In resolving this appeal, we must determine whether Mary M. Mares, a grocery bagger at the main commissary at Fort Bliss, Texas, was an employee of the Army for purposes of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq. In granting summary judgment to the Secretary of the Army, the district court concluded that Mares was not an Army employee. Agreeing, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Mares’s employment as a grocery bagger was terminated by Mauro Galvan, the chief bagger, following a verbal confrontation. She challenged this discharge before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) which declined to proceed and issued the statutory right-to-sue letter. Mares then filed this action, alleging discrimination because of her race (Oriental), *1067 national origin (Chinese), and sex, a claim not presented to the EEOC. Secretary Marsh successfully moved for summary judgment, asserting that Mares was not an employee of the Army.
The protections of Title VII extend to civilian employees of the Army. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(a);
Gonzales v. Department of Army,
Three tests have been devised by the courts to unravel the employee/independent contractor conundrum. The first is the traditional common law test of agency, turning on the employer’s right to control. This test was replaced in Fair Labor Standards Act cases by an “ ‘economic realities’ test under which persons are considered employees if they, ‘as a matter of economic reality, are dependent upon the business to which they render service.’ ”
Hickey v. Arkla Industries, Inc.,
In deciding whether Mares was an employee of the Army, the district court joined the majority of the courts that have addressed this issue and applied the hybrid
Spirides
test.
2
We agree with this applica
*1068
tion of
Spirides
which we find in accord with our precedent.
McClure v. Salvation Army,
In
McClure,
we observed that employee status must turn on the facts of each case. In our examination of the various indicia of employment, we focused on the alleged employer’s right of control. We found that McClure “was selected, employed, controlled, trained, and paid by the [defendant]. When the existence of such factors is shown, the individual falls within the definition of ‘employee.’ ”
In addition, we are persuaded that a test .which focuses on the extent of control exercised by the employer, against the backdrop of the other factors, is particularly suited for claims by alleged federal employees. A test which looks primarily to the extent of the government’s control of the putative employee is consistent with the test devised to determine employee status under the Federal Tort Claims Act.
United States v. Orleans,
ANALYSIS
The evidence before the district court is undisputed. That evidence fully describes the grocery bagging operation at the Fort Bliss commissary. When a vacancy occurred in the ranks of the baggers, the next applicant on the waiting list was “hired” by the head bagger. The head bagger, elected by vote of all of the baggers, hired, supervised, fired, and otherwise maintained complete control of the bagger coterie. No Army representative had any role in the hiring, firing, or supervision of the baggers. The Army’s involvement extended only to reserving the right to veto the head bagger selection and to the issuance of regulations affecting dress and conduct within the immediate area of the commissary.
In addition to the absence of control, other factors demonstrate that the baggers were not Army employees. The baggers received no wages from any source; their exclusive compensation came from tips. Baggers received no annual or medical leave, insurance or retirement benefits, or any other thing of value from the Army. Since the baggers were not paid, the Army did not report their income or withhold and report W/H or FICA taxes. The work arrangements and duty schedules were subject to the exclusive authority of the *1069 head bagger, a person selected by the baggers themselves, without any Army input whatever.
Mares points to the clothing and conduct regulations by the Army, and the fact that the Army enforces the Army enforcement equal opportunity policy, and that the Commissary Officer reviewed her discharge as proof that the baggers were Army employees. We do not agree. The mere fact that baggers must comply with certain Army regulations is not enough to make them employees of the Army.
Cf. United States v. Orleans,
The judgment of the district court granting summary judgment to John 0. Marsh, Secretary of the Army, is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The strict common law "agency” test generally has not been applied to federal social welfare and antidiscrimination legislation, since it is considered inconsistent with the remedial purposes behind such legislation.
Bartels v. Birmingham,
. The following cases have adopted the modified agency, "hybrid” test of
Spirides
in determining whether a person is an "employee” of another under Title VII:
Cobb v. Sun Papers, Inc.,
The following cases have adopted the more expansive "economic realities" test for determining employee status under Title VII:
E.E.O.C. v. Dowd & Dowd, Ltd.,
