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Previously on "Another defeat for HMRC - £140k TalkSPORT host (Update: they won in the end)"

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  • TheDogsNads
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    The key feature in these borderline cases seems to be how long you've been working there.
    18 years is a pretty long time!

    Leave a comment:


  • elsergiovolador
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    The key feature in these borderline cases seems to be how long you've been working there.
    This is probably a trigger as it seems that when someone been with one client for so long the likelihood of them being a disguised employee is higher than someone warming their seat for a couple of months.

    When you have been using a particular supplier for years there is no legal requirement to make them your employees.

    Leave a comment:


  • elsergiovolador
    replied
    Originally posted by Lance View Post
    closer but still not true.

    The worker doesn't determine status. The intermediary does. In most cases we discuss the 'worker' is a Director of the intermediary so makes that determination, but not in all cases.
    Yes you are correct, I just used a mental shortcut for the common case.

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    The key feature in these borderline cases seems to be how long you've been working there.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lance
    replied
    Originally posted by elsergiovolador View Post
    The worker will have to determine their status by themselves, but they have different risk than a company. I cannot see workers issuing blanket determination for themselves.
    closer but still not true.

    The worker doesn't determine status. The intermediary does. In most cases we discuss the 'worker' is a Director of the intermediary so makes that determination, but not in all cases.

    Leave a comment:


  • elsergiovolador
    replied
    The rules apply to all public sector clients and private sector companies that meet 2 or more of the following conditions:

    you have an annual turnover of more than £10.2 million
    you have a balance sheet total of more than £5.1 million
    you have more than 50 employees
    The worker will have to determine their status by themselves, but they have different risk than a company. I cannot see workers issuing blanket determination for themselves.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lance
    replied
    Originally posted by elsergiovolador View Post
    Companies with less than 50 employees will be exempt,
    Not true


    Originally posted by elsergiovolador View Post
    but given that for larger companies it will be problematic to contract anyone without PAYE.
    Not true



    Originally posted by elsergiovolador View Post
    No more odd cleaning jobs.
    What on earth are you talking about?

    Leave a comment:


  • Fred Bloggs
    replied
    I am pleased with the decisions relating to media personalities. It is a blatant abuse by the media companies and the presenters that they are not employees. Anyone broadcasting to a schedule dictated by the company presenting what the company tells you to do at a certain time and place for nearly twenty years? Come on, how are they NOT employees? Both the companies and the presenters have been getting away with murder for decades. Long overdue that it stops and these wealthy people bear their burden like everyone else.

    Leave a comment:


  • quackhandle
    replied
    So the 143k HMRC want was from a specific contract? Maybe he should be lucky they aren't going after him for the whole 18 years?

    Or maybe they will?

    qh

    Leave a comment:


  • elsergiovolador
    replied
    did have control over what tasks Hawksbee should perform, when and where he performed those tasks.
    Companies with less than 50 employees will be exempt, but given that for larger companies it will be problematic to contract anyone without PAYE.

    No more odd cleaning jobs.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheDogsNads
    replied
    Originally posted by eazy View Post
    Tribunal Decision
    https://assets.publishing.service.go..._Kickabout.pdf

    Sports radio presenter Paul Hawksbee has lost his battle to show that his relationship with TalkSport Radio lay outside of IR35, leaving his company Kickabout Productions Ltd with a tax and NIC liability of £143,126.

    Mutuality of obligation
    The UT concluded that TalkSport did have an obligation to provide work for Hawksbee under both of the contracts, and in turn Kickabout was obliged to make Hawksbee available, so MOO was present. The UT concluded that the FTT made an error of law on this point. However, the UT decided not to refer the case back to the FTT, but remade the decision itself.

    Control
    The UT considered the facts relating to control and found that TalkSport had little control over how Hawksbee did his work, but the radio station did have control over what tasks Hawksbee should perform, when and where he performed those tasks. The UT concluded there was sufficient control by TalkSport over Hawksbee to be consistent with an employment contract (inside IR35).

