Commission on Human Rights & Opportunities v. Echo Hose Ambulance , 322 Conn. 154 ( 2016 )


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    COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
    AND OPPORTUNITIES v. ECHO
    HOSE AMBULANCE ET AL.
    (SC 19496)
    Rogers, C. J., and Palmer, Zarella, Eveleigh, McDonald, Espinosa and
    Robinson, Js.*
    Argued March 30—officially released July 26, 2016
    Christopher T. Parkin, with whom, on the brief, were
    Russell J. Sweeting and Thomas W. Moyher, for the
    appellant (defendant Sarah Puryear).
    Ian Angus Cole, for the appellee (named defendant).
    Michael J. Rose, with whom, on the brief, was Cindy
    M. Cieslak, for the appellee (defendant city of Shelton).
    Opinion
    McDONALD, J. We are called upon to decide what
    test should be applied to determine whether an unpaid
    volunteer is an ‘‘employee’’ for purposes of the Connect-
    icut Fair Employment Practices Act (CFEPA), General
    Statutes § 46a-51 et seq. More specifically, we must
    decide whether a volunteer must satisfy the predomi-
    nant ‘‘remuneration test’’ used to resolve similar federal
    causes of action or Connecticut’s common-law ‘‘right
    to control’’ test.
    This certified appeal arises out of a complaint filed
    with the plaintiff, the Commission on Human Rights
    and Opportunities, by Brenda Puryear (Brenda), on
    behalf of her then minor daughter Sarah Puryear
    (Sarah).1 The complaint alleged that the defendants,
    Echo Hose Ambulance and the city of Shelton, had
    discriminated and retaliated against Sarah on the basis
    of her race and color in violation of CFEPA and Title
    VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
    et seq. (Title VII). The trial court rendered judgment
    dismissing the commission’s administrative appeal
    from the decision of the commission’s human rights
    referee, who had struck the complaint on the ground
    that Sarah was not an employee under the remuneration
    test. The Appellate Court affirmed the trial court’s judg-
    ment; Commission on Human Rights & Opportunities
    v. Echo Hose Ambulance, 
    156 Conn. App. 239
    , 253, 
    113 A.3d 463
     (2015); and Sarah appealed to this court. We
    affirm the judgment of the Appellate Court.
    The record reveals the following facts, as alleged
    in the complaint, and procedural history. Echo Hose
    provides ambulance transport and other services to the
    city. Sarah, who is African-American, was accepted into
    a ‘‘precepting program’’2 with Echo Hose, which
    required her to ride in an ambulance for one shift each
    week and to participate in other activities. While taking
    part in that program, and after completing it, Sarah
    ‘‘was treated differently due to her race and color and
    . . . was subject to discipline that other individuals
    . . . were not.’’ Specifically, Sarah was subjected to
    comments about Africa and the ‘‘ ‘ghetto,’ ’’ was sus-
    pended without good cause, and was terminated with-
    out good cause. Although Sarah’s termination was later
    overruled, such that she was able to complete the pre-
    cepting program, members of Echo Hose voted against
    making Sarah a member.
    Brenda thereafter filed a complaint with the commis-
    sion alleging violations of CFEPA and Title VII. The
    complaint did not allege that Sarah had been paid or
    had received other benefits in conjunction with her
    activities with Echo Hose. The city moved to strike the
    complaint, claiming that Sarah was not an ‘‘employee,’’
    a factual predicate to an action under either CFEPA or
    Title VII, because she could not satisfy the remuneration
    test that determines such a status. Brenda objected to
    the motion, claiming that the proper test for determin-
    ing who is an employee under CFEPA is the ‘‘right to
    control test,’’ which Sarah satisfied. The referee deter-
    mined that the remuneration test applied to both Title
    VII and CFEPA and that Sarah could not satisfy that
    test. The referee therefore struck the complaint in its
    entirety.
    After the referee declined to rule on motions for
    reconsideration filed by the commission and Sarah
    regarding Sarah’s claim under CFEPA, the commission
    brought this administrative appeal pursuant to General
    Statutes §§ 4-183 and 46a-94a. See footnote 1 of this
    opinion. The trial court concluded that the referee prop-
    erly had applied the remuneration test and dismissed
    the appeal.
    Sarah then appealed to the Appellate Court, which
    affirmed the judgment of dismissal. Commission on
    Human Rights & Opportunities v. Echo Hose Ambu-
    lance, supra, 
    156 Conn. App. 253
    . We granted Sarah’s
    petition for certification to appeal limited to the follow-
    ing issue: ‘‘Did the Appellate Court properly apply the
    federal ‘remuneration test’ rather than Connecticut’s
    common-law ‘right [to] control’ test to determine an
    ‘employee’ under [CFEPA] . . . ?’’ Commission on
    Human Rights & Opportunities v. Echo Hose Ambu-
    lance, 
    317 Conn. 911
    , 
    116 A.3d 309
     (2015).
    We apply plenary review to this question of law, and
    well established principles of statutory construction.3
    See General Statutes § 1-2z (setting forth plain meaning
    rule); Caciopoli v. Lebowitz, 
    309 Conn. 62
    , 69, 
    68 A.3d 1150
     (2013) (‘‘[w]hen a statute is not plain and unambig-
    uous, we also look for interpretive guidance to the legis-
    lative history and circumstances surrounding its
    enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to
    implement, and to its relationship to existing legislation
    and common-law principles governing the same general
    subject matter’’ [internal quotation marks omitted]).
    CFEPA defines an employee as ‘‘any person
    employed by an employer . . . .’’ General Statutes
    § 46a-51 (9). This circular definition provides no guid-
    ance on how to assess whether someone is an
    employee. Cf. Daggitt v. United Food & Commercial
    Workers International Union, 
    245 F.3d 981
    , 987 (8th
    Cir. 2001) (finding substantively identical definition of
    employee in Title VII circular and unhelpful in
    court’s inquiry).
    ‘‘This court previously has recognized that in constru-
    ing [CFEPA] we are properly guided by the case law
    surrounding federal fair employment legislation . . . .’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Perodeau v. Hart-
    ford, 
    259 Conn. 729
    , 738, 
    792 A.2d 752
     (2002); see also
    Patino v. Birken Mfg. Co., 
    304 Conn. 679
    , 689, 
    41 A.3d 1013
     (2012) (‘‘Connecticut antidiscrimination statutes
    should be interpreted in accordance with federal anti-
    discrimination laws’’ [internal quotation marks omit-
    ted]). We also have recognized that our legislature’s
    intent, in general, was to make CFEPA complement the
    provisions of Title VII. Williams v. Commission on
    Human Rights & Opportunities, 
    257 Conn. 258
    , 287,
    
    777 A.2d 645
     (2001); State v. Commission on Human
    Rights & Opportunities, 
    211 Conn. 464
    , 469–70, 
    559 A.2d 1120
     (1989). We therefore previously looked to
    Title VII jurisprudence for guidance when interpreting
    the meaning of ‘‘employer’’ under CFEPA. See Perodeau
    v. Hartford, supra, 738–41.
    Two tests—the right to control test and the remunera-
    tion test—have emerged from the federal courts to
    determine whether an individual is an employee in the
    context of the substantively identical definition of that
    term under Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e (f). The right to
    control test is based on the common law of agency,
    which considers various factors to determine ‘‘the hir-
    ing party’s right to control the manner and means by
    which the product is accomplished [by the hired
    party].’’4 (Emphasis added.) Community for Creative
    Non-Violence v. Reid, 
    490 U.S. 730
    , 751–52, 
    109 S. Ct. 2166
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 811
     (1989). The United States
    Supreme Court has applied this test to various statutory
    schemes, not including Title VII, to resolve the question
    of whether the hired party was an employee or indepen-
    dent contractor. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. v. Darden,
    
    503 U.S. 318
    , 323, 327, 
    112 S. Ct. 1344
    , 
    117 L. Ed. 2d 581
     (1992); Community for Creative Non-Violence v.
    Reid, 
    supra,
     751–52; see also O’Connor v. Davis, 
    126 F.3d 112
    , 115 (citing cases), cert. denied, 
    522 U.S. 1114
    ,
    
    118 S. Ct. 1048
    , 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 112
     (1998). The court
    relied on the well established rule that, ‘‘when Congress
    uses the term employee without defining it with preci-
    sion, courts should presume that Congress had in mind
    the conventional master-servant relationship as under-
    stood by the common-law agency doctrine.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) O’Connor v. Davis, 
    supra, 115
    , quoting Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. v. Darden,
    
    supra,
     322–23, and Community for Creative Non-Vio-
    lence v. Reid, 
    supra,
     739–40.
    The remuneration test arose to address circum-
    stances in which, in contrast to the employee versus
    independent contractor situation, it was not clear that
    the putative employee had been ‘‘hired’’ in the first
    instance, and accordingly, approximated the conven-
    tional master-servant relationship. O’Connor v. Davis,
    
    supra,
     
    126 F.3d 115
    . The remuneration test instructs
    courts to ‘‘conduct a [two step] inquiry by requiring
    that a volunteer first show remuneration as a threshold
    matter before proceeding to the second step—analyzing
    the putative employment relationship under the [com-
    mon-law] agency test. Remuneration may consist of
    either direct compensation, such as a salary or wages,
    or indirect benefits that are not merely incidental to
    the activity performed.’’ Juino v. Livingston Parish
    Fire District No. 5, 
    717 F.3d 431
    , 435 (5th Cir. 2013).
    A majority of United States Courts of Appeals that
    have considered this issue have adopted the remunera-
    tion test. See 
    id.,
     435–38 (adopting remuneration test
    after contrasting cases from circuits that apply remu-
    neration test, including Second, Fourth, Eighth, Tenth,
    and Eleventh Circuits, with cases from Sixth and Ninth
    Circuits, which apply common-law agency test).5 In so
    doing, several circuits, including the Second Circuit,
    concluded that a test designed to distinguish employees
    from independent contractors is ill-suited to distin-
    guishing employees from volunteers. See O’Connor v.
    Davis, 
    supra,
     
    126 F.3d 115
    ; Haavistola v. Community
    Fire Co. of Rising Sun, Inc., 
    6 F.3d 211
    , 220 (4th Cir.
    1993).
    Federal case law strongly weighs in favor of the appli-
    cation of the remuneration test to claims brought under
    CFEPA for two reasons. First, adopting the remunera-
    tion test makes this court’s interpretation of CFEPA
    complement the interpretation of Title VII as adopted
    by the majority of federal circuits, including the Second
    Circuit. See Gleason v. Smolinski, 
    319 Conn. 394
    , 444
    n.41, 
    125 A.3d 920
     (2015) (decisions of Second Circuit
    are deemed particularly persuasive when there is circuit
    split). Although this court has occasionally interpreted
    CFEPA differently than Title VII, it has done so only in
    circumstances in which there is clear evidence of a
    contrary legislative intent. See McWeeny v. Hartford,
    
    287 Conn. 56
    , 69, 
    946 A.2d 862
     (2008) (relevant portion
    of CFEPA plain and unambiguous); Evening Sentinel
    v. National Organization for Women, 
    168 Conn. 26
    , 34
    n.5, 
    357 A.2d 498
     (1975) (textual difference between
    CFEPA and corresponding provision of Title VII was
    ‘‘purposeful and is meaningful’’); see also Vollemans v.
    Wallingford, 
    103 Conn. App. 188
    , 213, 218, 
    928 A.2d 586
    (2007) (federal interpretation directly conflicted with
    specific legislative policy of avoiding dismissal of poten-
    tially meritorious claims due to late filing), aff’d, 
    289 Conn. 57
    , 61, 
    956 A.2d 579
     (2008). No such evidence is
    apparent in the present case.
    Second, the logic supporting the remuneration test
    is more sound. It provides a threshold step to resolve the
    factual premise that the right to control test assumes—a
    hiring party and a hired party.
    Our conclusion that the remuneration test applies is
    confirmed by the legislature’s enactment of ‘‘An Act
    Protecting Interns from Workplace Harassment and
    Discrimination.’’ Public Acts 2015, No. 15-56 (P.A. 15-
    56), codified at General Statutes (Supp. 2016) §§ 31-40y
    and 46a-51 (8). The bill subsequently enacted as P.A.
    15-56 was introduced prior to the Appellate Court’s
    decision in the present case but was not enacted until
    shortly after that decision was issued. The legislature,
    through P.A. 15-56, amended CFEPA to include interns
    as a separate class of persons to whom the protections
    of CFEPA applied. General Statutes (Supp. 2016) § 46a-
    51 (8). An ‘‘ ‘[i]ntern’ ’’ is defined in part as ‘‘an individual
    who . . . is not entitled to wages for the work per-
    formed’’; General Statutes (Supp. 2016) § 31-40y (a) (3)
    (B); in contrast to an ‘‘ ‘[e]mployee,’ ’’ which is defined
    as ‘‘any individual engaged in service to an employer in
    a business of such employer and receives compensation
    for such service . . . .’’6 General Statutes (Supp. 2016)
    § 31-40y (a) (1). In testimony before the Labor and Pub-
    lic Employees Committee prior to the Appellate Court’s
    decision in this case, Senator Martin M. Looney, one
    of the sponsors of the bill enacted as P.A. 15-56,
    explained to his colleagues that the need for the bill
    stemmed from the fact that ‘‘Connecticut does not cur-
    rently protect interns from harassment, discrimination,
    or retaliation in our statutes because they are not con-
    sidered to be employees under our state law.’’ Conn.
    Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Labor and Public
    Employees, Pt. 1, 2015 Sess., p. 164.
    Public Act 15-56 and its legislative history yield the
    following considerations. First, the legislature did not
    hold the view that the right to control test applied to
    CFEPA because, if that test had applied, interns would
    not have been categorically excluded from CFEPA. Sec-
    ond, adopting the right to control test for CFEPA would
    create tension between CFEPA and P.A. 15-56, the latter
    plainly turning on the question of compensation and
    other factors not directly related to the right to control.
    Creating such tension would be inconsistent with the
    principle that we read ‘‘the legislative scheme as a whole
    in order to give effect to and harmonize all of [its]
    parts.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Stewart v.
    Watertown, 
    303 Conn. 699
    , 711, 
    38 A.3d 72
     (2012).
    Sarah nevertheless advances a number of arguments
    for application of the right to control test, none of which
    we find persuasive. Sarah’s reliance on two cases
    involving complaints by volunteers, Groton v. Commis-
    sion on Human Rights & Opportunities, 
    169 Conn. 89
    , 91, 100–101, 
    362 A.2d 1359
     (1975), and Quinnipiac
    Council, Boy Scouts of America, Inc. v. Commission
    on Human Rights & Opportunities, 
    204 Conn. 287
    , 302,
    
    528 A.2d 352
     (1987), is misplaced. Because neither case
    directly addressed or analyzed the question of who is
    an employee under CFEPA, we read them as simply
    assuming, without deciding, that volunteers could be
    protected under CFEPA, a proposition that we do
    not dispute.
    Sarah’s contention that, by enacting P.A. 15-56, the
    legislature clarified the law to protect individuals in her
    position, is unsupported by its plain language. Public
    Act 15-56 expands protections for one narrowly defined
    class of persons—unpaid interns—to which Sarah does
    not belong.
    Sarah’s argument that applying the remuneration test
    would lead to unfair results, contrary to the public pol-
    icy of protecting workers from discrimination, is simi-
    larly unpersuasive. Although CFEPA is a remedial
    statute, such ‘‘that ambiguities in [CFEPA] should be
    construed in favor of persons seeking redress thereun-
    der’’; McWeeny v. Hartford, 
    supra,
     
    287 Conn. 70
    ; our
    ‘‘fundamental objective is to ascertain and give effect
    to the apparent intent of the legislature.’’ (Internal quo-
    tation marks omitted.) Standard Oil of Connecticut,
    Inc. v. Administrator, Unemployment Compensation
    Act, 
    320 Conn. 611
    , 642, 
    134 A.3d 581
     (2016). Accord-
    ingly, we are ‘‘not free to accomplish a result that is
    contrary to the intent of the legislature . . . .’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) McWeeny v. Hartford, 
    supra, 70
    . For all the reasons previously discussed, we are
    persuaded that the application of the remuneration test
    would be its intention. Moreover, the legislature’s use
    of the term ‘‘employee’’ instead of a more general term;
    cf. General Statutes § 53-450 (b) (‘‘[a]ny person . . .
    shall have a right of action against any person’’); is itself
    an expression of public policy to impose some limit on
    the scope of CFEPA. Thibodeau v. Design Group One
    Architects, LLC, 
    260 Conn. 691
    , 713, 
    802 A.2d 731
     (2002)
    (general public policy against sex discrimination could
    not trump specific expression of policy in CFEPA
    exempting small employers).
    In sum, the Appellate Court properly concluded that
    the remuneration test is the appropriate test for
    determining whether a volunteer is an employee under
    CFEPA. Although a volunteer may be able to meet the
    remuneration test by proof of benefits in lieu of wages;
    Haavistola v. Community Fire Co. of Rising Sun, Inc.,
    
    supra,
     
    6 F.3d 221
    –22; Sarah has neither alleged facts
    nor claimed on appeal that she can meet this test.
    Accordingly, our conclusion that the remuneration test
    applies is dispositive.
    The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other justices concurred.
    * This case originally was scheduled to be argued before a panel of this
    court consisting of Chief Justice Rogers and Justices Palmer, Zarella, Eve-
    leigh, McDonald, Espinosa and Robinson. Although Justice Eveleigh was
    not present when the case was argued before the court, he has read the
    briefs and appendices, and listened to a recording of the oral argument
    prior to participating in this decision.
    1
    Due to unusual procedures applicable to proceedings before the commis-
    sion, in this administrative appeal, the commission is named as both a
    plaintiff (in its own capacity) and as a defendant (in its capacity as the agency
    under which the commission’s human rights referee issued the decision from
    which the commission appealed). See General Statutes § 46a-94a. Sarah,
    who was substituted for her mother as a party upon reaching the age of
    majority, is named as a nominal defendant pursuant to General Statutes § 4-
    183 (c). For clarity, we refer to the commission and Sarah by name.
    2
    It appears from the record that the precepting program is a probationary
    training program that, if satisfactorily completed, allows the participant to
    become a regular member of Echo Hose upon a majority vote of all of the
    regular members.
    3
    Although we ordinarily afford ‘‘deference to the construction of a statute
    applied by the administrative agency empowered by law to carry out the
    statute’s purposes,’’ such deference is unwarranted when, as in this case,
    ‘‘the construction of a statute . . . has not previously been subjected to
    judicial scrutiny [or to] . . . a governmental agency’s time-tested interpreta-
    tion . . . .’’ Chairperson, Connecticut Medical Examining Board v. Free-
    dom of Information Commission, 
    310 Conn. 276
    , 281–82, 
    77 A.3d 121
     (2013).
    4
    Connecticut’s right to control test similarly determines the relationship
    between a worker and a putative employer ‘‘by asking whether the putative
    employer has the right to control the means and methods used by the worker
    in the performance of his or her job.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Doe v. Yale University, 
    252 Conn. 641
    , 680–81, 
    748 A.2d 834
     (2000). This
    court has not expressly endorsed the factors used by the federal courts,
    which include: ‘‘the skill required; the source of the instrumentalities and
    tools; the location of the work; the duration of the relationship between
    the parties; whether the hiring party has the right to assign additional projects
    to the hired party; the extent of the hired party’s discretion over when and
    how long to work; the method of payment; the hired party’s role in hiring
    and paying assistants; whether the work is part of the regular business of
    the hiring party; whether the hiring party is in business; the provision of
    employee benefits; and the tax treatment of the hired party.’’ (Footnotes
    omitted.) Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 
    490 U.S. 730
    ,
    751–52, 
    109 S. Ct. 2166
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 811
     (1989).
    5
    Two other circuit courts have applied the common-law test for agency
    to determine whether an individual was an employee under Title VII, but
    there was no question that the individual had been hired by the employer.
    See Brown v. J. Kaz, Inc., 
    581 F.3d 175
    , 178, 180 (3d Cir. 2009); Alberty-
    Velez v. Corporacion de Puerto Rico Para La Difusion Publica, 
    361 F.3d 1
    , 6–7 (1st Cir. 2004).
    6
    The definition of intern also provides that an intern is an individual
    whose work ‘‘supplements training given in an educational environment’’;
    General Statutes (Supp. 2016) § 31-40y (a) (3) (C) (i); therefore making clear
    that an intern is not the same as a volunteer whose efforts are unconnected
    to an educational program.