Finance Act 2010

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Number 5 of 2010


FINANCE ACT 2010


ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS

PART 1

Cost benefit analysis of tax expenditures

Section

1. Cost benefit analysis of tax expenditures.

PART 2

Income Levy, Income Tax, Corporation Tax and Capital Gains Tax

Chapter 1

Interpretation

2. Interpretation (Part 2).

Chapter 2

Income Levy

3. Income levy.

Chapter 3

Income Tax

4. Amendment of section 122 (preferential loan arrangements) of Principal Act.

5. Cesser of certain reliefs.

6. Amendment of section 469 (relief for health expenses) of Principal Act.

7. Amendment of section 244 (relief for interest paid on certain home loans) of Principal Act.

8. Amendment of section 997A (credit in respect of tax deducted from emoluments of certain directors) of Principal Act.

9. Amendment of section 71 (foreign securities and possessions) of Principal Act.

10. Amendment of section 825B (repayment of tax where earnings not remitted) of Principal Act.

11. Amendment of section 825A (reduction in income tax for certain income earned outside the State) of Principal Act.

12. Amendment of section 477 (relief for service charges) of Principal Act.

13. Amendment of section 216A (rent-a-room relief) of Principal Act.

14. Amendment of section 667B (new arrangements for qualifying farmers) of Principal Act.

15. Amendment of section 384 (relief under Case V for losses) of Principal Act.

16. Retirement benefits.

17. Amendment of section 128D (tax treatment of directors of companies and employees who acquire restricted shares) of Principal Act.

18. Information in respect of awards of shares.

19. Amendment of Schedule 11 (profit sharing schemes) to Principal Act.

20. Amendment of section 470B (age-related relief for health insurance premiums) of Principal Act.

21. Income tax: restriction on use of losses on approved buildings.

22. Amendment of Schedule 13 (accountable persons for purposes of Chapter 1 of Part 18) to Principal Act.

23. Limitation on amount of certain reliefs used by certain high income individuals.

Chapter 4

Income Tax, Corporation Tax and Capital Gains Tax

24. Provisions relating to charities and donations to approved bodies.

25. Amendment of Part 22 (provisions relating to dealing in or developing land and disposals of development land) of Principal Act.

26. Amendment of section 843A (capital allowances for buildings used for certain childcare purposes) of Principal Act.

27. Mid-Shannon corridor tourism infrastructure investment scheme.

28. Payment of tax by means of donation of heritage property.

29. Payments to subcontractors in certain industries.

30. Amendment of section 731 (chargeable gains accruing to unit trusts) of Principal Act.

31. Amendment of Part 27 (unit trusts and offshore funds) of Principal Act.

32. Amendment of section 1035A (relieving provision to section 1035) of Principal Act.

33. Dividend withholding tax.

34. Amendment of section 175 (purchase of own shares by quoted company) of Principal Act.

35. Amendment of Part 3 (provisions relating to the Schedule C charge and government and other public securities) of Principal Act.

36. Amendment of section 299 (allowances to lessees) of Principal Act.

37. Amendment of Chapter 4 (interest payments by certain deposit takers) of Part 8 of Principal Act.

38. Amendment of section 481 (relief for investment in films) of Principal Act.

39. Specified financial transactions.

40. Interest payments to residents in relevant territories.

41. Credit for foreign tax.

42. Transfer pricing.

Chapter 5

Corporation Tax

43. Intangible assets, etc.

44. Acceleration of wear and tear allowances for certain energy-efficient equipment.

45. Amendment of section 486C (relief from tax for certain start-up companies) of Principal Act.

46. Unilateral relief (royalty income).

47. Carry forward of unrelieved foreign tax.

48. Amendment of section 847 (tax relief for certain branch profits) of Principal Act.

49. Dividends paid out of foreign profits.

50. Foreign dividends.

51. Assets transferred in course of scheme of reconstruction or amalgamation.

52. Amendment of section 80A (taxation of certain short-term leases of plant and machinery) of Principal Act.

53. Amendment of section 402 (foreign currency: tax treatment of capital allowances and trading losses of a company) of Principal Act.

54. Amendment of section 766 (tax credit for research and development expenditure) of Principal Act.

55. Tax treatment of certain royalties.

Chapter 6

Capital Gains Tax

56. Amendment of section 542 (time of disposal and acquisition) of Principal Act.

57. Amendment of section 590 (attribution to participators of chargeable gains accruing to non-resident company) of Principal Act.

58. Amendment of section 598 (disposals of business or farm on “retirement”) of Principal Act.

59. Restrictions on allowable losses.

60. Amendment of section 607 (Government and certain other securities) of Principal Act.

61. Amendment of section 611 (disposals to State, public bodies and charities) of Principal Act.

62. Amendment of section 958 (date for payment of tax) of Principal Act.

63. Amendment of Schedule 15 (list of bodies for purposes of section 610) to Principal Act.

PART 3

Customs and Excise

Chapter 1

Mineral Oil Tax Carbon Charge

64. Mineral oil tax carbon charge.

65. Cesser of application of mineral oil tax to coal.

Chapter 2

Natural Gas Carbon Tax

66. Definitions (Chapter 2).

67. Charging and rates of natural gas carbon tax.

68. Liability to pay natural gas carbon tax.

69. Registration of natural gas suppliers.

70. Returns and payment by natural gas suppliers.

71. Reliefs from natural gas carbon tax.

72. Repayments of natural gas carbon tax.

73. Offence and penalty (Chapter 2).

74. Regulations (Chapter 2).

75. Care and management (Chapter 2).

76. Commencement (Chapter 2).

Chapter 3

Solid Fuel Carbon Tax

77. Interpretation (Chapter 3).

78. Charging and rates of solid fuel carbon tax.

79. Liability to pay solid fuel carbon tax.

80. Registration of solid fuel suppliers.

81. Returns and payment by solid fuel suppliers.

82. Reliefs from solid fuel carbon tax.

83. Repayments of solid fuel carbon tax.

84. Offence and penalty (Chapter 3).

85. Regulations (Chapter 3).

86. Care and management (Chapter 3).

87. Commencement (Chapter 3).

Chapter 4

Miscellaneous

88. Rates of alcohol products tax.

89. Amendment of section 98A (relief for biofuel) of Finance Act 1999.

90. Amendment of Chapter 1 (mineral oil tax) of Part 2 of Finance Act 1999.

91. Amendment of Chapter 3 (tobacco products tax) of Part 2 of Finance Act 2005.

92. Amendment of Chapter 1 (alcohol products tax) of Part 2 of Finance Act 2003.

93. Amendment of Part 2 (consolidation and modernisation of general excise law) of Finance Act 2001.

94. Amendment of section 34 (amendments relative to penalties) of Finance Act 1963.

95. Section 186 (illegally importing) of Customs Consolidation Act 1876 and penalties for offences.

96. Amendment of section 3 (penalty for illegally exporting goods) of Customs Act 1956.

97. Provision of information relating to persons, conveyances and goods.

98. Amendment of section 102 (penalties for certain mineral oil tax offences) of Finance Act 1999.

99. Amendment of section 119 (penalties for certain excise offences) of Finance Act 2001.

100. Amendment of section 79 (penalties for certain alcohol products tax offences) of Finance Act 2003.

101. Amendment of section 78 (penalties for certain tobacco products tax offences) of Finance Act 2005.

102. Amendment of section 130 (interpretation) of Finance Act 1992.

103. Amendment of section 130B (delegation of certain powers of the Revenue Commissioners) of Finance Act 1992.

104. Amendment of section 131 (registration of vehicles by Revenue Commissioners) of Finance Act 1992.

105. Amendment of section 132 (charge of excise duty) of Finance Act 1992.

106. Amendment of section 135 (temporary exemption from registration) of Finance Act 1992.

107. Repayment of amounts of vehicle registration tax in respect of the registration of certain new vehicles.

108. Remission or repayment in respect of vehicle registration tax on certain plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, certain electric vehicles and certain electric motorcycles.

109. Authorisation of competent persons.

110. Amendment of section 141 (regulations) of Finance Act 1992.

111. Return of motor insurance particulars.

PART 4

Value-Added Tax

112. Interpretation (Part 4).

113. Amendment of section 1 (interpretation) of Principal Act.

114. Amendment of section 4B (supplies of immovable goods) of Principal Act.

115. Amendment of section 4C (transitional measures for supplies of immovable goods) of Principal Act.

116. Amendment of section 5 (supply of services) of Principal Act.

117. Amendment of section 8 (accountable persons) of Principal Act.

118. Amendment of section 10 (amount on which tax is chargeable) of Principal Act.

119. Amendment of section 10A (margin scheme goods) of Principal Act.

120. Amendment of section 10B (special scheme for auctioneers) of Principal Act.

121. Amendment of section 11 (rates of tax) of Principal Act.

122. Amendment of section 12B (special scheme for means of transport supplied by taxable dealers) of Principal Act.

123. Amendment of section 12C (special scheme for agricultural machinery) of Principal Act.

124. Amendment of section 13 (remission of tax on goods exported, etc.) of Principal Act.

125. Amendment of section 15 (charge of tax on imported goods) of Principal Act.

126. Amendment of section 16 (duty to keep records) of Principal Act.

127. Amendment of section 17 (invoices) of Principal Act.

128. Amendment of section 26 (penalties generally) of Principal Act.

129. Addition of Schedule 7 to Principal Act.

130. Substitution of First and Second Schedules to Principal Act.

131. Consequential amendment of Value-Added Tax Act 1972.

132. Pre-consolidation amendments and repeals (Part 4).

133. Supply of greenhouse gas emission allowances.

PART 5

Stamp Duties

134. Interpretation (Part 5).

135. Information exchange with Property Registration Authority.

136. Conveyance in consideration of debt.

137. Certain investment certificates.

138. Funds: reorganisation.

139. Levy on certain life insurance premiums.

140. Levy on authorised insurers.

141. Amendment of Schedule 2B (qualifications for applying for relief from stamp duty in respect of transfers to young trained farmers) to Principal Act.

PART 6

Capital Acquisitions Tax

142. Interpretation (Part 6).

143. Amendment of section 57 (overpayment of tax) of Principal Act.

144. Exemption of certain investment entities.

145. Amendment of section 82 (exemption of certain receipts) of Principal Act.

146. Amendment of section 89 (provisions relating to agricultural property) of Principal Act.

147. Modernisation of capital acquisitions tax administration.

PART 7

Miscellaneous

148. Interpretation (Part 7).

149. Amendment of Part 33 (anti-avoidance) of Principal Act.

150. Domicile levy.

151. Cesser of section 825 (residence treatment of donors of gifts to the State) of Principal Act.

152. Provision of information by Commission for Taxi Regulation.

153. Revenue powers.

154. Provision of information by National Asset Management Agency.

155. Amendment of section 1078 (revenue offences) of Principal Act.

156. Tax clearance certificates.

157. Amendment of section 826 (agreements for relief from double taxation) of Principal Act.

158. Amendment of Schedule 24A (arrangements made by the Government with the government of any territory outside the State in relation to affording relief from double taxation and exchanging information in relation to tax) to Principal Act.

159. Miscellaneous technical amendments in relation to tax.

160. Amendment of section 1 (definitions) of Provisional Collection of Taxes Act 1927.

161. Gifts to the State by certain donors.

162. Capital Services Redemption Account.

163. Amendment of Bretton Woods Agreements Act 1957.

164. Care and management of taxes and duties.

165. Short title, construction and commencement.

SCHEDULE 1

Rates of Solid Fuel Carbon Tax

SCHEDULE 2

Consequential Amendment of Value-Added Tax Act 1972

SCHEDULE 3

Pre-consolidation amendments and repeals (Part 4)

SCHEDULE 4

Miscellaneous Technical Amendments in Relation to Tax


Acts Referred to

Bretton Woods Agreements Act 1957

1957, No. 18

Capital Acquisitions Tax Consolidation Act 2003

2003, No. 1

Child Care Act 1991

1991, No. 17

Companies Act 1963

1963, No. 33

Companies Act 1990

1990, No. 33

Courts of Justice Act 1924

1924, No. 10

Courts (Supplemental Provisions) Act 1961

1961, No. 39

Criminal Procedure Act 1967

1967, No. 12

Customs Consolidation Act 1876

39 & 40 Vict., c.36

Customs Act 1956

1956, No. 7

Defence Act 1954

1954, No. 18

Defence (Amendment) Act 2007

2007, No. 24

Fertilisers, Feeding Stuffs and Mineral Mixtures Act 1955

1955, No. 8

Finance (1909-10) Act 1910

10 Edw. 7, c.8

Finance Act 1931

1931, No. 31

Finance Act 1950

1950, No. 18

Finance Act 1963

1963, No. 23

Finance Act 1975

1975, No. 6

Finance Act 1976

1976, No. 16

Finance Act 1983

1983, No. 15

Finance Act 1992

1992, No. 9

Finance Act 1997

1997, No. 22

Finance Act 1999

1999, No. 2

Finance Act 2001

2001, No. 7

Finance Act 2002

2002, No. 5

Finance Act 2003

2003, No. 3

Finance Act 2005

2005, No. 5

Finance Act 2007

2007, No. 11

Finance Act 2008

2008, No. 3

Finance (No. 2) Act 2008

2008, No. 25

Finance Act 2009

2009, No. 12

Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest Act 2009

2009, No. 5

Gaming and Lotteries Act 1956

1956, No. 2

Health Act 1970

1970, No. 1

Health Contributions Act 1979

1979, No. 4

Health Insurance (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009

2009, No. 24

Intoxicating Liquor Act 2008

2008, No. 17

Judgement Mortgage (Ireland) Act 1850

13 & 14 Vict., c.29

Judgement Mortgage (Ireland) Act 1858

21 & 22 Vict., c.105

Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act 2009

2009, No. 27

Local Government Act 2001

2001, No. 37

Medical Practitioners Act 1978

1978, No. 4

Medical Practitioners Act 2007

2007, No. 25

National Asset Management Agency Act 2009

2009, No. 34

Nursing Homes Support Scheme Act 2009

2009, No. 15

Pensions Act 1990

1990, No. 25

Planning and Development Act 2000

2000, No. 30

Provisional Collection of Taxes Act 1927

1927, No. 7

Roads Act 1920

10 & 11 Geo. 5, c.72

Road Traffic Act 1961

1961, No. 24

Road Traffic Act 1968

1968, No. 25

Social Welfare and Pensions Act 2009

2009, No. 10

Social Welfare Consolidation Act 2005

2005, No. 26

Stamp Duties Consolidation Act 1999

1999, No. 31

Succession Act 1965

1965, No. 27

Taxes Consolidation Act 1997

1997, No. 39

Taxi Regulation Act 2003

2003, No. 25

Unit Trusts Act 1990

1990, No. 37

Value-Added Tax Act 1972

1972, No. 22

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Number 5 of 2010


FINANCE ACT 2010


AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR THE IMPOSITION, REPEAL, REMISSION, ALTERATION AND REGULATION OF TAXATION, OF STAMP DUTIES AND OF DUTIES RELATING TO EXCISE AND OTHERWISE TO MAKE FURTHER PROVISION IN CONNECTION WITH FINANCE INCLUDING THE REGULATION OF CUSTOMS.

[3rd April, 2010]

BE IT ENACTED BY THE OIREACHTAS AS FOLLOWS:

PART 1

Cost Benefit Analysis of Tax Expenditures

Cost benefit analysis of tax expenditures.

1.— The Minister shall within three months from the passing of this Act prepare and lay before Dáil Éireann a report on a cost-benefit analysis of tax expenditures provided for by this Act, setting out the costs of tax foregone, and the benefits in terms of job creation or otherwise.

PART 2

Income Levy, Income Tax, Corporation Tax and Capital Gains Tax

Chapter 1

Interpretation

Interpretation (Part 2).

2.— In this Part “Principal Act” means the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 .

Chapter 2

Income Levy

Income levy.

3.— (1) The Principal Act is amended in Part 18A—

(a) in section 531B by substituting the following for paragraph (a) of the Table to subsection (1):

“(a) The income described in this paragraph, to be known as ‘relevant emoluments’, is emoluments to which Chapter 4 of Part 42 applies or is applied—

(i) other than social welfare payments and similar type payments,

(ii) other than excluded emoluments,

(iii) disregarding expenses, in respect of which an employee may be entitled to relief from income tax, which fall within Regulation 10(3) of the PAYE Regulations,

(iv) having regard to any relief under section 201(5)(a) and paragraphs 6 and 8 of Schedule 3, and

(v) excluding emoluments of an individual who is resident in a territory with which arrangements have been made under subsection (1)(a)(i) or (1B)(a)(ii) of section 826 in relation to affording relief from double taxation, where those emoluments are the subject of a notification issued under section 984(1).”,

(b) in section 531B in paragraph (b) of the Table to subsection (1) by inserting the following after subparagraph (iv):

“(iva) having regard to any reduction arising by virtue of section 825A, and”,

(c) in section 531B in paragraph (b) of the Table to subsection (1) by inserting the following after subparagraph (iva) (inserted by paragraph (b)):

“(ivb) having regard to any allowances due under section 659 arising from the obligations under Council Directive 91/676/EEC of 12 December 1991 1 concerning the protection of waters against pollution caused by nitrates from agricultural sources.”,

and

(d) in section 531B in paragraph (b) of the Table to subsection (1) by deleting subparagraphs (v), (vi) and (vii).

(2) The Principal Act is amended in paragraph 1(1) of Part 1 of Schedule 24 by substituting the following for the definition of “ the Irish taxes ”—

“ ‘ the Irish taxes ’ means income tax, income levy and corporation tax;”.

(3) This section applies—

(a) as respects paragraphs (a), (b) and (d) of subsection (1) and subsection (2), for the year of assessment 2009 and subsequent years, and

(b) as respects paragraph (c) of subsection (1), for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years.

Chapter 3

Income Tax

Amendment of section 122 (preferential loan arrangements) of Principal Act.

4.— As respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment, section 122 of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (1)(a)—

(a) by inserting the following after the definition of “preferential rate”:

“ ‘qualifying loan’ has the meaning assigned to it by section 244(1)(a);”,

and

(b) by substituting for paragraph (i) of the definition of “the specified rate” the following:

“(i) in a case where the preferential loan is a qualifying loan, the rate of 5 per cent per annum or such other rate (if any) prescribed by the Minister for Finance by regulations,”.

Cesser of certain reliefs.

5.— The Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 236 by inserting the following after subsection (6):

“(7) This section ceases to have effect for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment.”,

and

(b) in section 470A by inserting the following after subsection (12):

“(13) This section ceases to have effect for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment.”.

Amendment of section 469 (relief for health expenses) of Principal Act.

6.— (1) Section 469 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) by substituting the following for the definition of “ health care ”:

“ ‘health care’ means prevention, diagnosis, alleviation or treatment of an ailment, injury, infirmity, defect or disability, and includes care received by a woman in respect of a pregnancy, but does not include—

(a) routine ophthalmic treatment,

(b) routine dental treatment, or

(c) cosmetic surgery or similar procedures, unless the surgery or procedure is necessary to ameliorate a physical deformity arising from, or directly related to, a congenital abnormality, a personal injury or a disfiguring disease;”,

(b) in subsection (1) in the definition of “ health expenses ” by substituting the following for paragraph (c):

“(c) maintenance or treatment necessarily incurred in connection with the services or procedures referred to in paragraph (a) or (b),”,

(c) in subsection (1) by deleting the definition of “ hospital ”,

(d) in subsection (1) in paragraph (a) of the definition of “practitioner” by substituting “ section 43 of the Medical Practitioners Act 2007 ” for “ section 26 of the Medical Practitioners Act, 1978 ”,

(e) by substituting the following for subsection (2)—

“(2) (a) Subject to this section, where an individual for a year of assessment proves that in the year of assessment he or she defrayed health expenses incurred for the provision of health care, the income tax to be charged on the individual, other than in accordance with section 16(2), for that year of assessment shall be reduced by the lesser of—

(i) the amount equal to the appropriate percentage of the specified amount, and

(ii) the amount which reduces that income tax to nil,

but, where an individual proves that he or she defrayed health expenses incurred for the provision of health care in the nature of maintenance or treatment in a nursing home, other than a nursing home which does not provide access to 24 hour nursing care on-site, the individual shall be entitled for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of the income on which he or she is to be charged to income tax, to have a deduction made from his or her total income of the amount proved to have been so defrayed.

(b) For the purposes of this section any contribution made by an individual in defraying expenses incurred in respect of nursing home fees where such an individual is entitled to or has received State support (within the meaning of section 3(1) of the Nursing Homes Support Scheme Act 2009 ) shall be treated as health expenses qualifying for relief under this section.

(c) Financial support (within the meaning of the Nursing Homes Support Scheme Act 2009 ) shall not be treated as health expenses for the purposes of this section.”,

and

(f) by inserting the following after subsection (7)—

“(8) (a) Where the Minister for Finance determines that expenses, or a class of expenses, representing the cost of anything referred to in paragraphs (a) to (i) in the definition of ‘health expenses’ in subsection (1) has been or may be incurred in the provision of health care which in the opinion of the Minister for Finance is inappropriate having regard to public policy, then the Minister may by order prescribe those expenses, or class of expenses, as not being eligible for relief under this section.

(b) The Minister for Finance shall not make an order under paragraph (a) unless he or she has consulted with the Minister for Health and Children and such appropriately qualified persons, bodies or institutions (if any), which in the opinion of the Minister for Finance or the Minister for Health and Children should be consulted.

(c) Every order made by the Minister for Finance under paragraph (a) shall be laid before Dáil Éireann as soon as may be after it is made and, if a resolution annulling the order is passed by Dáil Éireann within the next 21 days on which Dáil Éireann has sat after the order is laid before it, the order shall be annulled accordingly, but without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done thereunder.”.

(2) This section shall have effect for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years.

Amendment of section 244 (relief for interest paid on certain home loans) of Principal Act.

7.— As respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment, section 244 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1)(a) by inserting “taken out on or after 1 January 2004 and on or before 31 December 2011” after “qualifying loan” in the definition of “relievable interest”,

(b) by substituting the following for paragraph (b) of subsection (1A):

“(b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), this section shall continue to apply—

(i) for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment up to and including the year of assessment 2017 in respect of qualifying interest paid in respect of a qualifying loan taken out on or after 1 January 2004 and on or before 31 December 2011, and

(ii) for the year of assessment 2012 and subsequent years of assessment up to and including the year of assessment 2017 in respect of qualifying interest paid in respect of a qualifying loan taken out on or after 1 January 2012 and on or before 31 December 2012.”,

and

(c) by substituting the following for subsection (2)(a):

“(2) (a) In this subsection ‘appropriate percentage’, in relation to a year of assessment, means—

(i) as respects qualifying interest to which subsection (1A)(b)(i) applies—

(I) where relievable interest is determined by reference to paragraph (i) or (ii) of the definition of ‘relievable interest ’, 15 per cent for that year, and

(II) where relievable interest is determined by reference to paragraph (iii) or (iv) of the definition of ‘relievable interest ’:

(A) 25 per cent for the first and second years of assessment for which there is an entitlement to relief under this section,

(B) 22.5 per cent for the third, fourth and fifth years of assessment for which there is an entitlement to relief under this section, and

(C) a percentage equal to the standard rate of tax for the sixth and seventh years of assessment for which there is an entitlement to relief under this section,

and

(ii) as respects qualifying interest to which subsection (1A)(b)(ii) applies—

(I) where relievable interest is determined by reference to paragraph (i) or (ii) of the definition of ‘relievable interest’, 10 per cent for that year, and

(II) where relievable interest is determined by reference to the first 6 years of assessment or, where the period of entitlement to relief under this section is shorter, such shorter period, 15 per cent for that year.”.

Amendment of section 997A (credit in respect of tax deducted from emoluments of certain directors) of Principal Act.

8.— As respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment, section 997A of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following subsection after subsection (5)—

“(6) Where, in accordance with subsection (5), the tax to be treated as having been deducted from the emoluments paid to each person to whom this section applies exceeds the actual amount of tax deducted from the emoluments of each person, then the amount of credit to be given for tax deducted from those emoluments shall not exceed the actual amount of tax so deducted.”.

Amendment of section 71 (foreign securities and possessions) of Principal Act.

9.— As respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment, section 71 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for subsection (2):

“(2) Subsection (1) shall not apply to any person who satisfies the Revenue Commissioners that he or she is not domiciled in the State.”,

(b) in subsection (3), by substituting “In the case mentioned in subsection (2)” for “In the cases mentioned in subsection (2)”, and

(c) in subsection (5), by substituting “as to domicile” for “as to domicile or ordinary residence”.

Amendment of section 825B (repayment of tax where earnings not remitted) of Principal Act.

10.— As respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment, section 825B of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by inserting the following after subsection (1):

“(1A) As regards individuals who are not domiciled in the State and who, on or after 1 January 2010—

(a) become resident in the State for tax purposes for the first time, and

(b) exercise the duties of their employment in the State for the first time,

then, this section shall apply as if in subsection (1)—

(i) the words ‘which is not a party to the EEA agreement, but’ were deleted from the definition of ‘associated company’;

(ii) the words ‘that is not a party to the EEA Agreement but’ were deleted from the definition of ‘relevant employee’; and

(iii) the words ‘that is not a party to the EEA Agreement but’ were deleted from the definition of ‘relevant employer’.”,

(b) in subsection (2)—

(i) in paragraph (c) by substituting “one year” for “3 years”, and

(ii) by inserting “and not repaid” after “tax deducted”,

(c) in subsection (5) by inserting “, computed by reference to paragraphs (i) and (ii) of subsection (2),” after “shall be liable to income tax on those emoluments”, and

(d) in subsection (6) by substituting “one year” for “3 year”.

Amendment of section 825A (reduction in income tax for certain income earned outside the State) of Principal Act.

11.— Section 825A of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (7):

“(7) For the purposes of this section—

(a) as respects the year of assessment 2009 and previous years of assessment, an individual shall be deemed to be present in the State for a day if the individual is present in the State at the end of the day, and

(b) as respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment, an individual shall be deemed to be present in the State for a day if the individual is present in the State at any time during that day.”.

Amendment of section 477 (relief for service charges) of Principal Act.

12.— Section 477 of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (7):

“(8) This section ceases to have effect as respects service charges paid in the financial year 2011 for that financial year and subsequent financial years for those financial years.”.

Amendment of section 216A (rent-a-room relief) of Principal Act.

13.— Section 216A of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (3A):

“(3B) (a) Subsection (2) shall not apply for a year of assessment to relevant sums arising to—

(i) an individual, or

(ii) a person connected with the individual,

where the individual is an office holder, or employee, of—

(I) the person making the payment, or

(II) a person connected with the person making the payment.

(b) This subsection shall apply irrespective of whether the relevant sums are paid directly or indirectly by the person referred to in clauses (I) and (II) of paragraph (a) to the individual or to a person connected with the individual.”.

Amendment of section 667B (new arrangements for qualifying farmers) of Principal Act.

14.— The Table to section 667B of the Principal Act is amended in paragraph (3) by inserting the following after subparagraph (a):

“(aa) Bachelor of Agricultural Science — Agri-Environmental Science awarded by University College Dublin;”.

Amendment of section 384 (relief under Case V for losses) of Principal Act.

15.— Section 384 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (3) by substituting “Subject to subsection (4), any” for “Any”, and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (3):

“(4) Any allowance to be made in charging income under Case V of Schedule D in accordance with section 305(1)(a) shall be made in priority to any relief to be given under this section.”.

Retirement benefits.

16.— (1) The Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 784A(1BA) by deleting paragraph (a) and substituting the following for paragraph (c):

“(c) The specified amount for a year of assessment shall be an amount equivalent to the amount determined by the formula—

(A × 3) — B

100

where the amount so determined is greater than zero and where—

A is the value of the assets in an approved retirement fund on 31 December in the year of assessment or, where there is more than one approved retirement fund the assets of which are owned by the same individual and managed by the same qualifying fund manager, the aggregate of the value of the assets in each approved retirement fund on that date (in this subsection referred to as the ‘relevant value’ whether there is one or more than one such approved retirement fund), and

B is the amount or value of the distribution or the aggregate of the amounts or values of the distribution or distributions (in this subsection referred to as the ‘relevant distribution’), if any, made during the year of assessment by the qualifying fund manager in respect of assets held in—

(i) the approved retirement fund or, as the case may be, approved retirement funds referred to in the meaning of ‘A’, and

(ii) an approved minimum retirement fund, if any, the assets of which are beneficially owned by the individual and managed by that qualifying fund manager,

(in this paragraph referred to as the ‘funds’) being funds the assets in which were first accepted into the funds by the qualifying fund manager on or after 6 April 2000.”,

(b) in section 787O(1) by inserting the following after paragraph (b) of the definition of “date of the current event”:

“(ba) the annuity would otherwise become payable under a PRSA of a kind referred to in paragraph (c) of the definition of ‘relevant pension arrangement’ where an individual does not elect to exercise an option in accordance with section 787H(1) and instead retains the assets available in the PRSA at that date, in that PRSA or any other PRSA,”,

(c) in Schedule 23 by inserting the following after paragraph 2A:

Information to be provided in electronic format

2B. In the case of an approved scheme in respect of which the administrator has to deliver annual scheme accounts to the Revenue Commissioners, the administrator shall deliver the accounts by such electronic means as are required or approved by the Commissioners.”,

(d) in Schedule 23B by inserting the following after subparagraph (b) of paragraph 2:

“(ba) the individual does not elect to exercise an option in accordance with section 787H(1) and instead retains the assets of the PRSA in that PRSA or any other PRSA,”,

and

(e) in Schedule 23B by inserting the following after subparagraph (d) of paragraph 3:

“(da) where the benefit crystallisation event is an event of a kind referred to in paragraph 2(ba), the aggregate of the amount of so much of the cash sums and the market value of such of the assets as are retained in the PRSA or in any other PRSA,”.

(2) (a) Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) has effect for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment.

(b) Paragraphs (b), (d) and (e) of subsection (1) have effect as on and from 4 February 2010.

(c) Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) has effect as respects approved schemes whose accounting year ends on or after 1 January 2011.

Amendment of section 128D (tax treatment of directors of companies and employees who acquire restricted shares) of Principal Act.

17.— (1) Section 128D of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) by inserting the following after the definition of “ director” and “employee”—

“ ‘EEA Agreement’ means the Agreement on the European Economic Area signed at Oporto on 2 May 1992, as adjusted by all subsequent amendments to that Agreement;

‘EEA state’ means a state, other than the State, which is a Contracting Party to the EEA Agreement;”,

(b) in subsection (1) in the definition of “specified period” by substituting “subsection (3)(a);” for “subsection (3)(a).” and by inserting the following after that definition:

“ ‘trust’ means a trust established in the State or in an EEA state and the trustees of which are resident in the State or in an EEA state.”,

(c) in subsection (4)—

(i) by substituting “amount chargeable to income tax” for “charge to income tax” in both places where it occurs, and

(ii) in the meaning assigned to “A” in the formula in paragraph (a) by substituting “the income chargeable to tax” for “the income tax charge”,

(d) in subsection (5)—

(i) by substituting “an amount chargeable to income tax” for “a charge to income tax”,

(ii) by substituting “the amount chargeable to income tax” for “the income tax charge”, and

(iii) by substituting “Income Tax Acts” for “Income Taxes Acts”,

and

(e) in subsection (6)—

(i) by substituting “an amount chargeable to income tax” for “a charge to income tax”, and

(ii) by substituting “the amount chargeable to income tax” for “the amount of the income tax charge”.

(2) (a) Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) apply to shares acquired on or after 4 February 2010.

(b) Paragraphs (c), (d) and (e) of subsection (1) apply to shares acquired on or after 20 November 2008.

Information in respect of awards of shares.

18.— (1) The Principal Act is amended—

(a) in Chapter 3 of Part 38 by inserting the following after section 897A:

“Returns of information in respect of awards of shares to directors and employees.

897B.— (1) In this section—

‘director’, ‘employee’ and ‘employer’ have the meanings, respectively, given to them by section 770(1);

‘shares’ includes stock and securities within the meaning of section 135.

(2) (a) Where in any year of assessment an employer or other person awards shares to a director or employee and income tax under Schedule D or Schedule E may be chargeable on the director or employee in respect of the shares awarded, the employer or other person, as the case may be, shall deliver to the Revenue Commissioners on or before 31 March in the year of assessment following the year in which the award was made, particulars of all such awards.

(b) Paragraph (a) shall not apply where the employer or person, as the case may be, is obliged to provide such particulars under any other provision of the Income Tax Acts.”,

and

(b) in Schedule 29, column 3, by inserting “section 897B” before “section 904”.

(2) (a) Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) applies as on and from 1 January 2010 in respect of shares awarded on or after 1 January 2009.

(b) Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) applies as on and from the passing of this Act.

Amendment of Schedule 11 (profit sharing schemes) to Principal Act.

19.— (1) Schedule 11 to the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in Part 2, paragraph 4, by inserting the following after subparagraph (1B):

“(1C) (a) As respects a profit sharing scheme approved on or after 4 February 2010, the Revenue Commissioners shall be satisfied that there are no arrangements connected in any way, directly or indirectly, with the scheme, which make provision for a loan or loans to be made to some or all of the individuals eligible to participate in the scheme.

(b) For the purposes of this subparagraph—

‘arrangements’ include any scheme, agreement, undertaking, or understanding of any kind, whether or not it is, or it is intended to be legally enforceable;

‘loan’ includes any form of credit.”,

and

(b) in Part 3, in paragraph 8 by substituting “Subject to paragraphs 8A and 8B,” for “Subject to paragraph 8A,”, and by inserting the following after paragraph 8A:

“8B. (1) The shares shall not be shares—

(a) in a service company, or

(b) in a company that has control of a service company, where the company is under the control of a person or persons referred to in subparagraph (2)(a)(i) as it applies to a service company.

(2) For the purposes of this paragraph—

(a) a company is a service company if the business carried on by the company consists wholly or mainly of the provision of the services of persons employed by the company and the majority of those services are provided to—

(i) a person who has, or 2 or more persons who together have, control of the company,

(ii) a company associated with the company, or

(iii) a partnership associated with the company,

(b) a company is associated with another company where—

(i) both companies are under the control (within the meaning of section 432) of the same person or persons, or

(ii) it could reasonably be considered that—

(I) both companies act in pursuit of a common purpose,

(II) any person or any group of persons or groups of persons having a reasonable commonality of identity have or had the means or power, either directly or indirectly, to determine the trading operations carried on or to be carried on by both companies, or

(III) both companies are under the control of any person or group of persons or groups of persons having a reasonable commonality of identity,

(c) a partnership is associated with a company where the partnership and the company act in pursuit of a common purpose,

(d) a reference to a person includes a reference to a partnership, and

(e) where a partner, or a partner together with another person or persons, has control of a company, the partnership is to be treated as having control of that company.”.

(2) Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) applies to an appropriation of shares made by the trustees of an approved scheme (within the meaning of section 510(1)) on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 470B (age-related relief for health insurance premiums) of Principal Act.

20.— Section 470B of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (4):

“(4) Subject to subsections (5) and (6), where for a relevant year of assessment, an individual or, if the individual is a married person assessed to tax in accordance with section 1017, the individual’s spouse, makes a payment to an authorised insurer under a relevant contract and—

(a) the payment is in respect of a premium due under the relevant contract and the relevant contract was renewed or entered into on or after 1 January 2009 but before 1 January 2012, and

(b) the payment or part of the payment, as the case may be, is attributable to an insured person, and only to an insured person, who is aged 50 years or over on the date the relevant contract is renewed or entered into, as the case may be,

then the individual shall, for the relevant year of assessment, in respect of so much of the relievable amount of the payment or part of the payment, as the case may be, as is attributable to an insured person referred to in paragraph (b), be entitled to a credit (referred to in this section as ‘age-related tax credit’) equal to the lower of—

(i) as respects a relevant contract renewed or entered into on or after 1 January 2009 but before 1 January 2010, the amount specified in the second column of the Table to this subsection corresponding to the class of insured person mentioned in the first column of that Table or, where the payment made to the authorised insurer is a monthly or other instalment towards the payment of the total annual premium due under the relevant contract, an amount equal to the amount so specified divided by the total number of instalments to be made to pay such total annual premium;

(ii) as respects a relevant contract renewed or entered into on or after 1 January 2010, the amount specified in the third column of the Table to this subsection corresponding to the class of insured person mentioned in the first column of that Table or, where the payment made to the authorised insurer is a monthly or other instalment towards the payment of the total annual premium due under the relevant contract, an amount equal to the amount so specified divided by the total number of instalments to be made to pay such total annual premium, and

(iii) an amount which reduces the income tax to be charged on the individual for the relevant year of assessment, other than in accordance with section 16(2), to nil.

TABLE

(1)

(2)

(3)

Class of Insured Person

Amount of age-related tax credit

Amount of age-related tax credit

Aged 50 years and over but less than 60 years on the date the relevant contract is renewed or entered into, as the case may be.

€200.00

€200.00

Aged 60 years and over but less than 70 years on the date the relevant contract is renewed or entered into, as the case may be.

€500.00

€525.00

Aged 70 years and over but less than 80 years on the date the relevant contract is renewed or entered into, as the case may be.

€950.00

€975.00

Aged 80 years and over on the date the relevant contract is renewed or entered into, as the case may be.

€1,175.00

€1,250.00

”.

Income tax: restriction on use of losses on approved buildings.

21.— Section 409C of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (4)—

“(4A) (a) Notwithstanding subsection (4), where this section applies for the year of assessment 2010 or a later year of assessment, the amount of the loss referred to in subsection (3)(a) which can be treated as reducing income for each such year of assessment under section 381(1) shall be nil.

(b) This subsection shall not apply for the years of assessment 2010 or 2011 in relation to—

(i) work which was completed before 4 February 2010,

(ii) work which was underway on 4 February 2010, or

(iii) work carried out under a contractual commitment entered into before 4 February 2010 and evidenced in writing before that date where the work begins after that date.”.

Amendment of Schedule 13 (accountable persons for purposes of Chapter 1 of Part 18) to Principal Act.

22.— (1) Schedule 13 to the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by deleting paragraphs 31, 45, 57, 66, 67, 71, 72, 75, 78, 104, 113, 123, 130 and 172,

(b) by substituting the following for paragraph 73:

“73. Pobal.”,

(c) by substituting the following for paragraph 102:

“102. Commission for Energy Regulation.”,

(d) by substituting the following for paragraph 119:

“119. Digital Hub Development Agency.”,

and

(e) by inserting the following after paragraph 174 (inserted by the National Asset Management Agency Act 2009 ):

“175. National Transport Authority.

