Supply Chain Liability
Addresses a contractor's statutory liability for unpaid wages and taxes elsewhere in the chain.
Ce que c'est
Supply chain liability (ketenaansprakelijkheid) is a Dutch statutory regime, mainly in construction and temporary labour, under which a principal or contractor can be held liable for wages, payroll taxes and social premiums that a subcontractor or staffing agency lower in the chain fails to pay.
Pourquoi c'est important
A contractor can be left paying for another firm's defaults, sometimes years later. Contract clauses cannot remove the statutory liability, but they can manage it through warranties, withholding (g-rekening), certification and indemnities.
Comment l'appliquer
- Require subcontractors to be certified (e.g. SNA/NEN 4400) and properly registered.
- Use a blocked account (g-rekening) to reserve the wage-tax and premium portion.
- Take warranties and indemnities for unpaid wages and taxes down the chain.
- Keep a clear administration of hours, identities and payments to limit exposure.
Conseils de négociation
- • Principals should make certification and g-rekening use a condition of engaging a subcontractor.
- • Remember a contractual indemnity does not affect the statutory claim by the authorities or workers.
Pièges courants
- • Assuming a contract can exclude statutory chain liability. It cannot.
- • Engaging uncertified subcontractors and keeping poor records of who did the work.
Références juridiques
- BW 7:616a Wage chain liability (Act tackling sham arrangements) Droit néerlandais
- Invorderingswet 1990, art. 34-35 Tax and social-premium chain liability Droit néerlandais
Sauf mention contraire, les références renvoient au droit néerlandais (Burgerlijk Wetboek, le Code civil néerlandais) ; les instruments de l'UE tels que le RGPD s'appliquent dans toute l'UE. Il s'agit d'informations générales, pas de conseils juridiques. D'autres juridictions traitent ces concepts différemment. Vérifiez le texte en vigueur et votre situation avec un avocat qualifié.
Foire aux questions
Questions courantes sur cette clause.