Originally posted by mudskipper
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Previously on "Who pays IR35 tax and NI - Director or intemediary?"
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On the face of it, it would seem logical that the Employer's NI liability is company debt, the employee's NI liability personal. If you left PermCo and they had buggered up your NI ded'ns, you'd expect HMRC to recover the underpayment from you.
But HMRC don't always do logic...
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostSemantics. IR35 is based wholly on the premise that the company is merely a payment vehicle to process personal income. While the money is paid by the company, the whole point is that the company is assumed to have no purpose other than the payment of wages and is levied on the basis that the monies earned are personal to the worker. Also, remember that the only real protection against IR35 is to be seen as a business, the clear implication being that if you are caught, you are not a business. Hence the tax, to all intents and purposes, is a personal one. The point has never been tested, as far as I know, so remains somewhat theoretical
Agreed, but I felt it important that people understand that you can't simply assume the company is the end point and ignore the personal liability that may occur, especially if you have (in HMRC's eyes) blatantly disregarded the potential tax liability.
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I thought the JLJ case held him personally responsible on the half loss so it has been proven?
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostFirst, IR35 is not a tax on the individual, it is a tax on the employer. The intermediary is looked through for the purposes of establishing a hypothetical contract of employment, but the intermediary remains liable for operating PAYE appropriately (and thus the IR35 deemed payment).
Liability can be transferred to the director if they've acted negligently in establishing and documenting the liability, but there is a suitably high bar for this. Here's a useful blog post on the topic by Jessica@WhiteFieldTax:
https://www.whitefieldtax.co.uk/web/...-a-individual/
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First, IR35 is not a tax on the individual, it is a tax on the employer. The intermediary is looked through for the purposes of establishing a hypothetical contract of employment, but the intermediary remains liable for operating PAYE appropriately (and thus the IR35 deemed payment). Liability can be transferred to the director if they've acted negligently in establishing and documenting the liability, but there is a suitably high bar for this. Here's a useful blog post on the topic by Jessica@WhiteFieldTax:
https://www.whitefieldtax.co.uk/web/...-a-individual/
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Originally posted by borderreiver View PostIf that's true then almost all of us need to worry, since certainty and IR35 are a pretty bad mix ...
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Originally posted by borderreiver View PostIf that's true then almost all of us need to worry, since certainty and IR35 are a pretty bad mix ...
Simply closing the company to leave it all behind won't work.
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostNot catering for IR35 liability if you are not certain it is not due would count...
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Originally posted by borderreiver View PostInteresting link. I think the important bit is this:
QUOTE=mudskipper;2097860]It is clear that an employee or director has received payments knowing that the employer had deliberately failed to deduct the correct amount of PAYE from their earnings
Proving the non-payment was deliberate is key, surely?
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostHMRC can transfer liability.
Optimum PAYE - June 2012 - Transfer of Employer PAYE & National Insurance liabilities to Directors
It is clear that an employee or director has received payments knowing that the employer had deliberately failed to deduct the correct amount of PAYE from their earnings
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostA director's primary legal requirement is to ensure the company is solvent. If you have ignored IR35 liability, or made an unsupportable conclusion about your status, and therefore used the money that IR35 requires to be paid, then you have failed in that duty and can be prosecuted as a director. Limited liability does not extend to what is essentially criminal behaviour.
Again, I'm just reporting what I've read, but while I appreciate it's a director's duty to keep a business solvent, what happens to businesses that simply can't pay CT because a major customer let them down? It happens (maybe not in IT contracting, I admit). Are you saying those directors should be prosecuted?
I agree that HMRC is likely to vigorously pursue such debts, as it should, but if a company has no assets HMRC can't just transfer liability, though it may stamp its foot and threaten to do so.
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Originally posted by borderreiver View PostFrom what I have read on other business boards, it appears not (unless HMRC can prove negligence or worse). A company's debt remains a company's debt. That's the main point of limited liability IMHO.
You might end up having to wind up the company, of course, and HMRC would probably object, but I don't think they can recover a debt from a director in this case.
Optimum PAYE - June 2012 - Transfer of Employer PAYE & National Insurance liabilities to Directors
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Originally posted by borderreiver View PostFrom what I have read on other business boards, it appears not (unless HMRC can prove negligence or worse). A company's debt remains a company's debt. That's the main point of limited liability IMHO.
You might end up having to wind up the company, of course, and HMRC would probably object, but I don't think they can recover a debt from a director in this case.
Look at it from HMRC's viewpoint. A director's primary legal requirement is to ensure the company is solvent. If you have ignored IR35 liability, or made an unsupportable conclusion about your status, and therefore used the money that IR35 requires to be paid, then you have failed in that duty and can be prosecuted as a director. Limited liability does not extend to what is essentially criminal behaviour.
Also, who authorises the closure of a company? That's HMRC, who are looking to recover the unpaid tax...
And finally, IR35 is a tax on the individual, not the company.Last edited by malvolio; 25 May 2015, 10:56.
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Originally posted by thomast View PostWhat if the company does not have the funds pay? Does the responsibility get transferred to the director?
You might end up having to wind up the company, of course, and HMRC would probably object, but I don't think they can recover a debt from a director in this case.
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