MEMORANDUM
Now before, the Court is the motion of defendant World Book Company, Inc., for summary judgment. Upon consideration of the motion and the response of plaintiff Arlene Holtzman and the supporting briefs, as well as the documents and evidence submitted by the parties, I conclude as a matter of law that plaintiff was not an employee of World Book within the meaning of Title VII, and therefore cannot proceed with her claim under that statute. Accordingly, motion of defendant will be granted.
Background
Arlene Holtzman began working for World Book as a part-time sales representative in 1983. Her job involved selling
The magistrate judge to whom this case was assigned for discovery purposes stayed discovery on all issues but the threshold issue of whether Holtzman was an employee within the terms of Title VII. Defendant argues that plaintiff became an independent contractor in 1995, while plaintiff contends that she remained an employee through 1998. Thus, the question on the motion is what plaintiffs status was at the time of the alleged adverse employment action in 1998. Limited discovery on that issue is now complete, the parties have fully briefed it, and it is now ripe for consideration.
Summary Judgment Standard
Under Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law,” then a motion for summary judgment must be granted. The proper inquiry on a motion for summary judgment is “whether the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
The moving party “bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Analysis
Title VII protects workers who are “employees,” but does not protect independent contractors.
See Spirides v. Reinhardt,
(1) the skill required;
(2) source of the instrumentalities and tools;
(3) location of the work;
(4) duration of the relationship between the parties;
(5) whether the hiring party has the right to assign additional projects to the hired party;
(6) the extent of the hired party’s discretion over when and how long to work;
(7) the method of payment;
(8) the hired party’s role in hiring and paying assistants;
(9) whether the work is part of the regular business of the hiring party;
(10) whether the hiring party is in business;
(11) the provision of employee benefits; and
(12) the tax treatment of the hired party-
Darden,
Whether a worker is an “employee” is a question of law to be determined by the court in the absence of disputed material underlying facts.
See Cox v. Master Lock Co.,
The application of the
Darden
factors to this case requires some context. Prior to 1995, plaintiff was a part-time sales representative and then a district manager for World Book. (Deposition of Arlene Holtz-man, Dec. 28, 2000, at 9.) (“Holtzman Deposition”). She was responsible for selling World Book products to parents, schools and libraries.
(Id.)
In 1995, World Book decided to separate the parent
In 1995, when Holtzman was notified of the changes taking place in her division, she sought out an opportunity to work with Rosemarie Lee, formerly a branch manager. (Holtzman Deposition, at 36-37.) As part of her effort to become an RSLD for World Book under the new arrangement, Lee had formed an “S” corporation called Leer Services, Inc., entered into an independent contractor agreement with World Book, and gathered a ■ sales force comprised largely of former World Book sales representatives. (Lee Deposition, at 100-01.) Holtzman was one of those representatives or “specialists,” and she signed a contract with Lee’s corporation, Leer Services, to sell World Book products to schools and libraries, but not parents. (Holtzman Deposition, 41-42; Lee Deposition, at 109.) Holtzman eventually became a territory coordinator, a position slightly above sales representative but still reporting to Lee, an RSLD.
The core of this dispute is what Holtz-man’s status was under the arrangement with Leer Services. Did she remain, de facto, an employee of World Book? Or was she an independent contractor with World Book or Leer Services?
I look first to the written agreements among the players in this case. World Book’s standard contract with RSLDs like Lee provided expressly and unequivocally that the RSLDs were independent contractors. (Plaintiffs Exh. 4, Independent School/Library Sales Representative Agreement, at ¶ 14.) 2 Lee herself testified at her deposition that it was her understanding that under the new arrangement, she would no longer be a World Book employee, and instead became an independent contractor. (Lee Deposition, at 80, 278.) Furthermore, she testified that under the arrangement with World Book, her sales force would be comprised of independent contractors, not employees. (Id. at 105,107.)
As part of Lee’s sales force, then, Holtz-man was one of a number of independent contractors with Leer Services. Just as with the agreement between Leer Services and World Book, the contract between Leers Services and the members of its sales force, including Holtzman, expressly provides that the sales representative was an independent contractor, not of an employee. That sale representative agreement contains the following provision:
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS: Nothing contained here shall be construed to create the relationship of employer and employee between theCompany and the Specialist and/or the Specialist and World Book, it being understood that the specialist is an independent contractor ...
(Defendant’s Exh. E, Independent School/Library Specialist Agreement, at ¶ 6.) Under the clear terms of this agreement — which was between Holtzman and Leer Services, not World Book- — the parties’ unmistakable intent was that Holtz-man would be an independent contractor, not an employee. While the parties have not supplied the Court with a copy of the actual, signed agreement between Holtz-man and Leer Services, 3 Holtzman herself produced an unsigned version of the agreement between Leer Services and its sales representatives and recalled signing such an agreement at her deposition. (Holtz-man Deposition, at 41-42.) Holtzman also recalled at her deposition being told that she would be classified as an independent contractor. (Id. at 45.) Furthermore, Lee testified that Holtzman must have signed the agreement in order to work for her, and that Holtzman was an independent contractor. (Lee Deposition, 278.) Thus, there is no material dispute as to whether Holtzman signed the agreement. Furthermore, I conclude that the agreement clearly indicates Holtzman was an independent contractor. The agreement, while not dis-positive of plaintiffs employment status, is strong evidence that she was an independent contractor. 4
Thus, on the face of the contracts among World Book, Rosemarie Lee and her corporation Leer Services, and Holtzman, it appears that at best, Holtzman was an independent contractor to an independent contractor to World Book. Though she was selling World Book products, her contractual relationship was with Leer Services. Under the clear terms of the contracts, then, Holtzman was not a World Book employee.
