BIM35630 - Capital/revenue divide: intangible assets: assignment of onerous lease
Expenditure to secure assignment of lease
Where a property is leased and that lease is a capital asset of
the trade then any expenditure on altering, extending, assigning or
exiting the lease are on capital account.
In Southern Counties Agricultural Trading Society Ltd (SCATS)
v Blackler (SPC198) SCATS occupied office premises for the purposes
of its trade. The office was occupied under a lease subject to a
dilapidation provision. SCATS considered that it might have failed
to meet its obligations under that provision and wanted to be rid
of the burden before the next rent review.
SCATS agreed to assign the lease to AT&T Products (ATTP)
for £1. SCATS granted ATTP an underlease and paid ATTP a sum
of £150,000 plus VAT (referred to in the negotiations as a
'reverse premium' and described in the agreement as 'the
compensation payment'). ATTP accepted that there was no implied
covenant that SCATS had complied with the dilapidation provision
and agreed to indemnify SCATS for any claims for breach of the
dilapidation provision that might arise.
The Special Commissioner found that the £150,000 was a
payment made to secure the disposal of a disadvantageous capital
asset (the lease) and held that no deduction was due:
Mr Goodfellow (Counsel for SCATS) wishes me to look only at one aspect of the agreement between SCATS and AT&T Products, namely the acceptance by the latter company of the obligation to make good the dilapidations. The inspector on the other hand asks me to look at the whole picture involving the assumption of the burden of the dilapidations by AT&T Products, the disposal of the lease of the Northgate premises by SCATS and the acquisition by SCATS of its new premises at Capital House.
Bearing in mind the guidance which I have received from the authorities it is my judgement that the arguments of Mr Goodall, the Inspector, are to be preferred and the appeal therefore fails. In my view the payment made by SCATS is to be characterised as a payment of a capital nature. It was made to ensure the disposal of a disadvantageous capital asset (and incidentally to acquire a less disadvantageous capital asset).
See also Tucker v Granada Motorway Services Ltd [1979] 53TC92 described at BIM35320.
