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EVELYN A. SEBREE vs DIVISION OF RETIREMENT, 93-001592 (1993)

Court: Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 93-001592 Visitors: 9
Petitioner: EVELYN A. SEBREE
Respondent: DIVISION OF RETIREMENT
Judges: ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Agency: Department of Management Services
Locations: Leesburg, Florida
Filed: Mar. 24, 1993
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, October 29, 1993.

Latest Update: Dec. 13, 1993
Summary: Whether or not Respondent appropriately denied Petitioner's retirement benefits and what, if any, amount Petitioner must repay.Community college financial aid administrator reemployed as college president Search facilitator was independent contractor, not employee; full retirement benefits due.
93-1592.PDF

STATE OF FLORIDA

DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS


EVELYN A. SEBREE, )

)

Petitioner, )

)

vs. ) CASE NO. 93-1592

) DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT SERVICES, ) DIVISION OF RETIREMENT, )

)

Respondent. )

)


RECOMMENDED ORDER


Upon due notice, this cause came on for formal hearing on July 8, 1993, in Leesburg, Florida, before Ella Jane P. Davis, a duly assigned hearing officer of the Division of Administrative Hearings.


APPEARANCES


For Petitioner: Ms. Evelyn A. Sebree

Post Office Box 150 Umatilla, Florida 32784


For Respondent: Larry D. Scott, Esquire

Department of Management Services Division of Retirement

2639 North Monroe Street, Building C Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1560


STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE


Whether or not Respondent appropriately denied Petitioner's retirement benefits and what, if any, amount Petitioner must repay.


PRELIMINARY STATEMENT


The controversy in this case arises from a demand by the Division of Retirement (DOR) that Petitioner repay $2,037.58 as retirement benefits received by Petitioner from the Florida Retirement System (FRS) within the first twelve months of her retirement from Lake-Sumter Community College (LSCC) due to her

re-employment by LSCC. Petitioner contends she was an independent contractor and thus exempt from pay-back requirements.


Petitioner made a timely request for formal hearing and this case was originally assigned to Hearing Officer Stephen F. Dean who noticed it for final formal hearing on July 8, 1993. In his absence, the formal hearing was conducted by the undersigned on the same date at a later hour.

DOR presented the oral testimony of Pat Ochoa and Petitioner and had four exhibits admitted in evidence. DOR Exhibits 2, 3, and 4 are testimony by deposition of Randall Thornton, Sarabeth Snuggs, and Petitioner, respectively. The parties stipulated that the deposition of Petitioner would be admitted in addition to her oral testimony.


Petitioner testified on her own behalf and presented the oral testimony of Dr. Kenneth Stack and Dr. Dixie Allen.


No transcript was provided. Upon letter-motion filed July 26, 1993, Petitioner was granted additional time in which to submit her post-hearing proposals, which were filed August 17, 1993. Respondent's post-hearing proposals were filed August 16, 1993. All proposed findings of fact have been ruled upon in the appendix to this recommended order, pursuant to Section 120.59(2) F.S.


FINDINGS OF FACT


  1. Petitioner Dr. Evelyn A. Sebree was employed by Lake-Sumter Community College (LSCC) for over 25 years. LSCC is an agency within the State of Florida Retirement System (FRS).


  2. Petitioner was employed by LSCC as an instructor and later as a part- time counselor. She was subsequently named the Director of Financial Aid and the Executive Director of the Foundation. She served simultaneously in both capacities for many years. The Foundation is the fund-raising arm of LSCC and a nonprofit corporation separate from LSCC with its own governing board, bylaws and constitution. Only an employee of the college can be Director of the Foundation, but the Foundation Board is not made up of LSCC employees.


  3. In her LSCC employment as Director of Financial Aid, Petitioner was responsible for administering the college's student financial aid program. Her immediate supervisor in this employment category was Dr. Dixie Lee, and Petitioner reported ultimately to the Dean of Student Services. In this employment capacity, she administered federal, state, institutional and private grants, loans, and scholarship programs, including but not limited to Pell Grants, the Basic Education Opportunity Grant Program, the GI Bill, and work- study programs. She supervised three work-study students, who were part-time LSCC employees, and a financial aid specialist, a full-time LSCC employee, and had her own private office on campus.


