Course description
This virtual classroom seminar is aimed at tax professionals trying to fight through the mixed use SDLT criteria and why some cases succeed, and some cases fail.
It will review the impact of the ‘ambulance chaser’ who is approaching the claim to obtain an SDLT refund on a refund basis. The importance of the submission of well set out claims from the outset.
It will review the different types of eligibility from a range of woodlands to paddocks. The course analyses the ‘no hope’ claims to those that are very well set out.
Upcoming start dates
Outcome / Qualification etc.
Training Course Content
Introduction
This virtual classroom seminar is aimed at tax professionals and commercial property lawyers trying to fight through the mixed use SDLT criteria and why some cases succeed, and some cases fail.
It will review the impact of the ‘ambulance chaser’ who is approaching the claim to obtain an SDLT refund on a refund basis. The importance of the submission of well set out claims from the outset.
It will review the different types of eligibility from a range of woodlands to paddocks. The course analyses the ‘no hope’ claims to those that are very well set out.
What You Will Learn
This live and interactive course will cover the following:
- The failure of How Developments Ltd in the Upper Tribunal and non-commercial woodland
- The recent success of Guerlain-Desai and how woodlands achieved success despite the amended return
- Achieving the status of woodland not being part of the garden and grounds
- The Upper Tribunal case of Suterwalla and consideration of the grazing agreement
- The paddock in the context of the grounds of the residence
- The status of the commercial arrangement at the date of the completion of the purchase of the property
- The definition of residential property FA 2003 s.116
- The convincing understanding of non-residential property
- Mr and Mrs Bloom, two registered titles, and the sceptic tank
- Kozlowski v HMRC - the irrelevant purchase lease and the time of purchase of the property
- The need for commercial use at the time of purchase
- The success of Withers - the commercial operation
- The failure of Averdieck - the lane was not enough
- SDLT planning from the ‘get go’
- The role of the vendor - ‘future proofing’ the claim for mixed usage
- Farmers selling cottages with commercial land - can it work?
Expenses
MBL Seminars Limited
With over 1,000 expert speakers covering more than 3,360 different topics, our course portfolio is vast and can be delivered either online or in-person. With over 450 years of collective professional development experience, we are proud to be trusted to...