Remember Me
forgot your password?

Mind Your Own Business – Inheritance Tax and Business Property Relief

A recent decision by the Special Commissioners in Belfast highlighted a distinction between Agricultural Property Relief (APR) and Business Property Relief (BPR) that is of importance to anyone who owns agricultural land. The case has the snappy title of “Philip Norman McCall and Bernard Joseph Anthony Keenan (personal Representatives of Eileen McClean deceased) v The Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs”, and it dealt with APR and BPR.

When you die, Inheritance Tax (IHT) is payable on the value of your estate to the extent it is greater than the “nil rate band” which is currently £312,000. There are a number of reliefs that can be claimed, and the two most important are BPR and APR.

APR reduces the value of “agricultural property” in your estate by up to 100%, giving what is effectively an exemption from IHT, providing certain conditions are met. It would take a book to cover the detail of this, but what we are concerned with here are the exemptions available when you “occupy” land “for the purposes of agriculture”.

Obviously, a traditional farmer who owns and farms his land will qualify for this, but on the margin there are those who own the land but receive payment from someone else for using it. This commonly occurs when a farmer is getting on in years, or perhaps he has died and his widow does not want the trouble of actually farming the land herself. Or perhaps he is a “lifestyle farmer” who bought the place because he enjoys the country life, but is too busy to farm it himself.

One way in which the “occupation” condition has traditionally been met in such cases is to let the land for “grass keep”. Grass keep is an arrangement between the landowner and a third party (“the grazier”). The grazier has the right to graze his animals (sheep or cattle, typically, because horses are not “agricultural” except in special cases) on the land for a period of less than the full 365 days in any year, and the landowner undertakes to deal with hedging, ditching, mending gates and fences, and generally keeping the land in good condition.

It is well settled in law that a properly drawn up agreement for grass keep has the effect of leaving the landowner in “occupation” of the land “for the purposes of agriculture”, so on his death APR can be claimed at 100%.

In fact, 100% APR is also available in most cases where the land is let out on an ordinary tenancy to another farmer, but there are two crucial differences as a result of the landowner no longer being the “occupier”. One of these is that unless the landowner is also the farmer, the farmhouse occupied by the landowner will not qualify for APR, and the other is that APR is only available on the “agricultural value” of the land.

The “agricultural value” of land is its market value estimated on the assumption that it could never be used for anything except farming. If the land has development value because it has planning permission, or even “hope value” because it might get planning permission in the future, that part of its value is not covered by APR. Those who know their land values will appreciate that, even with the price of farmland up to £6,000 per acre these days, the development value, or hope value, may well be many times the agricultural value.

This is why it has been considered good tax planning to ensure that the landowner remains in “occupation” of the land. In the case of a farmer and his land, BPR comes to the rescue where APR fails to provide relief for the full value of the land.

BPR does not draw a distinction between agricultural value and market value. If the landowner is using the land for his trade at the time of his death, then BPR (also at 100%) covers any of the value of the land which is not covered by APR.

There has been a perhaps rather glib assumption that provided you met the “occupation” condition for APR, you were deemed to be farming the land yourself, so BPR would kick in as described above.

The Special Commissioner in Belfast did not agree. He accepted (indeed it was not in dispute) that APR was due on the land involved, because it was being grazed under an agreement for “agistment” (which is the Northern Irish equivalent of grass keep), but he did not accept that this automatically meant that it was also eligible for BPR.

The Special went through the written agreements in minute detail, and also looked closely at the evidence of what work was done by the landlord on the land, and he reached the conclusion that although what was done was (but only just) “a business”, it failed to attract BPR because it was a business of “making or holding investments”, which is specifically excluded from BPR.

The decision included this description of the grass keep arrangement:

“The activities of the business consisted of the making available of its major asset to other persons for payment without the separate provision of any substantial other goods or services”

More succinctly, the Commissioner also said:

“The land was used not to make (part of) a living on it, but to make (part of) a living from it; it was used as an investment”.

That is a neatly expressed distinction that I expect to appear in letters from HMRC in future when the difference between the agricultural and the real value of land qualifying for APR is important. Just to end with a flavour of the gap between agricultural value and open market value, in the McClean case, the agricultural value of the land was £165,000.

The open market value was £5,700,000, because the land had been zoned for development by the local council!

James Bailey

http://www.taxinsider.co.uk/

James Bailey

Tax Insider is one of the leading UK Tax saving strategy websites in UK specialises in UK Capital Gains Tax, UK Capital Gains Tax, UK Tax advice and UK Tax Schemes and Shelters. Tax Insider monthly tax e-zine is simple - to identify and demonstrate tax saving opportunities to those who are serious about their tax liabilities.

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Taxes Articles
  • More from James Bailey

Voluntary Disclosure Program – You Must File Before the IRS Contacts You

By: KevinThorn | 01/12/2009
U.S. taxpayers with undisclosed offshore accounts that missed the October 15th Voluntary Disclosure Program are still able to still file a voluntary disclosure under the IRS regular procedures before the IRS contacts them. Taxpayers could be subject to criminal prosecution and jail time for tax evasion.

Tax Debts and the Taxpayer Advocate Service

By: Roni Deutch | 01/12/2009
Have you ever dealt with an IRS representative who is less than helpful? This is a frustrating predicament for taxpayers that just want to put their IRS tax debt behind them so they can move on with their lives. However, it is easy to forget that the IRS is staffed by human beings with all the common foibles of ordinary people.

The Challenges of Being a US Taxpayer Living Abroad

By: Roni Deutch | 01/12/2009
If you thought filing a tax return every year as an American citizen was overwhelming, then you may be astounded to learn how difficult paying taxes are for a U.S. citizen living abroad. All American citizens are required to pay their taxes, regardless of whether they are living and/or working outside the country.

Peace of Mind

By: David Pedersen | 30/11/2009
IRS Tax Debt Relief

Voluntary Disclosure Program - U.S. Taxpayers Can Still File

By: KevinThorn | 30/11/2009
The Voluntary Disclosure Program deadline to apply to the IRS Offshore Settlement Initiative came and went. However U.S. taxpayers still can and should file a voluntary disclosure under the IRS regular procedures before the IRS contacts them.

What if I lost my last year tax return?

By: Petter Smith | 30/11/2009
It happens every year. Just when you get motivated to get rolling on your taxes, you realize you can’t find the return you filed last year.

Tax Implications of the Affordable Health Care for America Act

By: Roni Deutch | 29/11/2009
The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed HR3962: the Affordable Health Care for America Act of 2009. The legislation is thousands of pages long, making it difficult for regular taxpayers to understand how the bill will affect them.

Foreign Income Tax Breaks

By: Roni Deutch | 29/11/2009
The tax breaks available to foreign income earners are: the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion, the Foreign Housing Exclusion, and the Foreign Housing Deduction. In order to claim any of these deductions, your tax home must be in a foreign country, you must have foreign earned income, and you must meet the requirements of the bona fide presence test or the physical presence test. This is where the rules become convoluted and difficult to apply.

The Last Gas-guzzler – Changes in the Rules for Capital Allowances on Cars

By: James Bailey | 22/12/2008 | Taxes
This article looks at the new rules for capital allowances on cars bought by businesses. There has been a long consultation process and the new rules were announced in the Pre Budget Report, followed up by a "Technical Note" which dealt with the details of the new regime. For more please read full article:

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.07, 1, w1)