Background
A series of cases have been working their way through the UK courts in which HMRC has sought to apply the tax charge for "miscellaneous income" to variants of a remuneration planning scheme used by fund managers. In December last year the Court of Appeal, in BlueCrest Capital Management LP and others, upheld HMRC's view in relation to one iteration of the relevant arrangements, and that court has now considered another in HMRC v HFFX LLP and others.
In HFFX, profit share that would otherwise have been allocated to individual members of an LLP was instead allocated to a company member. The company paid corporation tax on those profits and invested the net amounts. These investments were sold in tranches over three years and the proceeds contributed back to the LLP as "special capital". The special capital was then reallocated to the relevant individuals and they were able to withdraw it. HFFX contended that no income tax was payable by the individuals on the reallocation or withdrawal.
Here is a simplified diagram of the arrangements: