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No notice Period???

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    #11
    Think about it. If the client has to give you notice, it implies they may have to pay you for working when there is no work to be done which implies mutuality of obligation that is reducible. If you don't have to give the client notice, he won't hire you since you obviously don't intend finishing the work.

    Notice periods are for permies. We're not permies. QED
    Blog? What blog...?

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      #12
      still none the wiser to be fair

      Agreed if both parties are not bound by a notice period indicates you could leave at any given moment, but the consensus is that a 'no notice contract is that you cannot leave for the duration of the contract.

      You cant have it both ways

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        #13
        Originally posted by downsouth View Post
        still none the wiser to be fair

        Agreed if both parties are not bound by a notice period indicates you could leave at any given moment, but the consensus is that a 'no notice contract is that you cannot leave for the duration of the contract.

        You cant have it both ways
        Which bit of a "no notice contract is that you cannot leave for the duration of the contract" do you not understand? Or have issues with? If you really do have to bail out for good reason mid contract, you would either negotiate with the client or, rather more sensibly, use the substitution clause in your expensive IR35-friendly coontract. That's what it's for.

        So stop thinking like a permie
        Blog? What blog...?

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          #14
          I hired a couple of contractors in 2000. They could not give me notice, I could give them immediate notice. In recognition of the "unfair" nature of this, I paid an increased daily rate. Everyone was happy. Part of the reason for doing it like this, is that we felt it would bolster them being outside IR35.

          Notice periods, like all commercial contracts, are down to negotiation. They do not have to be equitable or fair.

          The most important clauses in my contracts, after the specification of the role, are how much I'll get paid, how often I can invoice, and how quickly my invoices will be paid. Notice periods are way way down the list.
          Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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            #15
            Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
            What do you do if they don't?
            Point out you are opted-in and they have to pay you verbally and followed up by email.

            Send them a letter telling them you are taking them to court for the money outstanding.

            Start court proceedings.

            There is nothing stopping them counter-claiming but they have to do it under a different clause in the contract.

            Though if you got your contract checked out by a solicitor before you signed it then you shouldn't end up with clauses you don't completely like and the agent will be also aware you are opted-in.
            "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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              #16
              Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
              Point out you are opted-in and they have to pay you verbally and followed up by email.

              Send them a letter telling them you are taking them to court for the money outstanding.

              Start court proceedings.

              There is nothing stopping them counter-claiming but they have to do it under a different clause in the contract.
              So you still have to sue. Are you (hypothetically) going to pursue a lost week's income through the courts when the agent has the option of suing you for several months worth of their lost income because you've broken the contract? Probably better off not making a fuss.
              Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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                #17
                Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                So you still have to sue. Are you (hypothetically) going to pursue a lost week's income through the courts when the agent has the option of suing you for several months worth of their lost income because you've broken the contract? Probably better off not making a fuss.
                You presuming the agency will definitely counter-sue in the first place. It's likely they won't and will pay up.

                Particularly if they remember you as one of the contractors who got the contract rewritten by a solicitor who they then had to speak to or get an email from.
                "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by ascender View Post
                  the contract I've just been sent for review also has the term "no notice" in it.
                  Unless the contract explicitly states that the contractor will work the full duration of the contract and can't give notice I'd take that to mean that they have engaged you on an hourly/daily rate and you (and possibly they) are not required to give notice to terminate.

                  I can't see how you could have a contract to do (say) 6 months work for a client and no notice period. If the contract was to complete a particular project then that's understandable but hourly/daily rate? Nah.

                  If you get offered a contract like this then get them to clarify exactly what they require from you. If you really do have a contract where you have to work the full duration then make sure it has a realistic force majeur clause in it so you can terminate it should the worst happen.
                  Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by Wanderer View Post
                    Unless the contract explicitly states that the contractor will work the full duration of the contract and can't give notice I'd take that to mean that they have engaged you on an hourly/daily rate and you (and possibly they) are not required to give notice to terminate.

                    I can't see how you could have a contract to do (say) 6 months work for a client and no notice period. If the contract was to complete a particular project then that's understandable but hourly/daily rate? Nah.

                    If you get offered a contract like this then get them to clarify exactly what they require from you. If you really do have a contract where you have to work the full duration then make sure it has a realistic force majeur clause in it so you can terminate it should the worst happen.
                    I agree, for my current gig, I negotiated the notice period away. The way I see it, the shorter the notice, the better from an IR35 perspective.
                    Public Service Posting by the BBC - Bloggs Bulls**t Corp.
                    Officially CUK certified - Thick as f**k.

                    Comment


                      #20
                      Originally posted by Fred Bloggs View Post
                      I agree, for my current gig, I negotiated the notice period away. The way I see it, the shorter the notice, the better from an IR35 perspective.
                      I've never really bought that argument. Lots of commercial contracts have notice periods, and it's not unusual for a supplier to be paid for that notice period even if the service wasn't provided.

                      If you'd been offered say a 2 week notice period, and the client wanted to get rid of you early, and you don't immediately find another gig, that's a couple of thousand pounds income you've negotiated away. All because of the tiny possibility it could be the deciding factor in an IR35 investigation that may never happen. And it may well be (as happened to me recently), the client will want you to work your notice period.
                      Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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