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The Law of Work
Law of Work Archive

Employees, Independent Contractors, and Those In Between

by David Doorey May 4, 2010
written by David Doorey May 4, 2010

I’m talking about who is an “employee” in my employment law class this week.   It’s not always easy to figure out when we are looking at an employment relationship, and of course it matters greatly whether someone is an employee or not, because our rules and laws about employment only apply to the “employment” relationship.   In the common law, the issue often arises when a worker is dismissed by a company and sues for wrongful dismissal seeking damages for “reasonable notice”.  Historically, only “employees” were entitled to “reasonable notice” of termination–but that is no longer the case, as the Ontario Court of Appeal confirmed recently (see below).
So there are lots of cases in which workers who look in many ways like they are self-employed are nevertheless found to be employees by the courts.  That’s true even if the contract between the worker and the company expressly indicates that the the worker “is not an employee, and is an independent contractor”.   For example, see the Ontario Court of APpeal decision in Belton v. Liberty Insurance, where insurance agents were found to be employees notwithstanding that their contract included the following language:

“Status and Authority  For all purposes the Agent is an independent contractor and the Contract shall not create any employer/employee relationship between the Company and the Agent. …”

Courts have developed a variety of tests (“Control Test”, “Organization Test”) over the years to try and sort out where on the continuum between an obvious employee and an obvious independent contractor the line should be drawn to identify when there is an employment relationship.  These tests act as a proxy for the real question the judges are asking themselves, which is whether the person looks more like a self-employed entrepreneur or an employee.  If the person is an employee, then they are covered by all of the many entitlements and obligations that our law applies to the employment relationship.  If they are not an employee, then the law treats them as a commercial actor–like a business, on other words.
However, lately, the courts have recognized the “dependent contractor”, which is an animal that falls in between the “employee” and the “independent contractor”.  The “dependent contractor” is not a new idea, really.  It has long existed in labour relations statutes, which define “employees” as including “dependent contractors”.   That widens the scope of people who can join unions, since only “employees” (including dependent contractors) can join a union.  And the Ontario Court of Appeal recognized as far back as 1936 that there is an intermediate status between employee and independent contractor that should be given some legal recognition (Carter v. Bell & Sons [1936] O.R. 290.
That idea has found traction in recent Canadian decisions in which courts have ordered “reasonable notice” to be paid to “dependent contractors” whose contracts are terminated by the principal business they were doing work for.  There is an excellent discussion of this development in the recent Court of Appeal decision in McKee v. Reid Heritage Homes .   The Court said there (para. 30):

I conclude that an intermediate category exists, which consists, at least, of those non-employment work relationships that exhibit a certain minimum economic dependency, which may be demonstrated by complete or near-complete exclusivity.  Workers in this category are known as “dependent contractors” and they are owed reasonable notice upon termination.

The Court ruled that courts must deal with these issues as follows:

1.   Determine if the person is a contractor or an employee.
2.   If the person is a contractor, consider then if they are a “dependent contractor”.  If the worker works exclusively for one business, then they are clearly dependent, and are therefore entitled to “reasonable notice”, even though they are not “employees”.

It remains to be seen whether the courts will imply or recognize more of the common rights and obligations usually associated with the employment relationship in relationship to the “dependent contractor” status.

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David Doorey

Professor Doorey is a Full Professor of Work Law and Labour Relations at York University. He is Academic Director of Osgoode Hall Law School’s executive LLM Program in Labour and Employment Law and a Senior Research Associate at Harvard Law School’s Labor and Worklife Program. Professor Doorey is a graduate of Osgoode Hall Law School (LL.B., Ph.D), London School of Economics (LLM Labour Law), and the University of Toronto (B.A., M.I.R.).

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