I suspect that the borrowers and the beneficiaries are not the same people?
I suspect that one trust made a contribution/loan to another and the second trust made a loan to a borrower.
Consequently, if correct, then money going back to the second trust will go to the first trust and the beneficiary of that trust is ... ?
It is also a fallacy to think that repaying all/part of the loan proves anything for the purposes of tax (in my opinion).
The argument from HMRC as seen in Rangers is that the sum due to the individual by the employer is taxable at the point it becomes due. That works as a tax analysis.
For tax purposes therefore the money must have then been paid to a trust (and then on to another trust and/or paid as a loan). There is a question about who paid, on behalf of whom and whether the trust was ultra vires - for tax purposes.
In contract law however, there is a loan agreement that has rights and obligations. Repaying all/some of the loan will perhaps verify (or not) the contract law position but will not (in my view) impact the tax analysis.
I suspect that one trust made a contribution/loan to another and the second trust made a loan to a borrower.
Consequently, if correct, then money going back to the second trust will go to the first trust and the beneficiary of that trust is ... ?
It is also a fallacy to think that repaying all/part of the loan proves anything for the purposes of tax (in my opinion).
The argument from HMRC as seen in Rangers is that the sum due to the individual by the employer is taxable at the point it becomes due. That works as a tax analysis.
For tax purposes therefore the money must have then been paid to a trust (and then on to another trust and/or paid as a loan). There is a question about who paid, on behalf of whom and whether the trust was ultra vires - for tax purposes.
In contract law however, there is a loan agreement that has rights and obligations. Repaying all/some of the loan will perhaps verify (or not) the contract law position but will not (in my view) impact the tax analysis.
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