EIM31664 - The general rule for employees’ expenses: wholly and exclusively: expenditure with only incidental personal consequences
The whole of an expense is deductible where any personal or private consequences are purely incidental.
This can be illustrated by the case of Elwood v Utitz (42TC482).
A Northern Ireland company director frequently needed to visit
London on business. In order to obtain cheaper accommodation on
business trips he subscribed to a London club. This brought the use
of other facilities, such as a swimming pool and squash court but
Mr Utitz did not use these facilities and only paid the
subscription to get accommodation. The Courts held that these other
benefits were purely incidental to the true business purpose and
allowed a deduction.
The circumstances of the case are very unusual and you should
be careful about how this principle is applied. The case can be
contrasted with Brown v Bullock (40TC1) in which a bank manager was
refused a deduction for a club subscription that was incurred to
make social contacts and to keep in touch with other club members
who were customers of the bank. In that case the benefits of the
club subscription were not incidental to the performance of the
duties of the employment but were the whole purpose of the
expenditure.
In the case of Baird v Williams (71TC390) the Court was not
prepared to accept that the benefit to the taxpayer of mortgage
interest payments was merely incidental to a business purpose.
Payment of interest involved a "predictable benefit" to the
taxpayer and was not a "mere incidental and unavoidable benefit".
This illustrates the reluctance of the Courts to broaden the
principle established in Elwood v Utitz.
