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Councils ask Supreme Court to thwart SPV solution to empty property rates

The Supreme Court is being asked to rule that the leasing of unoccupied premises to special purpose vehicles in a bid to obtain relief from non-domestic rates constitutes a tax avoidance scheme.

The use of SPVs is one way that property owners have sought to avoid paying rates on empty properties, but the method is under attack by two local authorities whose challenge has been unsuccessful in the lower courts. At the outset of the appeal, Lord Reed said that the Supreme Court will ultimately rule on whether the scheme “works in law or not”.

Lord Reed, Lord Hodge, Lord Briggs, Lord Kitchin and Lord Leggatt are being asked to decide whether a number of developers should still be liable to pay non-domestic rates for periods when they leased their unoccupied properties to SPVs on the basis – argued by Rossendale Borough Council and Wigan Council – that either the leases were prearranged tax avoidance schemes or the SPVs can be disregarded by a “piercing of the corporate veil”.

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