Originally posted by northernladuk
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[Tax Planning][17/18] Company structure - spouse
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Originally posted by Maslins View PostEveryone knows your opinion is always correct, so no need for reinforcement from me...
'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostLOL.. I don't think you can say it's utterly incorrect
Originally posted by northernladuk View PostThere isn't enough there for my simple mind to come to the conclusion that Artic stands so this one is water tight. Not nearly enough. So for that I still think it's a risk.... and a bit of a pisstake in my very flawed opinion but there you go.
Originally posted by northernladuk View PostIf it's as black and white as you say we might as well all do it right now.. for what reason? Business reasons or purely tax ones?.. obviously the latter.
Originally posted by northernladuk View PostEach to their own, it's not actually been tested in court but IMO it's not a slam dunk as should be treated with care as indicated by a few other posters.
But for the third time of asking, please explain how a gift of zero value can be considered a settlement?First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. But Gandhi never had to deal with HMRCComment
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Originally posted by RonBW View Post
But for the third time of asking, please explain how a gift of zero value can be considered a settlement?'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostAsk as much as you want. I'm happy to admit I don't know enough about the details so you are going to have to ask someone a little smarter than me. I was only making the point about the advice on Alphabets which seemed to be against the advice of most of the accountants on here, even though it appears possible. In hindsight I should have just left it at that.
And I'm sure that there are plenty of contractors who use alphabet shares (and non-alphabet shares) to give a stake in the company to people who would never be covered by any precedent that Artic set - if the value of the company is £100 (assuming that the company has 100 £1 shares) then the size of the settlement is so low to be meaningless.First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. But Gandhi never had to deal with HMRCComment
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A few points:
Originally posted by RonBW View PostThe OP's situation doesn't seem that far from the judgement in Arctic - as long as the share is not just a right to income, and the share gift has been done correctly, then it would fall outside the settlements legislation.
But as I speculated in my previous post, that's no guarantee. HMRC were able to successfully attack dividend waivers by making the case that the waivers - not the underlying share structure and gift of shares - were a separate arrangement in their own right and one that was solely a gift of income.
I see no reason why they couldn't potentially make the same case against alphabet shares - the gift of shares itself might be protected by the spouse exemption but the act of specifically voting on dividends for one share class - notably to take advantage of a spouse's unused personal allowance - could be construed to be a separate arrangement and again, one that is effectively a gift of income. If HMRC chose to attack alphabet shares in this way, whilst each case would have to be judged on its own merits, I would not be surprised if they won.
It would obviously be different if the OP was giving a share in the business to a family member or to an unmarried partner (for example)
IMO, the circumstances in which this arrangement would be caught would potentially catch a husband/wife scenario too. The spouse exemption is not a panacea. It is still possible for a husband/wife scenario to be caught in certain circumstances and there's more to the spouse exemption than just making sure you give ordinary shares - but I'm not going to elaborate further on this because my view on this has been discussed on here many times in great detail.
Furthermore, the OP is setting the company up just now and so there is no value in any of the shares that are being given to anyone - it would be difficult to argue that there has been any settlement at all, since the company has no value. I presume that this is how some people who give shares to non-spouses (either using alphabet shares or otherwise) avoid the settlements legislation.
However this doesn't avoid the issue I mentioned above - the underlying gift of shares might not be a settlement, or it might be a settlement that isn't caught due to the spouse exemption or for some other reason - but subsequent voting of dividends on a particular class of shares could be.
Remember a settlement doesn't have to be a gift of shares - it can be potentially any bounteous arrangement.
This is just speculation. I'm generally still of the view that the risk of attack from HMRC using the settlements legislation is low and has diminished more and more since the Arctic case (waivers cases aside). But I think the potential for making a case against alphabet shares is there and the more people that start using them the more the risk increases that HMRC will start sniffing around again.Last edited by TheCyclingProgrammer; 30 January 2017, 18:46.Comment
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Originally posted by RonBW View Postevery hearing found that was irrelevant, and that the gift of shares which were more than a right to income, between spouses was not (and could not) be a settlement.
It was established eventually that the spouse exemption applied and therefore while it was still a settlement, it was taxed on the recipient.
It is of course true that the involvement of the recipient in the day to day running of the business - whilst relevant to establishing if there was a settlement (as it could be argued that if the wife/partner/family member was an active participant in the business then there probably wasn't a settlement in the first place as there isn't the element of bounty) - is not relevant to who the dividends should be taxed on. If the spouse exemption applies or the settlor does not retain an interest in the shares and related property then the income is always taxed on the recipient.Comment
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Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View PostBut as I speculated in my previous post, that's no guarantee. HMRC were able to successfully attack dividend waivers by making the case that the waivers - not the underlying share structure and gift of shares - were a separate arrangement in their own right and one that was solely a gift of income.First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. But Gandhi never had to deal with HMRCComment
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