Part 3U.K.Trading income

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

Chapter 9U.K.Trade profits: other specific trades

[F1Cemeteries and crematoria: interests in land]U.K.

Textual Amendments

148Allocation of ancillary capital expenditureU.K.

(1)The amount of ancillary capital expenditure allocated to the relevant period for the purposes of section 147(2)(b) is the amount given by the formula—

where—

RE means residual expenditure (see subsection (2)),

PSR means the number of grave-spaces or memorial garden plots in the cemetery or memorial garden sold in the relevant period, and

PAR means the number of grave-spaces or memorial garden plots in the cemetery or memorial garden which are or could be made available for sale at the end of the relevant period.

(2)Residual expenditure” means the total of all ancillary capital expenditure incurred at any time before the end of the relevant period, less—

(a)ancillary capital expenditure incurred on buildings or structures which were destroyed before the beginning of the first sale period,

(b)the excluded amount of any remaining old expenditure (see subsection (3)),

(c)if, after the beginning of the first sale period and before the end of the relevant period, an asset representing ancillary capital expenditure was sold or destroyed, the net sale proceeds or the compensation, and

(d)any amount deducted under section 147(2)(b) above, or under section 170(2)(b) of ITTOIA 2005, for a period of account ending before the relevant period.

(3)The excluded amount of remaining old expenditure is calculated by multiplying the remaining old expenditure by the fraction—

where—

PSB means the number of grave-spaces or memorial garden plots in the cemetery or memorial garden sold before the beginning of the basis period for the tax year 1954-55, and

PAB means the number of grave-spaces or memorial garden plots in the cemetery or memorial garden which were or could have been made available for sale immediately before the beginning of the basis period for that tax year.

(4)In this section—