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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> Crosby (Trustees) v HM Inspector of Taxes [2004] UKSC SPC00416 (08 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2004/SPC00416.html Cite as: [2004] UKSC SPC416, [2004] UKSC SPC00416 |
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SPC00416
CAPITAL GAINS TAX — qualifying loans — loans becoming irrecoverable — loans formally waived — claim for loss relief — TCGA 1992 s 253 — whether loan must be in existence at time claim made — no — appeal allowed
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
DANIEL CONRAD CROSBY
BRIDGET JOAN HEGGS
JOHN ROBERT SEED
(Trustees of the E A Crosby No 2 Settlement of 30 December 1954)
Appellants
- and -
PHILIP BROADHURST
(HM Inspector of Taxes)
Respondent
Special Commissioners : Colin Bishopp
David Demack
Sitting in Manchester on 19 May 2004.
Hugh McKay of counsel, instructed by Addleshaw Goddard, for the taxpayers
John Cormack, HM Inspector of Taxes, for the respondent
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2004
DECISION
"(1) In this section 'a qualifying loan' means a loan in the case of which—
(a) the money lent is used by the borrower wholly for the purposes of a trade carried on by him, not being a trade which consists of or includes the lending of money, and
(b) the borrower is resident in the United Kingdom, and
(c) the borrower's debt is not a debt on security as defined in section 132; …
(3) If, on a claim by a person who has made a qualifying loan, the inspector is satisfied that—
(a) any outstanding amount of the principal of the loan has become irrecoverable, and
(b) the claimant has not assigned his right to recover that amount …
this Act shall have effect as if an allowable loss equal to that amount accrued to the claimant when the claim was made …
(5) Where an allowable loss has been treated under subsection (3) … above as accruing to any person and the whole or any part of the outstanding amount mentioned in subsection (3)(a) … is at any time recovered by him, this Act shall have effect as if there had accrued to him at that time a chargeable gain equal to so much of the allowable loss as corresponds to the amount received …
(12) References in this section to an amount having become irrecoverable do not include references to cases where the amount has become irrecoverable in consequence of the terms of the loan, of any arrangements of which the loan forms part, or of any act or omission by the lender …".
"Do the provisions of section 253(3) Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (as applicable at the relevant date) require the loan by the appellants to H Housley & Sons Limited to be in existence at the time of the claim for loss relief by the appellants (being the date the tax return for the period to 5 April 1992 was submitted) for the claim to succeed?"
"Section 23(4) reads as follows:
'If, on a claim by the owner of an asset, the inspector is satisfied that the value of an asset has become negligible, he may allow the claim and thereupon this Part of this Act shall have effect as if the claimant had sold, and immediately re-acquired, the asset for a consideration of an amount equal to the value specified in the claim.'
The subsection operates in this way, that if it is agreed on a claim by the owner of an asset that it is of negligible value, a notional sale and reacquisition is deemed thereupon to have taken place. It is that notional sale and reacquisition which gives rise to a notional loss.
On a literal construction the word 'thereupon' most naturally relates back to the words 'he may allow'. That literal construction may give rise to arbitrary consequences if, for instance, as a result of delay on the part of the inspector, a claim made in one tax year is allowed in a subsequent tax year. In practice, as is apparent from the statement that I have read, the Revenue have always construed sub-s (4) as if the word 'thereupon' related back to the words 'on a claim by the owner of an asset'. That, I think, is a permissible construction, and I can see great force in the argument that if it is a permissible construction it should be preferred to a construction which fixed the possibly arbitrary date when the claim is allowed."
COLIN BISHOPP DAVID DEMACK
SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS