CA22110 - PMA: Buildings & structures: Shelters, huts etc
Advertisers sometimes lease shelters which they have erected and which they use to display advertisements to bus companies or local authorities. If they do that you should accept that the shelters are plant or machinery but note that where the assets are fixtures the claimant must have an interest in the relevant land CA26100.
Prefabricated buildings are not plant even if they can be taken
down and re-erected somewhere else (St. John's (Mountford and
another) v Ward 49TC524). In the St John's School case the school
claimed plant or machinery allowances on a prefabricated gymnasium
and laboratory. The capital allowance claim was rejected. All that
the gymnasium and laboratory did was provide housing in which the
school's activities could be carried on. They were not apparatus
with which the school's activities were carried on. The buildings
contained plant but that was not enough to make the buildings
themselves plant.
Most poultry houses / chicken shacks are buildings or
structures and so are excluded from plant or machinery allowances
CA22010. They are not plant even if they
are used in intensive poultry production and contain automated
systems for ventilation, heating, food and water.
There was an Irish case, O'Srianian v Lakeview (1984,
3ITR219), in which the Irish Courts held that the Irish tax
commissioners had not erred in law when deciding that a deep-pit
poultry house was a single-entity of plant. However, decisions in
the Irish Courts are not binding in the UK, and it is perhaps
unlikely that the UK Courts would follow that decision. Gibson L.J
in the Court of Appeal in the later case of Attwood v Anduff car
wash 69TC575, commented on the decision in O'Srianian v Lakeview ,
saying "
For my part, I have considerable doubt whether
the premises test was properly satisfied in that case".
Similarly, the fixed chicken cages inside a poultry house
should not be accepted as plant.
Refuse a claim for PMAs on a chicken shack / poultry house
unless it is moveable and intended to be moved in the course of the
trade. Mobility alone is not enough.
Treat temporary huts which are moved from one site to another
and used by builders and contractors to provide canteen and toilet
facilities or as storage sheds as site plant. They will then
qualify for plant or machinery allowances.
Do not give plant or machinery allowances on shop fronts.
They are not plant or machinery. There is guidance at BIM46904
about the treatment of shop fronts.
Treat showcases associated with a shop front that are
distinct from the structure as fixtures and fittings
CA21200.
