Partners and shareholders as covered employees under federal antidiscrimination acts
Partners and shareholders as covered employees under federal antidiscrimination acts
Greene
Stephanie M.
Greene, Stephanie M.
Dept. of Business Law, Carroll School of Management
Author
Author
O'Brien
Christine Neylon
O'Brien, Christine Neylon
Dept. of Business Law, Carroll School of Management
Author
Author
text
article
2003 2003 monographic
2003
2003
monographic
English eng
English
eng
electronic application/pdf digitized other analog
electronic
application/pdf
digitized other analog
A 2001 ruling by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit revives the controversy over whether partners and shareholders may be considered employees, entitled to protection under federal anti-discrimination laws. In Wells v. Clackamas, 271 F.3d 90, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that shareholders in a professional corporation are employees. A petition for certiorari was granted in this case, 2002 U.S. LEXIS 5383 (U.S. Oct. 1, 2002) (No. 01-1435). The Ninth Circuit's ruling allowed Ms. Wells to bring her suit for discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act because counting the shareholders as employees gave the company the required minimum of fifteen employees to qualify as a covered entity under the Act. The decision adopts the minority view that corporate form determines whether shareholders are employees under federal anti-discrimination laws. The majority view looks at the relationship between the individuals in question and the business entity and, based on the economic reality of that relationship, determines whether the individual has the proprietary qualities of an employer or not. The economic reality approach is also used in determining whether partners are true partners, and thus employers, or partners in name only, and thus employees. Whether partners in a partnership or shareholders in a professional corporation are employers or employees determines whether they may seek protection under federal anti-discrimination laws, or as in the Wells case, whether the firm is a covered entity, so that employees may bring suit. The authors maintain that the federal anti-discrimination laws should be amended to address the meaning of the term "employee." Because the cases indicate a lack of uniformity in both approach and outcome, the authors recommend amendments to the statutes that would clarify the distinction between "employers" and "employees" and whether the roles must be mutually exclusive. In addition, they recommend amendments regarding which indicia are critical in determining covered employee status, and what members of firms should count as employees for satisfying the jurisdictional minimum.
Version of record.
American Business Law Journal 0002-7766 40 4 781 826 pp. 781-826 Summer 2003
American Business Law Journal
American Business Law Journal
0002-7766
40 4 781 826 pp. 781-826 Summer 2003
40
40
4
4
781 826 pp. 781-826
781
826
pp. 781-826
Summer 2003
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Business Law ABLJ-v40-GreeneOBrien-p781-QC.pdf BusinessLawPublications.eml
Business Law
ABLJ-v40-GreeneOBrien-p781-QC.pdf
BusinessLawPublications.eml
MChB English eng
MChB
English eng
English
eng