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Capital Gains Tax Lesson 4 Taxable Events and Disposals A thorough analysis of what constitutes a 'disposal' for CGT purposes in Zimbabwe — covering sales, exchanges, donations, deemed disposals, liquidation transfers, timing rules, case law highlights, and the full compliance flowchart from disposal to CGT settlement.
1

Executive summary

The statutory definition of disposal and all events that trigger a CGT liability under the Capital Gains Tax Act [Chapter 23:01].

2

Lesson content

Types of disposal, deemed disposals, liquidation transfers, timing rules, case law, and the disposal-to-compliance flowchart.

3

Checklist & assessment

Compliance checklist, classroom activities, and exam-style questions for Lesson 4 on taxable events and disposals.

Executive summary
Lesson content
Checklist & assessment
Meaning of disposal Sale of assets Exchange (swap) of assets Donation or gratuitous disposal Deemed disposals Liquidation & restructuring Timing of disposal Case law highlights Worked examples Disposal flowchart Compliance checklist Assessment questions

Taxable Events and Disposals

Executive Summary. This lesson examines the “disposal” of specified assets under the Zimbabwe CGT regime. A disposal – though not explicitly defined – broadly means any transfer or extinction of ownership: sale, exchange, donation, or other transfer of a specified asset. Section 8(2) of the CGT Act treats many non‑sale transfers as deemed sales. We analyze each taxable event: sales, exchanges, gifts, and special “deemed” disposals (death, expropriation, etc.), citing exact Act provisions. We discuss timing rules (when the disposal occurs) and the interplay with other laws (Income Tax Act, Finance Acts). Throughout we cite statutes and case law, and illustrate concepts with worked examples. Practitioners will find checklists and a mermaid flowchart to guide compliance steps (withholding tax, returns, clearance).

Learning Objectives. After this lesson, students should be able to:

  • Define “disposal” of a specified asset and identify disposal events under the CGT Act.
  • Explain CGT on asset sales: how to determine the selling price (receipt vs. accrual) and relevant statutory rules.
  • Describe how exchanges (swaps) of assets trigger CGT and how to value them (fair market value basis).
  • Understand donation or gratuitous disposal rules and available exemptions (e.g. spouse transfers, principal residence).
  • List statutory “deemed disposal” events (death, expropriation, redemption, executory sale, relinquishment of rights) with citations.
  • Explain rules for transfers in restructurings or liquidations (rollover reliefs, anti-avoidance).
  • Determine the timing of a disposal (when CGT accrues) including special cases (instalment sales, suspensive conditions).
  • Apply the Capital Gains Tax Act (cap. 23:01) provisions to practical scenarios, perform CGT computations, and identify compliance steps (withholding, clearance).

1. Meaning of “Disposal”

The CGT Act does not define “disposal” in one place, but s. 8 treats various transfers as disposals. In general, disposing of a “specified asset” (land, buildings, or any marketable security) includes selling it or otherwise parting with it. Section 8(2) explicitly deems certain transfers to be “sales” at market value. For example, donations or gratuitous transfers and other non-sale alienations are deemed sales at fair market price. Transfers of rights (e.g. rights under a deed of sale or subdivision schemes) likewise trigger deemed disposals. Notably, transfers between spouses are specially addressed (s. 16) and may elect to defer or exempt CGT.

Key Statutes: No one-line definition, but see CGT Act s. 8(2)(b)-(h) (deemed sales). ZIMRA guidance also explains that disposal includes sale, cession, donation, etc..

Example: In Sabeta v CG ZIMRA (HH79/2012), Sabeta bought land (a specified asset) and CGT was assessed on that disposal (sale). The court compelled ZIMRA to recognize the disposal and assess CGT.

2. Sale of Assets

A sale of a specified asset is the most common disposal. Section 8(1)(a) defines “gross capital amount” as “the total amount received by or accrued to a person… from the sale… of specified assets”. In practice, the selling price is the amount agreed and paid (or payable) by buyer. If paid in installments or on credit, CGT treatment depends on timing (see Section 7 below).

Under s. 6, CGT is charged on any capital gain arising on disposal of a specified asset. The gain is the selling price less acquisition cost and allowable deductions. Section 7 confirms that the tax is calculated using Finance Act rates. (For example, by law CGT has been 20% of gain (or 5% of selling price for pre-2009 assets).) The Act itself does not fix rates; those are in Finance Acts (e.g. Finance Act 2009 s.57, Finance Act 2023 amendments, etc.).

