Unreasonable employer - advice needed

It was very close to the gross amount and was very little deducted from it. I don't have to pay further tax or do anything else with it, do I?

Unless we're discussing a settlement of more than £30,000, and unless there's been a change in the law that's come into force (I know there was one being discussed, but if it's happened, I didn't notice), there should have been no deductions at all! As a settlement, this should have been tax free, the full gross amount - with no later liability to tax either.


Well done though @awkwardflower for handling this alone, sticking with it, and getting (nearly) all you're entitled to.


Karl Limpert
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HMRC - would this be negligence?

Apparently there are a good percentage of crimes the police do not investigate.
The media reported 60% the other day. Were the media making stuff up?

You may think your evidence is good. To an investigator it may be not so good.
Has word got out the past 30 years that you cannot cheat the VAT? HMRC have been taking action against people for decades - the word got out that you know about?

While I would not go as far as 'everyone would be doing it' it has been said for many years that individuals fiddle the VAT.
Buy an expensive service / item and pay cash in exchange for not paying VAT - the person fiddles and HMRC lose out. Notice many householders get done for that over the years?

OK
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Grab lorries

Dependant on your location, there may be farms with large amounts of unused land that might willing to let you use some for storage at a decent price.
Until the couincil hit them with an enforcement order...

Round here a grab lorry is around £260-£280. It costs £140 for them to tip at the local tip.

No point double handling- plus, if you are going to tip up and store at your yard (and screen, to produce different products), then that's another set of licenses. Clay is useful for pond linings, etc, but the circumstances have to align exactly- same company digging out virgin clay, whilst also constructing a slurry lagoon ten mile saway, for example. I dug out ten eight wheelers of virgin sandy topsoil recently- it all went straight to the tip two miles away. Crazy waste, but not economical for them to do anything else with it on that particular week.

Question is, how far is your local tip and how much does it cost to tip there? Then, can you run it there in your own lorry significantly cheaper than just getting a grab firm in?
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Closing an insolvent business and re-opening with same/similar name

Is your home address on any public site? Can you be tracked down?
If someone wants to contact you and you aren't in the rented business premises they generally get in touch with the director.
Nothing.. there is another director who's details are available,I'll guess they would just contact him ?
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Employment rights with change of cicumstances

I am buying an existing business. It operates only online and by telephone so we are planning to relocate it to the same premises as another of my businesses in order to save costs.

As it happens, the existing business is fairly local to me, being about 12 miles away.

There is one full time staff member, who I am happy to take on or not as the case may be. However, the existing business owner, whilst he is happy for us to relocate the business, thinks the employee may not want to travel to my premises, as it is not an easy journey on public transport from where they live.

Basically if the employee left would they have a claim for constructive dismissal or somesuch, and who would be responsible for paying it? Us or the previous owner? Would it be like one week for year of service, as they have been there for quite some time.

Very sound advice from Kulture above, the mere fact that you say you are 'happy to take her on' and the existing owner thinks 'she may not want to travel' tells me no one has considered her contract or looked at TUPE regulations get some proper legal advice ASAP it's a minefield of an area and you do not want to end up in an Employment Tribunal they are not pleasant.

Please act on Kulture's advice and save yourself a heap lot of grief
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Restrictive Covenants

It really is quite staggering how many opinions are available to observe that a restrictive covenant covering a mere 75 miles is too restrictive.


For a start, there is no information in the post about the industry or location (Pete appears to work in retail, but nothing more known). If a local hair salon tried to apply a 75 mile restriction on their stylists – purpose being to avoid customers following a stylist to a new salon – that would very probably be seen as excessively restrictive; we have no idea why 75 miles is the range here, and it could be perfectly reasonable, based on the nature of the work – protecting their market in the local region really is not excessive.


Furthermore, we don’t know what compensation is provided as part of this employment to support such a restrictive covenant – it matters, as it will be taken into account by a court.


75 miles is simply making sure cannot work within travelling distance of home.


HR bods - ever seen that be enforceable?


Seen perfectly legitimate covenants covering the whole country, and there was a case once (in the shipping industry, if memory serves), that covered the globe, and applied forever – so 12 months is not necessarily excessive either.


What’s puzzling about the post/circumstances is the timing of the terms.


If the MD was attempting to get sales guys to sign a similar contract when Pete joined, why didn’t the MD simply ensure it was included as part of the employment contract for Pete? Or did they include it somehow, as would seem sensible?

When I started my employment the MD was attempting to get sales guys to sign a 'Business Protection' document as a supplement to the employment contract. The employment contract is fairly basic in that it states you can't pinch their customers. The new document states you can't work for a competitor for 12 months and within 75 miles of your home address in any business that competes in any way.


No one signed the document and the UK Sales Manager advised everyone not to sign it. I've now received an 'exit of employment' document which contains these restrictions and asking me to sign. It also states that 'Your employment by us is our consideration for your agreement to the undertakings contained in this letter'. As mentioned this wasn't in place at the time of employment and has not been signed since.


Perhaps by issuing the “exit of employment” document, Pete is being reminded that he has been bound by a contractual term for the 10 months of employment, and is being invited to confirm he is still aware of this – a convenience for all parties.


The employment contract is fairly basic in that it states you can't pinch their customers. The new document states you can't work for a competitor for 12 months and within 75 miles of your home address in any business that competes in any way.



I'm reasonably assuming I'm not bound to sign this in any way, although interestingly my sales figures relevant to annual bonus were included in the same mail to me with the exit doc attached.


I’m reasonably assuming that, given Pete has felt the need to register & post a question, Pete doesn’t really know if these terms were incorporated into the employment contract.


Ergo, I’m in agreement that Pete doesn’t have to sign anything new now. But I will observe what the terms of employment/post-employment are may or may not alter an iota whether that document is signed.



Karl Limpert
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Opencart webp images

You can use cloudflare Pro which is about $20 a month and set image conversion to lossy or lossless webp without the need to install anything server side. You also get some other optimisation features as well as a pretty good web application firewall included.

There are plenty of 3rd party services that will optimise your images on the fly but I'm not sure how easy they'd be to integrate with your set-up?

I have installed modPagespeed on a server in the past and it did work quite well but was a bit of pig to optimise.
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Customer going under- deposit and balance payments?

Just a quick update;

After suggesting we would have to go down the legal route (was going to start with a Letter Before Action) our customer has agreed to let us take over all outstanding orders and collect payments, when they're due, directly from the end customer, which was is the best outcome I believe.

Thanks for all comments and advice.

Congratulations. You know it makes sense.
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How cam hiring an apprenticeship help your small business?

Tried to take on one last year but Landscaping wasn’t part of the “apprenticeship scheme” or something along they lines.....

Ended up taking on a young lad at 16 and paying him minimum wage. Turned out ok but would have preferred to take on 2/3 apprentices and pay then low and increase wages as they learnt.

Did exactly the same as you- same trade also.

Not a lot of difference between minimum wage at 16 and apprentice wages, plus we didn't have to worry about any of the paperwork bollocks.

The kid was great. He learned quickly, earnt me a lot of money and had pay rises from the second month. Sadly he had difficult family circumstances, and ended up moving to be back with his dad several counties away.

He also learnt more than he would have on any college course- but only because he showed an interest and I receiprocated that by taking the time to show him how to do things properly. Helped that he was a smart kid and to be honest I couldn't see him staying working for anyone long term- he was just like me when I was his age.

God I feel old now.
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