CA21130 - PMA: Meaning of plant & machinery: Décor
C.I.R. v Scottish & Newcastle Breweries Ltd. 55TC252 also involved the setting in which a trade was carried on. The company spent money on light fittings and wiring, and decorative items such as wall plaques, tapestries, murals, prints and sculptures. It claimed plant or machinery allowances. The Inspector refused the claim and the company appealed to the Special Commissioners.
The Special Commissioners found that the electric wiring was
part of the fabric of the building. They found that everything else
was plant on the grounds that everything but the electric wiring
went to create the atmosphere or ambience that it was an important
function of the company's particular trade to provide for its
customers to resort to and enjoy. They therefore found that the
light fittings and decorative items satisfied the functional test
required of plant despite the fact that they formed part of the
setting within which the trade was carried on.
The Inspector appealed against the Special Commissioners
decision. The company accepted the decision that the wiring was not
plant. Both the Court of Session and the House of Lords rejected
the Inspector's appeal.
In the House of Lords Lord Lowry said "
something which becomes part of the premises,
instead of merely embellishing them, is not plant, except in the
rare case where the premises themselves are plant, like the dry
dock in Barclay Curle or the grain silo in Schofield v Hall"CA22050. The items in the Scottish and
Newcastle case on which capital allowances had been claimed were
part of the setting but they were not part of the premises.
Lord Cameron said "
The problem which the Commissioners were
called upon to solve was one concerned with a "service industry". I
think this factor is important because the question of what is
properly to be regarded as plant can only be answered in the
context of the particular industry concerned and possibly in light
also of the particular circumstances of the individual taxpayer's
own trade."
Later on he said "
I think that the Commissioners rightly applied
their minds to the proper initial and fundamental questions which
they had to answer - the meaning of plant in its statutory context
and as applicable to the trade carried on by the taxpayer".
Decorative assets are likely to be caught by CAA01/S21 - S22
and not to be plant, except where they fall within item 14 of list
C
CA22030. This covers decorative assets
provided for the enjoyment of the public in hotel, restaurant or
similar trades. You should only accept that items of decor are
plant if the taxpayer can show that:
- the trade involves the creation of atmosphere/ambience and in effect the sale of that ambience to its customers, and
- the items on which plant or machinery allowances are claimed were specially chosen to create the atmosphere that the taxpayer is trying to sell.
For example, a painting on an accountant's office wall that is owned by the accountant is not plant because selling atmosphere is not part of an accountant's business.
