IHTM25292 - Contracts for sale: Shareholdings and partnership interests
Partners and shareholder directors of companies may enter into agreements between themselves to the effect that
- when one of them dies before retirement
- the surviving partners or directors may purchase the partnership interest or shares of the one who has died.
The funds for the purchase may be provided by appropriate life
assurance policies.
Only most exceptionally does such an agreement constitute a
binding contract for sale within IHTA84/S113. For the agreement to
come within IHTA84/S113 it has to provide
- for the interest or shares of the deceased partner or shareholder to pass to his or her personal representatives
- that the personal representatives are required to sell the interest or shares to the surviving partners or shareholders
- who are in terms obliged to buy it or them.
These requirements are rarely satisfied. When they are, the
agreement is called a “buy and sell” agreement and it
prevents the interest or shares concerned qualifying for business
relief.
Much more common are agreements under which
- the deceased’s interest passes to the surviving partners, who are required to pay the personal representatives a particular price, or
- the deceased’s interest falls into the estate, but with an option for the surviving partners to purchase it.
Agreements of these types do not constitute contracts for sale.
So they do not prevent the interest from qualifying for business
relief by reason of IHTA84/S113.
If you consider that business relief should be denied by
reference to IHTA84/s113 because of the terms of a particular
partnership agreement, refer the case to your Team Leader.
(This text has been withheld because of exemptions in the
Freedom of Information Act 2000)
