Dependent Contractors: Can the Test from Stevens v Brodribb Protect Workers who are Quasi-Employees?
Abstract
Working from the presumption that the law of employment is grounded in a contract made ostensibly between two equal partners, the Australian tests for distinguishing an employee from an independent contractor have focused on the obligations under the contract. Where the fundamental term of an employment contract was the payment of wages in exchange for the performance of work at the direction of the master, freedom from the principal's direction or right to direct1 became allimportant in the characterisation of a contract independent of control by a principal. However with the growing variety of work relationships an employer's right to "control" the employee no longer was a sufficient test.
Published
Oct 30, 1997
How to Cite
DE PLEVITZ, Loretta.
Dependent Contractors: Can the Test from Stevens v Brodribb Protect Workers who are Quasi-Employees?.
QUT Law Review, [S.l.], v. 13, p. 263-275, oct. 1997.
ISSN 2201-7275.
Available at: <https://lr.law.qut.edu.au/article/view/447>. Date accessed: 01 feb. 2021.
doi: https://doi.org/10.5204/qutlr.v13i0.447.
Section
Articles - General Issue
Since 2015-12-04
Abstract Views
1694
PDF Views
3188
Until 2015-12-04:
Abstract Views
785
PDF Views
2925
Authors who publish with this journal retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
Articles in this journal are published under the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC-BY). This is to achieve more legal certainty about what readers can do with published articles, and thus a wider dissemination and archiving, which in turn makes publishing with this journal more valuable for authors.