Date: 19971127
Docket: 97-481-UI; 97-90-CPP
BETWEEN:
LOUISE MOHR,
Appellant,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
(Delivered orally from the Bench in Regina, Saskatchewan, on
October 24, 1997)
Mogan, J.T.C.C.
[1] The issue in these appeals is whether Shelley Agnew
(Shelley) who provided childcare services to the children of
Louise Mohr (the Appellant), was engaged in insurable employment
or whether she was an independent contractor. The Appellant and
her husband have three children: Colin born in August 1990,
Spencer born in September 1991 and Renee born in June 1993. The
father is employed with Saskatchewan Power and the mother is
employed by the Regina Fire Department in the capacity of an
administrator. Both the father and the mother have full-time
employment in those capacities. Because they were fully employed,
they needed someone to provide childcare for their three infant
children.
[2] In January 1994, the Appellant and her husband entered
into an arrangement with Shelley to provide childcare to the
three children as follows. Shelley would come to the house of the
Appellant and her husband each weekday at 7:30 a.m. and remain
there until 5:30 p.m. During that ten-hour day, Shelley had the
sole custody of the three children and was responsible for their
physical and emotional care and needs. She fed them meals, took
them out to the park and to the library. She could take them to
her own home which was an apartment, but the daycare had to be
provided in the home of the Appellant because it was not
convenient to take the children to Shelley's apartment. Also,
by having Shelley come to the Appellant's home, all of the
facilities were there for looking after small children, such as
bottles, toys and supplies like clothes, diapers and laundry
facilities. The arrangement was that Shelley would do laundry and
light housekeeping so that the parents would not come home at
night to find an accumulation of soiled children's clothing.
Shelley had great freedom during the daytime so long as the
children were cared for in a responsible manner. She could go
pretty well where she wanted. If she was going to use a vehicle,
however, the Appellant and her husband insisted that Shelley use
their family van which was fitted with appropriate childcare
seats and seatbelts to protect the children while the van was in
motion.
[3] Shelley apparently had a Bachelors degree in Education,
and also a CPR course in health science and safety as well as a
first aid course. She was compensated at the rate of $50 per day
or $250 per week and she was paid twice a month so that there
were 24 pay periods per year. As mentioned, she began work for
the Mohr family in January 1994 and continued until September
1997, when she left to work elsewhere. Shelley was obviously a
responsible person.
[4] The question in these appeals is whether the services
provided by Shelley can be characterized as a contract of
service, therefore giving rise to insurable employment, or
whether she was an independent contractor and not an employee
engaged in insurable employment pursuant to the Unemployment
Insurance Act and the Canada Pension Plan.
[5] The Appellant argues that Shelley was an independent
contractor because, apart from the duties assigned by the
Appellant and her husband, she had considerable freedom in taking
on other similar work. For example, in 1994, a child by the name
of Amanda Walton who was eight or nine years of age needed
childcare since her parents worked. An arrangement was made with
Amanda’s parents that she could go to the Mohr home at
12:00 noon to have lunch prepared by Shelley and also go there in
the afternoon from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. to be under
Shelley's care until Amanda’s parents were able to pick
her up. The Appellant stated that she had no knowledge of what
the compensation arrangement was between Shelley and Amanda's
parents because she thought that was not her concern. She did
note, however, that Amanda came to the Mohr home and she had no
objection to that.
[6] Similarly, in 1995, Shelley looked after two other
children named Ben and Heidi, a brother and sister. They were
quite young, one being six months old and the other about
2½ years old. Apparently, the parents of Ben and Heidi
struck an arrangement with Shelley whereby she did look after
them and, when the Appellant became aware of this additional
arrangement, she did not object because Shelley seemed to be able
to handle two more children and the arrangement was casual and on
a less frequent basis. The Appellant was not aware of what
compensation was being paid to Shelley by the parents of Ben and
Heidi.
[7] Also, there was another child, Nicholas, from across the
street whose parents worked and they asked the Appellant if
Shelley could look after their son on occasion as well. The
Appellant said to Nicholas' parents: “You will have to
ask Shelley. It is okay with us, if it is okay with her, but that
is your separate deal.” In that situation, Shelley declined
to look after Nicholas because he was such a tiny baby. She did,
however, from time to time provide childcare services for
Nicholas in the Appellant’s home, but only in situations
which I would call “panic calls” when whoever was
looking after Nicholas could not come and they needed a caregiver
on short notice. Shelley would take Nicholas for one-half day to
a full day, but not as a regular commitment.
[8] The Appellant put forward these examples of Amanda, Ben
and Heidi and Nicholas to show the flexibility that Shelley had;
that she was not tied down to giving services exclusively to the
children of the Appellant and her husband; and to put Shelley
more in the position of being a person engaged in a business with
clients among whom the Appellant and her husband were only two.
There is some merit in that. Shelley had other discretionary uses
of the Mohr home. She used their home computer for her own
assignments; she did needlework and other hand work and obviously
earned the responsibility which the Appellant and her husband
vested in her.
[9] Sometime in the fall of 1995, Shelley wanted to upgrade
her skills and went to the Canada Employment Centre to see about
courses. When the Centre inquired into her background, it was
discovered that there were no unemployment insurance premiums and
Canada Pension Plan contributions being paid by her or by
the Appellant with regard to the services she was providing and
the question arose as to whether she was engaged in insurable
employment. In February 1996, the Minister of National Revenue
ruled that Shelley was an employee and that her insurable
employment should be regarded as commencing as of January 1995.
