Our website uses cookies to store information on your computer. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but parts of the site will not work as a result. Find out more about how we use cookies.
(Accept cookies and do not show this message again)

Shout99.com - Freelancers Outside IR35

To Print this page select Print from the File menu.
Please use your browser Back button to return to Shout99.com

Shout99

False self-employment: What is control?
by Susie Hughes at 09:48 25/07/14 (News on Business)
A recent tax tribunal case has shed some light on how the control test in the new ‘false self-employment’ legislation, which applies from April 2014, may be interpreted by the courts. This legislation amended is known as ‘the agencies tax legislation’.
The issue concerned security guards who were supplied by a business to guard construction sites. HM Revenue and Customs had already concluded that these individuals were not employees of the business and so argued that the agencies tax legislation applied. The question was whether there was supervision, direction or control as to the manner in which the services are provided (SDC).

The case fell under the rules pre-dating April 2014 and so it was essential for HMRC to prove there was SDC. The business argued that ‘client companies would have no involvement with how the licensed and specialist security guards performed their function’.

HMRC in fact had no supporting evidence and so the tribunal found in favour of the business, agreeing with the taxpayer’s argument. There was therefore effectively no formal judgment on a set of facts, but in concluding in favour of the taxpayer the tribunal issued some guidance on SDC.

The tribunal said that the 'most obvious situation in which the ‘control’ requirement will not be satisfied is where the particular service being rendered is one that is extraneous to the basic activity of the client' citing an example of a construction company bringing in a specialist provider to service its mechanical equipment.

As the construction company itself does not employ its own staff to service the equipment, staff hired in to do the specific servicing, which is outside the range of its normal activity, would not be subject to SDC.

Indicator
Trade body, the Association of Recruitment Consultancies (ARC) says that this decision provides a useful indicator of how HMRC and a tribunal may approach the issue of control.

Advertisement
It also highlights the flaws in the test itself in that each case will turn on the specific facts. Since the default position from April 2014 is that there is control by someone, thus bringing the legislation into play, it is for agencies to show that this is not the case.

Those that can show the hirer engages the workers for a specific task that the hirer could not normally perform itself will take some solace from this, but otherwise the agencies not paying by way of PAYE and NICs will be exposed, subject to the usual exceptions. Most cases of agency supply work do not relate to a specific project in which expertise is relied upon, and thus the new legislation will apply.

Some argue this is unfair, particularly on those that otherwise are self-employed and invest in their own business services.

Adrian Marlowe, chairman of ARC said: “This is certainly a point of concern as it seems very difficult for genuinely self-employed workers now to find work by supply through agencies, representing discrimination against self-employed workers, with a negative effect on flexibility of the workforce. We have raised this and other issues relating to this legislation with the Exchequer two months ago and are currently awaiting a reply.”

Background
From April 2014 agencies that have contracts with hirers are responsible for accounting for PAYE and NICs to HMRC for every agency worker supplied on the assumption that the hirer can exercise supervision, direction or control as to the manner in which the services are provided (SDC).

The liability arises as the agency worker is deemed to be an employee of the agency for tax purposes, even if the agency worker is in fact engaged by a third party. There are two exceptions to the rule, and this ruling relates to the exception that the agency can show that the agency worker was not working under the supervision, direction or control as to the manner of the provision of the services.

--
If you wish to comment on this article, please log in and use the Reply button below. Registering is free and easy - see 'Join Shout99'.
-
Susie Hughes © Shout99 2014


This article was printed from Shout99.com
Copyright 1999-2015 Shout99 Ltd
All Rights Reserved