BLM21500 - Defining long funding leases: funding leases that are not long funding leases: short leases: excluded leases: disqualifications
Not all leases of plant or machinery that meets the
definition of background plant or machinery in CAA01/S70R (4) are
excluded leases of background plant or machinery. Plant or
machinery that meets the definition of background plant or
machinery in CAA01/S70R (4) is not excluded from being a long
funding lease in two situations.
First situation
The first situation is where the amounts payable under the
mixed lease (i.e. the lease of the building and the plant or
machinery) or any other arrangements vary or may be varied by
reference to the value to the lessor of the plant and machinery
allowances on the background plant or machinery.
Therefore, for example, where the lease of a building
provides for the rentals to vary according to how much expenditure
qualifies for plant or machinery allowances and / or by reference
to the rate at which allowances are available will not contain
derived leases that are excluded as leases of background plant or
machinery.
It is likely that any such leases are performing a financing
function and therefore whether or not a derived lease of plant or
machinery is a long funding lease will depend on whether or not it
meets the usual tests.
Second situation
The second situation is where the main purpose, or one of the
main purposes, of entering into
- the mixed lease,
- a series of transactions of which a mixed lease is one, or
- of any of the transactions in such a series
is to stop the long funding lease legislation applying to the
background plant or machinery so that the lessor gets plant and
machinery allowances on it.
The reference to ‘any other arrangements’ in the
first bullet ensures that the disqualification applies where the
payments under the lease remain unaltered but other payments are or
may be varied as a result of the value to the lessor of the plant
or machinery allowances.
An example of one situation where this rule would apply is
where a lessor buys a building for (say) £10m. The building
contains background plant or machinery with a value of £4m.
The building is leased under a lease where the lessee pays the
lessor a premium of £6m, none of which is attributed to the
plant or machinery. The result is that the lessee is, in effect,
only financing the plant or machinery.
