|
Advanced search
Previous page
 |
Title
The tax consequences for a seller (also briefly commenting from the perspective of the purchaser) when contingent liabilities are transferred in a sale of a business as a going concern with specific reference and evaluating income tax case no. 1839: (South Gauteng Tax Court) |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11805 |
Date
2010 |
Author(s)
Rossouw, Dewald Pierre |
Contributor(s)
Cramer, Peter |
Abstract
Includes summary. - Includes bibliographical references (leaves 55-57). - The selling of a business as a going concern can have various tax consequences for both the seller and the purchaser. This is so whether the purchase price is determined with reference to the net asset value, i.e. gross assets less liabilities, or not. Accounting liabilities are always part of a business and therefore part of a business sales contract. The basic transaction is normally that some or all of the assets of the business are transferred to the purchaser who also assumes all or some of the liabilities of the business. The liabilities transferred may include various accounting provisions. |
Subject(s)
Taxation |
Language
eng |
Publisher
University of Cape Town; Faculty of Commerce; Department of Commercial Law |
Type of publication
Thesis; Text; Masters; MCom |
Repository
Cape Town - OpenUCT, University of Cape Town
|
Added to C-A: 2017-02-17;13:37:57 |
© Connecting-Africa 2004-2023 | Last update: Thursday, January 19, 2023 |
Webmaster
|