176. The Medical Council.

177. Anglo Irish Bank Corporation Limited.

178. Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland.

179. Financial Services Ombudsman’s Bureau.

180. Broadcasting Authority of Ireland.”.

(2) Subsection (1)(e) of this section applies as and from 1 May 2010.

Limitation on amount of certain reliefs used by certain high income individuals.

23.— (1) Chapter 2A of Part 15 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 485C(1) by inserting the following definitions after the definition of “excess relief”:

“ ‘ income threshold amount ’, in relation to a tax year and an individual, means—

(a) €125,000, or

(b) in a case where the individual’s income for the tax year includes ring-fenced income and his or her adjusted income for the tax year is less than €400,000, the amount determined by the formula—

€125,000 × A

B

where—

A is the individual’s adjusted income for the year, and

B is an amount determined by the formula—

T + S

where T and S have the same meanings respectively as they have in the definition of ‘adjusted income’;

‘ relief threshold amount ’, in relation to a tax year and an individual, means €80,000;”,

(b) in section 485C(1) by deleting the definition of “threshold amount”,

(c) in section 485D—

(i) in paragraph (a) by substituting “the income threshold amount” for “the threshold amount”,

(ii) in paragraph (b) by substituting “the relief threshold amount” for “the threshold amount”, and

(iii) by substituting “20 per cent of the individual’s adjusted income” for “one-half of the individual’s adjusted income”,

(d) in section 485E by substituting the following for the construction of “Y” in the formula in that section—

“Y is the greater of—

(i) the relief threshold amount, and

(ii) 20 per cent of the individual’s adjusted income for the tax year.”,

and

(e) in section 485FB(6)(b) by substituting “the income threshold amount” for “the threshold amount”.

(2) Subsection (1) applies as respects the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment.

Chapter 4

Income Tax, Corporation Tax and Capital Gains Tax

Provisions relating to charities and donations to approved bodies.

24.— The Principal Act is amended—

(a) by inserting the following after section 208:

“Overseas charities.

208A.— (1) In this section and section 208B—

‘charity’ means any body of persons or trust established for charitable purposes only;

‘EEA Agreement’ means the Agreement on the European Economic Area signed at Oporto on 2 May 1992, as adjusted byall subsequent amendments to that Agreement;

‘EEA state’ means a state, other than the State, which is a contracting party to the EEA Agreement;

‘EFTA state’ means a state, other than an EEA state, which is a Member State of the European Free Trade Association.

(2) A person or trust established in an EEA state or in an EFTA state may on a claim being made to the Revenue Commissioners seek a determination to the effect that, if the person or trust were to have income in the State of a kind referred to in section 207 or 208, it would qualify for the exemptions provided for by those sections.

(3) A claim referred to in subsection (2) shall be determined by the Revenue Commissioners or such officer of the Revenue Commissioners (including an inspector) as they may authorise in that behalf.

(4) Where a claim referred to in subsection (2) has been determined in accordance with subsection (3) and the determination is to the effect that if the person or trust were to have income in the State of a kind referred to in section 207 or 208 it would qualify for the exemptions provided for by those sections, the Revenue Commissioners, or such officer of the Revenue Commissioners as they may authorise in that behalf, shall issue the person or trust with a notice of that determination.

(5) Every claim made under this section shall be verified by a document corresponding to an affidavit sworn in the State or by an equivalent sworn statement, and proof of the claim may be given by the treasurer, trustee or any duly authorised agent.

Charities — miscellaneous.

208B.— (1) In this section—

‘charity trustee’ includes—

(a) in the case of a charity that is a company, the directors and other officers of the company, and

(b) in the case of a charity that is a body corporate (other than a company) or an unincorporated body of persons, any officer of the body or any person for the time being performing the functions of an officer of the body;

‘qualified person’ means—

(a) a person who, in accordance with section 187 of the Companies Act 1990 , is qualified for appointment as an auditor of a company, or

(b) in relation to a person or trust that—

(i) has made a claim for a determination under section 208A(2),

(ii) is established in an EEA state or in an EFTA state, and

(iii) does not have a principal place of business in the State,

a person who is qualified under the law of that EEA state or that EFTA state, as the case may be, to perform functions the same as or similar to those which may be performed in the State by a person referred to in paragraph (a).

(2) A claim by a person or trust for—

(a) a determination under section 864 in relation to a claim under section 207 or 208, or

(b) a determination under section 208A,

shall be supported by such information as the Revenue Commissioners may reasonably require for the purpose of determining the claim.

(3) A charity—

(a) who has been granted an exemption under section 207 or 208, or

(b) to whom a notice of determination has been issued in accordance with section 208A(4),

shall, on request, provide such information to the Revenue Commissioners as they may require in respect of the activities of that charity in any financial year following the granting of an exemption or, as the case may be, the issuing of a notice of the determination.

(4) Any information to be provided to the Revenue Commissioners under subsection (2) or (3) shall be in an official language of the State.

(5) The Revenue Commissioners may appoint such qualified persons as they consider appropriate to verify any information provided to them under subsection (2) or (3).

(6) The expenses incurred by any person appointed by the Revenue Commissioners under subsection (5) shall be recoverable by the Revenue Commissioners as a simple contract debt in any court of competent jurisdiction—

(a) from the charity trustees (who shall be jointly and severally liable for those expenses), or

(b) from the charity concerned, where it is not practicable to recover them from the charity trustees.”,

(b) in Part 1 of Schedule 26A by deleting paragraph 19,

(c) in Part 3 of Schedule 26A by deleting “in the State” in—

(i) paragraph 1 in the definition of “eligible charity”, and

(ii) paragraph 2,

(d) in Part 3 of Schedule 26A by substituting the following for paragraph 3(c):

“(c) before the date of the making of the application concerned under paragraph 2—

(i) it has been granted exemption from tax for the purposes of section 207 for a period of not less than 2 years, or

(ii) it received a notice of determination from the Revenue Commissioners in accordance with section 208A at least 2 years before that date,”,

and

(e) in Part 3 of Schedule 26A by inserting the following after paragraph 7:

“8. Information to be furnished to the Revenue Commissioners or published as required by the Minister for Finance for the purposes of this Part shall be furnished or published in an official language of the State.”.

Amendment of Part 22 (provisions relating to dealing in or developing land and disposals of development land) of Principal Act.

25.— (1) Part 22 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in the definition of “qualifying land” in section 644AB(1) by deleting “or” where it last occurs in paragraph (a), by substituting “section 616(1)(g), or” for “section 616(1)(g)” in paragraph (b) and by inserting the following after paragraph (b):

“(c) consisting of a site of 0.4047 hectares or less whose market value at the date of disposal does not exceed €250,000 (notwithstanding that a planning authority may have granted permission in respect of that site in accordance with section 34(1) of the Planning and Development Act 2000 ), other than where the disposal by the person making it, or by a person connected with that person, forms part of a larger transaction or series of transactions,”,

(b) in section 644AB(1) by deleting the definition of “rezoning” and by inserting the following after the definition of “qualifying land”:

“ ‘relevant planning decision’, in relation to land and in accordance with the Planning and Development Act 2000 (in this definition referred to as the ‘Act of 2000’), means—

(a) a change in the zoning of land in a development plan or a local area plan made or varied under Part II of the Act of 2000 from non-development land-uses to development land-uses or from one development land-use to another development land-use including a mixture of such uses, or

(b) a decision to grant permission, in accordance with section 34(6) or 37(2) of the Act of 2000, for a development that would materially contravene a development plan;”,

(c) in section 644AB(2) by substituting “a relevant planning decision” for “the rezoning of that land”,

(d) in section 644AB(5)(a) by substituting “a relevant planning decision” for “the rezoning of land”,

(e) in section 649B(1) by deleting the definition of “rezoning” and by inserting the following after the definition of “non-development land use”:

“ ‘ relevant planning decision ’, in relation to land and in accordance with the Planning and Development Act 2000 (in this definition referred to as the ‘Act of 2000’), means—

(a) a change in the zoning of land in a development plan or a local area plan made or varied under Part II of the Act of 2000 from non-development land-uses to development land-uses or from one development land-use to another development land-use including a mixture of such uses, or

(b) a decision to grant permission, in accordance with section 34(6) or 37(2) of the Act of 2000, for a development that would materially contravene a development plan;”,

(f) in section 649B(1) in the definition of “windfall gain” by substituting “a relevant planning decision” for “rezoning”,

(g) in section 649B(2)—

(i) by deleting “, made on or after 30 October 2009,”, and

(ii) by substituting “a relevant planning decision” for “rezoning” in paragraph (a) and by substituting “relevant planning decision” for “rezoning” where it occurs in paragraphs (b) and (c),

(h) in section 649B(4) by deleting “or” where it last occurs in paragraph (a), by substituting “section 616(1)(g), or” for “section 616(1)(g),” in paragraph (b) and by inserting the following after paragraph (b):

“(c) the disposal is the disposal of a site of 0.4047 hectares or less whose market value at the date of disposal does not exceed €250,000 (notwithstanding that a planning authority may have granted permission in respect of that site in accordance with section 34(1) of the Planning and Development Act 2000 ), other than where the disposal by the person making it, or by a person connected with that person, forms part of a larger transaction or series of transactions,”,

and

(i) in section 649B(5) by substituting “relevant planning decision” for “rezoning”.

(2) (a) Paragraphs (a) and (h) of subsection (1) apply as respects disposals made on or after 30 October 2009.

(b) Paragraphs (b), (c), (d), (e), (g)(ii) and (i) of subsection (1) apply as respects changes or decisions made on or after 4 February 2010.

(c) Paragraph (g)(i) of subsection (1) applies as on and from 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 843A (capital allowances for buildings used for certain childcare purposes) of Principal Act.

26.— Section 843A of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) by inserting the following after the definition of “qualifying expenditure”:

“ ‘qualifying period’ means the period commencing on 1 December 1999 and ending—

(a) on 30 September 2010, or

(b) where subsection (6)(a) applies, on 31 March 2011, or

(c) where subsection (6)(b) applies, on 31 March 2012;”,

(b) in subsection (2) by substituting “Subject to subsections (2A) to (5)” for “Subject to subsections (3) to (5)”,

(c) by inserting the following after subsection (2):

“(2A) An allowance shall be given by virtue of subsection (2) in relation to any qualifying expenditure on a qualifying premises only in so far as that expenditure is incurred in the qualifying period.”,

(d) in subsection (3) by substituting “incurred in the qualifying period” for “incurred on or after 2 December 1998”, and

(e) by inserting the following after subsection (5):

“(6) (a) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of ‘ qualifying period ’, this paragraph applies where—

(i) capital expenditure is incurred on the construction, conversion or refurbishment of a qualifying premises,

(ii) the construction, conversion or refurbishment work on the qualifying premises represented by that expenditure is exempted development for the purposes of the Planning and Development Act 2000 by virtue of section 4 of that Act or by virtue of Part 2 of the Planning and Development Regulations 2001 ( S.I. No. 600 of 2001 ) (in this subsection referred to as the ‘Regulations of 2001’), and

(iii) not less than 30 per cent of the total construction, conversion or refurbishment costs has been incurred on or before 30 September 2010.

(b) For the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of ‘ qualifying period ’, this paragraph applies where—

(i) capital expenditure is incurred on the construction, conversion or refurbishment of a qualifying premises,

(ii) a planning application (not being an application for outline permission within the meaning of section 36 of the Planning and Development Act 2000 ), in so far as planning permission is required, in respect of the construction, conversion or refurbishment work on the qualifying premises represented by that expenditure, is made in accordance with the Regulations of 2001,

(iii) an acknowledgement of the application, which confirms that the application was received on or before 30 September 2010, is issued by the planning authority in accordance with article 26(2) of the Regulations of 2001, and

(iv) the application is not an invalid application in respect of which a notice was issued by the planning authority in accordance with article 26(5) of the Regulations of 2001.

(7) For the purposes only of determining, in relation to a claim for an allowance by virtue of subsection (2), whether and to what extent capital expenditure incurred on the construction, conversion or refurbishment of a qualifying premises is incurred or not incurred in the qualifying period, only such an amount of that capital expenditure as is properly attributable to work on the construction, conversion or refurbishment of the premises actually carried out during the qualifying period shall (notwithstanding any other provision of the Tax Acts as to the time when any capital expenditure is or is to be treated as incurred) be treated as having been incurred in that period.”.

Mid-Shannon corridor tourism infrastructure investment scheme.

27.— (1) Section 372AW of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) in the definition of “ qualifying period ” by substituting “31 May 2015” for “31 May 2013”, and

(b) in subsection (2)(b) by substituting “4 years” for “2 years”.

(2) Subsection (1) comes into operation on the making of an order to that effect by the Minister for Finance.

Payment of tax by means of donation of heritage property.

28.— (1) Section 1003A of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (1)—

(a) in the definition of “contents of the building” by substituting “the Minister is satisfied or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland are satisfied” for “the Minister is satisfied”, and

(b) by substituting the following for the definition of “relevant gift”:

“ ‘relevant gift’ means a gift of heritage property to the Trust or, as appropriate, to the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland in respect of which no consideration whatever (other than relief under this section) is received by the person making the gift, either directly or indirectly, from the Trust or from those Commissioners or otherwise;”.

(2) Section 1003A of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (2):

“(2) (a) In this section ‘heritage property’ means a building or a garden which, on application in writing to the Minister or, as appropriate, to the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland in that behalf by a person who owns the building or the garden is, subject to the provisions of this subsection, determined by the Minister or, as appropriate, by those Commissioners to be a building or a garden which is—

(i) an outstanding example of the type of building or garden involved,

(ii) pre-eminent in its class,

(iii) intrinsically of significant scientific, historical, horticultural, national, architectural or aesthetic interest, and

(iv) suitable for acquisition by the Trust or, as appropriate, by the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland,

and, for the purposes of this section, a reference to ‘building’ includes—

(I) any associated outbuilding, yard or land where the land is occupied or enjoyed with the building as part of its garden or designed landscape and contributes to the appreciation of the building in its setting, and

(II) the contents of the building.

(b) An application for a determination under this subsection shall be made to the Minister where it relates to a relevant gift to be made to the Trust or shall be made to the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland where it relates to a relevant gift to be made to those Commissioners.

(c) In considering an application for a determination under this subsection, the Minister or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland shall consider such evidence as the person making the application submits.

(d) On receipt of an application for a determination under this subsection, the Minister or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland shall request the Revenue Commissioners in writing to value the property in accordance with subsection (3).

(e) The Minister or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland shall not, during any calendar year, make a determination under this subsection where the market value of the property, as determined by the Revenue Commissioners in accordance with subsection (3), at the valuation date exceeds an amount determined by the formula—

€6,000,000 — M

where—

M is an amount (which may be nil) equal to the market value at the valuation date of the heritage property (if any) or the aggregate of the market values at the respective valuation dates of all the heritage properties (if any), as the case may be, in respect of which a determination has been made or determinations have been made, as the case may be, under this subsection whether by the Minister or by the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland in that calendar year and not revoked in that calendar year.

(f) The Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland shall not make a determination under this subsection without the consent in writing of the Minister for Finance and any such determination shall be subject to such conditions as may be specified by the Minister for Finance.

(g) The Minister and the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland shall, as appropriate, consult with each other in connection with the general application of this section and in particular for the purposes of the application of paragraph (e).

(h) (i) A property shall cease to be a heritage property for the purposes of this section if—

(I) the property is sold or otherwise disposed of to a person other than the Trust or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland,

(II) the owner of the property notifies the Trust or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland in writing that it is not intended to make a gift of the property to the Trust or, as appropriate, those Commissioners, or

(III) the gift of the property is not made to the Trust or, as appropriate, to the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland by the end of the calendar year following the calendar year in which the determination is made under this subsection.

(ii) Where the Minister becomes aware or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland become aware, at any time within the calendar year in which a determination under this subsection is made in respect of a property, that clause (I) or (II) of subparagraph (i) applies to the property, the Minister or, as appropriate, those Commissioners may revoke the determination with effect from that time.”.

(3) Section 1003A of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (4):

“(4) Where a relevant gift is made to the Trust or, as appropriate, to the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland—

(a) the Trust or, as appropriate, those Commissioners shall give a certificate to the person who made the relevant gift, in such form as the Revenue Commissioners may prescribe, certifying the receipt of that gift and the transfer of the ownership of the heritage property the subject of that gift to the Trust or, as appropriate, to the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland, and

(b) the Trust or, as appropriate, the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland shall transmit a duplicate of the certificate to the Revenue Commissioners.”.

Payments to subcontractors in certain industries.

29.— (1) Chapter 2 of Part 18 of the Principal Act is amended in section 530 by inserting the following after the definition of “relevant tax deduction card ”:

“ ‘return period’, in relation to the principal concerned, means the period specified in a notice in writing given by the Revenue Commissioners to that principal, being a period of one or more income tax months, in respect of which the principal is required under section 531(3A) to make a return to the Collector-General;”.

(2) Chapter 2 of Part 18 of the Principal Act is amended in section 531—

(a) by substituting the following for paragraph (a) of subsection (3A):

“(a) Not later than 14 days after the end of a return period, a principal or any person who was previously a principal and who has been required to do so by notice in writing from the Revenue Commissioners, shall—

(i) make a return to the Collector-General, on the prescribed form, of the amount, if any, of tax which that person was liable under this section to deduct from payments made to uncertified subcontractors during that return period, and

(ii) remit to the Collector-General the amount of the tax, if any, which the person was so liable to deduct.”,

(b) by inserting the following after paragraph (b) of subsection (3A):

“(c) The Revenue Commissioners may make regulations with respect to the provision to them, by a principal or other person as is referred to in paragraph (a), of such information as may be specified in the regulations in relation to the constituent elements of the amount (if any) referred to in paragraph (a)(i).”,

(c) in subsection (3AA) by substituting “then subsection (3A) shall apply and have effect as if ‘23 days’ were substituted for ‘14 days’ ” for “then subsection (3A) shall apply and have effect as if ‘the 23rd day of an income tax month’ were substituted for ‘the 14th day of an income tax month’ ”,

(d) in subsection (3B)(b)—

(i) by substituting “return period or periods” for “income tax month or months” in both places where it occurs, and

(ii) by substituting “those return periods” for “those income tax months”,

(e) in subsection (6)(a)(i) by substituting “a period covering not more than 2 years of assessment” for “a year of assessment”,

(f) in subsection (10)(i) by substituting “return period or periods” for “income tax month or months” in both places where it occurs,

(g) in subsection (10)(ii)—

(i) by substituting “each return period” for “each income tax month”, and

(ii) by substituting “the return period” for “the income tax month”,

and

(h) by substituting the following for paragraph (f) of subsection (12):

“(f) Where a specified limit has been applied by them for a year of assessment in relation to a relevant payments card by virtue of paragraph (e), the Revenue Commissioners, either at the request of the subcontractor named on the card or otherwise, may, as they consider it appropriate, amend the limit by reducing, increasing or removing it.”.

Amendment of section 731 (chargeable gains accruing to unit trusts) of Principal Act.

30.— (1) Section 731 of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (5) by substituting the following for paragraph (a)—

“(a) (i) Where throughout a year of assessment all the issued units in a unit trust which neither is, nor is deemed to be, an authorised unit trust scheme (within the meaning of the Unit Trusts Act 1990 ) are assets such that if those units were disposed of by the unit holder any gain accruing would be wholly exempt from capital gains tax (otherwise than by reason of residence or by virtue of section 739(3)), then gains accruing to the unit trust in that year shall not be chargeable gains.

(ii) Where the trustees, or any persons duly authorised to act on their behalf, of a unit trust to which subparagraph (i) applies are satisfied that, throughout a year of assessment, all the issued units in the unit trust are assets referred to in subparagraph (i), then they shall, in respect of that year of assessment, make a declaration to that effect.

(iii) The trustees, or any persons duly authorised to act on their behalf, of every unit trust to which subparagraph (i) applies shall in respect of each year of assessment, on or before 28 February in the year following the year of assessment, make a statement to the Revenue Commissioners in electronic format approved by them, which in respect of that year of assessment—

(I) states whether a declaration as referred to in subparagraph (ii) has, or has not, been made, and

(II) specifies in respect of each person who is a unit holder—

(A) the name and address of the person, and

(B) such other information as the Revenue Commissioners may require.

(iv) Where the trustees, or any persons duly authorised to act on their behalf, of a unit trust—

(I) make an incorrect or incomplete statement under subparagraph (iii), or

(II) fail, without reasonable excuse, to make such a statement,

then the trustees of that unit trust shall be liable to a penalty of €3,000. For the purposes of the recovery of a penalty under this subparagraph, section 1061 shall apply in the same manner as it applies for the purposes of the recovery of a penalty under any of the sections referred to in that section.”.

(2) This section shall apply for the year of assessment 2010 and subsequent years of assessment.

Amendment of Part 27 (unit trusts and offshore funds) of Principal Act.

31.— (1) Part 27 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 739B by substituting the following for the definition of “qualifying management company”:

“ ‘qualifying management company’, in relation to an investment undertaking, means a company which, in the course of a trade of managing investments, manages the whole or any part of the investments and other activities of the business of the undertaking;”,

(b) in section 739D, by inserting the following subsection after subsection (7A):

“(7B) (a) A gain shall not be treated as arising to an investment undertaking on the happening of a chargeable event in respect of a unit holder where, immediately before the chargeable event, the investment undertaking is in possession of written notice of approval from the Revenue Commissioners to the effect that subsection (7) is deemed to have been complied with in respect of the unit holder, and that approval has not been withdrawn.

(b) The Revenue Commissioners may give to an investment undertaking the approval, referred to in paragraph (a), that subsection (7) is deemed to have been complied with—

(i) as respects any unit holder or class of unit holder, and

(ii) subject to such conditions as they consider necessary so as to satisfy themselves that, at the time the approval is granted, appropriate equivalent measures have been put in place by the investment undertaking to ensure that unit holders in that investment undertaking are not resident or ordinarily resident in the State.

(c) (i) The Revenue Commissioners may by notice in writing withdraw any approval given under paragraph (b) if an investment undertaking has failed to comply with any of the conditions subject to which the approval was given.

(ii) Where approval is withdrawn in accordance with subparagraph (i), paragraph (a) shall not apply from such date, and in respect of such unit holder or class of unit holder, as may be specified in the notice.

(d) The Revenue Commissioners may nominate in writing an inspector or other officer to perform any acts and discharge any functions authorised by this subsection to be performed or discharged by the Revenue Commissioners.”,

and

(c) by inserting the following after section 747F:

“Chapter 5

Relevant UCITS

Tax treatment of relevant UCITS.

747G.— (1) In this section—

‘ management company ’, in relation to a relevant UCITS, means a management company within the meaning of the relevant Directives;

‘ relevant Directives ’ means Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 2 on the coordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (UCITS), and any Directive amending that Directive;

‘relevant profits’, in relation to a relevant UCITS, means the profits which would be relevant profits (within the meaning of section 739B) if the relevant UCITS were an investment undertaking (within the meaning of that section);

‘ relevant UCITS ’ means an undertaking for collective investment in transferable securities—

(i) to which the relevant Directives apply,

(ii) which is formed under the laws of any of the Member States of the European Union other than the State, and

(iii) (I) the management company of which is authorised under any laws of the State which implement the relevant Directives, and

(II) which, if the management company were not so authorised, would not be liable to tax in the State.

(2) Notwithstanding anything in the Tax Acts and the Capital Gains Tax Acts, a relevant UCITS shall not be chargeable to tax in respect of relevant profits.

(3) An interest in a relevant UCITS shall be treated for the purposes of this Part as an interest in a company, scheme or arrangement specified in section 743(1).”.

(2) This section comes into operation on the passing of this Act.

Amendment of section 1035A (relieving provision to section 1035) of Principal Act.

32.— (1) Section 1035A of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (1)—

(a) in the definition of “ authorised agent ” in paragraph (a)(ii) by substituting “revoked,” for “revoked, or”, in paragraph (b) by substituting “revoked, or” for “revoked,” and by inserting the following paragraph after paragraph (b):

“(c) a company—

(i) authorised under any laws of the State that implement the relevant Directives, and

(ii) which carries on a trade which consists of or includes the management of unit trusts, common contractual funds or investment companies, or any combination thereof, each of which is a relevant UCITS,”,

(b) in the definition of “investment business services” by substituting “1995;” for “1995.”, and

(c) after the definition of “investment business services” by inserting the following:

“ ‘relevant Directives’ means Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 3 on the coordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (UCITS), and any Directive amending that Directive;

‘relevant UCITS’ means an undertaking for collective investment in transferable securities—

(i) to which the relevant Directives apply, and

(ii) which is formed under the laws of any of the Member States of the European Union other than the State.”.

(2) This section comes into operation on the passing of this Act.

Dividend withholding tax.

33.— (1) The Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 172D(3)(b) by substituting “where the declaration made is a current declaration (within the meaning of paragraph 2A of that Schedule)” for “in relation to which declaration each of the certificates referred to in clause (i), the certificate referred to in clause (ii) or, as the case may be, the certificate referred to in clause (iii), of subparagraph (f) of that paragraph is a current certificate (within the meaning of paragraph 2 of that Schedule)”,

(b) in section 172F(3)(a) by substituting the following for subparagraph (ii):

“(ii) a declaration made by that person in accordance with section 172D(3)—

(I) in relation to which the certificate referred to in paragraph 8(f) of Schedule 2A is a current certificate (within the meaning of paragraph 2 of that Schedule), or

(II) which is a current declaration (within the meaning of paragraph 2A of Schedule 2A),”,

(c) in section 172I—

(i) in subsection (1) by inserting “, or by means of electronic communications,” after “in writing”,

(ii) in subsection (1A)—

(I) by inserting “or the recipient of a relevant distribution” after “to an intermediary”,

(II) in paragraph (a) by inserting “delivered to an intermediary” after “the statement”, and

(III) in paragraph (b) by inserting “or the recipient of the relevant distribution” after “the intermediary”,

(d) in section 172J(4) by deleting “in writing”,

(e) in paragraph 2 of Schedule 2A by deleting “or 9(f)”,

(f) in Schedule 2A by inserting the following after paragraph 2:

“Currency of certain declarations

2A. A declaration referred to in paragraph 9 shall be treated as a current declaration for the period from the date of the making of the declaration to the 31st day of December in the fifth year following the year in which the declaration was made.”,

(g) in paragraph 9 of Schedule 2A by substituting the following for subparagraph (e):

“(e) contains—

(i) the name and address of that company,

(ii) the name of the territory in which the company is resident for the purposes of tax,

(iii) in the case of a company within the meaning of section 172D(3)(b)(ii), the name of the relevant territory or names of the relevant territories, as the case may be, in which the person or persons who control (within the meaning of section 172D(4)(a)), whether directly or indirectly, the company is or are resident for the purposes of tax by virtue of the law of that territory or the laws of those territories, and

(iv) in the case of a company within the meaning of section 172D(3)(b)(iii), the name and address of a recognised stock exchange on which the principal class of the shares of the company or

(I) where the company is a 75 per cent subsidiary (within the meaning of section 172D(5)) of another company, of that other company, or

(II) where the company is wholly owned (within the meaning of section 172D(6)) by 2 or more companies, of each of those companies,

is substantially and regularly traded,”,

and

(h) by deleting paragraph 9(f) of Schedule 2A.

(2) This section applies to—

(a) relevant distributions, and

(b) declarations referred to in section 172D(3)(b),

made on or after the date of the passing of this Act.

Amendment of section 175 (purchase of own shares by quoted company) of Principal Act.

34.— (1) Section 175 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) by inserting “where the redemption, repayment or purchase does not form part of a scheme or arrangement the main purpose or one of the main purposes of which is to enable the owner of the shares to participate in the profits of the company or of any of its 51 per cent subsidiaries without receiving a dividend” after “shares”,

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (1):

“(1A) (a) Where in any accounting period a quoted company makes a payment on the redemption, repayment or purchase of its own shares, the company shall, not later than 12 months from the end of the accounting period, give notice to the Collector-General, or such other officer of the Revenue Commissioners as may be authorised by them for the purposes of this subsection, of—

(i) the payment, and

(ii) whether the payment is to be treated as not being a distribution by virtue of subsection (1).

(b) A notice under paragraph (a) shall be given by a company—

(i) in the return required to be made under section 951 for the accounting period of the company in which the payment is made, or

(ii) in such manner and form as the Revenue Commissioners may prescribe.”,

and

(c) in subsection (2) by substituting “subsections (1) and (1A)” for “subsection (1)”.

(2) This section applies to payments referred to in section 175 of the Principal Act which are made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of Part 3 (provisions relating to the Schedule C charge and government and other public securities) of Principal Act.

35.— (1) The Principal Act is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for section 42:

“Exemption of interest on savings certificates.

42.— (1) In this section—

‘EEA Agreement’ means the Agreement on the European Economic Area signed at Oporto on 2 May 1992, as adjusted by the Protocol signed at Brussels on 17 March 1993;

‘EEA state’ means a state which is a contracting party to the EEA Agreement;

‘relevant State’ means—

(i) a Member State of the European Union, or

(ii) not being such a Member State, an EEA state which is a territory with the government of which arrangements having the force of law by virtue of section 826(1) have been made.

(2) The accumulated interest payable in respect of any savings certificate issued by the Minister for Finance, or savings certificates or other similar securities issued by the Government of a relevant State pursuant to rules and conditions which correspond to the rules and conditions contained in regulations issued by the Minister for Finance, under which the purchaser, by virtue of an immediate payment of a specified sum, becomes entitled after a specified period to receive a larger sum consisting of the specified sum originally paid and accumulated interest on that specified sum, shall not be liable to tax so long as the amount of such certificates held by the person who is for the time being the holder of the certificate does not exceed the amount which that person is for the time being authorised to hold under regulations made by the Minister for Finance.”,

(b) in subsection (1) of section 43 by substituting “resident” for “ordinarily resident”,

(c) in subsection (4) of section 45 by substituting “resident” for “ordinarily resident”,

(d) in subsection (5) of section 48 by substituting “resident” for “ordinarily resident”, and

(e) in section 49 by the substitution of the following for subsection (2):

“(2) Any stock or other security to which this section applies may be issued with a condition that neither the capital of nor the interest on the stock or other security shall be liable to tax so long as it is shown in the manner directed by the Minister for Finance that the stock or other security is in the beneficial ownership of persons who are not resident in the State, and accordingly as respects every such stock or other security issued, exemption from tax shall be granted.”.

(2) This section comes into force and takes effect as on and from 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 299 (allowances to lessees) of Principal Act.

36.— (1) Section 299 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for subsection (1):

“(1) Subject to subsection (3), where machinery or plant is let by means of a finance lease (within the meaning of section 76D) to a person, by whom a trade is carried on, on the terms of that person being bound to maintain the machinery or plant and deliver it over in good condition at the end of the lease, and if the burden of the wear and tear of the machinery or plant in fact falls directly on that person, then, for the purposes of sections 283 and 284, the capital expenditure on the provision of the machinery or plant shall be deemed to have been incurred by that person and not by any other person and the machinery or plant shall be deemed to belong to that person and not to any other person.”,

and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (2):

“(3) (a) In this subsection ‘lease payments’, ‘lessee’ and ‘lessor’ have, respectively, the same meanings as in section 80A.

(b) Subsection (1) shall only apply where—

(i) the lessor and lessee jointly elect, or

(ii) where the lessor is not a person within the charge to tax under Schedule D, the lessee elects,

that this section shall apply for the purposes of sections 283 and 284 by giving notice in writing to the inspector on or before the specified return date for the chargeable period (within the meaning of section 950) in a form approved by the Revenue Commissioners and containing such particulars relating to the lessor and lessee and in connection with the lease as may be specified in the approved form.

(c) Where this section applies—

(i) the amount to be deducted in computing the profits or gains to be charged to tax under Case 1 of Schedule D for any chargeable period of the lessee in relation to lease payments to be paid in respect of the finance lease, shall be the amount in respect of those lease payments which in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice would be deducted in a profit and loss account for that period, and accordingly, the aggregate amount (referred to in subparagraph (ii) as the ‘aggregate deductible amount’) to be deducted in computing the profits or gains to be charged to tax under Case 1 of Schedule D for any chargeable period of the lessee in relation to lease payments to be paid in respect of and over the term of the lease, shall be the amount in relation to those lease payments which in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice would be deducted in the profit and loss account over the term of the lease, and

(ii) where capital expenditure deemed to have been incurred by the lessee would otherwise exceed the amount by which the aggregate amount of lease payments to be paid in respect of the lease exceeds the aggregate deductible amount, then the amount of capital expenditure on the provision of plant and machinery for the purposes of subsection (1) shall be deemed to be the amount by which the aggregate amount of the lease payments made in respect of and over the term of the lease exceeds the aggregate deductible amount.”.

(2) This section applies to chargeable periods (within the meaning of Part 9 of the Principal Act) commencing on, or after, the passing of this Act.

Amendment of Chapter 4 (interest payments by certain deposit takers) of Part 8 of Principal Act.

37.— (1) Chapter 4 of Part 8 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 256(1) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “pension scheme”:

“ ‘PRSA provider’ has the same meaning as in Part X of the Pensions Act 1990 ;”,

(b) in section 256(1) in paragraph (i) of the definition of “ re levant deposit ” by deleting “or”,

(c) in section 256(1) in paragraph (j) of the definition of “relevant deposit” by substituting “subsection (1B), or” for “subsection (1B);”,

(d) in section 256(1) in the definition of “relevant deposit” by inserting the following after paragraph (j):

“(k) which is made by, and the interest on which is beneficially owned by, a PRSA provider where the PRSA provider has provided the relevant deposit taker with the number assigned to that provider by the Revenue Commissioners;”,

(e) in section 256 by inserting the following after subsection (2):

“(3) As respects any specified deposits, the relevant deposit taker shall obtain the tax reference number (within the meaning of section 885) of the person making the deposit and the person making the deposit shall provide the tax reference number.”,

(f) in section 258(4) by substituting the following for paragraphs (a) and (b):

“(a) Notwithstanding subsection (3), a relevant deposit taker shall for each year of assessment pay an amount of appropriate tax to the Collector-General within 21 days of each of the following dates in that year of assessment—

(i) 31 March,

(ii) 30 June, and

(iii) 30 September.

(b) The amount to be paid—

(i) within 21 days of 31 March as referred to in paragraph (a)(i) shall not be less than the amount of appropriate tax which would be due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment concerned under subsection (3) if the total amount of the relevant interest which had accrued in the period commencing on 1 January and ending on 31 March,

(ii) within 21 days of 30 June as referred to in paragraph (a)(ii) shall not be less than the amount of appropriate tax which would be due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment concerned under subsection (3) if the total amount of the relevant interest which had accrued in the period commencing on 1 April and ending on 30 June, and

(iii) within 21 days of 30 September as referred to in paragraph (a)(iii) shall not be less than the amount of appropriate tax which would be due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment concerned under subsection (3) if the total amount of the relevant interest which had accrued in the period commencing on 1 July and ending on 30 September,

in that year of assessment on all relevant deposits held by the relevant deposit taker in that period (and no more) had been paid by it in that year of assessment.”,

(g) in section 259(4) by substituting the following for paragraph (a):

“(a) (i) Subject to subparagraph (ii) and notwithstanding section 258(3), a relevant deposit taker shall for each year of assessment pay to the Collector-General, within 21 days of each of the dates referred to in subparagraphs (i), (ii) and (iii) of section 258(4)(a) (each of which dates, as the case may be, is referred to in the Table to this subparagraph as the ‘relevant quarterly date’) in that year of assessment, an amount on account of appropriate tax which shall be not less than the amount determined by the formula set out in the Table to this subparagraph, and any amount on account of appropriate tax so paid by the relevant deposit taker for a year of assessment shall be treated as far as may be as a payment on account of any appropriate tax due and payable by it for that year of assessment under section 258(3).

TABLE

A — (B — C)

3

where—

A is the amount of appropriate tax which would be due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment (in this Table referred to as ‘the relevant year’) in accordance with section 258(3) if the total amount of the relevant interest which had accrued in the period of 12 months ending on the relevant quarterly date in the relevant year on all relevant deposits held by the relevant deposit taker in that period (and no more) had been paid by it in the relevant year,

B is the amount of appropriate tax which was due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment preceding the relevant year in accordance with section 258(3), and

C is an amount equal to the lesser of the amount at B and the amount treated, in accordance with this subsection or section 258(4), as paid by the relevant deposit taker on account of the appropriate tax due and payable by it for the year of assessment preceding the relevant year.

(ii) Notwithstanding section 258(3), the aggregate of the amounts on account of appropriate tax due in accordance with subparagraphs (i) and (iii) shall not, in any event, be less than the amount determined by the formula set out in the Table to this subparagraph.

TABLE

A — (B — C)

where—

A is the amount of appropriate tax which would be due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment (in this Table referred to as ‘the relevant year’) in accordance with section 258(3) if the total amount of the relevant interest which had accrued in the period of 12 months ending on 30 September in the relevant year on all relevant deposits held by the relevant deposit taker in that period (and no more) had been paid by it in the relevant year,

B is the amount of appropriate tax which was due and payable by the relevant deposit taker for the year of assessment preceding the relevant year in accordance with section 258(3), and

C is an amount equal to the lesser of the amount at B and the amount treated, in accordance with this subsection or section 258(4), as paid by the relevant deposit taker on account of the appropriate tax due and payable by it for the year of assessment preceding the relevant year.

(iii) Where, for any year of assessment the amount computed in accordance with subparagraph (ii) exceeds the aggregate of the amounts computed in accordance with subparagraph (i), and without prejudice to the obligation to pay any amount computed in accordance with subparagraph (i), that excess shall be paid by the relevant deposit taker to the Collector-General within 21 days of 30 September in that year of assessment and shall be treated as far as may be as a payment on account of any appropriate tax due and payable by it for that year of assessment under section 258(3).”,

(h) in section 260(4) by substituting the following for paragraph (a):

“(a) in accordance with section 258(4) or 259(4), as may be appropriate, a relevant deposit taker makes a payment on account of appropriate tax in respect of specified interest as if, in relation to each specified deposit held by it, the references—

(i) in section 258(4), to each of the periods referred to in subparagraphs (i), (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (b) of section 258(4) in the year of assessment, were a reference to the period beginning on the date on which the specified deposit was made and ending on each date referred to in subparagraphs (i), (ii) and (iii) of section 258(4)(a), as the case may be, in the year of assessment,

(ii) in section 259(4)(i), where it occurs in the meaning assigned to ‘A’, to the period of 12 months ending on each of the dates referred to in subparagraphs (i), (ii) and (iii) of section 258(4)(a) in the relevant year, were a reference to the period beginning on the date on which the specified deposit was made and ending on each date referred to in subparagraphs (i), (ii) and (iii) of section 258(4)(a), as the case may be, in the year of assessment, and

(iii) in section 259(4)(ii), where it occurs in the meaning assigned to ‘A’, to the period of 12 months ending on 30 September in the relevant year, were a reference to the period beginning on the date on which the specified deposit was made and ending on 30 September in the year of assessment,

and”,

and

(i) in section 262 by substituting “shall furnish to every person entitled to any relevant interest on a relevant deposit held by the relevant deposit taker” for “shall, when requested to do so by any person entitled to any relevant interest on a relevant deposit held by the relevant deposit taker, furnish to that person,”.

(2) (a) Paragraphs (a) to (d) of subsection (1) apply as respects any payment or crediting of relevant interest (within the meaning of Chapter 4 of Part 8 of the Principal Act) made on or after the date of the passing of this Act.

(b) Paragraph (e) of subsection (1) applies on and from the passing of this Act.

(c) Paragraphs (f) to (i) of subsection (1) come into operation on such day or days as the Minister for Finance may by order or orders appoint and different days may be appointed for different purposes or different provisions.

Amendment of section 481 (relief for investment in films) of Principal Act.

38.— The Principal Act is amended in section 481—

(a) in subsection (3) by deleting “an amount equal to 125 per cent of the amount” and substituting “the amount”, and

(b) in subsection (8) by deleting “125 per cent of the relevant deduction” and substituting “the amount of the relevant deduction”.

Specified financial transactions.

39.— The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after Part 8—

“PART 8A

Specified Financial Transactions

Chapter 1

Interpretation

Interpretation.

267N.— (1) For the purpose of this Part—

‘asset’ has the same meaning as in section 532;

‘charges on income’ has the same meaning as in section 243;

‘credit return’ means—

(a) in the case of a credit transaction within the meaning of paragraph (a) or (b) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’, the excess of the consideration accruing to the finance undertaking from the borrower in respect of the asset over the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for that asset, and

(b) in the case of a credit transaction within the meaning of paragraph (c) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’, the excess of the consideration (including any consideration paid or payable for the use of the asset during the period of the arrangement) accruing to the finance undertaking from the borrower in respect of the interest of the finance undertaking in the asset over the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for that asset;

‘credit transaction’ means—

(a) an arrangement whereby a finance undertaking acquires an asset for the purpose of disposing of the full interest in that asset to a borrower in circumstances where—

(i) the consideration paid or payable by the borrower exceeds the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the asset,

(ii) all or part of that consideration is not required to be paid until a date later than the date of the disposal, and

(iii) the excess of the consideration paid or payable to the finance undertaking by the borrower in respect of the asset over the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the asset is equivalent to the return on a loan of money at interest,

(b) an arrangement whereby a finance undertaking acquires an asset and—

(i) immediately disposes of its full interest in that asset to a borrower for a consideration which exceeds the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the asset,

(ii) the borrower acquires and immediately disposes of the full interest in that asset to another person for a consideration which is at least 95 per cent of the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the acquisition of that asset,

(iii) all or part of the consideration for the acquisition of the asset by the borrower is not required to be paid by the borrower until a date later than the date of the purchase of the asset, and

(iv) the excess of the consideration paid or payable to the finance undertaking by the borrower in respect of the asset over the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the asset is equivalent to the return on a loan of money at interest,

or

(c) an arrangement whereby—

(i) a finance undertaking and a borrower jointly acquire an asset, or

(ii) a finance undertaking acquires an interest in an asset from a borrower, in circumstances where the borrower retains an interest in that asset,

on terms whereby—

(I) the borrower—

(A) in the circumstances referred to in subparagraph (i) has exclusive use of the asset immediately and, in the circumstances referred to in subparagraph (ii), retains exclusive use of the asset immediately, as the case may be,

(B) is exclusively entitled to any income, profit or gain arising from or attributable to the asset (including any increase in the value of the asset), and

(C) agrees to make payments to the finance undertaking amounting to the aggregate of the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the acquisition of its interest in the asset and any consideration paid or payable by the borrower for the use of the asset during the period of the arrangement,

(II) the excess of the consideration (including any consideration paid or payable for the use of the asset during the period of the arrangement) accruing to the finance undertaking from the borrower in respect of the interest of the finance undertaking in the asset over the consideration paid or payable by the finance undertaking for the asset is equivalent to the return on a loan of money at interest, and

(III) the finance undertaking’s interest in the asset passes either immediately or by the end of a specified period of time, to the borrower for a consideration which exceeds the consideration paid by the finance undertaking for the asset;

‘deposit transaction’ means a transaction whereby—

(a) a person deposits a sum of money with a relevant deposit taker on terms under which it or any part of it may be repaid, either on demand or at a time or in circumstances agreed by or on behalf of the person making the deposit and the relevant deposit taker,

(b) the relevant deposit taker makes or credits a payment or a series of payments (in this Part referred to as the ‘deposit return’) over a period of time to the person—

(i) out of any profit resulting from the use of that money, and

(ii) in proportion to the money deposited by the person;

‘finance company’ means a company whose income consists of either or both of the following—

(a) income from the leasing of plant and machinery, and

(b) income from the carrying on of specified financial transactions;

‘financial institution’ has the same meaning as in section 891B;

‘finance undertaking’ means a finance company or a financial institution;

‘investment certificate’ means a security which—

(a) is issued by a qualifying company to a person in order to establish the claim of that person over the rights and obligations represented by the certificate,

(b) entitles the owner to an amount equivalent to a share in the profits or losses derived from an asset held by the qualifying company which issued the certificate, in proportion to the number and value of the certificates owned,

(c) is issued to the public, and

(d) is wholly or partly treated in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice as a financial liability of the qualifying company which issued the certificate;

‘investment return’ means—

(a) the excess (if any) of the consideration paid by the qualifying company on redemption of an investment certificate over the consideration paid in respect of that certificate by the beneficial owner to whom the certificate was first issued, and

(b) any other payments (if any) made from time to time by the qualifying company to the beneficial owner from profits or gains derived by the qualifying company from the asset and in consideration of the holding of the investment certificate;

‘ investment transaction ’ means a transaction whereby a person acquires investment certificates and receives an investment return;

‘loan’ means any loan or advance or any other arrangement whatever by virtue of which an amount equivalent to interest is paid or payable;

‘ owner ’, in relation to any security, means at any time the person who would be entitled, if the securities were redeemed at that time by the issuer, to the proceeds of the redemption, and ‘owned’ shall be construed accordingly;

‘public’ means individuals generally, companies generally, or individuals and companies generally;

‘ qualifying company ’ means a company which—

(a) is resident in the State,

(b) issues investment certificates to investors, and

(c) redeems the investment certificates after a specified period of time;

‘relevant deposit’, ‘relevant deposit taker’ and ‘relevant interest’ have, respectively, the meanings assigned to them by section 256;

‘specified financial transaction’ means—

(a) a credit transaction,

(b) a deposit transaction, or

(c) an investment transaction,

but a transaction shall not be a specified financial transaction if the terms of the transaction are not such as would reasonably have been expected if the parties to the transaction were independent persons acting at arm’s length.

(2) Any reference in this Part to consideration—

(a) paid or payable by a borrower or a finance undertaking shall be construed as a reference to the aggregate of amounts paid or payable by the borrower or finance undertaking, as the case may be,

(b) shall not include any amount in respect of which a borrower or a finance undertaking may claim—

(i) a deduction under section 12 of the Value-Added Tax Act 1972 , or

(ii) a refund of value-added tax under an order under section 20(3) of that Act,

and

(c) shall not include any amount chargeable by a finance undertaking in respect of fees, charges or similar payments.

Chapter 2

Credit Return

Treatment of credit return.

267O.— (1) Subject to section 130, a credit return shall be treated for all the purposes of the Tax Acts as if it were interest paid or payable, as the case may be, on a loan made by the finance undertaking to the borrower, or a security issued by the borrower to the finance undertaking, as the case may be, and the return shall be chargeable to tax accordingly.

(2) The amount of the credit return shall not be regarded as expenditure on an asset for the purpose of an allowance under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9.

(3) The amount of the credit return shall not be regarded as expenditure on an asset for the purpose of section 552.

Treatment of credit transaction.

267P.— (1) A reference to a loan in section 122 or in Part 8 shall be deemed to include a reference to a credit transaction.

(2) Acquisitions and disposals of an asset by the finance undertaking for the purpose of a credit transaction, within the meaning of paragraph (a) or (b) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’ in section 267N shall, where the finance undertaking is carrying on a trade which consists of or includes specified financial transactions, be regarded as made in the course of that trade.

(3) The borrower shall not be treated as having incurred a loss, for any purpose of the Tax Acts, on the disposal of the asset in the circumstances referred to in paragraph (b)(ii) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’ in section 267N.

(4) The finance undertaking shall not be entitled to any allowance under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9, in respect of expenditure incurred on assets acquired for the purpose of entering into a credit transaction.

(5) Where an asset is acquired by a borrower under a credit transaction, in the circumstances referred to in paragraph (c)(i) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’ in section 267N, the borrower shall be deemed to have acquired the full interest in that asset for the purpose of claiming any allowance under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9.

(6) The disposal of the borrower’s interest in the asset to the financial undertaking, in the circumstances referred to in paragraph (c)(ii) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’ in section 267N, shall not be construed as an event giving rise to an allowance or charge, as the case may be, within the meaning of section 274 or 288.

(7) The acquisition of an asset by the borrower, in the circumstances referred to in paragraph (c)(III) of the definition of ‘credit transaction’ in section 267N, shall not be construed as expenditure on an asset for the purpose of claiming any allowance under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9.

(8) Except in respect of a claim to any allowance referred to in subsection (5), no part of the consideration paid or payable by the borrower to the finance undertaking, other than an amount equal to the credit return, may be treated by the borrower as an amount which may be deducted in the computation of the profits or gains to be charged to tax under Schedule D.

Chapter 3

Deposit Return

Treatment of deposit return.

267Q.— Subject to section 130, a deposit return shall be treated for all the purposes of the Tax Acts as if it were relevant interest paid on a deposit of money and for this purpose—

(a) Chapter 4 of Part 8 shall apply to the deposit return as if it were relevant interest on a relevant deposit, and

(b) the relevant deposit taker shall not be regarded as carrying on a trade in partnership with the beneficial owner of the deposit for the purposes of Part 43 merely by virtue of the deposit arrangement.

Chapter 4

Investment Certificates and Returns

Treatment of investment return.

267R.— Subject to section 130, the Tax Acts shall apply to an investment return as if that investment return were interest on a security and the return shall be chargeable to tax accordingly.

Treatment of certificate owner.

267S.— (1) For the purposes of the Tax Acts, the owner of the investment certificate shall not be regarded as having a legal or beneficial interest in the assets held by the qualifying company.

(2) Income, profits, gains or losses arising from or attributable to the assets held by the qualifying company (including any increase or decrease in the value of the asset) shall be income, profits, gains or losses, as the case may be, of the qualifying company and the qualifying company shall be chargeable to corporation tax accordingly.

(3) The owner of the investment certificate shall not be entitled to an allowance under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9 in respect of expenditure on the assets held by the qualifying company.

Chapter 5

Reporting

Reporting.

267T.— Part 38 in so far as it relates to the reporting of interest payments shall apply to a deposit return, a credit return or an investment return as if that return were an interest payment.

Chapter 6

Application

Application.

267U.— (1) This Part shall apply to a specified financial transaction between a finance undertaking or a qualifying company, as the case may be, and another person where the finance undertaking or the qualifying company, as the case may be, makes an election in writing to the inspector (within the meaning of section 950).

(2) An election under this section—

(a) shall be made in a form approved by the Revenue Commissioners and containing such particulars relating to the finance undertaking or the qualifying company, as the case may be, and the transaction as may be specified in that form, and

(b) may be made either in respect of an individual transaction or in respect of a series of transactions of a similar nature.

(3) Where an election is made in accordance with this section—

(a) this Part shall apply to that transaction or series of transactions, and

(b) the finance undertaking or the qualifying company, as the case may be, shall notify any borrower or owner, as the case may be, who is a party to a specified financial transaction, that the transaction is a specified financial transaction.

Transactions to avoid tax.

267V.— This Part shall not apply to any transaction unless that transaction has been undertaken for bona fide commercial reasons and does not form part of any arrangement or scheme of which the main purpose or one of the main purposes is avoidance of liability to income tax, corporation tax, capital gains tax, value-added tax, stamp duty or capital acquisitions tax.”.

Interest payments to residents in relevant territories.

40.— (1) The Principal Act is amended in section 198—

(a) in subsection (1)(a) by substituting the following for the definition of “arrangements”:

“ ‘arrangements’ means arrangements having the force of law by virtue of section 826(1) or arrangements made with the government of a territory which on completion of the procedures set out in section 826(1) will have the force of law;”,

(b) in the definition of “ relevant territory ”—

(i) in paragraph (i) by inserting “or” after “the State,”,

(ii) in paragraph (ii) by deleting “made, or” and inserting “made;”, and

(iii) by deleting paragraph (iii),

(c) in subsection (1)(b)(i) by inserting “and have effect in accordance with the provisions of those arrangements” after “have been made”, and

(d) by substituting the following for subsection (1)(c)(ii):

“(ii) a company shall not be chargeable to income tax in respect of interest paid by a relevant person (within the meaning of section 246) in the ordinary course of a trade or business carried on by that person—

(I) if the company is not resident in the State but is regarded for the purposes of this subsection as being a resident of a relevant territory which imposes a tax that generally applies to interest receivable in that territory by companies from sources outside that territory, or

(II) where the interest—

(A) is exempted from the charge to income tax under arrangements made with the government of a territory outside the State having the force of law under the procedures set out in section 826(1), or

(B) would be exempted from the charge to income tax if arrangements made, on or before the date of payment of the interest, with the government of a territory outside the State, that do not have the force of law under the procedures set out in section 826(1), had the force of law when the interest was paid,”.

(2) The Principal Act is amended in section 246(3) by substituting the following for paragraph (h)—

“(h) interest, other than interest referred to in paragraphs (a) to (g), paid by a relevant person in the ordinary course of a trade or business carried on by that person to a company—

(I) which, by virtue of the law of a relevant territory, is resident in the relevant territory for the purposes of tax and that relevant territory imposes a tax that generally applies to interest receivable in that territory by companies from sources outside that territory, or

(II) where the interest—

(A) is exempted from the charge to income tax under arrangements made with the government of a territory outside the State having the force of law under the procedures set out in section 826(1), or

(B) would be exempted from the charge to income tax if arrangements made, on or before the date of payment of the interest, with the government of a territory outside the State, that do not have the force of law under the procedures set out in section 826(1), had the force of law when the interest was paid,

except where such interest is paid to that company in connection with a trade or business which is carried on in the State by that company through a branch or agency.”.

(3) This section applies to interest paid on or after the date of passing of this Act, other than interest paid under an agreement entered into before that date.

Credit for foreign tax.

41.— (1) Section 71 of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (3):

“(3A) (a) In this subsection ‘foreign tax’ means a tax chargeable and payable under the law of a territory other than the State which corresponds to income tax or corporation tax.

(b) Where income arising outside the State is chargeable to tax under Case III of Schedule D and a payment is made under the law of a territory other than the State to the person in receipt of the income by reference to foreign tax paid by another person, then the amount of income so chargeable shall be increased by an amount equal to the amount of the payment.”.

(2) Schedule 24 to the Principal Act is amended in paragraph 9A—

(a) in subparagraph (3) by substituting “subparagraphs (3B) and (5)” for “subparagraph (5)”,

(b) by inserting the following after subparagraph (3A):

“(3B) Where a payment is made under the law of a territory other than the State to any person by reference to tax paid under the law of a territory other than the State in relation to a relevant dividend paid by a company, then the amount of the credit to be allowed under subparagraph (3) against corporation tax attributable to the profits represented by the dividend shall be reduced by an amount equal to the amount of the payment.”,

and

(c) in subparagraph (4) by substituting “subparagraphs (3) and (3B)” for “subparagraph (3)”.

(3) This section applies to income and dividends received on or after 4 February 2010.

Transfer pricing.

42.— (1) The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after Part 35:

“PART 35A

TRANSFER PRICING

Interpretation.

835A.— (1) In this Part—

‘arrangement’ means any agreement or arrangement of any kind (whether or not it is, or is intended to be, legally enforceable);

‘ authorised officer ’ means an officer of the Revenue Commissioners authorised by them in writing for the purposes of this Part;

‘ chargeable period ’ has the same meaning as in section 321(2);

‘Commission Recommendation ’ means Commission Recommendation 2003/361/EC of 6 May 2003 4 concerning the definition of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises;

‘double taxation relief arrangements ’ means arrangements having effect by virtue of section 826;

‘group’ means a company which has one or more 75 per cent subsidiaries together with those subsidiaries;

‘relevant activities’, in relation to a person who is one of the persons between whom an arrangement is made, means that person’s activities—

(a) which comprise the activities in the course of which, or with respect to which, that arrangement is made, and

(b) which are not activities carried on either separately from the activities referred to in paragraph (a) or for the purpose of a different part of that person’s business;

‘relevant person ’, in relation to an arrangement, means a person who is within the charge to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D in respect of profits or gains or losses, the computation of which profits or gains or losses takes account of the results of the arrangement;

‘tax’ means income tax or corporation tax.

(2) References in this Part to ‘control’, in relation to a company, shall be construed in accordance with section 11.

Meaning of associated.

835B.— (1) For the purposes of this Part—

(a) 2 persons are associated at any time if at that time—

(i) one of the persons is participating in the management, control or capital of the other, or

(ii) the same person is participating in the management, control or capital of each of the 2 persons,

and

(b) a person (in this paragraph referred to as the ‘first person’) is participating in the management, control or capital of another person at any time only if that other person is at that time—

(i) a company, and

(ii) controlled by the first person.

(2) (a) For the purposes of this section a company shall be treated as controlled by an individual if it is controlled by the individual and persons connected with the individual.

(b) For the purposes of this subsection a person is connected with an individual if that person is a relative (within the meaning of section 433(3)(a)) of that individual.

Basic rules on transfer pricing.

835C.— (1) Subject to this Part, this section applies to any arrangement—

(a) involving the supply and acquisition of goods, services, money or intangible assets,

(b) where, at the time of the supply and acquisition, the person making the supply (in this Part referred to as the ‘supplier’) and the person making the acquisition (in this Part referred to as the ‘acquirer’) are associated, and

(c) the profits or gains or losses arising from the relevant activities are within the charge to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D in the case of either the supplier or the acquirer or both.

(2) (a) If the amount of the consideration payable (in this Part referred to as the ‘ actual consideration payable ’) under any arrangement to which this section applies exceeds the arm’s length amount, then the profits or gains or losses of the acquirer that are chargeable to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D shall be computed as if the arm’s length amount were payable instead of the actual consideration payable.

(b) If the amount of the consideration receivable (in this Part referred to as the ‘ actual consideration receivable’) under any arrangement to which this section applies is less than the arm’s length amount, then the profits or gains or losses of the supplier that are chargeable to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D shall be computed as if the arm’s length amount were receivable instead of the actual consideration receivable.

(3) For the purposes of this section the ‘arm’s length amount’ in relation to an arrangement is the amount of the consideration that independent parties would have agreed in relation to the arrangement had those independent parties entered into that arrangement.

Principles for construing rules in accordance with OECD Guidelines.

835D.— (1) In this section—

‘Article 9(1) of the OECD Model Tax Convention’ means the provisions which, at the date of the passing of the Finance Act 2010, were contained in Article 9(1) of the Model Tax Convention on Income and Capital published by the OECD;

‘OECD’ means the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development;

‘transfer pricing guidelines’ means the guidelines approved on 13 July 1995 by the Council of the OECD (in this definition referred to as the ‘OECD Council’) as its Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations—

(a) supplemented by—

(i) the report on intangible property and services noted by the OECD Council on 11 April 1996,

(ii) the report on cost contribution arrangements noted by the OECD Council on 24 July 1997, and

(iii) such additional guidance, published by the OECD on or after the date of the passing of the Finance Act 2010, as may be designated by the Minister for Finance for the purposes of this Part by order made under subsection (3),

and

(b) modified by updates approved by the OECD Council on 16 July 2009.

(2) For the purpose of computing profits or gains or losses chargeable to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D, this Part shall be construed to ensure, as far as practicable, consistency between—

(a) the effect which is to be given to section 835C, and

(b) the effect which, in accordance with the transfer pricing guidelines, would be given if double taxation relief arrangements incorporating Article 9(1) of the OECD Model Tax Convention applied to the computation of the profits or gains or losses, regardless of whether such double taxation relief arrangements actually apply,

but this section shall not apply for the purposes of construing this Part to the extent that such application of the section would be contrary to the provisions of double taxation relief arrangements that apply to the computation of those profits or gains or losses.

(3) The Minister for Finance may, for the purposes of this Part, by order designate any additional guidance referred to in paragraph (a)(iii) of the definition of ‘transfer pricing guidelines’ in subsection (1) as being comprised in the transfer pricing guidelines.

(4) Every order made by the Minister for Finance under subsection (3) shall be laid before Dáil Éireann as soon as may be after it is made and, if a resolution annulling the order is passed by Dáil Éireann within the next 21 days on which Dáil Éireann has sat after the order is laid before it, the order shall be annulled accordingly, but without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done thereunder.

Small or medium-sized enterprise.

835E.— (1) This Part does not apply in computing for any chargeable period the profits or gains or losses of a person if that person is a small or medium-sized enterprise for that chargeable period.

(2) For the purposes of this section ‘small or medium-sized enterprise’ means an enterprise which would fall within the category of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises as defined in the Annex to the Commission Recommendation (in this section referred to as the ‘Annex’) if—

(a) in the case of an enterprise which is in liquidation or administration, the rights of the liquidator or administrator (in that capacity) were left out of account when applying Article 3(3)(b) of the Annex in determining for the purposes of this Part whether—

(i) that enterprise, or

(ii) any other enterprise (including that of the liquidator or administrator),

is a small or medium-sized enterprise,

(b) Article 3 of the Annex had effect with the omission of paragraph 5 of that Article,

(c) the first sentence of Article 4(1) of the Annex had effect as if the data to apply to—

(i) the headcount of staff, and

(ii) the financial amounts,

were the data relating to the chargeable period referred to in subsection (1) (instead of the period described in the said first sentence of Article 4(1) of the Annex) and calculated on an annual basis, and

(d) Article 4 of the Annex had effect with the omission of the following provisions—

(i) the second sentence of paragraph 1 of that Article,

(ii) paragraph 2 of that Article, and

(iii) paragraph 3 of that Article.

Document-ation and enquiries.

835F.— (1) A relevant person in relation to an arrangement to which section 835C(1) applies shall have available such records as may reasonably be required for the purposes of determining whether, in relation to the arrangement, the income of the person chargeable to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D has been computed in accordance with this Part.

(2) The records referred to in subsection (1) shall be prepared on a timely basis and subsection (3) of section 886 shall apply to such records as it applies to records required by that section.

(3) Sections 900 and 901 shall apply to records referred to in subsection (1) as if they were books, records or documents within the meaning of section 900 and as if the reference to an authorised officer in section 900 were a reference to an authorised officer within the meaning of section 835A(1).

(4) Notwithstanding any other provisions of the Tax Acts, enquiries relating to compliance with this Part may only be initiated by an authorised officer.

Elimination of double counting.

835G.— (1) Where—

(a) the profits or gains or losses of a person (in this section referred to as the ‘ first-mentioned person’), that are chargeable to tax under Case I or II of Schedule D, are, by virtue of section 835C, computed as if, instead of the actual consideration payable or receivable under the terms of an arrangement, the arm’s length amount in relation to that arrangement were payable or receivable as the case may be, and

(b) the other party (in this section referred to as the ‘affected person’) to the arrangement is within the charge to tax under Schedule D in respect of the profits or gains or losses arising from the relevant activities,

then, subject to subsections (2) and (3), on the making of a claim by the affected person, the profits or gains or losses of the affected person arising from the relevant activities that are chargeable to tax under Schedule D shall be computed as if, instead of the actual consideration receivable or payable by the affected person under the terms of the arrangement, the arm’s length amount (determined in accordance with section 835C) in relation to that arrangement were receivable or payable as the case may be.

(2) (a) Subsection (1) shall not affect the credits to be brought into account by the affected person in respect of closing trading stocks, for any chargeable period.

(b) For the purposes of this subsection ‘trading stock’, in relation to a trade, has the same meaning as it has for the purposes of section 89.

(3) Subsection (1) shall not apply in relation to an arrangement unless and until the tax due and payable by the first-mentioned person for the chargeable period, in respect of which the profits or gains or losses are, by virtue of section 835C, computed as if, instead of the actual consideration payable or receivable under the terms of an arrangement, the arm’s length amount in relation to that arrangement were payable or receivable, as the case may be, has been paid.

(4) Where the profits or gains of an affected person are reduced by virtue of subsection (1) then the amount of foreign tax (if any) for which relief may be given under any double taxation relief arrangements or paragraph 9DA or 9FA of Schedule 24 shall be reduced by the amount of foreign tax which would not be or have become payable if, for the purposes of that tax, instead of the actual consideration payable or receivable under the terms of any arrangement to which subsection (1) applies, the arm’s length amount (determined in accordance with section 835C) in relation to that arrangement were payable or receivable by the affected person as the case may be.

(5) (a) Where, in relation to an arrangement—

(i) the persons, who apart from this paragraph would be the affected person and the first-mentioned person, are members of the same group,

(ii) the arrangement is comprised of activities within the meaning of paragraph (a) of the definition of ‘excepted operations’ in section 21A, and

(iii) the persons referred to in subparagraph (i) jointly elect that this section shall apply,

then section 835C and this section shall not apply in relation to that arrangement.

(b) An election under paragraph (a) shall be made by notice in writing to the inspector on or before the specified return date for the chargeable period (within the meaning of section 950) for the chargeable period of the person who, apart from paragraph (a), would be the first-mentioned person, and the notice shall set out the facts necessary to show that the persons referred to in paragraph (a)(i) are entitled to make the election.

(6) Any adjustments required to be made by virtue of this section may be made by the making of, or the amendment of, an assessment.

Capital allowances.

835H.— Section 835C shall not apply in computing any deductions or additions to be made in taxing a trade under the provisions of the Tax Acts which relate to allowances and charges in respect of capital expenditure.”.

(2) This section applies for chargeable periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011 in relation to any arrangement (within the meaning of section 835A(1) (inserted by this section) of the Principal Act) other than any such arrangement the terms of which are agreed before 1 July 2010.

Chapter 5

Corporation Tax

Intangible assets, etc.

43.— (1) The Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 288(3C) by substituting “10 years” for “15 years”,

(b) in section 291—

(i) in subsection (1) by substituting “Subject to subsection (3), where a person carrying on a trade has incurred” for “Where a person carrying on a trade incurs”, and

(ii) in subsection (2)—

(I) by substituting “Subject to subsection (3), in any case where” for “In any case where”,

(II) in paragraph (a) by substituting “has incurred” for “incurs”, and

(III) in paragraph (b) by substituting “having incurred” for “incurring”,

(c) in section 291 by inserting the following after subsection (2):

“(3) Subject to subsection (4), where the person is a company, this section shall operate as if computer software or a right to use or otherwise deal with computer software were construed as being any such software or any such right—

(a) which is provided for computer systems or processes or computer operated machinery or equipment for use in the operation of the trade carried on by the company, and

(b) (i) the provision of which does not limit or restrict the person from whom the company acquired the software or the right in—

(I) the use of that software or exercise of that right, or

(II) the provision of that software or granting of that right to other persons,

or

(ii) which is not provided for activities of managing, developing or exploiting that software or that right for the purposes of receiving a royalty or other sum in respect of the use of that software or the exercise of that right by other persons.

(4) (a) Subject to paragraph (b), where a company elects in writing, subsection (3) shall not apply to expenditure, specified in the election, incurred by it after 4 February 2010 and before 4 February 2012 on computer software or on a right to use or otherwise deal with computer software.

(b) An election under paragraph (a) shall be made in the return required to be made under section 951 for the accounting period of the company in which the expenditure is incurred and shall not be made later than 12 months from the end of the accounting period in which the capital expenditure, giving rise to the claim, is incurred.”,

(d) in section 291A(1) in the definition of “specified intangible asset” by inserting the following after paragraph (c):

“(ca) computer software or a right to use or otherwise deal with computer software other than such software or such right construed in accordance with section 291(3),”,

(e) in section 291A(1) in the definition of “specified intangible asset” by inserting the following after paragraph (f):

“(fa) any application for the grant or registration of anything within paragraphs (a) to (f),”,

(f) in section 291A(1) in the definition of “specified intangible asset” by substituting the following for paragraph (g):

“(g) secret processes or formulae or other secret information concerning industrial, commercial or scientific experience, whether protected or not by patent, copyright or a related right, including know-how within the meaning of section 768,”,

(g) in section 291A(1)(h) by inserting “, but this paragraph does not relate to a licence within the meaning of section 2 of the Intoxicating Liquor Act 2008 ” after “intended”,

(h) in section 291A(2) by substituting “has incurred” for “incurs”,

(i) in section 291A(3)—

(i) in paragraph (a) of the construction of “A” in the formula in that subsection by substituting “amortisation and any impairment” for “amortisation or depreciation”, and

(ii) in the construction of “B” in the formula in that subsection by substituting “amortisation and any impairment” for “amortisation or depreciation”,

and

(j) in section 291A(5) by substituting the following for paragraph (a):

“(a) In relation to the activities of a company carried on as part of a trade—

(i) the whole of such activities, if any, that—

(I) comprise the sale of goods or services which are goods or services that derive the greater part of their value from, or

(II) consist of managing, developing or exploiting,

a specified intangible asset or specified intangible assets in respect of which allowances under this Chapter have been made to the company, and

(ii) such parts of other such activities, if any, being parts that—

(I) consist of managing, developing or exploiting such assets, or

(II) contribute to the value of goods or services by using such assets,

are referred to in paragraph (b) as ‘relevant activities’ and shall be treated for the purposes of the Tax Acts, other than any provisions of those Acts relating to the commencement or cessation of a trade, as a separate trade (in paragraph (b) and subsection (6) referred to as a ‘relevant trade’) which is distinct from any other trade or part of a trade carried on by the company.”.

(2) (a) Paragraphs (a) to (f) and (h) to (j) of subsection (1) apply to expenditure incurred by a company after 4 February 2010.

(b) Paragraph (g) of subsection (1) has effect as respects any allowance to be made for an accounting period commencing on or after 1 January 2010.

Acceleration of wear and tear allowances for certain energy-efficient equipment.

44.— (1) The Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for Schedule 4A:

“SCHEDULE 4A

TABLE

(Class of Technology)

(Description)

(Minimum Amount)

(1)

(2)

(3)

Motors and Drives

Motor: An electric motor with a power rating of 1.1kW or greater, either standalone or as part of other equipment, meeting a specified efficiency standard.

Variable speed drive: A drive that is specifically designed to drive an electric motor in a manner that rotates the motor’s drive shaft at a variable speed dictated by an external signal.

€1,000

Lighting

Lighting units, comprising fittings, lamps, and associated control gear, that meet specified efficiency criteria, or lighting control systems designed to improve the efficiency of lighting units. Includes occupancy sensors and high efficiency signs.

€3,000

Building Energy Management Systems

Computer-based systems, designed primarily to monitor and control building energy use with the aim of optimising energy efficiency and meeting specified efficiency standards.

€5,000

Information and Communications Technology (ICT)

High Efficiency Enterprise ICT Hardware and Software: ICT infrastructure hardware or software systems for business applications specifically designed to achieve very high levels of energy efficiency and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Energy Saving ICT Cooling: Equipment designed to achieve very high operational cooling efficiency and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Advanced ICT Electrical Management: Systems for power switching control with the aim of achieving optimal energy efficiency, and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

€1,000

Heating and Electricity Provision

Advanced Heating and Electricity Generation: Equipment for generating heat or electricity or both, with the resulting energy stream intended primarily for on-site use and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Energy Saving Control Systems: Systems specifically designed to maximise energy efficiency of new or existing efficient heating or electricity generation equipment or both and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

€1,000

Process and Heating, Ventilation and Air-conditioning (HVAC) Control Systems

Efficient Heat Conservation and Recovery: Equipment or systems or both specially designed to control, conserve or recover any generated heating and cooling energy and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Advanced Liquid and Gas Handling Equipment: Equipment for energy-efficient on-site transfer of liquid or gas or both, meeting specified efficiency criteria. Includes very high efficiency pumps, fans, blowers and other liquid/gas handling equipment.

€1,000

Electric and Alternative Fuel Vehicles

Electric Vehicles and Associated Charging Equipment: Electric and part electric vehicles with a motor size >1kW, and relevant required charging equipment, that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Alternative Energy Vehicle Conversions: Equipment for the conversion to 100% bio-fuel for existing commercial diesel vehicles, that meet specified efficiency criteria.

€1,000

Refrigeration and Cooling Systems

Efficient Industrial Refrigeration and Cooling: Equipment specifically designed to achieve very high operational refrigeration or cooling efficiencies in industrial and commercial applications and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Energy Saving Control Systems: Systems specifically designed to maximise the energy efficiency of new or existing efficient refrigeration or cooling equipment and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

€1,000

Electro-mechanical Systems

Advanced Industrial Electro-mechanical equipment: Direct electrically powered mechanical equipment designed to achieve very high operational efficiencies in industrial applications and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Energy Saving Electrical Management Systems: Systems specifically designed to maximise the energy efficiency of new or existing efficient electrically powered equipment and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

€1,000

Catering and Hospitality Equipment

High Efficiency Catering Equipment: Equipment for commercial catering applications specifically designed to achieve very high levels of energy efficiency and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

Energy Saving Laundry Solutions: Commercial laundry equipment specifically designed to operate at very high efficiencies and that meet specified efficiency criteria.

€1,000

”.

(2) This section comes into operation on such day as the Minister for Finance may by order appoint.

Amendment of section 486C (relief from tax for certain start-up companies) of Principal Act.

45.— (1) Section 486C of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1)(a) by inserting the following definition before the definition of “EEA Agreement”:

“ ‘ Commission Regulation (EC) No. 1998/2006 ’ means Commission Regulation (EC) No. 1998/2006 of 15 December 2006 5 on the application of Articles 86 and 87 of the Treaty to de minimis aid;”,

(b) in subsection (2)(a)—

(i) by inserting “or 2010” after “2009”,

(ii) by deleting “or” at the end of subparagraph (iii), and

(iii) in subparagraph (iv) by substituting “section 441, or” for “section 441.”,

(c) in subsection (2)(a), by inserting the following after subparagraph (iv):

“(v) the activities of which form part of an undertaking to which subparagraphs (a) to (h) of Article 1 of Commission Regulation (EC) No. 1998/2006 apply.”,

and

(d) by inserting the following after subsection (11):

“(12) Notwithstanding any obligation to maintain secrecy or any other restriction on the disclosure of information imposed by or under statute or otherwise, the Revenue Commissioners or any officer authorised by them for the purposes of this subsection may—

(a) disclose to any board established by statute, any public or local authority or any other agency of the State (in this paragraph referred to as a ‘relevant body’) information relating to the amount of relief granted to a company under this section, being information which is required by the relevant body concerned for the purpose of ensuring that the ceilings on aid set out in Commission Regulation (EC) No. 1998/2006 are not exceeded, and

(b) provide to the European Commission such information as may be requested by the European Commission in accordance with Article 3 of Commission Regulation (EC) No. 1998/2006.”.

(2) This section has effect in relation to accounting periods beginning on and from 1 January 2009.

Unilateral relief (royalty income).

46.— (1) The Principal Act is amended in Schedule 24—

(a) in paragraph 4(5)(a) by substituting “paragraphs 9D and 9DB” for “paragraph 9D”,

(b) in paragraph 4(5)(b)—

(i) in subclause (iii) by deleting “and”, and

(ii) in subclause (iv) by inserting “, and” after “that paragraph)”,

(c) in paragraph 4(5)(b) by inserting the following after subclause (iv):

“(v) the amount of income of a company treated for the purposes of paragraph 9DB as referable to an amount of relevant royalties (within the meaning of that paragraph),”,

and

(d) by inserting the following after paragraph 9DA:

Unilateral Relief (royalty income)

9DB. (1) (a) In this paragraph—

‘relevant foreign tax’, in relation to royalties receivable by a company, means tax—

(i) which under the laws of any foreign territory has been deducted from the amount of the royalty,

(ii) which corresponds to income tax or corporation tax,

(iii) which has not been repaid to the company,

(iv) for which credit is not allowable under arrangements, and

(v) which, apart from this paragraph, is not treated under this Schedule as reducing the amount of income;

‘relevant royalties’ means royalties receivable by a company—

(i) which fall to be taken into account in computing the trading income of a trade carried on by the company, and

(ii) from which relevant foreign tax is deducted;

‘royalties’ means payments of any kind as consideration for—

(i) the use of, or the right to use—

(I) any copyright of literary, artistic or scientific work, including cinematograph films and software,

(II) any patent, trade mark, design or model, plan, secret formula or process,

or

(ii) information concerning industrial, commercial or scientific experience.

(b) For the purposes of this paragraph—

(i) the amount of corporation tax which apart from this paragraph would be payable by a company for an accounting period and which is attributable to an amount of relevant royalties shall be an amount equal to 12.5 per cent of the amount by which the amount of the income of the company referable to the amount of the relevant royalties exceeds the relevant foreign tax, and

(ii) the amount of any income of a company referable to an amount of relevant royalties in an accounting period shall, subject to paragraph 4(5), be taken to be such sum as bears to the total amount of the trading income of the company for the accounting period before deducting any relevant foreign tax the same proportion as the amount of relevant royalties in the accounting period bears to the total amount receivable by the company in the course of the trade in the accounting period.

(2) Where, as respects an accounting period of a company, the trading income of a trade carried on by the company includes an amount of relevant royalties, the amount of corporation tax which, apart from this paragraph, would be payable by the company for the accounting period shall be reduced by so much of 87.5 per cent of any relevant foreign tax borne by the company in respect of relevant royalties in that period as does not exceed the corporation tax which would be so payable and which is attributable to the amount of the relevant royalties.

(3) (a) This paragraph shall not apply as respects any accounting period of a company which is a relevant accounting period within the meaning of section 442.

(b) Subsection (2) of section 442 shall apply for the purposes of this paragraph as it applies for the purposes of Part 14.”.

(2) This section applies in respect of royalties received on or after 1 January 2010.

Carry forward of unrelieved foreign tax.

47.— (1) Schedule 24 to the Principal Act is amended in paragraph 9FA—

(a) in subparagraph (2)(b) by substituting “subparagraphs (3) and (4)” for “subparagraph (3)”, and

(b) by inserting the following after subparagraph (3):

“(4) Where the unrelieved foreign tax of an accounting period of a company exceeds the aggregate amount of corporation tax payable by the company for the accounting period in respect of foreign branch income of the company for that accounting period, the excess shall be carried forward and treated as unrelieved foreign tax of the next succeeding accounting period, and so on for succeeding accounting periods.”.

(2) This section applies as respects accounting periods ending on or after 1 January 2010.

Amendment of section 847 (tax relief for certain branch profits) of Principal Act.

48.— Section 847 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (6) by substituting “any provision of the Corporation Tax Acts other than this section” for “any other provision of the Corporation Tax Acts”,

(b) in subsection (9)(b) by substituting “For the purposes of this subsection and subsection (10), where” for “Where”, and

(c) by inserting the following after subsection (9):

“(10) (a) Notwithstanding subsection (9)(a), where, in any accounting period, a qualified company incurred a loss (in this subsection referred to as a ‘relevant loss’) on qualified foreign trading activities and that loss formed, or formed part of, the profits or gains or losses of the company which were disregarded for the purposes of the Corporation Tax Acts by virtue of subsection (6), then the company may claim relief under section 396(1) in accordance with this subsection in respect of that loss for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011.

(b) For the purposes of a claim under paragraph (a) in respect of a relevant loss, the qualified foreign trading activities carried on by a qualified company through a branch or agency outside the State shall for all accounting periods be treated as a trade separate from all other activities carried on by the company and the company shall be treated as continuing to carry on that separate trade for so long as it continues to carry on those activities through that branch or agency and to permanently discontinue to carry on that trade when it ceases to carry on those activities through that branch or agency.

(c) Where a qualified company makes a claim under paragraph (a) in respect of a relevant loss then, subject to paragraph (b), the company shall be entitled to such relief under section 396(1) for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2011 as it would have been entitled to had the profits or gains or losses from qualified foreign trading activities carried on through the branch or agency not been disregarded for the purposes of the Corporation Tax Acts by virtue of subsection (6) and had relief been granted in respect of the relevant loss under section 396(1), but not any other provision of the Corporation Tax Acts, for accounting periods ending before that date.”.

Dividends paid out of foreign profits.

49.— (1) The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after section 129:

“129A.— (1) (a) In this section ‘profits’, in relation to a company for a period of account, means the amount of the profits after taxation as shown in the profit and loss account or income statement for that period as laid before the annual general meeting of the company.

(b) For the purposes of this section—

(i) any question whether a company is connected with another company shall be determined in accordance with section 10 (as it applies for the purposes of the Tax Acts) and subparagraph (ii),

(ii) where a company is party to a scheme or arrangement, the main purpose, or one of the main purposes, of which is the avoidance of the whole or part of a distribution being treated as a taxable distribution, then the company shall be treated as connected with any other company which is a party to that scheme or arrangement.

(c) For the purposes of subsection (5) ‘control’ shall be construed in accordance with subsections (2) to (6) of section 432 as if in subsection (6) of that section for ‘5 or fewer participators’ there were substituted ‘persons resident in the State’.

(2) Where—

(a) a company receives a distribution from another company (in this section referred to as the ‘paying company’) resident in the State with which it is connected, and

(b) the paying company became resident in the State in the period—

(i) beginning on the date—

(I) 10 years before the date the distribution was made, or

(II) of passing of the Finance Act 2010,

whichever is the later, and

(ii) ending on the date the distribution is made,

then, subject to subsection (5), section 129 shall not apply to such amount of the distribution as is paid out of profits arising before the paying company became resident in the State and that amount shall be treated as income chargeable to tax under Case IV of Schedule D.

(3) (a) For the purposes of this section, where the amount of a distribution made by the paying company on or after the date (or the last such date if there was more than one date) it became resident in the State exceeds the distributable profits of the company for the period (in this subsection referred to as the ‘specified period’)—

(i) beginning on the date (or the last such date if there was more than one date) the company became resident in the State, and

(ii) ending on the last day of the accounting period of the company immediately preceding the accounting period in which the distribution is made,

then the excess shall be treated as paid out of profits arising before the company became resident in the State.

(b) For the purposes of this subsection—

(i) the distributable profits of the paying company for a specified period shall, subject to subparagraph (ii), be taken to be the aggregate of the profits of the periods of account (in this subsection referred to as ‘corresponding periods’) which fall wholly or partly within the specified period, as reduced by the aggregate of so much of the amounts of any distributions made in the specified period as were amounts to which section 129 applied,

(ii) where a corresponding period falls partly within a specified period, the amount to be included in the distributable profits for the specified period in respect of the profits of that corresponding period shall be the profits of that corresponding period reduced by applying the fraction—

A

B

where—

A is the length of the period common to the specified period and the corresponding period, and

B is the length of the corresponding period.

(4) Where, by virtue of subsection (2), section 129 does not apply to the whole or part of a distribution (such whole or part, as the case may be, in this section referred to as the ‘taxable distribution’) received by a company (in this subsection referred to as the ‘first-mentioned company’) from another company resident in the State then the first-mentioned company shall be entitled to reduce the corporation tax attributable to the taxable distribution by the amount of the credit for foreign tax that would have been applied, under the provisions of Schedule 24, in reducing the corporation tax chargeable in respect of a dividend of an amount equal to the taxable distribution received by the first-mentioned company from the other company on the day before the day (or the last such day where there was more than one) the other company became resident in the State.

(5) Subsection (2) shall not apply where the paying company was at all times before the date it became resident in the State (or the last such date where there was more than one date) not controlled by persons resident in the State.”.

(2) This section shall apply to distributions made on or after the passing of this Act.

Foreign dividends.

50.— (1) The Principal Act is amended in section 21B—

(a) in subsection (1)(b) by substituting the following for subparagraph (i):

“(i) references to a company by which a dividend is paid apply only to a company, where throughout the period out of the profits of which the dividend was paid—

(I) the company was, by virtue of the law of a relevant territory, resident for the purposes of tax in such a relevant territory, and for this purpose ‘tax’, in relation to a relevant territory, means any tax imposed in the relevant territory which corresponds to corporation tax in the State, or

(II) the principal class of shares of the company or, where the company was a 75 per cent subsidiary of another company, the principal class of shares of that other company, was substantially and regularly traded on a stock exchange in the State, on one or more than one recognised stock exchanges in a relevant territory or territories or on such other stock exchange as may be approved of by the Minister for Finance for the purposes of Chapter 8A of Part 6,”,

(b) in subsection (1) by inserting the following after paragraph (b):

“(c) For the purposes of paragraph (b)(i)(II), sections 412 to 418 shall apply as those sections would apply for the purposes of Chapter 5 of Part 12 if section 411(1)(c) were deleted.”,

(c) in subsection (2) by substituting the following for paragraph (a):

“(a) subject to paragraph (b), the amount of a dividend to be treated as paid out of trading profits of a company shall be—

(i) where the dividend is paid out of specified profits, so much of the dividend, as bears to the amount of that dividend the same proportion as the amount of trading profits of the company contained in the specified profits bears to the amount of those specified profits of the company, and

(ii) where the dividend is not paid out of specified profits so much of the dividend, as bears to the amount of that dividend the same proportion as the amount of trading profits of the company for the period out of which the dividend is paid bears to the total profits of the company for that period, and”,

and

(d) by substituting the following for subsection (4):

“(4) (a) This subsection applies to a dividend paid to a company (in this subsection referred to as the ‘first-mentioned company’) by another company and the first-mentioned company—

(i) does not own, directly or indirectly, either alone or together with a person who is connected (within the meaning of section 10) with the first-mentioned company, more than 5 per cent of the share capital of the other company, and

(ii) does not hold more than 5 per cent of the voting rights in the other company.

(b) Where the income of a company which is chargeable to tax under Case III of Schedule D includes a dividend, being a dividend to which this subsection applies, paid to the company by another company then the dividend shall be treated for the purposes of subsection (3) as a dividend paid by the other company out of trading profits of the other company.

(c) Where the income of a company which is income chargeable to tax under Case I of Schedule D would, but for this paragraph, include a dividend to which this subsection applies, then, except where otherwise expressly provided by the Corporation Tax Acts, corporation tax shall not be chargeable on the dividend, nor shall the dividend be taken into account in computing income for corporation tax.”.

(2) This section shall apply to dividends received on or after 1 January 2010.

Assets transferred in course of scheme of reconstruction or amalgamation.

51.— (1) The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after section 308:

“308A.— (1) In this section ‘scheme of reconstruction or amalgamation’ means a scheme for the reconstruction of any company or companies or the amalgamation of any 2 or more companies.

(2) Where—

(a) any scheme of reconstruction or amalgamation involves the transfer of the whole or part of the trade of a company (in this section referred to as the ‘transferring company’) to another company (in this section referred to as the ‘ acquiring company’),

(b) (i) the acquiring company is resident in the State at the time of the transfer, or the acquiring company uses the assets of the transferred trade for the purposes of a trade carried on by it in the State through a branch or agency immediately after that time, and

(ii) the transferring company is resident in the State at the time of the transfer, or the trade was carried on by it in the State through a branch or agency immediately before that time,

and

(c) the transferring company receives no part of the consideration for the transfer (otherwise than by the acquiring company taking over the whole or part of the liabilities of the trade),

then, subject to subsection (4), subsection (3) shall apply in relation to the assets of the trade transferred by the transferring company.

(3) Where this subsection applies—

(a) the transfer shall not be treated as giving rise to any allowance or charge provided for by section 307 or 308, and

(b) there shall be made to or on the acquiring company in accordance with sections 307 and 308 all such allowances and charges as would, if the transferring company had continued to carry on the trade and had continued to use the transferred assets for the purposes of the trade, have been made to or on the transferring company in respect of any assets transferred in the course of the transfer, and the amount of any such allowance or charge shall be computed as if the acquiring company had been carrying on the trade since the transferring company began to do so and as if everything done to or by the transferring company had been done to or by the acquiring company.

(4) Subsection (3) shall not apply as respects assets transferred in the course of a transfer if in consequence of the transfer, or a transaction of which the transfer is a part, the Corporation Tax Acts are to apply subject to subsections (6) to (9) of section 400.”.

(2) This section shall have effect in relation to assets transferred on or after 1 January 2010.

Amendment of section 80A (taxation of certain short-term leases of plant and machinery) of Principal Act.

52.— (1) Section 80A of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “fair value”:

“ ‘group limit’ means an amount determined by the formula—

A + (B × (C — D)/C)

where—

A is the threshold amount,

B is an aggregate amount computed in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice charged to the profit and loss account for all companies who are members of the group for the period of account which is the same as the specified period in respect of the amortisation or impairment of the cost of specified assets,

C is the cost of specified assets owned by all companies who are members of the group at the end of the specified period, and

D is the lesser of the cost of specified assets owned by all companies who are members of the group at the end of the threshold period or C;”,

(b) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “predictable useful life”:

“ ‘profit and loss account’, in relation to an accounting period of a company, has the meaning assigned to it by generally accepted accounting practice and includes an income and expenditure account where a company prepares accounts in accordance with international accounting standards;”,

(c) in the definition of “relevant short-term lease” by substituting “8 years;” for “8 years.”,

(d) by inserting the following definitions after the definition of “relevant short-term lease”:

“ ‘specified assets’ means relevant short-term assets owned by a company which—

(a) in respect of those assets, is entitled to any allowance under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9, and

(b) leases those assets, other than by means of a relevant short-term lease, for a period which does not exceed 8 years;

‘specified period’ means—

(a) in the case of companies which are members of a group the respective ends of the accounting periods of which coincide, the period of 12 months throughout which one or more members of the group carries on a trade of leasing specified assets and ending at the end of the first accounting period which commences on or after 1 January 2010, and

(b) in the case of companies which are members of a group the respective ends of the accounting periods of which do not coincide, the period specified in a notice in writing made jointly by companies which are members of the group and given to the inspector on or before the specified return date for the chargeable period (within the meaning of section 950) which is the same as the period so specified, being a period of 12 months throughout which one or more members of the group carries on a trade of leasing specified assets and ending at the end of the first accounting period of a company which is a member of the group which accounting period commences on or after 1 January 2010,

and each subsequent period of 12 months commencing immediately after the end of the relevant preceding specified period;

‘threshold amount’ in relation to a group of companies means the aggregate of allowances granted to all companies which are members of that group in respect of expenditure incurred on specified assets under Part 9, section 670, Part 29 or any other provision of the Tax Acts relating to the making of allowances in accordance with Part 9 for the threshold period;

‘ threshold period ’ in relation to a group of companies means an accounting period of one year ending on a date immediately preceding the date on which the first specified period commencing on or after 1 January 2010 begins.”,

(e) in subsection (2) by substituting “under this subsection—” for “under this section—”, and

(f) by inserting the following after subsection (2):

“(2A) Where a company makes a claim under this subsection in respect of specified assets—

(a) subject to paragraph (c), subsection (2) of section 284 shall be construed as if a reference in that section to an amount of wear and tear allowance to be made was a reference to an amount, computed in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice, charged to the profit and loss account of the company for the period of account which is the same as the specified period in respect of the amortisation or impairment of the cost of specified assets,

(b) the income from specified assets will be treated for the purposes of section 403 as if it were not income from a trade of leasing,

(c) the amount of the wear and tear allowance to be made to the company in accordance with paragraph (a) for any accounting period shall not exceed an amount to be determined by the formula—

E × F/G

where—

E is the group limit,

F is the cost of specified assets owned by the company at the end of the accounting period, and

G is the cost of specified assets owned by all companies who are members of the group, at the end of the accounting period,

(d) where the amount of wear and tear allowance, computed in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice, charged to the profit and loss account of the company for the period of account which is the same as the specified period in respect of the amortisation or impairment of the cost of specified assets, exceeds the amount of wear and tear to be made in accordance with paragraph (c), the amount of the excess shall be added to the amount of wear and tear due, in accordance with paragraph (a), for the following specified period, and deemed to be part of the amount so computed,

(e) the amount of the wear and tear allowance to be made to the company in accordance with paragraph (a), attributable to each specified asset for any accounting period shall be such portion of the amount of the allowance to be made in accordance with paragraph (a) as bears to that amount the same proportion as the cost of the asset bears to the cost of all specified assets which belong to the company and are in use for the purposes of the trade at the end of that accounting period,

(f) where in respect of a company, which is a member of a group of companies no accounting period coincides with the threshold period, there shall be made in relation to allowances granted to that company, in the calculation of the threshold amount, such apportionment as is just and reasonable, and

(g) where, in respect of a group of companies, no specified period commences before 1 January 2011, the threshold amount shall be nil.

(2B) For the purposes of a claim under subsection (2A)—

(a) 2 companies shall be deemed to be members of a group if one company is a 51 per cent subsidiary of the other company or both companies are 51 per cent subsidiaries of a third company: but in determining whether one company is a 51 per cent subsidiary of another company, the other company shall be treated as not being the owner of—

(i) any share capital which it owns directly in a company if a profit on a sale of the shares would be treated as a trading receipt of its trade, or

(ii) any share capital which it owns indirectly and which is owned directly by a company for which a profit on a sale of the shares would be a trading receipt;

(b) sections 412 to 418 shall apply for the purposes of this subsection as they would apply for the purposes of Chapter 5 of Part 12 if—

(i) ‘51 per cent subsidiary’ were substituted for ‘75 per cent subsidiary’ in each place where it occurs in that Chapter, and

(ii) paragraph (c) of section 411(1) were deleted;

(c) a company and all its 51 per cent subsidiaries shall form a group and, where that company is a member of a group as being itself a 51 per cent subsidiary, that group shall comprise all its 51 per cent subsidiaries and the first-mentioned group shall be deemed not to be a group: but a company which is not a member of a group shall be treated as if it were a member of a group which consists of that company;

(d) in determining whether a company is a member of a group of companies (in this paragraph referred to as the ‘threshold group’) for the purposes of determining the threshold amount in relation to a specified period of a group of companies (in this paragraph referred to as the ‘relevant group’), the threshold group shall be treated as the same group as the relevant group notwithstanding that one or more of the companies in the threshold group is not in the relevant group, or vice versa, where any person or group of persons which controlled the threshold group is the same as, or has a reasonable commonality of identity with, the person or group of persons which controls the relevant group.”.

(2) This section applies as respects accounting periods commencing on or after 1 January 2010.

Amendment of section 402 (foreign currency: tax treatment of capital allowances and trading losses of a company) of Principal Act.

53.— Section 402 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (2), by the insertion of the following after paragraph (b):

“(c) For the purposes of this subsection, references to an amount of any allowance or charge to be made in taxing a trade shall include a reference to an amount of any allowance or charge to be made by means of discharge or repayment of tax in taxing the leasing activities of a company, where those activities are charged to tax under Case IV of Schedule D and references to a trading expense or receipt shall be construed accordingly.”,

(b) by the insertion of the following after subsection (3):

“(4) (a) Subject to paragraph (b), where a company incurs a loss in an accounting period arising from a leasing activity in respect of which the company is within the charge to corporation tax under Case IV of Schedule D and makes a claim under section 399(1) to set that loss off against the amount of any income arising from such activities in respect of which the company is assessed to corporation tax under that Case for the same or any subsequent accounting period, the amount (which may be nil) of any set-off due to the company against that income in an accounting period shall—

(i) be computed in terms of the company’s functional currency by reference to amounts expressed in that currency, and

(ii) then be expressed in terms of the currency of the State by reference to the rate of exchange which—

(I) is used to express in terms of the currency of the State the amount of the income assessed to corporation tax under Case IV for the accounting period in which the loss is to be set off, or

(II) would be so used if there were such income.

(b) For the purposes of the computation of any set-off due to a company in accordance with paragraph (a) against income of an accounting period, in respect of a loss arising from a leasing activity in such period, where that loss or any set-off referable to that loss was computed in terms of a currency other than the functional currency of the company for the first-mentioned period, then that loss or set-off, as the case may be, shall be expressed in terms of that functional currency by reference to a rate of exchange of that functional currency for the other currency, being an average of representative rates of exchange of that functional currency for the other currency during the accounting period in which the loss was incurred.”.

Amendment of section 766 (tax credit for research and development expenditure) of Principal Act.

54.— (1) Section 766 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1)(a) in the definition of “ qualified company” by substituting the following for subparagraphs (ii) and (iii):

“(ii) carries out research and development activities in the relevant period,

(iii) maintains a record of expenditure incurred by it in the carrying out by it of those activities, and

(iv) in the case of a company which is a member of a group of companies that carries on research and development activities in separate geographical locations, maintains separate records of expenditure incurred in respect of the activities carried on at each location;”,

(b) in subsection (1)(a) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “research and development activities”:

“ ‘research and development centre’ means a fixed base or bases, established in buildings or structures, which are used for the purpose of the carrying on by a company of research and development activities;”,

(c) in subsection (1)(a) in the definition of “threshold amount” by deleting “but expenditure incurred by a company which is a member of the group for a part of the threshold period shall only be included in the threshold amount if the expenditure is incurred at a time when the company is a member of the group” and substituting the following:

“but—

(i) expenditure incurred by a company which is a member of the group for a part of the threshold period shall only be included in the threshold amount if the expenditure is incurred at a time when the company is a member of the group, and

(ii) subject to subsection (7C)(a)—

(I) where at any time during the threshold period, a group of companies carried on research and development activities in more than one research and development centre and each centre is in a separate geographical location, and

(II) at a time (referred to in this section as the ‘ cessation time’) after the end of the threshold period, a research and development centre ceases to be used for the purposes of a trade by a company which is a member of the group of companies and is not so used by any other company which is a member of the group,

then expenditure incurred in relation to that research and development centre shall not be taken into account in calculating the threshold amount in relation to any relevant period which commences after the cessation time”,

(d) in subsection (1)(b)(vi)(I) by substituting “research and development,” for “research and development, and”,

(e) in subsection (1)(b)(vi) by substituting the following for clause (II):

“(II) begins to carry on a trade after that time, and”,

(f) in subsection (1)(b)(vi) by inserting the following after clause (II):

“(III) makes a claim in respect of expenditure incurred at a time referred to in clause (I),”,

(g) in subsection (1)(b)(vi) by deleting “the expenditure shall be treated as it would if the company had commenced to carry on the trade at the time the expenditure was incurred;” and substituting the following:

“the expenditure shall be treated—

(A) for the purpose only of subsection (5), as incurred at the time the company begins to carry on the trade, and

(B) for the purposes of subsection (2), as it would if the company had commenced to carry on a trade at the time the expenditure was incurred, and the amount of any credit computed thereon shall be carried forward in accordance with subsection (4) and treated as an amount by which the corporation tax of the first accounting period which commenced on or after the time the company begins to trade is reduced;”,

(h) in subsection (1)(b)(viii) by substituting “research and development activities;” for “research and development activities.”,

(i) in subsection (1)(b) by inserting the following after subparagraph (viii):

“(ix) A research and development centre used by a company which is a member of a group of companies will be treated as being in a separate geographical location to another research and development centre used by the company or another company which is a member of the group if it is not less than a distance of 20 kilometres from that other research and development centre.”,

(j) in subsection (4B)(b)(ii)(II) by substituting “of the excess remaining as reduced” for “by which the excess remaining is reduced”,

(k) in subsection (7B) by deleting “section 1006A(2)” and substituting “section 960H(2)”, and

(l) by inserting the following after subsection (7B):

“(7C) (a) Subparagraph (ii) of the definition of ‘threshold amount’ shall not apply in relation to a relevant period (in this paragraph referred to as the ‘first-mentioned relevant period’) or any relevant period subsequent to that relevant period, where, at a time during that first-mentioned relevant period or any later relevant period, being a time subsequent to the cessation time—

(i) the research and development centre referred to in clause (II) of subparagraph (ii) of the definition of ‘threshold amount’ is used for the purposes of a trade by a company which is a member of the group, or

(ii) activities substantially the same as the research and development activities which were carried on in that research and development centre at any time in the 48 months immediately preceding the cessation time are carried on by a company which is a member of the group of companies.

(b) Where—

(i) by virtue of subparagraph (ii) of the definition of ‘threshold amount’, expenditure incurred in the threshold period is not taken into account in calculating the threshold amount in relation to a relevant period, and

(ii) by virtue of paragraph (a) of this subsection, subparagraph (ii) of that definition does not apply in relation to a subsequent relevant period,

then, in respect of the accounting period commencing at the same time as that subsequent relevant period or where no accounting period commences at that time, the first accounting period commencing after that time, the company referred to in subparagraph (i) or (ii) of paragraph (a), as the case may be, shall be charged to tax under Case IV of Schedule D on an amount equal to the aggregate of the amounts by which the qualifying group expenditure on research and development has been increased, as a result of a reduction in the threshold amount by virtue of subparagraph (ii) of the definition of threshold amount, for relevant periods, taking account of each relevant period in respect of which the qualifying group expenditure on research and development was so increased.

(c) Where—

(i) by virtue of subparagraph (ii) of the definition of ‘threshold amount’, expenditure incurred in the threshold period by a company which is a member of a group of companies is not taken into account in calculating the threshold amount in relation to a relevant period, and

(ii) at any time during the period of 10 years commencing on the date on which the research and development centre ceased to be used, no company which is a member of the group is carrying on a trade which is within the charge to corporation tax,

then, in respect of the final accounting period for which a company which is a member of the group is chargeable to corporation tax in respect of its trade, that company shall be charged to tax under Case IV of Schedule D on an amount equal to the aggregate of the amounts by which the qualifying group expenditure on research and development has been increased, as a result of a reduction in the threshold amount by virtue of subparagraph (ii) of the definition of threshold amount, for relevant periods, taking account of each relevant period in respect of which the qualifying group expenditure on research and development was so increased, as reduced by any amount charged to tax in accordance with paragraph (b).”.

(2) (a) Paragraph (g) of subsection (1) applies to accounting periods commencing on or after 1 January 2010.

(b) Paragraphs (j) and (k) of subsection (1) apply and have effect from 1 January 2010.

(c) Except where otherwise provided by paragraphs (a) and (b), subsection (1) applies to relevant periods (within the meaning of section 766 of the Principal Act) commencing on or after 1 January 2010.

Tax treatment of certain royalties.

55.— (1) Part 8 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by inserting the following section after section 242:

“242A.— (1) In this section ‘ relevant territory ’ has the meaning assigned to it in section 172A.

(2) This section applies to a payment of royalties—

(a) made by a company in the course of a trade or business carried on by the company,

(b) to a company (in this subsection referred to as the ‘receiving company’ ) which—

(i) is not resident in the State, and

(ii) is, by virtue of the law of a relevant territory, resident for the purposes of tax in a relevant territory which imposes a tax that generally applies to royalties receivable in that territory by companies from sources outside that territory,

and

(c) which is made for bona fide commercial reasons and does not form part of any arrangement or scheme of which the main purpose or one of the main purposes is avoidance of liability to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax,

except where the royalties are paid to the receiving company in connection with a trade or business carried on in the State by the company through a branch or agency.

(3) Where, apart from this section, section 238 would apply to a payment of royalties to which this section applies, that section shall not apply to that payment.

(4) A company shall not be chargeable to corporation tax or income tax in respect of a royalty payment to which this section applies where—

(a) the company—

(i) is not resident in the State, and

(ii) is, by virtue of the law of a relevant territory, resident for the purposes of tax in a relevant territory which imposes a tax that generally applies to royalties receivable in that territory by companies from sources outside that territory,

and

(b) the payment is made for bona fide commercial reasons and does not form part of any arrangement or scheme of which the main purpose or one of the main purposes is avoidance of liability to income tax, corporation tax or capital gains tax,

except where the royalty payment is made to the company in connection with a trade or business which is carried on in the State by the company through a branch or agency.”,

and

(b) in section 243(5)(c) by substituting “section 242A or 267I” for “section 267I”.

(2) This section applies to a payment made on or after 4 February 2010.

Chapter 6

Capital Gains Tax

Amendment of section 542 (time of disposal and acquisition) of Principal Act.

56.— (1) Section 542 of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (1) by substituting the following for paragraph (d):

“(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (c), for the purposes of the Capital Gains Tax Acts, where a person makes a disposal of land to an authority possessing compulsory purchase powers, and the disposal would not have been made but for the exercise of those powers or the giving by the authority of formal notice of its intention to exercise those powers, then the chargeable gain (if any) on the disposal shall be deemed to accrue—

(i) on the day on which the payment of the compensation amount is received by the person making the disposal, or

(ii) at a time immediately before the person’s death if the consideration has not been received at the date of his or her death.”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 590 (attribution to participators of chargeable gains accruing to non-resident company) of Principal Act.

57.— (1) Section 590 of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (7)(a):

“(a) a chargeable gain accruing on the disposal of assets, being—

(i) tangible property, whether movable or immovable, or a lease of such property, or

(ii) specified intangible assets within the meaning of section 291A(1),

where the assets were used, and used only, for the purposes of a trade carried on by a company, or by another company which is a member of the same group (within the meaning of subsection (16)) as the first-mentioned company, wholly outside the State,”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 598 (disposals of business or farm on “retirement”) of Principal Act.

58.— (1) Section 598 of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (7):

“(7A) (a) In this subsection ‘relevant payment’ means a payment made by a company on the redemption, repayment or purchase of its own shares which, by virtue of section 176, is not treated as a distribution for the purposes of Chapter 2 of Part 6.

(b) Subsection (2) shall apply where an individual disposes of shares in his or her family company and receives a relevant payment in exchange for that disposal.”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Restrictions on allowable losses.

59.— (1) The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after section 546:

“546A.— (1) In this section—

‘arrangements’ includes any agreement, understanding, scheme, transaction or series of transactions (whether or not legally enforceable);

‘tax advantage’ means—

(a) relief or increased relief from tax,

(b) repayment or increased repayment of tax,

(c) the avoidance or reduction of a charge to tax or an assessment to tax, or

(d) the avoidance of a possible assessment to tax;

‘ tax ’ means capital gains tax or corporation tax on chargeable gains.

(2) For the purposes of the Capital Gains Tax Acts, a loss shall not be an allowable loss if—

(a) it accrues to the person directly or indirectly in consequence of, or otherwise in connection with, any arrangements, and

(b) the main purpose, or one of the main purposes, of the arrangements is to secure a tax advantage.

(3) For the purposes of subsection (2), it shall not be relevant—

(a) whether or not the loss accrues at a time when there are no chargeable gains from which it could otherwise have been deducted, or

(b) whether or not the tax advantage is secured for the person to whom the loss accrues or for any other person.”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 607 (Government and certain other securities) of Principal Act.

60.— (1) Section 607 of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (2)—

(a) by substituting the following for paragraph (a):

“(a) All futures contracts which—

(i) are unconditional contracts for the acquisition or disposal of any of the instruments referred to in subsection (1) or any other instruments to which this section applies by virtue of any other enactment (whenever enacted),

(ii) require delivery of the instruments in respect of which the contracts are made, and

(iii) meet the requirements of paragraph (c) of this subsection,

shall not be chargeable assets.”,

and

(b) by inserting the following after paragraph (b):

“(c) Where a profit or loss on a futures contract is calculated, either directly or indirectly, by reference to the acquisition cost or disposal proceeds of an instrument to which subparagraph (i) of subsection (2)(a) applies, then—

(i) that acquisition cost shall be the market value of the instrument at the date of acquisition, and

(ii) those disposal proceeds shall be the market value of the instrument at the date of disposal.”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 611 (disposals to State, public bodies and charities) of Principal Act.

61.— (1) Section 611 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) by substituting the following for paragraph (a)(iii):

“(iii) to the Chester Beatty Library, the Crawford Art Gallery Cork, the Irish Museum of Modern Art, the National Archives, the National Concert Hall, the National Gallery of Ireland, the National Library of Ireland, the National Museum of Ireland, the Friends of the National Collections of Ireland, a local authority or a joint body within the meaning of section 2(1) of the Local Government Act 2001 and any university in the State,”,

and

(b) by substituting “referred to in paragraph (a)(iii) of subsection (1),” for “within section 28(3) of the Finance Act, 1931 ,” in each place where it occurs in subsection (2).

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 958 (date for payment of tax) of Principal Act.

62.— (1) Section 958 of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (3) by substituting the following for clause (I) of paragraph (c)(ii):

“(I) on or before—

(A) 31 October, as respects tax payable in the initial period, where that period falls in the years of assessment 2003 to 2008 inclusive,

(B) 15 December, as respects tax payable in the initial period, where that period falls in the year of assessment 2009 or any subsequent year of assessment,

and”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of Schedule 15 (list of bodies for purposes of section 610) to Principal Act.

63.— (1) Part 1 of Schedule 15 to the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for paragraph 4:

“4. A local authority or a joint body within the meaning of section 2(1) of the Local Government Act 2001 .”.

(2) This section applies to disposals made on or after 4 February 2010.

PART 3

Customs and Excise

Chapter 1

Mineral Oil Tax Carbon Charge

Mineral oil tax carbon charge.

64.— (1) Chapter 1 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 1999 is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) of section 94—

(i) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “biomass”:

“ ‘CO2’ means carbon dioxide;”,

(ii) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “dumper”:

“ ‘emissions’ means the release, on combustion of mineral oil, of CO2;”,

(b) with effect as on and from 10 December 2009 by substituting the following for Schedule 2 to that Act (as amended by section 15(a) of the Finance Act 2009 ):

“SCHEDULE 2

Rates of Mineral Oil Tax

Description of Mineral Oil

Rate of Tax

Light Oil:

Petrol

Aviation gasoline

€543.17 per 1,000 litres

€543.17 per 1,000 litres

Heavy Oil:

Used as a propellant

Used for air navigation

Used for private pleasure navigation

Kerosene used other than as a propellant

Fuel oil

Other heavy oil

€449.18 per 1,000 litres

€449.18 per 1,000 litres

€449.18 per 1,000 litres

€00.00

€14.78 per 1,000 litres

€47.36 per 1,000 litres

Liquefied Petroleum Gas:

Used as a propellant

Other liquefied petroleum gas

€63.59 per 1,000 litres

€00.00

Coal:

For business use

For other use

€4.18 per tonne

€8.36 per tonne

”,

(c) with effect as on and from 10 December 2009 by inserting the following after Schedule 2:

“SCHEDULE 2A

Carbon Charge

Description of Mineral Oil

Rate

Light Oil:

Petrol

Aviation gasoline

€34.38 per 1,000 litres

€34.38 per 1,000 litres

Heavy Oil:

Used as a propellant

Used for air navigation

Used for private pleasure navigation

€39.98 per 1,000 litres

€39.98 per 1,000 litres

€39.98 per 1,000 litres

”,

(d) with effect as on and from 1 May 2010 by substituting the following for Schedule 2 (as amended by paragraph (b)):

“SCHEDULE 2

Rates of Mineral Oil Tax

Description of Mineral Oil

Rate of Tax

Light Oil:

Petrol

Aviation gasoline

€543.17 per 1,000 litres

€543.17 per 1,000 litres

Heavy Oil:

Used as a propellant

Used for air navigation

Used for private pleasure navigation

Kerosene used other than as a propellant

Fuel oil

Other heavy oil

€449.18 per 1,000 litres

€449.18 per 1,000 litres

€449.18 per 1,000 litres

€38.02 per 1,000 litres

€60.73 per 1,000 litres

€88.66 per 1,000 litres

Liquefied Petroleum Gas:

Used as a propellant

Other liquefied petroleum gas

€88.23 per 1,000 litres

€24.64 per 1,000 litres

Coal:

For business use

For other use

€4.18 per tonne

€8.36 per tonne

”,

(e) with effect as on and from 1 May 2010 by substituting the following for Schedule 2A (inserted by paragraph (c)):

“SCHEDULE 2A

Carbon Charge

Description of Mineral Oil

Rate

Light Oil:

Petrol

Aviation gasoline

€34.38 per 1,000 litres

€34.38 per 1,000 litres

Heavy Oil:

Used as a propellant

Used for air navigation

Used for private pleasure navigation

Kerosene used other than as a propellant

Fuel oil

Other heavy oil

€39.98 per 1,000 litres

€39.98 per 1,000 litres

€39.98 per 1,000 litres

€38.02 per 1,000 litres

€45.95 per 1,000 litres

€41.30 per 1,000 litres

Liquefied Petroleum Gas:

Used as a propellant

Other liquefied petroleum gas

€24.64 per 1,000 litres

€24.64 per 1,000 litres

”,

(f) in section 96 by inserting the following after subsection (1):

“(1A) Where a rate is specified in Schedule 2A for any description of mineral oil, that rate, referred to in this Chapter as the ‘carbon charge’, is included in the rate of tax specified in Schedule 2 for that description of mineral oil.

(1B) The rate per 1,000 litres specified for each description of mineral oil in Schedule 2A is in proportion to the emissions for the description of mineral oil concerned, and is determined by the formula—

NCV × EF × A

where—

NCV is the net calorific value of the description of mineral oil concerned expressed in terajoules per 1,000 litres,

EF is the carbon emission factor of the description of mineral oil concerned expressed in tonnes of CO2 per terajoule,

A is the amount, €15, to be charged per tonne of CO2 emitted.”,

(g) in section 96 by inserting the following after subsection (4):

“(5) The Commissioners may, subject to such conditions for securing mineral oil tax as they may prescribe or otherwise impose, permit payment of the carbon charge to be deferred to a day not later than the 15th day of the month succeeding the month in which the mineral oil tax is payable.”,

(h) in subsection (1) of section 98 by substituting “at a rate, for heavy oil of €43.60 per 1,000 litres, and for liquefied petroleum gas of €30.22 per 1,000 litres” for “at the rate of €5.58 per 1,000 litres on such gas or oil”,

(i) in section 100 by inserting the following after subsection (1):

“(1A) (a) Without prejudice to any other relief that may apply and subject to paragraphs (b) and (c), a relief from the carbon charge shall apply to biofuel.

(b) From 10 December 2009 until 30 June 2010, where biofuel has been mixed or blended with any other mineral oil, the relief under paragraph (a) shall only apply where the biofuel content of the mixture or blend exceeds 10 per cent of the total volume of the mixture or blend.

(c) From 1 July 2010, where biofuel has been mixed or blended with any other mineral oil, the relief under paragraph (a) shall apply to the biofuel content of any such mixture or blend.

(1B) Without prejudice to any other relief that may apply, a relief from the carbon charge shall apply to any mineral oil which is intended for use or which has been used in an installation that is covered by a greenhouse gas emissions permit.”.

(2) (a) Subject to paragraph (b), and to paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (1), this section has effect from 1 May 2010.

(b) Subsections (1A) (inserted by subsection (1)(f)) and (5) (inserted by subsection (1)(g)) of section 96 of the Finance Act 1999 , and subsection (1A) (inserted by subsection (1)(i)) of section 100 of that Act have effect from 10 December 2009.

Cesser of application of mineral oil tax to coal.

65.— (1) Chapter 1 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 1999 is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) of section 94—

(i) by deleting the interpretations given to “business use”, “charitable organisation”, “coal”, “dual use”, “energy intensive business”, “household”, and“mineralogical processes”, and

(ii) by substituting the following for the definition of mineral oil:

“ ‘mineral oil’ means hydrocarbon oil, liquefied petroleum gas, substitute fuel and additives;”,

(b) in subsection (2) of section 95 by deleting “other than coal”,

(c) by deleting section 95A,

(d) in section 100—

(i) by deleting subsections (2) and (3),

(ii) in paragraph (a) of subsection (5) by deleting “coal delivered or other”,

(e) by deleting section 101A.

(2) Schedule 2 to the Finance Act 1999 (as amended by paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section 64 ) is amended by deleting the references to, and rates specified for, coal.

(3) This section has effect from such date as the Minister for Finance appoints by order for the coming into operation of Chapter 3.

Chapter 2

Natural Gas Carbon Tax

Definitions (Chapter 2).

