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How to fall outside IR35

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    #31
    Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View Post
    Sorry, not sure I made the point clear AnthonyQuinn - a firm of builders would know of someone to finish your renovation because they have a number of employees who are all equally as qualified as the original builder. They would not necessarily know the name of the individual who would finish the job at its commencement but they could name a number of individuals who would be capable of finishing the job should it become necessary.
    But imagine a builder who worked on his own and was not part of a "firm of builders". He might equally find himself unable to finish your extension in time for circumstances he found it hard to control. That doesn't make him your employee does it? Just because he hasn't got anyone lined up to substitute for him should he need a substitute does not make him an employee. And I can't see how anyone thinking logically could propose this.

    A friend of mine recently hired an electrician to rewire his house. The electrician did one day's work and then broker his foot playing football. He couldn't return for two weeks. He did not send a substitute. He didn't suggest sending one. He suggested my friend wait for two weeks until he could hobble around better. My friend eventually hired a different electrician to complete the job. The first electrician didn't exercise his right to substitute, but that doesn't mean he didn't have one. He patently didn't have someone lined up to substitute for him. I still believe he was self employed - don't you?

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      #32
      Originally posted by Hex View Post
      But imagine a builder who worked on his own and was not part of a "firm of builders". He might equally find himself unable to finish your extension in time for circumstances he found it hard to control. That doesn't make him your employee does it? Just because he hasn't got anyone lined up to substitute for him should he need a substitute does not make him an employee. And I can't see how anyone thinking logically could propose this.

      A friend of mine recently hired an electrician to rewire his house. The electrician did one day's work and then broker his foot playing football. He couldn't return for two weeks. He did not send a substitute. He didn't suggest sending one. He suggested my friend wait for two weeks until he could hobble around better. My friend eventually hired a different electrician to complete the job. The first electrician didn't exercise his right to substitute, but that doesn't mean he didn't have one. He patently didn't have someone lined up to substitute for him. I still believe he was self employed - don't you?
      Agree with you Hex but with IR35 you can't just take the substitution clause in isolation. To carry on with the builder analogy - if you had a contract with the builder which guaranteed he would be on site at 9am, left at 5pm and had lunch between 12 & 1 and you left him detailed instructions of the work you wanted carried out that day it would be a different situation. With regards to IR35, the lack of a substitute, if he was a one man band, would become more relevent.
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        #33
        Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View Post
        Agree with you Hex but with IR35 you can't just take the substitution clause in isolation. To carry on with the builder analogy - if you had a contract with the builder which guaranteed he would be on site at 9am, left at 5pm and had lunch between 12 & 1 and you left him detailed instructions of the work you wanted carried out that day it would be a different situation. With regards to IR35, the lack of a substitute, if he was a one man band, would become more relevent.
        Being pedantic - you probably can take the substition clause in isolation. If you have any one of The right to substitute, Lack of Mutuality of Obligation or Lack of Direction and Control then that would mean you're not an employee. Of course, the more pointers away from employment you have the better.

        I know a lot of builders who work the same hours every day. Turn up between 7 and 8, leave between 3 and 4. They're not contracted to these hours, but these are the hours they're used to and that's typically what they work. I know a lot of IT Contractors who typically work 9 to 5. They're not contracted to these hours, but these are they hours they're used to and that's typically what they work. I don't see the difference between the two. I don't know how many IT Contractor's contracts specify actual working hours but none of mine ever have.

        I've taken on builders and plumbers and given them quite a lot of direction as to what I want doing. I won't actually tell them what tools to use, but I'll tell them where I want the pipes run or where I want the wall built and what bricks to use. In the same way, some IT Contractors will be given a list of requirements - things that need to be built in a specified way. How those things are built (i.e. the tools that are used) is up to the Contractor, the end result of what is built is specified by the client. This seems to me to be similar to the client relationship a builder or plumber has.

        I understand that not all IT Contractors work in this way, but a great many do.

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          #34
          You're right Hex and it's one of the gigantic holes in IR35 that makes the whole thing rediculous.

          I had my roof replaced last summer and I specified what I wanted, where I wanted it, the hours that they should be on site (very unwell neighbour one side, young children the other and opposite a Junior school) and who would be doing the work so no RoS. I even supplied many of the materials myself as they were great builders, but lousy supplier and project managers and it's what I do professionally so I got stuff much cheaper than they could. I even had some MOO at least implied as I negotiated a price based on further work to the attics.
          By the typically accepted IR35 "guidelines" they failed IR35 on all 3 critical factors, yet they are clearly a seperate business from mine.

          IR35 is a complete farce as it's so riddled with grey areas that it's all but impossible to manage with reasonable certainty and (as far as I'm aware, I could be way off beam here) is almost exclusively applied to the IT contracting sector ignoring many other comparable professions.

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            #35
            Originally posted by TykeMerc View Post
            You're right Hex and it's one of the gigantic holes in IR35 that makes the whole thing rediculous[sic].


            IR35 is a complete farce as it's so riddled with grey areas that it's all but impossible to manage with reasonable certainty and (as far as I'm aware, I could be way off beam here) is almost exclusively applied to the IT contracting sector ignoring many other comparable professions.
            All true, but sadly no-one (from Joe Public) likes us so Hector can get away with being a total and utter git.

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              #36
              Originally posted by TykeMerc View Post
              You're right Hex and it's one of the gigantic holes in IR35 that makes the whole thing rediculous.

              I had my roof replaced last summer and I specified what I wanted, where I wanted it, the hours that they should be on site (very unwell neighbour one side, young children the other and opposite a Junior school) and who would be doing the work so no RoS. I even supplied many of the materials myself as they were great builders, but lousy supplier and project managers and it's what I do professionally so I got stuff much cheaper than they could. I even had some MOO at least implied as I negotiated a price based on further work to the attics.
              By the typically accepted IR35 "guidelines" they failed IR35 on all 3 critical factors, yet they are clearly a seperate business from mine.

              IR35 is a complete farce as it's so riddled with grey areas that it's all but impossible to manage with reasonable certainty and (as far as I'm aware, I could be way off beam here) is almost exclusively applied to the IT contracting sector ignoring many other comparable professions.
              The thing that makes the difference with IR35 though is that 'they were great builders' - had it been a one man band he would have fallen inside IR35 for all the reasons that you have given.
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                #37
                Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View Post
                had it been a one man band he would have fallen inside IR35 for all the reasons that you have given.
                Ah, but there is no way HMRC are going to start chasing all one-man band builders, plumbers, electricians who fall inside IR35 (and I'm sure there are a lot). Has there ever been an instance of this?

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                  #38
                  Originally posted by Belle View Post
                  Ah, but there is no way HMRC are going to start chasing all one-man band builders, plumbers, electricians who fall inside IR35 (and I'm sure there are a lot). Has there ever been an instance of this?
                  Most of these jobs last less than one month.
                  If your IT contracts were mostly less than one month, HMRC wouldnt bother with you either.

                  The other point is that when you take on a one man ltd plumber at home he isnt working along side other plumbers that you happen to be employing under paying PAYE.

                  A one man Ltd plumber contracting for a large plumbing firm for several years alongside PAYE plumbers would be a better comparison.

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