|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
|
|
ESTATE DUTY . For purposes of the national revenue in the United Kingdom, the Finance Act 1894 imposed on all property passing by death after the 1st of August 1894 a duty called estate duty, in lieu of certain other duties previously payable. The objects of the act were(1) simplification of the death duties and equalization as between real and personal property, and (2) aggregation of all the property passing on a death, and taxation at rates graduated according to the value of the whole. Before the act a duty (probate duty) was taken on the free personal property of deceased persons in the hands of the executor or administrator
settlement
consanguinity
tenure or destination. The Finance Acts of 1907 and 1909-1910 increased the scale of duties laid down in 1894.For this purpose all property passing on a death is aggregated to form one estate, on the capital value of which the duty is charged, at rates graduated from I to 13% according to the aggregate value. Besides the property of which the deceased was competent to dispose at his death, the aggregated estate includes property in which he had an interest
interest
which property is deemed to pass on the cesser of a limited interest is measured by the proportion of the income to which the interest extended, without regard to the tenure of the deceased or his successor. Property may therefore be included in the aggregate estate at its capital value owing to the passing of a life-interest only, the property being settled so that the absolute ownership does not pass at all. But when the duty has once been paid on property passing under a settlement
The rate of duty being fixed according to the aggregate capital value of the whole estate, the charge is distributed according to the different modes of disposition of the property comprised in the estate. The duty on the personalty which passes to the executor as such is paid by him, as the probate duty was, and comes out of the general estate. For the other property passing, trustees, or any person to whom it passes for a beneficial interest in possession, are made accountable, and are required to bring in an account of the property and pay the duty. The duty is a first charge on such property, and, when it is paid by a person having a life-interest only, he may charge the corpus of the property with it. The duty on real property included in an account is payable by eight yearly or sixteen half-yearly instalments, becoming due twelve months after the death, and bearing interest at 3 % from that date. On other property, except in a few special
consanguinity
For a detailed account of the provisions of the act of 1894 and subsequent amending acts, and of the practical
Hanson
End of Article: ESTATE DUTY If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/EMS_EUD/ESTATE_DUTY.html"> ESTATE DUTY </a> |
|
|
(Previous) ESTATE AND HOUSE AGENTS |
(Next) ESTCOURT, RICHARD (16681712) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements