PROVISION OF SERVICES IN COSTA RICA: LABOR RELATIONSHIPS
VS. NON LABOR RELATIONSHIPS ACCORDING TO LOCAL LAW AND
CASE LAW
The
basic legal principles that determine the existence of
an employment relationship under Costa Rican labor law
are established in the Labor Code, as follows:
Section
2: “Employer is any person or corporate entity,
private of public, that employs the services of another
or of others, based on an express or implied labor contract,
written or verbal, individual or joint.”
Section
4: “Employee is any person that gives another person
or entity his material, intellectual or material/intellectual
services, based on an express or implied labor contract,
written or verbal, individual or joint.”
Section
18: “Individual labor contract, whichever way it
is actually called, is any of such in which a person commits
to give another person or entity his services or to undertake
a piece of work, under permanent dependency and immediate
or delegated direction of such other entity or person,
and in exchange for a payment of any kind or form.”
From
these legal foundations, local case law is unanimous to
consider that there are three basic elements in a labor
relationship, whose presence is crucial to determine if
the link between the parties is of the labor kind, thus
subject to all stipulations and protections of the Labor
Code or of a non-labor kind, solely governed by ordinary
and non protectionist civil regulations.
Such
basic elements are that the service must be given personally;
that such service must be paid for and that it must be
given under subordination with respect to the employer.
Among them, subordination is considered as the main and
essential element for the determination of the presence
or not of an employment-type relationship since the other
two may be present and yet not necessarily involve the
application of labor law.
PERSONAL
SERVICE
A
contractual relationship cannot be considered as of the
labor type, if the service is not provided personally,
which is essential to labor relationships and basically
means that what has been contracted can only be performed
by a sole individual, who cannot be substituted.
In
a labor relationship, the party receiving the services
is not only interested in the provision of the services
per se, but also on the personal capacities of a specific
individual. Local case law has clearly stated that an
important factor to rule out the existence of a labor
relationship is if it is detected that services are given
by parties other than the one signing the agreement, party
that has the right to determine which specific individual
or individuals actually provide the services (obviously
under certain performance guidelines and qualifications,
mainly related to the quality of work performed and not
to the form it is to be performed).
Local
Courts have even considered that once and if the possibility
of substitution is existent and has actually happened,
it is not necessary to determine if the other elements
that create a labor relationship are or are not present
(mainly, as indicated, payment and subordination) since
the sole absence of the “personal service”
element is considered sufficient to rule out the application
of labor law.
The
above said does not mean that a labor relationship will
be avoided by solely indicating in the agreement between
the parties that the services can be performed by other
individuals. Such fact must be confirmed in the day to
day reality of the services rendered and as such, services
must be performed by the contracting party or any other
individual selected by such for those purposes, if the
replacement meets the criteria established in the contract.
It
is recommended, as an element to be used to argue the
non-existence of this personal element, to have a corporation
executing the agreement on behalf of the service provider,
and for it to issue locally authorized official invoices
for the payment of the services. For this mechanism to
actually work, it will be additionally important for the
service providing company executing the service contract
to have several employees and that as such they could
be used to provide the services, following the guidelines
set up in the agreement.
PAYMENT
For
the relationship to be considered as of labor-type, the
service provider must have a compensation for his work.
Payment in an employment relationship can be calculated
by unit of time, by task or by piece of work and made
in currency, in currency and specie, or by participation
in earnings, sales or collections from the employer.
SUBORDINATION
As
indicated above, this element is considered essential
for the existence of a labor relationship. It is defined
as the condition in which the employee’s autonomy
is limited, with regards to the provision of the services,
due to the written or oral agreement with the employer,
such limitation coming from the capacity of the employer
to guide the employee’s activities.
Subordination
is also considered as an actual dependency condition created
by the employer’s right to direct and give orders,
and the consequent obligation by the employee of following
such orders and directions and submitting to the employer’s
will. For subordination to exist, it is not enough to
detect the possibility of giving orders, since the right
to give them and to replace at will the individual providing
the services is also considered to be needed by local
Courts in order to confirm the existence of this element.
Subordination
includes the possibility by the employer to establish
disciplinary actions against the employee in cases of
bad performance or misbehavior, basically being capable
of imposing direct orders and penalties in case such orders
are not followed. Evidently, this possibility is many
times in a grey area, since a non-labor relationship must
also give the possibility to the contracting party to
establish guidelines on how the service will be provided.
The key here would be to establish such guidelines, but
not a direct supervision and disciplinary regime for the
individuals providing the service.
The
sole obligation to render reports on how the tasks have
been completed does not by itself creates a subordination
regime, since it is considered as an essential duty of
information from one party to the other which could be
present in a non-labor relationship as a performance obligation.
If additionally from this mere obligation of information,
the performance of the services is controlled by the service
receiver with regards to the actual manner of undertaking
of the work activities (and not only to their quality),
the relationship will be very probably considered as of
labor-type.
What
is also accepted and not considered to create a labor
relationship is when the party contracting the services,
instead of directly controlling how such services are
rendered, is merely coordinating the activities. In these
cases of coordination, the link of the service provider
with the recipient company’s commercial activities
does not consist on a direct involvement on how the services
are provided but on the indication of a specific “business
program” in which the services are introduced as
a means for the completion of such program. Coordination
must not exclude then the autonomy of the service provider
with respect to the choice of the specific means or forms
used for performing the services.
With
respect to schedules, it is considered that subordination
exists even if such schedules can be agreed upon by the
parties but once they have been set up, the service provider
cannot change them unilaterally and must comply with them
as originally agreed.
