• 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!

Working through the regulations

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

    #31
    Originally posted by NetContractor View Post
    Thought I'd leave one final comment...

    ...All Sorted. Staying put under a new (inside IR35) contract until the end of the project. I'm pleased with the result. HMRC should be too.

    The chance of a retrospective investigation is always there, however given the number of cases the HMRC is going to have to look at, I think this is and has always been a low risk option. Time will tell.
    pop along to the HMRC Scheme Enquiries thread.

    Sounds as though you are carrying ALL the risk .... We/you are a business and to me this sounds like bad business. Remember HMRC can come after long after this contract has finished...

    As a PM myself this has Red RAG all over it. I agree (cant believe I am saying this) with NLUK

    Comment


      #32
      Originally posted by Semtex View Post
      pop along to the HMRC Scheme Enquiries thread.

      Sounds as though you are carrying ALL the risk .... We/you are a business and to me this sounds like bad business. Remember HMRC can come after long after this contract has finished...

      As a PM myself this has Red RAG all over it. I agree (cant believe I am saying this) with NLUK
      ...and here I thought I was just updating people with the (good) outcome.

      I have taken financial advice and tax advice on the matter, and the professionals in the field generally seem to feel the retrospective investigation risk is low. Just because someone leaves a contract, it would not stop HMRC looking at the previous contract if they felt an investigation was due. My clients HR department, disagreed with my contract terms which put me outside of IR35. I think they are wrong, especially since they signed a contract 2 years ago stating that they accepted these as the business terms. IF I was to be investigated I would argue that the client signed the document to accept the terms, ie. substitution. Because they now disagree, we mutually agreed to immediately terminate the contract. We then agreed a NEW contract, starting from next week, which meets the needs of the client, puts me inside IR35 and with which I am happy with, going forward.

      If I terminated the old contract and left, if would have no bearing on if HMRC would investigate it or not. And if they DO investigate my contract, I will argue regarding the previous one, but the new one is untouchable.

      All is good.

      Comment


        #33
        Originally posted by NetContractor View Post
        ...and here I thought I was just updating people with the (good) outcome.

        I have taken financial advice and tax advice on the matter, and the professionals in the field generally seem to feel the retrospective investigation risk is low. Just because someone leaves a contract, it would not stop HMRC looking at the previous contract if they felt an investigation was due. My clients HR department, disagreed with my contract terms which put me outside of IR35. I think they are wrong, especially since they signed a contract 2 years ago stating that they accepted these as the business terms. IF I was to be investigated I would argue that the client signed the document to accept the terms, ie. substitution. Because they now disagree, we mutually agreed to immediately terminate the contract. We then agreed a NEW contract, starting from next week, which meets the needs of the client, puts me inside IR35 and with which I am happy with, going forward.

        If I terminated the old contract and left, if would have no bearing on if HMRC would investigate it or not. And if they DO investigate my contract, I will argue regarding the previous one, but the new one is untouchable.

        All is good.
        I think this is all tragically naive, but particularly the part in bold.

        That isn't an argument at all. HMRCs argument will be that those clauses are a sham (in particular substitution) and if the client agrees - which they do and are telling you they do in black and white, - you are totally ****ed.

        Comment


          #34
          Originally posted by FrontEnder View Post
          I think this is all tragically naive, but particularly the part in bold.

          That isn't an argument at all. HMRCs argument will be that those clauses are a sham (in particular substitution) and if the client agrees - which they do and are telling you they do in black and white, - you are totally ****ed.
          Alright then...What would YOU do in the situation where, under the new regulations, the client is making the decision, which I suspect is a blanket policy decision, but have no proof of that, to force the contract inside IR35. What would YOU do? - Because leaving doesn't make any difference. HMRC could see THAT as a "red rag". Carrying on under the same contract isnt an option, because if anything flags you up in the system its that you suddenly went from outside to inside under the same terms. Realistic Options?

          Comment


            #35
            Originally posted by Semtex View Post
            Sounds as though you are carrying ALL the risk
            Absolutely. Hopefully insurance is in place.

            Of course, quantifying the risk is difficult. No one knows how much risk there is. OP has judged the risk of retrospective investigation is low, and who can say he is wrong?

            The fact that there are substantive changes in the contract terms, as well as the rate increase, does work in his favour. If he'd KEPT a substitution clause in the new one and they were saying it was a fiction, that would be much more problematic. The fact that he terminated the contract as soon as they told him they wouldn't accept substitution, came back and proposed a completely different contract, and then accepted a still different contract which doesn't have substitution, would certainly bolster his defence. He can argue that he terminated because they were breaching the contract. None of this looks like an employer-employee relationship, it looks very much like a B2B relationship being terminated and a new employee-like relationship being formed, with new terms and rate.

            I wouldn't feel very safe if I were OP, but neither do I think this gives HMRC an open and shut case. I would definitely run the online tool under the old contract claiming the substitution clause, print it, and keep it. And then I would run it again answering "no" to the substitution clause. If it shows either outside or can't determine, I'd print that and keep it, too. Then, if they come calling, you can say, "Look, I had a substitution clause. When the client said they were revoking it, I terminated. Here's the results of your own online tool. But even if you could successfully challenge it, you still don't have much of a case."

