There is no single definition in the taxes acts. There is an ancient definition in Stroud’s Judicial Dictionary, quoting Coke on Littleton:
An annuity is a yearly payment of a certaine summe of money granted to another in fee, for life, or yeares, charging the person of the grantor onely.
From an early case called Foley v Fletcher (1858), 28 LJ Ex 100, the judgment of Watson B at 784-5 is often quoted:
But an annuity means where an income is purchased with a sum of money, and the capital has gone and has ceased to exist, the principal having been converted into an annuity.
From this and other cases, notably Southern-Smith v Clancy, 24TC1, the following factors emerge as needing to be present
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