If a sale is in foreign currency (or price differs by exchange), s. 8(2)(a) says use the actual Zimbabwe-dollar amount received, with adjustments taken in the year of accrual.

Timing of disposal for sale. A sale is treated as occurring when ownership passes. For land, that is usually registration of transfer. Under s. 30A, transfer cannot be registered unless CGT is paid (see flowchart below). In instalment sales (credit sales) or suspensive conditions, special rules apply (§18-19, see below).

Citing Example: In Old Mutual Zimbabwe Ltd v CG ZIMRA (2016), the court held proceeds from an employee share trust sale (marketable securities) were subject to CGT【13search0†L1-L2】. This illustrates a disposal by sale triggering CGT on the gains.

3. Exchange (Swap) of Assets

An exchange of a specified asset for another asset counts as a disposal of each asset. The CGT Act has no special section, but by s. 8(2)(b) any disposal otherwise than by sale is deemed a sale at fair market value. Thus, if A swaps land for shares with B, A has “sold” the land to B at the land’s market price, and B has “sold” the shares to A at their market value. Each party must compute CGT on its gain (price minus cost). The receiving asset’s cost to the new owner equals that deemed sale price.

There is no rollover relief for general swaps unless a special restructuring applies (see next section).

Example: A company swaps an unused factory (immovable) valued $300,000 for a block of unlisted shares of equal fair value. Both parties must treat it as a sale. If the factory cost was $200,000, the company has a $100,000 capital gain (taxed per Finance Act rate). The shareholder’s basis in the shares is $300,000.

Statutes: Deemed sale rule – CGT Act s. 8(2)(b). (ZIMRA guidance lists “exchange” under deemed disposals.)

4. Donation or Gratuitous Disposal

Donations or gifts of specified assets are disposals at market value. By s. 8(2)(b), any disposal not by sale (including donation) is “deemed to be a sale” at fair market price. Thus a person who gives away land or shares must still reckon CGT as if they sold it for FMV. (The recipient takes the asset at that FMV cost for their future CGT purposes.)

Exemptions: Some gratuitous transfers are exempt. Transfers between spouses are covered by s. 16: spouses may elect to defer gain (treat sale price as just equal to the giver’s allowable costs). For example, Husband transfers his house to Wife; they can choose no CGT now (gain is deferred). Also, a former residence to an ex-spouse on divorce decree can use s. 16(2)(b) relief. Principal private residences have special rollover relief (s. 21).

Statutes: Deemed sale on donation – s. 8(2)(b). Spouse transfers – s. 16 (exempt by election). ZIMRA notes spouses and reconstruction transfers are not taxable.

Example: A father donates a parcel of farmland (market value $50,000; cost $10,000) to his son. Father realizes a $40,000 capital gain (taxable). The son’s acquisition cost is $50,000 for future CGT. If the father had instead sold for $1, no matter – CGT is on $50,000 as “market price” by s. 8(2)(b).

5. Deemed Disposals (Special Events)

Besides actual transfers, the CGT Act explicitly lists events that trigger a disposal at specific values. Key deemed events include:

  • Death of the owner: Not directly in s. 8 but by analogy, disposal on death is treated as if the asset were sold at FMV on the date of death (with exceptions under estate administration). Section 9 of the CGT Act states that when assets pass on death, s. 10 of the Income Tax Act applies mutatis (so beneficiaries step into transferor’s base cost). (In practice, CGT on death is deferred: no CGT is collected on death; the deceased’s estate or heir only pays CGT on subsequent sale.)
  • Expropriation: If a specified asset is compulsorily acquired, it is “deemed to have been sold for an amount equal to compensation”.
  • Court sale: When a court sells an asset in execution, the sale amount is the price for CGT purposes.
  • Maturity/Redemption: On maturity of bonds, endowment policies, etc., deemed sold at redemption value.
  • Transfer of rights: (i) Deed of sale rights: If someone assigns his rights under a sale agreement, it’s treated as sale at the amount received. (ii) Development rights: Transfers of rights in undeveloped stands (even if not deed-registered) are deemed sales. (iii) Condominium interest: Relinquishing a share in a multi-unit property is treated as sale for the price received.
  • Sale of business assets: On cessation or liquidation, business property dispositions follow general rules; if a company transfers business property to itself (s. 17), or between same-control companies (s. 15), special rollover provisions apply (see next).

