Aig v. Daoud Oufafa ( 2021 )


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  •             RENDERED: DECEMBER 10, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2020-CA-0942-WC
    AIG                                                   APPELLANT
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION
    v.          OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    ACTION NO. WC-19-00222
    DAOUD OUFAFA; TAXI, LLC D/B/A
    TAXI 7 (AKA TAXICAB);
    UNINSURED EMPLOYERS’ FUND;
    HONORABLE W. GREG HARVEY,
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE;
    AND WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
    BOARD                                                 APPELLEES
    AND                   NO. 2020-CA-0946-WC
    TAXI, LLC D/B/A TAXI 7 (AKA                           APPELLANT
    TAXICAB)
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION
    v.          OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    ACTION NO. WC-19-00222
    DAOUD OUFAFA; AIG; UNINSURED
    EMPLOYERS’ FUND; HONORABLE
    W. GREG HARVEY,
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE;
    AND WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
    BOARD                                                                  APPELLEES
    OPINION
    REVERSING AND REMANDING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; ACREE AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.
    ACREE, JUDGE: Taxi, LLC d/b/a Taxi 7 (Taxi 7) and AIG separately petition
    this Court for review of the July 2, 2020, opinion of the Workers’ Compensation
    Board (the Board) reversing in part, vacating in part, and remanding the decision of
    the Administrative Law Judge (the ALJ) and the order dismissing AIG and the
    Uninsured Employers’ Fund (the UEF) as parties to the claim. The sole issue on
    appeal is whether the Board properly reversed the ALJ’s determination that Taxi 7
    was a taxicab leasing company rather than a taxicab company that employed
    Daoud Oufafa as a driver. We reverse the Board and remand with instructions to
    reinstate the ALJ’s determination.
    Daoud Oufafa, the claimant before the Board, moved from Morocco
    to the United States in 2011. He is married with two children and has a high
    school education. After working various jobs, including as a vehicle valet, Oufafa
    heard from a friend that Taxi 7 was seeking qualified persons to drive its taxicabs.
    -2-
    Taxi 7’s business involves leasing taxicabs and related services
    including dispatch and credit card processing services to individuals, corporations,
    partnerships, and other entities.1 In addition to owning the taxicabs it leases, it
    owned trademarks, brands, colors, and permits issued by government authority.
    Oufafa went to Taxi 7’s office and met with its representative,
    Michael Cregan. He provided his license to Cregan and later had a drug test
    performed at Cregan’s request. Cregan then presented Oufafa with two documents
    to consider.
    The first, dated February 5, 2016, was titled “TAXI, LLC COMPANY
    CAR DRIVER AGREEMENT” and provided that Oufafa would make a weekly
    lease payment of $405.00, and a separate $30.00 per week payment for vehicle
    insurance. Oufafa’s lease payments were consideration in exchange for Taxi 7’s
    providing a fully equipped taxicab,2 dispatch services and credit card processing
    services, its branding, and its goodwill. The Agreement also allowed Oufafa to
    sublease the taxicab and related services with Taxi 7’s prior approval. (Agreement
    ¶ 1.16.)
    1
    The form agreement Taxi 7 uses includes provision for leasing to “a corporation, partnership or
    other legal entity . . . .” (Agreement, ¶ 9.8.)
    2
    Pursuant to the Agreement, the leased taxicab was to be “in good working order, equipped with
    a taximeter, communication device, camera, credit card processing device and any other
    equipment as required by any state, county or local ordinance regulating taxicabs.” (Agreement,
    ¶ 1.3.)
    -3-
    The Agreement required Oufafa to represent and warrant to Taxi 7
    that he had “executed a statement which confirms that I am an independent
    businessperson” and that is the second document Oufafa signed.
    Bearing the same date as the Agreement, this document is titled
    “Status as a Self-Employed Businessperson.” It is a one-page document with
    redundancies that emphasize the nature of the relationship between Oufafa and
    Taxi 7. The first half of the page says, in pertinent part:
    I acknowledge and agree that there is no employer-
    employee, principal-agent, or master-servant relationship,
    either expressed or implied between [Taxi 7] and myself
    as a result of my operation of my TAXICAB. I am a self-
    employed businessperson free from interference or control
    on the part of [Taxi 7] in the manner or means of operation
    of the TAXICAB or the business that I conduct with the
    TAXICAB. I shall exercise complete discretion in lawful
    operation of the TAXICAB, and I shall determine the
    hours I work, the area I service, the methods, the details
    and means of performing any and all taxicab services I
    may decide to provide in my taxicab business, as follows:
    ▪    My earnings . . . are mine alone. I shall not share my
    fares with [Taxi 7], and I shall not account to [Taxi 7]
    for any fares collected from passengers in the
    operation of my business. [Taxi 7] shall do no more
    than make available referrals of prospective
    passengers received through telephone call service or
    radio dispatch service.
    ▪    [Taxi 7] does not require me (i) to remain at any
    specified place; (ii) to answer calls or report [my]
    location . . . ; or (iii) to work any fixed hours. I am
    free to decide if and when to work . . . and when and
    if to lease the TAXICAB to others.
    -4-
    ▪    [Taxi 7] does not restrict in any manner . . . [where] I
    may operate . . . or . . . my use of the TAXICAB for
    any lawful purpose. Any right to control exists solely
    with the passenger who is hiring the TAXICAB at my
    discretion.
    ▪    I may market my taxicab business independent of
    [Taxi 7] and advertise my services in my own name.
    . . . I may, if I wish, modify the TAXICAB . . . . [Taxi
    7] will relay to me orders received . . . from customers
    specifically requesting my services.
    The next part of this “Status” document is in boldface type. Its focus
    is Oufafa’s obligation as an independent business owner to comply with laws:
    I acknowledge and agree that, as a self-employed
    businessperson, free from authority and control of
    [Taxi 7]:
    ▪    I am not an employee for purposes of worker’s
    compensation     coverage,     State     Disability
    Insurance, the Federal Insurance Contributions
    Act (FICA), the Social Security Act, and State and
    Federal tax withholding at the source.
    ▪    [Taxi 7] will not withhold FICA or state and
    federal income taxes on any payments I may
    receive, and I am fully and solely responsible for
    paying any and all federal and state income taxes
    and self-employment taxes due as a result of any
    payments I receive.
    ▪    It is my responsibility to acquire a business license
    for the area(s) in which I intend to operate.
    As a further expression of his understanding of his status as a self-
    employed individual, Oufafa wrote the following in his own handwriting: “I am
    -5-
    self-employed for all purposes, including workers compensation and
    unemployment. Whether or not I drive the rented TAXICAB, I am not an
    employee of company.”
    Oufafa began driving for Taxi 7 a few days later. On January 5, 2018,
    while in the process of transporting passengers in his taxicab, Oufafa sustained a
    gunshot wound to his back that left him paralyzed from the waist down. Oufafa
    filed an Application for Resolution of Injury Claim seeking benefits for his
    injuries, alleging that he had been injured in the course and scope of his
    employment for Taxi 7. After the Department of Workers’ Claims certified that
    Taxi 7 was uninsured, the UEF was joined as a defendant. The UEF denied the
    claim was compensable. Taxi 7 also denied the claim.
    Michael Cregan testified by deposition that he was the general
    manager for Taxi 7, which had opened in Louisville in August 2015. He had
    previously worked in another Taxi 7 located in Nashville, Tennessee. The
    businesses were owned by the same ownership group, NBRS Management
    Services. Cregan described Taxi 7 and NBRS Management Services as the same
    entity.
    Consistent with the Agreement, Cregan stated that Taxi 7 processed
    credit card transactions for Oufafa. Any funds were first credited to Oufafa’s lease
    payment, and the remaining funds were wired to Oufafa or stayed in his Taxi 7
    -6-
    account. Taxi 7 issued Oufafa a copy of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form
    1099K each year stating how much revenue Oufafa generated by his customers’
    credit and debit card payments. Cregan described the drivers for Taxi 7 as
    independent contractors.
