BLM37025 - Taxation of leases that
are not long funding leases: legal expenses: incidental to creation
of lease - capital argument
The argument that expenses incidental to the creation of a
finance lease are capital relies on the legal form of the
transaction (the hiring of an asset):
- expenses incidental to a capital
transaction are themselves capital (see for example,
ECC Quarries, 51TC153;
BIM35325);
- the asset purchased by the lessor for
finance leasing is clearly on capital account (illustrated by the
capital allowances claim);
- the granting of the finance lease is akin
to the grant of a lease of real property and that is a capital
transaction (see
CIR v Wilson's Executors (18TC465) - this case
concerned whether expenses incidental to a real property lease were
expenses of management within ICTA88/S25 but remarks by the Court
of Session suggest that the judges viewed them as capital);
- it is wrong to draw a distinction between
real property leases and chattel leases (see Vinelott J's remarks
in
RTZ v Elliss at pp 172-3 61 TC;
BIM35420);
- in view of the very limited value of the
reversionary interest, a finance lease of a chattel is analogous to
a long lease of land (the clearest example of a capital transaction
in the real property field);
- a finance lease amounts to the once and
for all disposal of nearly all the economic rewards and risks of
ownership of the asset and thus has if anything an even stronger
capital flavour.