37927236c0c32c10018e767fae382587.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 24
LECTURE 10 DEPRECIATION
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Allowance for depreciation: Capital invested in physical assets used in production of income suffer wear, tear and obsolescence Commercial accounting requires recognition of this by a charge against income for depreciation Tax law permits much the same thing by means of an annual depreciation allowance
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Rules that permit and regulate depreciation: Income tax (Allowances for depreciation and Improvements) Instructions 1998 Taxpayer’s general authority to claim for depreciation found in paragraph 3
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Three elements to the rule A deduction is available for: Articles/plant and buildings u Owned by the taxpayer u And used by him for producing income u
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Articles or plant and buildings (1 st element) Item may be depreciated if it is either plant or building Important to know distinction between plant and buildings Because rules and rates of depreciation applicable to plant differ from those applicable to buildings
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Basic definition of plant Yarmouth v France (1887) 19 QBD 647 “in the ordinary sense, [plant] includes whatever apparatus is used by a business man for carrying on his business – not his stock-in-trade which he buys or makes for sale; but all goods and chattels, fixed or moveable, live or dead, which he keeps for permanent employment in his business. ”
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Plant is something used in the trade It’s apparatus Mere setting for the trade is not plant Pay attention to function of an item Example A dry-dock is first used to isolate a ship from water and u then house the ship while it is inspected and repaired u
Depreciation – s. 21 n Serving first function u n – dock functions as apparatus used to carry out the trade Serving second function u – dry dock is more than the setting for the trade of ship repair 3/15/2018 8
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Pay attention to details of the particular trade eg. lighting fixtures in a building are not usually plant, are just part of building that forms setting for the trade. However in; IRC v Scottish & Newcastle Breweries Ltd [1982] 1 WLR 322 Taxpayer was able to establish that lighting, paintings and sculptures used in hotel premises were held to be plant
Depreciation – s. 21 n Something that is usually plant cease to be plant if used in unusual fashion eg. boat will be plant when used shipping, fishing, cruising etc. but u ceases to become plant if used for floating restaurant since it becomes merely setting for taxpayers restaurant trade u
Depreciation – s. 21 n Categories of plant and structure may overlap eg. dry-dock is a structure but also plant u Pumps and tanks at a service station are plant but canopy placed over the pumps is not plant but only the setting for the trade u n n Something fixed to a building may become part of the building but Seats attached to the floor of a cinema or a grandstand is plant
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n In order for something to count as plant it must first constitute a capital asset Not necessary that there be a purchase, eg. gifts Yarmouth v France, definition contrasts plant and trading stock Item can change its character overtime CIR v Mc. Kenzie 12 FLR 115 (Fiji case) Cows originally acquired as ‘weeders’ for a copra plantation (their function was to keep down the grass between the trees) subsequently became trading stock when the taxpayer commence operating an abattoir business alongside the copra business
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Owned by the taxpayer (2 nd element) Obvious requirement Depreciation allowance aims to recognize exhaustion of capital invested in physical assets A cost to taxpayer in producing income only if capital being exhausted is his own and this is only the case if taxpayer owns the asset
Depreciation – s. 21 n 1. 2. Ownership rule produces two difficulties: A finance lease of chattels Depreciation allowance for buildings
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Used for producing income – 3 rd element An obvious requirement Capital invested in family car is exhausted as car is used, no depreciation allowance since exhaustion of capital is not an expense of deriving income Exhaustion of capital is only of significance for tax purposes where it is an expense for deriving income
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Note, reference is to ‘produce income’ generally and is not limited to producing business income eg. rent a house, income from property, (investment property to produce rental income), can claim depreciation on house
Depreciation – s. 21 n n In context of business, not actually that item be in actual use Paragraph 19, for plant acquired after 1/1/98, depreciation may be claimed on plant owned and ‘installed ready for use’ (i. e. not yet in actual use) ‘or held in reserve’ by the taxpayer for producing income.
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Not necessary that an asset be used exclusively for producing income Paragraph 13 provides that where asset is used partly for producing income and partly for other purpose, depreciation may be claimed in proportion to income and non-income use
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Calculating depreciation allowance Given that asset is depreciable by the taxpayer, how is annual allowance for depreciation calculated? Building receive their own rules (Part VI) Slightly different rules apply to plant acquired and put into use before 1/1/98 (Part II, Div 2) and After 1/1/98 (Part II, Div 3)
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Plant is depreciated on a prime cost basis (straight line method) - (para 19(3)) Annual allowance is calculated as a percentage of the asset’s acquisition cost Percentage figure is determined (indirectly) with reference to assets ‘effective life’ (para 20) Schedule to the Instructions lists over 800 different items of plant and states their effective lives Starting point in any calculation is to determine assets effective life as provided in the Schedule
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Taxpayer has degree of choice in depreciation rates Taxpayer may select any figure within range Bottom end of range is percentage figure that would ensure asset is completely written off over its effective life (para 22(3))
Depreciation – s. 21 n n n Example: Mill in a flour milling plant Effective life as per schedule is 15 years Minimum possible depreciation rate is 6. 66% (15/100) Top of the range is known as ‘standard rate’ plus a loading of 20% of standard rate Idea of standard rate of depreciation is introduced by Table A para 21
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Standard rate is the rate which would write off an asset at the bottom end of the period, exactly over the assets useful life The maximum rate of depreciation is simply the standard rate plus a loading of 20%
Depreciation – s. 21 n n Taxpayer to select a rate of depreciation, figure selected cannot be changed thereafter (para 22) Taxpayer generally select maximum rate for depreciation for obvious reason that this generates the largest immediate deduction