66.— (1) In this Chapter—

“ accounting period ” means a period of 2 calendar months or such other period as the Commissioners may prescribe for the purposes of returns and payment under section 70 ;

“CN Code” means a Community subdivision to the combined nomenclature of the European Communities referred to in Article 1 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2658/87 of 23 July 1987 6 as amended by Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 2031/2001 of 6 August 2001 7 ;

“CO2” means carbon dioxide;

“Commissioners” means the Revenue Commissioners;

“consumer” means a person who receives a supply of natural gas for combustion;

“Directive” means Council Directive No. 2003/96/EC of 27 October 2003 8 ;

“emissions” means the release, on combustion of natural gas, of CO2;

“ greenhouse gas emissions permit ” has the meaning assigned to it by Article 2(1) of the European Communities (Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trading) Regulations 2004 ( S.I. No. 437 of 2004 );

“natural gas” means natural gas falling within CN codes 2711 11 00 and 2711 21 00;

“officer” means an officer of the Commissioners;

“prescribed” means prescribed by regulations made by the Commissioners under section 74 ;

“supplier” means an entity which supplies natural gas to a consumer;

“ supply ” means a quantity of natural gas supplied to a consumer;

“tax” means natural gas carbon tax within the meaning of subsection (1) of section 67 .

Charging and rates of natural gas carbon tax.

67.— (1) Subject to the provisions of this Chapter and any regulations made under it, a duty of excise, to be known as natural gas carbon tax, shall be charged, levied and paid at the rate of €3.07 per megawatt hour on all natural gas supplied in the State by a supplier.

(2) Subsection (1) shall apply to all natural gas supplied by a supplier for combustion by such supplier.

(3) The rate per megawatt hour specified in subsection (1) is in proportion to the emissions of CO 2 from the combustion of natural gas and is determined by the formula—

EF × A × C

where—

EF is the carbon emission factor of natural gas expressed in kilograms of CO 2 per terajoule,

A is the amount, €0.015, to be charged per kilogram of CO 2 emitted,

C is 0.0036, the number of terajoules per megawatt hour.

Liability to pay natural gas carbon tax.

68.— (1) Tax shall be charged at the time the natural gas is supplied by a supplier to a consumer and, without prejudice to subsection (2), a supplier shall be accountable for and liable to pay the tax charged on the natural gas supplied by such supplier.

(2) Any supplier that is not established in the State shall establish a company in the State, and that company shall be liable to pay the tax due on the natural gas supplied by such supplier, and shall assume all the functions and responsibilities of the supplier under this Chapter and any regulations under section 74 .

Registration of natural gas suppliers.

69.— Every supplier shall register with the Commissioners in accordance with such procedures as the Commissioners may prescribe or otherwise impose.

Returns and payment by natural gas suppliers.

70.— (1) For the purposes of section 68 , a supplier shall within one month of the end of an accounting period, in respect of the natural gas supplied in that accounting period, furnish to an officer a return in such form as the Commissioners may require showing—

(a) the quantity of natural gas supplied, and

(b) in respect of each of the reliefs under section 71 , the quantity that qualified for such relief.

(2) The supplier shall, in accordance with the return under subsection (1) and by the time that return is due, pay the amount of tax due in respect of the accounting period concerned.

Reliefs from natural gas carbon tax.

71.— (1) Without prejudice to any other relief from tax which may apply, and subject to such conditions as may be prescribed or otherwise imposed, a full relief from tax shall be granted on any natural gas which is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners to have been supplied for use—

(a) for the generation of electricity, or

(b) for chemical reduction or in electrolytic or metallurgical processes.

(2) (a) Without prejudice to any other relief from tax which may apply, and subject to such conditions as the Commissioners may prescribe or otherwise impose, a partial relief from tax shall be granted on any natural gas which is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners to have been delivered for use in an installation that is covered by a greenhouse gas emissions permit.

(b) The relief under paragraph (a) shall be calculated as the amount of tax chargeable on the natural gas supplied, less an amount of €0.54 per megawatt hour.

Repayments of natural gas carbon tax.

72.— (1) Where a supply on which the tax has been paid qualifies for relief under section 71 , a repayment of that tax shall be made to the consumer of that supply.

(2) (a) Claims for repayment under subsection (1) shall be in such form as the Commissioners may direct and shall be in respect of natural gas supplied within a period of not less than one and not more than 6 calendar months.

(b) Except where the Commissioners may in any particular case otherwise allow, a repayment may not be made unless the claim is made within 6 calendar months following the end of the period in respect of which the claim for repayment is made.

Offence and penalty (Chapter 2).

73.— (1) It is an offence under this subsection for any person to contravene or fail to comply with any provision of this Chapter, or any regulation made under section 74 , or any condition imposed under this Chapter, or under such regulation in relation to such provision.

(2) Without prejudice to any other penalty to which a person may be liable, a person convicted of an offence under subsection (1) is liable on summary conviction to a fine of €5,000.

(3) Where an offence under subsection (1) is committed by a body corporate and the offence is shown to have been committed with the consent or connivance of any person who, when the offence was committed, was a director, manager, secretary or other officer of the body corporate, or a member of the committee of management or other controlling authority of the body corporate, that person shall also be deemed to be guilty of an offence and may be proceeded against and punished as if guilty of the first-mentioned offence.

Regulations (Chapter 2).

74.— The Commissioners may, for the purposes of managing, securing and collecting the tax, or for the protection of the revenue derived from it, make regulations.

Care and management (Chapter 2).

75.— The tax imposed by this Chapter is placed under the care and management of the Commissioners.

Commencement (Chapter 2).

76.— This Chapter comes into operation on 1 May 2010.

>Chapter 3

Solid Fuel Carbon Tax

Interpretation (Chapter 3).

77.— In this Chapter and in Schedule 1

“accounting period” means a period of 2 calendar months or such other period as the Commissioners may prescribe for the purposes of payment and returns under section 81 ;

“briquettes” means milled peat which has been mechanically compressed into blocks;

“ CN Code ” means a Community subdivision to the combined nomenclature of the European Communities referred to in Article 1 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2658/87 of 23 July 1987 9 as amended by Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 2031/2001 of 6 August 2001 10 ;

“CO2” means carbon dioxide;

“coal” includes coal and lignite, solid fuel manufactured from coal and lignite, and any other energy product within the meaning of Article 2.1 of the Directive in solid form;

“Commissioners” means the Revenue Commissioners;

“consumer” means a person who receives a supply of solid fuel for combustion;

“Directive” means Council Directive No. 2003/96/EC of 27 October 2003 11 ;

“emissions” means the release, on combustion of a solid fuel, of CO2;

“greenhouse gas emissions permit” has the meaning assigned to it by Article 2(1) of the European Communities (Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trading) Regulations 2004 ( S.I. No. 437 of 2004 );

“milled peat” means granulated peat that is supplied for use as a fuel;

“officer” means an officer of the Commissioners;

“other peat” means peat other than milled peat and briquettes that is supplied for use as a fuel;

“peat” means peat falling within CN code 2703 and includes any solid fuel manufactured from peat;

“prescribed” means prescribed by regulations made by the Commissioners under section 85 ;

“solid fuel” means coal or peat;

“supplier” means an accountable person for the purposes of section 8 of the Value-Added Tax Act 1972 who supplies solid fuel;

“supply” means the supply of a quantity of solid fuel;

“tax” means solid fuel carbon tax within the meaning of subsection (1) of section 78 .

Charging and rates of solid fuel carbon tax.

78.— (1) Subject to the provisions of this Chapter and any regulations made under it, a duty of excise, to be known as solid fuel carbon tax, shall be charged, levied and paid at the rates specified in Schedule 1 on all solid fuel supplied in the State by a supplier.

(2) Subsection (1) shall apply to all solid fuel supplied by a supplier, for combustion by such supplier.

(3) The rate per tonne for each solid fuel specified in Schedule 1 is in proportion to the emissions of CO2 from the combustion of the solid fuel concerned and is determined by the formula—

NCV × EF × A

where—

NCV is the net calorific value of the solid fuel concerned expressed in terajoules per tonne,

EF is the carbon emission factor of the solid fuel concerned expressed in tonnes of CO 2 per terajoule,

A is the amount, €15, to be charged per tonne of CO 2 emitted.

Liability to pay solid fuel carbon tax.

79.— Tax shall be charged at the time the solid fuel is first supplied in the State by a supplier, and that supplier shall be accountable for and liable to pay the tax charged.

Registration of solid fuel suppliers.

80.— Every supplier shall register with the Commissioners in accordance with such procedures as the Commissioners may prescribe or otherwise impose.

Returns and payment by solid fuel suppliers.

81.— (1) For the purposes of section 79 , a supplier shall within one month of the end of an accounting period, in respect of the solid fuel supplied in that accounting period, furnish to an officer a return in such form as the Commissioners may require showing—

(a) the quantity and description of that solid fuel, and

(b) in respect of each of the reliefs under section 82 , the quantity of that solid fuel that qualified for such relief.

(2) The supplier shall, in accordance with the return under subsection (1) and by the time that return is due, pay the amount of tax due in respect of the accounting period concerned.

Reliefs from solid fuel carbon tax.

82.— (1) Without prejudice to any other relief from tax which may apply, and subject to such conditions as may be prescribed or otherwise imposed, a full relief from tax shall be granted on any solid fuel which is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners to have been delivered for use—

(a) for the generation of electricity, or

(b) for chemical reduction or in electrolytic or metallurgical processes.

(2) (a) Without prejudice to any other relief from tax which may apply, and subject to paragraph (b) and to such conditions as may be prescribed or otherwise imposed, a relief from tax shall be granted on any solid fuel which is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners to have been delivered for use in an installation that is covered by a greenhouse gas emissions permit.

(b) The relief under paragraph (a) is—

(i) in the case of peat, a full relief, and

(ii) in the case of coal, a partial relief, to be calculated as the amount of tax chargeable on the quantity of coal delivered, less an amount calculated at the rate of €4.18 per tonne.

Repayments of solid fuel carbon tax.

83.— (1) Where a supply on which tax has been paid qualifies for relief under section 82 a repayment of that tax shall be made to the consumer of that supply.

(2) (a) Claims for repayment under subsection (1) shall be in such form as the Commissioners may direct and shall be in respect of solid fuel delivered within a period of not less than one and not more than 6 calendar months.

(b) Except where the Commissioners may in any particular case otherwise allow, a repayment may not be made unless the claim is made within 6 calendar months following the end of the period in respect of which the claim for repayment is made.

Offence and penalty (Chapter 3).

84.— (1) It is an offence under this subsection for any person to contravene or fail to comply with any provision of this Chapter, or any regulation made under section 85 , or any condition imposed under this Chapter, or under such regulation in relation to such provision.

(2) Without prejudice to any other penalty to which a person may be liable, a person convicted of an offence under subsection (1) is liable on summary conviction to a fine of €5,000.

(3) Where an offence under subsection (1) is committed by a body corporate and the offence is shown to have been committed with the consent or connivance of any person who, when the offence was committed, was a director, manager, secretary or other officer of the body corporate, or a member of the committee of management or other controlling authority of the body corporate, that person shall also be deemed to be guilty of an offence and may be proceeded against and punished as if guilty of the first-mentioned offence.

Regulations (Chapter 3).

85.— The Commissioners may, for the purposes of managing, securing and collecting the tax, or for the protection of the revenue derived from it, make regulations.

Care and management (Chapter 3).

86.— The tax imposed by this Chapter is placed under the care and management of the Commissioners.

Commencement (Chapter 3).

87.— This Chapter comes into operation on such date as the Minister for Finance may appoint by order.

Chapter 4

Miscellaneous

Rates of alcohol products tax.

88.— The Finance Act 2003 is amended with effect as on and from 10 December 2009 by substituting the following for Schedule 2 to that Act:

“SCHEDULE 2

Rates of Alcohol Products Tax

(With effect as on and from 10 December 2009)

Description of Product

Rate of Tax

Spirits:

€31.13 per litre of alcohol in the spirits

Beer:

Exceeding 0.5% vol but not exceeding 1.2% vol

€0.00

Exceeding 1.2% vol but not exceeding 2.8% vol

€7.85 per hectolitre per cent of alcohol in the beer

Exceeding 2.8% vol

€15.71 per hectolitre per cent of alcohol in the beer

Wine:

Still and sparkling, not exceeding 5.5% vol

€87.39 per hectolitre

Still, exceeding 5.5% vol but not exceeding 15% vol

€262.24 per hectolitre

Still, exceeding 15% vol

€380.52 per hectolitre

Sparkling, exceeding 5.5% vol

€524.48 per hectolitre

Other Fermented Beverages:

(1) Cider and Perry:

Still and sparkling, not exceeding 2.8% vol

€32.93 per hectolitre

Still and sparkling, exceeding 2.8% vol but not exceeding 6.0% vol

€65.86 per hectolitre

Still and sparkling, exceeding 6.0% vol but not exceeding 8.5% vol

€152.28 per hectolitre

Still, exceeding 8.5% vol

€216.00 per hectolitre

Sparkling, exceeding 8.5% vol

€432.01 per hectolitre

(2) Other than Cider and Perry:

Still and sparkling, not exceeding 5.5% vol

€87.39 per hectolitre

Still, exceeding 5.5% vol

€262.24 per hectolitre

Sparkling, exceeding 5.5% vol

€524.48 per hectolitre

Intermediate Beverages:

Still, not exceeding 15% vol

€262.24 per hectolitre

Still, exceeding 15% vol

€380.52 per hectolitre

Sparkling

€524.48 per hectolitre

”.

Amendment of section 98A (relief for biofuel) of Finance Act 1999.

89.— Section 98A of the Finance Act 1999 is amended―

(a) in subsection (1) by substituting “a relief from mineral oil tax shall, subject to such conditions as may be imposed by the Minister or by the Commissioners, apply to such biofuel” for “a relief from mineral oil tax shall, subject to such conditions as the Commissioners may impose, apply to such biofuel”,

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (1):

“(1A) The power of the Minister under subsection (1) to impose conditions includes the power to impose such conditions as the Minister considers necessary or appropriate for the purpose of ensuring that an approved project is conducted in accordance with the terms of its approval.”,

(c) by inserting the following after subsection (3):

“(3A) Where the total quantity of biofuel specified under subsection (3)(a) in the approval for any particular project exceeds 50 million litres, relief under subsection (1) shall not be granted in respect of any quantity of biofuel, produced or supplied (as the case may be) during the period from 1 July 2010 to 31 December 2010, that exceeds 20 per cent of that total quantity.”.

Amendment of Chapter 1 (mineral oil tax) of Part 2 of Finance Act 1999.

90.— (1) Chapter 1 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 1999 is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) of section 94 by inserting the following definition after the definition of “ recycle ”:

“ ‘release for consumption’ has the same meaning as it has in Part 2 of the Finance Act 2001 ;”,

(b) in section 95 by substituting the following for subsection (1)—

“(1) In addition to any other duty that may be chargeable, and subject to the provisions of this Chapter and any regulations made under it, a duty of excise, to be known as mineral oil tax, shall, subject to subsection (4), be charged, levied and paid on all mineral oil—

(a) released for consumption in the State, or

(b) released for consumption in another Member State, and brought into the State.”.

(2) This section has effect on and from 1 April 2010.

Amendment of Chapter 3 (tobacco products tax) of Part 2 of Finance Act 2005.

91.— (1) Chapter 3 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 2005 is amended in subsection (1) of section 71—

(a) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “fine cut tobacco for the rolling of cigarettes”:

“ ‘importer’ means a person who, for commercial purposes, brings tobacco products into the State, and includes a person who brings tobacco products from another Member State;”,

and

(b) by substituting the following for the definition of “release for consumption”:

“ ‘ release for consumption ’ has the same meaning as it has in Part 2 of the Finance Act 2001 ;”.

(2) Chapter 3 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 2005 is amended by substituting the following for section 72:

“Charging and rates.

72.— In addition to any other duty that may be chargeable, and subject to the provisions of this Chapter and any regulations made under it, a duty of excise, to be known as tobacco products tax, shall be charged, levied and paid at the rates specified in Schedule 2 on all tobacco products—

(a) released for consumption in the State, or

(b) released for consumption in another Member State and brought into the State.”.

(3) Chapter 3 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 2005 is amended in section 73 by substituting the following for subsection (1):

“(1) Liability for tobacco products tax shall arise at the time tobacco products are, either—

(a) released for consumption in the State, or

(b) following release for consumption in another Member State, brought into the State.”.

(4) This section has effect on and from 1 April 2010.

Amendment of Chapter 1 (alcohol products tax) of Part 2 of Finance Act 2003.

92.— (1) Chapter 1 of Part 2 of the Finance Act 2003 is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) of section 73 by inserting the following definition after the definition of “prohibited goods”:

“ ‘release for consumption’ has the same meaning as it has in Part 2 of the Finance Act 2001 ;”,

(b) in section 75 by substituting the following for subsection (1)—

“(1) In addition to any other duty that may be chargeable, and subject to the provisions of this Chapter and any regulations made under it, a duty of excise, to be known as alcohol products tax, shall be charged, levied and paid at the rates specified in Schedule 2 on all alcohol products—

(a) released for consumption in the State, or

(b) released for consumption in another Member State and brought into the State.”,

(c) in section 76 by substituting the following for subsection (1):

“(1) Liability for alcohol products tax shall arise at the time alcohol products are, either—

(a) released for consumption in the State, or

(b) following release for consumption in another Member State, brought into the State.”.

(2) This section has effect on and from 1 April 2010.

Amendment of Part 2 (consolidation and modernisation of general excise law) of Finance Act 2001.

93.— (1) Part 2 of the Finance Act 2001 is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for section 96:

“Interpretation (Part 2).

96.— (1) In this Part—

‘accompanying administrative document’ means the document provided for by Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 2719/92 12 of 11 September 1992;

‘Appeal Commissioners’ has the meaning assigned to it by section 850 of the Taxes Consolidation Act, 1997 ;

‘authorised warehousekeeper’ means, as the case requires, either—

(a) a person in the State authorised by the Commissioners, in accordance with section 109, to produce, process, or hold excisable products in a tax warehouse, or to dispatch and receive consignments of excisable products to and from a tax warehouse, in the course of business, under a suspension arrangement, or

(b) a person in another Member State, authorised by the competent authorities of that Member State to dispatch and receive consignments of excisable products to and from a tax warehouse, in the course of business, under a suspension arrangement;

‘Commissioners’ means the Revenue Commissioners;

‘ Directive ’ means Council Directive No. 2008/118/EC 13 of 16 December 2008;

‘European Union’ means the territory of the Union as defined by the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and, in particular, Article 355 of that Treaty except for the following national territories:

(a) in the case of Germany, the Island of Heligoland and the territory of Büsingen,

(b) in the case of Italy, Livigno, Campione d’Italia and the Italian waters of Lake Lugano,

(c) in the case of the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands,

(d) in the case of Greece, Mount Athos,

(e) in the case of Spain, the Canary Islands, Ceuta and Melilla,

(f) in the case of France, the overseas Departments of the Republic, and

(g) in the case of Finland, the Åland Islands;

‘excise law’ means the statutes that relate to the duties of excise and the instruments relating to those duties made under statute;

‘exempt consignee’ means, as the case may be, either—

(a) a consignee in the State who, in respect of a consignment, qualifies for relief under section 104(1), and who has been granted a certificate to that effect by the Commissioners, or

(b) a consignee in another Member State who, in respect of a consignment, qualifies for relief in accordance with paragraph 1 of Article 12 of the Directive, and who has been granted a certificate to that effect by the competent authority of that Member State;

‘free warehouse’ has the same meaning as it has in Article 166 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92 of 12 October 1992 14 ;

‘free zone’ has the same meaning as it has in Article 166 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92 of 12 October 1992;

‘information’ includes any representation of fact, whether in legible form or otherwise;

‘Member State’ means a Member State of the European Union;

‘mineral oil’ has the same meaning as it has in paragraph (d) of section 97(1);

‘non-State vendor’ means a person in another Member State who sells excisable products, released for consumption in that Member State, to a private individual resident in the State, for the personal use of that private individual, and who dispatches or transports such products, directly or indirectly, to such private individual;

‘ officer ’, except in Chapter 4, means an officer of the Commissioners;

‘prescribed’ means prescribed by regulations made by the Commissioners under section 153;

‘prohibited goods’ has the same meaning as it has in either—

(a) section 94 of the Finance Act 1999 , or

(b) section 73 (as amended by the Finance Act 2005 ) of the Finance Act 2003 ;

‘ records’ means any books, accounts, documents or other recorded information including information in a computer or in other non-legible form;

‘registered consignee’ means, as the case requires, either—

(a) a person, other than an authorised warehousekeeper or an exempt consignee, authorised by the Commissioners, in accordance with section 109J(3), to receive, in the course of business, consignments of excisable products from another Member State under a suspension arrangement, or

(b) a person in another Member State, other than an authorised warehousekeeper or an exempt consignee, authorised by the competent authority of that Member State, to receive, in the course of business, consignments of excisable products from another Member State under a suspension arrange-ment;

‘registered consignor’ means, as the case requires, either—

(a) a person, other than an authorised warehousekeeper, who is authorised by the Commissioners in accordance with section 109A to consign, in the course of business, excisable products to another Member State under a suspension arrangement, upon their release for free circulation in accordance with Article 79 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92, or

(b) a person, other than an authorised warehousekeeper, who is authorised by the competent authorities of another Member State, to consign, in the course of business, excisable products from that other Member State under a suspension arrangement, upon their release for free circulation in accordance with Article 79 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92;

‘simplified accompanying document’ means the simplified accompanying document provided for in Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 3649/92 of 17 December 1992 15 ;

‘spirits’ has the same meaning as it has in paragraph (a) of section 97(1);

‘ State vendor ’ means a person established in the State who sells excisable products, released for consumption in the State, to a private individual in another Member State for the personal use of that private individual, and who dispatches or transports such products, directly or indirectly, to such private individual;

‘suspension arrangement’ means an arrangement under which excisable products are produced, processed, held or moved, excise duty being suspended;

‘tax representative’ means a person, established in the State, who is authorised by the Commissioners to act as an agent on behalf of persons delivering excisable products from another Member State;

‘tax warehouse’ means, as the case requires, either—

(a) a premises or place approved by the Commissioners under section 109, where excisable products may be produced, processed, held, received or dispatched under a suspension arrangement by an authorised warehousekeeper in the course of business, or

(b) a premises or place approved by the competent authority of another Member State, where excisable products may be produced, processed, held, received or dispatched under a suspension arrangement by an authorised warehousekeeper in the course of business;

‘tobacco products’ has the same meaning as it has in paragraph (c) of section 97(1);

‘vehicle’ means a mechanically propelled vehicle or any other conveyance, and includes any container, trailer, tank or any other thing, which—

(a) is or may be used for the storage of goods in the course of carriage, and

(b) is designed or constructed to be placed on, in or attached to any such vehicle or other conveyance;

‘ wine ’ has the same meaning as it has in section 73 of the Finance Act 2003 .

(2) A word or expression that is used in this Part and which is also used in the Directive has, unless a meaning is provided by subsection (1) or section 109B or the contrary intention otherwise appears, the same meaning in this Part as it has in the Directive.”,

(b) by substituting the following for section 98:

“Importation from outside territory of European Union.

98.— The Commissioners may require that, on the importation of excisable products from outside the territory of the European Union, the person who declares such products for free circulation in accordance with Article 79 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92 shall provide such information as they require for the correct accounting for, and payment of, any excise duty that is payable on such products.”,

(c) by inserting the following after section 98:

Release for consumption.

98A.— (1) In this Part ‘release for consumption’ means—

(a) any release, including irregular release, of excisable products from a suspension arrangement,

(b) any production, including irregular production, of excisable products outside a suspension arrangement, or

(c) any importation, including irregular importation, of excisable products, except where, in the case of a regular importation, the excisable products are, immediately upon importation, placed under a suspension arrangement.

(2) Where a consignment is to be delivered to a registered consignee or exempt consignee under section 109J(1), that consignment is released for consumption when it is so received by that consignee, or when it is delivered in accordance with section 109J(2).

(3) Any excisable products that are held otherwise than under a suspension arrangement have been released for consumption under subsection (1).

(4) Without prejudice to subsection (1), excisable products shall be deemed not to have been released for consumption where they are shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners to have been lost—

(a) during production, processing or holding in the State, or

(b) in the course of movement to, from or within the State,

under a suspension arrangement, and where such loss is shown to their satisfaction to have been—

(i) due to unforeseen circumstances or force majeure, or

(ii) a loss inherent in the nature of the excisable products, or

(iii) the result of destruction in accordance with such procedures as the Commissioners may require.

(5) For the purposes of subsection (4) excisable products are destroyed where they are rendered unusable as excisable products.

(6) Except where subsection (4) applies, a shortage or loss of excisable products under a suspension arrangement is a release for consumption, and such products are, accordingly, liable to excise duty at the rate applicable—

(a) at the time such losses or shortages occurred, where such time can be established to the satisfaction of an officer, or

(b) where such time cannot be so established, at the time such losses or shortages came to the notice of an officer.

(7) For the purposes of subsection (1)(a), an irregular release of excisable products from a consignment under a suspension arrangement is a release for consumption in the State only where that irregular release has occurred in the State or is, in accordance with prescribed criteria, deemed to have so occurred.”,

(d) by substituting the following for section 99:

“Liability of persons.

99.— (1) An authorised warehousekeeper is liable for payment of the excise duty on excisable products released from a tax warehouse by such authorised warehousekeeper—

(a) for consumption, or

(b) for delivery under a suspension arrangement.

(2) The liability under subsection (1)(b) is fully or partly discharged where, and to the extent that, the excisable products have been (as the case may be)—

(a) received into another tax warehouse in the State,

(b) received in another Member State by a consignee referred to in section 109E(2),

(c) exported from the European Union,

and evidence to that effect is received within the prescribed time and in the prescribed manner.

(3) A registered consignor is liable for payment of the excise duty on any consignment made by such registered consignor under section 109E(1)(b), and that liability is fully or partly discharged where, and to the extent that, evidence that the consignment has ended is received within the prescribed time and in the prescribed manner.

(4) A registered consignee is liable for payment of excise duty on excisable products delivered to such consignee under a suspension arrangement.

(5) Without prejudice to the liability of any person under subsection (1), (3), or (4), where the irregular release of excisable products from a suspension arrangement gives rise to a liability to excise duty, any person who knowingly participated in that irregular release is liable for payment of that excise duty.

(6) A tax representative, acting on behalf of a non-State vendor in accordance with section 109U, is liable for the payment of the excise duty on excisable products delivered to the State by or on behalf of such non-State vendor.

(7) Where excisable products are imported into the State from outside the European Union, and the products are not then placed under a suspension arrangement, the person liable for payment of the excise duty is—

(a) the person who declares such products for free circulation, in accordance with Article 79 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92, or

(b) where the excisable products are not declared for free circulation—

(i) any person who imports the products, and

(ii) any person who arranged for the importation of the products, or on whose behalf such importation was arranged.

(8) Where excisable products are produced, otherwise than under a suspension arrangement in a tax warehouse, the person liable for payment of the excise duty is—

(a) the producer of the excisable products, and

(b) any person who arranged for the production, or on whose behalf the production was carried out.

(9) Where any person, otherwise than under a suspension arrangement, has—

(a) sold or delivered, or

(b) kept for sale or delivery,

excisable products on which the appropriate excise duty has not been paid, then—

(i) such person,

(ii) any other person on whose behalf such excisable products have been so sold, kept, or delivered, and

(iii) any person to whom such products have been delivered,

is liable for payment of the excise duty on such excisable products.

(10) Where any person has received excisable products on which excise duty has been relieved, rebated, repaid, or charged at a rate lower than the appropriate standard rate subject to a requirement that such excisable products are used for a specific purpose or in a specific manner, and where—

(a) such requirement has not been satisfied, or

(b) any requirement of excise law in relation to the holding or delivery of such excisable products has not been complied with, and it is not shown, to the satisfaction of the Commissioners, that the excisable products have been used, or are held for use, for such purpose or in such manner,

then the person who has received such excisable products, or who holds them for sale or delivery, is liable for payment of the excise duty on such products at the rate appropriate to them, without the benefit of any such relief, rebate, repayment or lower rate.

(11) Where under subsections (1) to (10) more than one person is, in a particular case, liable for payment of an excise duty liability, such persons are jointly and severally liable.

(12) Subsections (1) to (11) are without prejudice to the liability of excisable products to excise duty, or their liability to forfeiture, under excise law.”,

(e) by substituting the following for section 100:

“Duties to apply to excisable products released for consumption in another Member State.

100.— (1) Subject to section 104(2), the duties of excise imposed by the provisions referred to in section 97 shall apply in relation to excisable products released for consumption in another Member State and brought into the State.

(2) Subsection (1) shall not apply to any excisable products that have been released for consumption in another Member State and which are held on board a boat or aircraft making a sea crossing between another Member State and the State, where such excisable products are not available for sale or supply while such boat or aircraft is within the territory of the State.

(3) Subsection (1) shall not apply to excisable products that are brought into the State under cover of the simplified accompanying document, while such products remain under such cover.”,

(f) by deleting section 102,

(g) in section 104 by substituting the following for subsection (1):

“(1) Without prejudice to any other relief from excise duty that may apply, and subject to such conditions as the Commissioners may prescribe or otherwise impose, a full relief from excise duty shall be granted on any excisable products that are shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners to be delivered—

(a) under diplomatic arrangements in the State,

(b) to international organisations recognised as such by the State, and the members of such organisations based in the State, within the limits and under the conditions laid down by international conventions establishing such organisations or by other agreements,

(c) for consumption under any agreement entered into between the State and a country other than a Member State where such agreement also provides for exemption from value-added tax,

(d) for export or re-export from the State to a place outside the European Union, or shipped for use as stores on board a ship or aircraft on a voyage or a flight, as the case may be, from a place in the State to a place outside the State, and

(e) to a tax-free shop at an airport for supply to passengers travelling to a destination outside of the European Union.”,

(h) in section 105 by deleting paragraphs (d) and (e) of subsection (1),

(i) in section 105C (inserted by section 98 of the Finance Act 2003 ) by deleting subsection (1),

(j) in section 105D by deleting the definition of “excise law” in subsection (1),

(k) by deleting section 106,

(l) in section 108A (inserted by section 69 of the Finance Act 2008 ) by substituting the following for paragraph (b) of subsection (1):

“(b) the holding of excisable products under a suspension arrangement, or on which the appropriate rate of excise duty has not been paid.”,

(m) in section 109 by substituting the following for paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (7):

“(b) Without prejudice to paragraph (a) a tenant shall, at a level specified in the authorisation document, provide security for any excisable products to be received by such tenant as a consignee under a suspension arrangement,

(c) Any authorised warehousekeeper who dispatches excisable products from a tax warehouse under a suspension arrangement shall, before any such dispatch, provide security, valid throughout the European Union, at a level specified in the authorisation document, for the excise duty on such products.”,

(n) by inserting the following after section 109:

“Authorisation of registered consignors.

109A.— (1) In this section—

‘applicant’ means a person who has applied in writing for authorisation under subsection (2);

‘authorised’ means authorised as a registered consignor under this section;

‘conditions of authorisation’ means the conditions referred to in subsection (2).

(2) The Commissioners may, under this section, authorise a person who has applied to them in writing as a registered consignor—

(a) for consignments of specific types of excisable products, and

(b) for such period, and subject to such conditions as they may think fit to impose in any particular case.

(3) (a) An applicant shall only be authorised where it is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners that such applicant or, where the applicant is a company, any director or person having control of such company, within the meaning of section 11 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 , can satisfy the conditions of authorisation.

(b) No applicant shall be authorised who does not hold a current tax clearance certificate issued under section 1094 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 .

(c) No applicant shall be authorised where such applicant or, where the applicant is a company, any director or person having control of the company within the meaning of section 11 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 , has in the 10 years prior to the application been convicted of any indictable offence under the Acts referred to in section 1078(1) of that Act, or any corresponding offence under the law of another Member State.

(4) Before any excisable products are consigned by a registered consignor, that registered consignor shall provide security, valid throughout the European Union, at a level specified in the authorisation document, for the excise duty on such consignment.

(5) A registered consignor shall inform an officer of any changes or proposed changes that are relevant to the conditions of authorisation.

(6) The Commissioners may at any time, following such notice as is reasonable in the circumstances, vary the conditions of authorisation.

(7) Where a registered consignor is a company, the authorisation shall expire immediately upon a change of control of such company, within the meaning of section 11 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 .

(8) Authorisation under this section is at all times subject to the conditions of authorisation, and the Commissioners may revoke an authorisation where the registered consignor—

(a) contravenes or fails to comply with such conditions,

(b) contravenes or fails to comply with any provision of excise law relating to the excisable products in respect of which the authorisation has been granted, or

(c) no longer satisfies the requirements for authorisation.

(9) Where the Commissioners propose to revoke an authorisation, they shall notify the registered consignor concerned in writing of their intention, and afford such registered consignor a period of at least 15 working days from the date of that notification, to make representations to them in relation to the matter.”,

(o) by substituting the following for Chapter 2:

“Chapter 2A

Intra-European Union Movement under a Suspension Arrangement

Interpretation (Chapter 2A).

109B.— In this Chapter—

‘administrative reference code’ means the unique administrative reference to be assigned to the draft electronic administrative document, in accordance with Article 21(3) of the Directive;

‘Commission Regulation’ means Commission Regulation (EC) No. 684/2009 of 24 July 2009 16 ;

‘completely denatured alcohol products’ means alcohol products that are exempt from excise duty under Article 27(1)(a) of Council Directive No. 92/83/EEC;

‘ computerised system ’ means the system referred to in Article 1 of Decision No. 1152/2003/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 June 2003 17 ;

‘consignment’ means the single movement of a specific quantity of excisable products under a suspension arrangement;

‘consignor’ means, as the case requires, either—

(a) an authorised warehousekeeper or registered consignor in the State who dispatches a consignment under section 109E(1), or

(b) an authorised warehousekeeper or registered consignor in another Member State who dispatches a consignment;

‘ customs electronic data ’ in respect of a consignment, means the export data that, under Chapter 3 of Title IV of Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 2454/93 of 2 July 1993 18 , are to be exchanged between customs authorities using information technology and computer networks;

‘customs office of exit’ means the customs office of exit referred to in Article 793(2) of Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 2454/93;

‘customs office of export ’ means the customs office of export where an export declaration is lodged in accordance with Article 161(5) of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92;

‘customs suspensive arrangement’ means any one of the special procedures provided for under Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92 relating to the customs supervision to which non-European Union goods are subjected upon their entry into the European Union customs territory, temporary storage, free zones or free warehouses, as well as any of the arrangements referred to in Article 84(1)(a) of that Regulation;

‘designated consignee’ means the authorised warehousekeeper, registered consignee, or exempt consignee, identified as the consignee in the electronic administrative document, or any other document under cover of which a consignment is dispatched;

‘destination Member State’, in respect of a consignment, means the Member State where, as the case may be, the designated consignee, or place of exportation for that consignment, is located;

‘electronic administrative document’ means the electronic administrative document referred to in Article 21(2) of the Directive;

‘exemption certificate’ means, as the case requires, the certificate referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) of the definition of ‘exempt consignee’ in section 96;

‘Member State of dispatch’ means the Member State from which a consignment is dispatched;

‘ paper confirmation of export ’ has the meaning given by section 109N(4);

‘paper confirmation of receipt’ has the meaning given by section 109N(1);

‘ place of exportation ’ means a place where, in accordance with customs procedures, excisable products leave the territory of the European Union;

‘ place of importation ’ means a place where excisable products are released for free circulation in accordance with Article 79 of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2913/92;

‘ place of direct delivery ’ has the same meaning as it has in Article 17(2) of the Directive;

‘ report of export ’ means a report by means of the computerised system, in accordance with Article 25(1) of the Directive, certifying that a consignment has been exported from the territory of the European Union;

‘ report of receipt ’ means a report by means of the computerised system, in accordance with Article 24(1) of the Directive, certifying that a consignment has been received by a designated consignee;

‘ small wine producer ’ means a person in another Member State who produces on average less than 1,000 hectolitres of wine per year, and who is, under Article 40 of the Directive, exempted by the competent authorities of that Member State from the requirements of Chapters III and IV of the Directive;

‘ temporary registered consignee ’ means a registered consignee who receives consignments only occasionally, and whose registration is limited accordingly under section 109J(3).

Product scope (Chapter 2A).

109C.— (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), this Chapter applies to all excisable products.

(2) This Chapter applies only to—

(a) those mineral oils specified in paragraph (1) of Article 20of Council Directive No. 2003/96/EC of 27 October 2003 19 , or which have, by a decision under paragraph (2) of that Article, been made subject to Chapters III, IV, and Vof Council Directive No. 2008/118/EC,

(b) consignments from small wine producers to the extent provided for in section 109O(2),

(c) consignments of completely denatured alcohol products to the extent provided for in section 109O(1).

(3) This Chapter does not apply to any excisable products that are under a customs suspensive arrangement.

Member State territories, exceptional arrangements (Chapter 2A).

109D.— Without prejudice to the definition of ‘ European Union’ in section 96, a consignment under a suspension arrangement to or from—

(a) the Principality of Monaco shall be treated as a movement to or from France,

(b) San Marino shall be treated as a movement to or from Italy,

(c) the United Kingdom Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia shall be treated as a movement to or from Cyprus,

(d) the Isle of Man shall be treated as a movement to or from the United Kingdom,

(e) Jungholz and Mittelberg (Kleines Walsertal) shall be treated as a consignment to or from Germany.

Consignments to another Member State under a suspension arrangement.

109E.— (1) A consignment under a suspension arrangement from a place in the State to another Member State begins when that consignment is dispatched from—

(a) a tax warehouse, where the consignor is an authorised warehousekeeper, or

(b) a place of importation, where the consignor is a registered consignor.

(2) Subject to the relevant provisions of this Chapter, a consignor may dispatch a consignment to—

(a) a tax warehouse, where the designated consignee is an authorised warehousekeeper,

(b) a registered consignee,

(c) a place of exportation, or

(d) an exempt consignee,

in another Member State.

(3) Except where—

(a) in accordance with section 109I(1)(b), a consignment is under cover of a paper document, or

(b) in accordance with section109P, a consignment is dispatched under cover of an accompanying administrative document,

a consignment from a place in the State to another Member State shall be dispatched under the computerised system, and under cover of an electronic administrative document.

