K5K Limited (K5K) operated as an employment agency in the healthcare sector, supplying healthcare workers and nurses to clients. Following a compliance check on the business, which included an employment status review, HMRC raised tax determinations and National Insurance Contributions (NIC) decisions against K5K covering the tax years 2014-15 to 2016-17.
The determinations and decisions covered those individuals whom K5K contended were engaged through their individual PSCs, whilst HMRC’s view was that the individual workers were deemed employees of K5K by virtue of the Section 44 agency legislation (s44) and the equivalent NIC provisions.
K5K appealed on two grounds; firstly, whether the determinations and decisions issued were valid as they did not refer specifically to the legislation under which they had been raised (this being s44); secondly, whether s44 did apply on payments made by K5K to those agency workers who were engaged through a PSC.
In relation to the issue of the validity of the determinations and decisions, the Tribunal concluded that “there is no statutory requirement for the Relevant Decisions to state the charging provision”. It further found that, despite the contentions made, K5K understood that the issue under consideration centred around the agency legislation in light of the numerous correspondences between both parties in the preceding months, even though HMRC’s covering letter issued with the determinations and decisions did not specifically refer to s44.
We now turn to the principal issue of whether the payments made by K5K to those agency workers who were engaged through a PSC meant that they were deemed employees within s44.
As an overview, s44 applies if the following three conditions are met:
However, even if these three conditions are satisfied, the application of s44 is negated if:
K5K’s main contention was that the company had not contracted with the individual worker but with their respective limited companies. Fundamental to the outcome of this case was identifying the correct contracts in place to assist the Tribunal in securing their findings of fact.
Throughout the compliance review, HMRC attempted to obtain specific copies of the relevant contracts in place between K5K and the PSCs, and between K5K and its clients, which also resulted in two separate preliminary hearings being undertaken at the Tribunal in February and July 2021 to obtain those documents.
Numerous contracts have been provided but there is doubt over which versions were in place during the relevant periods and, of those examples provided, some have not been dated or signed and the contents found to be unclear.
The Tribunal concluded that the ‘workers contract’ was the contract in place with the following findings of fact:
The tribunal found that there was no contract in place between K5K and the individual PSCs but rather the contracts were between K5K and the individual worker. Accordingly, it was found that the conditions for s44 were satisfied, and the relevant workers were deemed employees of K5K.
The lesson to be learned from this case is to ensure that the contractual arrangements in place are with the correct entity and reflect the reality of the working arrangement in place.
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