CPR Plus, LLC v. Division of Employment Security

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 2019
DocketWD82146
StatusPublished

This text of CPR Plus, LLC v. Division of Employment Security (CPR Plus, LLC v. Division of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CPR Plus, LLC v. Division of Employment Security, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 CPR PLUS, LLC,   WD82146 Appellant,  OPINION FILED: v.   APRIL 16, 2019 DIVISION OF EMPLOYMENT  SECURITY,   Respondent.  

Appeal from Labor and Industrial Relations Commission

Before Special Division: Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Presiding Judge, Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judge, Kelly C. Broniec, Special Judge

CPR Plus, LLC (“CPR Plus”) appeals from three consolidated decisions by the Missouri

Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (“Commission”), which found that instructors

associated with CPR Plus are employees rather than independent contractors. On appeal, CPR

Plus contends the Commission erred in deciding affiliated instructors are employees of CPR Plus,

arguing there is no competent and substantial evidence in the record as a whole supporting this

determination. We affirm. Factual and Procedural History1

Stacy Ann Graff-Baehmann was in business twenty years as a sole proprietor before

creating CPR Plus in January 2015. CPR Plus is a business providing instructors to conduct

training classes in CPR, and other treatment related to emergency situations, to various clients. All

instructors are required to be certified to teach CPR Plus classes. CPR Plus is an American Heart

Association (AHA) training center which certifies CPR Plus to provide AHA training. The AHA

requires all AHA-certified instructors to be aligned with an AHA training center in the instructor’s

region. Each AHA training center has the responsibility of ensuring that all the AHA-certified

instructors aligned with that training center (“member instructors”) comply with the AHA

guidelines in providing CPR instruction. Member instructors are not required to provide

instruction services for the training center. In the case of CPR Plus, not all member instructors

who have been AHA-certified by CPR Plus contract with CPR Plus to provide services for CPR

Plus. All instructors at issue in the Commission’s investigation into employee versus independent

contractor status, however, contract (or contracted) with CPR Plus to provide services for CPR

Plus.2 Two thirds of CPR Plus’s business is offering classes; CPR Plus also sells first aid supplies.

A client or customer contacts CPR Plus requesting a CPR class be held on a specific date.

A certified instructor teaches the class, and then has participants fill out required AHA forms. The

forms are used to process cards showing the attendee successfully completed the CPR class. CPR

1 We include the Findings of Fact made by the Commission as we are to accept the Commission’s findings of fact as conclusive so long as they are ‘supported by competent and substantial evidence’ and in the absence of fraud. § 288.210. CPR Plus makes no claim of fraud, or that the Commission’s Findings of Fact are not supported by competent and substantial evidence; CPR Plus’s claim is that the Commission’s conclusion, that CPR Plus instructors are employees rather than independent contractors, is not supported by sufficient competent evidence in the record as a whole. 2 Unless specifically designated as “member instructor,” “instructor” herein references an individual contracting with CPR Plus to provide services for CPR Plus.

2 Plus, as a training center, is authorized by the AHA to collect the paperwork and process the cards

upon submission of the appropriate forms. CPR Plus distributes the cards to class attendees at a

later date.

CPR Plus began operating in Missouri on January 13, 2015. Graff-Baehmann operates

CPR Plus from her home located in Chesterfield, Missouri. Graff-Baehmann finds individuals

interested in being instructors by networking and visiting internet job sites. She typically looks

for individuals with a related background. Some of CPR Plus’s instructors are already certified to

teach the classes prior to working for CPR Plus. If they are not, CPR Plus offers the necessary

training and books. The instructors purchase the materials and books needed to the complete the

training to be certified. As an authorized training center, CPR Plus issues the necessary

certification to those individuals.

CPR Plus and instructors negotiate an hourly rate of pay depending on the expertise of the

individual. CPR Plus requires the instructor to sign a written agreement provided by CPR Plus.

CPR Plus places dates, times, and locations of classes on a software program called, “When to

Work.” Any instructor can sign up to teach a class, or they can ask CPR Plus to schedule them for

classes for a specific number of hours they desire to work. The instructors with the most

experience are designated as lead instructors.

All classes are conducted at the client location which might be a medical center, nursing

home, or educational facility. No services are provided at Graff-Baehmann’s home. The client

sometimes has the equipment necessary for the class; other times, CPR Plus provides the instructor

with access to a storage locker that houses equipment. The instructors are also allowed to provide

their own equipment. CPR Plus pays the instructors to clean equipment they use from CPR Plus

storage. They are paid an hourly rate for the amount of time they spend cleaning, disinfecting, and

3 returning the equipment to the storage locker. The instructors are reimbursed for parking fees, if

applicable, at various client locations where the classes are held.

CPR Plus supplies a spreadsheet for the instructors to fill out their hours worked. CPR

Plus issues paychecks on the fifteenth and last day of the month. No taxes are withheld and an

IRS form 1099 is given to instructors. CPR Plus does not provide insurance for instructors. The

CPR Plus/instructor contract states that instructors are required to provide automobile insurance

for the automobiles they use to travel to the class sites. CPR Plus provides no reimbursement for

gasoline or training materials needed to maintain a valid certification. The instructors are not

required to wear uniforms.

Each class requires a ratio of nine attendees per instructor to satisfy the AHA guidelines.

If fewer attendees than planned participate, an extra instructor is told to leave, and they are paid

only for the hours spent setting up the class. The time spent setting up the class is compensated;

the commute time is not compensated.

Graff-Baehmann testified that most instructors have jobs as paramedics, nurses, or other

health related jobs. There was no evidence before the Commission that CPR Plus instructors hold

themselves out to the public as CPR instructors. The instructors are not allowed to have helpers

when teaching CPR Plus classes. The instructors have a continuing relationship with CPR Plus,

as they work on a reoccurring basis depending on the number of classes scheduled. Instructors

decide to work as much or as little as they choose depending on the number of classes available.

The CPR Plus/instructor contract contains a non-compete provision. The instructor is

prohibited from any effort to obtain business with clients of CPR Plus for a two-year period. The

contract also contains a non-disclosure of trade secrets provision.

4 Graff-Baehmann periodically monitors instructors when they teach classes. The AHA

requires certain basic items be covered for AHA certification, but there are optional exercises CPR

Plus’s instructors also cover. CPR Plus clients have indicated they appreciate the extra content in

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CPR Plus, LLC v. Division of Employment Security, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cpr-plus-llc-v-division-of-employment-security-moctapp-2019.