  4. As Executive Director of the Foundation, Petitioner was responsible for raising money for the college and for scholarships. She reported to the LSCC President, was responsible for fund raisers, making contacts with potential donors, and soliciting money from various wealthy people for the college.


  5. During her LSCC employment as Financial Aid Director and collateral service as Executive Director of the Foundation, Petitioner developed many influential contacts in the fields of higher education and financial administration. These contacts were not only statewide, but also national. Petitioner also served on many state and national boards, including: State Financial Aid Association, Board of Directors of the Southern Association of Student Financial Aid, National Board of Student Financial Aid Directors, and the Florida Association of Community College and College Board Council on Higher Education Services. After her retirement as an employee of LSCC, Petitioner could no longer serve as Executive Director of the Foundation, but Petitioner continued to serve on the Board of the Foundation, as a private citizen.

  6. As a result of her contacts with many influential people, Petitioner considered herself to be a mover and a shaker in the community.


  7. Petitioner decided to retire after 29 years of service at the college when she was offered an early retirement incentive package. The package included paid health insurance for three years and partial salary for three years.


  8. Prior to her retirement, DOR mailed Petitioner a brochure. The brochure advised the Petitioner of the re-employment limitations. Prior to receiving her first retirement warrant, DOR mailed Petitioner a letter, again advising her that benefits would be suspended if she was re-employed within twelve months of her retirement date.


  9. As an agency within the FRS, LSCC was mailed several numbered memoranda advising reporting agencies to avoid "sweetheart" arrangements by hiring recently retired employees to fill positions within the system.


  10. Petitioner retired, effective July 1, 1992.


  11. In the fall of 1992, the LSCC college president quit. Dr. Kenneth Stack was appointed acting president while the LSCC Board of Trustees mounted a search for a permanent replacement president.


  12. The LSCC Board of Trustees is the governing board of the college which, among other duties, hires and fires the college president, sets college policy and adopts a budget. The LSCC Board of Trustees decided the new college president should be someone from Florida. They desired a college president who would have knowledge of the Florida educational system.


  13. The LSCC Board of Trustees had previously hired two college presidents, one six years previously and one eleven years previously. In each instance, a search committee made up of faculty, students, trustees, townspeople and residents of the two counties, Lake and Sumter, had been formed, and the Board had contracted with an outside "facilitator" to focus the presidential search and assist the presidential search committee. The last facilitator had been hired in 1986 from a professional group of "consultants" from Washington, D.C.


  14. This time, in 1992, LSCC's Board of Trustees decided they needed to hire a facilitator with knowledge of LSCC, the geographic area, college personnel within the state, and the Florida Community College System. The Board also believed that an in-state facilitator would help achieve their ultimate desired result of obtaining a qualified Floridian to fill the vacant LSCC presidency.


  15. Petitioner was nominated for facilitator by Board of Trustees member, Randall Thornton, an attorney. Due to her past employment and community reputation, Petitioner's education, training, experience, and status in the community were well known to all Board members. The Board considered facilitator candidates from the University of Florida and Florida State University also, but Petitioner was selected instead. All Board members cast a vote for their choice of facilitator. One consideration in favor of Petitioner was that she would accept a contract capped at $5,000, while the last professional out-of-house facilitator's total cost to LSCC was nine times that figure, or roughly $45,000.

  16. Petitioner was appointed Presidential Search Committee Facilitator pursuant to a contract drawn by attorney Randall Thornton. This contract significantly paralleled the contract between LSCC and its last out-of-state facilitator in that Mr. Thornton used the old contract as his model for the new one.


