Analysis of the Tests Developed by the Courts in Determining the Existence of an Employee or an Independent Contractor Relationship in the Imposition of Vicarious Liability in Malaysia
Abstract
Employers are said to be vicariously liable for the torts of their employees which are
committed during the course of employment. It is critical that business owners correctly
determine whether the individuals providing services are employees or independent
contractors. Employers or ‘masters’ will only be liable for the torts of their employees or
‘servants’ as they are called in law. They will not usually be liable for the torts of their
independent contractors (subject to some exceptions). It is, therefore, necessary to establish
the status of the person who committed the wrongful act. The task of the court is to interpret
the contract of employment. In order to make such a distinction, the courts have adopted
certain tests. However, the courts have been unable to formulate a concise definition of the
terms ‘employee’ and ‘independent contractor’ that will furnish an accurate test to be applied
in determining whether one is acting for another as servant or as an independent contractor.
In Malaysia, the courts generally favour the control test. While the control test may have
been persuasive in the past, in modern industrial society, with its increasingly sophisticated
division of labour, the test is not always effective. In many cases employees may have
technical skills and knowledge not shared by their employers. The purpose of this article
is to examine these tests and the problems posed by the tests used by the Malaysian courts
in an attempt to draw a distinction between an employee and an independent contractor in
the context of vicarious liability.
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