(4) The consignor shall ensure that a consignment under cover of the electronic administrative document is accompanied at all times by—

(a) a printed copy of that document, or a commercial document with the same information, and

(b) in the case of a consignment to an exempt consignee, an exemption certificate,

and that such document, and where applicable such certificate, is made available on request to an officer.

Consignment to consignee in another Member State under computerised system.

109F.— (1) For a consignment to a designated consignee in another Member State, a consignor shall submit a draft electronic administrative document, completed in accordance with Article 3 of the Commission Regulation, to the Commissioners.

(2) The Commissioners shall carry out an electronic verification of the data in the draft electronic administrative document by reference to the requirements of the Commission Regulation.

(3) Where the data in the draft electronic administrative document are verified in accordance with subsection (2), the Commissioners shall assign an administrative reference code to it, and forward it without delay to the consignor and to the competent authority of the destination Member State.

(4) Where the data in the draft electronic administrative document cannot be verified in accordance with subsection (2), the Commissioners shall, without delay, advise the consignor accordingly by means of the computerised system.

(5) Where in respect of an electronic administrative document that has, under subsection (3), been forwarded to the competent authority of the destination Member State, the Commissioners receive a report of receipt from that authority, they shall forward that report to the consignor.

Consignment to place of exportation in another Member State under computerised system.

109G.— (1) For a consignment to a place of exportation in another Member State, a consignor shall submit a draft electronic administrative document, completed in accordance with Article 3 of the Commission Regulation, to the Commissioners.

(2) The Commissioners shall carry out an electronic verification of the data in the draft electronic administrative document by reference to the requirements of the Commission Regulation.

(3) (a) Where the data in the draft electronic administrative document are verified in accordance with subsection (2), the Commissioners shall assign an administrative reference code to it, and forward it without delay to the consignor.

(b) Where the data in the draft electronic administrative document cannot be verified in accordance with subsection (2), the Commissioners shall, without delay, advise the consignor accordingly by means of the computerised system.

(4) Where an administrative reference code has been assigned in accordance with subsection (3)(a), and where the export declaration for the consignment is lodged at a customs office of export in another Member State, the Commissioners shall without delay forward the electronic administrative document to the competent authority of that Member State.

(5) Where in respect of a consignment for which an administrative reference code has been assigned in accordance with subsection (3)(a), the Commissioners find that the data in the electronic administrative document do not accord with the customs electronic data for that consignment—

(a) the Commissioners shall advise the consignor accordingly, and

(b) the consignor shall, where required by the Commissioners, ensure that the consignment is halted until such time as the discrepancy is resolved.

(6) Where in respect of an electronic administrative document that has, under subsection (4), been forwarded to the competent authority of another Member State the Commissioners receive a report of export from that authority, they shall forward that report to the consignor.

(7) This section does not apply to any consignment for which customs electronic data are not available.

Cancellation or amendment of electronic administrative document.

109H.— (1) A consignor may only cancel an electronic administrative document where the consignment has not yet been dispatched from (as the case may be) the tax warehouse or place of importation.

(2) Where a consignment has been dispatched, the consignor may by means of the computerised system, in accordance with Article 4 of the Commission Regulation, and subject to verification under (as the case may be) section 109F(2) or 109G(2), amend the destination of the consignment as recorded in the electronic administrative document to any other destination that is allowable under section 109E(2).

(3) Subsection (2) does not apply to any consignment to an exempt consignee.

(4) (a) In the case of a consignment of mineral oil by sea, the Commissioners may, subject to such conditions as they may prescribe or otherwise require, permit the consignor to omit the data concerning the designated consignee from the draft electronic administrative document, where those data have not been determined at the time that document is submitted.

(b) Where paragraph (a) applies, the consignor shall, by means of the computerised system, submit the relevant data to the Commissioners as soon as they are determined, and at the latest when the consignment ends.

Consignment to another Member State where computerised system is unavailable.

109I.— (1) Where the computerised system is unavailable to a consignor, that consignor may, in accordance with subsections (1) and (2) of section 109E, dispatch a consignment where—

(a) the consignor informs the Commissioners in advance, in accordance with such procedures as they may prescribe or otherwise require, of the intention to dispatch and the reason for the unavailability,

(b) the consignment is accompanied by a paper document (referred to as such in this section) containing all the data required for an electronic administrative document.

(2) The Commissioners may prescribe—

(a) the circumstances and situations in which, for the purposes of subsection (1), the computerised system may be considered to be unavailable to a consignor,

(b) the form of the paper document.

(3) The Commissioners may, in any particular case, require that—

(a) a copy of the paper document is sent to them,

(b) the unavailability of the computerised system, and the validity of the paper document, are established to their satisfaction before the consignment is dispatched.

(4) (a) A consignor who has consigned in accordance with subsection (1) shall, as soon as the computerised system is available to that consignor, submit a draft electronic administrative document for the consignment concerned.

(b) From such time as an administrative reference code is assigned to the draft electronic administrative document submitted in accordance with paragraph (a), the consignment is under cover of that document, and subject to the provisions of this Chapter that relate to the computerised system.

(5) Where a consignment is under cover of a paper document, the consignor may, in accordance with such procedures as the Commissioners may prescribe, change the destination for that consignment, as recorded in that paper document, to any other destination that is allowable under section 109E(2).

Consignments to the State under suspension arrangement.

109J.— (1) A consignment from another Member State may be delivered to—

(a) a tax warehouse, where the designated consignee is an authorised warehousekeeper,

(b) a registered consignee, subject to subsection (3),

(c) an exempt consignee, or

(d) a place of exportation,

in the State.

(2) Without prejudice to subsection (1), the Commissioners may, subject to such conditions as they may prescribe or otherwise require, in the case of any consignment for—

(a) a tax warehouse, or

(b) a registered consignee other than a temporary registered consignee,

allow that consignment to be delivered to a place of direct delivery.

(3) For the purposes of subsection (1)(b) a registered consignee shall—

(a) be registered as such by the Commissioners for such periods and subject to such conditions as the Commissioners may prescribe, and in any case where consignments are to be delivered only occasionally, such authorisation may be limited to—

(i) a specified quantity of excisable products,

(ii) a single consignment,

(iii) a single consignor, or

(iv) a specified period,

(b) provide security for the excise duty on every consignment to be received, before such consignment is dispatched,

(c) keep such records as the Commissioners may require.

(4) (a) The Commissioners may at any time for reasonable cause revoke any registration under subsection (3), or vary its terms.

(b) Where the Commissioners propose to revoke a registration under paragraph (a), they shall notify the registered consignee accordingly in writing of their intention, and afford such registered consignee a period of at least 15 working days from the date of that notification, to make representations to them in relation to the matter.

(5) Where, in respect of any consignment under the computerised system to an authorised warehousekeeper or registered consignee, the Commissioners receive an electronic administrative document from the competent authority of the Member State of dispatch, they shall forward that electronic administrative document to that authorised warehousekeeper or registered consignee.

(6) The consignments referred to in subsection (1), and any other consignment from another Member State that enters the territory of the State, shall at all times be under cover of—

(a) an electronic administrative document,

(b) in any case where the computerised system was unavailable at the time of consignment, and Article 26(3) of the Directive applied for the time being, a paper document containing all the data required for an electronic administrative document, or

(c) in any case where section 109P(1) applies, an accompany-ing administrative document.

(7) In the case of a consignment to an exempt consignee under section 109J(1)(c), that consignee shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that, in addition to the document required for that consignment under subsection (6), the consignment is accompanied by a copy of the exemption certificate of the exempt consignee.

Completion of consignment.

109K.— (1) A consignment shall end—

(a) in the case of a consignment to a designated consignee, when that designated consignee has taken delivery of the consignment, and

(b) in the case of a consignment to a place of exportation, when that consignment has left the territory of the European Union.

(2) (a) A report of receipt, report of export, paper confirmation of receipt or paper confirmation of export shall, unless and until there is evidence to the contrary, be evidence that a consignment has ended.

(b) Without prejudice to paragraph (a), the Commissioners may, in any case where evidence under that paragraph is unavailable, accept alternative evidence that a consignment has ended.

Report of receipt.

109L.— (1) (a) Except where section 109N applies, and subject to paragraph (b), where a consignment has been delivered to a designated consignee in accordance with section 109J(1), that designated consignee shall, without delay and no later than 5 working days after the consignment has been received, submit a report of receipt to the Commissioners.

(b) Where a consignment has been delivered to an exempt consignee in accordance with section 109J(1)(c), the Commissioners shall, in accordance with such procedure as they may prescribe or otherwise require, prepare a report of receipt.

(2) The Commissioners shall, by reference to the requirements of the Commission Regulation, carry out a verification of the data in each report of receipt submitted to them.

(3) (a) Where the data in the report of receipt are verified in accordance with subsection (2), the Commissioners shall, by means of the computerised system confirm the registration of that report to the designated consignee, and forward it to the competent authority of the Member State of dispatch.

(b) Where the data in the report of receipt cannot be verified in accordance with subsection (2), the Commissioners shall advise the designated consignee accordingly without delay.

Report of export.

109M.— (1) Where, in the case of a consignment to a place of exportation, the export declaration is lodged at a customs office of export in the State, and where an electronic administrative document has been forwarded to the Commissioners from—

(a) a consignor in the State, in accordance with section 109G and verified in accordance with subsection (2) of that section, or

(b) the competent authority of a Member State of dispatch, in accordance with Article 21.5 of the Directive,

the Commissioners shall, on receipt of an electronic confirmation from the customs office of exit that the consignment has left the territory of the European Union, carry out an electronic verification of the data in that confirmation and, subject to such verification, complete a report of export.

(2) The Commissioners shall forward the report of export—

(a) where paragraph (a) of subsection (1) applies, to the consignor,

(b) where paragraph (b) of subsection (1) applies, to the competent authority of the Member State of dispatch.

Confirmation of receipt and export by alternative means.

109N.— (1) Where a report of receipt cannot be submitted in accordance with section 109L(1), either because—

(a) the computerised system is unavailable to the designated consignee, or

(b) the consignment remains, for the time being under cover of the paper document in accordance with section 109J(6)(b),

the designated consignee shall, between the 15th and 30th day after the consignment has ended, submit to the Commissioners a paper confirmation of receipt containing all the data required for a report of receipt, stating that the consignment has been received.

(2) Where a paper confirmation of receipt has been submitted in accordance with subsection (1), and as soon as paragraph (a) or (b) (as the case may be) of subsection (1) no longer applies, the designated consignee shall submit a report of receipt for the consignment by means of the computerised system in accordance with section 109L(1).

(3) Where—

(a) a paper confirmation of receipt has been submitted to the Commissioners, and

(b) within 30 days of the ending of the consignment, the consignee cannot submit a report of receipt by means of the computerised system,

then the Commissioners shall forward a copy of the paper confirmation of receipt to the competent authorities of the Member State of dispatch.

(4) Where because—

(a) the computerised system is unavailable, or

(b) the consignment remains, for the time being under cover of the paper document in accordance with section 109J(6)(b),

a report of export cannot be forwarded in accordance with section 109M, the Commissioners shall, between the 15th day and 30th day after the consignment has ended, complete a paper confirmation of export containing all the data required for a report of export and forward it, as appropriate to the circumstances of section 109M(2), to the consignor in the State or the competent authority of the Member State of dispatch.

(5) Where, in respect of any consignment to another Member State, the Commissioners receive, otherwise than by means of a report of receipt or a report of export, confirmation from the competent authority of another Member State that a consignment has ended, they shall forward that confirmation to the consignor.

Exceptional procedures.

109O.— (1) Without prejudice to the generality of this Chapter, the provisions of this Chapter that relate to the computerised system shall not apply to consignments under a suspension arrangement of completely denatured alcohol, and such consignments shall, in accordance with Article 5 of Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 3649/92, be under cover of the simplified accompanying document.

(2) Without prejudice to the generality of this Chapter, the provisions of this Chapter that relate to the computerised system shall not apply to consignments of wine produced and dispatched by a small wine producer, and any such consignment shall be in accordance with Commission Regulation (EC) No. 884/2001 of 24 April 2001 20 , and such procedures as the Commissioners may prescribe.

(3) For any consignment of wine referred to in subsection (2), the designated consignee shall—

(a) in advance of the dispatch of the consignment, inform an officer in writing of the intention to receive it,

(b) provide such evidence as the officer may require that the consignment is from a small wine producer, and

(c) on receipt of the consignment, advise the Commissioners in accordance with such procedures as they may specify.

Transitional arrangements.

109P.— (1) From 1 April 2010 until 31 December 2010, or until such other day as the Minister for Finance may appoint by order—

(a) a consignment to another Member State in accordance with section 109E,

(b) a consignment to the State in accordance with section 109J, or

(c) any other consignment from another Member State that enters the territory of the State,

may be under cover of the accompanying administrative document.

(2) The Commissioners may prescribe—

(a) the circumstances in which a consignment may be dispatched under paragraph (a) of subsection (1),

(b) the procedure for the dispatch of a consignment under the accompanying administrative document,

(c) the procedure for receiving a consignment under the accompanying administrative document.

(3) A consignor shall only dispatch a consignment under cover of the accompanying administrative document to a temporary registered consignee in another Member State, where that temporary registered consignee, in advance of the dispatch, provides such consignor with a document certifying that such temporary registered consignee—

(a) has declared to the competent authority of the destination Member State the intention to receive such consignment, and

(b) has paid or secured the excise duty on such consignment in that Member State.

Chapter 2B

Intra-European Union Movement of Duty-Paid Excisable Products

Interpretation (Chapter 2B).

109Q.— In this Chapter ‘consignment’ means the single movement to a Member State of a specific quantity of excisable products that have been released for consumption in another Member State.

Product scope (Chapter 2B).

109R.— (1) Subject to subsection (2), this Chapter applies to all excisable products.

(2) This Chapter applies only to those mineral oils specified in paragraph (1) of Article 20 of Council Directive No. 2003/96/EC of 27 October 2003 or which have, by a decision under paragraph (2) of that Article, been made subject to Chapters III, IV, and V of Council Directive No. 2008/118/EC.

Member State territories, exceptional arrangements (Chapter 2B).

109S.— Without prejudice to the definition of ‘European Union’ in section 96, a consignment to or from—

(a) the Principality of Monaco shall be treated as a consignment to or from France,

(b) San Marino shall be treated as a consignment to or from Italy,

(c) the United Kingdom Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia shall be treated as a consignment to or from Cyprus,

(d) the Isle of Man shall be treated as a consignment to or from the United Kingdom,

(e) Jungholz and Mittelberg (Kleines Walsertal) shall be treated as a consignment to or from Germany.

Consignment to the State of excisable products released for consumption in another Member State.

109T.— (1) Subject to subsection (2), a consignment may be brought into the State only where the person who brings it, or any other person who arranges for it to be so brought—

(a) in advance of the dispatch of the consignment, declares to an officer the intention to bring the consignment, and secures the excise duty,

(b) pays the excise duty on the excisable products consigned,

(c) complies with such conditions as may be prescribed.

(2) Any consignment under subsection (1) shall be accompanied by a simplified accompanying document, and be delivered to the person designated as the recipient in that document.

(3) This section does not apply to any excisable products that are—

(a) relieved from excise duty under section 104(2), or

(b) acquired from a non-State vendor in accordance with section 109U.

Distance selling from another Member State.

109U.— (1) Before the dispatch of a consignment to a private individual in the State, a non-State vendor shall appoint a person established in the State as a tax representative who, under section 99(6), is liable for the excise duty on that consignment.

(2) (a) A tax representative shall be approved as such by the Commissioners for such periods and subject to such conditions, including the level of security to be provided, as the Commissioners may think fit to impose in any particular case.

(b) The Commissioners may at any time for reasonable cause revoke any approval granted under paragraph (a), or vary its terms.

(c) Where the Commissioners propose to revoke an approval under paragraph (b), they shall notify the tax representative concerned in writing of their intention, and afford such tax representative a period of at least 15 working days from the date of that notification, to make representations to them in relation to the matter.

(3) A tax representative shall ensure that—

(a) prior to the dispatch of a consignment, a declaration, in such form as the Commissioners may prescribe, is made to an officer, describing the consignment and designating a premises or place to which it is to be delivered,

(b) prior to the dispatch of a consignment, security is provided for the excise duty on it,

(c) as soon as the consignment is delivered, any excise duty outstanding is paid,

(d) such other requirements, including the keeping of records, as the Commissioners may prescribe, are complied with.

Consignment of excisable products, duty-paid in the State, to another Member State.

109V.— Any person other than a State vendor who dispatches a consignment from the State to another Member State shall—

(a) before the consignment is dispatched—

(i) make a declaration to the Commissioners in such form as they may prescribe or otherwise require, and

(ii) ensure that the consignment is under cover of the simplified accompanying document,

(b) comply with such other requirements, including the keeping of records, as the Commissioners may prescribe.

Distance selling to another Member State.

109W.— A State vendor shall, for any excisable products sold by such State vendor and dispatched to a private individual in another Member State—

(a) before the dispatch—

(i) have registered his or her identity with the office designated by the competent authority of that other Member State for that purpose, and

(ii) guarantee payment of the excise duty due in that other Member State on the consignment,

(b) pay any excise duty outstanding in respect of any such consignment, in that other Member State as soon as the consignment is delivered,

(c) keep records, and provide such information as the Commissioners may require to determine that any such consignment has been in accordance with paragraphs (a) and (b), and to establish an entitlement to a repayment under section 105(1)(b).

Additional requirements.

109X.— (1) In addition to any other requirement of this Chapter or Chapter 2A for use of the simplifying accompanying document, any consignment, other than a consignment from a State vendor or a non-State vendor shall, at all times while within the territory of the State, be under cover of that document.

(2) The Commissioners may prescribe requirements for consignments—

(a) between 2 places in another Member State, by way of the territory of the State,

(b) between 2 places in the State, by way of another Member State.”,

(p) in section 121 by substituting the following for subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a):

“(i) any provision of section 108A, 109, or 109A, or any provision of Chapter 2A, or 2B, or,”,

(q) in section 131 by substituting the following for paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) of subsection (3):

“(b) without prejudice to section 104(2), where excisable products which have been released for consumption in another Member State are found in the State and a requirement specified in subsection (1) of section 109T has not been complied with in respect of such excisable products, any person in whose possession or charge such excisable products are found is presumed, until the contrary is proved, to have contravened or failed to comply with that subsection,

(c) where excisable products to which subsection (3) of section 109U applies are found in the State, and a requirement specified in that subsection has not been complied with in respect of such excisable products, any person in whose possession or charge such excisable products are found is presumed, until the contrary is proved, to have contravened or failed to comply with that subsection,

(d) where excisable products to which section 109J applies are found in the State and a requirement or condition specified in that section or in regulations made under section 153 has not been complied with in respect of such excisable products, any person in whose possession or charge such excisable products are found is presumed, until the contrary is proved, to have contravened or failed to comply with (as the case may be) the requirement or condition concerned.”,

(r) in section 144A by substituting the following for subsection (2):

“(2) Any power, function or duty conferred or imposed on the Commissioners by any provision of section 108A, 109, or 109A, or of Chapter 2A or Chapter 2B, may be exercised or performed on their behalf, and subject to their direction and control, by an officer authorised by them in writing for the purposes of the provision concerned.”,

(s) in subsection (3) of section 145 by substituting the following for paragraphs (b) and (c):

“(b) a refusal to approve a person as a tax representative under section 109U(2), or a revocation under that section of any such approval that has been granted,

(c) a refusal to register a person as a registered consignee under section 109J(3) or a revocation under that section of any such authorisation that has been granted,”,

and

(t) in subsection (3) of section 145 by inserting the following after paragraph (f):

“(g) a refusal to approve a person as a registered consignor under section 109A, or a revocation under that section of any such approval that has been granted,”.

(2) This section comes into operation on 1 April 2010.

Amendment of section 34 (amendments relative to penalties) of Finance Act 1963.

94.— Section 34 of the Finance Act 1963 is amended in subsection (6) by deleting paragraph (c) (inserted by section 80 of the Finance Act 2003 ).

Section 186 (illegally importing) of Customs Consolidation Act 1876 and penalties for offences.

95.— (1) A person who commits an offence to which section 186 of the Customs Consolidation Act 1876 relates is liable—

(a) on summary conviction, to a fine of €5,000 or, at the discretion of the court, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to both the fine and the imprisonment,

(b) on conviction on indictment, to a fine not exceeding—

(i) €126,970, or

(ii) where the value of the goods concerned, including the duty and tax payable thereon, is greater than €250,000, three times the value of those goods,

or at the discretion of the court, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years or to both the fine and the imprisonment.

(2) Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 shall apply in relation to an offence under section 186 of the Customs Consolidation Act 1876 as if, in place of the penalties specified in subsection (3) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 , there were specified in that subsection the penalties provided for by subsection (1) (a) and the reference in subsection (2)(a) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 to the penalties provided for in subsection (3) of that section shall be construed and apply accordingly.

(3) Section 89 of the Finance Act 1997 is repealed.

Amendment of section 3 (penalty for illegally exporting goods) of Customs Act 1956.

96.— Section 3 of the Customs Act 1956 is amended—

(a) in subsection (1) by deleting “and shall for each such offence forfeit either treble the value of the goods or €125, whichever is the greater, and such person may either be detained or proceeded against by summons” and substituting the following:

“and shall for each such offence be liable—

(i) on summary conviction, to a fine of €5,000 or, at the discretion of the court, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to both the fine and the imprisonment,

(ii) on conviction on indictment, to a fine not exceeding—

(I) €126,970, or

(II) where the value of the goods concerned, including the duty and tax payable thereon, is greater than €250,000, three times the value of those goods,

or at the discretion of the court, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years or to both the fine and the imprisonment”,

and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (3):

“(4) Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 shall apply in relation to an offence under this section as if, in place of the penalties specified in subsection (3) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 , there were specified in that subsection the penalties provided for by subsection (1)(i) of this section and the reference in subsection (2)(a) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 to the penalties provided for in subsection (3) of that section shall be construed and apply accordingly.”.

Provision of information relating to persons, conveyances and goods.

97.— (1) In this section “transport operator” means a person or class of persons—

(a) concerned with any aspect of the movement of persons, conveyances or goods out of the State, or

(b) any person directly concerned with the movement of persons, conveyances or goods into the State,

to whom regulations made by the Revenue Commissioners under this section relate.

(2) For the purposes of the prevention, detection and investigation of offences under the Customs Acts and the statutes relating to the duties of excise, the Revenue Commissioners may make regulations requiring a transport operator or class of transport operator to provide to the Revenue Commissioners, in relation to persons, conveyances or goods, entering or leaving the State, or about to enter or leave the State, by air or by sea, the following to the extent known to the transport operator concerned:

(a) a list specifying the name and nationality of each person carried or to be carried on board the conveyance and in such form, and containing such other information relating to the person, as may be prescribed in the regulations;

(b) details of the members of the crew of the conveyance;

(c) such information in respect of the conveyance or goods as may be prescribed in the regulations;

(d) copies of such documents, including travel documents relating to any person or goods carried or to be carried on board the conveyance, as may be prescribed in the regulations;

(e) such other information as may be prescribed in the regulations.

(3) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (2), regulations under this section may, in particular, include provision for—

(a) notifying a transport operator that he or she is a person to whom the regulations relate,

(b) determining the timing, frequency, manner and format by which information to be supplied under the regulations shall be made to the Revenue Commissioners,

(c) delegating to an officer, or a particular class of officers, of the Revenue Commissioners the authority to perform any acts and discharge any function authorised by the regulations or this section (other than the power to make regulations) to be performed or discharged by the Revenue Commissioners,

(d) prescribing the offices of the Revenue Commissioners to which the information should be delivered, and

(e) such supplemental and incidental matters as appear to the Revenue Commissioners to be necessary—

(i) to enable a transport operator to comply with the regulations, or

(ii) for the general administration and implementation of this section and the regulations.

(4) Regulations made under this section shall be laid before Dáil Éireann as soon as may be after they are made and, if a resolution annulling the regulation is passed by Dáil Éireann within the next 21 days on which Dáil Éireann has sat after the regulations are laid before it, the regulations shall be annulled accordingly, but without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done under them.

(5) Information provided to the Revenue Commissioners in accordance with this section shall be kept only for the period necessary to achieve the purpose for which it was provided in accordance with the section. The need for the retention of any information kept for a period greater than 12 months shall be reviewed at least annually by the Revenue Commissioners.

(6) Without prejudice to any other penalty to which a transport operator may be liable, any transport operator who, without reasonable cause, fails to provide the information which he or she is required to provide by regulation under this section, or who provides information which he or she knows to be incorrect or misleading, shall be liable to a penalty of €1,500.

(7) Section 1077A of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 (as inserted by section 98 and Schedule 5 of the Finance (No. 2) Act 2008 ) is amended in the definition of “the Acts” by inserting “(h) the Customs Acts,” after “(g) the statutes relating to the duties of excise and to the management of those duties,”.

Amendment of section 102 (penalties for certain mineral oil tax offences) of Finance Act 1999.

98.— Section 102 of the Finance Act 1999 is amended—

(a) in subsection (4)(b) by substituting “not exceeding €126,970” for “of €12,695” (inserted by the Finance Act 2001 ), and

(b) by substituting the following for subsection (8):

“(8) Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 shall apply in relation to an offence under this section as if, in place of the penalties specified in subsection (3) of that section, there were specified in that subsection the penalties provided for by subsection (4)(a) of this section, and the reference in subsection (2)(a) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 to the penalties provided for in subsection (3) of that section shall be construed and apply accordingly.”.

Amendment of section 119 (penalties for certain excise offences) of Finance Act 2001.

99.— Section 119 of the Finance Act 2001 is amended—

(a) in subsection (3) by substituting the following for paragraph (b):

“(b) on conviction on indictment, to a fine not exceeding—

(i) €126,970, or

(ii) where the value of the excisable products concerned, including any duty or tax chargeable thereon, is greater than €250,000, three times the value of those products,

or, at the discretion of the court, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years or to both the fine and the imprisonment.”,

and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (3):

“(4) Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 shall apply in relation to an offence under this section as if, in place of the penalties specified in subsection (3) of that section, there were specified in that subsection the penalties provided for by subsection (3)(a) of this section, and the reference in subsection (2)(a) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 to the penalties provided for in subsection (3) of that section shall be construed and apply accordingly.”.

Amendment of section 79 (penalties for certain alcohol products tax offences) of Finance Act 2003.

100.— Section 79 of the Finance Act 2003 (as amended by section 62 of the Finance Act 2005 ) is amended—

(a) in subsection (7) by substituting “subsection (1) or (3)” for “subsection (1), (2) or (3)”,

(b) in subsection (8) by substituting “subsection (2) or (5)” for “subsection (5)”,

(c) in subsection (8)(b) by substituting “a fine not exceeding €126,970” for “a fine of €12,695”, and

(d) by inserting the following after subsection (8):

“(8A) Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 shall apply in relation to an offence under this section as if, in place of the penalties specified in subsection (3) of that section, there were specified in that subsection the penalties provided for by subsection (8)(a) of this section, and the reference in subsection (2)(a) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 to the penalties provided for in subsection (3) of that section shall be construed and apply accordingly.”.

Amendment of section 78 (penalties for certain tobacco products tax offences) of Finance Act 2005.

101.— Section 78 of the Finance Act 2005 is amended—

(a) in subsection (5)(b) by substituting “a fine not exceeding €126,970” for “a fine not exceeding €12,695”, and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (5):

“(5A) Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 shall apply in relation to an offence under this section as if, in place of the penalties specified in subsection (3) of that section, there were specified in that subsection the penalties provided for by subsection (5)(a) of this section, and the reference in subsection (2)(a) of section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 to the penalties provided for in subsection (3) of that section shall be construed and apply accordingly.”.

Amendment of section 130 (interpretation) of Finance Act 1992.

102.— (1) Section 130 of the Finance Act 1992 is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for the definition of “ambulance”:

“ ‘ ambulance ’ has the same meaning as in paragraph 5.3 of Annex II of Directive 2007/46/EC;”,

(b) by substituting the following for the definition of “bus”:

“ ‘bus’ means a category M2 vehicle or a category M3 vehicle;”,

(c) by substituting the following for the definition of “category A vehicle”:

“ ‘category A vehicle ’ means a category M1 vehicle;”,

(d) by substituting the following for the definition of “category B vehicle”:

“ ‘category B vehicle’ means a category N1 vehicle or a motor caravan;”,

(e) by substituting the following for the definition of “category C vehicle”:

“ ‘category C vehicle’ means a category M2 vehicle, a category M3 vehicle, a category N2 vehicle, a category N3 vehicle, a category T1 vehicle, a category T2 vehicle, a category T3 vehicle, a category T4 vehicle or a category T5 vehicle;”,

(f) by inserting the following definitions after the definition of “category D vehicle”:

“ ‘category M1 vehicle’, ‘category M2 vehicle’, ‘category M3 vehicle’, ‘category N1 vehicle’, ‘category N2 vehicle’ and ‘category N3 vehicle’ have the same meanings as in Annex II of Directive 2007/46/EC;

‘category L1e vehicle’, ‘category L2e vehicle’, ‘category L3e vehicle’, ‘category L4e vehicle’, ‘category L5e vehicle’, ‘category L6e vehicle’ and ‘category L7e vehicle’ have the same meanings as in Directive 2002/24/EC;

‘category T1 vehicle’, ‘category T2 vehicle’, ‘category T3 vehicle’, ‘category T4 vehicle’ and ‘category T5 vehicle’ have the same meanings as in Annex II of Directive 2003/37/EC;”,

(g) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “the Commissioners”:

“ ‘competent person’ means one or more than one individual or body appointed by the Commissioners under section 131;”,

(h) by substituting the following for the definition of “conversion”:

“ ‘conversion’, in relation to a vehicle, means the modification of the vehicle in such manner that it no longer retains all of the characteristics of the vehicle category under which it is certified for type-approval purposes;”,

(i) by inserting the following definitions after the definition of “deal”:

“ ‘Directive 2007/46/EC’ means Directive 2007/46/EC 21 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 5 September 2007 (as amended) establishing a framework for the approval of motor vehicles and their trailers, and of systems, components and separate technical units intended for such vehicles;

‘Directive 2002/24/EC’ means Directive 2002/24/EC 22 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 March 2002 (as amended) relating to the type-approval of two or three-wheel motor vehicles and repealing Council Directive 92/61/EEC;

‘ Directive 2003/37/EC ’ means Directive 2003/37/EC 23 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 May 2003 (as amended) on type-approval of agricultural or forestry tractors, their trailers and interchangeable towed machinery, together with their systems, components and separate technical units and repealing Directive 74/150/EEC;”,

(j) by substituting the following for the definition of “motor cycle”:

“ ‘motor cycle’ means a category L1e vehicle, a category L2e vehicle, a category L3e vehicle, a category L4e vehicle, a category L5e vehicle, a category L6e vehicle or a category L7e vehicle;”,

(k) by substituting the following for the definition of “motor caravan”:

“ ‘motor caravan’ has the same meaning as in paragraph 5.1 of Annex II of Directive 2007/46/EC;”,

(l) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “special purpose vehicle”:

“ ‘type-approval’ means the process of certification whereby a type of vehicle satisfies the relevant administrative provisions and technical requirements imposed by, or pursuant to, Directive 2007/46/EC, Directive 2002/24/EC and Directive 2003/37/EC, and references to ‘type-approved’ shall be construed accordingly;”,

(m) in the definition of “vehicle” by substituting “vehicle;” for “vehicle.”, and

(n) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “vehicle”:

“ ‘vehicle details’ means any data or information in relation to the registration of vehicles and their ownership which may be specified by the Commissioners for the purposes of this Chapter.”.

(2) Subsection (1) (other than paragraphs (g), (m) and (n)) comes into operation on 1 January 2011.

Amendment of section 130B (delegation of certain powers of the Revenue Commissioners) of Finance Act 1992.

103.— Section 130B of the Finance Act 1992 is amended by substituting the following for subsection (1):

“(1) For the purposes of this Chapter, and subject to the direction and control of the Commissioners, any power, function or duty conferred or imposed on them may, subject to subsection (2), be exercised or performed on their behalf by an officer of the Commissioners or by a competent person.”.

Amendment of section 131 (registration of vehicles by Revenue Commissioners) of Finance Act 1992.

104.— Section 131(1) of the Finance Act 1992 is amended by substituting the following for paragraph (ba):

“(ba) In respect of a vehicle which is within any particular category of vehicle that is specified by the Commissioners for the purposes of this paragraph or is within any other class of vehicle that is specified by the Commissioners, the Commissioners may, as a condition of registration, require confirmation that such vehicle—

(i) is a mechanically propelled vehicle, and

(ii) complies with any matters specified by the Commissioners as they consider necessary for—

(I) the registration of the vehicle concerned,

(II) the proper operation of vehicle registration tax, and

(III) the collection of the appropriate amount of vehicle registration tax.

(bb) Where in respect of a vehicle the Commissioners require confirmation for the purposes of paragraph (ba), they shall register the vehicle only on receipt by them of a declaration made by a competent person in such form as may be specified by the Commissioners that the vehicle—

(i) is a mechanically propelled vehicle, and

(ii) complies with any matters specified by the Commissioners for the purposes of paragraph (ba)(ii).

(bc) The Commissioners may appoint in writing a competent person for all or any of the following purposes:

(i) for the purposes of paragraph (bb), to carry out a pre-registration examination of a vehicle to determine if the vehicle is a mechanically propelled vehicle and to confirm whether or not such vehicle complies with any matters specified by the Commissioners for the purposes of paragraph (ba)(ii);

(ii) in respect of each vehicle examined by a competent person for the purposes of this subsection, to—

(I) declare to the Commissioners in such form as may be specified by the Commissioners the vehicle details and the details of the person to whom it will be registered, and

(II) subject to section 136A(4), to pay the vehicle registration tax that is chargeable, leviable and payable in respect of the registration of the vehicle;

(iii) to carry out any other functions specified by the Commissioners as they consider necessary for—

(I) the registration of the vehicle concerned, and

(II) the proper operation of vehicle registration tax.

(bd) A competent person appointed under paragraph (bc) shall comply with any instructions and directions given by the Commissioners to such person for the purposes of paragraphs (ba), (bb), (bc), (be) and (bf).

(be) The Commissioners may, at any time for reasonable cause (which shall be stated to the competent person) and following such notice as is reasonable in the circumstances, revoke an appointment made under paragraph (bc).

(bf) The fee to be charged by the competent person for the carrying out of functions referred to in paragraph (bc) shall be agreed with the Commissioners. Different fees may be so agreed in respect of different categories or other classes of vehicles. The fees so agreed shall be deducted from the vehicle registration tax to be paid under section 136A to the Commissioners by the competent person, but no other fees, charges or costs incurred by the person presenting the vehicle for registration shall be so deducted.”.

Amendment of section 132 (charge of excise duty) of Finance Act 1992.

105.— (1) Section 132(3) of the Finance Act 1992 is amended—

(a) in paragraph (f)(iii) by substituting “output,” for “output.”, and

(b) by inserting the following after paragraph (f):

“(g) in case it is a vehicle whose category cannot be confirmed by reference to the relevant EC type-approval certificate or EC certificate of conformity, or any other documentation specified by the Commissioners for the purposes of confirming the categorisation of vehicles for the purposes of this Chapter which is produced in support of the declaration for registration, the vehicle shall be deemed to be a category M1 vehicle for vehicle registration tax purposes.”.

(2) Subsection (1) comes into operation on 1 January 2011.

Amendment of section 135 (temporary exemption from registration) of Finance Act 1992.

106.— Section 135 of the Finance Act 1992 is amended by substituting the following for subsection (3):

“(3) In respect of a vehicle to which subsection (2) relates, a declaration made by a competent person under section 131(1) shall be produced to the Commissioners in order that the vehicle may be registered.”.

Repayment of amounts of vehicle registration tax in respect of the registration of certain new vehicles.

107.— The Finance Act 1992 is amended by inserting the following after section 135B:

“135BA.— (1) In this section—

‘new vehicle’ means a category A vehicle that has not been registered or recorded under—

(a) section 131 of this Act or section 6 of the Roads Act 1920 , or

(b) a system for maintaining a record of vehicles and their ownership established by or on behalf of the government of another state;

‘scrapped vehicle’ means a category A vehicle in respect of which a certificate of destruction has been issued in accordance with the Waste Management (End-of-Life Vehicles) Regulations 2006 ( S.I. No. 282 of 2006 ) and references to ‘scrapped’ and ‘certificate of destruction’, in relation to such a vehicle, shall be construed accordingly.

(2) The Commissioners may repay to a person an amount of the vehicle registration tax paid in respect of a new vehicle equal to the lesser of the amount of the tax which, apart from this section, would be payable in respect of that vehicle or €1,500, where—

(a) the new vehicle has a level of CO2 emissions of not more than 140g/km,

(b) the new vehicle is first registered during the period 1 January 2010 to 31 December 2010,

(c) the person becomes registered as the owner of the new vehicle at the time when it is first registered,

(d) a scrapped vehicle has been registered in the name of the registered owner of the new vehicle for a period of not less than 18 months immediately prior to the date of registration of the new vehicle,

(e) the scrapped vehicle is scrapped on or after 10 December 2009, and is scrapped within 60 days prior to, or 60 days after, the date of the first registration of the new vehicle, but in any case is scrapped no later than 31 December 2010,

(f) the scrapped vehicle was first registered or recorded under—

(i) section 131 of this Act or section 6 of the Roads Act 1920 , or

(ii) a system for maintaining a record of vehicles and their ownership established by or on behalf of the government of another state,

not less than 10 years prior to the date of issue of a certificate of destruction in respect of the vehicle,

(g) in accordance with the Road Traffic (National Car Test) Regulations 2003 ( S.I. No. 405 of 2003 )—

(i) a valid test certificate (within the meaning of those Regulations), or a test certificate that expired not more than 90 days prior to the date of issue of the certificate of destruction, issued in respect of the scrapped vehicle, or

(ii) a test certificate was refused in respect of the scrapped vehicle during the period of 6 months immediately prior to the date of issue of the certificate of destruction,

and

(h) an approved policy of insurance referred to in section 56(1)(a) of the Road Traffic Act 1961 was issued to the person in respect of the scrapped vehicle and was in force during a total period of at least 12 months in the period of 18 months immediately prior to the date of issue of the certificate of destruction in respect of the scrapped vehicle, or the person was an exempted person within the meaning of section 60 (inserted by section 54 of the Road Traffic Act 1968 ) of that Act.

(3) A claim for repayment of vehicle registration tax under this section shall be made in such manner and in such form as may be approved by the Commissioners for that purpose.

