IFM22135 - Real Estate Investment Trust : Conditions and Tests: maximum shareholding: reasonable steps: preventing payment of a distribution to a holder of excessive rights : CTA2010/S551(1)(b)
If the company, (principal company in the case of a Group REIT) , has taken reasonable steps to prevent paying a dividend to a holder of excessive rights (HoER), then some or all of the additional charge will not be imposed. HMRC has provided criteria which, if met, may be accepted as reasonable steps (IFM22125).
The second criterion for arrangements to be reasonable is that the company, (principal company in the case of a Group REIT) must be able to prohibit the payment of dividends on shares that form part of an excessive shareholding. It is the payment of a dividend in respect of an excessive holding that triggers a tax charge, not the existence of an excessive shareholding. To prohibit payment would require changes to the company’s Articles of Association.
Second suggested addition to the Articles of Association
This may take the form of a provision that provides that distributions will not be paid in the following circumstances:
· on shares forming part of an excessive shareholding if the board is not satisfied that ownership of distributions has been disposed of (see below for how the board might be satisfied of this)
· on shares where there has been a failure to provide information requested in order to determine if a shareholding is excessive (see IFM22145)
· in any other case, if the board believes the shares may form part of an excessive shareholding.
A company may not withhold payment of distributions permanently, so the company needs to have arrangements for when the withheld distributions can be released. This needs to be documented and the company needs to be able to show that it will not operate discretion in releasing distributions without all the criteria for release being met. Discussion on how the distributions are looked after until one of these events happens is in IFM22145.
Distributions withheld may be released and paid if the payment would not be to a HoER.
Events that could trigger release include:
· the shareholder provides a certificate of non-ownership of the distributions for certification requirements, see (IFM22140)
· the shareholder provides information required to show the shareholding is not part of an excessive shareholding (see IFM22140)
· when shares are transferred in such a way that the right to the retained distributions is transferred, on transfer to a person who certifies that they are not a HoER (and is not holding them on behalf of someone who is)
· on transfer of sufficient shares from a holding so the remaining shares held are no longer part of an excessive holding, provided the right to the distributions on the transferred shares is also transferred (the release here is of distributions withheld on the retained shares).
Before releasing the distributions where shares have been transferred, the company would need some form of certification by the excessive shareholder that the rights to the distributions have been transferred. This certificate and the one covering non-ownership of the distributions must also cover the fact that the new owners do not trigger the 10% rule as a result of acquiring the right to the distributions or the excess shares.
A company would need to document the evidence that a trigger for release of the distributions has occurred in order to show that the payment was made in appropriate circumstances. For detail on how the distributions are dealt with until one of the events happen see IFM22145.