ZIMRA also summarizes deemed sales as including donation, expropriation, execution, maturity, and assignment.

Example: A mining title (specified asset) is expropriated for $500,000. The owner is deemed to have sold it for $500,000 and would pay CGT on gain ($500,000 minus cost).

6. Transfers in Liquidation and Restructuring

The CGT Act contains special rules for corporate reorganizations and transfers under common control:

  • Same-control transfers (s. 15): Transfers of specified assets between companies under common control (same majority shareholder) can be made on a no-gain/no-loss basis by election. Both parties elect that the selling price equals the transferor’s allowable cost (deferred gain). If later sold to outsiders, normal CGT applies as if first company still owned it.
  • Individual to controlled company (s. 17): Similar rollover for an individual transferring trade-used property to a company he controls. Elect to use cost instead of market price.
  • Group reorganizations: Not explicitly in CGT Act, but ZIMRA guidance and practice allow rollovers for approved schemes of reconstruction/merger. (An example is the Finance Act exemption for tax-neutral corporate mergers.)
  • Liquidations: The Act has no explicit CGT rollover on winding up. Ordinarily, when a company sells assets to liquidate, CGT applies on gains. Shareholders receiving assets in specie are treated as if they acquired them at market value (their cost for CGT on later sale). (If a company is liquidated in an approved scheme under tax laws, it may qualify for relief under Income Tax Act s.36(4) and corresponding CGT provisions.)

Statutes: s. 15 (same-control companies), s. 17 (individual to company), s. 22 (substitution of business property) for trade property rollover. Finance and Companies Acts may add exceptions (unspecified).

Example: LtdCo transfers a machine (used in its business) to a sister company (both owned by the same family). They can elect under s. 15 that no CGT is computed (transfer at cost). If later SisterCo sells the machine to a third party, CGT is calculated as if LtdCo had kept it (s.15 proviso).

7. Timing of Disposal

CGT is due when the disposal “accrues” to the taxpayer. In sales, this is generally when the asset is sold (or when ownership passes). Key timing rules:

  • Accrual vs Receipt: The Act uses the “received or accrued” concept. If sale price is to be paid later or in installments, the whole price is deemed accrued at sale if ownership has passed.
  • Instalment/Credit sales (s.18-19): If a sale contract passes ownership but payment is in instalments, the entire price is deemed accrued on contract date. The Commissioner allows an “instalment allowance” for unpaid portions. Similarly, sales under suspensive condition (ownership passes only after full payment) are treated as accrued on agreement date. If contracts are cancelled, adjustments are made.
  • Shares and securities: Disposal date is typically when shares transfer (registration). Part IIIA requires a withholding and clearance at transfer.
  • Suspensive conditions: See s. 18 above.
  • Death: No immediate CGT, but for tracing base costs see s. 9 (incorporating Taxes Act s.10).
  • Other assets: Rights under a contract are deemed sold when rights transfer (s.8(2)(f) above).

Statutes: s. 8(1) (defines “received or accrued”), s. 18 (suspensive sales), s. 19 (credit sales). See also Income Tax Act s. 10 (deemed accruals, by analogy).

Case Law Highlights

  1. Sabeta v CG ZIMRA (HH-79-12) – Sale of immovable property: Court held CGT is payable on the sale of Stand 965 Mabelreign and ordered ZIMRA to assess and accept CGT. (Demonstrates that disposal of land triggers tax.)
  2. Sheriff for Zimbabwe v Humbe & Anor (HH-378-20) – Execution sale of property: The court enforced that no transfer could be registered unless CGT was paid. It underscores s. 30A: CGT must be paid (or withheld) before registration.
  3. Old Mutual Zimbabwe Ltd v CG ZIMRA (2016, HH-143-16) – Sale of shares via employee trust: Court confirmed proceeds of shares sold to satisfy PAYE from an employee housing fund scheme were subject to CGT【13search0†L1-L2】. (Illustrates CGT on marketable securities.)
  4. Sommer Ranching (Pvt) Ltd v Commissioner of Taxes (1999 SC 65) – Although not fully reported online, is cited for CGT clearance: fair market value must be taken (no tax avoidance by understating price) (Cf. Act note references Sommer Ranching on market value).

