it was my first contract - you live and you learn
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umbrella company altering contract to avoid notice payment
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It seems that it comes down to who is the employer and who is the employee in the relationship, and which of the following actually applies.
1) Consultant uses Brolly - The Brolly is only there for the purpose of processing payroll and getting cash from Client to Consultant.
2) Consultant uses Brolly - Consultant is actually an employee of Brolly.
Given what is known about Employment Status, I can't see how anyone can argue 2) above, and that in actual fact, the Brolly is a provider of a service to the consultant, and not the other way round. On this basis, how could the brolly pay the consultant money out of what has not been earnt. There may be a contract of employment, but the reality behind the paper is one of self-employment.Comment
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Originally posted by Integrity View PostIt seems that it comes down to who is the employer and who is the employee in the relationship, and which of the following actually applies.
1) Consultant uses Brolly - The Brolly is only there for the purpose of processing payroll and getting cash from Client to Consultant.
2) Consultant uses Brolly - Consultant is actually an employee of Brolly.
Given what is known about Employment Status, I can't see how anyone can argue 2) above, and that in actual fact, the Brolly is a provider of a service to the consultant, and not the other way round. On this basis, how could the brolly pay the consultant money out of what has not been earnt. There may be a contract of employment, but the reality behind the paper is one of self-employment.Comment
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Originally posted by ASB View PostIt's quite simple. 2 applies. What one might think the relationship is and what the law says it is are different things. If somebody is on your payroll then they are your actual employee. It really is that simple.Cooking doesn't get tougher than this.Comment
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Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View PostExcept when your brolly goes bust,as mine did in the 90s. Then the Govt deem that you were not an employee under the regulations and are not entitled to any money.Comment
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Originally posted by ASB View PostIt's quite simple. 2 applies. What one might think the relationship is and what the law says it is are different things. If somebody is on your payroll then they are your actual employee. It really is that simple.
Well, I've had several calls from brollies over the past few years. They called to offer me a service. The service they offered was to have them in the middle processing invoices and paying me money. Not one of them actually called me to offer me employment.
They all walked away when I asked what happens to other staff on the payroll. They said that the services they offer are designed for one-person businesses.
The other thing to consider is what happens when you apply IR56 tests to the relationship. Well, that falls over on the idea that brolly has no obligation to actually offer the consultant any work, in fact if they want work they must find it for themselves, then hand the client over to the brolly.
Other questions that I ask in the same area - given someone who has a baby while working through a brolly, would the brolly be expected to pay maternity pay for 6 months, or sick pay, or other things generally that an Employer would be legally bound to provide for employees.Last edited by Integrity; 1 July 2008, 13:09.Comment
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Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View PostExcept when your brolly goes bust,as mine did in the 90s. Then the Govt deem that you were not an employee under the regulations and are not entitled to any money.Comment
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Originally posted by ASB View PostYes. But that's a different problem. If you were paye you weren't any less an employee. Just a somewhat second class one.Comment
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They all walked away when I asked what happens to other staff on the payroll. They said that the services they offer are designed for one-person businesses.
There certainly were companies which you would hand over a contract to and they may or may not employ you and they may or may not offer you a different class of share and they may or may not pay you dividends based on the income you generate. Essentially under the MSC legislation it is now broadly impossible to run a business this way.
This does raise a point though. If *yourco* signs up to a provider on this basis the provider can only remunerate your co - and basically it can only do this in a way that ensures the funds are subject to paye. In this circumstance it may still be the case that you individually are not an employee of the "brolly".
If *you* individually sign up you are an employee. The entity you are an employee of must provide you employment rights. You can't sign away the legal minima.
Other questions that I ask in the same area - given someone who has a baby while working through a brolly, would the brolly be expected to pay maternity pay for 6 months, or sick pay, or other things generally that an Employer would be legally bound to provide for employees.
It might be worth you reviewing this where Lisadid specifically confirm this.
http://forums.contractoruk.com/accou...rumbrella.htmlComment
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Originally posted by ASB View PostIf they are deducting employers NI (or should be!) then they are your employer.
There certainly were companies which you would hand over a contract to and they may or may not employ you and they may or may not offer you a different class of share and they may or may not pay you dividends based on the income you generate. Essentially under the MSC legislation it is now broadly impossible to run a business this way.
This does raise a point though. If *yourco* signs up to a provider on this basis the provider can only remunerate your co - and basically it can only do this in a way that ensures the funds are subject to paye. In this circumstance it may still be the case that you individually are not an employee of the "brolly".
If *you* individually sign up you are an employee. The entity you are an employee of must provide you employment rights. You can't sign away the legal minima.
Yes. The brolly must provide the statutory rights to its employees.
It might be worth you reviewing this where Lisadid specifically confirm this.
http://forums.contractoruk.com/accou...rumbrella.html
So, if I have understood correctly, if my business has a number of associates who do work when needed, and those associates use a brolly, there is no risk of them being deemed an employee of my business if my business pay invoices issued by the brolly.
The word "deemed" seems to come up far too often these days for things to be obvious and based on common sense.Comment
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