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It is known that industrywide pension funds actively approach employers who may fall within their scope. Companies are, however, less aware of the risks of possible claims of pension premiums for bogus independent contractors.
The ruling of the Supreme Court in November 2023 should be seen as a wake-up call for all companies. The Supreme Court ruled that Deliveroo must pay pension premiums for the ‘riders’ to the industrywide pension fund Transportation with retro-effect.
The main question that the Supreme Court had to answer upon, was whether the ‘riders’ of Deliveroo are bogus independent contractors and therefore ‘employees’. This would lead to a mandatory participation in the Industrywide pension fund Transportation. Deliveroo, which was a platform where consumers could order meals online and have it delivered to their home, hired these ‘riders’ based on an independent contractors construction. However, the industrywide pension fund Transportation claimed that the ‘riders’ are ‘bogus’ independent contracts and should be qualified as employees. Therefore they would accrue pension entitlements with them and charged Deliveroo for € 639.372,98 in overdue premiums.
The subdistrict court and the Court of Appeal decided earlier that the ‘riders’ of Deliveroo fall within the scope of the participation decree. The Supreme Court upheld the ruling of the subdistrict court and the Court of Appeal, referring to a different ruling where the Supreme Court decided that the ‘riders’ work on the basis of an employment agreement. This is important, as only employees (and not independent contractors) fall withing the scope of the participation decree. The Supreme Court also decided that Deliveroo is a meal delivery company – and therefore not an IT-company, which Deliveroo claimed to be. This means that Deliveroo had to pay overdue pension premiums to industrywide pension fund for Transportation.
The ruling has far-reaching consequences. Industrywide pension funds can claim pension premiums retroactively from employers who hire bogus independent contractors. This could lead to significant claims from the pension funds. Therefore, it is essential for companies to carefully assess whether their independent contractors should be seen as ‘bogus’ independent contractors. If this is not done correctly, the risk remains that the companies face retroactive claims from the pension fund.
Do you have questions about this or would you like to discuss the (qualification of) employment agreements within your company? Feel free to contact us.
Would you like to know more about the subject of independent contractors? Click here!