• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

IR35 Retrospective Tax Claims

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #51
    Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
    So. Bit of a ramble but hope some of it is useful. I'm no expert and we have very little detail but these are the areas I'd be concerned about from just this thread. No particular order but trying to start of with tangible points and filter down to musings.

    So your pillars are Ros, MoO and D&C. The problem you have is the length of time. Although not an indicator it is very difficult to keep these up as time progresses. You want to read up on the JLJ partial case where he was outside to start but through apathy he became part and parcel and forgot to keep his diligence up. Details here.
    New IR35 ruling: Partial victory for JLJ Services v HMRC

    So after a long time on the gig MoO has to be a problem. You just carry on doing the work you are given. Over time they'll just expect you to do the work you are given without saying no. That is assuming another key point. You are working to a well defined statement of work. It would be easy to imagine that for that length of time you are just doing a bum on seat enduring role that should have a permie doing it for a start. Even if you fudge the paperwork to make it look like a SoW over time it's likely you'll drop that and your contract will just look like a job description. As there is no defined work it's difficult to find a line where absence of MoO could be proved.

    On to D&C. Again, if you are doing an enduring role and you've been there you have to be part and parcel. It's human nature just to fall in to it and very difficult after 10 years to think of it as anything but you permanent job and they treat you like a member of staff. That means you are highly likely to be treated like the perms and are directed and controlled in the same way. Going up to you client for 10 years reminding them you are a contractor and can't/shouldn't be doing that is going to grate on them for sure.

    As mentioned there is the whole part and parcel thing. Although not directly a flag it brings all sorts of risks with it.

    RoS. You've mentioned an employee which is terrific defence but it's not exactly Ros. If you are so specialised, been there so long and no one out there in the market they may be reticent to allow a substitute. I don't know if courts take in to account the fact that although they may allow it, it's next to impossible to do due to lack of equally skilled resources so the clause is a sham.

    The length of time is also going to be of interest due to the amount of monies involved which is also likely to cloud their judgement on the facts (HMRC I mean, not the courts).

    On the face of it 10 years, just doing the same can be nothing but a permie role but that doesn't really count for much. You have to go through all the elements in detail in court but you couldn't blame HMRC for thinking they've got a good case.

    How many times have you had your contracts and working practices reviewed? Insurances in place?

    I don't think any comments on minor evidence like having 'Contractor' on your pass and the like helps in this situation. They only thing you really need is cold hard examples of you meeting those pillars and working practices are outside every day for those 10 years. If you haven't been thinking and acting like a contractor with a very close eye on IR35 all these times then no retrospective defence is going to be much use at this point.

    I don't want to be rude to the OP but schemes he's been thinking resulting in Cojaks comments would lead me to believe the previous paragraph is the real problem. We are going to see many many posts in the coming year from people that have suddenly gotten wind of the IR35 problem and are guessing at quick fixes rather than a balance and measured approach to something they've already been doing day in day out. The ideas and schemes show a gap in knowledge that is likely to have been there from day one. Sorry.

    in any case, all aspects of the reality of the engagement and the contractual provisions as presented by both sides will be taken into account. The court will determine the weighting factor, so your advice isn't necessarily correct. As you say, you are no expert. Such things as the intentions of the parties and the remuneration levels can be and are taken into account and weighted appropriately. Only a court can decide these factors, what you say is only an opinion.

    Comment


      #52
      OP - check out IPSE's guide to IR35, which covers the basics.

      https://www.ipse.co.uk/uploads/asset...fae75f7d27.pdf

      Comment


        #53
        Originally posted by cojak View Post
        Right, I've kept an eye on this thread but I'm now stepping in.

        The OP has valiantly attempted to keep this thread on-topic by himself but with the last conspiracy theory post it's obvious that he needs help.

        @jk3838 - do you have all the info you need? If you don't I will clear the dross off the thread from this point and keep it on topic.

