9. CGT - charge Flashcards
LIABILITY TO CGT
- components of charge present
- computation –> gain or loss?
- relief? exemption?
s.37(1) - CGT cannot arise if already income tax charge
rates
10%/18% (basic rate)
20%/28% (higher rate - based on band of income tax)
18/28 = for residential property and carried interest
components of a charge
CHARGEABLE PERSON
DISPOSAL
CHARGEABLE ASSET
CHARGEABLE GAIN
CHARGEABLE PERSON S.2(1)
anyone resident or ordinary resident (and if resident only part of the year, still a charge ESCD2)
LIABLE FOR WORLDWIDE CHARGEABLE GAINS
but foreign investors not caught by CGT unless residential property (unfair!)
contrast income tax –> all income tax receipts in the country are taxable
DISPOSAL
no definition in legislation
CGT leaflet 8:
- ownership changes
- owner divests himself of his rights or interests over asset
e.g. sale, exchange, gift
Examples of disposals
capital sum derived from asset (e.g. insurance paid for damage/destruction to asset)
receipt of compensation/damages
exchange of assets
involuntary disposals
disposals that are not disposals
mortgages and bankruptcy (because no underlying disposal)
mortgages: expect property to pass back
for hire purchase: disposal at beginning but if property doesn’t pass, tax is adjusted
disposals that do not give rise to CGT (NO CHARGEABLE GAIN)
DEATH s.62
INTERSPOUSAL TRANSFERS s.58
CHARITY GIFTS s.256
SHARE FOR SHARE EXCHANGES
COMPANY RECONSTRUCTION
TRANSFERS BY SPECIAL TRUSTEE
FOREIGN CURRENCY FOR PERSONAL USE
TRANSFER OF SHARES TO EMPLOYEE IN EMPLOYEE SHARE OWNERSHIP TRUST
TRANSFERS WITHIN A GROUP
Actual disposals
actual total disposals (e.g. sale/gift of shares)
- CGT Leaflet 8
- straight forward
actual part disposal (e.g. sale/gift of part of a holding of land)
- s.21(2) disposals include part disposals
- s.42: not taxed on whole amount (can reduce DC by some AE of the whole)
CREATION OF OPTION = NOT DISPOSAL (it is itself an asset)
SALE OF 50 OF 100 SHARES = TOTAL DISPOSAL OF EACH 50 SHARE (but if I lose majority, it is a part disposal if shares are worth less)
DEEMED DISPOSALS
Deemed part disposals (i.e. receipt of compensation where an asset is damaged)
- s.22
- s.21
deemed total disposal (e.g. destruction of an asset)
- s.22 (capital sum derived from asset)
- s.17 (bargains not at arm’s length - deemed to take place at MV)
- s.18 (transactions with connected person is not at arm’s length)
ASSET DOESN’T SEEM TO MOVE so disposal must be deemed (s.22-24)
Turner v Follett
300 shares gifted to T’s children
- disposal deemed at MV
- CGT charge
- not a gift tax because it is the gain that is taxed not the whole gift
Davis v Powell
compensation paid for disturbance under AHA s.34 (T gave up lease)
- Revenue argued compensation was derived from the asset (s.22(c)) because lease is the asset
- NO CGT
- cap sum was paid under statute
- NOT sum derived from asset (lease)
Davenport v Chilver
two payments:
(1) daughter’s compensation in own right
- CGT
- derived from interest in property (s22)
(2) daughter’s compensation received as beneficiary under mother’s will
- CGT
- derived from rights under statute (s.22 applies)
- order created independent proprietary right, which is an asset, so CGT triggered
CAN DISTINGUISH THIS CASE BY SAYING THE ORDER WAS A FUND held by Gov to pay compensation rather than a normal statute
Drummond v Austin Brown
compensation paid for terminating tenancy with notice under s.25 LTA 1954
- CA held asset is statute
- CGT applies (s.22 - sum derived from asset)
- BUT REVENUE didn’t argue this (so not taxed as sum was not derived from lease)
Zim Properties v Proctor
S.22 - compensation derived from asset (right to sue - O’Brien)
= CGT
problem: money meant to compensate so if taxed on this is problematic