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Car vandalised whilst at ClientCo - Repairs reimbursable?

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    #51
    Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View Post
    If you're an employee then despite being taxed you'd probably be pretty happy if your employee covered your loss as you're only losing out a little bit (you just pay the tax, the repair bill is covered).
    Any employer stupidhappy to stump up the excess on a personal insurance claim (for what is criminal damage that didn't even happen on their premises!) is probably going to be minded to suffer the tax on it as well.

    pa, you can do this too, btw. If it makes you feel better.

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      #52
      I'll just go back to what actually happened to me as opposed to all this theorising.

      I was an employee on a business trip to a competitor's site. I used my own car. I claimed mileage for the trip. While my car was parked at the site (on a public street) it was vandalised. My employer (a large multi-national that employed hundreds if not thousand of lawyers and accountants) said this fell within their duty of care*, paid for the cost of all the repairs and the use of a hire car while my car was in the garage. There was no discussion of excesses or my insurance at all, my insurer never even heard about it. The not insignificant cost did not appear on my P11D, nor was my tax code adjusted to compensate for it. There was no fault accruing to me, and the only reason it happened was because of the business trip (I did not use my car to commute to my regular office).


      * Like they said at the time, if they just told people to whom this sort of thing happened "tough t1tty", then no one would ever use their own cars for business travel and they would have to pay out much more in maintaining a fleet, hiring cars, paying for business class travel, etc.
      I'm Spartacus.

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        #53
        Thinking about it, this has actually happened to me twice (I've been in the game a long time, some mornings I can't remember my own name).

        The other occasion, with a different employer, was very similar but I was visiting one of their own sites. Car was vandalised and the result was the same - the employer paid for it all including the cost of recovery (the car was totally trashed and undriveable), and there was no tax implication for me. They were an insurer as it happens (although not a motor insurer).
        I'm Spartacus.

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          #54
          Originally posted by pacontracting View Post
          I guess the point was - that if you were driving for business purposes (excepting commuting as you are claiming business mileage so not commuting) - are you actually insured for driving for business to a client. I think only Direct Line covers this.
          I've always added it to my policy, and have never used Direct Line.

          My current policy with Aviva says
          Description of use
          Use for social, domestic and pleasure purposes.
          Use for travel to or from a place of paid employment.
          Use for <TF> business or their spouse/domestic/civil partner in connection with their business
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          Work in the public sector? You can read my FAQ here
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            #55
            Originally posted by pacontracting View Post
            i wouldn't consider it relief. If the OP were to sue his employer (himself) because he suffered a loss while on company business - he would claim damages to being him back to the state he were in before he suffered that loss. That would be the cost of the repairs.
            If you don't consider the repayment of the expense to the employee as relief, then you agree that if the company makes an additional payment outside the scope of the tax-free amount, then no tax relief should be applied and the employee would be taxed on it.

            Which is pretty much what everyone apart from Spartacus has said throughout the course of this thread.
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              #56
              Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
              Which is pretty much what everyone apart from Spartacus has said throughout the course of this thread.
              I'm just relating what actually happened (twice). Everyone else is theorising.

              The OP must make their own mind up of course, or >gasp< seek professional advice from their accountant.
              I'm Spartacus.

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