        If you have then I will close this thread.
        Please can you keep the post, it is most useful, and I'm directing other contractors towards it so they might learn too

        Delete the dross by all means if you have time to go through

        Also, I feel others in the private sector will eventually start waking up and find this post, which I'm sure will answer a lot of identical questions for them (and save anyone having to ask/answer them all over again)

        It would be a shame for the time put in to help me (and it time, to help others) were to be wasted by deleting the whole post simply because it was hijacked for a point scoring spat

        Please can I ask that if the post is kept running, can the 'point scoring spat' please stop Call it a draw This forum is a great help to people like me

        Again, thank you to those who kept to the point Your post have been / still are great help to those with lesser understanding of a very complicated but very important subject

        Comment


          #54
          Of course jk3838.

          I would not have deleted the thread, and now things have calmed down ( ) I'm sure that it will come back on track.

          I may even decide to move the other posts to General.

          Maybe.
          "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
          - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

          Comment


            #55
            Originally posted by cojak View Post
            Of course jk3838.

            I would not have deleted the thread, and now things have calmed down ( ) I'm sure that it will come back on track.

            I may even decide to move the other posts to General.

            Maybe.
            great, and phew I was thinking I had to frantically copy and paste the useful bits (and that wasn't how high any mountains are)

            Comment


              #56
              Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
              So. Bit of a ramble but hope some of it is useful. I'm no expert and we have very little detail but these are the areas I'd be concerned about from just this thread. No particular order but trying to start of with tangible points and filter down to musings.

              So your pillars are Ros, MoO and D&C. The problem you have is the length of time. Although not an indicator it is very difficult to keep these up as time progresses. You want to read up on the JLJ partial case where he was outside to start but through apathy he became part and parcel and forgot to keep his diligence up. Details here.
              New IR35 ruling: Partial victory for JLJ Services v HMRC

              So after a long time on the gig MoO has to be a problem. You just carry on doing the work you are given. Over time they'll just expect you to do the work you are given without saying no. That is assuming another key point. You are working to a well defined statement of work. It would be easy to imagine that for that length of time you are just doing a bum on seat enduring role that should have a permie doing it for a start. Even if you fudge the paperwork to make it look like a SoW over time it's likely you'll drop that and your contract will just look like a job description. As there is no defined work it's difficult to find a line where absence of MoO could be proved.

              On to D&C. Again, if you are doing an enduring role and you've been there you have to be part and parcel. It's human nature just to fall in to it and very difficult after 10 years to think of it as anything but you permanent job and they treat you like a member of staff. That means you are highly likely to be treated like the perms and are directed and controlled in the same way. Going up to you client for 10 years reminding them you are a contractor and can't/shouldn't be doing that is going to grate on them for sure.

              As mentioned there is the whole part and parcel thing. Although not directly a flag it brings all sorts of risks with it.

              RoS. You've mentioned an employee which is terrific defence but it's not exactly Ros. If you are so specialised, been there so long and no one out there in the market they may be reticent to allow a substitute. I don't know if courts take in to account the fact that although they may allow it, it's next to impossible to do due to lack of equally skilled resources so the clause is a sham.

              The length of time is also going to be of interest due to the amount of monies involved which is also likely to cloud their judgement on the facts (HMRC I mean, not the courts).

              On the face of it 10 years, just doing the same can be nothing but a permie role but that doesn't really count for much. You have to go through all the elements in detail in court but you couldn't blame HMRC for thinking they've got a good case.

              How many times have you had your contracts and working practices reviewed? Insurances in place?

              I don't think any comments on minor evidence like having 'Contractor' on your pass and the like helps in this situation. They only thing you really need is cold hard examples of you meeting those pillars and working practices are outside every day for those 10 years. If you haven't been thinking and acting like a contractor with a very close eye on IR35 all these times then no retrospective defence is going to be much use at this point.

              I don't want to be rude to the OP but schemes he's been thinking resulting in Cojaks comments would lead me to believe the previous paragraph is the real problem. We are going to see many many posts in the coming year from people that have suddenly gotten wind of the IR35 problem and are guessing at quick fixes rather than a balance and measured approach to something they've already been doing day in day out. The ideas and schemes show a gap in knowledge that is likely to have been there from day one. Sorry.
              Can do nothing but agree with the above

              But we are where we are

              To shed a little extra like on my situation.

