CA12100 - General: Combined sales: Property sold with other property
CAA01/S562 (1) - (3)
You may have a case where:
- assets that have qualified for capital allowances are sold together with other assets that have not; or
- several items of plant and machinery are sold together but have expenditure in different pools.
If so, you may need to break down one sale price that covers everything in order to deal with the separate assets. You do so on the basis of a just and reasonable apportionment.
For example, the sale price of a shop may include something for
the premises and goodwill, which have not qualified for capital
allowances, and something for fixtures and fittings, which have.
Where assets that have qualified for capital allowances are sold
together with assets that have not make a just apportionment of the
sale price to establish how much of the sale price relates to the
assets that have qualified for capital allowances.
The seller is likely to apportion as small an amount as
possible to assets that have qualified for capital allowances in
order to minimise the balancing charge. The buyer, however, will
want to apportion as much of the price as possible to assets that
qualify for capital allowances. The buyer and the seller have to
use the same apportionment.
If you find out that an apportionment has been made you
should check with the buyer/seller's district to make sure that the
buyer/seller has used the same apportionment in their capital
allowance computations as your taxpayer. You should not accept your
taxpayer's computations if different figures have been used.
Example Peter sells a pub together with its
fixtures and fittings to Dennis for £300,000. Peter has
claimed capital allowances on the fixtures and fittings. Peter's
apportionment is pub £280,000; fixtures £20,000. Dennis's
apportionment is pub £230,000; fixtures £70,000. Neither
Peter's nor Dennis's capital allowance computations should be
accepted until they both use the same apportionment.
You should ignore any apportionment figures shown in the sale
documents if those figures seem unreasonable. You must remember
that if the total sales figure has been negotiated at arm's length
you cannot change that total sales figure. If you think that the
apportionment given by the taxpayer undervalues the assets that
have qualified for capital allowances you can only challenge that
apportionment if you can also show that something else has been
overvalued.
If one of the assets included in the combined sale is land
you should follow the guidance at
CA12300.
