Defining the Employer-Employee Relationship
by Sharon Funcheon Murphy and Lewis Wagner, LLP
Two recent cases help to
explain the way civil courts are looking at the existence (or
nonexistence) of employment relationships when work place accidents
occur. Unfortunately, the holdings of these cases put in doubt the
predictability of the law in this area.
1.
Temporary Employees
-
Who
is their Employer?
Since the amendments to the Act in 2001,
there has been statutory language in the Workers’ Compensation Act which
defines the relationship between an employee working for a temporary
agency while assigned to the workplace of a company. That language is
present in the definition of Employer found in Indiana Code §22-3-6-1
(a) as follows:
(a) “Employer” includes.
. .
Both the lessor and a lessee of
employees shall each be considered joint employers of the employees
provided by the lessor to the lessee for purposed of IC 22-3-2-6’ and
IC 22-3-3-31.
Despite this statutory language, the
court in Wishard v. Kerr 846 N.E.2d 1083 (Ind.Ct.App. 2006)
seemed to analyze the case solely on the criteria by which an individual
is determined to be an employee of one or the other company.
Ms. Kerr was a registered
nurse assigned to work at Wishard through a temporary staffing agreement
with CareStaff, Inc. She slipped and fell on a slick floor in the
hospital as she departed at the end of her shift. She collected workers’
compensation benefits as against the staffing agency and then sued
Wishard civilly. A motion to dismiss the suit based on the worker’s
compensation bar was denied, and the denial was upheld by the court on
appeal. Evidently there was nothing in the contract between the two
companies that stated Ms. Kerr would be a “dual employee” and there was
not sufficient other information presented to support such a finding.
However, it would seem under the language of the WCA noted above, such a
“weighing of the evidence” was unnecessary, and the bar to civil
liability should have been upheld.
11C
22-3-2-6 limits an employee’s remedy for any personal injury or death
by accident to the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act.
21C
22-3-3-31 states that when an employee works for two employers at the
same time, the employers are liable for benefits in proportion to
their liability for wages;
however, the employers are
allowed to make any alternative arrangement between themselves a long as
it is reasonable.
2.
Independent Contractors
- Who is their
Employer?
While it may seem counter
intuitive to talk about the “employer” of an “independent contractor,”
that sort of question often plagues litigants before the Board. Since
the Workers’ Compensation system was designed to attempt to establish a
remedy covering a minimum amount of benefits in all cases of work
related injuries (i.e. lost wages, medical expenses, and PPI), the
Hearing Members are reluctant to deny compensation to any worker without
clear statutory authority to do so.
In like manner, civil
courts are likely to look closely at the relationship of the individuals
involved in a workplace accident to determine if in fact an employment
relationship exists limiting the injured worker to benefits under the
Workers’ Compensation Act. One such example is the case of Nickels v.
Bryant, 839 N.E.2d 1211 (Ind.Ct.App. 2006). In that case, the
infonnal arrangement between two truck drivers to work as a team was
found to establish an employer-employee relationship between them.
Bryant worked as an
independent contractor for New Prime, Inc. (NPI) and Nickels was an
employee of NPI. Bryant agreed to take Nickels as a 2’”’ seat driver to
train her on his runs. Though Nickels was an employee of NPI, the Court
found that she was also an employee of Bryant for the purpose of the
exclusivity doctrine of the Workers’ Compensation Act. Therefore, when
Bryant ran over Nickels’ foot causing her injury, Nickels’ civil suit
for damages against Bryant was dismissed and she was directed that her
only remedy was workers’ compensation benefits. The court used the
following seven factors to determine if an employment relationship
existed between the two drivers:
-
The right to discharge
-
The mode of payment
-
Who supplies the tools
or equipment
-
Whether the parties
believe there is an employer-employee relationship
-
The control over the
means used and the results reached
-
The length of
employment, and
-
The establishment of
work boundaries.
Clearly this sort of
“weighing of the evidence” is appropriate in a situation such as this
when there is no statutory basis to establish whether an employment
relationship exists. The problem faced by litigants, however, is the
difficulty in predicting the outcome of such a “weighing of the
evidence” review by the courts. Furthermore, it would seem important in
almost every instance for potential “employers” to seek the counsel of
those well versed in workers’ compensation law as well as employment law
in order to educate the court as to the ramifications of any potential
decision that is rendered while there is still time to have an impact on
that decision. |