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United Kingdom

Campbell v HMRC: UKUT overturns FTT on CGT main residence and job‑related accommodation relief, penalties and mitigation; trading finding upheld; case remitted to new FTT

Published on: 08 January 2024

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Campbell v HMRC [2023] UKUT 265 (TCC)

What are the practical implications of this case?

It is relatively unusual for the UT to return matters to the FTT with such trenchant comment. Here, the UT not only identified several errors of law, but also delivered robust criticism of the FTT’s methodology and conclusions. The censure extended to both the approach adopted and the conclusions drawn by the FTT. Of the four grounds advanced by Mr Campbell, the UT agreed with three, quashing those determinations and sending them back for a fresh determination by a differently composed FTT tribunal. Of note, the UT did not also send back the trading issue, even though it considered the FTT had misread an important authority. Should Mr Campbell eventually prevail on every ground, he would have disposed of four properties within six years, realising profits of circa £260,000, with CGT chargeable on only a single disposal. Advisers should be alert that HMRC are apt to characterise arrangements of this type as trading, and to prefer income tax treatment to CGT in such circumstances.

What was the background?...

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