An examination of the factors identified in
Darden
further confirms what was made explicit in Holtzman’s agreement with Leer Services. Plaintiff relied on no instrumentalities or tools provided by
I conclude that these factors far outweigh those indicating employee status. Plaintiffs long relationship with World Book is not dispositive, especially in light of the fact that after 1996, her contractual relationship was with Leer Services, not World Book. The fact that her commission checks were processed by World Book does not mean that World Book was her employer; deposition testimony demonstrates that this was merely a payroll service offered as an option by World Book to its independently contracted RSLDs, and plaintiff offers nothing to rebut that testimony. (Lee Deposition, at 85.) Nor does the fact that her work was part of the regular business of World Book outweigh the other factors. 6
Plaintiff may well have subjectively believed that she remained a World Book employee even after the 1995 structural changes took place. However, I conclude a reasonable jury could only find that the objective, legal reality of her status under the new regime was that of an independent contractor, not an employee. 7
Plaintiff argues that even if she was not an employee, she was denied an opportunity to become an employee with
Conclusion
My review of the evidence in light of
Darden
clearly demonstrates that Holtz-man was an independent contractor and not an employee of World Book when her relationship with World Book and Leer Services was terminated in 1998. Accordingly, I conclude that defendant is entitled to summary judgment on plaintiffs Title VII claim because no reasonable jury could conclude that plaintiff was an employee as defined by Title VII. Because plaintiffs § 1981 claim for workplace discrimination is analyzed under the same framework as Title VII, her § 1981 claim suffers the same fate.
See Stewart v. Rutgers, The State University,
An appropriate order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, on this 13th day of August, 2001, upon consideration of the motion of defendant The World Book Company, Inc., for summary judgment (Document No. 15) and the response of plaintiff Arlene Holtz-man (Document No. 19), and having considered the pleadings and evidence on the record pursuant to Rule 56(c) of the Fed
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiffs Third Cause of Action under the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act is DISMISSED without prejudice to plaintiffs right to present the claims contained therein to the courts of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
This is a final Order.
Notes
. The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit addressed the different kinds of tests used to determining employee status in
E.E.O.C. v. Zippo Mfg. Co.,
. The contract provides: “Representative shall be an independent contractor in the performance of this Agreement and is not and shall not be deemed to be the legal representative, partner or agent of the Company for any purpose whatsoever.” (Plaintiff’s Exh. 4, Independent School/Library Sales Representative Agreement, at ¶ 14.).
. The Court finds it odd that no party has produced a copy of the agreement signed by plaintiff, however, because there is no dispute as to whether the agreement was signed and what the terms of the agreement were, I do not dwell on its mysterious absence.
. A number of courts have relied on contract language in concluding that an individual was not an employee and therefore could not proceed against a defendant under Title VII.
See Schwieger v. Farm Bureau Ins. Co. of Nebraska,
. Plaintiff was provided IRS 1099 forms by Leer Services, indicating that she was not an employee of Leer Services or World Book. Since 1996, plaintiff has claimed to be self-employed on her tax return forms, attaching Self Employment Tax Schedule SE forms to the 1040 forms she filed each year. (Defendant's Exh. J, Plaintiff's Tax Records.) Prior to 1996, she had not claimed to be self-employed. This further supports my conclusion that plaintiff was indeed not an employee of World Book or Leer Services, but was an independent contractor.
. Plaintiff relies heavily on her assertion that "nothing changed” between the way things operated between plaintiff and World Book before and after the structural changes in late 1995. She contends that the 1995 decision of World Book to restructure its school/library/parent sales force had little practical impact on plaintiff’s relationship with World Book; the sales force was essentially structured the same as before, she still sold World Book products to schools and libraries, still received the same communications from World Book, and the pay was the same. Assuming plaintiff’s representations are accurate, the question remains whether the relationship of plaintiff to defendant as it stands now is that of an independent contractor or an employee under the Darden factors. The "nothing changed” argument rests on the assumption that plaintiff was unquestionably an employee within the meaning of Title VII pri- or to the structural changes in late 1995, but I have drawn no conclusions about plaintiff's status prior to 1995, and it is not clear whether she was an independent contractor or an employee under the pre-1995 regime. Thus, comparisons to how things were before 1995 are not helpful, because the focus of this case is on what plaintiff’s status was after 1995.
. Plaintiff devotes an inordinate amount of pages in its brief to a section entitled "An Initial Word on Credibility,” in which plaintiff argues that defendant and its representatives have failed to offer a cogent explanation for the decision to alter the sales structure of
Plaintiff also argues that World Book "unilaterally” transformed her into an independent contractor. The thrust of this argument is that any change in plaintiff's status could not have been valid because World Book did not seek plaintiff's input. Even if it were true that an employer cannot unilaterally alter an individual’s status from employee to independent contractor — and I am not certain that is true — here, there is evidence that plaintiff voluntarily signed a document under which she agreed to become an independent contractor. Thus, plaintiff's coercion argument is without a basis in the record.
. I note that at least one judge of this district has held that Title VII and the PHRA, while containing different textual definitions of "employee,” are to be interpreted consistently as to whether an individual is an employee, and thus if a person is not an employee under Title VII, she may not be an employee under PHRA.
See Hudson v. Radnor Valley Country Club,
No. 95-4777,
