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When a property should be classified as fixed assets

16.05.2011
8 min read
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Property tax is levied on property treated as fixed assets for accounting purposes. However, the Russian accounting regulations (PBU 6/01) do not specify when property should be classified as fixed assets.

This article looks at the case law and its various approaches as to when a capital construction object [1] should be classified as a fixed asset.

The property is put into operation on the date that a commissioning permit is received

Article 55, clauses 1 and 2 of the Russian Urban Planning Code provides that a commissioning permit is a document which certifies that the construction project has been […] fully completed in compliance with the construction permit, and that the resulting […] capital construction object tallies with design documentation and the urban plan of the land plot [2], and which allows the completed property to be put into operation.

Consequently, for the purposes of urban-planning legislation, construction is deemed to be completed and the completed property to be put into operation on the date that a commissioning permit is received. It is the date after which urban-planning legislation allows properties to be operated.

Our analysis of tax and accounting legislation and case law suggests that as a general rule, receiving a commissioning permit is considered to be the necessary grounds for including the cost of a fixed asset in taxable property.

Under Article 374 of the Russian Tax Code, Russian entities are liable to pay property tax on movable and immovable property […] classified as fixed assets in accordance with accounting regulations.

The Regulation for Accounting for Fixed Assets (PBU 6/01) provides that an asset may be classified as a fixed asset on the following four conditions (PBU 6/01, par. 4):

1) the asset in question is intended to be used in the company’s operations (to be used for production purposes or to be leased out);
2) the asset is expected to be in operation for more than 12 months;
3) the asset is expected to generate future economic benefits for the company;
4) the company does not plan to sell the asset.

It follows fr om the above conditions that the key substantive criterion for an asset to qualify as a fixed asset is its being intended to be used for production purposes or to be transferred for temporary use (under a lease).

Normally, a completed building/structure may not be put to its intended use until a commissioning permit has been received, since buildings may not be operated without a permit.

This reasoning is used by courts to determine the time when assets should be classified as fixed assets, and consequently, should be included in taxable property.

For instance, the Federal Arbitration Court for the North-West Circuit in its Resolution dated 17 December 2008 in case No. А21-1145/2008 looks at the following situation:

On 30 September 2005, the taxpayer and its lessee entered into a property lease. A commissioning certificate was signed in November 2005. The taxpayer classified the properties as fixed assets and property tax began to accrue thereon on 1 December 2005. The tax office argued that tax should have accrued fr om October 2005, i.e. from the date that the lease was entered into. The court ruled in favour of the taxpayer, saying that:
‘Buildings may not be classified as fixed assets until duly commissioned. Under Clause 8 of the USSR Council of Ministers Resolution No. 105 dated 23 January 1981 “On the commissioning of completed properties”, the commissioning date is deemed to be the date when a certificate is signed by the state commissioning panel. Thus, the properties that the Company leased out had been lawfully shown as fixed assets (account 01) since 10 November 2005, i.e. the date when the certificate was issued and approved [3].

A similar conclusion may be drawn from the Guidelines for Accounting for Fixed Assets (as approved by the Russian Ministry of Finance Order No. 91n dated 13 October 2003).

Under clause 23 of the Guidelines, additions to fixed assets are recorded at historical cost, which includes the cost of bringing assets into an operating condition (clause 32 of the Guidelines).

Therefore, it would be unlawful to classify an asset as a fixed asset until measures have been taken to bring it into an operating condition, since its historical cost would not comprise all necessary elements until it is brought into an operating condition. More specifically, such measures should include obtaining all approvals and permits to remove the legal barriers to using such asset.
 
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However, obtaining a commissioning permit does not always necessarily give rise to a tax liability.

Case law suggests that classifying an asset as a fixed asset at the time of receiving a commissioning permit is but a legal presumption [4] of the time when the asset was put into operation (and property tax began to accrue).

Case law shows that this presumption may be rebutted in two events:

  • If the property had actually been put into operation before the commissioning permit was received, or
  • If the property cannot be put to its intended use after the commissioning permit has been received.

The property is actually put into operation before the commissioning permit is received

Case law involving the application of tax legislation proceeds from substance over form and the autonomous nature of tax legislation [5].

Neither tax nor accounting legislation establish a link between transferring an asset to account 01 (classifying it as a fixed asset) and ensuring that it complies with industry regulation (e.g. property development regulation). As indicated above, the only substantive criterion for an asset to be classified as a fixed asset is its being ready (intended) to be used in the company’s operations. If the property had actually been put into operation before the commissioning permit was received, it was obviously ready to be used in the company’s operations.

Therefore, it is the date when the asset was actually put in operation that is relevant in legal terms for property tax purposes under tax and accounting legislation.

Since this conclusion (i.e. that the property had actually been put into operation before the commissioning permit was received) suggests that the taxpayer is in breach of urban planning legislation, it is for the tax authorities to demonstrate that that the property had actually been put into operation before the commissioning permit was received.

In some cases, this would be the simplest of tasks for the tax office, for instance, wh ere a company established with the sole purpose of operating the asset begins recognising revenue from sales of products/services created by means of such an asset.

In such circumstances, a further argument could be made to show that the asset is not a fixed asset. This could take the form of documentary evidence of the asset undergoing testing and commissioning that involves stress-testing, e.g. of its load-bearing elements, foundations and equipment. These activities would be considered to be part of bringing it into an operating condition, rather than constituting actual use.

The property is put into operation after the commissioning permit is received

As a general rule, the liability to pay tax cannot depend on the taxpayer’s discretion as to when it will actually put a property into operation.

However, there may be circumstances wh ere receiving a commissioning permit would not demonstrate that the asset can actually be used for the purposes specified in PBU 6/01, clause 4, sub-clause 1. For example, it may turn out after the commissioning permit has been received that the property in question cannot be put to its intended use.

The Presidium of the Russian Supreme Arbitration Court gave a legal assessment of such situations in its Resolution No. VAS-4451/10 dated 16 November 2010.

The facts of the case show that the taxpayer received as commissioning permit and registered title to a hotel and office building. However, it turned out after the commissioning permit had been received and title was registered, that significant additional investment was required to decorate the interiors. Therefore, the taxpayer decided that the building was not suitable for its intended use so it could not be used.

The trial court upheld the taxpayer’s claims and held that:

‘Building the property and subsequently decorating its interiors should be viewed as a single process of creating a hotel and office building, which results in a property that qualifies as a fixed asset’.

The Federal Arbitration Court for the North-West Circuit ruled that the tax office had been right in assessing the taxpayer as liable for additional property tax for the period from the time that title to the property was registered in July 2007.

The Presidium of the Russian Supreme Arbitration Court upheld the trial court ruling.


[1] Translator’s note: this refers to a building or structure built as a result of a capital construction project.

[2] Translator’s note: this refers to a document issued by the government authorities and setting out legislative and regulatory urban-planning requirements for the development of the land plot question.

[3] A similar conclusion is made by the Federal Arbitration Court for the Urals Circuit in its Resolution No. F09-7348/09-С3 dated 30 September 2009.

[4] That is, assuming that something is true (in this particular case – that the property in question has been put in operation) if something else is true (in this particular case - if commissioning permit has been issued).

[5] This idea underlies, for instance, the Resolution dated 18 September 2007 of the Presidium of the Russian Supreme Arbitration Court in case No. 5600/07, which was in favour of the taxpayer.

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