    Based upon Cregan’s deposition testimony that Taxi 7 and NBRS
    Management Services were the same entity, separate counsel entered an
    appearance for AIG to protect its interests. AIG provided the policy of insurance
    for ADP Total Source, Inc. (ADP), which was a Professional Employer
    Organization that provided workers’ compensation coverage for the companies
    falling under its umbrella. ADP’s claims were handled by a third-party
    administrator, Helsman. However, NBRS Management Services, not Taxi 7, was
    included in the endorsement for covered companies under ADP’s policy with AIG.
    The ALJ conducted a teleconference with the parties to discuss the newly raised
    issues. The ALJ treated AIG’s motion as a motion to intervene, which was granted
    for the purpose of determining the coverage question – whether Taxi 7 was insured
    or was the beneficiary of workers’ compensation coverage for Oufafa’s injuries.
    The ALJ also reopened proof to allow the parties to submit evidence on the
    question of whether coverage existed. AIG subsequently entered a denial of
    Oufafa’s claim.
    -7-
    Michael Solomon testified by telephonic deposition. He was the
    President of NBRS Management Services, which he described as providing
    employees for the management of its group of taxicab companies throughout the
    eastern part of the United States. NBRS Management Services had workers’
    compensation insurance with ADP. Cregan was an employee of NBRS
    Management Services and worked as the manager of Taxi 7 on-site in Louisville.
    He was not an employee of Taxi 7; rather, that was the location where he worked
    as Taxi 7 did not have any employees.
    Solomon testified that he considered himself to be an expert in the
    area of taxi companies and explained how they are typically set up:
    I would say 99.9 percent of all taxi cab companies
    in the U.S. are operated on an independent contractor basis
    where the drivers secure or bring their own vehicle and
    they are several models one or the other to the taxi
    company [sic]. They pay for the opportunity to work
    under their what they call their colors, their brands. They
    are independent contractors. What they collect in the
    vehicle belongs to them. They pay a fee either by week or
    by month or by day or by shift. There’s a multitude of
    ways that works. In our case our drivers pay by week as a
    courtesy but they’re signing a month-long contract that
    auto renews if either party doesn’t make a change to that
    before the end of the month. There is a small handful of
    companies including the City of Las Vegas that the drivers
    are actually employees of the company but, like I say, 99
    percent of all their jurisdictions in the U.S. is done the way
    as I previously stated as independent contractors renting a
    car or bringing their own car and renting our services, our
    dispatch, our brands, our permits, and that’s pretty much
    the way they operate.
    -8-
    Because Taxi 7 did not have any employees, Solomon stated that it did not require
    workers’ compensation coverage. Later, Solomon testified that NBRS USA
    Holdings owned Taxi 7, not NBRS Management Services, and that NBRS
    Management Services and Taxi 7 were not the same company. He described
    Oufafa as a customer of Taxi 7 and an independent contractor. Solomon pointed
    out that Oufafa filled out paperwork that stated he was an independent contractor
    and Taxi 7 filed Form 1099K with the IRS stating independent contractor earnings
    for Oufafa. He did agree that the drivers were an integral part of the business.
    The ALJ held a benefit review conference on December 2, 2018, and
    entered an order thereafter indicating that the matter had been bifurcated to first
    determine the contested issues of whether Oufafa had an employment relationship
    with Taxi 7 and, if so, whether there was coverage for his claim. A final hearing
    was held immediately after the conference.
    At the hearing, the ALJ heard additional testimony from Oufafa and
    Cregan. Oufafa testified that he gave his tax records to a tax “officer” to complete
    and file his tax forms. Cregan also testified he did not understand anything about
    the U.S. tax law. He stated that he was an employee of NBRS Management
    Services where he worked as the general manager over day-to-day operations at
    Taxi 7. He described the company as a taxi company that leases vehicles. He said
    he managed Taxi 7’s leasing operations. Cregan said it was a standard practice in
    -9-
    Louisville for taxi companies to lease cabs to independent contractors, who then
    operated as a business. He also testified that the City of Louisville sets the
    maximum taxi rate as well as how the taxis are to operate and look. The only
    requirements to drive with Taxi 7 are a driver’s license, a background check, a
    drug test, and a permit from the City of Louisville. Taxi 7 held the certificate of
    operation. By the time of the hearing, Cregan stated that Taxi 7 had merged with
    Yellow Cab.