    Other factors

    For completeness the UT considered what other factors pointed at self-employment or an employment relationship.

    The pointers towards employment were:
    • The fact that Hawskbee had been presenting the show for 18 years
    • Hawksbee could not provide a substitute
    • There were exclusivity provisions in the contracts
    •The contracts required four-months’ notice of termination

    The pointers to self-employment included:
    • Fixed fee per show, which demonstrated a degree of financial risk
    • Narrow task to be performed
    • No worker rights such as sick pay, holiday pay
    • No intention to form an employment contract
    • No requirement for Hawksbee to complete training or undertake medicals
    • Hawksbee was not part and parcel of the organisation

    See AccountingWeb for details
    IR35: Final score for Kickabout Productions | AccountingWEB
    Hawksbee not 'part and parcel' of the organisation but had been presenting the same programme for 18 years? I know they said these were pointers but those two are paradoxically opposed.

    Oh, and Alan Brazil must be crapping himself at this decision.

    Leave a comment:


  • eazy
    replied
    UT : IR35: Final score for Kickabout Productions

    Tribunal Decision
    https://assets.publishing.service.go..._Kickabout.pdf

    Sports radio presenter Paul Hawksbee has lost his battle to show that his relationship with TalkSport Radio lay outside of IR35, leaving his company Kickabout Productions Ltd with a tax and NIC liability of £143,126.

    Mutuality of obligation
    The UT concluded that TalkSport did have an obligation to provide work for Hawksbee under both of the contracts, and in turn Kickabout was obliged to make Hawksbee available, so MOO was present. The UT concluded that the FTT made an error of law on this point. However, the UT decided not to refer the case back to the FTT, but remade the decision itself.

    Control
    The UT considered the facts relating to control and found that TalkSport had little control over how Hawksbee did his work, but the radio station did have control over what tasks Hawksbee should perform, when and where he performed those tasks. The UT concluded there was sufficient control by TalkSport over Hawksbee to be consistent with an employment contract (inside IR35).

    Other factors

    For completeness the UT considered what other factors pointed at self-employment or an employment relationship.

    The pointers towards employment were:
    • The fact that Hawskbee had been presenting the show for 18 years
    • Hawksbee could not provide a substitute
    • There were exclusivity provisions in the contracts
    •The contracts required four-months’ notice of termination

    The pointers to self-employment included:
    • Fixed fee per show, which demonstrated a degree of financial risk
    • Narrow task to be performed
    • No worker rights such as sick pay, holiday pay
    • No intention to form an employment contract
    • No requirement for Hawksbee to complete training or undertake medicals
    • Hawksbee was not part and parcel of the organisation

    See AccountingWeb for details
    IR35: Final score for Kickabout Productions | AccountingWEB

    Leave a comment:


  • FIERCE TANK BATTLE
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    Do you have an example where someone caught inside IR35 claimed employment benefits ?

    I can't imagine being caught inside IR35 would be an adequate reason for bringing a case after 3 months because a court would argue the plaintiff should have known.
    Didn't that happen with HMRC's own contractor? IIRC HMRC said you're inside IR35, pay up, and they said OK give me my holiday entitlement, and HMRC said no, and they went to court and HMRC lost.

    Something like that.

    Edit: IPSE: Meet the woman who took on HMRC, and won

    Leave a comment:


  • SussexSeagull
    replied
    Tax and employment laws are entirely separately beasts. Incorrectly, some might argue. A future Labour government trying to tackle forced self employment in generally low paid jobs might change this and drag contractors along but that is highly speculative.

    Non the less employment benefits will enter the equation for contractors considering what to do post April next year.

    Leave a comment:


  • WordIsBond
    replied
    Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
    could it be that they were worried that he'd make a claim in the ET for employment benefits?
    Why would they care if he did?

    Leave a comment:

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