Originally posted by northernladuk
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So, if you have a right of substitution, but the client wouldn't allow you to make that substitution, then as far as HMRC are concerned, you didn't have a right of substitution. IIRC, that was part of the problem in the Dragonfly case. Part of the problem that we have, though, is that your contract might have that right of substitution in it, and as far as you are concerned, you have a RoS. Unknown to you, the contract between agency and client does not provide a RoS - so in the event of an investigation, the reality of the situation is that you have no RoS (which you don't know until you are about to get royally screwed over). I guess you could then sue the agency...
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