Career Development Center, Inc. v. Virginia Employment Commission

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 14, 2021
Docket0420212
StatusUnpublished

This text of Career Development Center, Inc. v. Virginia Employment Commission (Career Development Center, Inc. v. Virginia Employment Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Career Development Center, Inc. v. Virginia Employment Commission, (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and Fulton UNPUBLISHED

Argued by teleconference

CAREER DEVELOPMENT CENTER, INC. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0420-21-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES DECEMBER 14, 2021 VIRGINIA EMPLOYMENT COMMISSION

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND William R. Marchant, Judge

James H. Shoemaker, Jr. (Patten, Wornom, Hatten & Diamonstein, L.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Joshua E. Laws, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General; Donald D. Anderson, Deputy Attorney General; Heather Hays Lockerman, Senior Assistant Attorney General and Chief, on brief), for appellee.

Upon review of a ruling of the Virginia Employment Commission pursuant to Code

§ 60.2-500, the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond affirmed the agency’s determination that

claimant Christopher Walker was an employee of Career Development Center, Inc. (“CDC”) and

not an independent contractor. CDC now appeals the circuit court’s judgment to this Court.

I. BACKGROUND

CDC is a Virginia corporation operated by a local chapter of the United Steelworkers of

America labor union that represents workers at a Goodyear manufacturing complex in Danville,

Virginia. CDC exists to provide career development services to Goodyear’s hourly workers as a

benefit of their union affiliation. Among the services it provides, CDC offers classes in various

subjects geared toward the educational and vocational development of the union members. CDC

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. has historically offered classes in a wide range of subjects, including, for example, Microsoft Excel,

self-defense, American Sign Language, ballroom dancing, and welding.

Christopher Walker is a welding instructor. Walker initially taught welding classes at CDC

pursuant to an assignment of a contract between CDC and GreenWood, Inc. In April 2017, CDC

hired Walker directly. They entered into a written contract, titled “Career Development Center

Instruction Agreement,” which provided that Walker would teach welding and advanced welding

courses at CDC’s office from April to July 2017.

The written agreement set forth the rights and responsibilities of each party. It required

Walker to design his courses, to create a syllabus prior to the first class session, and to collect

evaluations and submit them to CDC at the end of the course. It required CDC to schedule the

classes, to determine the course participants/students, to supply the textbook(s)/instructional

material(s) to be used, to facilitate necessary communications with students, to provide evaluation

forms to students, and to provide Walker with a summary of evaluation results. The agreement also

provided that “[n]either party may assign any of its rights or obligations under this Agreement

without the prior written consent of the other party.” Regarding termination, the agreement

provided, “This agreement may be canceled by either party upon thirty (30) days written notice for

any reason or for no reason.” It also provided that CDC “may cancel this agreement upon seven (7)

days written notice to the Education Provider due to low enrollment, or Education Provider’s

misconduct or poor performance.” Finally, the agreement allowed Walker to choose whether he

would receive a lump sum for his work or earn an hourly wage. Walker elected to be paid at the

hourly rate. In addition to the hourly wage, CDC paid Walker $160 for designing the course and

reimbursed him $40 per day for his travelling expenses. The parties performed the contract, and

Walker’s welding courses concluded at the end of July 2017.

-2- The matter now before us began when Walker filed a claim for unemployment benefits with

the Virginia Employment Commission (“VEC”) in November 2017. In his claim for

unemployment benefits, Walker listed CDC as his most recent employer and stated that he had

worked as a welding instructor for CDC until July 2017. Upon investigation, VEC determined that

CDC had not reported Walker’s wages to VEC. A request to reconsider Walker’s eligibility for

unemployment compensation was referred to a Field Tax Representative who subsequently found

that Walker was an employee of CDC and that CDC had erroneously classified Walker as an

independent contractor. Consequently, the Field Tax Representative determined that CDC was

liable for past-due payroll taxes that CDC should have been paying for its employees who had

been misreported as independent contractors. CDC requested a hearing pursuant to Code

§ 60.2-500 to contest its liability before VEC.1

VEC held the requested hearing and subsequently issued an order setting forth its decision

on October 21, 2019. The order detailed VEC’s findings of fact on each of the twenty factors

comprising the twenty-factor test from IRS Revenue Ruling 87-41. See Code § 60.2-212(C).2

Based on its application of the twenty-factor test, VEC found that Walker was an employee

of CDC rather than an independent contractor. Specifically, VEC found that fourteen of the

twenty factors weighed in favor of an employee status, while four of the factors weighed in favor

1 Code § 60.2-500 provides that VEC “may, upon its own motion or upon application of an employing unit . . . make findings of fact, and on that basis, determine whether: . . . [s]ervices performed for or in connection with the business of an employing unit constitute employment for such employing unit[.]” Code § 60.2-500(A)(2). 2 The applicable version of Code § 60.2-212 was enacted in 2005. Code § 60.2-212 was amended effective July 1, 2020, and again effective July 1, 2021. See 2020 Va. Acts ch. 1261; 2021 Va. Acts ch. 448. Unless specifically stated otherwise, all subsequent references to Code § 60.2-212(C) are to the version that was in effect at the time of the October 21, 2019 VEC decision that is the subject of this appeal. -3- of an independent contractor status, and two of the factors were inconclusive. For example, VEC

found that Factor 3 (whether the worker’s services are integrated into the employer’s business

model) favored employment because CDC relied on Walker’s expertise and the expertise of

other instructors to accomplish its mission of offering career development courses to union

members. VEC found that Factor 4 (whether the worker renders services personally) also

favored employment because Walker taught the classes personally and, per the agreement,

Walker needed CDC’s written consent before he could assign the contract to someone else. In

addition, Factor 7 (whether the worker has set hours of work) favored employment because

Walker had no authority to alter the hours of his work as CDC had full control over the time and

day of the classes. Furthermore, VEC determined that Factor 13 (whether the employer pays for

business and/or travel expenses) favored employment because CDC paid Walker $160 to design

the course as well as $40 “to defray his travel expenses for each day he taught.” Finally, VEC

found that CDC could cancel the agreement “for instructor misconduct, substandard performance

or low enrollment” and that Walker could cancel the agreement without incurring any liability,

meaning that Factor 19 (whether the employer has a right to discharge the worker) and Factor 20

(whether the worker has a right to terminate the employment) both “strongly favor[ed]

employment.”

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