I think Seb has been quite clear, TBH. Some people aren’t listening. At the time a claim is made, the insurer’s defence team would need to decide whether there is a realistic prospect of success. If there isn’t, for whatever reason, then tough luck. In the vast majority of cases, there would be. In the situation where the client is arguing against the contractor, there probably wouldn’t be, unless the contractor had excellent evidence to the contrary.
If the client says the contractor is inside and there has been no change in WP over the duration of the engagement, then the contractor was probably always inside. If there is no realistic prospect of success, it doesn’t matter when the determination was made by the client that undermines the contractor.
Personally, I’ve always questioned tax liability insurance. Professional expenses insurance is always worthwhile. With tax liability cover, you are focused on that very small % of borderline cases where it could go either way. If a case proceeds, you will almost certainly win, statistically speaking. If it doesn’t, that is because you had no realistic prospect of success.
If the client says the contractor is inside and there has been no change in WP over the duration of the engagement, then the contractor was probably always inside. If there is no realistic prospect of success, it doesn’t matter when the determination was made by the client that undermines the contractor.
Personally, I’ve always questioned tax liability insurance. Professional expenses insurance is always worthwhile. With tax liability cover, you are focused on that very small % of borderline cases where it could go either way. If a case proceeds, you will almost certainly win, statistically speaking. If it doesn’t, that is because you had no realistic prospect of success.
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