8. Employment Income - expenses Flashcards

1
Q

Steps to do before talking about expenses

A

s. 11 = net taxable earnings are taxable earnings takeaway allowable deductions
s. 327 - deductions for E’s expenses are allowed
s. 336 - general rule for expenses

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2
Q

MODIFICATIONS of general principles

A

ALLOW deduction of SUBSCRIPTIONS to professional bodies - s.343, s.344

DISALLOW BUSINESS ENTERTAINMENT EXPENSES - s.356

TRAVEL EXPENSES dealt with separately in s.337

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3
Q

S.336 - THE GENERAL RULE

A

Wholly and exclusively

necessarily

incurred in performance of duty

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4
Q

Browne v Bullock

A

necessarily

  • necessity isn’t necessarily obliged by employer, it is necessarily obliged by employMENT
  • obliged to incur by employer doesn’t mean it is necessary
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5
Q

Simpson v Tate

A

doctor subscriptions - doing it in preparation of duties, NOT IN PERFORMANCE so not an expense

overruled b s.343/344 now

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6
Q

Smith v Abbott

A

journalist subscriptions - reimbursements are TAXABLE and not an expense under s.336

  • not in performance of duties (only in preparation)
  • s.336 is STRICTLY INTERPRETED, if it only goes to aid performance but not to performance itself = not good enough
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7
Q

Perrin v HMRC

A

COE said accountant had to pay for course before he was qualified and employed

  • payment for the course is not s.336
  • not his JOB to qualify, so NOT IN PERFORMANCE OF DUTIES
  • it was a CONDITION of his job to qualify
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8
Q

HMRC v Banarjee

A

qualification was part of her job - she was employed under a TC

  • whole purpose of attending was because she was contractually required to do so
  • DE because incurred in performance of duties
  • if training is part of your job = DE (here yes, she was contractually required to attend)
  • no duality of purpose
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9
Q

Roskam v Bennett

A

obliged to work at home because he couldn’t drive due to defective eyesight - tried to deduct a % of household expenses

  • not DE
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10
Q

Humbles v Brooks

A

headmaster obliged to attend a course to improve background knowledge

  • payment for course NOT DE
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11
Q

Hillyer v Leeke

A

payment for suit to wear only for work

  • NOT DE not wholly and exclusively because it also provided cover and warmth
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12
Q

Ainsell v Browne

A

dietary supplements for rugby player - cost of that

NOT DE - it is preparation of duties not in performance of duties

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13
Q

Snowdon v Charnock

A

psychiatrist claimed DE for cost of personal psychotherapy sessions (required for him to qualify as a psychotherapist)

  • NOT DE
  • incurred for further qualifications NOT in performance of duties
  • just for promotion
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14
Q

TRAVELLING EXPENSES

A

s. 337 - performance of duties

s. 338 - necessary attendance

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15
Q

Ricketts v Colquhoun

A

barrister held office as Recorder of Portsmouth

  • DE of travel expense?
  • NOT DE
  • he chose to live in LONDON
  • cost is expended due to his CHOICE of where to reside
  • personal elements is the reason for cost
  • so not necessarily incurred in performance of duties
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16
Q

Owen v Pook

A

medical practitioner held 2 posts 15 miles away - he would be on stand by duty at certain times

  • he was responsible for patient as soon as he received the call
  • travel expense DE?
  • YES DEDUCTIBLE
  • whole journey is deductible because he was under performance as soon as he took the call (as he was responsible for the patient)
17
Q

Taylor v Provon

A

Canadian citizen residing in Toronto for his main job - as expert in the world on expansion by merger, he advised some UK companies and consequently was awarded by “reason of prestige” the director of companies

  • visits to UK, travel expense deductible?

YES

1) only person who could do the job
2) his main job was in Canada

RARE scenario
UK role = prestige role, so travel is NECESSARILY incurred (he had to come from Canada) - not like Ricketts where anyone could do the job

18
Q

Kirkwood v Evans

A

Norfolk home working scheme - travel to Leeds office twice a week = deductible?

NO - it was ordinary commuting! he made his own choice to work from home and live in Norfolk

  • E wasn’t uniquely qualified like the Canadian in Taylor v Provon
  • bills not deductible either because home working scheme was optional
19
Q

Hazel Patricia v Revenue

A

E worked from home for part of the week - not required by R but R provided office equipment

  • E was reimbursed receipts for travel to and from London
  • DE?
  • NO DE
  • working from home by choice is not sufficient to say travel from home to office is deductible
  • s.338 = reduces harshness of s.337
  • travel is not travel from 2 offices
  • nothing about e’s duties that required E to work from home so cost expended isn’t necessarily occurred in performance of duty