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- @165 CHAP 9
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS OR EMPLOYEES? │
- └─────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- As pointed out elsewhere in this program, there are some
- major tax and other advantages in hiring independent
- contractors rather than employees to work in your business.
- Not only do you effect considerable payroll tax savings (no
- FICA, FUTA or state unemployment tax), but there are fewer
- administrative headaches, since you don't have to withhold
- income and payroll taxes from payments to an independent
- contractor (generally), you don't have to provide workers'
- compensation coverage for them, you don't have to worry
- about the Age Discrimination in Employment Act and the
- Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (since both Acts
- apply only to employees, not independent contractors), and
- you don't have to cover them in your retirement plan or
- other employee fringe benefit plans.
-
- Too good to be true? Yes, if the people in question don't
- qualify to be treated as other than employees. Unfortunately,
- just because you agree with someone you hire that they
- will be an independent contractor does NOT make it so for
- tax and legal purposes. Thus, before you attempt to hire
- anyone to work for you as an independent contractor, you
- need to take a hard look at whether the IRS or a court of
- law would consider that person to be your employee, rather
- than an independent contractor. The IRS uses the following
- 20 factors to test and evaluate whether or not a person is
- an employee:
-
- . CONTROL. If a worker is required to comply with
- directions about when, where and how the job is to
- be done, he or she is usually an employee. (This
- is the key factor to consider.)
-
- . TRAINING. Where the owner trains a worker, it
- indicates that control is being exercised over the
- means by which results are to be accomplished. Ergo,
- the worker is an employee.
-
- . WHO MUST RENDER SERVICES? If the services must be
- rendered personally, it suggests that the employer
- controls both the means and the results of the work.
-
- . INTEGRATION. When the continued operation of a
- business depends on the rendition of certain services
- by the worker, those services are necessarily subject
- to a certain amount of control by the business.
-
- . HIRING, SUPERVISING & PAYING ASSISTANTS. Control is
- exercised if the company hires, supervises and pays
- assistants of the worker in question.
-
- . CONTINUING RELATIONSHIP. A continuing relationship
- between the worker and company is indicative that an
- employer-employee relationship has been created.
-
- . HOURS OF WORK. If set hours of work are established,
- it suggests control, and therefore is indicative
- that an employer-employee relationship exists.
-
- . FULL TIME REQUIREMENT. If the worker is required to
- devote full time to the one "client," it strongly
- indicates that the "client" is exercising control
- over the worker's time, and is thus his or her
- employer.
-
- . WORKING ON EMPLOYER'S PREMISES. Control is indicated
- if the work is performed on the company's premises.
-
- . ORDER OR SEQUENCE OF WORK IS SET. If the worker is
- not free to choose his or her own pattern of work,
- but must perform services in the order or sequence
- set by the company, it is indicative of control by
- the company.
-
- . ORAL OR WRITTEN REPORTS. A requirement that the
- worker must submit regular oral or written reports
- to the company suggests control by the company.
-
- . PAYMENT BY THE HOUR, WEEK, OR MONTH. Payment by
- the hour, week or month usually (but not always) is
- indicative of an employer-employee relationship.
-
- . PAYMENT OF BUSINESS/TRAVELING EXPENSES. Payment of
- the worker's business and/or traveling expenses gives
- the appearance that the worker is an employee.
-
- . FURNISHING OF TOOLS & MATERIALS. If the company
- furnishes significant tools, materials and other
- equipment, it strongly points to an employer-employee
- relationship.
-
- . SIGNIFICANT INVESTMENT. If the worker invests
- significantly in facilities that are not typically
- maintained by employees (such as an office rented at
- fair market value from an unrelated party) he or she
- will usually be considered to qualify as an independent
- contractor.
-
- . RISK OF PROFIT OR LOSS. If a worker can make either
- a profit or a loss (in addition to the profit or
- loss ordinarily realized by employees), it indicates
- independent contractor status; if he or she cannot,
- then the worker is an employee.
-
- . WORKING FOR MORE THAN ONE FIRM. If a worker performs
- significant services for a number of unrelated persons
- at the same time, he or she is an independent
- contractor, not an employee.
-
- . MAKING SERVICES AVAILABLE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC. A
- worker is considered to be an independent contractor
- if making his or her services available to the general
- public on a regular and consistent basis. (Just
- printing up some business cards won't do the trick,
- however, and will not fool any but the most
- dim-witted Revenue Agents.)
-
- . RIGHT TO DISCHARGE. The right of a company to
- discharge a worker indicates the worker is an
- employee.
