McGillis v. Dept. of Economic Opportunity

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 1, 2017
Docket15-2758
StatusPublished

This text of McGillis v. Dept. of Economic Opportunity (McGillis v. Dept. of Economic Opportunity) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGillis v. Dept. of Economic Opportunity, (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed February 1, 2017. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D15-2758 Lower Tribunal No. 0026283468-02 ________________

Darrin E. McGillis, Appellant,

vs.

Department of Economic Opportunity; and Rasier LLC, d/b/a UBER, Appellees.

An Appeal from the Department of Economic Opportunity.

Darrin E. McGillis, in proper person.

Shutts & Bowen LLP, and Daniel E. Nordby (Tallahassee), and Andrew E. Schwartz (Fort Lauderdale), for appellee Department of Economic Opportunity; Littler Mendelson, P.C., and Courtney B. Wilson, for appellee Rasier, LLC.

Before LAGOA, SALTER, and LOGUE, JJ.

LOGUE, J. Darrin E. McGillis, a former Uber driver, appeals the decision of the Florida

Department of Economic Opportunity concluding that an Uber driver is not an

employee for the purpose of reemployment assistance. Because the parties’ contract

explicitly provides that an Uber driver is not an employee and the nature of the

parties’ relationship was consistent with this classification, we agree. We therefore

affirm the Department’s order denying McGillis’ claim for reemployment

assistance.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Uber is a technology platform that connects drivers with paying customers

seeking transportation services. McGillis served as an Uber driver until Uber

revoked his access to the technology based on alleged violations of Uber’s user

privacy policy. McGillis then filed a claim for reemployment assistance against

Rasier LLC, d/b/a Uber. 1 The threshold issue raised by McGillis’ claim was whether

he provided service to Uber as an employee entitled to reemployment assistance

under section 443.1216, Florida Statutes (2015), or whether he served Uber as an

independent contractor.

The Department of Revenue initially found that McGillis served as an Uber

employee. Uber contested this determination, and an evidentiary hearing was held

1 Rasier LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Uber Technologies, Inc., and holds a license to administer Uber Technologies’ software in Florida. For purposes of simplicity, we refer to both Uber Technologies and Rasier as “Uber.”

2 before the Department of Economic Opportunity. Following the hearing, a special

deputy recommended a reversal of the Department’s order. The special deputy

found McGillis had served Uber as an independent contractor and was therefore not

entitled to reemployment assistance. McGillis filed exceptions to the recommended

order. In a detailed final order, the executive director of the Department of

Economic Opportunity adopted the special deputy’s recommended order and

overruled McGillis’ exceptions. McGillis filed this timely appeal.

At the hearing before the Department, witnesses explained in detail how

Uber’s transportation network software works. The software consists of two

applications that are generally accessible on smartphones: a “user application,” used

by individuals seeking transportation services, and a “driver application,” used by

individuals willing to provide transportation services. 2 Drivers receive a percentage

of the fare charged to the passengers,3 and Uber processes payments to drivers

weekly by direct deposit.

Uber supplies additional insurance coverage for commercial operation of a

vehicle, but it does not provide other benefits such as medical insurance, vacation

2 If a prospective driver does not own a smartphone, Uber may provide one to the driver with the driver application installed, but the driver is responsible for paying a deposit and a weekly fee. 3 The fare is based on an algorithm developed by Uber. Variables include a minimum base fare, charges for mileage and time spent in transit, and a multiplier based on supply and demand in a particular location at a particular time.

3 pay, or retirement pay. At the end of each year, Uber sends each driver a “Form

1099”—an Internal Revenue Service form used to report payments to independent

contractors—setting out the amounts paid to the driver for the year.

A prospective Uber driver must agree to the terms and conditions of Uber’s

“Software Sublicense and Online Agreement.” This contract specifies that the driver

is an independent contractor and not an employee. It further explains that the driver,

as an independent contractor, is not entitled to unemployment benefits:

This Agreement is between two co-equal, independent business enterprises that are separately owned and operated. The Parties intend this Agreement to create the relationship of principal and independent contractor and not that of employer and employee. The Parties are not employees, agents, joint venturers or partners of each other for any purpose. As an independent contractor, you recognize that you are not entitled to unemployment benefits following termination of the Parties’ relationship.

The contract further specifies that each trip request accepted is considered a

“separate contractual engagement,” that drivers are “entitled to accept, reject, and

select” requests as they see fit, and that drivers have no obligation to accept any

request.4 Drivers are free to set their own schedules and to determine what locations

they will serve.

4 Uber may deactivate the driver’s account if the driver’s acceptance rate is persistently below a specified level or after 180 consecutive days of inactivity. But even if deactivated, the driver may request reactivation of the account and return to using the driver application.

4 A prospective driver is subject to a background check and must provide Uber

with information about the driver’s vehicle, registration, license, and insurance.

Drivers are responsible for supplying, maintaining, and fueling their own vehicles.

Uber does not require drivers to display Uber signage in their vehicles, nor does

Uber control the drivers’ attire. Drivers are free to switch between using Uber’s

driver application and the application of a competitor, such as Lyft.

Uber does not directly evaluate or supervise its drivers. Instead, passengers

rate their drivers on a scale ranging from one to five stars. If a driver’s overall rating

falls below the level set by the region’s general manager and no improvement is

shown, Uber may deactivate the driver’s account. 5

During his time as an Uber driver, McGillis experimented with when and

where to use the driver application. He spent his own time and money investigating

the most profitable times and locations. Uber did not reimburse him for any costs

related to this market research, such as the cost of gas. And although McGillis left

his previous job to use Uber’s driver application, Uber did not require him to do so.

Nor did Uber prohibit him from receiving ride requests from Lyft’s driver

application. In fact, McGillis switched between using Uber and Lyft at his discretion.

5 Drivers also rate passengers on a similar scale. This score can affect a passenger’s average rating, which drivers can view before accepting or rejecting a trip request.

5 Based on the testimony presented at the hearing, the Department’s executive

director concluded that Uber drivers were not employees. It noted that the drivers

exercise a level of free agency and control over their work different from that of the

traditional master-and-servant model indicative of an employer-employee

relationship:

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