BLM20120 - Defining long funding leases: basic definition: rules applying to lessees (CAA01/S70H)
As mentioned at
BLM20110, lessees are under no
obligation to treat a lease as a long funding lease if they do not
wish to do so. A lessee can choose not to be within the long
funding lease regime by making a return on the basis that the lease
is not a long funding lease.
This choice must be made for what the legislation refers to
as ‘the initial period’. This is defined as
“the first accounting period or, as the case may be,
tax year in which there is a difference in the amount of the
profits or losses falling to be shown in the return, according to
whether the lease is a long funding lease or not.”
This rule relies on the tax treatment differing between the
two types of lease to establish whether a lease is a long funding
lease or not. Broadly speaking, if a return is made early on in the
life of a lease to the effect that it is a long funding lease, then
that will ‘fix’ it as a long funding lease. But if
returns are not made on that basis it will ‘fix’ it as
a lease that is not a long funding lease.
The ‘initial period’ is defined in the way it is
because the differences may show up at or before commencement. For
example
- where a lease is an operating lease, the difference in tax treatment begins at commencement when the restriction under ICTA88/S502K (or ITTOIA05/S148J begins to have effect ( BLM42040) even if no capital allowance claim is made at that point
- where a lease is a finance lease, the difference in tax treatment may begin before commencement because, if any rentals exceed the finance charge, they will not be allowable – ICTA88/S502I (or ITTOIA05/S148H) ( BLM42025).
A lessee cannot make a claim for relief under the error or
mistake relief provisions on the grounds that a return that shows
that a lease should be taxed as a long funding lease or not was
made in error or by mistake (CAA01/S70H (2)).
Once a lessee has made a return on the basis that a lease is
a long funding lease then that establishes the nature of the lease
in the lessee’s hands. This is subject to the lessee’s
right to amend its return within the time limits for doing so. This
assumes, of course, that the necessary conditions for the lease to
be treated as a long funding lease are satisfied.
