CG78702 - Compensation: confiscated property: capital sums
In these cases we regard such compensation as chargeable to
Capital Gains Tax as a capital sum, being money or money's worth,
which is derived from an asset, TCGA92/S22. However, the asset is
not the original property itself, but the statutory right to
compensation arising from either the agreement between the two
Governments or the foreign legislation.
The argument that the compensation derives from the
statutory right to compensation is based on the judgement in
Davenport v Chilver 57TC661.
Miss Chilver and her mother owned property in Latvia which
had been confiscated in 1940. In 1969, Miss Chilver claimed
compensation under the UK-USSR agreement of that year, see CG78710.
She claimed in her own right and as a beneficiary of her mother's
estate. The Court held that while the compensation for her own
property represented compensation for the loss of that property,
the compensation for her late mother's property was derived from
her right to claim under the 1969 agreement. CG12050+ tell you more
about this case.
We now consider that we would not distinguish between the
two types of claim. If you are dealing with compensation received
under either a later agreement, see CG78710+, or foreign
legislation, see CG78750+, you should argue that it derives from
the statutory right even if the person receiving the compensation
originally owned the property.
