IHTM35100 - Consideration brought in from outside the estate
IHTA84/S142 (1) does not apply to a variation or disclaimer
if it is made to any extent for a consideration in money or money's
worth not provided out of the death estate (
IHTM35071), IHTA84/S142 (3).
These provisions apply mainly where, in effect, the
beneficiary under a redirection made by a variation (or as a result
of a disclaimer) purchases out of his or her own pocket a benefit
from the person entitled under the deceased's Will, etc. Its
primary purpose is to ensure that spouse, civil partner (
IHTM11032) or charity exemption is not
available for property given to non-exempt beneficiaries.
A disclaimer or variation made to avoid or compromise a claim
under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act
1975 is accepted as not caught by s142(3) unless the deceased dies
domiciled outside the UK, in which case the matter should be
referred to TG. The bar against consideration relates only to
extraneous consideration and will not prevent a rearrangement of
assets within the will.
You should refer at an early stage to TG any case where
- it is thought a variation or disclaimer may have been made for extraneous consideration, or
- there is any doubt about possible extraneous consideration.
Example 1
A dies leaving his estate worth £400,000 to his sons.
The sons enter into a variation redirecting the estate to their
mother (to try to obtain spouse or civil partner exemption from
IHT).
However, the mother uses £400,000 from her own resources
(or borrows the money) to compensate the sons for the loss of their
shares in father's estate.
But for IHTA84/S142 (3), the net result would be that the
sons still get £400,000 but no IHT would be payable.
Subsection (3) steps in to disapply subsection (1) with the result
that the variation cannot be taken into account in determining the
tax payable on the father's death. Thus, spouse or civil partner
exemption is denied and the estate remains chargeable to tax.
Example 2
By Will T leaves a house to A. By an IoV A, with gratuitous
intent, transfers the house to B for a consideration equal to a
quarter of its value. B finds that consideration from his or her
own resources.
IHTA84/S142 (3) prevents IHTA84/S142 (1) from applying to the
IoV.
Example 3
C dies leaving a house to his daughter. She makes a variation
redirecting the house to her mother. To compensate her for the loss
of the house, her brother pays her its value from his own
resources.
Because the variation was made for a consideration not
provided out of C's death estate, it is not within IHTA84/S142
(1).
