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Contract indemnifies agency (at my expense) against HMRC enquiries

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    Contract indemnifies agency (at my expense) against HMRC enquiries

    Previous contracts have stipulated that the supplier is responsible for any PAYE and NICs that arise for supplier staff. Fine.

    New contract has no less than eight paragraphs about this issue.

    Supplier is responsible.

    Supplier indemnifies agency against any future claims from HMRC (because the supplier mis-paid).

    Supplier agrees to provide assistance/paperwork to agency to help with any HMRC enquiries.

    Supplier agrees to indemnify agency against any costs relating to dealing with HMRC enquiries (!)

    Because of time pressures (contract sent late on Friday which I scanned, on-site meeting expected first thing next week) I suggested reducing the notice period so that the contract could be replaced if necessary, although I haven't signed yet. But now that I'm reading it through, this clause seems to me unacceptable. Even the briefest engagement could render me liable for indemnifying them for HMRC enquiries.

    I have TLC35, does anyone know if this would cover enquiries against other parties?

    #2
    Run away very quickly?

    In seriousness I while I'm happy to be responsible for PAYE/NICs of my own company per the majority of existing contracts, there is no way in hell I'm going to indemnify the agency on behalf of my company against any future investigations by HMRC. For me that kind of clause would be a deal breaker.

    From memory and also scan reading my TLC35 policy documents, I don't believe it covers enquiries such as you are asking about.
    Last edited by ShandyDrinker; 3 November 2018, 12:44.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by ShandyDrinker View Post
      Run away very quickly?

      In seriousness I while I'm happy to be responsible for PAYE/NICs of my own company per the majority of existing contracts, there is no way in hell I'm going to indemnify the agency on behalf of my company against any future investigations by HMRC. For me that kind of clause would be a deal breaker.

      From memory and also scan reading my TLC35 policy documents, I don't believe it covers enquiries such as you are asking about.
      Indeed. Called QDOS this morning and confirmed.

      This is doubly not my responsibility as the likelihood of the agency being investigated is a function of the success of the agency. As such, they should make a decision about what kind of insurance they need to get.

      Also, they wanted to be able to recoup any expenses involved in answering HMRC queries, and for me to be on hand to provide documentation. Also not covered by TLC35 or accountant.

      Comment


        #4
        So it turns out that it's really to cover the scenario where I close my company and HMRC then go after the agency for debt collection because they determine that actually, a contract was inside IR35 (although the clause also covers them for more than this).

        I see the point -- but still find it unacceptable.

        Agency suggested I sign the contract (as it will take a couple of days for legal review and revision, which would overrun the start date) and send an email with a read receipt stating explicitly which parts of the relevant clause I reject. Seem reasonable?
        Last edited by zerosum; 3 November 2018, 14:44.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by zerosum View Post
          So it turns out that it's really to cover the scenario where I close my company and HMRC then go after the agency for debt collection because they determine that actually, a contract was inside IR35 (although the clause also covers them for more than this).

          I see the point -- but still find it unacceptable.

          Agency suggested I sign the contract (as it will take a couple of days for legal review and revision, which would overrun the start date) and send an email with a read receipt stating explicitly which parts of the relevant clause I reject. Seem reasonable?
          No it isn’t reasonable. You can bet your sweet patootie that email will mysteriously ‘disappear’ as soon as you send it.

          The contract is what counts, not any useless email.
          "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
          - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

          Comment


            #6
            To reiterate. Do not trust the agency. Their priority is just to get you on site and working, they do not have your best interests in mind.

            They should be able to amend the contract and get it signed quickly enough to not delay your start date too much.

            Comment


              #7
              Agency showing why we think they're such slimy shysters.

              Do not sign a contract until you are happy with the terms you are signing.

              Also do not start a contract unsigned as that infers you accept the terms and the agency no longer requires a signature, though not sure if that would stand up in court.
              Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by zerosum View Post
                So it turns out that it's really to cover the scenario where I close my company and HMRC then go after the agency for debt collection because they determine that actually, a contract was inside IR35
                Is this a plausible scenario?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by pauldee View Post
                  Is this a plausible scenario?
                  My reading of it is that we're likely to see more and more agencies now try this on with clauses in their contracts effectively trying to pass the buck for failure of IR35 status decisions being passed on to the contractor. I wouldn't be surprised if this becomes more commonplace in the run up to April 2020.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by ShandyDrinker View Post
                    My reading of it is that we're likely to see more and more agencies now try this on with clauses in their contracts effectively trying to pass the buck for failure of IR35 status decisions being passed on to the contractor. I wouldn't be surprised if this becomes more commonplace in the run up to April 2020.
                    Either that or they try shovelling everyone into inside IR35 contracts.
                    "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
                    - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

                    Comment

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