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RALC Consulting Ltd v The Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs [2019] UKFTT 0702

This month’s Chartered Accountants Tax Case Digest examines another First Tier Tribunal (FTT) case where the taxpayer won their appeal against a tax and national insurance assessment by successfully arguing that the intermediaries legislation (IR35) did not apply. The decision in this case centred on the lack of mutuality of obligation and control within the specific circumstances.

This is the fourth case in as many month’s where HMRC has lost an IR35 case. HMRC has stated its intention to appeal this decision. Next month, we will look at a case where HMRC was successful in the context of IR35.

These cases come at a time when the rules for extending the IR35 off-payroll working public sector rules to the private sector are due to take effect from April 2020.

Background

The FTT examined an appeal by RALC Consulting Limited (RALC) against a notice of determination of PAYE and Class 1 National Insurance Contributions (NICs) issued by HMRC. The total amount of income tax and NICs payable (not including interest) in dispute was £164,482 and £78,842 respectively.

RALC is a personal service company (PSC), of which the sole director and shareholder is Richard Alcock, an IT consultant. During the tax years 2010–2015, RALC contracted separately with Accenture (UK) Limited (Accenture), a management consultancy and professional services firm, and with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), (the end clients), to provide Mr Alcock’s services. Mr Alcock had previously been an employee of Accenture.

Those contractual arrangements were both four-party chains between Mr Alcock, RALC, an agency and the end clients. The agency for the Accenture contracts was Networkers Recruitment Services Limited (Networkers) and Capita Resourcing Limited (Capita) (the agencies) for the DWP contract. In both cases, there was a written contract between RALC and the agency and a contract between the agency and the end client.

The two issues to be decided by the Tribunal were whether:

Sections 34 and 36 of the Taxes Management Act (TMA) 1970 applied to the determinations. In order to fall within the extended time limit of six years, HMRC had the burden of demonstrating that there was a loss of income tax brought about carelessly by Mr Alcock, RALC or another person (his accountant) acting on his behalf.

RALC’s ground of appeal was that the intermediaries legislation does not apply because the hypothetical contracts with the end clients would have been contracts for services and Mr Alcock would have been self-employed. RALC submitted that the hypothetical contracts between Mr Alcock and the end clients would:

HMRC’s case was that the intermediaries legislation did apply to the engagements. In each of those years, RALC agreed to provide the services of Mr Alcock to work full time on long-term engagements, usually at the client site, as part of the client teams delivering substantial IT projects. HMRC submitted that the hypothetical contracts would have contained both mutuality of obligation and the requirement for personal service by Mr Alcock (with a highly fettered right of substitution). There would also have been a sufficient right of control by Accenture and DWP over Mr Alcock’s work (the how, what, where, and when thereof) and the other terms of the hypothetical contracts would not have been inconsistent with the contracts being of employment.

HMRC submit that the engagements were Mr Alcock’s primary source of income during the relevant tax years. Although RALC provided the services of Mr Alcock to other organisations, those engagements were ad hoc and short-term (consistent with the contractual restrictions on outside work) and did not fall within the intermediaries legislation. In contrast, Mr Alcock had substantial and regular engagements with Accenture and DWP, which would have been contracts of employment under hypothetical contracts, at the same time as he had occasional self-employed engagements.

In respect of the second issue of extended time limits, the appellant’s case was that neither Mr Alcock and RALC nor their accountant acted carelessly in engaging in the contracts. The operation of his business and any change of circumstances in relation to the intermediaries legislation were discussed in his annual review with his accountant. Therefore, RALC contended that the PAYE tax determinations were out of time because the extended time limits under Section 36 TMA did not apply.

HMRC’s case was that RALC acted carelessly by failing to seek professional advice on the specific and relevant contract and/or their accountant was careless in failing to undertake reviews of the relevant contracts to enable them to provide such advice.

The decision to submit the relevant tax returns without applying the intermediaries legislation was made without any proper consideration of the relevant contractual terms. Therefore, HMRC submitted that the determinations were competent and within the extended time limit available.

Decision

The Tribunal weighed up all the factors and having examined the contracts, facts and circumstances set out its summary conclusion that the hypothetical contracts would provide as follows:

The appellant’s appeal was therefore successful in the context of the intermediaries legislation as it was found that the hypothetical contracts were contracts for service, meaning he was self-employed. In light of this conclusion, the Tribunal did not need to consider the second issue.

The full judgment in this case is available from http://financeandtax.decisions.tribunals.gov.uk//judgmentfiles/j11432/TC07474.pdf