Assessing Your Worker Misclassification Exposure
In my last post, I discussed some of the potential risks of misclassifying workers as independent contractors (IC). If you are a company that hires independent contractors, now is a good time to do a self-audit of your worker classification and assess your worker misclassification exposure. A person is not an IC simply because the parties agree to that classification. The common law rules determine the status of each worker. A number of courts have issued some interesting decisions in cases involving worker misclassification claims. As a result, a multitude of tests have evolved for determining whether a worker is an employee or an IC. Because federal and state agencies apply different tests to determine who is an employee versus an IC, it is possible for a worker to be an employee under one test and an IC under another. What test does the IRS and Missouri use? Historically, the IRS and Missouri used what has become known as the “Twenty Fact...