    The parties filed briefs addressing the salient issues, after which the
    ALJ entered an opinion and order on January 31, 2020, in which he determined
    that Oufafa was an independent contractor. Pertinent to the issue before this Court,
    the ALJ made several findings. First, the ALJ addressed the nature of Oufafa’s
    work as it related to Taxi 7’s business:
    Taxi 7 leased the taxicab and equipment to Oufafa.
    It also provid[ed] the certificate of operation that allowed
    Oufafa to drive a cab and the dispatch service that notified
    Oufafa of the overwhelming majority of potential
    customers in the city. However, Oufafa did not work a set
    schedule and could accept or reject pick-[ups] as he saw
    fit. In fact, he could park the cab for as long as he wanted
    provided he paid the lease as it came due. [Taxi 7] alleges
    it is a taxicab leasing company whose customer is the
    driver. It submits the driver’s customer is the passenger.
    As a regulated industry, the city of Louisville also
    exercised control over the appearance of the cab, did
    routine inspections and required Oufafa to be permitted to
    drive. Taxi 7 did not actually transport people, it provided
    Oufafa the means to do so. The ALJ agrees with
    -10-
    Solomon’s testimony that the structure of the business is
    driven by costs considerations on both sides – both from
    the owner of the cabs and the driver. Each has reasons to
    desire the relationship to be other than that of employee-
    employer.
    The obvious cost driver for the owner of the cab
    fleet is worker’s compensation insurance. By setting up a
    relationship that is that of independent contractor with the
    drivers, the owner of the vehicles and certificate enables
    itself to generate revenue through lease payments rather
    than direct fare-splitting. It also does not have employees.
    Similarly, the driver retains the autonomy of setting his
    own schedule, avoiding withholdings, working in areas
    and at times he desires and to have some control over the
    amount of fares he generates with a set cost of the cab. In
    other words, once the driver has the lease payment
    covered, all the earnings over and above that amount are
    his and his alone.
    In the absence of drivers, a taxi leasing company
    would have no market for leasing the cabs it owns and
    outfits. Consistent with Solomon’s testimony, the ALJ
    finds Oufafa’s work as a taxi cab driver was an integral
    part of Taxi LLC’s business of leasing cabs to operators
    and this factor weighs in favor of an employer/employee
    relationship.
    Next, the ALJ addressed the extent of control exercised over Oufafa
    by Taxi 7:
    The fact that Oufafa retained autonomy in his
    schedule, had the ability [to] accept and reject any dispatch
    calls causes the ALJ to find that Taxi 7 did not exercise
    significant control over . . . Oufafa. The ALJ is aware
    there is a distinction between the right to control and the
    extent of control. Once Oufafa decided to enter into the
    lease, Taxi 7 did not have the right to control his every day
    -11-
    work and did not do so. It did have the right to control the
    equipment it owned and to monitor [its] use.
    The ALJ found this factor weighed in favor of finding that Oufafa was an
    independent contractor.
    Later, the ALJ addressed whether Oufafa was engaged in a distinct
    occupation or business:
    This issue is very closely aligned with the analysis
    above. Defendant argues that it was in the business of
    leasing cabs while [Oufafa] was in the business of
    transporting customers. Unlike the integral part of the
    business analysis performed above, the question of
    whether or not Oufafa’s work was distinct is different. He
    drove a cab. The alleged employer is Taxi 7 who provides
    the capital equipment, certificate of operation and dispatch
    services. It does not also transport passengers. It leases
    vehicles and provides information but does not drive.
