Business Brief September 2010

01/09/2010
Posted in Business
01/09/2010 Level One

Contractors vs employees: Can you tell the difference?

A recent decision by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) should serve as a warning for any employer who employs independent contractors. In a case brought by the Tax Commissioner, a company that employs over 1000 contractors to provide interpretation and translation services is now potentially liable for superannuation guarantee payments to all of its contractors – now and retrospectively.

So what went wrong? The problem is that there is no conclusive definition of who or what an independent contractor is. The fact that an agreement might state that someone is a contractor is considered merely a ‘label’ by the court. Where the contractor primarily supplies their personal labour, the dividing line between an employee and a contractor is even harder to distinguish as the tools of the contractor’s trade is their knowledge and expertise. The case before the AAT, Associated Translators and Linguists Pty Limited and Commission of Taxation [2010] AATA 260 is a case in point.

Associated Translators and Linguists Pty Limited (ATL) provide interpretation and translation services in 90 different languages across the country. ATL has two full time interpreters and translators but the bulk of the service is managed through a ‘panel of consultants’. The panel of over 1000 interpreters and translators fulfil between 1300 and 1500 client assignments per month. The panel of consultants are predominantly individuals who contract back to ATL when a job comes up in their area of expertise that cannot be fulfilled by the full time staff.

In this case, the Tax Commissioner singled out one panel member from ATL’s pool, Mr Sani, who started contracting to the company in 2003. The Tax Office was of the view that Mr Sani was an employee of ATL not a contractor and issued ATL a superannuation guarantee assessment for a shortfall in superannuation guarantee payments to Mr Sani. ATL objected. The ATO held firm on its view.

The Superannuation Guarantee Assessment (SGA) Act requires that superannuation guarantee payments are made by the employer for employees (using the ordinary term for employee). Then, the Act goes one step further stating that “if a person works under a contract that is wholly or principally for the labour of the person, the person is an employee of the other party to the contract.”

The case before the AAT first had to determine if Mr Sani was an employee under its ordinary meaning. If not then the tribunal had to decide if Mr Sani was an employee under the extended definition of employee in the SGA Act. As it turned out, the case didn’t get that far with the AAT deciding that Mr Sani was in fact an employee of ATL under its ordinary meaning. Previously the courts have looked at a number of factors to determine if an independent contracting relationship exists:

Whether the work involves a particular profession or skill set Panel members also need to report back to ATL within 24 hours of the completion of the assignment. ATL argued that the code of conduct was consistent with the ethics for all interpreters and translators as part of their professional membership and that the administrative requirements are merely for efficiency. It was argued that these same arrangements would apply to a totally independent interpreter engaged for a one-off assignment.

Complaints were not dealt with by the panel member but by ATL. The Tax Commissioner argued that complaints affected ATL’s goodwill not the contractors. The Commissioner also noted that the panel member did not have the capacity to develop goodwill with the client or generate business. Panel members had to refer any assignments requested by clients back to ATL.

The payments and invoices were managed by ATL. In the event of a complaint or poor conduct, panel members may be subject to some sort of warning or sanction. Where payment was withheld, it was generally because the client had withheld payment. In effect, the panel member did not bear the risk of the assignment.

Panel members carry ATL business cards, or identification cards, with their name, confirmation that they are an ATL panel member, and their NAATI accreditation number. ATL pointed out that the identification cards are simply a way of confirming to the client that the interpreter is an ATL panel member and properly accredited. The Tax Commissioner saw that the panel members were represented as being part of ATL not independent to it. Commercially, this issue would pose a problem for many businesses if they followed the Commissioner’s logic as it would mean diluting the prominence of their own brand by exposing their client base to and developing the contractor’s personal profile.

ATL also noted that panel members were free to accept and generate business in their own right including from competitors. This fact however was disregarded by the tribunal.

ATL also noted that it does not place controls over how the panel member completes an assignment. However, the tribunal saw that employees also did not face these controls and the company’s capacity to review all of the assignments was limited.

Weighing up the case, the tribunal saw that ATLs panel members were not `only part and parcel of the business, they were the business. ATL has no capacity to deliver their services across the range of languages and geographic locations without them. Following this decision it would be hard to see how any business that relied predominantly on independent contractors to fulfil its services could establish the independence of those contractors.

But it was two other factors that tipped the scales in favour of the Tax

Commissioner:

Control – while panel members can decline an assignment, once they have accepted they are under fairly tight control by ATL. The view of the tribunal was that a contractor would generally not be expected to report back to the contracting organisation within 24 hours.

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