  17. For purposes of this proceeding, the significant provisions of Petitioner's contract are that: Petitioner was to be paid at the rate of $40 per hour up to a maximum of $5,000, regardless of how long the search took to complete. Clearly, it may be inferred that Petitioner's services would end when a college president was selected. In order to be paid, Petitioner was to bill the Board of Trustees monthly for hours worked and for expenses. She was to be reimbursed for any expenditures or expenses in addition to her hourly fee for personal services. To minimize costs to LSCC, Petitioner's travel expenses were geared to Chapter 112 F.S., normally covering state employees. She also was required to use the college's Watts line "to the extent possible," but she would be reimbursed for all her out of pocket expenses, including but not limited to telephone calls, fax, express mail, travel, and similar items. Because this was a personal services contract, Petitioner could not delegate her duties except with express prior agreement of the Board, but there was no specific prohibition on her hiring subordinate support service helpers. Either LSCC or Petitioner could cancel the contract upon 30 days' written notice without incurring liability to each other. However, Petitioner agreed to indemnify and "hold harmless" the college both for her own negligence in conducting the search and for any other liability arising out of her activities during the search. She was required to comply with equity rules and regulations. This requirement may be inferred to reiterate the obvious, that she, like any other citizen, was bound to comply with all equal opportunity and labor laws for appropriate hiring practices. One contract clause specifically denied Petitioner any employee, servant, or agency authority to bind or incur liability for the college, and described her as an independent contractor.


  18. Mr. Thornton modeled LSCC's contract with Petitioner on the contract drafted by the 1986 facilitator from Washington, D.C., who was clearly an independent contractor. According to Dr. Kenneth Stack, the contract as finalized is similar to the standard contract by which LSCC contracts for outside labor, power, and such professional services as those of architects, normally considered to be independent contractors. This facilitator contract differs significantly from Petitioner's employment contract as Director of Financial Aid for LSCC prior to her retirement on July 1, 1992, the form of which employment contract is prescribed by the Florida Community College System.


  19. After negotiating with Mr. Thornton, who was acting for the Board in the place of the college's general counsel, Petitioner had input into the final version of the facilitator contract. Exactly what Petitioner's input was, is unclear. Although there is some testimony that the former facilitator was paid in a lump sum of $20,000, there is also testimony that the total payments to that facilitator by LSCC totalled $45,000. Although this fact, together with the contents of the final contract between Petitioner and LSCC is not sufficient to infer that the prior out-of-state facilitator was also paid at an hourly rate up to a certain capped amount plus an expense reimbursement, it is sufficient to infer that expense reimbursement was part of the prior out-of-state independent contractor's agreement with the college.

  20. Petitioner's $40/hour fee as "facilitator" constituted a higher hourly rate than she had been paid when employed by LSCC as its Financial Aid Director prior to retirement.


  21. Petitioner was not covered for health insurance or unemployment or workers' compensation benefits under her contract as presidential search facilitator. No social security, retirement, or income tax was withheld by LSCC from her hourly rate as facilitator. LSCC provides all its regular employees with these fringe benefits.


  22. In practice, as LSCC presidential search committee facilitator, Petitioner used her own telephone and the LSCC telephone. She worked out of an established office in her own home where she simultaneously cared for her 92 year old mother. She also had the use of, and occasionally utilized, the Board room at LSCC which the Board of Trustees had been made available to her and the search committee whenever the Board was not using it. Because there was no college president, the secretary assigned to the president was available for Petitioner's use, and this secretary did some minimal work for Petitioner, primarily copying materials for the search committee members. An employee of LSCC who regularly deals with equity matters also was available to Petitioner and the search committee for advice as needed.


  23. As facilitator, Petitioner utilized a comprehensive notebook compiled by a prior Chairman of the LSCC Board of Trustees in the course of the 1986 presidential search. She also utilized two professional books she specifically purchased in order to fulfill her contract with LSCC. Petitioner gave the Board-appointed search committee their direction, worked with a subcommittee to

    design the advertisement for position, received all applications, analyzed them, and copied and distributed them to the search committee. After the committee read and ranked the applications and selected the finalists, Petitioner did background checks on the finalists and held personal conversations with applicants' employers, prior employers, and colleagues to get a "feel" for each applicant's qualifications. She then reported these findings to the search committee, and apparently another "cut" was made. She coordinated all visits, receptions, and committee interviews for the last five presidential finalists.

    In this process, she took no direction from LSCC's Acting President, Dr. Kenneth Stack, who was an applicant, and the Board of Trustees' input was more in the nature of questions concerning what was she doing and what were the search committee's time frames, than directions on what to do or how to do it.


