Does Dr. Richard A. Schmidt’s status as a shareholder-director in a closely held professional corporation preclude him from being considered an “employee” entitled to bring suit under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act? Applying a functional “economic realities” test, which this Court adopted in
EEOC v. Dowd & Dowd, Ltd.,
HISTORY
Ottawa Medical Center (“OMC”) was originally incorporated under the Illinois Medical Practice Act, before it reorganized itself in 1969 as a professional corporation under the Illinois Professional Service Corporation Act. 805 ILCS 10/1 et seq. (2002). Dr. Schmidt, a family practice physician, began his practice with OMC in 1966 and, upon OMC’s reorganization, became a founding shareholder. He has remained a shareholder at all relevant times since.
Including Dr. Schmidt, there are eight shareholder-physicians of OMC. Each has the right to an equal vote on shareholder-physician compensation plans, on proposed amendments to employment agreements, on the hiring of nonshareholder-physi-cians, 1 and any other matter put to shareholder vote. While being a shareholder-physician of OMC, Dr. Schmidt has also frequently served as one of its corporate officers, holding at different times vice-presidential and secretarial positions. Most recently in 1997, Dr. Schmidt was the corporation’s secretary. During those periods that he was a corporate officer, Dr. Schmidt also had a seat on OMC’s board of directors. And in March 2000, the shareholders voted to amend OMC’s bylaws to provide that all shareholders, by virtue of their shareholder status, would be directors of the corporation. Accordingly, Dr. Schmidt is once again a director of OMC.
OMC compensates its shareholder-physicians in two ways. First, every shareholder-physician has executed employment agreements with OMC. Under his 1976 employment agreement, Dr. Schmidt draws a base salary of $3700 a month. Second, each shareholder-physician is also *463 eligible to share in OMC’s profits via shareholder compensation in addition to whatever base salary his or her employment contract provides.
The formula for determining the amount of that additional compensation has been amended multiple times by the shareholder-physicians, and Dr. Schmidt has had the opportunity to vote on each of those proposals. Most recently in December 1999, the shareholder-physicians considered a plan whereby a shareholder-physician’s compensation would equal his or her net medical receipts after deducting his or her pro rata share of overhead expenses, pension allocation, and profit-sharing contributions. Because Dr. Schmidt’s net medical receipts would not have entitled him to any additional compensation under the proposed plan, he voted against it. He lost. Moreover, a majority of shareholder-physicians voted in 2000 to adopt new “Shareholder Employment Agreements” to su-percede their outstanding employment agreements with OMC. Every shareholder-physician besides Dr. Schmidt has since entered into this new agreement. As a result of the new compensation structure, Dr. Schmidt has since drawn only the $3700-per-month base salary.
ANALYSIS
An appellate court reviews summary-judgment motions de novo, viewing the record and all inferences from it in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
McCoy v. WGN Cont’l Broad. Co.,
The ADEA unhelpfully defines “employee” as “an individual employed by an employer,” and an “employer” as “a person ... who has twenty or more employees.” 29 U.S.C. § 630®, (b) (2002). To determine whether an organization has enough “employees” to qualify as an “employer” under the ADEA, we have already decided that the economic realities of the workplace, rather than mechanical adherence to state-law corporate forms, shall define the relationship between the parties.
EEOC v. Dowd & Dowd, Ltd.,
We must now decide whether
Dowd
applies when we are asked to classify an individual shareholder-claimant as an “employee” entitled to bring suit under the Act. If it does, and if “economic realities” control here as well, we must then ask, does
Dowd
require us always to treat Illinois professional-corporation shareholders as employers? If not, what factors will determine the actual role of the claimant-
*464
shareholder in the operations of the involved entity?
See Fountain v. Metcalf, Zima & Co.,
We recently asked similar questions in
EEOC v. Sidley Austin Brown & Wood,
Although we reserved the question of the 32’s status, had we been prepared to accept a mechanical test — that the use of the partnership form as recognized under Illinois state law precluded finding the 32 as anything but partners and, thus, employers under the Act — there would have been no need to continue the EEOC’s investigation into the circumstances of the 32’s actual role in the firm. Id. at 707 (listing additional information sought by the EEOC that “would bear on the unavoidably multifaetored determination” of whether the 32 should be treated as employers or employees). Our holding in Sidley, therefore, must be read to apply Dowd’s functional test of employee status to determinations of whether an individual claimant qualifies as an employee under the ADEA. 2
What remains is deciding which factors, in what we anticipated would be a multi-factored analysis,
see id.
at 1178, shall be important to determine whether Dr. Schmidt should be treated as an employer or an employee.
Dowd
provides little guidance — there, we matter-of-factly observed that “the economic reality of the professional corporation in Illinois is that the management, control, and ownership of the corporation is much like the management, control, and ownership of a partnership.”
