#24343-a-BJORKMAN, Circuit Judge 

2007 SD 68 

 

IN THE SUPREME COURT 

OF THE 

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA 

 

* * * * 

 

TAK COMMUNICATIONS, Appellant, 

 

 v. 

 

SOUTH DAKOTA UNEMPLOYMENT 

INSURANCE DIVISION, Appellee. 

 

* * * * 

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT 

OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 

MINNEHAHA COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA 

 

* * * * 

 

HONORABLE WILLIAM J. SRSTKA, Jr. 

Judge 

 

* * * * 

CRAIG A. PFEIFLE of 

Lynn, Jackson, Shultz & Lebrun 

Rapid City, South Dakota 

 

A. STEVENSON BOGUE of 

McGrath, North, Mullin & Kratz 

Omaha, Nebraska Attorneys for appellant. 

 

SHANNON GEORGE-LARSON 

South Dakota Department of Labor 

Pierre, South Dakota 

 

ROBERT B. ANDERSON of 

May, Adam, Gerdes & Thompson 

Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for appellee. 

 

* * * * 

 CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS 

 ON MAY 22, 2007 

 

 OPINION FILED 7/11/07 


#24343 

BJORKMAN, Circuit Judge 

[¶1.] TAK Communications (TAK) appeals from the circuit court's judgment 
affirming the Administrative Law Judge's (ALJ) decision that Diana Dillman 
(Dillman) and others similarly situated were employees of TAK, rendering TAK 
liable for contributions to the unemployment compensation fund based on their 
wages. We affirm. 

FACTS 

[¶2.] TAK is a South Dakota corporation which contracts with cable 
companies across the United States to perform their sales campaigns. In South 
Dakota TAK's only client is Midcontinent Communications (Midco). Dillman began 
working for TAK in June 2004 after signing an Independent Contractor Agreement 
(Agreement) which TAK drafted. Prior to her work with TAK, Dillman, educated 
through the tenth grade, had always acted as an employee of others, never having 
owned or operated her own business. She came to TAK with no prior sales 
experience. 

[¶3.] The Agreement, which Dillman contended she did not fully 
comprehend, provided that Dillman "is not and will not be considered an employee 
of TAK Communications, Inc. and that the relationship between [sic] and [Dillman] 
is on [sic] of principal-independent contractor rater [sic] than employer-employee." 
In the Agreement, Dillman represented that as contractor she was "properly 
organized and validly existing under the laws of the State of South Dakota. 
Attached as Exhibit A is a copy of Contract's [sic] certificate of organization or 
registration." Despite this language, no Exhibit A was attached to the Agreement, 


Dillman established no such organization, and she executed the Agreement solely in 
her own name. 

[¶4.] According to the Agreement, Dillman was to supply her own materials, 
provide her own insurance, set her own hours, and bear the risk of not earning any 
commission due to lack of sales. TAK provided Dillman with forms and sales 
materials to allow her to sell Midco products. It also provided her with a shirt and 
identification tag with Midco's name on them, although Dillman was not required to 
wear either item. Dillman's training consisted of accompanying other sales 
personnel to learn how to sell the product and she was provided guidance from a 
TAK representative on sales techniques. She was responsible for her own 
transportation, was to purchase her own peddler's license for each municipality in 
which she sold, and was provided with "turf sheets" indicating areas in which to 
market the products. 

[¶5.] While TAK allows its sales associates to operate other businesses 
independent of their relationship with TAK, and some of its sales associates did so, 
Dillman was not among them. Dillman had never obtained a sales tax license, 
either before, during, or after the time she sold for TAK. Apart from her 
relationship with TAK, Dillman had no sales experience prior to, during, or after 
the conclusion of her relationship with TAK. During the time Dillman sold for TAK 
she never used a business name, did not advertise the sale of other products, and 
had no separate business premises. Dillman had no peddler's license before TAK's 
representative, Pam Boyden, ordered her to stop selling until she obtained one. 
When Dillman paid the fee and obtained the required license, it listed TAK 


Communications above Dillman's name and contained TAK's address rather than 
Dillman's. 

[¶6.] In 2005 Dillman ceased selling for TAK. After her relationship with 
TAK ended, she eventually returned to work full time as an employee for another 
business. Following an investigation, the South Dakota Unemployment Insurance 
Division (Division) issued a determination notice concluding that Dillman was 
TAK's employee, and that services she and others similarly situated provided to 
TAK were subject to the unemployment insurance laws. TAK appealed Division's 
determination. The ALJ concluded that Dillman was free from TAK's control in the 
performance of her service, however, she was not customarily engaged in an 
independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business, thus rendering 
her, and others similarly situated, TAK employees under SDCL 61-1-11. TAK 
appealed the ALJ's decision to the circuit court. 

[¶7.] The circuit court affirmed both of the ALJ's determinations. TAK then 
appealed to this Court. Division did not file a notice of review as to the ALJ's 
conclusion that Dillman was free from TAK's control, leaving us with the sole issue 
of whether the circuit court erred in affirming the ALJ's decision that Dillman was 
not customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, 
profession, or business as provided in SDCL 61-1-11(2). 

