BIM61601 - Lotteries promoted by sport supporters’ societies: SP/C1, terminology, establishment of conduit
Background
A supporters’ club may promote or run a lottery in order
to provide funds for a football, rugby, cricket or other sports
club. The Lotteries and Amusements Act 1976 only allows lotteries
to be promoted under certain specific circumstances. Lotteries run
by supporters’ clubs are governed by Section 5 of that Act
and are referred to as society lotteries. They must be registered
with the local authority or the Gaming Board for Great Britain. The
society then authorises a promoter to run the lottery (Section 11).
Section 5(1) also covers non sporting societies and whilst
the following guidance is only expressed in terms of sports club
supporters’ societies, it applies equally to societies
established for the other purposes listed in that sub section (see
BIM61605 below for details).
SP/C1
The tax treatment of sport supporters’ lotteries is covered in Statement of Practice C1. The text of SP/C1 is as follows:
Lotteries and football pools
Where a football pool or small lottery is to be run by a
supporters club or other society on the basis that a stated
percentage or fraction of the cost of each ticket will be given to
a club or body conducted and established wholly or mainly for one
or more of the purposes specified in Section 5(1) of the Lotteries
and Amusements Act 1976, the Inland Revenue will accept that the
donation element as stated in the cost of each ticket may be
excluded in computing for tax purposes the profits of the trade of
promoting the pool or lottery.
A football pool run by a supporters' club had its appeal
against tax assessment upheld by the Special Commissioners. When
this question was raised in Parliament on 14 December 1956, Mr
Henry Brooke said:
`The football pool in this case was organised on the basis
that a specified percentage of the sum received from each
competitor would be paid as a gift to the football club. The
Special Commissioners have held that this donation element formed
no part of the receipts to be taken into account in computing for
income tax purposes the profits of the trade of promoting the pool.
This decision will be accepted by the Revenue as governing all
cases where a football pool or small lottery is run by a
supporters' club or other society on the basis that a stated
percentage or fraction of the cost of each ticket or chance will be
given to a club or body established and conducted wholly or mainly
for one or more of the purposes specified in subsection (1) of
Section 1 of the Small Lotteries and Gaming Act 1956.` (Now Section
5(1) Lotteries and Amusements Act 1976).
Terminology
In normal usage, the word “club” can be used to
refer either to the sport supporters’ society organising the
lottery or to the eventual beneficiary receiving the funds raised
by the lottery.
In the following guidance the body promoting or running the
lottery is referred to as the “society”. The body which
is the eventual beneficiary of funds from the lottery is referred
to as the “club” or “beneficiary club”.
Establishment of a conduit
Promoting a lottery is a trade and the liability to tax is not
affected by the destination or application of the profits
(Hutchinson & Co (Publishers) Ltd. v Turner [1950] 31TC495).
However the situation is different where a lottery is
organized by a society on the basis that a stated percentage or
fraction of the ticket purchase price (or other stake money) is to
be given to a club or body established and conducted wholly or
mainly for one of the purposes specified in Section 5(1) Lotteries
and Amusements Act 1976. In that situation we accept that the
society promoting the lottery simply acts as a conduit through
which the money passes from the donor to the club.
The result (as set out in Statement of Practice C 1) is that
the “donation element” of the ticket price (or other
stake money) does not form part of the trade receipts of the
society promoting the lottery.
The exclusion from receipts of the “donation
element” may mean in many cases that the tax liability of the
society is negligible (but see
BIM61615).
See also
BIM24792 onwards as regards the trading
activities of a voluntary organization.
