On 30th March 2022, the French tax
administration published a deceptively short notice that it had
updated its two existing instructions (its
doctrine not a guideline) regarding the reporting obligations of
Trustees under Article 1649AB CGI and Articles 369 to 369 AB of
Annex II CGI. Link to BOFIP notice
here.
Bear in mind that the previous changes
in 2020 were designed to implement the EU Money Laundering
Directives' provisions in relation to trusts, which relation to
which the French political side of the administration had been
forceful. The French Finance Ministry had delegated the
responsibility for creating and aminating the French register of
trusts to the Tax administration immediately the Register ws
introduced..
However, that is not the whole story by any means.
Article 1649AB CGI has in fact
extended the scope of the declarations to include trustees of
trusts who have entered into a professional or business
relationship with certain French categories of legal, tax,
accounting and investment professionals to name but a
few.
Its first paragraph
reads:
I.-L'administrateur d'un trust
défini à l'article
792-0bis dont
le constituant ou l'un au moins des bénéficiaires a son domicile
fiscal en France ou qui comprend un bien ou un droit qui y est
situé, l'administrateur d'un trust défini à l'article 792-0 bis
établi ou résidant en dehors de l'Union européenne lorsqu'il
acquiert un bien immobilier ou qu'il entre en relation d'affaires
en France au sens de l'article
L. 561-2-1 du code monétaire et
financier ainsi que
l'administrateur qui a son domicile fiscal en France sont tenus de
déclarer les informations suivantes :
This sets out
the French
Connections (nexus) which trigger
reporting requirements and give rise to penalties
etc.
The point to note is that a trustee
acquiring an immovable in France is caught by this, but also note
that seeking advice from any of the professions caught, including
avocats notaires, experts comptables, huissiers de justice through
to investment professionals also triggers a technical declaration
requirement. This is not limited to creating a French
company to hold immovable for the trust, or using a foreign company
to purchase a French immovable. A failure to declare
a foreign arrangement which falls within the French fiscal
definition of a trust (including foundations and anstalts), not
only runs the risk of tax penalties but also severe money
laundering sanctions. Note that the French extended the Hague
Convention's definition which they had signed to include these
arrangements, without ratifying the Convention of
1984.
In effect the definition of a trust
limited to taxation issues at article 762-0 bis CGI, which
is hardly a satisfactory legal definition at all, is now leaking
out into the compliance and legal areas of the French legal system
as no French lawyer has yet had the gumption to challenge
it.
Whilst the remainder of the articles
in the legislation have not been modified since 2020, and still
remain in force as they were, the administration appears to have
introduced a further exception from declarations for trustees
established in jurisdictions with administrative fiscal assistance
agreements with France. This is not an innocent change. It may be
that the French tax administration are struggling with the data
filed by compliant trustees, bit there is more to it than
that.
This might appear to be a relief for a
hard-pressed lay trustee of English will trusts with beneficiaries
or even assets in France, but it is not that simple. For example,
it certainly is no longer possible to keep one's head below the
parapet as a trustee/beneficiary of a simple offshore life
insurance bond issued in trust without taking
advice.
Continuing to make declarations may
still be the best option.
The question is how to be sure that
seeking assistance from a French professional does not trigger a
reporting requirement. Expecting the fullest understanding from a
French avocat whose advertised specialisation is in American trusts
may be optimistic when dealing with a British (onshore or offshore)
trust arrangement.
This is not as straightforward as it might
appear as the French professional as well as the other
administrations consulting and using the French Trust Register as
their source of official information on the trust or arrangement
concerned are now required to report anomalies between whet is
declared to them and what appears on their consultation of the
Trust Register. To quote the
Instruction :
"L'
article L. 102 AH du LPF, créé par l'article 14 de l'ordonnance n° 2020-115 du 12
février 2020 renforçant le dispositif national de lutte contre le
blanchiment de capitaux et le financement du terrorisme,
prévoit en outre une procédure de signalement des divergences.
Conformément à cette disposition, les personnes assujetties aux
obligations de lutte contre le blanchiment des capitaux et le
financement du terrorisme mentionnées à l'article L. 561-2 du
CoMoFi ainsi que les autorités de contrôle de ces personnes,
mentionnées à l'article L 561-36 du CoMoFi, doivent signaler à
l'administration toute divergence qu'elles constatent entre les
informations conservées dans le registre des trusts prévu à
l'article 1649 AB du CGI et le registre des fiducies prévu à
l'article 2020 du code civil et les informations sur les
bénéficiaires effectifs dont elles disposent, y compris l'absence
d'enregistrement de ces informations."
The question is how can the Trust
Register be "informed" and completed for non-EU trusts, when there
is no declarative requirement enforcement by the Frencn tax
administation, owing to CJEU judgments and rulings on the Freedom
of movement of Capital with Third States? There is clearly more
afoot.
Whilst the inconsistency between the
declaratory obligation and the doctrinal exemption might be
explained by the Tax Administration being the collector and the
guardian of information on the Register of Trusts used by the
remainder of the French administration and professionals for
example, as means of identifying and regulating trust and
beneficial entitlement to French situs assets, that is not
conclusive. What it does mean is that there is now no effective
barrier or restriction on information flowing out from the Tax
administration to other French administrations as the information
it gleans and obtains from tax information exchanges can now
circulate, whether automatic or not.
The notice instruction and
the modifications carried to the underlying instructions address
what the French administration now terms a French nexus (the French
connection), and also the various reporting obligations and related
tolerances, the possible reporting exemptions as well as additional
details on the public register of trusts.
However, the most important point to
note is that Article L.
561-2-1 of
the French Code monétaire et
financière is now linked into the tax
structure by rendering any advice sought from a professional on a
trust with a potential French connection liable to an immediate
declaration of its existence to the French tax administration. See
the full text below. That is rendering the Tax administration
competent in matters which previouly were outside their
jurisdictional field.
In parallel, France's 2022 Financial Law, enacted
on 31 December 2021, extended the scope of certain anti-tax
avoidance provisions to trusts. The settlor or beneficiary deemed
to be settlor of a trust is presumed to satisfy the 10% holding
requirement for anti-avoidance purposes (income tax) of Article 123
bis of the CGI.
Whether onshore or offshore, trustees
may need to think twice before triggering an Event declaration
requirement under article 2181 Trust1 by seeking French legal, tax,
accounting or investment advice from a French professional who may
feel it incumbent upon themselves to require the filing of a return
under the French implementation of the EU Money Laundering
Directives or report a trustee for not doing so.
The worst side of
the changes is that in addition to any other French administration
using the Register, an French professional coming into contact with
a trust is now required to report any discrepancy, omission or
anomaly with the information declared on the Trust Register, which
is now being transformed into a substitute for a quasi-corporate
register. The 2181 Trust1 "event" declaration being the equivalent
of the déclaration d'existence.
Don't forget that the 2181 Trust1 "event" declarationis also
required within the month of death to declare indirect gifts and
internal transfers of interests within the trust ad the decease of
the constituant or deemed settlor for gift and succesion duty
purposes. These will not be picked up on automatic information
exchanges unless the French administration are intending to
transpose information gleaned from foreign administrations such as
HMRC directly without the trustees' permission or
declaration.
As Overseas Chambers is established outside the EU
and the United Kingdom, I can give preliminary advice to trustees
outside France before they trigger a French reporting requirement
by simply seeking advice, for example acquiring a French property
through a company or even acquiring French
investments.
See the background summary on the resources page (link
here): a forfeitary fee will be charged for the rotating
password enabling a copy to be taken Contact
oc@overseaschambers.com for transfer details