    Oufafa is in the business of driving passengers. He could
    perform that work for Uber or Lyft or for another cab
    company. His work is distinct from leasing cabs and
    performing dispatch services.
    The undersigned is persuaded Oufafa was engaged
    in a distinct occupation or business as a cab driver.
    Although that business is an integral part of Taxi 7’s
    business of leasing taxi cabs it is still distinct.
    The ALJ believes Oufafa was engaged in a distinct
    occupation or business but that his work was an integral
    part of Taxi 7’s business. Because his work was distinct,
    this factor supports a finding Oufafa was an independent
    contractor.
    After completing his analysis of the factors, the ALJ concluded:
    -12-
    As the parties can see from the above analysis, this
    claim presents a very difficult set of facts and law. The
    ALJ has evaluated the factors required by the Courts in
    both [Ratliff v. Redmon, 
    396 S.W.2d 320
     (Ky. 1965),] and
    [Chambers v. Wooten’s IGA Foodliner, 
    436 S.W.2d 265
    (Ky. 1969).] The predominant factors are split. The
    remaining Ratliff factors weigh slightly in favor of a
    finding of independent contractor. This is a unique
    situation where Oufafa’s employment is an integral part of
    Taxi 7’s business but he plays a distinct role. The Taxi 7
    business model is that of a leasing company. It has priced
    the lease of the cabs and allowed the driver to make
    whatever profit he can. It has also left the amount of work
    and schedule up to the driver.
    ....
    Taxi 7 leased the cab and Oufafa was the driver.
    Oufafa paid Taxi 7 the lease amounts while the city
    dictated the maximum fare Oufafa could charge. Taxi 7
    had no way, in this particular relationship, to pass on the
    costs of the injuries to passengers in Oufafa’s cab. This is
    not a situation where a product is being sold. This is a
    service provided by Oufafa with capital equipment
    provided by Taxi 7.
    This is a claim where great empathy exists for
    Oufafa’s plight. The undersigned is obligated, however,
    to apply the law to the facts presented. In doing so, the
    ALJ finds the factors evaluated lead to the finding that
    Oufafa was an independent contractor. He signed an
    agreement to drive a cab as an independent contractor and
    did so for approximately three years. His tax returns
    reflect he identified himself as a self-employed taxicab
    driver. Taxi 7 provided him with a cab and services to
    help him procure passengers. It did not control his day to
    day work activities and he had autonomy.
    -13-
    Accordingly, the ALJ dismissed the claim against Taxi 7 based upon its finding
    that Oufafa was an independent contractor and deemed the remaining issues to be
    moot.
    AIG filed a petition for reconsideration seeking clarification that it
    and the UEF were also dismissed from the claim, which the ALJ granted by order
    entered February 21, 2020. The opinion and order was amended to reflect that
    AIG and the UEF were both dismissed.
    Oufafa also filed a petition for reconsideration, in which he pointed
    out numerous errors of fact and law. This included an argument that Taxi 7 was
    not merely a taxicab leasing company based upon its representations that it was a
    taxi transportation service when it obtained the certification of operation from the
    City of Louisville. The ALJ rejected this argument, noting that he had focused on
    the conduct of the parties with each other. The ALJ ultimately denied Oufafa’s
    petition.
    Oufafa appealed the ALJ’s decisions to the Board, which entered its
    opinion on July 2, 2020. The Board ruled that the ALJ incorrectly concluded that
    Taxi 7 was a taxicab leasing company rather than a taxicab company and that this
    “tainted the entirety of his analysis.” The Board continued:
    Unquestionably, a proper understanding of the nature of
    the alleged employer’s regular business is essential before
    undertaking an analysis under Ratliff, Chambers, and
    [Kelly Mountain Lumber v. Meade, Nos. 2007-SC-
    -14-
    000507-WC and 2007-SC-000526-WC, 
    2008 WL 3890701
     (Ky. Aug. 21, 2008).] As we previously pointed
    out, the Court in [Husman Snack Foods v. Dillon, 
    591 S.W.2d 701
     (Ky. App. 1979),] stated, “the treatment of the
    claimant’s work in relation to the regular business of the
    employer as the dominant factor in the decision of whether
    the claimant is an employee, fulfills the theory of risk
    spreading embodied in compensation.” Dillon at 703.
