An emploment lawyer friend tells me this is good news for contractors...
IT consultant wins IR35 appeal
The First-tier Tribunal has allowed a consultant's IR35 appeal notwithstanding the requirement to provide personal service, the absence of any practical right to provide a substitute and other factors that clearly pointed to employment (such as the vesting of intellectual property rights in the end client).
The decision is helpful because it shows the factors that point to employment, those that point to self-employment and those that, depending on the circumstances, could point either way. However, as with all IR35 cases, it needs to be viewed with caution because the outcome of any case depends entirely on its own facts. This makes it extremely difficult to ascertain a clear set of principles that can be translated into firm advice for clients when advising on consultancy arrangements.
The decision also highlights the relative weight that a tribunal may attach to the various contracts in a tripartite agreement. The tribunal attached much less significance to the contract between the personal service company and the agent than to the agreement between the agent and the end client. (MBF Design Services Ltd v HMRC [2011] UKFTT 35.)
IT consultant wins IR35 appeal
The First-tier Tribunal has allowed a consultant's IR35 appeal notwithstanding the requirement to provide personal service, the absence of any practical right to provide a substitute and other factors that clearly pointed to employment (such as the vesting of intellectual property rights in the end client).
The decision is helpful because it shows the factors that point to employment, those that point to self-employment and those that, depending on the circumstances, could point either way. However, as with all IR35 cases, it needs to be viewed with caution because the outcome of any case depends entirely on its own facts. This makes it extremely difficult to ascertain a clear set of principles that can be translated into firm advice for clients when advising on consultancy arrangements.
The decision also highlights the relative weight that a tribunal may attach to the various contracts in a tripartite agreement. The tribunal attached much less significance to the contract between the personal service company and the agent than to the agreement between the agent and the end client. (MBF Design Services Ltd v HMRC [2011] UKFTT 35.)
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