Revenue Note for Guidance
(1) The transactions which are liable to companies capital duty fall into 3 main groups i.e.
(2) Only the chargeable transactions of a capital company4—
are liable to companies capital duty.
“Effective centre of management” is not defined but essentially it means the location of the day to day running of the company. The registered office is the address of the company as listed on the register of companies in the Companies Registration Office.
The charge to companies capital duty does not extend to—
Furthermore, it is the practice of the Revenue Commissioners not to charge companies capital duty when a private unlimited company is being converted into a public unlimited company. Under Irish company law such a conversion must be effected in 2 stages i.e. from private unlimited to public limited and from public limited to public unlimited. The technicality of having to become, albeit for an instant, a limited company is ignored in such cases provided the public limited company registers as a public unlimited company on the same day as the public limited company is registered and that the public limited company conducts no activities - commercial, legal or otherwise - other than those necessary for registration as a public unlimited company.
2 The issued share capital must be increased by the contribution of assets e.g. cash, shares, land.
3 The assets must be in return for rights similar to those normally attaching to shares e.g. voting rights, rights to dividends.
4 A company limited by guarantee (with or without share capital) is a capital company. If the only undertaking by the members of the company is an undertaking to contribute assets on a winding-up no chargeable transaction takes place until the winding-up of the company. If, however, assets are contributed during the lifetime of the company in return for shares or rights, companies capital duty is chargeable in accordance with section 117.
5 Section 64 (as amended by section 119 of the Finance Act, 1990), though repealed by section 220 of the Companies Act, 1990, continues to apply to redeemable preference shares issued by a limited company prior to 1 July, 1991.
6 If the stock is convertible into shares then companies capital duty is chargeable on conversion (section 116(c)).
Relevant Date: Finance Act 2014