    (Emphasis added). In other words, before the ALJ can
    accurately determine if his delineation of a worker as an
    “employee” or “independent contractor” satisfies the
    theory of risk spreading which is essential to the workers’
    compensation system, he must have an accurate
    understanding of the claimant’s work in relation to the
    regular business of the employer.
    The Board held that the evidence from both Cregan and Solomon compelled a
    finding that Taxi 7 was a taxicab company, not a taxi leasing company.
    Accordingly, the Board reversed the ALJ’s determination that Taxi 7
    was a taxicab leasing company, vacated his finding that Oufafa was an independent
    contractor and the order dismissing AIG and the UEF as parties, and remanded the
    claim to the ALJ for “an amended opinion finding Taxi 7 is a taxicab company”
    along with a renewed analysis of the factors set forth in Ratliff, Chambers, and
    Meade. The Board directed the ALJ to “look to the nature of the work Oufafa
    performed in relation to the regular business of Taxi 7 as a taxicab company” when
    he re-analyzed the control factor.
    Finally, the Board addressed what weight should be given to the
    language in the Agreement and the Status as a Self-Employed Businessperson
    -15-
    document. The Board disagreed with the ALJ’s finding that these documents
    manifested the intent of the parties, stating that “depending on the facts of the
    given case, a claimant labeled by an employer as an independent contractor in a
    contract of hire may, in reality, be no more ‘independent’ than any other at-will
    employee in Kentucky.” These consolidated petitions for review by AIG and Taxi
    7 (collectively, the appellants) now follow.
    On appeal, Taxi 7 argues that the Board erroneously made its own
    findings of fact and in doing so usurped the function of the ALJ, that the ALJ’s
    finding that Taxi 7 leases taxicabs is supported by substantial evidence or was
    harmless error, and that the Board’s direction on remand related to the control
    factor was contrary to the law. AIG argues that the evidence presented to the ALJ
    does not compel a finding in Oufafa’s favor by the Board and that the Board
    improperly substituted its judgment for that of the ALJ.
    This Court’s standard of review in workers’ compensation appeals is
    well-settled in the Commonwealth. “The function of further review of the [Board]
    in the Court of Appeals is to correct the Board only where the Court perceives the
    Board has overlooked or misconstrued controlling statutes or precedent, or
    committed an error in assessing the evidence so flagrant as to cause gross
    injustice.” Western Baptist Hosp. v. Kelly, 
    827 S.W.2d 685
    , 687-88 (Ky. 1992).
    As to the Board’s review, Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 342.285(2) provides:
    -16-
    No new or additional evidence may be introduced before
    the board except as to the fraud or misconduct of some
    person engaged in the administration of this chapter and
    affecting the order, ruling, or award, but the board shall
    otherwise hear the appeal upon the record as certified by
    the administrative law judge and shall dispose of the
    appeal in summary manner. The board shall not substitute
    its judgment for that of the administrative law judge as to
    the weight of evidence on questions of fact, its review
    being limited to determining whether or not:
    (a) The administrative law judge acted
    without or in excess of his powers;
    (b) The order, decision, or award was
    procured by fraud;
    (c) The order, decision, or award is not in
    conformity to the provisions of this chapter;
    (d) The order, decision, or award is clearly
    erroneous on the basis of the reliable,
    probative, and material evidence contained in
    the whole record; or
    (e) The order, decision, or award is arbitrary
    or capricious or characterized by abuse of
    discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of
    discretion.
    In Kentucky, “[t]he claimant in a workman’s compensation case has
    the burden of proof and the risk of persuading the board in his favor.” Snawder v.