In
general terms, there are elements that can be introduced
in the contract (and to be effective, to be present in
the actual provision of the services over time) to try
to have the services to be considered as not being provided
with subordination. Such elements materialize if the service
provider: (i) works on his own; (ii) bears the risks associated
with his activities; (iii) is liable before the law for
any illegal actions he may incur in while providing the
services; (iv) pays his own social security, taxes, etc.;
(v) hires his own employees, if any; (vi) works as independent,
for another employer; (vi) has the capacities of selecting
a replacement for him; (vii) provides the services in
a place or places not imposed by the service receiver;
(viii) does not get, from the service receiver, the instruments,
tools or materials he needs to perform the services.
Although
their existence or non-existence will not rule out or
imply the appearance, by itself, of a labor relationship,
the following elements would be evaluated by a local Court
of Law in order to “suspect” the existence
of it, and as such, should be avoided, if possible, and
as much of them as also possible: (i) exclusivity (as
opposed to the possibility of providing services for other
parties); (ii) place of work under employer’s control;
(iii) periodical and fixed payment; (iv) submission to
hourly shifts and schedules; (v) not having the possibility
to accept or reject to provide specific services; (vi)
provision by the employer to the employee of the material
and personal means needed for performing the services;
(vii) registration before the Costa Rican Social Security
Agency and the length and continuity of the service relationship.
WORK
CONTRACT AND THE PRINCIPLE OF “REALITY CONTRACT”
Section
18 of the Costa Rican Labor Code, which has been already
referred to above, establishes the presumption of the
existence of a contract -written or oral- between the
employer and the worker. The sole initiation of the work
relationship is sufficient for the presumption of the
existence of the contract and such agreement compels the
two parties to obey the obligations and rights established
in the law.
Everything
that is agreed upon by the parties of the labor relationship,
being agreed in writing or not, but existing as the current
conditions of the work relationship, becomes part of it.
This corresponds to a basic principle of local labor law
(principle of “Contrato Realidad” –Reality
Contract in English –) which establishes that no
matter what has been agreed in writing as the contractual
relationship employer-employee or no matter what the prior
contractual relationship contents were, what rules is
the current and real contents of the employment relationship,
even though they are different from the agreement, all
in favor of the employee (i.e. real work schedules vs.
Contractually agreed work schedules; actually paid salaries
and compensations vs. contractually agreed compensation;
etc.).
While
applying the “Reality Contract” principle
to the labor relationships vs. non-labor service agreements
issue, we must bear in mind that under local laws and
case law, it is not important how the contract itself
is labeled by the parties, as it is constantly indicated
by Labor Courts that they consider that the employer frequently
uses several mechanisms to deceive the application of
labor law, giving the contract the appearance of a non-labor
matter.
At
the end of the day, local Labor Courts will examine how
the actual relationship between the parties occurred,
and in view of such and the detection and evaluation of
the elements that have been covered in the paragraphs
above, they will make the determination of its nature
and the applicable legal regime.
PRESUMPTION
OF THE EXISTENCE OF A LABOR RELATIONSHIP
As
per local laws and case law, the general rule is that
the existence of a labor relationship when services are
provided is always presumed, and the employer must bear
the burden of proof of the contrary.
Notwithstanding
the above, the general rule is reversed, as established
by case law, when services are not provided personally
(but by a corporate entity) and the parties expressly
state, by the means of a written contract, that the relationship
is not of a labor nature. In this case, the burden of
proof is transferred to the service provider’s side,
who must demonstrate the existence of the elements that
we have stated as determining an employment relationship.
In this type of situations, as indicated by local case
law, what is applied is a case by case examination of
the facts and proof in order to determine if the specific
matter will be governed by labor law.
LEGAL
OBLIGATIONS BY THE EMPLOYER IF THE RELATIONSHIP IS CONSIDERED
A LABOR RELATIONSHIP
Although
all measures possible to try to characterize the relationship
as out of the reach of local labor law are taken, the
type of activities that will be performed certainly pose
a high risk of being considered by a local Labor Court,
if a dispute arises, as constituting a regular labor relationship
between the parties.
If
that happens, we consider it is important to have a clear
picture of the obligations that will materialize for the
employer, which mainly consist in penalties for the lack
of registration of the employees before the local Social
Security Administration, as well as the payment of all
labor related compensations to which regular employees
are entitled under Costa Rican labor law, namely vacations,
Christmas bonus (also called thirteenth month), right
of notice of termination and severance.
Vacations
With regards to vacations, besides holidays and Sundays,
the employee is entitled to two weeks of paid vacation
for each fifty weeks worked or, in cases of contracts
that terminate before such 50 weeks, a day for each month
worked. Vacations can be divided, but only in two segments.
Upon
termination of the contract, unused vacation time should
be paid using as a base the average of salaries earned
during the last six months.
Christmas Bonus
Employees must be paid a bonus of one month’s salary
after a year of work (“aguinaldo”), or an
amount proportionate to the time worked, if it less than
a year.
Right of notice of termination
After three months of employment, an employee has the
right to receive notice in the event of termination of
employment without just cause by the employer (if notice
is not given, he must be paid one month's salary, or a
fraction if he has been employed for less than one year).
Severance
payment
If the worker is fired without justification after at
least three months of service, the employer has to pay
a severance payment whose amount increases in accordance
with the time served and could be up to twenty two days
per year worked, with a maximum calculated on the basis
of eight years, all according to a specific calculation
table indicated by the Labor Code.
©2003
Henry Lang, Lang & Asociados. All rights reserved.