• Welcome to the LegalBeagles Consumer and Legal Forum.
    Please Register to get the most out of the forum. Registration is free and only needs a username and email address.
    REGISTER
    Please do not post your full name, reference numbers or any identifiable details on the forum.
  • If you need direct help with your employment issue you can contact us at admin@legalbeaglesgroup.com for further assistance. This will give you access to “off-forum” support on a one-to- one basis from an experienced employment law expert for which we would welcome that you make a donation to help towards their time spent assisting on your matter. You can do this by clicking on the donate button in the box below.

More freelancers might be taxed as employees after High Court ruling

Collapse
Loading...
This thread is closed.
X
X
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • More freelancers might be taxed as employees after High Court ruling

    An IT contractor has been hit with a £99,000 tax bill after the High Court ruled that he should be taxed as an employee of the company he undertook work for.

    Jon Bessell, 50% owner and sole director of Dragonfly Consulting, carried out work for motoring organisation AA for three years until 2003.

    Bessell is an IT systems tester and worked almost exclusively for AA in the three year period, providing his services as Dragonfly Consulting via an agency for IT contractors, DPP.

    A set of rules known as IR35 were introduced by Inland Revenue in 2000 to ensure that individuals were not using a corporate structure to avoid paying tax and national insurance as individual employees.

    Bessell was deemed by Inland Revenue to be an employee of the AA according to the IR35 rules.

    The Special Commissioner had looked at the fact that Bessell operated under the control of AA, had only one other client who provided only a little income and was "integrated into the AA's business, and who had a role similar to that of a professional employee".

    Bessell appealed to the High Court, arguing that the Commissioner had made legal errors in the assumptions made about the notional contract imagined between Bessell and the AA; that the intentions of both parties were not, as the Commissioner deemed them, "irrelevant", and that there exists a status between being in business and being an employee, and that is the state of being "a worker".

    The High Court found that the relationship was essentially that of an employee and employer. Mr Justice Henderson found that Bessell's work could not be substituted for another's; that the control, appraisal and assessment of his work undertaken by AA manager's was like that undertaken in relation to an employee; that the parties' view of what they wanted the status to be was indeed irrelevant; and that Bessell fell "on the employment side" of the dividing line between employee and non-employee.

    Mr Justice Henderson upheld the Special Commissioner's view that Bessell should pay the tax and national insurance contributions he would have been due to pay as an employee, which amount to £99,000.

    Bessell released a statement through contractors' body the Professional Contractors' Group (PCG) saying he was "devastated" by the ruling.

    "Not only does it affect my family and me, but all the other freelance professional consultants who are trying to earn an honest living," he said. "I was never an employee of the AA and I simply cannot understand how the High Court has reached its decision."

    PCG was formed specifically in reaction to the IR35 rules, which are named after the number code of the Inland Revenue press release that announced them and are now part of the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act.

    PCG managing director John Brazier said that the ruling had potentially significant implications.

    “This is a potentially massive blow to freelancers throughout the country," he said. "This case threatens the long-established defences against IR35; we will be looking at the judgment in very close detail to work out its full implications.”

    The Ruling

  • #2
    Re: More freelancers might be taxed as employees after High Court ruling

    If you use their equipment, desk, computer etc or are tied to their pre arranged times it's always been dodgy to class yourself as a self employed consultant

    In fact in case or personal injury where the employing firm tries to refute liability on the grounds that the 'employee' was/is self employed this is the 1st thing I would determine, did he/she use their customers equipment, was he she required to work specific hours set by the customer & if the answer was yes to any of them then that customer was liable

    Comment

    View our Terms and Conditions

    LegalBeagles Group uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience and to create a secure and effective website. By using this website, you are consenting to such use.To find out more and learn how to manage cookies please read our Cookie and Privacy Policy.

    If you would like to opt in, or out, of receiving news and marketing from LegalBeagles Group Ltd you can amend your settings at any time here.


    If you would like to cancel your registration please Contact Us. We will delete your user details on request, however, any previously posted user content will remain on the site with your username removed and 'Guest' inserted.

    Announcement

    Collapse

    Welcome to LegalBeagles


    Donate with PayPal button

    LegalBeagles is a free forum, founded in May 2007, providing legal guidance and support to consumers and SME's across a range of legal areas.

    See more
    See less

    Court Claim ?

    Guides and Letters
    Loading...



    Search and Compare fixed fee legal services and find a solicitor near you.

    Find a Law Firm


    Working...
    X