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Supreme Court Turndown Not the End of California Independent Contractor Battle

On March 18, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal in a case involving the alleged misclassification of California owner-operator drivers as independent contractors rather than employees – but it's far from the end of the battle over employee misclassification in the state.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
March 26, 2019
Supreme Court Turndown Not the End of California Independent Contractor Battle

The Port of Long Beach. California's ports are a main battleground in the state's battle over who is and who is not an independent contractor.

Photo by Jim Park

3 min to read


On March 18, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal in a case involving the alleged misclassification of California owner-operator drivers as independent contractors rather than employees – but it's far from the end of the battle over employee misclassification in the state.

The California Trucking Association had filed suit against California Labor Commissioner Julie A. Su, whose office has ruled that port truck drivers are misclassified as independent contractors.

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In July of 2016, the CTA challenged what it called the California Labor Commissioner’s interference in motor carrier and owner-operator contractual relationships.

That suit challenged the state’s use and application of the common law Borello independent contractor test through two lawsuits in both state and federal courts.

The Borello test evaluates multiple factors to determine whether an individual was an independent contractor. Not all of the factors have to be met to establish independent contractor status, but the principal factor dealt with the company’s control over the contractor.

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CTA’s contention in its federal legal challenge was that the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act preempts the Labor Commissioner from interfering in the contractual relationships between motor carriers and independent contractors. The FAAAA is a federal law Congress passed in 1994; a provision of that law prohibits states from enacting laws that affect a motor carrier's prices, routes and services.

In September of 2018, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against CTA, saying FAAAA did not preempt California’s Labor Commissioner from using a common law test to determine whether they were misclassified for purposes of the state’s labor laws. The ruling said that “Congress did not intend to preempt generally applicable state transportation, safety, welfare, or business rules that do not otherwise regulate prices, routes, or services.”

CTA took it to the U.S. Supreme Court, which declined to take the case.

The Teamsters union, which has been fighting to get drayage truckers at California’s ports reclassified as employees rather than contractors, praised the Supreme Court action.

“In rejecting the CTA’s appeal, the highest court in the land has effectively closed the case on predatory trucking companies’ efforts to dodge taxes and steal the hard-earned wages of drivers through a scheme that illegally classifies drivers as independent contractors,” said Fred Potter, director of the Teamsters Port Division. 

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But there’s another, potentially even bigger case involving contractors still in the courts.

“While the Supreme Court’s decision to not review our case is disappointing, it is not altogether surprising given that the Court agrees to take less than 2% of the cases petitioning for a hearing,” said Shawn Yadon, CEO of the California Trucking Association, in a statement. “However, the misclassification issue and the ability for truckers to be independent contractors continues.”

Another lawsuit regarding California’s stance on trucking and independent contractors is still being litigated. In September of 2018, the CTA and two owner-operators filed a lawsuit on the application of the recently adopted “ABC” worker classification test as defined in the Dynamex decision. That case, California Trucking Association et al v. Becerra et al, continues to be litigated.

“We remain hopeful our current legal challenge to California’s more recent Dynamex ruling, which is an essential outright ban on independent contracting, will demonstrate to the court the dire impact the state’s quest to eliminate small-business trucking will have on interstate commerce.”

In a letter to CTA members, Yadon noted that in last September’s rejection of the Su case, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals stated the very recently adopted “ABC” test as outlined in Dynamex v. Superior Court was “likely preempted” by FAAAA. “This opinion led to a successful precedent in Alvarez v. XPO, the first district court case to find the Dynamex ‘ABC’ test preempted by the FAAAA,” he said.

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