Judge Denies Uber's Motion To Dismiss, Sets Up Jury Trial For 'Employees Or Independent Contractors?' Question
from the innovation-through-jurisprudence? dept
In a decision that's sure to be applauded by Uber's opponents, Judge Edward Chen has denied the ride-sharing company's request to declare its drivers independent contractors. If Uber is forced to suddenly take thousands of employees on board, along with the added expenses and liabilities such a move would entail, it's going to have a much harder time maintaining -- much less expanding -- a service that many people find preferable to the taxicab strangleholds present in many cities.In denying the company's motion for summary judgment, Chen calls Uber out for the "narrow framing" of its "we're an app, not a company" assertions, but notes that Uber does grant its drivers enough leeway that the question cannot be completely resolved via a motion in his court. Chen also raises the spectre of further regulation -- something that's similarly unlikely to work out in Uber's favor.
The application of the traditional test of employment – a test which evolved under an economic model very different from the new “sharing economy” – to Uber’s business model creates significant challenges. Arguably, many of the factors in that test appear outmoded in this context. Other factors, which might arguably be reflective of the current economic realities (such as the proportion of revenues generated and shared by the respective parties, their relative bargaining power, and the range of alternatives available to each), are not expressly encompassed by the Borello test. It may be that the legislature or appellate courts may eventually refine or revise that test in the context of the new economy. It is conceivable that the legislature would enact rules particular to the new so-called “sharing economy.”And then sends the case on its way to a jury trial, something he notes earlier is the only way to resolve an issue this complex. No precedent is set or will be set, at least not in Chen's court.
Until then, this Court is tasked with applying the traditional multifactor test of Borello and its progeny to the facts at hand. For the reasons stated above, apart from the preliminary finding that Uber drivers are presumptive employees, the Borello test does not yield an unambiguous result. The matter cannot on this record be decided as a matter of law. Uber’s motion for summary judgment is therefore denied.So, a case that has been running since August of 2013 may still be months away from a resolution. Uber's inability to get the suit tossed doesn't necessarily mean it's destined to become Yet Another Cab Company. It still has options, but it also has an uphill battle against plenty of incumbents… and the politicians who prefer what they know to unfamiliar market entrants.
This order disposes of Docket No. 211.
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Filed Under: contractors, employees, gig economy, labor, ridesharing
Companies: lyft, uber
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"Even where there is an absence of control over work details, an employer-employee relationship will be found if (1) the principal retains pervasive control over the operation as a whole, (2) the worker’s duties are an integral part of the operation, and (3) the nature of the work makes detailed control unnecessary. (Yellow Cab Cooperative v. Workers Compensation Appeals Board (1991) 226 Cal.App.3d 1288)"
reading this makes it seem a lot less ambiguous.
1. Pervasive control. The only thing not under Uber's control is the actual driving, all the other business aspects, payment processing, marketing, price control, and driver - passenger pairing is controlled by Uber.
2. This one is pretty plain as without drivers, Uber has no business.
3. Also pretty plain, Uber doesn't need to maintain control over the routes taken by drivers and micro-manage them.
Under California law, Uber is likely to lose this case unless they modify their app to give drivers more control. Under Federal law... that'll be decided in court too most likely.
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The expenses of becoming a "traditional company" and those up-front costs of finding ways out of those expenses like "traditional companies". Then they can become a mega-corp and incur the expenses of buying politics to lower expenses and make law as they see fit.
Imagine all the employment opportunities and economic growth that entails!
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And that's good. Remember, popularity <> quality.
Lots of people "prefer" to shop at Wal-Mart, but that doesn't make them not a thoroughly evil, corrupt company that exploits and harms everyone they come into contact with. Uber is the same way.
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Can't have such freedom, can we? Can't have that cash going into the hands of people outside of our little money club, eh?
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Re:
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Uber Drivers
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Since judges do exactly as they are paid to, business as usual.
If Uber pays the judge more than the taxi companies then they will have a favorable outcome.
The USA justice system is a figment of the delusionist's mind.
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Re: Uber Drivers
True, but the same can be said of the vast majority of companies that exist, so I'm not sure why that's significant.
"A 25% cut out of my driver commission is TOO HIGH but this is what Uber takes from us."
According to my non-Uber cab driving friend, Uber lets you take home more money than traditional cab companies. They structure the payment differently (the traditional cab company charges daily fees to drivers in addition to a percentage of the take) which makes direct comparisons difficult, but in the end cab companies keep more than 25%.
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Re: Uber Drivers
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Borello test
IANAL, but most of these factors seem to fall in favor of Uber. The primary factor (in bold) supports the contractor angle, since Uber does not have much control over how or if a driver operates. The secondary factors are somewhat split: 1, 2, and 5 would suggest an employee relationship, but the remainder lean towards contractor. Factors 3, 4, 8, 9, and 10 are particularly slanted towards Uber's position.
I think Uber has a reasonably good case here. I can also see why Judge Chen was unwilling to grant summary judgement.
(For those of you who are neither lawyers nor legal nerds, the bar for "summary judgement" is very high. You have to assume everything the other side says is true and still show that you'll win. Most real cases won't be decided this way. Summary judgement is mainly useful for things like "they accused me of something that isn't illegal", or "they aren't even pretending to have any proof".)
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