(4) Where a claim for repayment of vehicle registration tax is made under this section in relation to a new vehicle, the following documents shall be retained by the claimant for a period of not less than 4 years from the date on which the new vehicle is first registered—

(a) the certificate of destruction in relation to the scrapped vehicle,

(b) the test certificate or evidence of refusal of a test certificate in relation to the scrapped vehicle, as referred to in subsection (2)(g),

(c) the certificate or certificates of insurance in relation to the scrapped vehicle, as referred to in subsection (2)(h), and

(d) a copy of the completed application form for the repayment of vehicle registration tax as submitted to the Commissioners for that purpose.

(5) For the purposes of subsection (2)(c) and (h), any reference to ‘person’ may, in the application of those provisions, be construed by the Commissioners as a reference to the person concerned or to that person’s spouse.”.

Remission or repayment in respect of vehicle registration tax on certain plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, certain electric vehicles and certain electric motorcycles.

108.— (1) Chapter IV of Part II of the Finance Act 1992 is amended by substituting the following for section 135C:

“135C.— (1) In this section—

‘electric vehicle’ means a vehicle that derives its motive power exclusively from an electric motor;

‘ electric motorcycle ’ means a motorcycle that derives its motive power exclusively from an electric motor;

‘ plug-in hybrid electric vehicle ’ means a series production vehicle that derives its motive power from a combination of an electric motor and an internal combustion engine, where the electric motor derives its power from a battery that may be charged from the internal combustion engine and an alternating current (AC) electric mains supply and is capable of being driven on electric propulsion alone for a material part of its normal driving cycle.

(2) (a) Where a person first registers a category A vehicle or a category B vehicle during the period from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2012 and the Commissioners are satisfied that the vehicle is a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle, then the Commissioners shall remit or repay to that person an amount equal to the lesser of—

(i) the vehicle registration tax which, apart from this subsection, would be payable in respect of the vehicle in accordance with paragraph (a) or (c) of section 132(3), or

(ii) the amount specified in the Table to this subsection which is referable to the vehicle having regard to its age.

(b) In this subsection ‘age’, in relation to a vehicle, means the time that has elapsed since the date on which the vehicle first entered into service.

TABLE

Age of vehicle

Maximum amount which may be remitted or repaid

New vehicle, first registration

Not a new vehicle but less than 2 years

2 years or over but less than 3 years

3 years or over but less than 4 years

4 years or over but less than 5 years

5 years or over but less than 6 years

6 years or over but less than 7 years

7 years or over but less than 8 years

8 years or over but less than 9 years

9 years or over but less than 10 years

10 years or over

€2,500

€2,250

€2,000

€1,750

€1,500

€1,250

€1,000

€750

€500

€250

Nil

(3) A category A electric vehicle or a category B electric vehicle first registered during the period 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2012 is exempt from vehicle registration tax where the Commissioners are satisfied that such vehicle is a series production electric vehicle.

(4) An electric motorcycle first registered during the period 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2012 is exempt from vehicle registration tax where the Commissioners are satisfied that such vehicle is a series production electric motorcycle.”.

(2) This section comes into effect on 1 January 2011.

Authorisation of competent persons.

109.— The Finance Act 1992 is amended by inserting the following after section 136:

“136A.— (1) The Commissioners may authorise in writing one or more than one competent person to carry out, on their behalf, a specified function or functions relating to the proper operation of vehicle registration tax, subject to such conditions as the Commissioners think fit to impose.

(2) The Commissioners may, at any time for reasonable cause (which shall be stated to the competent person) and following such notice as is reasonable in the circumstances, revoke an authorisation made under subsection (1).

(3) Vehicle registration tax payable at the time of registration of vehicles examined by the competent person for the purposes of section 131(1) shall be paid to the Commissioners by the competent person not later than the 15th day of the month following that in which the vehicle was registered.

(4) The amount of vehicle registration tax which, apart from this section, would be payable by the competent person in accordance with section 131, in respect of all vehicles examined by that person in any month which are registered in that month (in this section referred to as “the gross amount”), shall be reduced by an amount calculated in accordance with the following formula—

A — B

where—

A is the total fees payable by the Commissioners to a competent person in respect of the examination of those vehicles, and

B is the gross amount multiplied by a percentage equal to the European Inter Bank Offered Rate (EURIBOR) one month rate published on the last working day of the month in which the vehicles were registered minus 0.2.

Where B is greater than A, the amount of vehicle registration tax payable to the Commissioners by the competent person in respect of the vehicles in question shall be increased by the amount by which B exceeds A.”.

Amendment of section 141 (regulations) of Finance Act 1992.

110.— Section 141(2) of the Finance Act 1992 is amended by substituting the following for paragraph (w):

“(w) make provision for the purposes of paragraphs (ba) to (bf) of section 131(1) and sections 135 and 136A, in respect of the carrying out of specified functions by competent persons relating to the registration of vehicles.”.

Return of motor insurance particulars.

111.— (1) The Finance Act 1992 is amended by inserting the following after section 142:

“142A.— (1) In this section—

‘policy of insurance’ means an approved policy of insurance referred to in section 56(1)(a) of the Road Traffic Act 1961 ;

‘unregistered vehicle’ means a vehicle that has not been registered in the State under section 131 of this Act or section 6 of the Roads Act 1920 ;

‘vehicle insurer’ has the same meaning as in section 58 of the Road Traffic Act 1961 .

(2) A vehicle insurer who issues a policy of insurance to a person for a period in excess of 42 days in relation to an unregistered vehicle shall, within one month of the date of issue of the policy of insurance, make a return to the Commissioners of the following particulars—

(a) the name and address of the person to whom the policy of insurance issued,

(b) the policy number,

(c) the commencement and cessation dates of the policy of insurance,

(d) the registration or identification marks assigned to the unregistered vehicle under a system for maintaining a record of vehicles and their ownership duly established by or on behalf of the government or other authority of the state (other than the State) or territory concerned, or where no such registration or identification mark has been assigned, the vehicle identification number,

(e) the country code for the state or territory concerned referred to in paragraph (d) as set out in the International Standard ISO 3166-1 (Codes for Representation of Names of Countries and their Subdivision) of the International Organisation for Standardisation, and

(f) the make, model, type and colour (if known) of the vehicle.

(3) Where a return is required under subsection (2), then such return shall be made in such form as the Commissioners may require, including by electronic means, as appropriate.”.

(2) Subsection (1) applies to policies of insurance (within the meaning of section 142A (inserted by subsection (1)) of the Finance Act 1992 ) issued on or after the date of the passing of this Act.

PART 4

Value-Added Tax

Interpretation (Part 4).

112.— In this Part “Principal Act” means the Value-Added Tax Act 1972 .

Amendment of section 1 (interpretation) of Principal Act.

113.— Section 1 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by inserting with effect from 1 January 2010 the following definition after the definition of “assignment”:

“ ‘auction scheme’ has the meaning assigned to it by section 10B;”,

(b) by substituting the following definition for the definition of “local authority”:

“ ‘local authority’ has the meaning assigned to it by the Local Government Act 2001 ;”,

(c) by inserting with effect from 1 July 2010 the following definition after the definition of “principal supply”:

“ ‘public body’ means—

(i) a Department of State,

(ii) a local authority,

(iii) a body established by any enactment;”,

(d) in paragraph (b) of the definition of “taxable dealer” by substituting with effect from 1 January 2010 “including a means of transport and agricultural machinery” for “other than a means of transport”, and

(e) by inserting with effect from 1 July 2010 the following definition after the definition of “telecommunications services”:

“ ‘telephone card’ means a card, or a means other than money—

(a) that confers a right to access a telecommunications service and, in cases where the supplier of the telecommunications service so agrees with another supplier (referred to as a ‘contracted third party supplier’), a right to receive other services or goods from that contracted third party supplier, and

(b) that, when the card or other means is supplied to a person other than for the purpose of resale, entitles the supplier to a consideration for the supply under circumstances that preclude the user of the card or means from being liable for any further charge for access to the telecommunications service or for the receipt of services or goods from a contracted third party supplier;”.

Amendment of section 4B (supplies of immovable goods) of Principal Act.

114.— Section 4B of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for subsection (5):

“(5) Subject to subsection (8), where a taxable person who carries on a business in the State supplies immovable goods to another taxable person who carries on a business in the State in circumstances where that supply would otherwise be exempted because of subsection (2) of this section, or section 4C(2) or (6)(b), then, despite those provisions, tax is chargeable on that supply, but only if the supplier and the taxable person to whom the supply is made have, no later than the 15th day of the month after the month during which the supply occurred, entered into an agreement in writing to opt to have tax chargeable on that supply (in this Act referred to as a ‘joint option for taxation’).”,

and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (6):

“(6A) (a) In this subsection—

‘owner’ means the accountable person referred to in section 3(7);

‘purchaser’ means the person to whom the immovable goods that are referred to in paragraph (b) are supplied;

‘vendor’ means the person referred to in section 3(7), not being the accountable person referred to in that section, who disposes of the immovable goods that are referred to in paragraph (b).

(b) Where a supply of immovable goods is a supply to which section 3(7) applies and such supply would otherwise be exempted because of subsection (2) of this section, or subsection (2) or (6)(b) of section 4C, then, despite those provisions, tax is chargeable on that supply, where—

(i) the purchaser is a taxable person, and

(ii) the vendor and the purchaser have, no later than the 15th day of the month after the month during which the supply occurred, entered into an agreement in writing to opt to have tax chargeable on that supply.

(c) Where paragraph (b) applies—

(i) the purchaser shall, in relation to that supply, be an accountable person and shall be liable to pay the tax chargeable on that supply as if that purchaser supplied those goods,

(ii) neither the vendor nor the owner shall be accountable for or liable to pay that tax, and

(iii) sections 9(2A) and 19(3)(b) shall not apply.

(d) Paragraph (b) shall not apply where the purchaser is a person connected (within the meaning of section 7A(3)) with either the vendor or the owner.

(e) Where a supply of immovable goods is a supply to which section 3(7) applies and that supply would otherwise be exempted because of subsection (2) then, despite that provision, tax is chargeable on that supply, where—

(i) the immovable goods are buildings designed as or capable of being used as a dwelling,

(ii) the owner is a person who developed those immovable goods in the course of a business of developing immovable goods or is a person connected with that person within the meaning of section 7A(3), and

(iii) the owner was entitled to a deduction under section 12 for tax chargeable to that person in respect of that owner’s acquisition or development of those immovable goods.”.

Amendment of section 4C (transitional measures for supplies of immovable goods) of Principal Act.

115.— Section 4C of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (10)—

“(10) In the application of section 12E to immovable goods and interests in immovable goods to which this section applies, subsections (4), (5) and (6) of that section shall be disregarded in respect of the person who, on 1 July 2008, owns those immovable goods or holds an interest in those immovable goods, but—

(a) if that person develops those immovable goods and that development is a refurbishment, within the meaning of section 12E, that is completed on or after 1 July 2008, subsections (4), (5) and (6) of that section shall not be disregarded in respect of that refurbishment;

(b) if, on or after 23 February 2010, that person—

(i) first uses those immovable goods (in this subsection referred to as the ‘first use’), or

(ii) changes the use of those immovable goods (in this subsection referred to as the ‘changed use’),

and the first use, or the changed use, as the case may be, is a use of those immovable goods for a purpose other than the provision of a letting of the type referred to in paragraph 11(1) of Schedule 1, then subsection (6)(a) of section 12E shall not be disregarded for the remainder of the adjustment period applicable to those immovable goods.”.

Amendment of section 5 (supply of services) of Principal Act.

116.— Section 5 of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 July 2010 by deleting subsection (10).

Amendment of section 8 (accountable persons) of Principal Act.

117.— (1) Section 8 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1A)(aa)(i) by substituting “a taxable person who carries on a business in the State, or a person to whom a registration number has been assigned” for “a taxable person, or a person other than a taxable person to whom a registration number has been assigned”,

(b) by substituting the following for subsection (2A):

“(2A) Notwithstanding section 2, the State or any public body shall not be treated as a taxable person acting in that capacity in respect of any activity or transaction that is carried out by it in, or is closely linked to, the exercise by the State or such public body of particular rights or powers conferred on it by any enactment, except where—

(a) that activity is listed in Annex I (which is set out in Schedule 7) of Council Directive 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006 24 on the common system of value added tax, and is carried out by the State or that public body on a more than negligible scale, or

(b) not treating the State or that public body as a taxable person in respect of that activity or transaction creates or would likely create a significant distortion of competition.”,

and

(c) in subsection (3E)(a) with effect from 8 March 2010—

(i) in subparagraph (i) by deleting “, or”,

(ii) by deleting subparagraph (ii),

(iii) in subclause (A) by deleting “, the State or such local authority”, and

(iv) in subclause (B) by deleting “, the State or such local authority”.

(2) (a) Subject to paragraph (b), paragraph (b) of subsection (1) comes into operation on 1 July 2010.

(b) Paragraph (b) of subsection (1), in so far as it applies to the supply of community facilities, comes into operation on such day or days as the Minister may by order appoint and different days may be so appointed for different purposes or different community facilities.

(c) For the purposes of paragraph (b), “community facilities” means—

(i) facilities for taking part in sporting or physical education activities and services closely related to the provision of such facilities, other than facilities for taking part in golf and for this purpose facilities for taking part in golf do not include facilities for taking part in pitch and putt, and

(ii) the hiring of halls, meeting rooms, grounds and other facilities of a similar nature to non-profit making sporting, cultural, social and community organisations.

(d) Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) shall not affect the validity of any determination made under subsection (3E) of section 8 of the Principal Act before 8 March 2010 by an authorised officer within the meaning of the said subsection (3E), and any such determination shall continue in force as if paragraph (c) of subsection (1) had not been enacted.

Amendment of section 10 (amount on which tax is chargeable) of Principal Act.

118.— Section 10 of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 July 2010—

(a) by substituting the following for subsection (6):

“(6) Subject to subsection (6A), where a right to receive goods or services for the redeemable value of any coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher is granted for a consideration, the consideration shall be disregarded for the purposes of this Act except to the extent (if any) that it exceeds that redeemable value.”,

(b) by substituting the following for subsection (6A):

“(6A) Notwithstanding subsection (6), where—

(a) a supplier—

(i) supplies a coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher, which has a redeemable value, to a person who acquires it in the course or furtherance of business with a view to resale, and

(ii) promises to subsequently accept that coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher at its redeemable value in full or part payment of the price of goods or services,

and

(b) a person who acquires that coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher whether from the supplier referred to in paragraph (a) or from any other person in the course or furtherance of business, supplies it for consideration in the course or furtherance of business,

then in the case of each such supply the consideration received shall not be disregarded for the purposes of this Act and when such coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher is used in payment or part payment of the price of goods or services, its redeemable value shall, for the purposes of section 10(2), be disregarded.”,

(c) in subsection (7) by deleting paragraph (a),

(d) in subsection (7) by substituting the following for paragraphs (b) and (c):

“(b) supplies of coupons, stamps, tokens or vouchers when supplied as things in action (not being coupons, stamps, tokens or vouchers specified in subsection (6)),

(c) subject to subsection (6A) or (7A), supplies of goods or services wholly or partly in exchange for coupons, stamps, telephone cards, tokens or vouchers of a kind specified in subsection (6) or paragraph (b),”,

and

(e) in subsection (10) by inserting the following definition after the definition of “open market value”:

“ ‘redeemable value’ means the amount stated on a coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher or, where an amount is not so stated, the value expressed in terms of money for which a coupon, stamp, telephone card, token or voucher can be used as consideration (or part consideration) for a supply of goods or services;”.

Amendment of section 10A (margin scheme goods) of Principal Act.

119.— Section 10A of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010—

(a) in subsection (1) in the definition of “second-hand goods” by substituting “including means of transport (within the meaning of section 12B) and agricultural machinery (within the meaning of section 12C), purchased or acquired on or after 1 January 2010, but not including” for “other than means of transport, agricultural machinery (within the meaning of section 12C),”,

(b) in subsection (1) by substituting the following for the definition of “taxable dealer”:

“ ‘taxable dealer’—

(a) means an accountable person who in the course or furtherance of business, whether acting on that person’s own behalf, or on behalf of another person pursuant to a contract under which commission is payable on purchase or sale, purchases or acquires or applies for the purpose of his or her business margin scheme goods or the goods referred to in paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (4), with a view to resale, or imports the goods referred to in paragraph (a) of subsection (4), with a view to resale, and

(b) includes a person supplying financial services of the kind specified in paragraph 6(1)(e) of Schedule 1 who acquires or purchases margin scheme goods for the purpose of the supply thereof as part of an agreement of the kind referred to in section 3(1)(b),

and, for the purposes of this interpretation, a person in another Member State shall be deemed to be a taxable dealer where, in similar circumstances, that person would be a taxable dealer in the State under this section.”,

(c) by substituting the following for subsection (13):

“(13) Notwithstanding paragraph 12 of Schedule 1 where an accountable person acquires goods to which the margin scheme has been applied and that person subsequently supplies those goods, that paragraph shall not apply to that supply, unless the goods consist of—

(a) motor vehicles within the meaning of section 12(3)(b) which that person acquired other than as stock-in-trade or for the purposes of a business which consists in whole or in part of the hiring of motor vehicles or for use, in a driving school business, for giving driving instruction, or

(b) goods used by that person solely in the course of an exempted activity.”,

and

(d) by inserting the following after subsection (13):

“(14) With effect from the date of the passing of the Finance Act 2010

(a) where a means of transport which is a motor vehicle within the meaning of section 12(3)(b) is declared for registration to the Revenue Commissioners in accordance with section 131 of the Finance Act 1992 by a taxable dealer on that dealer’s own behalf and on which deductibility in accordance with section 12 has been claimed by that dealer, then that means of transport shall be treated for the purposes of this Act as if it were removed from stock-in-trade and such removal is deemed to be a supply of that means of transport by that taxable dealer for the purposes of section 3(1)(e) and, for the avoidance of doubt, the amount of tax chargeable in respect of that supply is the amount referred to in paragraph (b)(ii) and accordingly is not included in any amount which the taxable person is entitled to deduct in accordance with section 12(1)(a)(iii),

(b) at the time when a taxable dealer supplies to another person a means of transport which is deemed to have been previously supplied in accordance with paragraph (a) or section 12B(11)(a), then that means of transport is deemed to have been re-acquired by that dealer as margin scheme goods immediately before the supply to that person and, for the purpose of the calculation of the profit margin in relation to that supply the purchase price of the means of transport is deemed to be the sum of—

(i) the amount on which tax was chargeable on the supply of that means of transport to the dealer,

(ii) the tax which was chargeable on the supply referred to at subparagraph (i), and

(iii) the vehicle registration tax accounted for by that dealer in respect of the registration of that means of transport.”.

Amendment of section 10B (special scheme for auctioneers) of Principal Act.

120.— Section 10B of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010 by substituting the following for subsection (10):

“(10) Notwithstanding paragraph 12 of Schedule 1, where an accountable person acquires goods to which the auction scheme has been applied and that person subsequently supplies those goods, that paragraph shall not apply to that supply, unless the goods consist of—

(a) motor vehicles within the meaning of section 12(3)(b) which that person acquired other than as stock-in-trade or for the purposes of a business which consists in whole or in part of the hiring of motor vehicles or for use, in a driving school business, for giving driving instruction, or

(b) goods used by that person solely in the course of an exempted activity.”.

Amendment of section 11 (rates of tax) of Principal Act.

121.— Section 11 of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010 in subsection (1)(a) by substituting “21 per cent” for “21.5 per cent”.

Amendment of section 12B (special scheme for means of transport supplied by taxable dealers) of Principal Act.

122.— Section 12B of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010—

(a) in subsection (4)—

(i) in paragraph (b) by substituting “the taxable dealer.” for “the taxable dealer:”, and

(ii) by deleting the proviso to subsection (4),

(b) in subsection (11) by inserting the following after paragraph (c):

“(d) This subsection, other than paragraph (e), does not apply on or after the date of the passing of the Finance Act 2010.

(e) Where on the date of the passing of the Finance Act 2010 a taxable dealer has a means of transport in respect of which prior to that date the taxable dealer had not claimed deductibility in the circumstances referred to in paragraph (c), then, when that taxable dealer supplies that means of transport to another person, that supply shall be treated as a supply of margin scheme goods for the purposes of section 10A and section 10A(14)(b) shall apply for the purpose of the calculation of the profit margin (within the meaning of section 10A) in relation to that supply.”,

and

(c) by inserting the following after subsection (11):

“(12) (a) Subject to paragraph (b), where a taxable dealer purchases or acquires a means of transport referred to in subsection (2) in the period from 1 January 2010 to 30 June 2010 (in this subsection referred to as the ‘transitional period’) the amount of residual tax referred to in subsection (4) which that taxable dealer is entitled to deduct shall be restricted to—

(i) 40 per cent of the residual tax in the case of a means of transport purchased or acquired in the taxable period beginning on 1 January 2010,

(ii) 30 per cent of the residual tax in the case of a means of transport purchased or acquired in the taxable period beginning on 1 March 2010, and

(iii) 20 per cent of the residual tax in the case of a means of transport purchased or acquired in the taxable period beginning on 1 May 2010.

(b) The entitlement to restricted residual tax as provided for in paragraph (a) applies only on the occasion of the first purchase or acquisition by a taxable dealer of a means of transport referred to in subsection (2) which occurs on or after 1 January 2010, and does not apply to any subsequent purchase or acquisition of that means of transport by that or any other taxable dealer.

(c) Where a taxable dealer purchased or acquired a means of transport referred to in subsection (2) prior to 1 January 2010 and during the transitional period supplies that means of transport to another taxable dealer, the supplier shall indicate on the invoice in respect of that supply that the special scheme as provided for by this section has been applied and that restricted residual tax only is applicable.

(d) Where a taxable dealer purchased or acquired a means of transport referred to in subsection (2) prior to 1 January 2010 and during the transitional period supplies that means of transport to a taxable person other than another taxable dealer, the supplier shall indicate on the invoice in respect of that supply that the special scheme as provided for by this section has been applied and that the invoice does not give the right to deduct the tax chargeable on that supply.

(e) Where a taxable dealer opts to apply the margin scheme or applies the auction scheme to the supply of a means of transport referred to in subsection (2) which that dealer purchased or acquired on or after 1 January 2010, the supplier shall indicate on the invoice in respect of that supply that the margin scheme or the auction scheme, as appropriate, has been applied and no residual tax is applicable.

(f) Where during the transitional period a taxable dealer purchases or acquires a means of transport referred to in subsection (2) from a person other than another taxable dealer—

(i) the taxable dealer shall take all reasonable steps to establish whether or not the means of transport was acquired during the transitional period by that person from another taxable dealer (in this paragraph referred to as a ‘motor trader’), and

(ii) if that person acquired the means of transport from a motor trader during the transitional period, the taxable dealer shall take all reasonable steps to establish whether or not restricted residual tax as provided for in paragraph (a) was deductible by that motor trader or any other taxable dealer in relation to the means of transport.

(13) This section does not apply to a means of transport purchased or acquired on or after 1 July 2010.”.

Amendment of section 12C (special scheme for agricultural machinery) of Principal Act.

123.— Section 12C of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010—

(a) by deleting subsection (4), and

(b) by inserting the following after subsection (5):

“(6) (a) Subject to paragraph (b), where a taxable dealer purchases or acquires from a flat-rate farmer or a person referred to in subsection (1A) agricultural machinery in the period from 1 January 2010 to 31 August 2010 (in this subsection referred to as the ‘transitional period’) the amount of residual tax referred to in subsection (3) which that taxable dealer is entitled to deduct shall be restricted to—

(i) 40 per cent of the residual tax in the case of agricultural machinery purchased or acquired in a taxable period beginning on 1 January 2010, 1 March 2010 or 1 May 2010, as the case may be, and

(ii) 30 per cent of the residual tax in the case of agricultural machinery purchased or acquired in the taxable period beginning on 1 July 2010.

(b) The entitlement to restricted residual tax as provided for in paragraph (a) applies only on the occasion of the first purchase or acquisition by a taxable dealer of agricultural machinery which occurs on or after 1 January 2010, and does not apply to any subsequent purchase or acquisition of that agricultural machinery by that or any other taxable dealer.

(c) Where during the transitional period a taxable dealer purchases or acquires agricultural machinery from a flat-rate farmer or a person referred to in subsection (1A)—

(i) the taxable dealer shall take all reasonable steps to establish whether or not the agricultural machinery was acquired in the transitional period by that flat-rate farmer or that person from another taxable dealer (in this paragraph referred to as an ‘agricultural machinery trader’), and

(ii) if that flat-rate farmer or that person acquired the means of transport from an agricultural machinery trader during the transitional period, the taxable dealer shall take all reasonable steps to establish whether or not restricted residual tax as provided for in paragraph (a) was deductible by that agricultural machinery trader or any other taxable dealer in relation to the agricultural machinery.

(7) This section does not apply to agricultural machinery purchased or acquired on or after 1 September 2010.”.

Amendment of section 13 (remission of tax on goods exported, etc.) of Principal Act.

124.— Section 13 of the Principal Act is amended—

(a) in subsection (1A) by substituting the following for subparagraphs (i) and (ii):

“(i) has at the time of the supply of the goods taken all reasonable steps to confirm that the purchaser is a traveller as defined in this section,

(ii) has proof that the goods were exported by or on behalf of the traveller by the last day of the third month following the month in which the supply takes place,”,

(b) in subsection (1A) by inserting the following after subparagraph (ii):

“(iia) has proof that, where an amount of tax has been charged to the traveller in respect of a supply of goods covered by subparagraph (ii), that the amount to be repaid to the traveller has been repaid to that traveller no later than the twenty-fifth working day following receipt by the supplier of the traveller’s claim to repayment,”,

and

(c) by inserting the following after subsection (1C)—

“(1D) Where, in relation to a supply of goods, any of the conditions of subparagraphs (i) to (v) of subsection (1A) are not complied with or are not complied with within the time limits specified in those subparagraphs, where applicable, then—

(a) that supply is not a supply of traveller’s qualifying goods, and

(b) zero-rating is not applicable to the supply of services by a VAT refunding agent, if any, in respect of those goods.”.

Amendment of section 15 (charge of tax on imported goods) of Principal Act.

125.— Section 15 of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2011 by inserting the following after subsection (7):

“(8) In the case where the importation of goods is followed by a supply or transfer of those goods to a person registered for value-added tax in another Member State paragraph 2(1) of Schedule 2 applies only if the person who imports those goods (referred to in this subsection as the ‘importer’)—

(a) at the time of importation declares the following information:

(i) the importer’s registration number,

(ii) the identification number (referred to in the definition in section 1 of ‘a person registered for value-added tax’) of the person to whom the goods are supplied or transferred,

and

(b) provides evidence, if so requested by the Revenue Commissioners, that the imported goods are to be transported or dispatched from the State to another Member State.”.

Amendment of section 16 (duty to keep records) of Principal Act.

126.— Section 16 of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010 by inserting the following after subsection (5):

“(6) Every taxable dealer to whom section 12B or 12C applies shall, in addition to records required to be kept in accordance with any other provision of this section and regulations, keep a record of the following information, namely—

(a) the name and address of each person from whom such taxable dealer purchased or acquired a means of transport or, as the case may be, agricultural machinery in the period from 1 January 2010 to 30 June 2010 in relation to which such taxable dealer deducted residual tax in accordance with section 12B or 12C, as the case may be,

(b) the date on which such means of transport or agricultural machinery was so purchased or acquired,

(c) the amount of such residual tax so deducted in relation to each such means of transport or agricultural machinery, and

(d) the vehicle registration number of each such means of transport or, as the case may be, details of the make, model and, where appropriate, the year of manufacture, the engine number and registration number of each such agricultural machine.

(7) A taxable dealer to whom section 12B or 12C applies shall, on receipt of a notice in writing to that effect from an officer of the Revenue Commissioners, furnish to that officer within the time specified in the notice (which shall not be less than 21 days from the date of the notice), or to such other officer of the Revenue Commissioners as may be specified in the notice, a copy of the information required to be kept by the taxable dealer under subsection (6).”.

Amendment of section 17 (invoices) of Principal Act.

127.— Section 17 of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (1C)—

“(1D) (a) In this subsection—

‘travel agent’ and ‘margin scheme services’ have the meanings assigned to them by section 10C(1);

‘qualifying accommodation’ and ‘qualifying conference’ have the meanings assigned to them by section 12(3)(ca).

(b) Where a travel agent supplies margin scheme services that include qualifying accommodation in connection with attendance by a traveller at a qualifying conference the travel agent shall issue a document to the traveller containing particulars of the amount of tax chargeable by the accommodation provider in respect of the supply of the qualifying accommodation to that traveller.”.

Amendment of section 26 (penalties generally) of Principal Act.

128.— Section 26 of the Principal Act is amended with effect from 1 January 2010 by inserting the following subsection after subsection (3B):

“(3C) A person who fails to comply with a notice issued under section 16(7) shall be liable to a penalty of €4,000.”.

Addition of Schedule 7 to Principal Act.

129.— The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following Schedule after the Ninth Schedule which is renamed “ Schedule 6 ” by virtue of section 131 :

“SCHEDULE 7

ACTIVITIES LISTED IN ANNEX 1 OF COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 2006/112/EC OF 28 NOVEMBER 2006

(1) Telecommunication services;

(2) supply of water, gas, electricity and thermal energy;

(3) transport of goods;

(4) port and airport services;

(5) passenger transport;

(6) supply of new goods manufactured for sale;

(7) transactions in respect of agricultural products, carried out by agricultural intervention agencies pursuant to Regulations on the common organisation of the market in those products;

(8) organisation of trade fairs and exhibitions;

(9) warehousing;

(10) activities of commercial publicity bodies;

(11) activities of travel agents;

(12) running of staff shops, cooperatives and industrial canteens and similar institutions;

(13) activities carried out by radio and television bodies in so far as these are not exempt pursuant to Article 132(1)(q) of Council Directive 2006/112/EC.”.

Substitution of First and Second Schedules to Principal Act.

130.— The Principal Act is amended by substituting the following Schedules for the First and Second Schedules:

“SCHEDULE 1

Exempt Activities

PART 1

Activities in the Public Interest

This Part sets out the exemptions for certain activities in the public interest in accordance with Chapter 2 of Title IX of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006.

Postal services

1. Public postal services; including the supply of goods and services incidental to their provision, by An Post (including postmasters) or by designated persons in accordance with the European Communities (Postal Services) Regulations 2002 ( S.I. No. 616 of 2002 ) but only if that supply is not on terms that have been individually negotiated.

Medical and related services

2. (1) Hospital and medical care or treatment provided by a hospital, nursing home, clinic or similar establishment.

(2) Services closely related to medical care covered by section 61 or 61A of the Health Act 1970 which are undertaken by or on behalf of the Health Service Executive or by home care providers duly recognised by that Executive under section 61A of that Act.

(3) Professional medical care services recognised as such by the Department of Health and Children (other than dental or optical services), but only if those services are not supplied in the course of carrying on a business that wholly or partly consists of selling goods.

(4) The supply by dental technicians of services of a dental nature and of dentures or other dental prostheses.

(5) Professional dental or optical services.

(6) The collection, storage, supply, intra-Community acquisition or importation of human organs, human blood and human milk.

(7) Other professional medical care services that, on 1 January 2010, were recognised by the Revenue Commissioners as exempt activities.

Certain independent groups, non-profit making organisations and other bodies

3. (1) The supply of services by an independent group of persons (being a group that is an independent entity established for the purpose of administrative convenience by persons whose activities are exempt from, or are not subject to, tax) for the purpose of rendering to its members the services directly necessary to enable them to carry out their activities, but only if the group recovers from its members the exact amount of each member’s share of the joint expenses.

(2) The supply of goods and services closely related to welfare and social security by non-profit making organisations.

(3) The supply of services and the supply of goods closely related to those services for the benefit of their members by non-profit making organisations whose aims are primarily of a political, trade union, religious, patriotic, philosophical, philanthropic or civic nature where such supply is made without payment other than the payment of any membership subscription.

(4) The provision by non-profit making organisations of facilities for participation in sporting or physical educational activities, or of services closely related to the provision of those facilities (but excluding the provision of facilities to which paragraph 12(2) or (3) of Schedule 3 relates).

(5) The supply of cultural services, and the supply of goods closely linked to those services, by any cultural body (whether established by or under an enactment or not) that is recognised as such a body by the Revenue Commissioners for the purposes of this paragraph (but excluding the supply of services to which paragraph 5(2) relates).

Children and education

4. (1) The supply of services for the protection or care of children and young persons, and the supply of goods closely related to that supply, otherwise than for profit.

(2) The supply of services for the protection or care of children and young persons, and the supply of goods closely related to that supply, by persons whose activities may be regulated by regulations made under Part VII or Part VIII of the Child Care Act 1991 .

(3) The provision by educational establishments recognised by the State of children’s or young people’s education, school or university education, or vocational training or retraining (including the supply of goods and services incidental to that provision, other than the supply of research services), and the provision by other persons of education, training or retraining of a similar kind, but excluding instruction in the driving of mechanically propelled road vehicles other than—

(a) vehicles designed or constructed for the carriage of 1.5 tonnes of goods or more, or

(b) vehicles designed or constructed for the carriage of more than 9 persons (including the driver).

Other activities

5. (1) Catering services supplied—

(a) to patients of a hospital or nursing home in the hospital or nursing home, or

(b) to school students at their school.

(2) The promotion of, and admission to, live theatrical or musical performances, including circuses, but excluding—

(a) dances, and

(b) performances in conjunction with which facilities are available for the consumption of food or drink during all or part of the performance by persons attending the performance.

(3) The promotion of sporting events (other than in the course of the provision of facilities for taking part in sporting activities of the kind specified in paragraph 12(1) of Schedule 3).

(4) The provision of the national broadcasting and television services, excluding advertising.

PART 2

Other Exempted Activities

Financial services

6. (1) Financial services that consist of any of the following:

(a) issuing, transferring or otherwise dealing in stocks, shares, debentures and other securities (other than new stocks, new shares, new debentures or new securities for raising capital and documents establishing title to goods);

(b) arranging for, or underwriting, an issue of stocks, shares, debentures and other securities (other than documents establishing title to goods);

(c) operating a current, deposit or savings account, and negotiating or dealing in payments, transfers, debts, cheques and other negotiable instruments, but excluding debt collecting and factoring;

(d) issuing, transferring, receiving or otherwise dealing in currency, bank notes and metal coins, in use as legal tender in any country, but excluding any such bank notes and coins that are supplied as investment goods or as collectors’ objects;

(e) giving and negotiating credit, and managing credit by the giver of the credit;

(f) giving, or dealing in, credit guarantees or any other securities for money, and managing credit guarantees by the giver of the credit;

(g) managing an undertaking of a kind specified in subparagraph (2);

(h) supplying services to a person under an arrangement that provides for the person to be reimbursed for the supply by the person of goods or services in accordance with a credit card, charge card or similar card scheme;

(i) entering into specified financial transactions within the meaning of Part 8A of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 where those transactions correspond to financial services listed elsewhere in this paragraph.

(2) The following undertakings are specified for the purpose of subparagraph (1)(g):

(a) a collective investment undertaking as defined in section 172A of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

(b) a special investment scheme within the meaning of section 737 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

(c) an undertaking that is administered by the holder of an authorisation granted under the European Communities (Life Assurance) Regulations 1984 ( S.I. No. 57 of 1984 ), or by a person who is deemed, by Article 6 of those Regulations, to be such a holder, the criteria in relation to which are the criteria specified in relation to an arrangement to which section 9(2) of the Unit Trusts Act 1990 applies;

(d) a unit trust scheme established solely for the purpose of superannuation fund schemes or charities;

(e) an undertaking that is a qualifying company for the purposes of section 110 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

(f) any other undertaking that is determined by the Minister for Finance to be a collective investment undertaking to which subparagraph (1)(g) applies.

(3) A determination referred to in subparagraph (2)(f) takes effect on the date when it is notified to the undertaking concerned or on such later date as is specified in the determination.

(4) In relation to an undertaking specified in subparagraph (2), management of the undertaking can consist of any one or more of the three functions listed in Annex II to Directive No. 2001/107/EC of the European Parliament and Council (being the functions included in the activity of collective portfolio management) where the relevant function is carried out by the person who has responsibility for carrying out that function in respect of the undertaking.

Agency services

7. The supply of agency services relating to the financial services specified in paragraph 6, excluding management and safekeeping services in regard to the services specified in subparagraph (1)(a) of that paragraph (but not being services specified in subparagraph (1)(g) of that paragraph).

Insurance and reinsurance services

8. (1) Supplying insurance and reinsurance services, and supplying related services by insurance brokers and insurance agents.

(2) For the purposes of this paragraph ‘related services ’, in relation to insurance services, includes—

(a) collecting insurance premiums and selling insurance, and

(b) handling claims and providing claims settlement services where the supplier of the insurance services delegates authority to an agent and is bound by the agent’s decision in relation to claims.

Supply of investment gold

9. (1) The supply, intra-Community acquisition and importation of investment gold, other than supplies of investment gold to the Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland.

(2) In relation to investment gold, the supply of services of an intermediary acting in that capacity.

(3) In this paragraph, the expressions ‘intermediary’ and ‘investment gold’ have the same meanings as they have in section 6A.

Gambling and lotteries

10. (1) The acceptance of bets that are subject to excise duty imposed by section 67 of the Finance Act 2002 and bets that are exempted from excise duty by section 68 of that Act.

(2) The issuing of tickets or coupons for the purpose of a lottery.

Letting of immovable goods

11. (1) The letting of immovable goods, but not including any of the following:

(a) letting machinery or a business installation when let separately from any other immovable goods of which the machinery or installation forms part;

(b) letting hotel or holiday accommodation of the kind to which paragraph 11 of Schedule 3 relates;

(c) providing facilities for taking part in sporting activities of the kind to which paragraph 12(1) of Schedule 3 relates;

(d) providing parking accommodation for vehicles by the operators of car parks;

(e) hiring safes.

(2) Allowing a person to use a toll road or a toll bridge is not a letting of immovable goods for the purposes of this Act.

Other supplies of goods

12. The supply of goods (other than immovable goods or goods of a kind specified in section 3(1)(g)) by a person, being goods—

(a) that were used for the purposes of a business carried on by the person, and

(b) in relation to the acquisition or application of which the person had borne tax, and

(c) that are of such a kind, or were used in such circumstances, that no part of the tax was deductible under section 12.

