Disclaimer This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication. It should not be regarded as indicative of the ATO's current views. The law may have changed since original publication, and views in the edited version may also be affected by subsequent precedents and new approaches to the application of the law. You cannot rely on this record in your tax affairs. It is not binding and provides you with no protection (including from any underpaid tax, penalty or interest). In addition, this record is not an authority for the purposes of establishing a reasonably arguable position for you to apply to your own circumstances. For more information on the status of edited versions of private advice and reasons we publish them, see PS LA 2008/4. |
Edited version of your private ruling
Authorisation Number: 1012534264094
Ruling
Subject: Obligation to withhold from payments
Question
Is there an obligation on the entity to withhold from payments made to providers?
Answer
No
This ruling applies for the following periods
Year ending 30 June 2014
Year ending 30 June 2015
Year ending 30 June 2016
The scheme commenced on
1 July 2013
Relevant facts
You operate a scheme.
You entered into a funding agreement to receive funds from a third party.
You pass on those received funds less an administration fee to providers upon them meeting their obligations.
You do not supervise the providers.
The providers employ any assistants or helpers needed to provide the service.
The providers set the fee charged for the provision of the service.
The providers must pay for and maintain public liability insurance.
Relevant legislative provisions
Schedule 1 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 Section 12-35
Reasons for decision
Summary
Based on the information you have provided, the Commissioner considers that there is no requirement to withhold from payments made to the providers under section 12-35 of Schedule 1 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA).
Detailed reasoning
Section 12-35 of Schedule 1 to the TAA provides that you must withhold an amount from a payment of salary, wages, commission, bonuses or allowances you pay to an individual as an employee.
A determination of whether an individual under a specific arrangement is an employee must be made by a consideration of the total factual circumstances in light of all of the indicators determining the status of that individual. It is the totality of the relationship that needs to be considered.
Taxation Ruling TR 2005/16 considers the various indicators the Courts have considered in establishing whether a person engaged by another individual or entity is an employee within the common law meaning of the term.
These indicators include:
· The control test: The degree of control which the payer can exercise over the payee.
· The organisation or integration test: Whether the worker operates on their own account or in the business of the payer.
· The results test: Whether the worker is free to employ their own means and is paid to achieve the contractually specified outcome.
· The delegation test: Whether the work can be delegated or subcontracted (with or without the approval or consent of the principal).
· The risk test: Whether the worker bears the legal responsibility and expense for the rectification or remedy in the case of unsatisfactory performance.
· Which party provides tools, equipment and payment of business expenses?
Control
The test for determining the nature of the relationship between a person who engages another to perform work and the person so engaged is the degree of control which the former can exercise over the latter. A common law employee is told not only what work is to be done, but how and where it is to be done. The importance of control lays not so much in its actual exercise as in the right of the employer to exercise it.
A high degree of discretion or latitude in the manner in which a task is performed does not, of itself, indicate a contract for services.
Further, although it is not uncommon for a contract to specify how the contracted services are to be performed, this does not necessarily imply an employment relationship. A high degree of direction and control is not uncommon in contracts of service. In contractual arrangements any control or direction must be expressed in terms of the contract only, otherwise the contractor is free to exercise their own discretion, because they work for themselves.
In this case providers provide a service. You do not supervise the providers. Providers are free to engage assistants or helpers in order for them to efficiently operate their service. Providers are free to exercise their own discretion in how they operate the service they provide within the guidelines you and the third party have placed upon them.
Organisation or integration
In an employment relationship, tasks are performed at the request of the employer and the employee is said to be working in the business of the employer. An independent contractor carries on a trade or business of their own. An independent contractor enters into a contract to perform specific tasks and has a high level of discretion and flexibility about how the work is to be performed, even if the contract contains precise terms about methods of performance.
An employee works in the business of the employer and the work performed may be said to be integral to that business. An independent contractor works for the payers business but the work is not integrated into the business rather is an accessory to it.
In this case providers provide services. You merely administer the scheme on behalf of a third party and pass on funds to the providers after completion of a service. Providers are not integrated into your business as they operate their own businesses.
Results
Where the substance of a contract is for the production of a given result, there is a strong indication that the contract is one for services.
'The production of a given result' means the performance of a service by one party for another where the first-mentioned party is free to employ their own means (such as third party labour, plant and equipment) to achieve the contractually specified outcome. Satisfactory completion of the specified services is the 'result' for which the parties have bargained.
The consideration is often a fixed sum on completion of the particular job as opposed to an amount paid by reference to hours worked. If remuneration is payable when, and only when, the contractual conditions have been fulfilled, the remuneration is usually made for producing a given result.
In this case providers are paid by a third party (via you) once the conditions for the service have been met. The third party pays the providers for a result i.e. providing a service.
Delegation
The power to delegate or subcontract is a significant factor in deciding whether a worker is an employee or independent contractor. If a person is contractually required to personally perform the work, this is an indication that the person is an employee.
Whereas if an individual has unfettered power to delegate the work to others (with or without approval or consent of the principal), this is a strong indication that the person is engaged as an independent contractor. The contractor is free to arrange for their employees to perform all or some of the work or may subcontract all or some of the work to another service provider. In these circumstances, the contractor is the party responsible for remunerating the replacement worker.
A common law employee may frequently 'delegate' tasks to other employees, particularly where the employee is performing a supervisory or managerial role. However, this 'delegation' exercised by an employee is fundamentally different to the delegation exercised by a contractor outlined above. When an employee asks a colleague to take an additional shift or responsibility, the employee is not responsible for paying that replacement worker, rather the workers have merely organised a substitution or shared the work load. This is not delegation consistent with that exercised by a contractor.
In this case providers are able to employ any assistants or helpers needed to provide the service.
Risk
An employee bears little or no risk of the costs arising out of injury or defect in carrying out their work. An independent contractor bears the commercial risk and responsibility for any poor workmanship or injury sustained in the performance of work. An independent contractor is usually expected to take out their own insurance and indemnity policies.
Whether the worker is contractually obliged to accept liability for the cost, in terms of time or money, for the rectification of faulty or defective work is a relevant consideration in determining if that worker should be regarded as an employee or independent contractor.
Commonly, an independent contractor or entity would solely bear the risk and responsibility of liability for their work if it does not meet an agreed standard and would be required to either rectify this defective work in their own time or at their own expense.
An employee on the other hand, would bear no such responsibility and the liability for any defective work of the employee, either to a third party or otherwise, would fall to the employer in terms of the burden of cost or time for rectification.
In this case the providers bear all risk whilst doing their activities. They are also responsible for ensuring they have a public liability insurance policy and work cover.
Provision of tools and equipment and payment of business expenses
The provision of assets, equipment and tools by an individual and the incurring of expenses and other overheads is an indicator that the individual is an independent contractor.
However, the provision of necessary tools and equipment is not necessarily inconsistent with an employment relationship. The provision and maintenance of tools and equipment and payment of business expenses should be significant for the individual to be considered an independent contractor.
There are situations where very little or no tools of trade or plant and equipment are necessary to perform the work. This fact by itself will not lead to the conclusion that the individual engaged is as an employee. The weight or emphasis given to this indicator (as with all the other indicators) depends on the particular circumstances and the context and nature of the contractual work.
Further, an employee, unlike an independent contractor, is often reimbursed (or receives an allowance) for expenses incurred in the course of employment, including for the use of their own assets such as a car.
In this case providers provide the venue for their activity and all equipment required and are also responsible for all associated costs.
Conclusion
After assessing the facts against the indicators in TR 2005/16, it is considered that there is no obligation on you to withhold from payments made to providers.