Sussex wrote:
In respect of why I take that view it’s because that’s where we are now. If an operator passes on a cash job then any liabilities passes to the driver, who if their income is less than the VAT threshold doesn’t charge VAT.
Same for account work where the operator doesn’t take a cut. This could possibly change should the courts decide on that.
If an operator takes a cut on an account job then VAT is due on the whole job, not just the cut.
Ah, I see. But not sure where the cash goes, whether it's an automated payment, or whether it's a weekly settle or percentage commission is really what it's all about, as is the case with the whole employment status thing.
It's more a contractual thing and who's contracting with who, and how that all ties in with the private hire operator regimes. As I recall it, the 1976 operator legislation applies to someone 'making provision' for a booking, and I think the issue is how that ties in with the contractual situation, and in turn how that interacts with VAT law.
Which I think is essentially what the article above is saying in the extract quoted below. And clearly Uber wants VAT across the whole trade.
I agree about independent HCDs, because obviously they're contracting directly with customers. But where the HC and mixed circuits figure in all of this, I haven't a scooby, particularly as no operator's licence is required to take HC pre-bookings, and presumably that matter won't be decided by the Sefton case.
And, of course, Scotland has a whole different legislative regime as regards the booking system (which, unlike England, also includes HC circuits.)
But, thinking of it in terms of contractual and economic substance rather than the minutiae of the operators and bookings legislation, at a rough guess I'd say if the London ruling is extended to the whole of England via Sefton, then no reason it shouldn't apply to HC circuits in England, and all circuits north of the border
Quote:
Uber told City A.M that it had completed the changes as required by law, but said that it “considers that the PHV regulation in the rest of England, Wales and Northern Ireland is substantially the same as London, so Uber applied these changes across the UK.”
This week’s hearing is a matter of contractual law expanding beyond London, and whether a licensed operator who accepts a booking is required to enter as principal into a contractual obligation with that passenger – meaning they must pay the 20 per cent levy on each journey.
If the court rules in favour of Uber, it could mean that all taxi bookings, for all operators around the country, would see an automatic hike in fares, placing additional regulatory burden on operators of all sizes.