Trusts (Capital and Income) Act 2013

JurisdictionUK Non-devolved
Citation2013 c. 1
Year2013
(1) Any entitlement to income under a new trust is to income as it arises (and accordingly section 2 of the Apportionment Act 1870, which provides for income to accrue from day to day, does not apply in relation to the trust) .the first part of the rule known as the rule in Howe v. Earl of Dartmouth (which requires certain residuary personal estate to be sold) ;the second part of that rule (which withholds from a life tenant income arising from certain investments and compensates the life tenant with payments of interest) ;the rule known as the rule in Re Earl of Chesterfield's Trusts (which requires the proceeds of the conversion of certain investments to be apportioned between capital and income) ;the rule known as the rule in Allhusen v. Whittell (which requires a contribution to be made from income for the purpose of paying a deceased person's debts, legacies and annuities) .(3) Trustees have power to sell any property which (but for subsection (2) (a) ) they would have been under a duty to sell.in any trust instrument of the trust, andin any power under which the trust is created or arises.(5) In this section “new trust” means a trust created or arising on or after the day on which this section comes into force (and includes a trust created or arising on or after that day under a power conferred before that day) .(1) A receipt consisting of a tax-exempt corporate distribution is to be treated for the purposes of any trust to which this section applies as a receipt of capital (even if it would otherwise be treated for those purposes as a receipt of income) .in any trust instrument of the trust, andin any power under which the trust is created or arises.a distribution that is an exempt distribution by virtue of section 1076, 1077 or 1078 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010, andany other distribution of assets (in any form) by a body corporate, where the distribution is of a description specified by an order made by the Secretary of State by statutory instrument.(4) An order under subsection (3) (b) may specify a description of distribution only if neither income tax nor capital gains tax is chargeable in respect of a distribution of that description.(5) A statutory instrument containing an order under subsection (3) (b) is subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament.(6) This section applies to any trust, whether created or arising before or after this section comes into force.by virtue of section 2 a tax-exempt corporate distribution made by a body corporate is treated for the purposes of a trust to which that section applies as a receipt of capital, andthe trustees are satisfied that it is likely that, but for the distribution, there would have been a receipt from the body corporate that would have been a receipt of income for the purposes of the trust.(2) The trustees may make a payment out of the capital funds of the trust, or transfer any property of the trust, to an income beneficiary for the purpose set out in subsection (3) (and any such payment or transfer is to be treated as a payment or transfer of capital) .(3) The purpose is placing the income beneficiary (so far as practicable) in the position in which the trustees consider that the beneficiary would have been had there been the receipt of income mentioned in subsection (1) (b) .(4) In this section “income beneficiary”, in relation to a trust, means a person entitled to income arising under the trust, or for whose benefit such income may be applied.

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