CTM61710 - Close companies: loans to participators: acquisition of control of company
ICTA88/S422 (2) may apply, subject to ICTA88/S422 (4) (
CTM61730), where a close company
acquires control of a company which has previously made a loan that
had not previously been caught by ICTA88/S419 (1). As soon as the
close company takes control, the loan is caught by ICTA88/S419.
Treat the loan as if the close company had made the loan
immediately after the time when it acquired control.
If, at the time the loan was made, another close company
controlled the company, you should submit the case to CT&VAT
(Technical) with the file before making an assessment. For the
definition of 'control' see
CTM60200 onwards.
ICTA88/S422 (2) was designed to counter a particular
avoidance scheme, which had been widely used. It usually took the
following form.
A close company, Company X, had surplus funds which it wanted
to pass to shareholders without producing IT liability (on a normal
distribution), CGT liability (on a distribution in a winding-up) or
ICTA88/S419 liability (on a loan).
The shareholders in Company X borrowed the desired amount
from unconnected Company Y.
For added protection Company Y - the lending company - would
usually not be a close company, for example it could be a specially
formed subsidiary of a UK or non-resident bank or finance company.
Shortly after the loan was made, Company X used its surplus
funds to buy all the shares in Company Y. Company X could then
ensure that the loan remained outstanding indefinitely.
Without Section 422 (2), the loan would not be caught by
ICTA88/S419. The borrowers would not be participators in the
lending company when the loan was made.
Section 422 brings this arrangement within the charge.
