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cheers Directive. - but more than one case can apply, and thus create a new precedant.. right?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Singh is a particular ECJ decision. It involved a married couple and the EU citizen was working.
I am not a lawyer, but my understanding is that the case can be used in the following way:
(1) If the decision has been overturned by a subsequent ECJ decision, then you can ignore the original case. This seems to happen rarely, if ever.
(2) If your specifics match those of the case, then you can directly rely on the case (but you have to make the connection by saying "in all these important ways we are in the exactly the same situation as Singh")
(3) If your case is similar to the case, but not exactly the same, you can argue that that it still applies or you can extract the argument from the case and use something similar for your situation. This may or may not work. There may be lots of other national case law which has done this before you.
The bigger the difference between your case and the original ECJ case, the more carefully you will need to justify why the original case applies to you.
norwegianish wrote: WorldBridge said that MY income will also count, even though I am the non-EEA spouse! Have any of you heard of that before..? It sounds great, but I'm just worried if no one else has come across this information before.
Two sole traders can make a partnership. No need for ltd co.nobodysperfect wrote:norwegianish wrote: WorldBridge said that MY income will also count, even though I am the non-EEA spouse! Have any of you heard of that before..? It sounds great, but I'm just worried if no one else has come across this information before.
If you are working as a business (partnership or a limited company)then your income should be counted however if you and your spouse are sole traders then I doubt.
no, but you only need to complete one tax return. you can then submit it for both... and the profits are 50/50... - taxes are equal liability...nobodysperfect wrote:Is one sole trader equally liable for other sole traders taxes? I don't think so.wiggsy wrote:
Two sole traders can make a partnership. No need for ltd co.
this means if i setup a business and do all the work, if my wife is a busines partner, we can use both my full tax allowance, and her tax allowance to reduce taxes etc...'Ordinary' business partnership
In a business partnership, you and your business partner (or partners) personally share responsibility for your business.
You can share all your business’ profits between the partners. Each partner pays tax on their share of the profits.
Tax avoidance - legal.nobodysperfect wrote:Thanks wiggsy. I have learnt something new today.
There is no "scheme" - it's relatively straightforward: We both work as sole-traders, but I am currently setting up a sole-tradership where we're both either equal partners, or where one of us is the "CEO", so to speak (I will find out more about this via the Norwegian authorities). Either way, our invoices will now have both our names & join bank account, etc.wiggsy wrote:Tax avoidance - legal.nobodysperfect wrote:Thanks wiggsy. I have learnt something new today.
Tax evasion - illegal.
Obviously, you need to be careful where each "scheme" falls... But this its nothing new, and no different to employing the wife a as secretary , except you don't need employers liability insurance
I was refering to tax reduction and that (as always) thin line between legal and illlegal. Not particularly your case.
There is no "scheme" - it's relatively straightforward: We both work as sole-traders, but I am currently setting up a sole-tradership where we're both either equal partners, or where one of us is the "CEO", so to speak (I will find out more about this via the Norwegian authorities). Either way, our invoices will now have both our names & join bank account, etc.
In any case, I suppose we won't know for sure until they do or don't grant us the permit, so fingers crossed :S
According to HMRC, self-employed people don't have to fill in any P85 or forms when they leave for less than 1 full tax year. If you move away permanently, you apply for non-residence, but that doesn't apply here. The EEA Family Permit route doesn't really mention "tax" or even "earnings" directly, so this shouldn't be mandatory (it can't hurt to show the new tax ID numbers, etc. even if we won't end up paying tax in Norway - we'll still be liable for UK tax for the whole year, Norway won't even accept tax for less than 6 months)norwegianish wrote:Thanks!! Didn't realise we had to notify them, makes sense though - d'oh! Will call them right away.wiggsy wrote:Theres a form with hmrc to complete to tell them he is leaving the country too.
Dont forget about it/call them etc