For many advisers, the House of Lords’ decision in Sharkey v Wernher is a distant memory from a training course. And the facts were so obscure (concerning horses bred in a lady’s stud farm and transferred to her racing stables) that it would be tempting to overlook it. However, the case is in fact authority for a principle that has a very wide application.
According to the House of Lords, whenever a trader takes an item of trading stock for personal use, the trader is required – for tax purposes at least – to account for the profit that would have been made had the stock been sold in the normal course of business.
For example, supposing a grocer takes a £1.50 loaf out of the business for personal use (and let’s assume that the loaf cost her 80p), the grocer is required to report a taxable profit of 70p in her tax accounts.
Clients can be forgiven for not knowing the rule – after all, it makes very little sense from a policy perspective. The more sophisticated clients could even be justified in objecting to the rule, given that it contradicts both the normal rules of accountancy and the VAT treatment that would apply (assuming the stock were not, as in my example, zero-rated).
Nevertheless, the rule has been around since 1955 and HMRC will frequently adjust tax computations to reflect the rule when they spot such “appropriations”.