              It's not ten years, but is more than five.
              Have had periodic new contracts.
              Have brought in a. n. other as well to help with work load
              Do tell them I'm out of office (never ask them)
              Do exclude myself from all team events, photos, training, forms, systems (yep, one contractor here was happy to use the clocking in and out system)
              Have kept emails regarding delivering work as a package
              A project they want is given to my company, I go away and create it then deliver it (no client intervention apart from do you want it in red or blue)
              Have emails saying I'll rectify x,y,z that I did wrong at no additional cost to the client
              Have emails saying I don't want that piece of work
              Have emails from client asking 'we can't fix this, can you fix this?, 'yes I can fix that' 'here's a quote to fix that' 'let me know if you want that fixing and I'll see if I have capacity'
              I have quotes for fixed price work and then invoice for same work at later date
              Qdos review of current contract but not all contracts since day 1
              Substitute clause in contract
              Have a 'not an employee' and 'not to be treated as one' in the contract
              Obviously don't get bonuses or any other 'employee benefits and discounts'
              Constantly try to not become seen the same as the permies at every opportunity in all things
              To everything I say 'no thanks, I don't work here' verbally and in writing

              Things I will get next week after talking to client

              A signed 'outside' declaration from the client
              Signed CEST test on me by them

              Not sure on cold hard examples of working practices apart from those above ?

              If I'm caught, I'm caught but just trying to climb higher up the tree

              Again any suggestions on how to do that appreciated

              Learned a lot this week, no less scared, in fact more so, but better to be more aware and have done more to shore up the defences than most here who couldn't care less Ignorance is bliss and all that

              Comment


                #57
                Originally posted by jk3838 View Post
                A signed 'outside' declaration from the client
                Best way to do this is to use a Confirmation of Arrangements letter. Templates can be found here. It confirms the client is aware of and agrees the terms of the contract so there can be no accusations of sham clauses the client won't comply with.

                Confirmation of Arrangements - IR35 Resources - Qdos Contractor

                Comment


                  #58
                  Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post
                  length of contract has no bearing on your IR35 status.
                  But it has a bearing on if they'd bother pursuing you.

                  Comment


                    #59
                    Originally posted by rootsnall View Post
                    But it has a bearing on if they'd bother pursuing you.
                    Actually, there isn't much evidence of that. The historical MO at HMRC seems to be: we open an investigation (probably triggered by something completely unrelated), and we pursue it much further than you might expect, possibly w/ long silent periods. There is anecdotal evidence of this everywhere. I expect you may be right for something on the order of days or weeks, but anything on the order of months, it seems not, anecdotally (based on anecdotes from those dealing w/ IR35 at the sharp end, because most of this stuff never sees the light of day, obviously). Operating a deterrent often means spending more than might be recovered.

                    Comment


                      #60
                      So, just heard through the grapevine that agent has had a meeting with end client and proposed bringing an IR35 compliance company to review the contracts and working practices in order to assist the client in their determination of IR35 status for its contractors. (I know someone suggested that exact thing yesterday on here) and I presume some sort of insurance cover for the client

                      Then (the contracts may or may not need a tweek first but are qdos compliant now) the IR35 experts will then offer a contract review (paid for by the contractors that want it) to assure they are outside compliant

                      Good news in that they are looking at it rather than the blanket 'you're all inside' that I was expecting them to do, in a backside covering exercise

                      This has gained momentum here this week (I've nudged a few guys into sending the agent an email) and the penny is starting to drop with the client that they could lose the guys with hard to find skills who know the implications of what is coming, leaving the numpty 'if it happens it happens' too lazy/incompetent to move on types behind, if they don't cover it off

                      Always the chance the IR35 compliance company could advise the client to go 'all inside' for safety but there is some incentive for them to say 'outside' in that quite a bit of business for them to be had with individual reviews and compliance insurance for a few hundred contractors

                      Guess it comes down to 'are we really outside or not?', which is how it should be

                      Trouble is, if it comes back we're inside, then client determination might trump any evidence we have we are 'outside'

                      Either way I'll know what I'm doing based on the outcome
                      Last edited by jk3838; 27 June 2019, 17:51.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X