INTM208140 - Controlled Foreign Companies: exemptions - the motive test
The diversion of profits leg of the motive test: United Kingdom company
ICTA88/SCH25/PARA19 (3)
If there is no United Kingdom company actually in existence
which could have received the controlled foreign company’s
receipts, it may be assumed, if it is reasonable to do so, that
such a company would, in the absence of the controlled foreign
company, have been established. It cannot be contended therefore on
behalf of a controlled foreign company that there is no United
Kingdom company which fulfils or could fulfil the same function as
the controlled foreign company.
Having made the above assumptions, it has to be decided
whether it is reasonable to suppose that the whole or a substantial
part of the receipts which are reflected in the controlled foreign
company’s profits in the accounting period would have been
received by a company or individual resident in the United Kingdom.
So the first thing the statute requires is the creation of a
fictional scenario - i.e. that the controlled foreign company does
not exist. As fictions go, that is not perhaps too difficult a
concept. However, it then requires a determination of whether, in
its absence and that of any related non- United Kingdom company, it
is reasonable to suppose that the controlled foreign
company’s receipts would have been received by a United
Kingdom person - including a company which, in the controlled
foreign company’s absence it is reasonable to suppose would
have been established for that purpose.
It seems unlikely, in such a scenario, that the recipient
would be anyone other than the United Kingdom parent - or one of
its United Kingdom associates. The scenario the statute requires
one to consider is one where receipts have been received by a
company (i.e. the controlled foreign company) that we are required
to assume does not exist. In such a scenario it is unlikely that
the receipts will be received by anyone outside the group. The
group has, after all earned the receipts and is unlikely to allow
their diversion to an outsider. So, the only likely destination is
another group company.
The statute then requires, however, an assumption that there
are no non-United Kingdom group companies that could perform the
same function as the controlled foreign company. So, the only
likely recipient now becomes a United Kingdom group company. The
statute pre-empts the potential argument that there is no United
Kingdom group company in existence that could perform the same
function as the controlled foreign company by requiring us to
assume that there is one - if that would be reasonable. So, unless
there is some reason why a United Kingdom company could not receive
the receipts, it will always be reasonable to suppose that, in the
absence of the controlled foreign company, its receipts would be
received by a United Kingdom company or individual.
This will only rarely be the case. One example might be where
there were restrictions under United Kingdom law which would
prevent a United Kingdom company from receiving the receipts of the
controlled foreign company. If that were the case, it might not be
reasonable to suppose that a United Kingdom person would receive
the receipts of the controlled foreign company.
Indeed, it might even be the case where it was the law of the
territory in which the controlled foreign company was resident that
prevented a United Kingdom company from receiving the receipts of
the controlled foreign company. A claim that it was not reasonable
to suppose that a United Kingdom person would receive the receipts
of the controlled foreign company because the law of the territory
in which the controlled foreign company was resident prevented a
United Kingdom company from doing so would have to be looked at
very carefully, however. The growth of designer rate regimes in
certain offshore jurisdictions demonstrates that some overseas
territories are willing to design their laws specifically to enable
companies to avoid the controlled foreign company rules. The claim
would very likely be unsuccessful in such circumstances.
The answer to the question as to whether a United Kingdom
person could have received the controlled foreign company’s
receipts will therefore nearly always be that it could. It is rare
that a United Kingdom company will be prevented from carrying out
business anywhere in the world.
