIM14025 and
BIM60300+). Conversely, deductions for
capital sums are sometimes specifically allowed in computing
profits when they would normally be excluded. Examples of this are
the deductions allowed for-
- certain premiums paid to obtain the lease of premises occupied for the purposes of a trade etc. by ICTA88/S87 (2): see BIM46250 onwards, and
- waste disposal site restoration payments and site preparation expenditure by ICTA88/S91A and ICTA88/S91B respectively (see BIM67400 onwards).
These statutory overrides are usually introduced for economic or other policy reasons and do not diminish the strength of general principles. If anything, they reinforce them by demonstrating the need for special treatment where wider policy considerations take precedence.