-
- . RIGHT TO TERMINATE. A worker is an employee if he
- or she has the right to end the relationship with
- the company at any time he or she wishes without
- incurring any liability.
-
- Other factors that the courts may look at in deciding this
- issue include a determination of whether the kind of work
- the person does for you is of a kind normally done by
- employees (such as secretarial work, for example), and
- whether the worker is a licensed professional of any type
- (such as a lawyer, architect, etc.).
-
- Unless you are quite clear that the work relationship will
- not be considered that of employer-employee, be VERY careful
- about hiring someone as a so-called independent contractor.
- The consequences of being wrong can be severe, and few
- people ever suspect the enormous risks in using independent
- contractors until it is too late. A state or federal audit
- that disallows independent contractor status can mean
- personal financial disaster for you as a small business
- @IF121xx]owner, even though @NAME is incorporated.
- @IF120xx]owner of @NAME, a @ENTITY.
- @IF113xx]
- @IF113xx](Even though, as an LLC, your company has limited liability.)
-
- The IRS "business plan" has recently focused heavily on the
- independent contractor vs. employee issue, and the IRS is
- generating large amounts of revenue from this issue on tax
- audits. In recent audits, the average reclassification
- assessment was $68,000, according to one report, and some 90%
- of the IRS audits found misclassified independent contractors
- working for the firms that were audited.
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ HARD FACTS: During the period from 1988│
- │ to 1995, the Internal Revenue Service │
- │ performed 12,983 employment tax audits, │
- │ which resulted in re-classification of │
- │ some 527,000 workers as employees. Their│
- │ employers were assessed $830 million in │
- │ back taxes, penalties, and interest. │
- └─────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- Some of the things (none of them good) that can happen if
- your "independent contractor" is held to be an employee
- include the following:
-
- . You are liable for not only the employer payroll
- taxes you failed to pay, but also a portion of the
- employee taxes you failed to withhold (income taxes,
- FICA). If you treat someone as an independent
- contractor, you should report payments of $600 or
- more to that person on IRS Form 1099-MISC. If you
- do, and the IRS later determines that the person was
- really an employee, the back taxes you are liable
- for are limited to: (a) the employer payroll taxes,
- (b) 20% of the employee's FICA tax you failed to
- withhold, and (c) income tax withholding equal to
- only 1.5% of the wages you paid the person. But
- if you do NOT file a Form 1099-MISC and the person
- is re-classified as an employee by the IRS, you
- are liable for 40% of the employee's FICA tax and
- income tax withholding equal to 3% of the wages
- (twice as much as where you have filed the 1099-MISC).
- Furthermore, there is now a $100 penalty for failure
- to file the 1099-MISC and you will owe interest on
- the taxes due. You may also be assessed other
- penalties if you did not have a reasonable basis
- for treating the person as a non-employee and may
- be liable for up to 100% of the FICA and income tax
- which you failed to withhold.
-
- . If the person is hurt on the job and you have not
- provided workers' compensation coverage, you could
- be liable for extensive legal damages.
-
- . If your firm has a qualified retirement plan and you
- have not contributed to the plan on behalf of the
- person because he or she was not thought to be an
- employee at the time, the retirement plan could be
- disqualified for tax purposes for failing to cover
- the employee in question.
-
- Needless to say, if you try to hedge your bets by covering
- your "independent contractors" under workers' compensation
- and your qualified retirement plans, you are also virtually
- admitting that they are actually employees.
-
- Be aware that if you do take the precaution of filing the
- 1099-MISC form, you will be inviting an IRS investigation,
- if not a full-blown audit. The IRS has recently instituted
- a major "search and destroy mission" for following up on
- 1099-MISC filings to determine if the so-called "independent
- contractors" shown on such forms should in fact be considered
- employees.
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │BOTTOM LINE: Don't let yourself be stampeded into the │
- │independent contractor game by friends and business │
- │associates who tell you how simple and easy it is to │
- │avoid paying all those payroll taxes---unless you are │
- │planning to become a part of the subterranean economy. │
- └───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
-
- "SAFE HARBOR" EXEMPTION FOR CERTAIN COMPANIES TREATING
- WORKERS AS INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS SINCE 1977 OR EARLIER
- ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978 provides an exemption
- or "safe harbor" from reliance on the 20 common law factors
- that are ordinarily used to determine if a worker is to be
- treated as an employee or an independent contractor for tax
- purposes. This exemption, which is sort of a "grandfather
- clause," is available only if all the following conditions
- are met:
-
- . Since December 21, 1977, the hiring company has
- consistently treated all similar workers as
- independent contractors, not as employees; and
-
- . the hiring company has filed all required IRS
- forms relating to such workers (Form 1099-MISC,
- for example); and
-
- . the hiring company has a reasonable basis for
- treating the workers in question as independent
- contractors, because of the existence of any
- ONE of the following three factors:
-
- - a prior judicial precedent; or
- - reliance upon a prior IRS audit; or
- - long-standing industry practice of treating
- such workers as independent contractors.
