A hire purchase agreement provides for the asset being hired to
become the property of the lessee automatically at the end of the
hire period, or gives the hirer an option to buy the asset for a
specified price (often a nominal amount). The seller retains
ownership until the hire purchaser has fulfilled the conditions
specified in the agreement.
Payments under a hire purchase contract are therefore made up
of:
That the payments should be split in this way was confirmed in
the case of Darngavil Coal Co Ltd v Francis [1913] 7TC1, although
it gives no guidance on how to apportion each payment between the
revenue and capital components.
In a typical hire purchase agreement where the lessee
acquires ownership of the asset at the end of the hire period
either automatically or on payment of a nominal amount, the revenue
’hire' element of the payments should be taken to be the
difference between the sum of all the instalments under the
agreement and the value of the asset at the date the hire purchase
agreement was entered into.
The timing of deductions for the revenue ‘hire’
expenditure is based on the accounting treatment, see
BIM45355.
A lease purchase agreement is a type of hire purchase
agreement.
An agreement that transfers ownership immediately is an
agreement for purchase by instalments (capital expenditure). None
of the expenditure by the purchaser is revenue ‘hire’
expenditure.
Under such an agreement the vendor can only sue for
instalments in arrear and has no right to recover the asset.