In many cases of joint right of occupation, the interest of the
beneficiary is easy to identify and although the Valuation Office
(VO) (
IHTM23002) will advise on annual
values, this approach may not be necessary. For example in a normal
case, if there are three occupants equally entitled to occupy, it
can be seen that the beneficial interest of each extends to
one-third.
But IHTA84/S50 (5) ensures that this interest is not valued
as a one-third share, with any appropriate ‘joint
property’ discount because the formula -
| beneficiary’s proportion of annual value | x the property |
| aggregate of all annual values |
produces a value based on the entirety value and excludes any
notion of a ‘joint property’ discount.
The VO should be asked for a value of the entirety. You
should mention that you are interested in, e.g. one-third of that
value without discount for joint ownership in order to avoid
confusion. The position should also be explained to the taxpayer if
they have not taken the point.
Note that IHTA84/S50 (5) begins: ‘where the person
referred to in IHTA84/S49 (1) above is not entitled to any income
of the property…..’. These words refer to this
property, the one in which the beneficiary has use and enjoyment.
The beneficiary may very well be entitled to a great deal of income
from the rest of the settled fund, but that does not affect the
application of IHTA84/S50 (5).
If the interest carries the right to let the property and
receive a share of the income, S50 (5) does not apply [as this is
not use and enjoyment in the sense of living in the property] but
S50 (1) produces the same result.
The right of residence (sole or joint) (
IHTM16131) gives an interest in
possession to the beneficiaries in occupation. If the trusts
provide that in addition to these occupants, a further beneficiary
[who has no right of use and enjoyment] shall have a right to the
income of the property, that beneficiary takes no immediate
interest in possession - the interest in income is displaced by the
interests in possession of the occupants - Statement of Practice
SP10/79 last paragraph.
The ‘displaced’ interest may in practice be
described as ‘postponed’ because the further
beneficiary will take an interest in possession if still living
when the occupants move out or die.
Where a house is given to A for life on condition that he
permits B to reside there with him, it is considered that A has the
sole interest in possession. B has no interest in the house. This
view, which also applied for Estate Duty, might seem debatable, but
it accords with the Pearson case - Pearson v IRC [1981] AC 753
A can, from the beginning, refuse to let B into the property
and thereby lose his own life interest but whether he does that or
not, there is nothing B can do about it. A can later terminate his
occupation, which on these facts also terminates B’s
occupation [the obligation being personal to A].
B has no present right of present enjoyment and therefore has
no interest in possession. On these facts B will never acquire an
interest in possession in the property.
As B has no enforceable right to stay in the property, his
presence there has no effect on the value of the property when any
IHT charge arises under IHTA84/S4 (death) or IHTA84/S52 (lifetime).
There is no element of nuisance value because B, if so inclined,
can only be a nuisance to the trustees.