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UK Contracting Notice Period Legalities

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    UK Contracting Notice Period Legalities

    I am a UK contractor with a registered limited company.

    My contract stipulates that my agency can terminate the contract within 7 days notice, where as the I cannot give notice, and can only leave at the end of the assignment or extension offer.

    Is this legal, and If I were to leave would they have the right to sue me for damages incurred by my absence for the remainder of the agreed contract period?

    #2
    Originally posted by sabobin View Post
    If I were to leave would they have the right to sue me for damages incurred by my absence for the remainder of the agreed contract period?
    Potentially yes.
    'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

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      #3
      And check this thread out.... very useful...

      http://forums.contractoruk.com/welco...uk-forums.html
      'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by sabobin View Post
        Is this legal, and If I were to leave would they have the right to sue me for damages incurred by my absence for the remainder of the agreed contract period?
        a) Yes. That clause is certainly legal. Whether it would be upheld in a contractual dispute is different. I'd want long odds against it though.

        b) Yes. Anybody has the right you describe. Success of defending it? If you just left slim. If there were other factors related to that contract, less clear.

        c) Not asked. What would those damages be? Strictly limited to the financial loss. However this could be potentially limited by the agency regs. It could also be more than the "lost commission". Very much more.

        d) VERY IMPORTANT. It takes the other side to bring action to get any judgement unless you decide to capitulate should this happen. Who has the bigger balls?

        e) Can you work out where their value judgement might be? Will they bring action - doubtful under the terms most people work under. Simple thing. If you ask a question "is this term legal" you never understood the downside of what you are agreeing to. Never sign a contract you don't understand. You didn't. (sorry harsh).

        [/NLUK off]

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
          Potentially yes.
          There is one word too many in there. The only thing that is potential is whether they would succeed. The right is there.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by ASB View Post
            There is one word too many in there. The only thing that is potential is whether they would succeed. The right is there.
            Ah, indeed so but the full term I would have used used would have been Potentially yes but realistically no.

            What is potential is if they would take it further, which never happens hence the play on words.
            'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by sabobin View Post
              I am a UK contractor with a registered limited company.

              My contract stipulates that my agency can terminate the contract within 7 days notice, where as the I cannot give notice, and can only leave at the end of the assignment or extension offer.

              Is this legal, and If I were to leave would they have the right to sue me for damages incurred by my absence for the remainder of the agreed contract period?
              Get this straight, it's not your contract, it's your company's contract. You won't get sued, your company will get sued. Except that they won't sue because you could just close the company down and they would probably get nothing except a big legal bill....

              Your company has entered into a business to business deal with another company. If your company doesn't perform it's obligations under the contract then the other company may sue your company. Most often, a client or agency would use the breach of contract as an excuse to withhold payment from your company with the amount of "damages" being co-incidentally equal to the amount of money owed to you when you try to terminate the contract.

              My feeling is that agencies are using these one side termination clauses to bully contractors. If you are in this situation and you want to leave then you should take legal advice or you will probably find yourself shafted by the agency/client and out of pocket.

              If your company is considering signing a contract with a one sided notice period then you should negotiate with the agency/client to have it removed if you are not comfortable with working that way.

              Legal advice and a contract review might be a good move. Good luck!
              Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by sabobin View Post

                Is this legal, and If I were to leave would they have the right to sue me for damages incurred by my absence for the remainder of the agreed contract period?
                Yes they can sue you.

                However depending on how much they have lost and the reason for the staff of your company leaving they may not be decide to.

                I mean if you didn't turn up for 5 days because you were critically ill in hospital and whoever else is an officer in your company terminates the contract, then they won't sue unless they are stupid and want bad publicity.

                The best way to end a contract where there is no notice on your side is to get the client to end the contract. The agency may then threaten not to pay you but all you need to do is turn around and threaten to take them to court.
                "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
                  Ah, indeed so but the full term I would have used used would have been Potentially yes but realistically no.

                  What is potential is if they would take it further, which never happens hence the play on words.


                  Comes down to the definition of "illegal" or "unlawful". Consider:-

                  a) Contrary to law. Particularly "criminal law" 12 men good and true.

                  b) Oh well, different view. Under civil tort.

                  A differentiator is sanction. Consider a divorce. If you can sort out financial settlement yourselves good. For lots of reasons. If you can't then the MCA determines how a judge will pronounce. Have you done anything illegal or unlawful simply by not being able to agree? No.

                  If you have a contract dispute then has the loser done something unlawful? Doubtful

                  Is there legal sanction? Yes. The judge makes the decision.

                  But, illegal is a strong (though often fair) use of words.

                  Ultimately, you win something in court does not suggest the away team did anything illegal.

                  Perhaps that second bottle should not have been opened.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by ASB View Post
                    <too much serious stuff>
                    I am well aware of this but you are reading far too much in to my post. It has the potential to go to court and all that stuff you said... but very rarely to almost never does for contractors.

                    Should the OP worry unduly about it.. no.. Thats all I was saying tongue in cheek. You did spot my post before it?
                    'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

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