            And I'd definitely maintain any IR35 insurance you have, and if you don't have any, I'd join IPSE yesterday.

            Comment


              #36
              Originally posted by NetContractor View Post
              Alright then...What would YOU do in the situation where, under the new regulations, the client is making the decision, which I suspect is a blanket policy decision, but have no proof of that, to force the contract inside IR35. What would YOU do? - Because leaving doesn't make any difference. HMRC could see THAT as a "red rag". Carrying on under the same contract isnt an option, because if anything flags you up in the system its that you suddenly went from outside to inside under the same terms. Realistic Options?
              If you are confident in your current working arrangements being outside, then you have little to worry about apart from any angst that might come from an investigation in the future (and nobody knows how likely that may be or not).

              Your best bet from here is to make sure that you have excellent professional advice available to you if there is a future investigation - whoever that may be from. The majority of IR35 cases that lose do so because the contractor or someone on their behalf tried to deal with HMRC without knowing exactly what they were doing and how to respond correctly. As long as you have that professional representation to cover you for your prior work then I don't think there is much more that you can do.

              Good luck
              Best Forum Advisor 2014
              Work in the public sector? You can read my FAQ here
              Click here to get 15% off your first year's IPSE membership

              Comment


                #37
                Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
                If you are confident in your current working arrangements being outside, then you have little to worry about apart from any angst that might come from an investigation in the future (and nobody knows how likely that may be or not).

                Your best bet from here is to make sure that you have excellent professional advice available to you if there is a future investigation - whoever that may be from. The majority of IR35 cases that lose do so because the contractor or someone on their behalf tried to deal with HMRC without knowing exactly what they were doing and how to respond correctly. As long as you have that professional representation to cover you for your prior work then I don't think there is much more that you can do.

                Good luck
                True, however this advice isnt limited to my situation. It can be applied globally to ANY contract.

                My point was that I am not more at risk for accepting new terms (and a new contract) than I was for not accepting them. In fact it could be argued that anyone outside Ir35 is more prone to an investigation going forward as HMRC start their clamp down.

                For me, the inside argument was really about pride; for 15 years I have worked, as a contractor, and on day 1 I registered my own limited company. Suddenly accepting that, even though I still have the limited company, I am really going to be an employee of my client going forward, is a bit depressing. Being remunerated for being an employee, however, is not so depressing.

                Comment


                  #38
                  Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
                  If you are confident in your current working arrangements being outside, then you have little to worry about apart from any angst that might come from an investigation in the future (and nobody knows how likely that may be or not).

                  Your best bet from here is to make sure that you have excellent professional advice available to you if there is a future investigation - whoever that may be from. The majority of IR35 cases that lose do so because the contractor or someone on their behalf tried to deal with HMRC without knowing exactly what they were doing and how to respond correctly. As long as you have that professional representation to cover you for your prior work then I don't think there is much more that you can do.

                  Good luck
                  Agreed, you may well and probably are ok, but the flag to HMRC and their investigations would cause stress.

                  If it wasnt because HMRC are lacking any kind of moral compass I would go ahead and provide your services like a freelancer does. My concern and because of historical HMRC abuse in many instances on this forum I would be wary and cover myself as best I could ie insurance.

                  Good luck!

                  Comment


                    #39
                    Originally posted by NetContractor View Post
                    Alright then...What would YOU do in the situation where, under the new regulations, the client is making the decision, which I suspect is a blanket policy decision, but have no proof of that, to force the contract inside IR35. What would YOU do? - Because leaving doesn't make any difference. HMRC could see THAT as a "red rag". Carrying on under the same contract isnt an option, because if anything flags you up in the system its that you suddenly went from outside to inside under the same terms. Realistic Options?
                    I'd tell them they need to offer me a new contract outside of IR35 or I'll leave before 5th april. Which is what you did do but then bottled it.

                    If they say your inside of appeal it as far as you can - the walk of they don't change it.

                    It might be a red flag to leave, but not nearly as much as staying in the same role and being outside one day and inside the next.

                    Yes, we don't know what HMRC will do, but it so d's like you're minimising this risk when the consensus is that it's a big one. It sounds like you've got your head in the sand, tbh.

                    Comment


                      #40
                      Originally posted by FrontEnder View Post
                      I'd tell them they need to offer me a new contract outside of IR35 or I'll leave before 5th april. Which is what you did do but then bottled it.

                      If they say your inside of appeal it as far as you can - the walk of they don't change it.

                      It might be a red flag to leave, but not nearly as much as staying in the same role and being outside one day and inside the next.

                      Yes, we don't know what HMRC will do, but it so d's like you're minimizing this risk when the consensus is that it's a big one. It sounds like you've got your head in the sand, tbh.
                      Sorry, but this is completely wrong and misguided. For starters I never bottled it...they made it worth my while; Financially I'm considerably better off inside than I was outside.

                      Getting a "new" outside contract, and carrying on, if anything, is screaming...I knew my contract was inside before.

                      My head is certainly now in the sand, which is exactly why I drew a line under the previous contract. As for an appeal...what appeal? Who do you appeal to? I certainly have not seem any documented appeal process, and even if there was one it take time. What do you do during the months if not years of appeal? sit on the bench? or carry on knowing that they might refuse it? I think drawing a line under the contract and creating a new inside working relationship IS the safest way to go forward.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X