Finance Leasing Manual - FLM12.44
No secondary period: leases of fixtures
Under general law, machinery and plant fixtures belong to the
freeholder (see Melluish v BMI, House of Lords, 68 TC 1). Thus, a
finance lessor will not own any fixtures it leases out (unless it
buys the freehold of the land on which they stand, which is
unusual). But the lessor may be able to claim capital allowances
for the machinery and plant via a section 53 CAA 1990 election with
the lessee (see CA 2550). In such cases it might be possible, from
a commercial angle, to provide neither for secondary periods nor
for a rental rebate. This is because the lessee owns the freehold
(or a long lease) and therefore the machinery and plant affixed to
that land. The lessee therefore already has full economic title to
the asset for as long as required and so does not need secondary
periods or rebates. At the end of the primary period the lessee
retains the asset.
In Tax Bulletin (Issue 15) of February 1995 at paragraphs
8.7/8.8 we said that we reserve the right to challenge cases where
fixtures leases are, or turn out to be, of short duration if
rentals are not spread over the life of the asset. One (of several)
arguments in these cases if our view is not accepted is that the
rental payments are capital because they secure an enduring
advantage for the lessee - an advantage which runs well beyond the
end of the primary period.
