Aura Spa & Boutique v. Department of Workforce Services , 845 Utah Adv. Rep. 32 ( 2017 )


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    2017 UT App 152
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    AURA SPA & BOUTIQUE,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE SERVICES,
    WORKFORCE APPEALS BOARD,
    Respondent.
    Opinion
    No. 20160341-CA
    Filed August 17, 2017
    Original Proceeding in this Court
    David E. Ross II, Attorney for Petitioner
    Suzan Pixton and Nathan R. White, Attorneys
    for Respondent
    JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES
    J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. and MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN concurred. 1
    ORME, Judge:
    ¶1     Aura Spa & Boutique (the Spa) petitions for judicial
    review of the Workforce Appeals Board’s decision that
    concluded the Spa’s workers were employees rather than
    independent contractors for purposes of Utah’s employment
    security regime. We decline to disturb the board’s
    determination.
    1. Judge J. Frederic Voros Jr. participated in this case as a
    member of the Utah Court of Appeals. He retired from the court
    before this decision issued.
    Aura Spa & Boutique v. Department of Workforce Services
    ¶2     The Spa offered massages and various esthetic services to
    its customers. In providing these services, the Spa contracted
    with individual massage therapists and estheticians, paying
    them a commission for the services they rendered. The Spa set
    the prices for the services, and it provided advertising, clientele,
    equipment, supplies, clerical support, and business premises
    where the workers performed their services for customers who
    wished to come to the Spa. Additionally, the Spa required its
    workers to carry liability insurance and maintain their
    professional licenses, both at their own expense.
    ¶3      In 2014, the Department of Workforce Services (DWS)
    randomly selected the Spa for an audit. During its investigation,
    DWS distributed questionnaires to the Spa’s workers to
    determine whether the workers were the Spa’s employees for
    purposes of unemployment compensation. After reviewing the
    pertinent information, the DWS auditor concluded that the
    workers were not independent contractors but were instead
    employees of the Spa. The Spa appealed, and a DWS hearing
    officer affirmed the decision.
    ¶4     The Spa appealed the hearing officer’s decision, and an
    administrative law judge (the ALJ) conducted a hearing. The
    owner of the Spa testified, but none of the Spa’s workers did.
    After the hearing, the ALJ issued a written decision, holding that
    the workers received wages subject to the Employment Security
    Act (the Act), see Utah Code Ann. § 35A-4-204(3) (LexisNexis
    2015); that the workers were employees rather than independent
    contractors for purposes of the Act; that the Spa directed and
    controlled its workers; and that the Spa was responsible for
    providing its employees with unemployment benefits through
    the payment of appropriate premiums for unemployment
    insurance. The ALJ concluded that the Spa failed to provide any
    legally competent evidence to support its claims to the contrary,
    noting that it “provided only hearsay testimony about the
    services provided by the [workers].” The Spa appealed the ALJ’s
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    Aura Spa & Boutique v. Department of Workforce Services
    decision, and the Workforce Appeals Board affirmed. The Spa
    now seeks our review of the board’s disposition.
    ¶5     “The determination whether a claimant is an independent
    contractor involves a fact-sensitive inquiry into the unique facts
    of a particular employment relationship.” Evolocity, Inc. v.
    Department of Workforce Services, 
    2015 UT App 61
    , ¶ 6, 
    347 P.3d 406
    . Due to the “individuality of fact patterns and the vagaries of
    various vocations,” BMS Ltd. 1999, Inc. v. Department of Workforce
    Services, 
    2014 UT App 111
    , ¶ 13, 
    327 P.3d 578
    , we will not disturb
    the board’s decision unless the challenging party shows “that a
    finding is not supported by legally sufficient evidence even
    when the evidence is viewed in a light most favorable to the
    finding,” Evolocity, 
    2015 UT App 61
    , ¶ 6 (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    ¶6    The Spa contends that the board erred in determining that
    its workers were employees rather than independent
    contractors. To establish that a worker is an independent
    contractor, the business owner has the burden to show that
    (a) the individual is customarily engaged in an
    independently established trade, occupation,
    profession, or business of the same nature as that
    involved in the contract of hire for services; and
    (b) the individual has been and will continue to be
    free from control or direction over the means of
    performance of those services, both under the
    individual’s contract of hire and in fact.
    Utah Code Ann. § 35A-4-204(3)(a)–(b).
    ¶7     The Spa asserts that its workers were independently
