Business Contracts Attorney

While it may be a romantic notion, doing business on a handshake simply isn't a good idea. The exchange of money or promises should always be memorialized with a written contract for a host of reasons. Reducing an agreement to writing gives the parties an opportunity to work out any miscommunications and helps ensure the contract accurately reflects their intentions. Disputes can often be avoided by a well-written contract to which all parties are equally bound.

Employees & ContractorsBusiness ContractsContract ReviewContract Drafting

Employees & Independent Contractors

Many business owners are under the mistaken impression that by simply calling their workers independent contractors, they can avoid paying employment taxes. This is not true. The IRS uses a 160-page manual to train its examiners how to differentiate an employee from an independent contractor, which suggests the determination is not a simple one. Whether a worker is an independent contractor or employee depends on the degree of control the employer has over the worker versus the degree of independence the worker enjoys. Though the IRS does not offer a simple method of distinguishing the two, it has published Form SS-8 to help you with the determination.

When in doubt, it is better to consider the worker an employee and pay the proper taxes than misclassify them as an independent contractor and risk paying back taxes, along with penalties and interest down the road.

Whether your workers are employees or independent contractors, it is important to use an employment agreement that sets forth the obligations of the worker along with those of the employer. It is also important to outline policies and procedures for wages, time off, disciplinary procedures, and grounds for termination. As a benefit to employers, employment agreements can also include confidentiality agreements to protect trade secrets, assignments of rights to give the employer rights to any work produced for the company, non-solicitation provisions to prevent the worker from taking clients when they leave, and non-compete clauses to prevent the worker from opening a competing company using the knowledge they gained from their previous employer.

It's much easier and far less expensive to do things right at the start than to try to fix a mistake down the road. With all the laws and regulations out there, it's easy to make a mistake. Help ensure the success of your business; contact the Law Office of Gina Madsen at (702) 485-1200 or fill out the contact form for information on how we can help you get your business off to the right start.