As the top up loan you took out was taken out on the security of the premises itself, the interest payable in respect of said premises is only an allowable deduction against Rental Income from that premises alone”.
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As any of the tax people on here will tell you Bronte, all of that Revenue material you've quoted comes with heavy caveats & disclaimers - at the end of the day the legislation is king, so I think it bears repeating:
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I agree with you that the legislation is king and I think with the last document I've linked which seems to be to be exactly what Capricorn needs. It's very hard for an ordinary person to quote legislation in letters to revenue officials. And you run the risk of them running rings around you in their replies.
Maybe he is dealing with someone in revenue that is dead set on his ways and he needs to get beyond this person.
Also I think it's very important to point out that despite all these guidelines having caveats & disclaimers, it would be extraordinary that if borrowing on one property to purchase another was disallowed that this would not be highlighted. So far we've not found that anywhere, neither legislation nor guidelines.
Ironically you've gone full circle here, because you are now quoting the exact paragraphs from the manual that have caused the confusion!!
But Capricorn isn't me, and bearing in mind as Oldnick said dealing with Revenue can be a bit daunting for lay people, it's a situation where paying a couple of hundred quid for a good tax agent to make a couple of calls and get it sorted would be money well spent.
Yes,the Revenue bolded and underlined the words in the letter to me. The rank of the Revenue official who signed the letter (decision on my appeal) was Inspector of Taxes.
I will try to get my head around this and phone this official's manager.
The issue came up in a normal review of the previous year’s returns. It was not as a result of a tax audit. I appealed the decision to no avail.
I was given the right of appeal within a certain timeframe. I just sent in a letter of appeal stating my case. I was not called to an appeal hearing.
Many practitioners had taken the view that foreign rental losses could be offset against (say) government bond interest (with Revenue disputing this view). The fact that this has now been legislated against suggest that the practitioners may have been correct.
On a related note, Finance Bill 2013 provides that foreign rental losses cannot be offset against Case III income. Many practitioners had taken the view that foreign rental losses could be offset against (say) government bond interest (with Revenue disputing this view). The fact that this has now been legislated against suggests that the practitioners may have been correct.
Just because something is spelt out in legislation to avoid any possible ambiguity doesn't necessarily mean that the person(s) who suggested a different interpretation were correct - surely that's for the courts to decide?
As a tax person, you should have noted my use of the words "suggests" and "may". Of course it doesn't definitively prove anything, however if the "Case III/single source" argument had no merit, there wouldn't have been a need to change the legislation.
Wow, aren't we aggressive - 30 posts in and you're already at everyone's throats!
Since we're into note taking, maybe you should note my use of the words "doesn't necessarily mean"...
Do you disagree withe the point I made? Is it, or would it not be, for the courts to decide?
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