  24. On her own initiative, Petitioner gave interim reports on the search committee's progress, usually at the regularly scheduled monthly Board of Trustees meetings, until the final presidential candidates were chosen, at which time the Board met weekly for the specific purpose of selecting the college president. Petitioner was required to bill her hours and expenses monthly but was not required to appear before the Board of Trustees. She was never summoned to appear before the Board. She had to ask to be put on the Board agenda each time she gave a report. On the basis of her education, training, experience, investigation, and analysis, Petitioner made suggestions to the Board of Trustees as to search procedures, deadlines, the profile of the president, and advertising the college presidency position.


  25. The LSCC Board of Trustees voted on the selection of a college president in April 1993. By its terms, Petitioner's contract terminated with the selection of a college president.

  26. The presidential search was not a regularly established function of the college, although employment of a college president was integral to the college's function and purpose. The search committee and search committee facilitator were not regularly established job positions with the college.


  27. Petitioner did not incorporate because no state license or certification is required for her services. She also did not advertise her services because she planned to work only intermittently as an independent contractor/consultant in a variety of higher education/administrative fields, relying on her professional networking to get offers of specific projects. At the time of formal hearing, she had the potential for contracts to do financial aid counseling at Seminole Community College and to rewrite a policy and procedure manual for South Florida Community College.


  28. LSCC paid Petitioner approximately $435 for her work for LSCC during the month of October 1992, plus some reimbursed expenses.


  29. In November 1992, DOR advised Petitioner it had determined that she was an employee and not an independent contractor. Prior to advising Petitioner, DOR requested the federal Internal Revenue Service (IRS) render its opinion. This opinion concluded that Petitioner was an employee of LSCC rather than an independent contractor, but the IRS opinion is not binding upon DOR or dispositive of this instant de novo proceeding pursuant to Section 120.57(1)

    F.S. It is noted that the review sheets filled out by LSCC and Petitioner and utilized by DOR and the IRS were not as detailed as the evidence adduced at formal hearing, and in some respects the answers were unintentionally misleading.


  30. At some point, DOR demanded approximately $435 from Petitioner and

    $1,018.79 from LSCC for retirement benefits DOR had paid Petitioner during October 1992, but apparently DOR now seeks $2,037.58 solely from Petitioner.


  31. Because of the controversy with Respondent DOR, Petitioner did not accept any payment from LSCC pursuant to their facilitator contract after October 1992, when she was notified by DOR that any payment from LSCC for employment would result in a DOR repayment demand and/or withholding of her FRS benefits by DOR.


    CONCLUSIONS OF LAW


  32. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this cause pursuant to Section 120.57(1), F.S.


  33. Chapter 121, F.S., established the Florida Retirement System in 1970. The Division of Retirement, pursuant to Section 121.031(1), F.S. [1991], is authorized to implement rules for the efficient administration of the system.


34. Pursuant to Section 121.021(11) F.S. [1991],


"Officer or employee" means any person receiving salary payments for work performed in a regularly established position and, if employed by a city or special district, employed in a covered group.

  1. The Division of Retirement also promulgated Rule 60S-6.011(49), F.A.C., which defines a regularly established position as follows:


    A regularly established position in a State agency is a position which is authorized and established pursuant to law and is compensated from a salaries appropriation pursuant to Section 216.011(1)(y)1. and 2., F.S., or an established position which is authorized pursuant to Section 216.262(1)(a) and (b) F.S., and is compensated from a salaries account in accordance with Rule

    3A-10.031, F.A.C. A regularly established position in a local agency (district school board, county agency, community college, city and special district) is an employment position which will be in existence for a period beyond 6 consecutive months, except as provided in Rule 60S-1.004(5)(e), F.A.C.


  2. Rule 60S-6.001(33), F.A.C., promulgated by the Division, defines independent contractor and reads as follows:


    (33) INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR - Means an individual who is not subject to the control and direction of the employer for whom work is being performed, with respect not only to what shall be done but to how it shall be done. If the employer has the right to exert such control, an employee-employer relationship exists and the person is an employee and not an independent contractor. The Division has adopted the following factors as guidelines to aid in determining whether an individual is an employee or an independent contractor. The weight given each factor is not always the same and varies depending on the particular situation.