    established. It relies on a copy of a worker’s advertisement for
    massage services unrelated to the Spa; its workers’ responses to
    the DWS questionnaire, which consistently suggested
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    circumstances consistent with independence; 2 and the Spa
    owner’s hearing testimony.
    ¶8     DWS’s regulations identify seven factors to consider in
    determining whether a worker is independently established. See
    Utah Admin. Code R994-204-303(1)(b). Specifically, the factors
    require the reviewing entity to examine whether the worker has
    a separate place of business; has substantially invested in his or
    her own equipment; has independent clients; can realize a profit
    or loss; advertises his or her own services; has obtained the
    required and customary professional licenses; and maintains
    records that validate business expenses. 
    Id.
     R994-204-
    303(1)(b)(i)–(vii). Significantly, the burden is not on DWS to
    establish that the workers are covered employees under the Act;
    the burden is on the employer to establish that the workers are
    independent contractors not subject to the Act. See Utah Code
    Ann. § 35A-4-204(3).
    ¶9      The board found that all seven factors tended to show the
    workers were not independently established. In reaching its
    conclusion, the board noted that there was no legally competent
    evidence demonstrating that any of the workers maintained a
    separate place of business, rendered services to independent
    clients, advertised their services, or filed taxes as independent
    business entities. Additionally, while the board noted that the
    workers were free to use their own massage beds and lotions if
    they preferred, it concluded that the Spa “provided all the tools
    and equipment necessary for the workers to perform their jobs.”
    2. Most of the questionnaires included answers indicating the
    workers had their own separate places of business from which
    they often worked, frequently provided their own supplies and
    equipment (and invariably did so when making house calls),
    paid for their own liability insurance, and conducted advertising
    for massage and similar services unrelated to the Spa.
    20160341-CA                     4              
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    Aura Spa & Boutique v. Department of Workforce Services
    The board further determined that the workers faced “no risk of
    a loss,” noting that the workers were paid “[i]f they provided the
    service,” but otherwise stood to gain or lose nothing by reason of
    their affiliation with the Spa. Finally, the board noted that all
    massage therapists and estheticians, whether employees or
    independent contractors, are required to maintain professional
    licenses. In the board’s view, this fact, especially coupled with
    the fact that none of the Spa’s workers obtained separate
    business licenses, 3 also favored a conclusion that the Spa’s
    workers were employees.
    ¶10 In this judicial review proceeding, the Spa challenges the
    board’s decision by relying on the evidence it presented at the
    administrative hearing. But the Spa fails to show that the board’s
    decision was not supported by sufficient evidence, much less
    that the decision was outside “the realm of reasonableness and
    rationality.” See Prosper Team, Inc. v. Department of Workforce
    Services, 
    2011 UT App 142
    , ¶ 6, 
    256 P.3d 246
     (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    ¶11 While the Spa argues that the board’s decision was not
    supported by sufficient evidence, its primary argument is that
    the board erroneously refused to consider legally competent
    evidence that, according to the Spa, would have tipped the
    decision in its favor. This argument implicates the so-called
    residuum rule. The residuum rule requires that an
    administrative board’s findings of fact “be supported by a
    residuum of legal evidence competent in a court of law” even if
    3. We note that two workers, in their responses to the DWS
    questionnaire, indicated that they had business licenses in
    addition to their professional licenses. But as we explain below,
    this evidence alone is insufficient to support a finding that the
    Spa’s workers obtained separate business licenses. See infra
    ¶¶ 12–13.
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    Aura Spa & Boutique v. Department of Workforce Services
    the board has received and considered evidence of a lesser
    quality. See InnoSys, Inc. v. Department of Workforce Services, 
    2011 UT App 169
    , ¶ 9, 
    257 P.3d 489
     (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted). While hearsay “is clearly admissible in
    administrative proceedings,” 
    id.
     (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted), the ensuing findings of fact may not rely
    exclusively on inadmissible hearsay evidence, see Prosper, Inc. v.
    Department of Workforce Services, 
    2007 UT App 281
    , ¶ 11, 
    168 P.3d 344
    ; Utah Admin. Code R994-508-111(4).
    ¶12 Hearsay consists of “a statement that: (1) the declarant
    does not make while testifying at the current trial or hearing;