Shelley and the Appellant appealed from that ruling and late in
1996, the Minister’s ruling was confirmed. From that
confirmation, an appeal is brought to this Court.
[10] I had some doubt as to whether this might be regarded as
casual employment within the meaning of paragraph 3(2)(b)
of the Unemployment Insurance Act. However, no argument
was put to me with any jurisprudence on the extent to which that
paragraph has been construed, and my instinct is that without
hearing legal argument, it is not casual employment because of
the regularity and consistency with which the service was
rendered 10 hours per day, five days per week, 52 weeks per year.
I believe that takes it out of the category of being employment
of a casual nature. It does not, however, answer the question as
to whether Shelley was an employee or an independent contractor.
In argument, counsel for the Respondent referred me to the
well-known tests laid down by the Federal Court of Appeal in
Wiebe Door Services Ltd. v. M.N.R., [1986] 3 F.C. For
convenience, I shall briefly apply those tests to this
situation.
[11] On the question of control, that test favours employment
over independent contractor because the hours were laid down by
the Appellant, the service was to be performed to the convenience
of the Appellant and her husband, namely, from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30
p.m. The duties were assigned by the Appellant and had to be
performed to her satisfaction both with regard to the physical
care such as providing meals, cleaning the children, doing the
laundry, and the emotional care of looking after the children in
an atmosphere where they would feel secure, comforted and
protected. There is a certain responsibility in control because
in 1995, the oldest child would have been five years old and able
to complain to his mother. Both Colin and Spencer could have
complained to their parents by 1995 and 1996 if they were not
happy or if Shelley had been treating them in an irresponsible
manner. Therefore, although there was no direct hands-on
supervision through the 10 hours of the day, there was a control
mechanism in terms of whether the children were being cared for
in a responsible, secure, safe and happy environment. On the test
of control, I believe that test favours employment over Shelley
being an independent contractor.
[12] With regard to the ownership of the tools, my first
reaction is that tools were never thought of in connection with
services like this. Tools in the workplace usually relate to
either hand tools, like the carpenter's hammer and saw, or a
machinist’s tools, like a lathe and a drill press. One does
not think of tools in connection with childcare but, if the word
is to be given a broader meaning, that is the properties that
would permit a service to be rendered, those personal properties
would be dishes and cutlery to feed the children, a stove to warm
their food, toys with which they played, diapers for infant
children because they are necessary items for the care of a very
small child, a van to transport the children if they are to be
taken on outings of any kind. Since all of these
“tools” were owned by and provided by the Appellant,
that test favours employment.
[13] The third test is the chance of profit and risk of loss.
In this regard, the Appellant argues that Shelley’s
opportunity either to take on additional children like Amanda,
Ben and Heidi and Nicholas, or decline, is a chance for her to
enhance her earnings or not. There is no question that she had
that discretion with the permission of the Appellant, but I do
not think that is the relevant fact in applying the test of
chance of profit or risk of loss. I see no risk of loss at all
because as long as the assigned duties were performed, the
compensation of $50 per day would be paid. Although it was not
fixed like an hourly rate, it was just as secure as any hourly
wage or a daily or weekly salary that might arise in other
service situations. I see the chance of profit and risk of loss
as being in favour of employment because there was an assured
compensation and no risk of loss. Whether Shelley was inclined to
take on the services of looking after other children was up to
her and the parents of the other children. It has no bearing, in
my view, on the fixed permanent relationship that was established
between Shelley and the Appellant.
[14] The integration test as I indicated to the parties in
argument, is not relevant in this case. Shelley was primarily the
caregiver on behalf of the Appellant.
[15] It is interesting how this case came up because, in my
view, and I think this is clear from the evidence of the
Appellant, neither she nor Shelley ever thought of this service
as being insurable employment. The thought simply had not crossed
their minds and would not have crossed their minds but for the
fact that Shelley went to the Canada Employment Centre to find
out about certain programs that might be available to her. Her
inquiry caused some officer of that Centre to ask the logical
question “Are you now engaged in insurable employment and
what are you doing?” Once Shelley tells her story, it
triggers a whole series of inquiries as to whether the service
Shelley provides to the Appellant is insurable employment and,
after a long process, it brings the parties to this Court.
[16] I find on the law that Shelley was engaged in insurable
employment. The jurisprudence states that that is so. I might
say, however, that I cannot imagine that when the legislation was
originally introduced in the late 1940s or revised as it has been
from time to time, that up until recently anyone would have
thought of the casual work of a childcare person in the home as
being insurable employment, giving rise to rights to unemployment
insurance. We live in a society where laws and regulations are
becoming overly intrusive in the lives of cititzens. This is an
area where one person who wants to expand her skills inquires
about some form of assistance and triggers a whole series of
ramifications, which suddenly put Shelley and the Appellant not
only into an employer/employee relationship, but into one which
gives rise to the need to withhold and remit unemployment
insurance premiums and Canada Pension Plan contributions.
It is an indication that we are an over-regulated society, but
Judges do not make laws. They only interpret them and apply them
to certain fact situations: what I am obliged to do in this case.
Reluctantly, I hold that Shelley was engaged in insurable
employment in 1995, 1996 and 1997 and the appeals are
dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 27th day of November, 1997.
"M.A. Mogan"
J.T.C.C.