Dowd,
If not to
Dowd,
then where are we to look? An exhaustive discussion of the relevant case law in
Sidley
revealed alternate
*465
lines of precedent suggesting this multifac-tored analysis could be conducted either with an eye towards statutory purpose,
see Sidley,
The Supreme Court may ultimately resolve this tension between statutory purpose and agency principles since it has granted certiorari in
Wells v. Clackamas Gastroenterology Assocs.,
in which the Ninth Circuit rejected
Dowd’s
economic-realities test in holding that the conscious adoption of the corporate form dictated that shareholder-physicians in closely held professional corporations be treated as employees.
*466 In any event, we need not attempt to resolve this tension here. It makes little difference in this case whether we are guided in our analysis of the economic realities by adherence to common-law agency principles or by attention to statutory purpose. Under either approach, we must conclude that Dr. Schmidt’s shareholder-physician role was akin to that of a bona fide partner-employer rather than that of an employee.
It is beyond reproach that both agency-law principles and statutory purpose would consider control over employment opportunities to be a relevant factor. Certainly, in describing the master-servant relationship, agency law focuses on control: The defining characteristic of the master-servant relationship is the possession in the one of the right to control the work of the other. That is, “the relation presupposes the right of the master to have the work executed in such manner as he directs and a correlative duty on the part of the servant to perform as expressly or impliedly directed by the master.” HAROLD GILL REUSCHLEIN ET AL., THE LAW OF AGENCY AND PARTNERSHIP at 102 (2d ed.1990). Conversely, “[t]he essence of [a] partnership is the common conduct of a shared enterprise,” and as a result the recognition that decisions important to that enterprise are made by common agreement.
Hishon,
As for statutory purpose, the Supreme Court has opined that the congressional intent behind the federal antidiscrimi-nation laws was to prohibit those entities where “control over access to the job market may reside” from “exerting any power [they] may have to foreclose, on invidious grounds, access by an individual to employment opportunities otherwise available to him.”
Ex rel. Doe v. St. Joseph’s Hosp.,
*467 Here, Dr. Schmidt throughout his career has shared in the management and control of OMC. He was a founding shareholder-physician of the corporation and has remained one at all relevant times since. During most of the last decade he was also a corporate officer and held a seat on OMC’s board, and he once again holds a director’s seat now by virtue of his enduring status as a shareholder. As a shareholder, he possesses an equal vote in all matters put to shareholder vote, including the hiring of nonshareholder-physicians and shareholder compensation. Presumably as a director, he has in the past and now also enjoys a voice in all matters put before the board. Throughout his relationship with OMC and continuing to the present day, Dr. Schmidt thus has had ample opportunity to share in the management and control of OMC.
And the mere fact that lately his preferences on shareholder-compensation proposals have not secured the majority opinion of his fellow shareholders does not alter the fact that with each vote he has exercised this right to control. Even though Dr. Schmidt rejected the current plan because he would be affected adversely by its passage, he nevertheless had the opportunity to participate in revising and voting on it. It is hornbook law that majority rules dictate the governance of partnerships (in the absence of an act in contravention of the partnership agreement or extraordinary matters), and thus partnership law anticipates that individual partners may be bound by adverse majority decisions of the partnership as a whole. REUSCHLEIN ET AL.,
supra,
at 276. It is common for partners to vote on compensation that reflects each partner’s economic contributions to the firm.
See Hishon,
Against this conclusion, Dr. Schmidt argues that his employment agreement, which repeatedly refers to him as an employee, signifies a relinquishment of control over his employment since, among other things, it vests sole authority of patient assignment in OMC’s board. But Dr. Schmidt is also a member of the board, which confers upon him decisionmaking authority with respect to these matters, including patient assignments. Moreover, his employment agreement vests in him absolute authority for the treatment of his patients once assigned to him. Therefore, while Dr. Schmidt may not possess sole authority over the conditions of his employment (that is, he only shares that complete authority in equal parts with other members of the board), he does exercise significant control. And since each of the seven other shareholder-physicians are governed by similar employment agreements, Dr. Schmidt exercises as much control over his employment as any other member of OMC. By contrast, the non-shareholder-physicians have no ability to exercise any control over patient assignments or any other matter put to the directors or shareholders.
CONCLUSION
We need not determine here whether the absence of control in and of itself will distinguish bona fide partner-employers from disguised employees when the presence of other factors may favor partnership.
Compare Sidley,
Notes
. Besides the eight shareholder-physicians, there were at the time of the complaint three nonshareholder-physicians and sixty-five non-physician employees working at OMC. Their status under the Act is not at issue here.
. We are not the first circuit to follow
Dowd
to this conclusion.
See Fountain v. Metcalf, Zima & Co., 925
F.2d 1398, 1400-01 (11th Cir.1991) (holding that a plaintiff shareholder in a professional corporation of accountants was akin to a partner, precluding his status as an “employee”);
cf. Devine v. Stone Leyton & Gershman, P.C.,
. The question in
Darden
was whether the claimant should be classified as an employee or an independent contractor for ERISA purposes. And like they had done elsewhere when "Congress has used the term ‘employee’ without defining it,”
see, e.g., Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid,
