The term “associated person” is used throughout the legislation. Any person who acquires a security by reason of another’s employment is associated with the employee for these purposes, as is any other person connected with either that person or the employee. That group of people can be thought of as within a “box”.
Various chargeable events can occur when disposing of the securities. The aim of the legislation is to charge when the securities are sold outside the box to a genuine third party. Hence the disposal charges are phrased along the lines of “disposal otherwise than to another associated person”. Of course, the employee is also an “associated person”.
When the securities are disposed of outside the “box” they cease to be within the provisions of Chapters 2 to 4A (subsection (5) of ITEPA03/S421B).
The definition of “associated person” is set out in ITEPA03/S421C as:
A person is a “relevant linked person” if-
are or have been connected or (without being or having been connected) are or have been members of the same household (see ITEPA03/S421C (2)).
The broad coverage of “household” is intended to include modern personal relationships beyond the traditional family within marriage.
Before 18 June 2004, a “relevant linked person” was:
are connected or, although not connected, are members of the same household.
The difference is that the earlier definition was in the present tense. The wording was taken advantage of in avoidance schemes. Under the new wording: once connected, always connected.
A company which would otherwise be a relevant linked person is not, per ITEPA03/S421C (3), if it is-
So, if the employer buys back the securities that will be a disposal to a non-associated person for tax purposes.