Originally posted by northernladuk
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Immutable contracts - Agencies that will not allow modifications
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Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied. -
Originally posted by TransitTrucker View PostAnyone got any "lateral" ideas around limiting liability or limiting what a suing party can reasonably hope to recover. This seems far more practical than getting into a "lawyerfest" over a dodgy contract and gives a certain amount of freedom to sign immutable contracts. Plus, of course, it is getting one over those dodgy agencies that are taking the Michael.
There are lots of sad stories out there from people who personally underwrote their business and lost everything. The proper, tried and tested way of doing business is with a Limited Liability Company (with appropriate insurance) to ring fence your personal assets and limit your liability if anything should go wrong.
If the agency won't budge then tell them you are going to decline the contract and explain to the client why you can't take it on. The client will understand that the agency are being unreasonable and will probably stop dealing with the agency too.
And ask the agency if the directors and shareholders will provide a reciprocal agreement to underwrite the line of credit your company is extending to them, so if the agency goes bust then the directors and shareholders will personally underwrite an unlimited liability for debts owed to your company? Your request will be met with hysterical laughter - of course they won't and that's why you shouldn't either.Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.Comment
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As I mentioned before by paying a solicitor and getting them to redraft clauses the agency normally bends over.
It also helps to inform the client what is happening especially if there are any particular clauses related to their work which you have clarify with them.
I would inform the client first then tell the agency."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostAs I mentioned before by paying a solicitor and getting them to redraft clauses the agency normally bends over.
It also helps to inform the client what is happening especially if there are any particular clauses related to their work which you have clarify with them.
I would inform the client first then tell the agency.Comment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostI've found actually using a real solicitor helps get agencies who write their own rubbish contracts change them.
If you ask them to change it yourself they come out with the "No one else asked for this change" bulltulip but when they realised they are actually dealing with a qualified and experienced solicitor they back track.
In most cases the agent will phone your solicitor to confirm you aren't taking the piss and actually using one.I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!Comment
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Originally posted by Wanderer View PostNO NO NO!!! DO NOT EVER agree to a personal guarantee in your contract. Not under any circumstances. It's simply not worth the risk and if you cave in then you make it worse for the rest of us who then have a harder job resisting these insidious practices.
There are lots of sad stories out there from people who personally underwrote their business and lost everything. The proper, tried and tested way of doing business is with a Limited Liability Company (with appropriate insurance) to ring fence your personal assets and limit your liability if anything should go wrong.
If the agency won't budge then tell them you are going to decline the contract and explain to the client why you can't take it on. The client will understand that the agency are being unreasonable and will probably stop dealing with the agency too.
And ask the agency if the directors and shareholders will provide a reciprocal agreement to underwrite the line of credit your company is extending to them, so if the agency goes bust then the directors and shareholders will personally underwrite an unlimited liability for debts owed to your company? Your request will be met with hysterical laughter - of course they won't and that's why you shouldn't either.
Back to the question: Faced with all agencies behaving like the Cray Twins what strategy can be used to minimise the effect e.g. removing all my assets from their reach when they evoke an unfair indemnity clause because some othet bu99er messed up.
Anyone?Comment
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Originally posted by TransitTrucker View PostSummarising the situation: The agency have a contradictory ambiguous contract. They won't change it. I am given a take it or leave it proposition. If I walk away I lose £30K of work. When all the agencies behave in this way I will be forcd to walk from all contracts.
Back to the question: Faced with all agencies behaving like the Cray Twins what strategy can be used to minimise the effect e.g. removing all my assets from their reach when they evoke an unfair indemnity clause because some othet bu99er messed up.
Anyone?
You can try and give assets away but the courts have cottoned on the fact people do this for example couples getting divorced.
The biggest risk is that the agency will find an excuse not to pay you by evoking one of the clauses in the contract, or claw money back using a clause rather than going through a court.
If they are clawing money back this is where the personal guarantee comes in as if your company hasn't got the money they will use the clauses to come after you rather than go through your PI insurance.
The first incident is more common than the second.
Personally I've never come across an agency who refuses to change a single clause when they know you are using an experienced solicitor but have come across those who absolutely refuse to negotiate with you until they know you are."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by TransitTrucker View PostSummarising the situation: The agency have a contradictory ambiguous contract. They won't change it. I am given a take it or leave it proposition. If I walk away I lose £30K of work.
Originally posted by TransitTrucker View PostWhen all the agencies behave in this way I will be forcd to walk from all contracts.
The important thing is to make sure the agency knows you are going to tell the client why you are refusing. Show the client your solicitor's opinion of how crap the contract is so they know the agency are a bunch of idiots and that they are being unreasonable. If you don't tell the client yourself then the agency will just lie to them.
Originally posted by TransitTrucker View PostBack to the question: Faced with all agencies behaving like the Cray Twins what strategy can be used to minimise the effect e.g. removing all my assets from their reach when they evoke an unfair indemnity clause because some othet bu99er messed up.
As for putting your assets beyond the legal jurisdiction of the English courts, good luck with that. As SueEllen says, this may be possible if you are a foreign national who is non domiciled in the UK with no assets here but other than that forget it. Lots of people have tried this (eg, in divorce cases) and failed - the courts deal with this all the time and they aren't stupid.
The way to ring fence your assets is using a LTD liability company.... Don't sign that liability away.Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.Comment
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Originally posted by TransitTrucker View PostSummarising the situation: The agency have a contradictory ambiguous contract. They won't change it. I am given a take it or leave it proposition. If I walk away I lose £30K of work. When all the agencies behave in this way I will be forcd to walk from all contracts.
Back to the question: Faced with all agencies behaving like the Cray Twins what strategy can be used to minimise the effect e.g. removing all my assets from their reach when they evoke an unfair indemnity clause because some othet bu99er messed up.
Anyone?
As for losing £30K of work, you must have the mindset that another contract will be just around the corner so you're not really losing out on £30K.
If you're not confident that you'll get another contract in the near future, then perhaps you need to look for a permie job (no disrespect intended!).
I recently turned down a contract because the client weren't willing to describe the work i'd be doing for them in the contract. It soundedlike they wanted a temporary employee to do whatever they wanted and as they saw fit, which was an IR35 risk (IMO). I managed to land another contract a few days later.
In your case (personal liabilities) I would turn the contract down. I'd be inclined to ask the agency why they won't accept a sole trader to do the workContracting: more of the money, less of the sh1tComment
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Current position:
The agency won't negotiate the contract. The agency and client's resourcing managers are as thick as thieves. The agency even has their personel permanently on site. Both think they can get rare skills off the street. This is probably why the project is 2 years late and slipping day to day.
The operational manager is fed up as he is losing a rare find (as he correctly sees it ) but the client's resourcing managers don't care a fig. Both operational and resourcing managers have been sent the email chain and a plethora of evidence to support the true history. This makes the agency lies rather obvious but this is having little effect e.g. there is an email saying the contract can be changed (which contradicts the agencies current stance).
The personal liability issue is the killer. It is time to walk away. The client's operational and resourcing managers have been informed that the agency are intransigent and are forcing an ambiguous and contradictory contract on the worker. They have a few days to make a change otherwise I'll simply walk away.
The real issue isn't this one contract. It the proliferation of the agencies strategy.Comment
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