Leekes Ltd. – Court of Appeal of England and Wales finds that the ability of successor to apply predecessor losses to income from the same trade did not extend to profits from an enlarged trade

A British taxpayer (Leekes) carrying on a retail trade through four stores acquired, for nominal consideration, all the shares of another company (Coles) carrying on a similar retail trade through three stores, and then effectively wound-up Coles so as to carry on the operations of the three former Coles’ stores directly. At issue was whether a provision - which provided that Leekes (viewed as the successor to the Coles’ trade) could deduct any amount for which the predecessor (Coles) would have been entitled to relief if it had continued to carry on the trade - permitted Leekes to deduct its losses from continuing to carry on the three former Coles’ stores from its profits from operating its four “old” stores.

In finding that such relief was unavailable, Henderson LJ stated:

[T]he words "the trade" can only refer to the trade previously carried on by Coles. They cannot refer to the enlarged trade carried on by Leekes, because that trade had never been carried on by Coles, and Coles cannot therefore be deemed to have continued to carry it on. … [I]t is necessary to ascribe a deemed continuity to the former trade of Coles, although it now forms part of the merged business carried on by Leekes, and relief may only be obtained if and to the extent that Leekes then derives trading income from the former Coles trade.

ITA s. 111(5)(a)(ii) provides a somewhat generous test for carrying forward losses from a streamed business and deducting them from profits from a similar business as described in s. 111(5)(a)(II)(B). In most circumstances, an expanded business would qualify as a similar business, so that it would be unnecessary to address any relevance of the distinction drawn in the above case between the core of the business that is a continuation of that which was previously carried on, and the expanded component of that business (that had been a separate person's business).

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Leekes Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs, [2018] EWCA Civ 1185 under s. 111(5)(a)(ii).