(If case texts were unavailable, mark as unspecified. The summaries above are brief; full case links are provided where available.)

Worked Examples

(a) Sale of Immovable Property (with withholding and clearance): X sells a house for US$200,000. The conveyancer (depositary) must withhold CGT at 15% of price (as per Finance Act/SI) i.e. US$30,000. Upon withholding, the vendor can apply for a CGT clearance certificate; once issued, transfer is registered under s. 30A. Suppose X’s cost basis was US$150,000. Capital gain = $50,000. If the Finance Act rate is 20% of gain, tax due = $10,000. The $30,000 withheld is an advance; after filing a return, X applies withheld tax ($30k) against $10k owed, and gets a $20k refund or credit.

Steps: 1. Withholding: Conveyancer calculates 15% of $200k = $30k, remits to ZIMRA.
2. Clearance: ZIMRA issues CGT clearance certificate (required by s. 30A).
3. CGT Return: X prepares CGT return: selling price $200k, acquisition cost $150k, capital gain $50k. CGT at 20% of gain = $10k.
4. Payment/Credit: ZIMRA applies the $30k withheld against $10k. X receives credit of $20k (either refunded or applied to other taxes).

(b) Exchange of Land for Shares: A and B swap assets. A gives land to B (FMV $100k); B gives A shares in PvtCo (FMV $100k). A’s cost in land was $60k; B’s cost in shares was $80k. Each party treats the exchange as a sale at $100k.

  • A’s CGT: Sold land for $100k (market value by s.8(2)(b)), cost $60k. Gain = $40k. CGT on $40k per rate (say 20%) = $8k.
  • B’s CGT: Sold shares for $100k, cost $80k. Gain = $20k. CGT = $4k.
  • New Bases: A’s acquisition cost in shares = $100k; B’s cost in land = $100k.

No withholding agent here (private swap), so each reports and pays in their tax return.

(c) Liquidation – Assets to Shareholders: Company C liquidates. It has a building (cost $50k) now valued $200k. The liquidator distributes it to shareholder S as part of winding up.

  • For the company: It is deemed to have “sold” the building for its market value. Company’s gain = $150k. CGT due at corporate rate (assuming 20% of gain) = $30k. Company must declare this in its CGT return (the transfer is executed via liquidator, but s.8 applies as sale).
  • For shareholder S: S receives building at FMV $200k (his acquisition cost). If S later sells, his gain/loss is relative to $200k cost. (The act doesn’t treat this distribution as a taxable disposal by S at this time.)

No withholding applies here (liquidator is not a “depositary” under Part IIIA for land). However, CGT on company’s gain must be paid before transfer documents are registered. S’s share disposal: if S received shares in lieu of money, selling his shares would be a separate disposal event.

Flowchart: Disposal to Compliance Steps

flowchart LR
  A[Specified Asset Disposal Occurs] --> B{Type of Asset}
  B -->|Immovable property| C[Conveyancer holds proceeds (depositary)]
  B -->|Marketable Security (Shares)| D[Transfer via Companies Registrar]
  B -->|Other specified assets (patents, mining rights)| E[Relevant Registrar holds proceeds]
  C --> F[Withhold CGT (15% of price)]
  D --> G[Company Secretary/Depositary withholds CGT (5–10%)]
  E --> H[Custom agent withholds if any, else payer pays tax]
  F --> I[Submit CGT Clearance Certificate]
  G --> I
  H --> I
  I --> J[Pay CGT liability (after assessment)]
  J --> K[Register Transfer (Deeds/Company, etc.)]
  K --> L[File CGT Return; pay any shortfall or claim refund]
  style I fill:#f9f,stroke:#333,stroke-width:2px

Note: The above simplifies the steps. Section 22C–22E and 30A of the CGT Act govern withholding, depositaries, and the clearance certificate requirement.

