ESM0515 - Guide to determining status: relevant factors
In deciding whether a person is in business on his own account
or working under the control of and as part of the business of
another, a variety of factors are relevant. Cooke J said in Market
Investigations (see
ESM7040)
'No exhaustive list has been compiled and perhaps no
exhaustive list can be compiled of the considerations which are
relevant in determining' [whether there is a contract of
employment] 'nor can strict rules be laid down as to the relative
weight which the various considerations should carry in particular
cases. The most that can be said is that control will no doubt
always have to be considered, although it can no longer be regarded
as the sole determining factor; and that factors which may be of
importance are such matters as whether the man performing the
services provides his own equipment, whether he hires his own
helpers, what degree of financial risk he takes, what degree of
responsibility for investment and management he has, and whether
and how far he has an opportunity of profiting from sound
management in the performance of his task.'
Although there is no exhaustive list, the factors to be
considered include the following:
- control
- personal service
- equipment
- financial risk
- basis of payment
- mutuality of obligation
- holiday pay, sick pay and pension rights
- part and parcel of the organisation
- right to terminate a contract
- opportunity to profit from sound management
- personal factors
- length of engagement
- intention of the parties.
It must be emphasised that status in not a matter to be
determined by running down some form of check list or adding up the
number of factors pointing toward employment and comparing that
result with the number pointing toward self employment. It is a
matter of evaluating the overall picture that emerges from a
detailed review of all the facts. This was made clear in the recent
tax case of Hall v Lorimer (see
ESM7160). In the High Court Mummery J.
made the following comment which was quoted with approval by Nolan
J in the Court of Appeal
'In order to decide whether a person carries on business on
his own account it is necessary to consider many different aspects
of that person’s work activity. This is not a mechanical
exercise of running through items on a check list to see whether
they are present in, or absent from, a given situation. The object
of the exercise is to paint a picture from the accumulation of
detail. The overall effect can only be appreciated by standing back
from the detailed picture which has been painted, by viewing it
from a distance and by making an informed, considered, qualitative
appreciation of the whole. It is a matter of evaluation of the
overall effect, which is not necessarily the same as the sum total
of the individual details. Not all details are of equal weight or
importance in any given situation. The details may also vary in
importance from one situation to another.
The process involves painting a picture in each individual
case.'
