BIM45705 - Specific deductions: interest: overdrawn capital account
The only foolproof way of ascertaining how much of an overdraft
or loan has funded private expenditure is to look at each
individual entry. This is usually impracticable and it is necessary
to use a reasonable basis as an approximation.
An overdrawn capital account shown in the balance sheet is no
more than an indication that a loan or overdraft is being used to
fund private drawings. You must be able to demonstrate that it is
private drawings, which have caused the account to become
overdrawn, and that the overdrawn capital account has been funded
by bank borrowings. You must look carefully at all of the
components of the balance sheet to judge how the proprietor’s
drawings have been funded.
These sorts of issues were considered in Silk v Fletcher
SPC201 (with final figures being determined in SPC262). The Special
Commissioner’s decision in SPC201 contains clear reasoning
about the facts in that particular case to decide whether interest
was paid wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the profession.
See also
BIM45715 and
BIM45725.
