BLM74005 - Schedule 12 FA 1997: bad
debts: lessor's rentals within trading income - interaction with
excess reliefs
Consider a new lease within FA97/Sch12 where the facts are
otherwise exactly the same as those of the existing lease in the
Example at
BLM74001.
- The stepped rental profile will cause the
measure of taxable income for the initial years of the lease to be
the accountancy rental earnings.
- When the lessee becomes insolvent and the
debtor balance is written off, the limit on the tax deduction due
for the bad debt is again the amount recognised as taxable
income.
- As the amount recognised as taxable income
is increased (compared with an existing lease outside Schedule 12)
by the excess of accountancy rental earnings over normal rents (the
amounts which would have been taxable but for Schedule 12), there
are no grounds for Schedule 12 to include special relieving
provisions for the bad debts of trading lessors.
But provisions are needed to ensure that excessive relief is not
given as a result of the interaction of the rules in
FA97/Sch12/Para6 for relieving cumulative accountancy rental
excess, with the relief available on Case I principles. The excess
substantially represents rents not yet received which have already
been taxed. If the tax charge on those rents is reversed by virtue
of bad debt relief then there is no case for giving further relief
under paragraph 6.
See the example at
BLM74010.