-
- (CAUTION: In 1986, Congress amended the Section 530 safe
- harbor, eliminating its protections for the engineering and
- computer industries.)
-
- Obviously, this safe harbor exception will not be of much
- use to companies that did not begin business or begin
- hiring persons as independent contractors before December
- 21, 1977, but if your company has been around that long and
- meets the above requirements, this can be a very important
- shield against devastating liabilities that might be imposed
- on you as a result of an IRS audit, where the persons your
- firm treats as independent contractors do not qualify under
- the 20-factor test. If you meet the above "safe harbor"
- requirements, it will be crucial that you continue to timely
- file Forms 1099-MISC and be consistent in treating all such
- workers as independent contractors, in order to maintain
- your eligibility to utilize the Section 530 exemption.
-
-
- WAYS TO AVOID HAVING INDEPENDENT
- CONTRACTORS TREATED AS EMPLOYEES
- ────────────────────────────────
-
- There are a number of steps you may be able to take to make
- a stronger case for someone who does work for you being
- treated as an independent contractor. Obviously, not all
- of the following steps will necessarily be feasible in every
- case, and a number of these steps, if implemented, may
- require some significant changes in the way you do business.
- But if you can follow most of the suggestions below with
- regard to a given worker, you should at least improve your
- odds against having that worker reclassified as an employee.
-
-
- . Have a written agreement, signed by both parties,
- which makes it clear that the company doesn't have
- the right to control the methods or procedures for
- the worker to accomplish the work contracted for.
- Include language in the agreement that it is the
- worker's obligation to pay income and self-employment
- taxes on amounts earned, and that he or she will
- receive a 1099 reflecting amounts earned, if $600
- or more.
-
- . Try to avoid setting working hours by day or week.
- It would be acceptable to specify starting and
- completion dates for the work.
-
- . Make it clear that if additional workers are needed
- to help, the contractor will hire and pay them.
-
- . If tools are needed, the contractor should provide
- and select them for the job.
-
- . The arrangement should make it clear that the
- contractor is not limited to working exclusively
- for you, but is free to take on other work from
- other customers.
-
- . Compensation should be based on what work is
- performed rather than the time spent to do it.
- This may require careful estimates so that the
- worker is fairly paid, and not overpaid for the
- work done.
-
- . Avoid providing office space to the contractor on
- a regular basis.
-
- . Let the workers be responsible for their own
- training, if that is possible.
-
- . Each worker should be advised, in writing, to
- provide for their own liability, workers' compensation,
- health and disability insurance coverage.
-
- . Costs such as meals, transportation, and clothing
- should be built into the contract price of the job,
- rather than being billed directly to your account.
-
- . It should be clear in your agreement with the worker
- that he or she can't be fired, and can't quit. Their
- job is to fulfill a given work contract.
-
- . Don't give the worker other work to "fill in" during
- downtime. This may mean, of course, that you will
- have to pay the workers somewhat more for the work
- done than you otherwise would, if you wish to keep
- them happy.
-
- . Don't EVER pay bonuses to a person you treat as an
- independent contractor.
-
-
- @CODE: CA
- @CODE:NF
- Note that in California, the rules are even tougher. Under
- California law, any construction worker who does not hold a
- valid California contractor's license is treated as an
- employee of the general contractor. The state has started
- cross-checking, by computer, all 1099 forms filed by
- licensed contractors, and if the subcontractor on a 1099 is
- not a licensed contractor, the EDD will treat the general
- contractor as an employer and hold it liable for payroll
- and withholding taxes with regard to the unlicensed payee.
-
- NOTE ALSO: California's Franchise Tax Board has begun to
- require withholding on payments made to nonresident
- independent contractors for services performed in California,
- IN ALL INDUSTRIES. Withholding is required with regard to
- any nonresident payee for whom a Form FTB 1099 information
- return is given, and the tax is to be remitted on Forms
- FTB 591 and 592.
-
- @CODE:EN
-
-