    1. INSTRUCTIONS: An employee must comply with instructions from his employer about when, where, and how to work. The instructions may be oral or may be in the form of manuals or written procedures which show how the desired result is to be accomplished. Even if no actual instructions are given, the control factor is present if the employer has the right to give instructions.


    2. TRAINING: An employee is trained to perform services in a particular manner. This is relevant when the skills and experience which would be used as an independent contractor were gained as a result of previous employment. Independent

      contractors ordinarily use their own methods and receive no training from the purchasers of their services.


    3. INTEGRATION: An employee's services are integrated into the business operations because the services are critical and essential to the success or continuation of an agency's progress/operation. This shows

      that the employee is subject to direction and control.


    4. SERVICES RENDERED PERSONALLY: An employee renders services personally. This shows that the employer is interested in the methods as well as the results. Lack of employer control may be indicated when a person has the right to hire a substitute without the employer's knowledge or approval.


    5. HIRING ASSISTANTS: An employee works for an employer who hires, supervises, and pays assistants. An independent contractor hires, supervises, and pays assistants under a contract that requires him or her to provide materials and labor and to be responsible only for the result.


    6. CONTINUING RELATIONSHIP: An employee has a continuing relationship with an employer. A continuing relationship may exist where work is performed at frequently recurring, although irregular intervals.


    7. SET HOURS OF WORK: An employee usually has set hours of work established by an employer. An independent contractor is the master of his or her own time and works on his own schedule.


    8. FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME WORK: An employee may work either full-time or part- time for an employer. Full-time does not necessarily mean an 8-hour day or a 5 or

      6-day week. Its meanings may vary with the intent of the parties, the nature of the occupation and customs in the locality.

      These conditions should be considered in defining "full-time." An independent contractor can work when and for whom he or she chooses.


    9. WORK DONE ON PREMISES: An employee works on the premises of an employer, or works on a route or at a location designated by an employer. The performance of work on

      the employer's premises is not controlling in

      itself; however, it does imply that the employer has control over the employee. Work performed off the employer's premises does indicate some freedom from control; however, it does not in itself mean the worker is not an employee.


    10. ORDER OR SEQUENCE OF SERVICES: An employee generally performs services in the order or sequence set by an employer. This shows that the employee is subject to direction and control of the employer.


    11. REPORTS: An employee submits oral or written reports to an employer. This shows that the employee must account to the employer for his or her actions.


    12. PAYMENTS: An employee is usually paid by the hour, week, or month. An independent contractor is paid periodically (usually a percent of the total payment) by the job or on a straight commission.


    13. EXPENSES: An employee's business and/ or travel expenses are paid by an employer. This shows that the employer is in a position to control expenses, and, therefore, the employee is subject to regulations and control.


    14. TOOLS AND MATERIALS: An employee is furnished significant tools, materials, and other equipment by an employer. An independent contractor usually provides his own tools, material, etc.


    15. INVESTMENT: An employee is usually furnished the necessary facilities. An independent contractor has a significant investment in the facilities he or she uses in performing services for someone else.


    16. PROFIT OR LOSS: An employee performs the services for an agreed upon wage and is not in a position to realize a profit or suffer a loss as a result of his services. An independent contractor can make a profit or suffer loss. Profit or loss implies the use of capital by the individual in an independent business of his own.


    17. WORKS FOR MORE THAN ONE PERSON OR FIRM: An employee usually works for one

      organization. However, a person may work for a number of people or organizations and still be an employee of one or all of them. An

      independent contractor provides his or her services to two or more unrelated persons or firms at the same time.


    18. OFFERS SERVICES TO GENERAL PUBLIC: An independent contractor makes his or her services available to the general public. This can be done in a number of ways: Having his/her own office and assistants, hanging out a "shingle", holding business licenses, having listings in business directories and telephone directories, and advertising in newspapers, trade journals, etc.


    19. RIGHT TO TERMINATE EMPLOYMENT: An employee can be fired by an employer. An independent contractor cannot be fired so long as he or she produces a result that meets the specifications of the contract. An independent contractor can be terminated, but usually he will be entitled to damages for expenses incurred, lost profit, etc.


