Originally posted by mattfx
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I'm not talking about your personal circumstances, because I have no idea what they are, but I suspect that you're making a few different points here:
- HMRC would see a bunch of contracts and back-off.
- If they didn't, they'd look at the individual contracts and then back-off.
- If they didn't, they'd have a tough time arguing that I wasn't in business on my own account.
I think you misunderstand the process. There's absolutely no evidence whatsoever that HMRC "backs-off" under any superficial circumstances. They pursue a case until the detailed facts are established. That's the whole point of operating a deterrent. This isn't about saving tax payer's money though the timely closure of individual investigations. There are countless anecdotes on CUK and elsewhere that support this (one that comes to mind involved a demonstrated, valid, substitution, which did not close down further investigation).
The reality is that HMRC would ask to see all your contracts, and they would then take the contract(s) that looked best for further investigation. All the anecdotal stuff about other contracts (especially if they account for a small fraction of your turnover) will be completely unconvincing, pre-tribunal. In short, of the enumerated points above, the final point may be correct, but it won't be established until you're way down the pipeline of due process. They won't "back off" because a certain % of your contracts look watertight. If one looks arguable, that will be pursued (and even if it doesn't, it will be pursued to some extent).
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