    Stice, 
    576 S.W.2d 276
    , 279 (Ky. App. 1979) (citations omitted). “When the
    decision of the fact-finder favors the person with the burden of proof, his only
    burden on appeal is to show that there was some evidence of substance to support
    -17-
    the finding, meaning evidence which would permit a fact-finder to reasonably find
    as it did.” Special Fund v. Francis, 
    708 S.W.2d 641
    , 643 (Ky. 1986). However,
    “[i]f the board finds against a claimant who had the burden of proof and the risk of
    persuasion, the court upon review is confined to determining whether or not the
    total evidence was so strong as to compel a finding in claimant’s favor.” Snawder,
    
    576 S.W.2d at 280
     (citations omitted). The Francis Court went on to explain:
    If the fact-finder finds against the person with the
    burden of proof, his burden on appeal is infinitely greater.
    It is of no avail in such a case to show that there was some
    evidence of substance which would have justified a
    finding in his favor. He must show that the evidence was
    such that the finding against him was unreasonable
    because the finding cannot be labeled “clearly erroneous”
    if it reasonably could have been made.
    Thus, we have simply defined the term “clearly
    erroneous” in cases where the finding is against the person
    with the burden of proof. We hold that a finding which
    can reasonably be made is, perforce, not clearly erroneous.
    A finding which is unreasonable under the evidence
    presented is “clearly erroneous” and, perforce, would
    “compel” a different finding.
    708 S.W.2d at 643. Furthermore, “[t]he ALJ, as the finder of fact, and not the
    reviewing court, has the sole authority to determine the quality, character, and
    substance of the evidence.” Square D Co. v. Tipton, 
    862 S.W.2d 308
    , 309 (Ky.
    1993) (citing Paramount Foods, Inc. v. Burkhardt, 
    695 S.W.2d 418
     (Ky. 1985)).
    We disagree with the Board that the evidence of record compels a
    finding for Oufafa that Taxi 7 was a taxicab company that employed him.
    -18-
    However, we agree with the Board’s emphasis on “the intertwined association
    between an analysis of the control factor and an analysis of the nature of the
    claimant’s work in relation to the regular business of the employer.” The Board
    instructed the ALJ to “look to the nature of the work Oufafa performed in relation
    to the regular business of Taxi 7” and, consistent with Meade, supra, directed “the
    control factor to be analyzed by looking to the nature of the work that the injured
    worker performed in relation to the regular business of the employer.” Meade,
    
    2008 WL 3890701
    , at *4. This record allows the Court to do that without the
    ALJ’s input.
    The Board identifies “the claimant’s work in relation to the regular
    business of the employer as the dominant factor in the decision of whether the
    claimant is an employee . . . .” Dillon, 
    591 S.W.2d at 703
     (emphasis added). But
    what do we mean by “work”?
    “‘Work’ means providing services to another in return for
    remuneration on a regular and sustained basis in a competitive economy[.]” KRS
    342.0011(34) (emphasis added). According to this record, Taxi 7 did not
    remunerate Oufafa at all. He received remuneration from one source–his
    independent customers. What Oufafa charged was a matter negotiated between
    Oufafa and his customers, provided the fare satisfied the applicable regulatory
    -19-
    authority–Taxi 7 had no say, and no stake in what Oufafa charged or received as
    remuneration.
    To be clear, Oufafa received remuneration two ways. He was paid
    directly from his customers when they paid in cash. When a customer paid by
    debit or credit card, Taxi 7 processed the payment as part of the leasing services
    Oufafa purchased with his weekly $405 payment. Taxi 7 never supplemented any
    of Oufafa’s customers’ credit or debit card payments, nor did Taxi 7 add to
    Oufafa’s income in any way. To the contrary, Taxi 7 sometimes retained a portion
    of Oufafa’s customers’ debit and credit card payments to apply against his weekly
    lease payment.
    The IRS Form 1099K Taxi 7 provided to Oufafa is not proof of
    remuneration by an employer to an employee. The form, entitled “Payment Card
    and Third[-]Party Network Transactions,” is required for compliance with 26
    United States Code Annotated (U.S.C.A.) § 6050W. That statute requires a
    “payment settlement entity”–Taxi 7 in this case–to report to the Internal Revenue
    Service “any payment card transaction and any third[-]party network transaction”
    made to “each participating payee to whom one or more payments in settlement of
    reportable payment transactions are made” and, in this case, that “participating
    payee” would be Oufafa. 26 U.S.C.A. § 6050W(a)-(d). When Oufafa received his
    copy of the Form 1099K that Taxi 7 sent to the IRS, he was required by law to
    -20-
    report the same amount on his federal income tax return. And, in fact, he did so
    using a Schedule C (Form 1040), “Profit and Loss From Business (Sole
    Proprietorship).” (Oufafa brief, Appendix G.) The Form 1099K is evidence that
    Taxi 7 was a payment settlement entity, but not proof Taxi 7 was Oufafa’s
    employer.
    Oufafa never performed “work” for Taxi 7 as that term is defined in
    KRS Chapter 342. Remuneration by the employer, a primary characteristic of the
    relation between an employee and an employer, simply cannot be found in the
    relationship between Oufafa’s work and the regular business of Taxi 7. We reach
    the same conclusion if we shift our focus to the other side of that relationship, the
    regular business of Taxi 7.
    Taxi 7 derives its revenue by leasing equipment and services for a set
    weekly fee. Its income is unaffected by how much or how little its lessees work.
    To rephrase that concept, Taxi 7’s income is not generated by the labor performed
    by taxicab drivers, but by how many lease contracts it services. That is a proper
    understanding of this alleged employer’s regular business. It does not support a
    finding that Taxi 7 was Oufafa’s employer.
    The independency of Oufafa’s business and Taxi 7’s business is not
    lessened because there is an interrelationship. We even agree with the Board’s
    premise that “an independent contractor in a contract of hire may, in reality, be no
    -21-
    more ‘independent’ than any other at-will employee in Kentucky.” However, this
    record does not contain evidence supporting that premise to such a degree as to
    compel a finding of an employee-employer relationship. That is not to say no
    evidence exists. But if we were to unbundle what Taxi 7 leases, separating credit
    card processing services from vehicle leasing for example, we could easily see that
    the former is ubiquitous in the retail industry and the latter available at every
    airport without even a thought that an employee-employer relationship is involved.
    The Agreement and Status document between the parties has some
    bearing on the foregoing analysis of Oufafa’s remuneration. The Board’s
    instruction to the ALJ on remand that less weight should be afforded those
    documents would not have yielded an analysis that compelled a finding for Oufafa
    on the question of his employment status. The documents do tell us that Oufafa
    understood his relationship with Taxi 7 and that these documents informed him of
    his obligation to comply with the law applicable to independent contractors.
    The bottom line for this Court is that Oufafa controlled his own
    compensation. If he chose not to work, it would lower his income while also
    reducing the risk that he would suffer a workplace injury. That he should bear
    these associated risks is in keeping with the “theory of risk spreading embodied in
    compensation.” Dillon, 
    591 S.W.2d at 703
    .
    -22-
    We are not unsympathetic to Oufafa’s circumstances. We can all
    agree he is a victim. But we must repeat the ALJ’s sentiment that “[a]lthough it
    gives the undersigned no pleasure to do so[,] the analysis dictates the result and
    Oufafa’s claim for benefits” must fail.
    CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE, CONCURS.
    LAMBERT, JUDGE, DISSENTS AND DOES NOT FILE
    SEPARATE OPINION.
    BRIEF FOR                                   BRIEF FOR APPELLEE DAOUD
    APPELLANT/APPELLEE AIG:                     OUFAFA:
    Ronald J. Pohl                              Andrew C. Weeks
    Carolyn A. Allen                            Louisville, Kentucky
    Lexington, Kentucky
    BRIEF FOR
    APPELLANT/APPELLEE TAXI,
    LLC D/B/A TAXI 7:
    Kyle L. Johnson
    Louisville, Kentucky
    -23-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020 CA 000942

Filed Date: 12/10/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/17/2021