    20. RIGHT TO QUIT: An employee can quit his or her job at any time without incurring

    liability. An independent contractor usually agrees to complete a specific job and is responsible for its satisfactory completion, or is legally obligated to make good for failure to complete it.


  3. Petitioner contended she was an independent contractor and DOR contended she was an employee. The terms of Petitioner's 1992 facilitator contract and the actual services Petitioner performed as facilitator equate more closely with the definition of an independent contractor.


  4. The tasks of the presidential search facilitator did not relate to administering financial aid to students or raising money for college programs which were the LSCC employment responsibilities and functions from which Petitioner retired. Her services as a presidential search committee facilitator were not integral to the nature of LSCC as an institution. Her facilitator contract and actual work situation did not necessitate Petitioner working with, for, or over other regularly employed LSCC staff. Specifically, she was not supervised nor did she report in either chain of command (Dr. Allen or Dr. Stack) that she had reported in prior to her retirement. While ongoing financial aid counselling might be highly suspect of "continuing employee" status, an activity such as a presidential search which is undertaken by the college only as needed after five or six year gaps and which has a definite, limited goal and a predictable termination date is not an activity so integral to the nature of the institution as to confer an "employee" status. See, Nunn, et al v. Dept. of Administration DOAH Cases Nos. 90-8015, 90-8016, 90-8017, (Recommended order entered January 15, 1992, Final Order April 9, 1992).


  5. As facilitator, Petitioner's association with LSCC was not exclusive, as it would have been had she been an employee of LSCC. Petitioner was negotiating for other contracts from other colleges simultaneously with working

    as LSCC's facilitator. LSCC did not restrict her to their project at any time either by contract terms or exercise of cloaked authority.


  6. Although the presidential search project does not lend itself to analysis of risk of profit or risk of loss, it would be hard to say that Petitioner did not assume substantial risk as facilitator by contracting to indemnify and hold harmless the college in light of the plethora of equity statutes and rules which had to be followed. On the other hand, advice to Petitioner on these matters, provided by a college employee, was prudent on the college's part but not such a "control" as to significantly affect the bulk of Petitioner's day-to-day performance of her independent contract.


  7. Petitioner earned more per hour on the facilitator contract than she had when she was employed full-time by LSCC.


  8. Under the facilitator contract, Petitioner was outside the normal fringe benefits of LSCC employees.


  9. If Petitioner had been injured while performing her tasks as search facilitator, even if these tasks were performed on campus, she could not have successfully proven "employee" status under the tests established pursuant to Chapter 440 F.S., The Florida Workers' Compensation Act.


  10. Petitioner was paid only for the hours she "facilitated" and only if she billed for the hours worked. The college relied entirely on her representation of her hours worked and did not supervise those working hours as to time or location.


  11. Any report of her activities to the Board initially required the Petitioner to request time on the Board's regular agenda. When the Board became involved weekly in the final selection of a college president from among the five finalists, the Board was not invading Petitioner's independent discretion because as facilitator, Petitioner had no vote on who would be hired as president, anyway. The instructions provided to Petitioner by the Board were general and directional only. No formal training to Petitioner was provided by LSCC or the Board, although records of prior facilitated searches were provided to her.


  12. Petitioner, like many independent contractors, was required to work within certain cost-saving parameters "to the maximum extent possible," using college Watts lines and secretarial help. She was encouraged to keep travel expenses down by having her expenses capped, pursuant to Chapter 112, F.S. However, these expense terms were reasonably negotiated elements of an independent contract favorable to one party, LSCC. As such, they do not equate with the day-to-day control of an employee's expenses contemplated in the rule.


  13. If one factor is foremost, it is the right of control as to the day- to-day mode of doing the work. See, Global Home Care, Inc. v. Dept. of Labor,

    521 So.2d 220 (Fla. 2nd DCA 1988) and Messer v. Dept. of Labor and Employment,

    500 So.2d 1372 (Fla. 5th DCA 1987). The degree of LSCC control necessary to define Petitioner as an employee of LSCC is absent here. Compare, by analogy, the circumstances of In re Howard, 4 FALR 542A (Final Order 12/11/81), wherein a school board attorney was held to be an employee and Henry v. State of Florida, Dept. of Administration, Div. of Retirement, 4 FALR 1295A (Final Order 4/27/82) aff. 431 So.2d 677 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983), wherein a hospital attorney was held to be an independent contractor.

