BIM33040 - Stock: meaning of: what is stock
when the trade includes hiring assets
Where the trade consists of hiring out equipment then the
equipment is the capital assets of the trade. It is not stock. The
equipment will usually qualify for capital allowances, for
example:
- small tools,
- games machines in pubs,
- vending machines,
- returnable containers.
Difficulties may arise when the business both sells and hires
out the same goods. For instance in the plant hire and scaffolding
industry it is quite common for equipment to be either sold at a
profit or compensation is received for loss of the equipment in a
sum exceeding the original cost.
There are three possibilities.
- The hiring activity is the sole
trade, and so when hired assets are disposed of this is the
disposal of fixed assets. The purchase and sale of the assets is
dealt with through capital allowance and CG computations.
- The company has two separate trades,
one of hiring and one of dealing in the same assets. Ex-hire assets
are sometimes sold. They should be treated as appropriated to
trading stock when hiring ceases. The profit on sale is included in
the dealing trade.
- The company has one trade of turning
the assets to profit, whether by hiring them or selling them. All
profits in these assets, however made, are within one trading
income computation. Gloucester Railway Carriage and Wagon Company
Ltd v CIR [1925] 12TC720 was a case in which it was held that there
was one business which incorporated both the hiring of the assets
and selling the assets, see
BIM33030. In that case all of the
rolling goods were treated as stock. This principle was confirmed
in the later case, North Central Wagon and Finance Co. Ltd v
Fifield [1953] 34TC59. An asset can be on trading account if there
is a fixed intention to deal with it as trading stock even though
it is let in the meantime.
It depends on the facts of the particular case whether it is all
one trade or two separate trades and whether the goods are stock or
should be treated as fixed capital assets of the business. Some
factors to consider are detailed at
BIM33045.