CA28980 - PMA - Anti-avoidance: Finance leaseback: Transitional provisions
FA04/SCH23
The legislation in CAA01/S228A to S228J applies for chargeable
periods ending on or after 17 March 2004. There are transitional
provisions in Schedule 23 for existing leasebacks and transitional
periods of account. Broadly, these transitional provisions preserve
the lessee’s deductions for and the lessor’s income
from pre-commencement rentals. CAA01/S228E provides special rules
for the calculation of chargeable gains where existing leasebacks
in lease and finance leaseback arrangements are terminated. These
are the definitions that apply to the transitional provisions.
Pre-commencement rentals are amounts payable
before 17 March 2004, amounts payable after 17 March 2004 in
respect of rental periods ending before that date, and an
apportioned amount of rentals payable after 17 March 2004 in
respect of a transitional period of account.
An
existing leaseback is a leaseback the term of
which began before 17 March 2004.
A
transitional period of account is a period of
account that includes 17 March 2004.
The
appropriate fraction for a period is no of days
before 17 March 2004 / whole period.
CAA01/S228B
Where there is a sale and finance leaseback
CA28920 Section 228B restricts the lease
rentals that may be deducted in computing the lessee’s income
or profits to the permitted maximum. This restriction is intended
to recover any tax free sum that the lessee may have received
because the disposal value brought to account when the sale and
finance leaseback was entered into was restricted.
The
lessee’s excess rentals are the rentals that
would have been deducted before the introduction of the legislation
minus the actual rental deductions allowed. The transitional
provisions allow a deduction for the excess rentals.
Example Bob pays rent of £100,000 for his
accounting period ended 24 May 2004. The rental deductions allowed
are £80,000. Bob’s excess rentals are £20,000
(£100,000 - £80,000).
If the lessee has excess rentals (CA28920) Section 228B is
amended for the transitional period of account and later periods to
allow them. The rules end when the lessee’s excess rentals
have been allowed in full.
For the transitional period of account and later periods the
permitted maximum (CA28920) for an accounting period is increased.
The increased permitted maximum is the excess rentals that have not
yet been relieved plus a fraction of the usual permitted maximum
for that period. The fraction is:
| Notional rental reduction less deductible excess |
| Notional rental deduction |
The
notional rental deduction is the deduction that
would have been allowed if Section 228B had not applied.
The
deductible excess is the excess rentals or the
unrelieved portion of the excess rentals.
In the transitional period of account the permitted maximum
is the higher of the increased permitted maximum given by the above
calculation and the appropriate fraction of the notional rental for
that period.
If a termination occurs in the transitional period of account
the permitted maximum is not affected by the transitional
provisions outlined above.
If the lease terminates before all of the unrelieved portion
of the excess rentals can be used increase the permitted maximum
for the accounting period in which the lease terminates by the
excess rentals that cannot be used.
CAA01/S228C
Section 228C does not apply if a leaseback terminates before 17
March 2004.
If a leaseback terminates early
CA28930 Section 228C increases the
lessee’s profits to recover the rest of the tax-free sum that
would have been recovered by Section 228B. If this profits increase
is more than the relevant cap, the part of the profits increase
that is more than the relevant cap is ignored.
The
relevant cap is:
| (Original consideration – relevant rentals) x net consideration |
| Original consideration |
The
original consideration is the consideration
payable to the person who sold the plant and entered into the
leaseback
The
net consideration is the difference between the
amount the seller received for entering into the sale and finance
leaseback and the restricted disposal value that was brought to
account. That is, it is the tax-free amount that the seller
received.
The
relevant rentals are the pre-commencement rentals
minus both the finance charges shown in the accounts for periods
that end before 17 March 2004 and the appropriate proportion of
finance charges shown in accounts for the transitional period of
account.
After the introduction of the legislation in CAA01/S228A to
S228J people may decide that they no longer want sale and finance
leaseback arrangements they have entered into. The transitional
provisions let the parties to a sale and finance leaseback unwind
the transaction without incurring the Section 228C charge
CA28930 provided that certain conditions
are satisfied. These are the conditions that have to be
satisfied:
- The leaseback terminates early.
