Legal Question in Business Law in California

Employee seeks Additional work as Independent Contractor

An employee wants to do additional work (cleaning his workspace and that of other employees and staff) for his employer, a small business with 5 employees but wants to be an independent contractor (IC). What employment contract language or seperate IC agreement is needed to avoid possible problems from injury at workplace while working as an IC but a claim is filed against Workmens Comp? Does IC work have to be done after regular business hours? Should the IC be required to sign a waier of insurance coverage if he becomes injured while doing the IC work?


Asked on 5/09/06, 7:29 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Ken Dallara Law Office of Ken Dallara

Re: Employee seeks Additional work as Independent Contractor

Under California Law, that employee will be treated as an employee of yours and will thus be on overtime. California Employment Commission will not separate work done for you and work done outside of your scope of work for him. I speak from experience. A 1099 will not protect you. The State will see the same employer number (you) for the same SS# of the employee and will not allow it.

Should the employee be employed by another company with a different EIN#, I did not find any problems. I was able to find work for these people in this manner.

The law is not favorable for people who want to earn a little extra money and employers nice enough to want to help their employees.

Insurance wise, a truly independent contractor will carry their own workmen's comp and you have a duty to verify that they carry liability insurance. Your insurance company will look very disfavorably on you for risking their converage, and might in fact even deny you coverage for his accident, placing the company liable for his accident.

You did not mention if your company is incorporated or even an LLC but this is when you need those protections.

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Answered on 5/09/06, 8:05 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: Employee seeks Additional work as Independent Contractor

As the previous response points out, this is not a good idea. Any attempt to waive liability would be VOID, so forget that angle. You can get excellent free advice about these kinds of schemes from a competent workers' comp insurance agent or broker.

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Answered on 5/09/06, 10:23 pm


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