    and (2) a party offers in evidence to prove the truth of the matter
    asserted in the statement.” Utah R. Evid. 801(c). Much of what
    was traditionally considered to be hearsay is, by rule, now
    characterized as “not hearsay.” See 
    id.
     R. 801(d). And much
    hearsay is legally competent evidence, given the multitude of
    exceptions to the presumptive bar on the admission of hearsay.
    See 
    id.
     R. 803 (listing twenty-three exceptions); 
    id.
     R. 804(b)
    (listing four exceptions); 
    id.
     R. 807(a) (permitting the admission
    of hearsay statements, not qualifying for admission under an
    express exception, if “the statement has equivalent
    circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness” and satisfies three
    other requirements). Hearsay statements covered by the
    foregoing exceptions are legally competent for purposes of the
    residuum rule; conversely, hearsay that does not come within
    one or more of these exceptions does not pass muster under the
    residuum rule. See Prosper Inc., 
    2007 UT App 281
    , ¶ 11.
    ¶13 During the administrative hearing, the Spa’s owner
    provided a copy of one massage therapist’s advertisement for
    services wholly independent of the Spa. Alas, the advertisement
    is hearsay. It contained a statement that was not made at the
    hearing, and it was offered to prove the truth of the matter
    asserted—that one of the Spa’s workers offered her massage
    services independently of her work for the Spa. The Spa made
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    no effort to establish the applicability of one of the foregoing
    exceptions. Therefore, the board correctly refused to find, based
    on this flyer alone, that the Spa’s workers had independently
    advertised their services.
    ¶14 The workers’ responses to the DWS questionnaire are also
    hearsay, but the Spa argues that the responses to the
    questionnaire would nonetheless be admissible in court under
    the public record exception to the hearsay rule, and thus are
    legally competent for purposes of the residuum rule. See Utah R.
    Evid. 803(8). We disagree. Interpreting the identically worded
    federal rule of evidence, the United States Court of Appeals for
    the Seventh Circuit stated that “the presumption of reliability
    that serves as the premise for the public-records exception does
    not attach to third parties who themselves have no public duty
    to report.” Jordan v. Binns, 
    712 F.3d 1123
    , 1133 (7th Cir. 2013)
    (refusing to admit “third-party statements contained in a police
    report”). See also United States v. Morales, 
    720 F.3d 1194
    , 1202 (9th
    Cir. 2013) (“In general, statements by third parties who are not
    government employees . . . may not be admitted pursuant to the
    public records exception but must satisfy some other exception
    in order to be admitted.”). Thus, the responses to the
    questionnaires must themselves fall within one of the exceptions
    to the hearsay rule. Cf. In re G.Y., 
    962 P.2d 78
    , 85 (Utah Ct. App.
    1998) (holding that third-party statements contained in DCFS
    caseworker reports constituted hearsay). 4 Because the Spa does
    4. At the administrative hearing, the Spa also provided what
    appears to be a copy of an email attachment containing the
    business license of one of its workers. While the Spa refers to this
    license in its brief, it does not argue that the copy is admissible
    under the public records exception. We therefore have no
    occasion to consider it, but we do note that there was no
    foundation established for its authenticity, nor was it a certified
    copy.
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    Aura Spa & Boutique v. Department of Workforce Services
    not contend that the responses to the questionnaire are
    admissible under any other exception to the hearsay rule, the
    Spa has not established that the statements are legally competent
    for purposes of the residuum rule.
    ¶15 The Spa has not demonstrated, with the support of at
    least a residuum of legally competent evidence, that its workers
    were independently established. It has likewise failed to
    demonstrate that the board’s decision was not supported by
    legally sufficient evidence or was beyond the limits of
    rationality. Further, because independent contractor status
    requires a showing of both independent establishment and
    freedom from direct control, the lack of the former obviates the
    need to discuss the latter. See Evolocity, Inc. v. Department of
    Workforce Services, 
    2015 UT App 61
    , ¶ 22, 
    347 P.3d 406
    .
    ¶16 For the foregoing reasons, we decline to disturb the
    board’s decision.
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    2017 UT App 152
                                

Document Info

Docket Number: 20160341-CA

Citation Numbers: 2017 UT App 152, 402 P.3d 813, 845 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2017 WL 3574654, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 153

Judges: Orme, Voros, Christiansen

Filed Date: 8/17/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024