Worker Status Is No Way to Pad Your Bottom Line
April 1, 2003
William B. "Bill" deMeza- Tampa
Too often, employers attempt to reduce payroll costs (by
avoiding payroll withholdings and contributions required for employees) by
converting existing employees to independent contractor status or by having
contractors perform work traditionally performed by employees. Such cost-reduction efforts can be costly in
the long run, because erroneously characterizing a worker as an independent
contractor can have serious economic consequences for employers.
Are Your Workers Employees or Independent Contractors?
Although all definitions agree an “employee” is someone who
performs services for wages, it is difficult to distinguish an employee from
other workers who provide services for money.
One way is to look at the relationship between the worker and the
organization.
An employer-employee relationship exists when the employer
has the right to control and direct the worker as to the results to be
accomplished and in the details and means by which the results are to be
achieved. It is not necessary that the
employer actually direct or control the manner in which the work is performed;
it is sufficient if the employer has the right to exert such control.
In contrast, a typical independent contractor is a
consultant who provides specified services for agreed-upon compensation for a
limited period of time. While the
company may specify the number, type and quality of services to be performed,
and the results to be obtained, it has neither the right to control the manner
in which the services are performed nor how the results are achieved. Commonly, independent contractors are service
providers engaged in the pursuit of an independent trade or business (e.g., a
plumber).
A test often used to decide a worker’s status is the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) “twenty-factors” test. Among other things, it involves determining
whether
- the worker
must comply with company instructions
- the worker’s
services are integrated into company business (i.e., whether it is a routine, regular, necessary part of the
operation)
- the worker’s
services must be performed personally or he can hire substitutes or assistants
to do the work
- there is a
continuing (not simply short-term) relationship between the parties
- the worker
must work required hours or a set schedule
- the worker
must work exclusively or full-time for the company or can offer his services to
the general public
- the worker
works at the company’s offices using its tools and materials
- the worker
risks profit or loss
Companies can seek IRS advice about whether a worker is an
employee by filing Form SS‑8; however, the IRS ruling on that filing is not a
final decision and there is some evidence that the agency uses such filings as
invitations to audit the filer to determine if it has been properly classifying
workers.)
A worker and a company can agree on the worker’s status but,
sadly, the agreement may not be decisive.
The courts and agencies almost always respect the parties’
characterization of their relationship as employer-employee, but the
characterization of the relationship as company-independent contractor is always
subject to scrutiny.
Regardless what test is applied, the actual treatment of the
worker is determinative and any agreements inconsistent with actual practice
will be ignored. Further, the courts and
agencies using multifactor tests have said that no single factor or sum of
factors is decisive; for example, even if 14 of the IRS factors suggest
independent contractor status, the agency may conclude from the other six
factors that the worker is an employee.
Legal Obligations to Employees and Contractors
A company owes significantly different legal obligations to
employees than it owes to independent contractors. The differences are economically significant.
Employees are owed numerous and substantial legal
obligations. For example, a company must
withhold and pay over federal, state, local, FICA and other payroll taxes from
wages paid employees and, in addition, the company must match the FICA amount;
payroll taxes often are quite sizeable and, more importantly, failure to
withhold and pay over those sums can subject the employer to civil and criminal
liability. Employees participate in the
employer’s frequently expensive fringe benefit plans. A number of laws regulate the treatment of
employees, including the employment discrimination laws, the minimum
wage/overtime laws, and the National Labor Relations Act. Further, companies generally must provide
workers’ compensation insurance for employees.
In contrast, a company’s legal obligations to contractors
are dictated by an agreement and governed by the general law of contracts. Other than providing a safe workplace, and
ensuring that they are not sexually harassed, a company has essentially no
statutory obligations to its independent contractors.
Legal Consequences of Misclassifying Workers
The costs and legal responsibilities associated with
employees make it tempting to classify a worker as an independent
contractor. Be warned that there are
serious consequences if such a decision is challenged successfully: the company
will be liable to the workers for all wages, benefits and protections to which
employees are entitled and, possibly, damages and penalties for the improper
classification.
A federal appeals court ruling against Microsoft illustrates
the consequences of misclassifying workers as independent contractors. In Vizcaino
v. Microsoft Corp, the court held that free-lance workers had been
misclassified as independent contractors and, thus, were entitled to
retroactive fringe benefits equal to those paid to regular employees. Microsoft took steps to ensure that the
free-lancers were independent contractors: they were paid through the company’s
accounts receivable department (and were not on the payroll), they had signed
contracts stating they were independent contractors, and they had accepted
higher-than-normal compensation in exchange for expressly waiving fringe
benefits given to employees.
Nonetheless, the court was persuaded to find that the workers were
employees by the facts that the free-lancers worked alongside Microsoft’s
regular employees, often took direction from the same supervisors, and had very
few contacts with their temporary agencies (i.e., only to receive their
paychecks and W-2 forms). The court
noted that “Microsoft fully integrated the [free-lancers] into its workforce:
they often worked on teams along with regular employees, sharing the same
supervisors, performing identical functions, and working the same core
hours. Because Microsoft required that
they work on-site, they received admittance card keys, office equipment and
supplies from the company.”
Proper classification of workers is of continuing active
interest to various government agencies.
For example, during one recent seven-year period, the IRS conducted
nearly 13,000 audits to determine whether employers had properly classified
workers; the audits concluded with recommended assessments of more than $830
million in employment taxes and the reclassification of 527,000 workers as
employees. (There is real financial
incentive for the IRS: one study suggested that, over a seven-year period, the
agency could raise $334.8 billion by ensuring that employers properly classify
their workers.)
Minimizing Future Controversies
If you have decided that your workers are independent
contractors, there are various ways to minimize future controversies over the
decision.
First, require your independent contractors to be
incorporated and employed by their
corporation, with its own federal employer tax identification number. Your payments to that company for their
services, and your issuance of an IRS Form 1099 for those monies, will be
circumstantial evidence of independent contractor status.
Second, ensure that all workers performing similar tasks be
similarly classified, i.e., all persons doing the same job should either be
all
“employees” or all “independent contractors.”
Further, avoid unnecessarily switching an employee’s status to
“independent contractor”: the change may lead to government inquiries about the
validity of the change.
Finally, consider having contractors sign agreements. An effective, enforceable independent
contractor agreement should have various provisions, including statements that
- the parties
agree their relationship will be company-independent contractor
- the workers
must achieve certain results, but the methods used are outside the company’s
control
- the workers
are paid a fixed fee from the project (i.e., not on an hourly or daily basis)
- the company
will not provide fringe benefits (including insurance, vacation/sick time,
expense reimbursement, training, payment of licenses or permits, etc.)
- the workers
are entitled to delegate or subcontract the work and need not personally
perform the tasks and, if assistants are used, their supervision must be
provided by the independent contractor
- the workers
will provide all necessary tools, equipment and insurance (including workers’
compensation coverage)
- the workers
will set their daily schedules (even though the company may impose project
deadlines and insist that work on company premises occur only during certain
hours), and all risks of profit and loss are on the workers (i.e., the company
has no responsibility for any financial losses to the workers)
William B. deMeza is the leader of Holland & Knight’s
Employment, Labor and Benefits Group. For more information, call Bill, toll
free, at 1-888-688-8500.