Checklist: Identifying the Taxable Event and Actions

Disposal Type CGT Trigger Immediate Actions
Sale of land/building Disposal on sale; capital gain = sale price – cost Conveyancer withholds tax (15%); obtain CGT clearance; register transfer; file CGT return.
Sale of listed shares Disposal on sale; taxed at 1% withholding (post-2009) Transfer via stock exchange (CDC); CDC withholds 1%; issue clearance; file return.
Sale of unlisted shares/pvt comp. Disposal on sale; CGT = 20% of gain (10% withholding on price) Company secretary or broker (as depositary) withholds 10%; clearance; transfer shares with CR14; file return.
Exchange (swap) of assets Two disposals (each at FMV) Both parties calculate gains; file returns individually (no depositary unless securitized).
Donation/gift (non-spouse) Deemed sale at FMV Compute gain on FMV; no withholding; file return (CGT due).
Transfer to spouse (within marriage) Can elect no CGT (selling price = seller’s cost) File election in CGT return; transfer. Spouse gets same base cost.
Cession of development rights Deemed sale at amount received Compute gain on amount paid; file return.
Death of owner CGT deferred until sale by estate/beneficiary Estate/beneficiary inherits base cost; no immediate CGT (internal rule under s.9).
Expropriation of asset Deemed sale at compensation Capital gain = comp – cost; CGT payable by owner; file return.
Transfer under restructuring/scheme May elect rollover (no immediate CGT) if pre-approved Ensure Commission’s approval; make election in return; maintain records.
Liquidation distribution Company deemed sale at FMV; shareholder receives at FMV cost Company pays CGT on asset gains before distribution; shareholder’s cost = FMV.

(See flowchart above and ZIMRA guidance for merger/restructure exemptions.)

Classroom Activities and Questions

  • Short Answer: Explain how the CGT Act treats a gift of a specified asset. (Expected: It’s “deemed a sale” at fair market value, per s. 8(2)(b).)
  • Statutory Interpretation: Read CGT Act s. 8(2)(f)-(h). In your own words, what disposals are covered here? (Discuss assignments of sale agreements, land rights, condominium shares.)
  • Problem-Solving: Company A, controlled by Person X, transfers a warehouse (cost $80k, FMV $120k) to Company B (same ownership). If no election is made, what are the tax implications for A? For B? (A would realize a $40k gain on presumed sale to B; if election under s. 15 is made, A’s disposal price is deemed $80k (no gain). B’s base cost is $80k.)
  • Worked Example Exercise: Compute CGT for: (a) Sale of land for $500k (cost $300k) with 10% improvements, tax rate 20%. (b) Exchange: X trades land (cost $100k, FMV $180k) for shares (cost $0, FMV $180k). Show each party’s gain.
  • Discussion Prompt: Should transfers between spouses always be exempt from CGT? Why did the law allow an election instead of an outright exemption? (Consider economic effects and equity.)
  • Case Brief: Read Sheriff v Humbe (HH378-20). Identify how s. 30A was applied and why registration was blocked. What does this tell you about the importance of paying CGT at disposal time?

These activities reinforce identifying disposal types, applying statutory rules, and calculating tax.

Current Date: 2026-03-11.

Chapter 23:01

https://www.zimra.co.zw/downloads/category/17-acts?download=165:capital-gains-tax-act&start=20

Zimbabwe Revenue Authority

https://www.zimra.co.zw/14-tax/other-taxes/1729-withholding-tax

https://lawportalzim.co.zw/cases/civil/168/mariane-sabeta/commissioner-general-zimbabwe-revenue-authority

https://lawportalzim.co.zw/cases/civil/3495/the-sheriff-for-zimbabwe/frank-humbe-and-desmond-muchina

Explore More CGT Modules

Specified Assets
What assets are within the CGT charge.
Determining Capital Gains
How the capital gain is measured from the disposal proceeds.
CGT Exemptions
Disposals that are exempt from CGT.
Payment & Clearance
CGT payment obligations following a disposal.
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 1
Introduction to CGT
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 2
Legal Framework
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 3
Specified Assets
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 4
Disposal of Assets
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 5
Determining Capital Gains
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 6
Allowable Deductions
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 7
CGT Rates & Calculation
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 8
CGT Exemptions
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 9
Special CGT Rules
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 10
Withholding Tax
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 11
Role of Intermediaries
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 12
Returns & Assessments
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 13
Payment & Clearance
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 14
Objections & Appeals
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 15
CGT Enforcement
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 16
Corporate Restructuring
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 17
CGT on Property Sales
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 18
Shares & Securities
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 19
Cross-Border Transfers
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 20
Compliance & Planning
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 21
CGT Case Law
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 22
CGT Administration
Capital Gains Tax Lesson 23
Practical Applications
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