BIM45530 - Specific deductions: insurance: key
persons: non- trade purposes
Whether the sole purpose condition in
BIM45525 is met is a question of fact,
to be determined by evidence of what the directors of the company
concerned, or the proprietors of an unincorporated business, were
seeking to achieve by taking out the insurance policy and paying
the premiums. General guidance on the ‘wholly and
exclusively’ test in ICTA88/S74 (1)(a) is at
BIM37000 onwards.
Circumstances in which there may be non-trade purposes for
taking out a ‘key person’ policy are:
- where the policy is in respect of
directors who are major shareholders but not other employees,
- if benefits under the policy exceed sick
pay arrangements - or other employee benefits - typically offered
to employees of equivalent status in similar concerns.
For example, where the key person is a director whose death
would significantly affect the value of shares in the company, one
of the purposes for taking out the policy may be a non-trade
purpose of protecting the value of the director’s shares and
therefore the value of their estate.
This was the case with one of the policies in Beauty
Consultants v Inspector of Taxes (SPC321/2002) where the Special
Commissioner decided that the premiums on all four of the insurance
policies in dispute were not paid wholly and exclusively for the
purposes of the company’s trade:
- the first two policies were on the life of
each of A and B, the two directors of the company, were taken out a
number of years before the company was formed, and related to the
directors’ ownership of their private residence - the only
connection between the company and these policies was that the bank
lending to the company had a second charge on the house.
- the third policy was in the
directors’ own names and linked to a first charge on the
property from which the business was conducted under which the
directors’ preference shares would be repaid on the sale of
the business premises - as the excess of the policy moneys over the
secured debts would belong to the directors the Special
Commissioner could not identify any benefit to the company or its
trade in paying the premiums.
- the fourth policy was taken out by another
company of which A and B were the sole shareholders and directors.
It was assigned to Beauty Consultants Ltd in circumstances where A
and B were about to become directors of the company with
arrangements to acquire shares in it. The Special Commissioner
decided that this policy had a dual purpose, similar to that in
Samuel Dracup & Sons Ltd v Dakin [1957]
37TC377. Although the policy would benefit the trade of the company
it would also improve the value of the directors’
shares.
Group policies
Where there is a non-trade or personal purpose in paying
premiums in the case of some members of a group policy but not
others, a reasonable apportionment may be made.