Gas and electricity services

13. (1) The importation of gas through the natural gas distribution system.

(2) The importation of electricity.

Exemptions by derogation in accordance with Article 371 of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006

14. (1) The provision of services by a funeral undertaking.

(2) The supply of water by local authorities.

(3) Transporting passengers and their accompanying baggage.

(4) The admission of spectators to sporting events.

SCHEDULE 2

Zero-Rated Goods and Services

PART I

International Supplies

This Part sets out the exemptions with deductibility in accordance with Chapters 4 to 10 of Title IX of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006.

Intra-Community transactions

1. (1) The supply of goods dispatched or transported from the State to a person registered for value-added tax in another Member State.

(2) The supply of new means of transport dispatched or transported directly by or on behalf of the supplier to a person in the territory of another Member State.

(3) The supply of excisable products dispatched or transported from within the State to a person in another Member State when the movement of the products is subject to Chapter II of Part 2 of the Finance Act 2001 (which implement the arrangements specified in paragraphs 4 and 5 of Article 7, or Article 16, of Council Directive No. 92/12/EEC of 25 February 1992).

(4) The supply of intra-Community transport services involving the carriage of goods to and from the Azores or Madeira.

Imports

2. (1) Subject to the regulations (if any), the importation of goods that are, at the time of importation, consigned to another Member State.

(2) The supply of transport services relating to the importation of goods where the value of the services is included in the taxable amount in accordance with section 15(3).

Exports

3. (1) A supply of goods that are to be transported directly by or on behalf of the person making the supply outside the Community. This subparagraph does not apply to a supply of goods to a traveller that the traveller exports on behalf of the supplier. Any such supply is to be treated as a supply of traveller’s qualifying goods.

(2) The carriage of goods in the State by or on behalf of a person in performing a contract to transfer the goods to a place outside the Community.

(3) A supply of goods that are to be dispatched or transported directly outside the Community by or on behalf of the purchaser of the goods where that purchaser is established outside the State.

(4) A supply of services that consists of work on movable goods acquired or imported for the purpose of undergoing that work within the Community and dispatched or transported out of the Community by or on behalf of the person providing the services.

(5) In this paragraph, ‘traveller’ and ‘traveller’s qualifying goods’ have the meaning given by section 13(3B).

Services relating to vessels and aircraft

4. (1) The provision of docking, landing, loading or unloading facilities (including customs clearance), directly in connection with—

(a) the disembarkation or embarkation of passengers, or

(b) the importation or exportation of goods.

(2) The supply, modification, repair, maintenance, chartering and hiring of—

(a) sea-going vessels of a gross tonnage of more than 15 tons being vessels used or to be used—

(i) for the carriage of passengers for reward, or

(ii) for the purposes of a sea fishing business, or

(iii) for other commercial or industrial purposes, or

(iv) for rescue or assistance at sea,

or

(b) aircraft used or to be used by a transport undertaking operating for reward chiefly on international routes.

(3) Subject to the regulations (if any), the supply, hiring, repair and maintenance of equipment incorporated or for use in sea-going vessels to which subparagraph (2)(a) relates.

(4) The supply, repair, maintenance and hiring of equipment incorporated or used in aircraft to which subparagraph (2)(b) relates.

(5) The supply of goods for the fuelling and provisioning of sea-going vessels and aircraft of the kind specified in subparagraph (2), but excluding goods for supply on board the vessels or aircraft to passengers with a view to those goods being taken off the vessels or aircraft by those passengers.

(6) The supply of navigation services by the Irish Aviation Authority to meet the needs of aircraft to which subparagraph (2)(b) relates.

Certain transactions treated as exports

5. (1) The supply of goods or services to international bodies recognised as such by the public authorities of the host Member State, and to members of those bodies, within the limits and under the conditions prescribed by the international conventions establishing the bodies or by the agreements between the headquarters of those bodies and the host Member State of the headquarters.

(2) The supply of gold to the Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland.

Services by intermediaries

6. (1) Services supplied by an intermediary acting in the name or on behalf of another person in obtaining—

(a) the export of goods, or

(b) services specified in subparagraph (2), or

(c) the supply of goods or services outside the Community.

(2) The following services are specified for the purposes of subparagraph (1)(b):

(a) services of the kind referred to in paragraph 1(4) (Carriage of goods to or from the Azores or Madeira);

(b) services of the kind referred to in paragraph 3(2) (Carriage of goods in transit to a place outside the Community);

(c) services of the kind referred to in paragraph 4(1) (Provision of docking, landing, loading or unloading facilities);

(d) services of the kind referred to in paragraph 4(2) (Supply, hire, repair, maintenance, etc. of equipment incorporated or for use in sea-going vessels);

(e) services of the kind referred to in paragraph 5(2) (Supply of gold to the Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland).

(3) Services that are treated as intermediary services under the travel agent’s margin scheme in accordance with section 10C(8).

International trade, etc.

7. (1) The supply of goods by a registered person within a free port to another registered person within a free port.

(2) The supply of goods by a registered person within the customs-free airport to another registered person within the customs-free airport or a free port.

(3) The supply of goods that are to be transported directly or on behalf of the person making the supply to a registered person within the customs-free airport.

(4) The supply of goods that are a traveller’s qualifying goods, but only if section 13(1A) is complied with.

(5) The supply of services in obtaining a repayment of tax due on the supply of a traveller’s qualifying goods or as a result of the application of subparagraph (4) to that supply of goods, but only if section 13(1A) is complied with.

(6) Subject to such conditions and in such amounts as may be specified in regulations (if any)—

(a) the supply of goods, in a tax-free shop approved by the Revenue Commissioners, to travellers departing the State for a place outside the Community, or

(b) the supply, other than by means of a vending machine, of food, drink and tobacco products on board a vessel or aircraft to passengers departing the State for another Member State, for consumption on board that vessel or aircraft.

(7) Subject to section 13A, the supply of qualifying goods and qualifying services to, or the intra-Community acquisition or importation of qualifying goods by, an authorised person in accordance with that section (excluding a supply of goods within the meaning of section 3(1)(e) or (f)).

(8) In this paragraph, “traveller’s qualifying goods” has the meaning given by section 13(3B).

PART 2

Supplies within the State

This Part sets out special provisions as provided by Article 109 of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006.

Food and drink

8. (1) A supply of food and drink of a kind used for human consumption, other than a supply to which paragraph 3(3) of Schedule 3 relates and a supply of the kind specified in subparagraph (2).

(2) The following supplies are specified for the purpose of subparagraph (1):

(a) beverages chargeable with excise duty specifically charged on spirits, beer, wine, cider, perry or Irish wine, and preparations derived from any of them;

(b) tea and preparations derived from tea when supplied in drinkable form;

(c) cocoa, coffee and chicory and other roasted coffee substitutes, and preparations and extracts derived from them, when supplied in drinkable form;

(d) ice cream, ice lollipops, water ices, frozen desserts, frozen yoghurts and similar frozen products, and prepared mixes and powders for making any of those products;

(e) savoury products made from cereal or grain, or from flour or starch derived from cereal or grain, pork scratchings, and similar products when supplied for human consumption without further preparation;

(f) any of the following when supplied for human consumption without further preparation:

(i) potato crisps, potato sticks, potato puffs and similar products made from potato, or from potato flour or from potato starch;

(ii) popcorn;

(iii) salted or roasted nuts, whether or not in their shells;

(g) except as provided by subparagraph (3)—

(i) drinking water, juice extracted from, and other drinkable products derived from, fruit or vegetables, and syrups, concentrates, essences, powders, crystals or other products for the preparation of beverages;

(ii) beverages, other than those specified in subparagraph (2)(a), (b) or (c);

(h) all kinds of chocolates, sweets and similar confectionery (including glacé or crystallised fruits), biscuits, crackers and wafers, and all other kinds of confectionery and bakery products (whether cooked or uncooked), excluding bread.

(3) The following products are excepted from subparagraph (2)(g):

(a) tea and preparations derived from tea when supplied in a non-drinkable form;

(b) cocoa, coffee and chicory and other roasted coffee substitutes, and preparations and extracts derived from any of them, when supplied in a non-drinkable form;

(c) milk and preparations and extracts derived from milk;

(d) preparations and extracts derived from meat, yeast or eggs.

(4) For the purpose of subparagraph (2)(h), ‘bread’ means food for human consumption manufactured by baking dough composed exclusively of a mixture of cereal flour and any one or more of the ingredients included in the first column of the following table that do not exceed the quantities (if any) set out for each ingredient in the second column of that table, but does not include food packaged for sale as a unit (not being a unit designated as containing only food specifically for babies) containing 2 or more slices, segments, sections or other similar pieces, and having a crust over substantially the whole of their outside surfaces, being a crust formed in the course of baking, frying or toasting.

Table

Column 1

Column 2

Ingredient

Weight limit for the ingredient, as % of weight of flour included in the dough

Yeast or other leavening or aerating agent, salt, malt extract, milk, water, gluten

No limit

Fat

Not exceeding 2%

Sugar

Not exceeding 2%

Bread improver

Not exceeding 2%

Dried fruit

Not exceeding 10%

(5) In this paragraph, a reference to supplying food and drink includes—

(a) a reference to supplying food without drink, and

(b) a reference to supplying drink without food.

Certain printed matter

9. The supply of printed books and booklets including atlases, but excluding the following:

(a) newspapers, periodicals, brochures, catalogues, directories and programmes;

(b) books of stationery, cheque books and similar products;

(c) diaries, organisers, yearbooks, planners and similar products the total area of whose pages consist of 25 per cent or more of blank spaces for the recording of information;

(d) albums and similar products;

(e) books of stamps, tickets or coupons.

Children’s clothing and footwear

10. (1) The supply of articles of children’s personal clothing of sizes that do not exceed the sizes of those articles appropriate to children of average build of 10 years of age, but excluding the following:

(a) articles of clothing made wholly or partly of fur skin other than garments merely trimmed with fur skin, unless the trimming has an area greater than one-fifth of the area of the outside material;

(b) articles of clothing that are not described, labelled, marked or marketed on the basis of age or size.

(2) The supply of articles of children’s personal footwear of sizes that do not exceed the size appropriate to children of average foot size of 10 years of age, but excluding footwear that is not described, labelled, marked or marketed on the basis of age or size.

(3) In this paragraph, a child whose age is 10 years or 10 years and a fraction of a year is taken to be a child of 10 years of age.

Medicine, medical equipment and appliances

11. (1) The supply of medicine of a kind used for human oral consumption.

(2) The supply of medicine of a kind used for animal oral consumption, excluding medicine which is packaged, sold or otherwise designated for the use of dogs, cats, cage birds or domestic pets.

(3) The supply of medical equipment and appliances, being—

(a) invalid carriages and other vehicles (excluding mechanically propelled road vehicles) of a kind designed for use by invalids or infirm persons;

(b) orthopaedic appliances, surgical belts, trusses and similar products, deaf aids, and artificial limbs and other artificial parts of the body excluding artificial teeth, corrective spectacles and contact lenses;

(c) walking frames and crutches;

(d) parts or accessories suitable for use solely or principally with any of the goods specified in sub-subparagraphs (a), (b) and (c).

Fertilisers, feeding stuffs, certain seeds, etc.

12. (1) Fertiliser that is supplied in units of not less than 10 kilograms and the sale or manufacture of which is not prohibited under section 4 or 6 of the Fertilisers, Feeding Stuffs and Mineral Mixtures Act 1955.

(2) Animal feeding stuff, excluding feeding stuff which is packaged, sold or otherwise designated for the use of dogs, cats, cage birds or domestic pets.

(3) Seeds, plants, trees, spores, bulbs, tubers, tuberous roots, corms, crowns and rhizomes, of a kind used for sowing in order to produce food.

(4) For the purpose of this paragraph, ‘fertiliser’ has the meaning given by the Fertilisers, Feeding Stuffs and Mineral Mixtures Act 1955.

Other zero-rated goods and services

13. (1) Services provided by the Commissioners of Irish Lights in connection with the operation of lightships, lighthouses or other navigational aids.

(2) Life saving services provided by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution including the organisation and maintenance of the lifeboat service.

(3) The supply of sanitary towels and sanitary tampons.

(4) The supply of wax candles and night-lights that are white and cylindrical, excluding candles and night-lights that are decorated, spiralled, tapered or perfumed.

SCHEDULE 3

Goods and Services Chargeable at the Reduced Rate

PART 1

Interpretation

Definitions: Schedule 3

1. (1) In this Schedule—

“bread” has the same meaning as in paragraph 8(4) of Schedule 2;

“ food and drink list” means the following items of food and drink:

(1) beverages chargeable with excise duty specifically charged on spirits, beer, wine, cider, perry or Irish wine, and preparations derived from any of them;

(2) tea and preparations derived from tea when supplied in drinkable form;

(3) cocoa, coffee and chicory and other roasted coffee substitutes, and preparations and extracts derived from them, when supplied in drinkable form;

(4) ice cream, ice lollipops, water ices, frozen desserts, frozen yoghurts and similar frozen products, and prepared mixes and powders for making any of those products;

(5) savoury products made from cereal or grain, or from flour or starch derived from cereal or grain, pork scratchings, and similar products when supplied for human consumption without further preparation;

(6) any of the following when supplied for human consumption without further preparation:

(i) potato crisps, potato sticks, potato puffs and similar products made from potato, or from potato flour or from potato starch;

(ii) popcorn;

(iii) salted or roasted nuts, whether or not in their shells;

(7) except as provided by subparagraph (2)—

(i) drinking water, juice extracted from, and other drinkable products derived from, fruit or vegetables, and syrups, concentrates, essences, powders, crystals or other products for the preparation of beverages;

(ii) beverages, other than those specified in items (1), (2) and (3);

(8) all kinds of chocolates, sweets and similar confectionery (including glacé or crystallised fruits), biscuits, crackers and wafers, and all other kinds of confectionery and bakery products (whether cooked or uncooked), excluding bread;

“in the course of catering” means—

(a) in the course of operating a hotel, restaurant, cafe, refreshment house, canteen, establishment licensed for the sale for consumption on the premises of intoxicating liquor, catering business or similar business, or

(b) in the course of operating any other business in connection with the carrying on of which facilities are provided for the consumption of the food or drink supplied;

“ margin scheme supply” means a supply—

(a) by a taxable dealer in accordance with the provisions of section 10A(3) or section 10A(8), or

(b) by an auctioneer within the meaning of section 10B and in accordance with subsection (3) of that section.

(2) The following are excepted from item (7) of the food and drinks list:

(a) tea and preparations derived from tea when supplied in a non-drinkable form;

(b) cocoa, coffee and chicory and other roasted coffee substitutes, and preparations and extracts derived from any of them, when supplied in a non-drinkable form;

(c) milk and preparations and extracts derived from milk;

(d) preparations and extracts derived from meat, yeast or eggs.

Other interpretative provisions

2. (1) In this Schedule, a reference to supplying food and drink includes—

(a) a reference to supplying food without drink, and

(b) a reference to supplying drink without food.

(2) For the purposes of paragraph 12, the expression ‘golf’ does not include pitch and putt.

PART 2

Annex III supplies

This Part sets out supplies of goods and services as provided by Article 98 of and Annex III to Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006.

Food and drink for human consumption

3. (1) The provision of food and drink in a form suitable for human consumption without further preparation—

(a) by means of a vending machine, or

(b) in the course of catering,

being food and drink that are items (2) or (3) in the food and drink list or that, apart from this subparagraph, would be chargeable to tax at the rate specified in section 11(1)(b).

(2) The supply in the course of catering of—

(a) items (4), (5), (6) or (8) of the food and drink list, or

(b) fruit juices other than fruit juices chargeable with a duty of excise,

when those items or juices are supplied in the course of a meal.

(3) The supply of food and drink that consists of or includes food and drink—

(a) that—

(i) has been heated, enabling it to be consumed at a temperature above the ambient air temperature, or

(ii) has been retained heated after cooking, enabling it to be consumed at a temperature above the ambient air temperature, or

(iii) is supplied while still warm after cooking, enabling it to be consumed at a temperature above the ambient air temperature,

and

(b) that is above the ambient air temperature at the time when it is provided to a customer,

being items (2) or (3) in the food and drink list, or food and drink that would, apart from this subparagraph, be chargeable to tax at the rate specified in section 11(1)(b).

(4) Subparagraph (3) does not apply to bread.

(5) Food of a kind used for human consumption (other than that chargeable to tax at the rate specified in section 11(1)(b)), being flour or egg based bakery products (including cakes, crackers, wafers and biscuits), but excluding the following:

(a) wafers and biscuits wholly or partly covered or decorated with chocolate or some other product similar in taste and appearance;

(b) items (4) and (5) of the food and drink list;

(c) chocolates, sweets and similar confectionery.

Live animals, animal feeding stuffs

4. (1) Greyhound feeding stuff that is packaged, advertised or held out for sale solely as greyhound feeding stuff, and that is supplied in units of not less than 10 kilograms.

(2) Live poultry and live ostriches.

Pharmaceutical products

5. Non-oral contraceptive products.

Certain safety equipment

6. Children’s car safety seats.

Books, newspapers and other printed matter

7. Printed matter consisting of—

(a) newspapers and periodicals, or

(b) brochures, leaflets and programmes, or

(c) catalogues, including directories, and similar printed matter, or

(d) maps, hydrographic and similar charts, or

(e) printed music other than in book or booklet form,

but excluding—

(f) other printed matter wholly or substantially devoted to advertising, and

(g) the items specified in subparagraphs (b) to (e) of paragraph 9 of Schedule 2, and

(h) any other printed matter.

Shows, exhibitions, cultural facilities, etc.

8. (1) Promotion of, and admission to, showings of cinematographic films.

(2) Promotion of, and admission to, live theatrical or musical performances, but excluding—

(a) dances, and

(b) performances of the kinds specified in paragraph 5(2) of Schedule 1.

(3) Amusement services of the kind normally supplied in fairgrounds or amusement parks, but excluding—

(a) services consisting of dances,

(b) services consisting of circuses,

(c) services consisting of gaming, as defined in section 2 of the Gaming and Lotteries Act 1956 (including services provided by means of a gaming machine of the kind referred to in section 43 of the Finance Act 1975 ), or

(d) services provided by means of an amusement machine of the kind referred to in section 120 of the Finance Act 1992 .

(4) Admission to exhibitions, of the kind normally held in museums and art galleries, of objects of historical, cultural, artistic or scientific interest, not being services of the kind specified in paragraph 3(5) of Schedule 1.

Private dwellings

9. (1) Services consisting of the development of immovable goods, being private dwellings, and work on such immovable goods including the installation of fixtures, where the value of movable goods (if any) provided in pursuance of an agreement in relation to such services does not exceed two-thirds of the total amount on which tax is chargeable in respect of the agreement.

(2) Services consisting of the routine cleaning of private dwellings.

Agricultural goods and services

10. (1) Agricultural services consisting of any of the following:

(a) field work, including reaping, mowing, threshing, baling, harvesting, sowing and planting;

(b) stock-minding, stock-rearing, farm relief services and farm advisory services (other than farm accountancy or farm management services);

(c) disinfecting and ensilage of agricultural products;

(d) destroying weeds and pests, and dusting and spraying crops and land;

(e) lopping, tree felling and similar forestry services.

(2) Animal insemination services.

(3) The supply of livestock semen.

Hotel, holiday accommodation

11. Subject to the regulations (if any)—

(a) letting immovable goods (other than in the course of the provision of facilities of the kind specified in paragraph 12(1)), where those goods consist of—

(i) a room or rooms in a hotel or guesthouse, or

(ii) all or part of a house, apartment or other similar establishment that is let on a short-term basis for guest accommodation, or

(iii) a part of a caravan park, camping site or other similar establishment,

or

(b) the provision of holiday accommodation.

Sporting facilities

12. (1) The provision of facilities for taking part in sporting activities by a person other than a non-profit making organisation.

(2) The provision by a member-owned golf club of facilities for taking part in golf to any person (other than a natural person whose membership subscription to the club at the time when the person uses the facilities confers an entitlement to use them without further charge on at least 200 days (including the day on which the person uses the facilities) in a continuous period of 12 months), where the total consideration received by the club for providing those facilities exceeds, or is likely to exceed, the services threshold during any continuous period of 12 months.

(3) The provision by a non-profit making organisation (other than a member-owned golf club) of facilities for taking part in golf to any person, where the total consideration received by the organisation for providing the facilities exceeds or is likely to exceed the services threshold in any continuous period of 12 months.

Other services

13. (1) Services consisting of the acceptance for disposal of waste material.

(2) Carrying out minor repairs or modifications to bicycles, shoes or leather goods, clothing or household linen.

(3) Hairdressing services.

PART 3

Certain supplies with reduced rate at 1 January 1991: Special provisions in accordance with Article 115 of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006

Housing

14. The supply of immovable goods used or to be used for residential purposes.

PART 4

Certain supplies with reduced rate at 1 January 1991: Special provisions in accordance with Article 118 of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006

Non-residential immovable goods

15. (1) The supply of immovable goods, other than immovable goods used or to be used for residential purposes.

(2) Services consisting of the development of immovable goods (not being goods referred to in paragraph 9(1)) and work on those goods (including the installation of fixtures), where the value of any movable goods supplied under an agreement relating to the services does not exceed two-thirds of the total amount on which tax is chargeable in respect of the agreement.

(3) Services consisting of the routine cleaning of immovable goods (not being immovable goods referred to in paragraph 9(2)).

Concrete works

16. (1) The supply of concrete that is ready to pour, but excluding the margin scheme supply of the concrete.

(2) The supply of blocks of concrete of a kind that comply with the specification contained in the Standard Specification (Concrete Building Blocks, Part 1, Normal Density Blocks) Declaration 1987 (Irish Standard 20: Part 1: 1987), but excluding the margin scheme supply of those blocks.

Energy products and supplies

17. (1) The supply of coal, peat and other solid substances offered for sale solely as fuel.

(2) The supply of electricity, but not the distribution of electricity if the distribution is wholly or mainly in connection with the transmission of communication signals.

(3) The supply of gas of a kind used for domestic or industrial heating or lighting, whether in gaseous or liquid form, but not including—

(a) motor vehicle gas within the meaning of section 42(1) of the Finance Act 1976 , or

(b) gas of a kind normally used for welding or cutting metal, or

(c) gas sold as lighter fuel.

(4) The supply of hydrocarbon oil of a kind used for domestic or industrial heating, excluding gas oil (within the meaning of the Mineral Oil Tax Regulations 2001 ( S.I. No. 442 of 2001 )), other than gas oil which has been duly marked in accordance with Regulation 6(2) of those Regulations.

Photographic and related supplies

18. (1) The supply to a person of photographic prints (other than goods produced by means of a photocopying process), slides or negatives, that have been produced from goods provided by that person.

(2) The supply of goods being—

(a) photographic prints (other than goods produced by means of a photocopying process) mounted or unmounted, but unframed,

(b) slides and negatives, and

(c) cinematographic and video film,

that record particular persons, objects or events, supplied under an agreement to photograph those persons, objects or events.

(3) The supply by a photographer of—

(a) negatives that have been produced from film exposed for the purpose of the photographer’s business, and

(b) film that has been exposed for the purposes of the photographer’s business.

(4) The supply of photographic prints produced by means of a vending machine which incorporates a camera and developing and printing equipment.

(5) Services consisting of—

(a) editing photographic, cinematographic and video film, or

(b) microfilming.

(6) Agency services relating to a supply specified in subparagraph (1).

Hiring for short periods

19. Hiring—

(a) a vehicle designed and constructed, or adapted, for the conveyance of persons by road, or

(b) a vessel designed and constructed for the conveyance of passengers and not exceeding 15 tonnes gross, or

(c) any kind of sports or pleasure boat, or

(d) a caravan, mobile home, tent or trailer tent,

to a person under an agreement (other than an agreement of the kind referred to in section 3(1)(b)) for any term or part of a term that, when added to the term of a previous hiring (whether of the same goods or of other goods of the same kind) to the same person during the 12 months ending on the date of the beginning of the existing hiring, does not exceed 5 weeks.

Certain repair and related services

20. (1) Services, other than those specified in paragraph 13(2), consisting of—

(a) repairing or maintaining movable goods, or

(b) modifying used movable goods (other than contract work or services of a kind specified in subparagraph (2)), but excluding the supply in the course of any such repair, maintenance or modification of—

(i) accessories, attachments or batteries, or

(ii) tyres, tyre cases, interchangeable tyre treads, inner tubes and tyre flaps, for wheels of all kinds.

(2) The following services are specified for the purposes of subparagraph (1):

(a) services specified in paragraph 3(4) of Schedule 2 (Work on movable goods for export);

(b) services specified in paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 2 (Repair, etc. of sea-going vessels or aircraft);

(c) services specified in paragraph 4(4) of Schedule 2 (Repair, etc. of equipment used in international aircraft).

Miscellaneous services

21. (1) Services consisting of the care of the human body, including services supplied in the course of a health studio business or similar business, but not including exempted activities referred to in Part 1 of Schedule 1 or hairdressing services referred to in paragraph 13(3).

(2) Services supplied in the course of their profession by jockeys.

(3) Services supplied in the course of their profession by veterinary surgeons.

(4) Services supplied in the course of their profession by tour guides.

(5) Instruction in the driving of mechanically propelled road vehicles, but excluding education, training or retraining of the kind specified in paragraph 4(3) of Schedule 1.

PART 5

Supplies of certain live plants and similar goods

This Part sets out special provisions in accordance with Article 122 and Annex III (paragraph (11)) of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006.

Plants and bulbs, etc.

22. (1) The supply of nursery or garden centre stock consisting of live plants, live trees, live shrubs, bulbs, roots and the like, not being of a type specified in paragraph 12(3) of Schedule 2, and cut flowers and ornamental foliage not being artificial or dried flowers or foliage.

(2) The supply of miscanthus rhizomes, seeds, bulbs, roots and similar goods used for the agricultural production of bio-fuel.

PART 6

Supplies of certain works of art, antiques and literary manuscripts

This Part deals with special arrangements made in accordance with Article 311 and Annex IX of Council Directive No. 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006.

Works of art

23. The supply of a work of art that is—

(a) a painting, drawing or pastel, or any combination of them, that is produced entirely by hand, not being—

(i) a hand-decorated article, or

(ii) a plan or drawing for the purpose of depicting topographical features, or

(iii) a plan or drawing produced for an architectural, engineering, industrial, commercial or similar purpose,

or

(b) an original lithograph, engraving, or print, or any combination of them, produced directly from lithographic stones, plates or other engraved surfaces, that are produced entirely by hand, or

(c) an original sculpture or statue (not being a mass-produced reproduction or work of craftsmanship of a commercial nature),

but excluding the margin scheme supply of such a work.

Antiques

24. The supply of an antique that is an article of furniture, silver, glass or porcelain (whether hand-decorated or not) of a kind specified in the regulations, that is shown to the satisfaction of the Revenue Commissioners to be more than 100 years old, but excluding—

(a) a work of art of a kind specified in paragraph 23, and

(b) the margin scheme supply of an antique.

Literary manuscripts

25. The supply of a literary manuscript certified by the Director of the National Library as being of major national importance and of either cultural or artistic importance.”.

Consequential amendment of Value-Added Tax Act 1972.

131.— The enactments specified in Schedule 2 are amended as indicated in that Schedule.

Pre-consolidation amendments and repeals (Part 4).

132.— The Principal Act is amended to the extent and manner specified in paragraphs 1 to 20 of Schedule 3 .

Supply of greenhouse gas emission allowances.

133.— (1) The Principal Act is amended—

(a) in section 8 by inserting the following after subsection (1C):

“(1D) (a) Where a taxable person who carries on a business in the State (in this subsection referred to as a ‘recipient’) receives greenhouse gas emission allowances from another taxable person who carries on a business in the State then the recipient shall, in relation to that supply, be an accountable person or be deemed to be an accountable person and shall be liable to pay the tax chargeable as if that recipient made that supply in the course or furtherance of business and the person who supplied the greenhouse gas emission allowances shall not be accountable for or liable to pay the said tax in respect of such supply.

(b) In this subsection—

‘ allowance ’ has the meaning assigned to it by Article 3 of the Directive;

‘Directive’ me ans Directive 2003/87/EC 25 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 October 2003 (as amended) establishing a scheme for greenhouse gas emission allowance trading within the Community and amending Council Directive 96/61/EC;

‘greenhouse gas’ has the meaning assigned to it by Article 3 of the Directive;

‘ greenhouse gas emission allowances ’ means allowances to emit greenhouse gases transferable in accordance with the Directive and other units that may be used by operators for compliance with the Directive;

‘operator’ has the meaning assigned to it by Article 3 of the Directive.”,

(b) in section 12(1)(a) by inserting the following after subparagraph (vc):

“(vd) the tax chargeable during the period, being tax for which the recipient (within the meaning of section 8(1D)) is liable by virtue of section 8(1D) in respect of greenhouse gas emission allowances (within the said meaning) received by that recipient: but this subparagraph shall apply only where the recipient would be entitled to a deduction of that tax elsewhere under this subsection if that tax had been chargedto such recipient by an accountable person,”,

and

(c) in section 17 by inserting the following after subsection (1D) (inserted by section 127 ):

“(1E) Where a taxable person who carries on a business in the State supplies greenhouse gas emission allowances (within the meaning of section 8(1D)) to a recipient (within the said meaning), that person shall issue a document to the recipient indicating—

(a) that the recipient is liable to account for the tax chargeable on that supply, and

(b) such other particulars as would be required to be included in that document if that document was an invoice required to be issued in accordance with subsection (1) but excluding the amount of tax payable.”.

(2) Subsection (1) comes into operation on such day as the Minister for Finance may appoint by order.

PART 5

Stamp Duties

Interpretation (Part 5).

134.— In this Part “Principal Act” means the Stamp Duties Consolidation Act 1999 .

Information exchange with Property Registration Authority.

135.— The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after section 137—

“137A.— (1) In this section ‘Authority’ means An tÚdarás Clárúcháin Maoine or, in the English language, the Property Registration Authority.

(2) The Authority shall, at such intervals as are specified by the Revenue Commissioners, supply to the Revenue Commissioners such information in the Authority’s possession as may be required for the performance of the functions of the Revenue Commissioners under this Act.

(3) Notwithstanding any obligation to maintain secrecy or any other restriction on the disclosure or production of information obtained by or furnished to the Commissioners, the Commissioners shall, at such intervals as are specified by the Authority, supply to the Authority such information in the Commissioners’ possession which may be required by the Authority when considering stamp duty in relation to documents presented for registration.”.

Conveyance in consideration of debt.

136.— (1) Section 41 of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for section 41:

“41.— (1) Where any property is conveyed to any person in consideration, wholly or in part, of any debt due to such person, or subject either certainly or contingently to the payment or transfer of any money or stock, whether being or constituting a charge or incumbrance on the property or not, the debt, money or stock shall be deemed the whole or part, as the case may be, of the consideration in respect of which the conveyance is charged with ad valorem duty.

(2) Where, in connection with or as part of any arrangement involving any conveyance referred to in subsection (1) of stock of a company, the transferee procures, either directly or indirectly, the discharge of any indebtedness of the company (in this subsection referred to as the ‘first-mentioned company’) or of any other company which is connected with the first-mentioned company within the meaning of section 10 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 , and the main or one of the main purposes of the arrangement is to secure a tax advantage, then the conveyance shall, in addition to any other payment of money or transfer of stock to which it is subject (if any), be deemed to be subject to the payment of an amount equal to the amount of such indebtedness.

(3) In subsection (2)—

‘arrangement’ includes any agreement, understanding, scheme, transaction or series of transactions (whether or not legally enforceable);

‘tax advantage’ means the avoidance or reduction of a charge to stamp duty.”.

(2) This section applies as respects instruments executed on or after 4 February 2010.

Certain investment certificates.

137.— The Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after section 85:

“85A.— Stamp duty shall not be chargeable on the issue, transfer or redemption of an investment certificate within the meaning of section 267N (inserted by the Finance Act 2010) of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 .”.

Funds: reorganisation.

138.— The Principal Act is amended—

(a) by substituting the following for subsection (2) of section 88B:

“(2) Stamp duty shall not be chargeable on any instrument made for the purposes of or in connection with any arrangement between a foreign fund and a domestic fund, being an arrangement entered into for the purposes of or in connection with a scheme of reconstruction or amalgamation under which the foreign fund transfers assets to the domestic fund and the domestic fund—

(a) issues units to persons who hold units in the foreign fund in respect of and in proportion to (or as nearly as may be in proportion to) their holdings of units in the foreign fund, or

(b) issues units directly to the foreign fund.”,

and

(b) by inserting the following after section 88D:

“Transfer of assets within unit trusts.

88E.— (1) In this section—

‘investment undertaking’ means—

(a) an investment undertaking to which paragraph (a) of the definition of ‘investment undertaking’ in section 739B(1) of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 relates, and

(b) an investment undertaking that is a ‘unit trust’;

‘relevant Regulations’ has the same meaning as in section 739B(1) of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

‘unit trust’ has the same meaning as in relevant Regulations.

(2) Stamp duty shall not be chargeable on any instrument made for the purposes of the transfer of assets within an investment undertaking.”.

Levy on certain life insurance premiums.

139.— (1) Section 124B of the Principal Act is amended in subsection (1):

(a) by substituting the following for the definition of “assessable amount”:

“ ‘assessable amount’, in relation to a quarter, means the gross amount received by an insurer by means of premiums in that quarter for policies of life insurance referred to in classes I, II, III, IV, V and VI of Annex I to the Directive to the extent that the risks to which those policies of life insurance relate are located in the State (being risks deemed to be located in the State by virtue of section 61) but excluding amounts received in respect of pension business which shall be construed in accordance with subsections (2) and (3) of section 706 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 and excluding amounts received in the course of or by means of reinsurance;”,

(b) by substituting the following for the definition of “due date”:

“ ‘due date’ means, in respect of the quarter ending on—

(a) 31 March in any year, 25 April in the same year,

(b) 30 June in any year, 25 July in the same year,

(c) 30 September in any year, 25 October in the same year, and

(d) 31 December in any year, 25 January in the following year;”,

and

(c) by substituting the following for paragraph (c) in the definition of “insurer”:

“(c) the holder of an official authorisation to undertake insurance in Iceland, Liechtenstein or Norway, pursuant to the EEA Agreement, within the meaning of the Agreement on the European Economic Area signed at Oporto on 2 May 1992, as adjusted by all subsequent agreements to that Agreement, who is carrying on business of life assurance in the State;”,

(2) (a) Paragraphs (a) and (c) of subsection (1) have effect from 1 January 2010, and

(b) Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) has effect in respect of all statements to be delivered to the Commissioners after 31 December 2009.

Levy on authorised insurers.

140.— Section 125A (inserted by the Health Insurance (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009 ) of the Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for subsection (3):

“(3) There shall be charged on every statement delivered by an authorised insurer pursuant to subsection (2) a stamp duty at the rate of—

(a) where the relevant contract was renewed or entered into before 1 January 2010:

(i) €53 in respect of each insured person aged less than 18 years, and

(ii) €160 in respect of each insured person aged 18 years or over,

and

(b) where the relevant contract was renewed or entered into on or after 1 January 2010:

(i) €55 in respect of each insured person aged less than 18 years, and

(ii) €185 in respect of each insured person aged 18 years or over,

included in the statement.”.

Amendment of Schedule 2B (qualifications for applying for relief from stamp duty in respect of transfers to young trained farmers) to Principal Act.

141.— Schedule 2B to the Principal Act is amended in paragraph 3 by inserting the following after subparagraph (a):

“(aa) Bachelor of Agricultural Science — Agri-Environmental Science awarded by University College Dublin;”.

PART 6

Capital Acquisitions Tax

Interpretation (Part 6).

142.— In this Part “Principal Act” means the Capital Acquisitions Tax Consolidation Act 2003 .

Amendment of section 57 (overpayment of tax) of Principal Act.

143.— (1) Section 57(1) of the Principal Act is amended in the definition of “tax” by inserting “probate tax and” after “includes”.

(2) This section applies to claims for repayment of tax made on or after the date of the passing of this Act.

Exemption of certain investment entities.

144.— (1) The Principal Act is amended by substituting the following for section 75:

“75.— (1) In this section—

‘collective investment scheme’ means a bona fide scheme for the purpose, or having the effect, solely or mainly, of providing facilities for the participation by the public or other investors in profits or income arising from the acquisition, holding, management or disposal of securities or any other property;

‘common contractual fund’ has the meaning assigned to it by section 739I of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

‘investment undertaking’ has the meaning assigned to it by section 739B of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

‘unit’, in relation to a collective investment scheme, includes shares, members’ interests, limited partnership interests and any other instruments granting an entitlement to the income or investments from the scheme;

‘unit’, in relation to a common contractual fund, has the meaning assigned to it by section 739I of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 ;

‘unit’, in relation to an investment undertaking, has the meaning assigned to it by section 739B of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 .

(2) Where any unit of a collective investment scheme which is incorporated or otherwise formed under the law of a territory outside the State, a common contractual fund or an investment undertaking is comprised in a gift or an inheritance, then, such unit—

(a) is exempt from tax, and

(b) is not taken into account in computing tax on any gift or inheritance taken by the donee or successor,

if it is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioners that—

(i) the unit is comprised in the gift or inheritance—

(I) at the date of the gift or the date of the inheritance, and

(II) at the valuation date,

(ii) at the date of the disposition, the disponer is neither domiciled nor ordinarily resident in the State, and

(iii) at the date of the gift or at the date of the inheritance, the donee or successor is neither domiciled nor ordinarily resident in the State.

(3) Where—

(a) any unit of an investment undertaking which is comprised in a gift or an inheritance came into the beneficial ownership of the disponer or became subject to the disposition prior to 15 February 2001, and

(b) the conditions of subparagraphs (i) and (iii) of subsection (2) are complied with,

then, that subsection shall apply to that unit of an investment undertaking comprised in a gift or an inheritance, if at the date of the disposition, the proper law of the disposition was not the law of the State.”.

(2) This section applies to gifts and inheritances taken on or after 4 February 2010.

Amendment of section 82 (exemption of certain receipts) of Principal Act.

145.— (1) Section 82(1) of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after paragraph (c):

“(ca) the receipt by a person of an award from the competition ‘Your Country, Your Call’ which was launched by the President on 17 February 2010,”.

(2) This section applies to gifts taken on or after 17 February 2010.

Amendment of section 89 (provisions relating to agricultural property) of Principal Act.

146.— (1) Section 89 of the Principal Act is amended by inserting the following after subsection (4):