  14. DOR places considerable emphasis upon the fact that Petitioner did not draft the contract with LSCC. However, Petitioner negotiated the contract on a parity with the college's acting attorney. The contract grossly parallels the last facilitator's contract, and that facilitator was undeniably an independent contractor. LSCC uses a similar contract for similar personal services, such as those of an architect, and architects are normally considered to be independent contractors. These factors further support the conclusion that Petitioner is a legitimate independent contractor.


  15. DOR also emphasized that Petitioner was not engaged in a distinct occupation or business and did not advertise or distribute business cards. This argument is not persuasive of her "employee" status. Petitioner's skills are somewhat specialized and focused, even if they do not correspond to a distinct occupation or business. Like most professionals in that vague, jello-like world of the professional "consultant," Petitioner offers many similar, but not identical, services to several colleges and is free to peddle her services by the means most successful and economical for her, i.e. networking instead of paying for cards and advertisements which are more commonly tools of an occupation than of a profession.


  16. Petitioner's situation correlates closely to the situation in Davis v. Dept. of Administration, Division of Retirement, 585 So.2d 421 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991), wherein Respondent's predecessor agency initiated forfeiture proceedings to recover retirement benefits paid to a school board finance officer who, after retiring, subsequently became associated with another school board. The First District Court of Appeal resolved the issue in the retiree's favor, determining he was an independent contractor. Therein, the factors most persuasive to the court seem to have been that the retiree under independent contract did not receive the usual employee health, workers' compensation, or social security benefits or income tax withholding as he would have received if he had been an employee of the school board. Petitioner's situation is the same as to those factors. Also, like Davis, Petitioner set her own work schedule, was free to accomplish her work at a location of her choice, was negotiating other contracts with other colleges, and was not subject to control or review by any superior except as to the results of her work.


  17. A strong indicator of what type of relationship is involved is what the parties believed at the time of contract. The Board wanted to save money,

    $5,000 versus $20,000. The Board wanted someone to steer the presidential search in favor of a Florida educator. Petitioner wanted to work at her own pace and utilize her talents and contacts on a limited basis without working full-time. This does not sound like the type of "employment" DOR is charged with preventing.


  18. DOR has been rightfully vigilant to ward-off "sweetheart deals" designed to sidestep legitimate state interests in protecting the actuarial soundness of the FRS. Actuarial soundness relies on a proper balance of FRS contributions to benefits. That balance is jeopardized if employers are able to avoid required FRS contributions by obtaining the same employee services by immediately utilizing retirees to perform all or some of the same functions they performed as an employee. See Nunn, supra. However, as in the Davis case, here there is no evidence of collusive activity between the former employer (LSCC) and the employee (Petitioner) to retire the employee and still allow the employer to avail itself of the employee's continued services without appropriate contribution to FRS. The fact that Petitioner learned her skills and "paid her dues" networking while working as LSCC's employee is not

controlling. What she did for LSCC as facilitator and how much control LSCC had over what she did as facilitator is material. The majority of indices provided by rule show her to be an independent contractor.


RECOMMENDATION


Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is recommended that the Department of Management Services, Division of Retirement enter a final order absolving Petitioner of any pay back to FRS for the month of October 1992.


RECOMMENDED this 29th day of October, 1993, at Tallahassee, Florida.



ELLA JANE P. DAVIS, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The De Soto Building

1230 Apalachee Parkway

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550

(904) 488-9675


Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 29th day of October, 1993.


APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER 93-1592


The following constitute specific rulings, pursuant to S120.59(2), F.S., upon the parties' respective proposed findings of fact (PFOF).


Petitioner's PFOF:


  1. The factual matters are accepted. The legal argument is covered in the Conclusions of Law.

  2. Accepted (FOF 10).

  3. Rejected as argument only. Covered in substance in FOF

    3 and 23 and the Conclusions of Law.

