CA33100 - IBA: Relevant interest: Election to treat grant of long lease as a sale of the relevant interest
CAA01/S290 - S291
Normally the grant of a lease out of the relevant interest has
no effect for IBA purposes. The person who holds the relevant
interest continues to be entitled to IBA.
There is one exception to this. The relevant interest may be
a lease The premium paid by the lessee for the grant of the lease
is treated as the sale / purchase price. A balancing adjustment
will be made on the lessor and the lessee will be entitled to IBA.
You should exclude the part of the premium that relates to the land
on which the building stands in the normal way.
A long lease is a lease that lasts more than 50 years. There
are rules similar to the Schedule A rules for establishing the
length of a lease. Broadly, a lease is treated as being shorter
than the term specified in the lease agreement if it looks unlikely
that it will last that long. Conversely, a lease is treated as
being longer than the term specified if the lessee might become
entitled to a further lease when the original lease ends. In that
case the original lease is treated as continuing until the further
lease ends.
The election covers all the construction expenditure and all
the buildings for which the interest out of which the lease is
granted is the relevant interest.
If you get a
late election you should refuse it. There is
nothing in the legislation that gives the Revenue authority to
admit a late election. There is one exception to this. You may
accept a late election if:
- there is a clear in-date indication in the papers or in the correspondence that an election will be made, or
- everyone concerned has submitted claims, computations etc. on the basis that an election has been or will be made.
Warren builds a factory on land that he owns for use in his
manufacturing trade. 2 years later he builds an extension. The
freehold interest is the relevant interest for both the factory and
the extension. 3 years after that Warren grants a 999-year lease of
the factory to Jackson and Warren and Jackson make a joint election
to treat that grant of a long lease as the sale of the relevant
interest. The election applies to both the factory and the
extension. It is not possible for Warren and Jackson to make an
election for the extension only.
The election is made by written notice to the Inland Revenue
and must be made within 2 years of the date on which the lease
takes effect. An election cannot be made until some construction
expenditure has been incurred on the building.
An election may
not be made if:
- the lessor and lessee are connected unless the lessor is a body discharging statutory functions and the lessee a company that it controls. For example, a local authority may grant a long lease of a building that it has built to a company that runs its refuse services. The local authority and the company may make an election to have the grant of the long lease treated as a sale of the relevant interest even though the local authority and the company are connected.
- it appears that the sole or main benefit expected to be gained from the granting of the lease and the making of the election is the obtaining of a balancing allowance.
