• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Bench - the end client bench

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #21
    Originally posted by MyUserName View Post
    But if the new contract covers the work then surely that is fine? Or are you saying that updating a contract to reflect potential new work would be the problem?
    But you said the work wasn't covered in your contract. You had no schedule? You could raise a contract for every piece of work but you have to look at the reality and the perception of the client. If the client just sees you as an enduring resource HMRC will see the contracts as a sham. Have a very careful read of this on the JLJ case. He started off with contracts and then just disappeared in to the system to be used as the client required. Some key paragraphs may be similar to your situation. Only you will know though.

    IT contractor JLJ in first ever 'split IR35 case' :: Contractor UK

    Such a lack of control is "fine" when the worker is providing expert services (judgement point 23) - on a unique project (point 42), but not, explains Ms Cottrell, when "the engager needs work undertaken repeatedly, and when you are working generally within the organisation."

    Given that the classic tests of employment status have not changed, and therefore remain as significantly determining as they were before the case, the advisor believes such a work pattern is the "main" warning contractors should heed.

    Mr Mason agreed: "For a contractor, the central message being sent by the courts is that if you're going to engage over a long period, then you really need to be able to show that you're engaged on specific projects.

    "[To be outside IR35 you can't] just basically get on with whatever work crops up [from the end-user]. Do that and you risk ending up becoming very much part and parcel of their organisation.

    "So if you're not doing separately identifiable and discreet projects, then it's very easy over an extensive period to be perceived as part of the client's furniture. That's what happened here and to my mind, that's Mutuality of Obligation."
    Although that quote does blow my opinion that mutuality is only after contract and not during

    Anyway, that paragraph is also something for the OP to consider as well.

    Well, I think it is fair to say that sorting this ASAP with the client and QDOS to be priority number 1!
    Indeed but only you know the real situation at the client so you have to be super pragmatic.
    Last edited by northernladuk; 5 December 2013, 14:45.
    'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

    Comment


      #22
      Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
      Indeed but only you know the real situation at the client so you have to be super pragmatic.
      It is an awkward one here as there is only one other guy in the project team and he basically comes and goes when he pleases (within reason) and is handled very informally as he has been here almost 20 years. The project manager is generally very relaxed about pretty much everything so there is not a massive difference in the way we are treated as the company rules are not really enforced on him.

      I have never brought in a sub, although contractually I can, so I am not sure exactly how I would specifically show I was outside IR35 when the only other person on the project has such flexibility. Other than trivial things like not needing to ask about holidays, needing timesheets signed etc.

      However, this does not seem to be any different to how the many contract developers at BNPP worked when I was there etc.
      "He's actually ripped" - Jared Padalecki

      https://youtu.be/l-PUnsCL590?list=PL...dNeCyi9a&t=615

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
        Although that quote does blow my opinion that mutuality is only after contract and not during
        To be honest it has been said on here before that it's not just at the end of a contract. I can't remember who it was - maybe Wanderer or Mal? It was towards the end of a fairly long thread I think, where both after and during contracts had been put forward, but there is some previous case law to say that it includes a client wanting you to keep a seat warm while they find you some more work.

        If you search the forums then you'll find it's been asked before.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by MyUserName View Post
          It is an awkward one here as there is only one other guy in the project team and he basically comes and goes when he pleases (within reason) and is handled very informally as he has been here almost 20 years. The project manager is generally very relaxed about pretty much everything so there is not a massive difference in the way we are treated as the company rules are not really enforced on him.
          Which, taken on face value, further makes me think they see you as part and parcel of the organisation. You need a different opinion though, maybe Mal, Wanderer or someone else that is pretty hot on IR35 can comment.

          I am assuming this other person is a permie?

          I have never brought in a sub, although contractually I can, so I am not sure exactly how I would specifically show I was outside IR35 when the only other person on the project has such flexibility. Other than trivial things like not needing to ask about holidays, needing timesheets signed etc.

          However, this does not seem to be any different to how the many contract developers at BNPP worked when I was there etc.
          I don't know either but a schedule of work with specific completion points would differentiate yourself from a permie. Just have to see what someone else thinks.
          'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by Ticktock View Post
            To be honest it has been said on here before that it's not just at the end of a contract. I can't remember who it was - maybe Wanderer or Mal? It was towards the end of a fairly long thread I think, where both after and during contracts had been put forward, but there is some previous case law to say that it includes a client wanting you to keep a seat warm while they find you some more work.

            If you search the forums then you'll find it's been asked before.
            Yes but there are also threads that discuss MoO being over and above the contract so changed my mind a few times. It's very complicated and am sure there would be no black and white when if it hit the courts. I think this thread sums it up pretty well.

            http://forums.contractoruk.com/busin...ct-clause.html

            Again some useful reading for MUN and the OP as well.

            EDIT : Even the pro's are not in total agreement as this article shows.

            http://www.contractorweekly.com/cont...gation-extinct

            It would appear HMRC accept there will be MOO within a contract so further muddying the waters. Have to read it all to get the context as they go on to discuss the opposite further down but here is an interesting snippet..

            Where a worker undertakes duties for an engager and the engager pays the worker for carrying out the work then there will be sufficient MOO for a contract to exist. The question of MOO poses no difficulty during the period when the worker is actually working for the engager. For that duration the worker undertakes to work and the engager in turn undertakes to pay for the work done. The mutual obligations, i.e. to work on the one hand and to be paid on the other, will continue to exist until the contract is terminated and will provide the basic requisite mutual obligations.
            Last edited by northernladuk; 5 December 2013, 16:46.
            'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

            Comment


              #26
              Originally posted by perplexed View Post
              I don't think it's outside IR35. Which was my whole point, to be honest. I can correct the end client, point out that if there's no work as there's no MOO I can sit at home unable to invoice. That then means I start a contract extension with no work, possibility of never getting any work.

              Sadly I find Harry Potter more plausible than most deities...
              Could you not have a completely new contract drawn up and declare yourself IR35 caught for the 3 months? That gives you some income whilst looking for a new gig?

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by oracleslave View Post
                Could you not have a completely new contract drawn up and declare yourself IR35 caught for the 3 months? That gives you some income whilst looking for a new gig?
                Having a split in/our IR35 gig is tricky IMO. It happened in the LJL case.

                I wonder what would happen if OP decided to declare himself "in" for the 3 months, then got offered a contract "out" of IR35 afterwards. Does the fact that he was "in" for those 3 months therefore mean that he can only be "in" after that point -- i.e. returning to work for an "employer"?
                Contracting: more of the money, less of the sh1t

                Comment

                Working...
                X