- Within one month of the termination date the lessee becomes the owner of the asset by acquiring it from the lessor or a person connected with the lessee.
- No person who is not connected with the lessee has owned the asset in the period between the sale by the lessor and the acquisition by the lessee.
- The lessor must have sold the asset at a price not less than market value.
- The lessee’s qualifying expenditure is restricted by CAA01/S226 CA28550.
Section 226 restricts the buyer’s qualifying expenditure
when an asset that has been the subject of a sale and finance
leaseback is sold. The unwinding rules vary depending upon whether
or not the Section 226 restriction is more than the Section 228C
charge.
If the Section 226 restriction is more than the Section 228C
(3) amount and there is not a disposal event for 6 years from the
termination date then Section 228C does not apply. If the asset is
disposed of within 6 years then an amount based on the disposal
proceeds is brought to account.
If the Section 226 restriction is not more than the Section
228C charge then the Section 228C charge is reduced by the Section
226 restriction with the same six-year rule applying to any
subsequent disposal. The balance of the Section 226 charge is held
over until the asset is disposed of.
When the asset is finally disposed of this is treated as a
termination of the leaseback for the purposes of Section 228C. The
Section 228C (2) profits increase takes account of the final sales
proceeds. The adjustment ensures that the operation of Section 228C
(3) takes account of the ultimate disposal proceeds (or market
value if higher) after excluding the restricted amount qualifying
for capital allowances.
CAA01/S228D
Where there is a sale and leaseback Section 228D
CA28940 leaves the amounts received under
the sale and leaseback that are above the permitted threshold out
of account. If the pre- commencement rentals are more than the
actual rentals taken into account in computing the lessor’s
income from the leaseback for periods of account ending before the
transitional period there are rules about Section 228D. These are
the rules.
The lessor’s excess rentals are the pre-commencement
rentals minus the actual rentals that should be taken into account
in computing the lessor’s income or profits for a period of
account.
If in the transitional period or a later period the
lessor’s excess rentals, or any untaxed portion of the
lessor’s excess rentals, are more than the amount that would
be taken into account before the permitted threshold introduced by
Section 228D, then Section 228D does not apply for that period.
If there are excess rentals, or an untaxed portion, for an
accounting period that are less than the amount that would have
been taxed before Section 228D introduced the permitted threshold ,
then you increase the permitted threshold for that accounting
period. The permitted threshold is increased to the excess rentals
plus a fraction of the normal permitted threshold. The fraction for
an accounting period is:
| Notional rental deduction |
| The rental that would have been included if Section 228D did not apply |
In the transitional period the permitted threshold is the
greater of the amount given by the above calculation and the
appropriate fraction of the rental that would have been included if
Section 228D did not apply.
If a termination occurs in the transitional year then the
permitted threshold rules in Section 228D (4) can be increased.
The transitional rules end when the lessor excess rentals
have been fully taxed.
If the leaseback terminates before all of the untaxed portion
of the lessor’s excess rentals can be taxed then the balance
is taxed in that period by increasing the permitted threshold.
CAA01/S228E
Section 228E does not apply if the leaseback terminates before
17 March 2004.
When the leaseback in a lease and finance leaseback
CA28940 where the owner has received a
premium terminates, the owner may then dispose of the asset that
was leased and leased back. If a chargeable gain arises on the
disposal only part of the gain is taken into account for the
purposes of capital gains tax or corporation tax on chargeable
gains.
This is the part that is taken into account. It is:
| Chargeable gain x net rentals – termination charge |
| Lease premium |
Net rentals are the total of the lessee’s
deduction for rents minus the finance charges for the leaseback in
the lessee’s accounts.
Termination charge is the amount by which the
lessee’s income or profits are increased by CAA01/S228C (2)
CA28930.
Lease premium is the premium that the person
received for entering into the lease and finance leaseback.