  4. Accepted (FOF 25).

  5. Accepted except as to Conclusion of Law which is covered in the Conclusions of Law. (FOF 22-25).

  6. Accepted except to the degree unnecessary, subordinate or cumulative (FOF 16-19).

  7. Accepted (FOF 12-15).

  8. Constitutes a request to rule certain evidence irrelevant.

    Not a PFOF. Covered in FOF 27 and the Conclusions of Law.

  9. Accepted except to the degree unnecessary or subordinate.

    (FOF 27).

  10. Rejected as related to matters outside the record which apparently occurred after formal hearing. Similar material covered in FOF 27.

Respondent's PFOF


1-17 Accepted (FOF 1-16).

  1. Accepted in part and rejected in part upon the greater weight of the record as set forth in FOF 15.

  2. Accepted (FOF 23).

  3. Rejected as a Conclusion of Law. See, Conclusions of Law.

  4. Accepted (FOF 17, 22).

  5. Rejected because as stated it is misleading. Covered in FOF 17-19.

23-25 Accepted (FOF 17-25).

26-27 Accepted (FOF 9).

28-29 Accepted (FOF 29).

30 Accepted (FOF 30)


COPIES FURNISHED:


A. J. McMullian, III, Director Division of Retirement

Cedars Executive Center, Bldg. C 2639 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1560


Sylvan Strickland, Esquire General Counsel

Department of Management Services Knight Building, Suite 309

2737 Centerview Drive

Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0950


Larry D. Scott, Esquire Department of Management Services Division of Retirement

2639 North Monroe Street, Building C Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1560


Ms. Evelyn A. Sebree Post Office Box 150 Umatilla, Florida 32784


NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS


All parties have the right to submit written exceptions to this Recommended Order. All agencies allow each party at least 10 days in which to submit written exceptions. Some agencies allow a larger period within which to submit written exceptions. You should contact the agency that will issue the final order in this case concerning agency rules on the deadline for filing exceptions to this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that will issue the final order in this case.


Docket for Case No: 93-001592
Issue Date Proceedings
Dec. 13, 1993 Final Order filed.
Oct. 29, 1993 Recommended Order sent out. CASE CLOSED. Hearing held July 8, 1993.
Aug. 17, 1993 (Petitioner's Proposed) Recommended Order w/cover ltr filed.
Aug. 13, 1993 (Respondent) Proposed Recommended Order filed. (From Larry D. Scott)
Jul. 28, 1993 Order sent out.
Jul. 28, 1993 Letter to L D Scott from EJD sent out. (Re: Ex Parte communication)
Jul. 26, 1993 Letter to EJD from Evelyn A. Sebree (re: filing PRO) filed.
Jul. 15, 1993 Order Granting Motion to Compel Discovery sent out.
Jul. 13, 1993 Post-Hearing Order sent out.
Jul. 08, 1993 CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
Jul. 06, 1993 Petitioners' Response to Request to Produce filed.
Jun. 14, 1993 Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
Jun. 04, 1993 (Respondent) Notice of Cancellation of Taking Deposition filed.
May 18, 1993 (Respondent) Notice of Continuing Taking Deposition filed.
May 03, 1993 (Respondent) Second Amended Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
Apr. 30, 1993 Letter to WRC from Mark A Hanson (re: confirmation on requested subpoenas) filed.
Apr. 28, 1993 (Respondent) Amended Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
Apr. 22, 1993 Notice of Hearing and Order sent out. (hearing set for 7-8-93; 9:30am; Leesburg)
Apr. 19, 1993 (Respondent) Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
Apr. 14, 1993 (Respondent) Notice of Taking Deposition; Amended Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
Apr. 12, 1993 Ltr. to SFD from Larry D. Scott re: Reply to Initial Order filed.
Apr. 09, 1993 (Respondent) Answer and Affirmative Defenses filed.
Mar. 30, 1993 Initial Order issued.
Mar. 24, 1993 Agency referral letter; Petition for Formal Administrative Hearing filed.

Orders for Case No: 93-001592
Issue Date Document Summary
Dec. 09, 1993 Agency Final Order
Oct. 29, 1993 Recommended Order Community college financial aid administrator reemployed as college president Search facilitator was independent contractor, not employee; full retirement benefits due.
Source:  Florida - Division of Administrative Hearings

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