STANDARD OF REVIEW 

[¶8.] Agency findings are subject to the same standard of review as circuit 
court findings. This Court must decide, in light of all the evidence, whether the 
findings are clearly erroneous. "If after careful review of the entire record we are 
definitely and firmly convinced a mistake has been committed, only then will we 


reverse." Streeter v. Canton School Dist., 2004 SD 30, ¶14, 677 NW2d 221, 225. 
Whether an individual is an employee or an independent contractor raises a mixed 
question of law and fact; as such, it is fully reviewable by this Court." Egemo v. 
Flores, 470 NW2d 817, 820 (SD 1991) (citing Appeal of Hendrickson's Health Care 
Service, 462 NW2d 655, 658 (SD 1990)). We give no deference to the decision of 
either the ALJ or the circuit court. Midland Atlas Co., Inc. v. South Dakota Dep't of 
Labor, 538 NW2d 232, 235 (SD 1995). 

DECISION 

[¶9.] Resolution of this appeal is controlled by SDCL 61-1-11. That statute 
provides: 

Service performed by an individual for wages is 
employment subject to this title unless and until it is 
shown to the satisfaction of the Department of Labor that: 

 

 (1) The individual has been and will continue to 
be free from control or direction over the 
performance of the service, both under his 
contract of service and in fact; and 

 

 (2) The individual is customarily engaged in an 
independently established trade, occupation, 
profession, or business. 

 

SDCL 61-1-11. The burden initially lies with Division to prove that Dillman 
provided services to TAK for wages. Midland Atlas Co. Inc., 538 NW2d at 235. 
Wages are defined by SDCL 61-1-1(17) as: "all remuneration paid for services, 
including commissions and bonuses." 

[¶10.] TAK acknowledges that it paid Dillman wages in the form of 
commissions. Thus, the burden shifts to TAK to prove that Dillman met both 
elements of SDCL 61-1-11. Midland Atlas Co. Inc, 538 NW2d at 235. 


Because Division does not seek review of the determination that Dillman 
was free from TAK's control over the performance of her work, the question of 
Dillman's status turns on whether at the time in question she was 
"customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, 
profession, or business" pursuant to SDCL 61-1-11(2). 

[¶11.] We have previously defined the terms employed in this 
provision: 

The adverb 'independently' clearly modifies the word 
'established', and must carry the meaning that the trade, 
occupation, profession or business was established, 
independently of the employer or the rendering of the 
personal service forming the basis of the claim. The 
present tense 'is' indicates the individual must be engaged 
in such independent activity at the time of rendering the 
service involved. 'Customarily' means usually, habitually, 
regularly. The language used contemplates that one 
engaged in an independently established trade, 
occupation, profession or business has a proprietary 
interest therein to the extent that he can operate it 
without hindrance from any individual whatsoever. An 
established business is one that is permanent, fixed, 
stable and lasting. 

 

South Dakota Dep't of Labor v. Tri State Insulation Co., 315 NW2d 315, 316 (SD 
1982) (citing Vermont Securities v. Vermont Unemployment Comp. Comm'n, 104 
A2d 915, 917 (Vt 1954) (internal citations omitted)). 

[¶12.] We have addressed this issue in a variety of contexts, including 
several actions involving salespersons. See, e.g., Moonlight Rose Co. v. South 
Dakota Unemployment Ins. Div., 2003 SD 96, 668 NW2d 304 (affirming 
circuit court's determination that rose salespersons were employees rather 
than independent contractors); Lake Preston Housing Corp. v. South Dakota 
Dep't of Labor, 1999 SD 5, 587 NW2d 736 (affirming circuit court's 


determination that a property manager was an employee rather than an 
independent contractor); Unemployment Liability of Shoppers Guide v. South 
Dakota Dep't of Labor, Unemployment Ins. Div., 1996 SD 92, 551 NW2d 584 
(reversing circuit court's determination that newspaper carriers were 
employees rather than independent contractors); Midland Atlas Co., Inc. 538 
NW2d at 236 (reversing circuit court's determination that Atlas sales 
representatives were employees rather than independent contractors); Appeal 
of Hendrickson's Health Care Serv., 462 NW2d at 655 (affirming circuit 
court's determination that nurses and nurse's aides who provided in-home 
health care to business clients were employees); Miller Liquid Feeds v. South 
Dakota Dep't of Labor, Unemployment Ins. Div., 340 NW2d 185 (SD 
1983)(affirming circuit court's determination that a corporation's salesmen 
were employees rather than independent contractors); Tri State Insulation 
Co., 315 NW2d at 319 (affirming circuit court's determination that salesmen 
were independent contractors rather than employees). 

[¶13.] Our holdings in these cases demonstrate that: "In determining 
whether an individual is an employee or an independent contractor, each case 
must be determined on its own facts and all the features of the relationship 
are to be considered." Egemo, 470 NW2d at 820. In Moonlight Rose Co., we 
set forth a four prong test to determine whether a relationship fits within the 
meaning of SDCL 61-1-11(2). Under that test, TAK must show that Dillman: 

(1) was engaged in an enterprise that was 
created and exists apart from her 
relationship with TAK and that the 
enterprise would survive the termination of 
that relationship; 


 

(2) has a proprietary interest in the enterprise 
to the extent that she can operate without 
hindrance from any other individual; 

 

(3) due to her skill, is engaged in an economic 
enterprise such that she bears the risk of 
unemployment; and 

 

(4) remains employed as a function of market 
forces and the demand for her skills, rather 
than the response of an employer to similar 
economic realities. 

 

 All four prongs of this test . . . require that the individual 
have some relationship with an economic enterprise that 
is independent of the relationship with the company that 
is allegedly subject to unemployment insurance taxation. 

 

Moonlight Rose Company, 2003 SD 96, ¶17, 668 NW2d at 310. Under the facts of 
this case, Dillman was not customarily engaged in an enterprise independent of the 
relationship with TAK, thus rendering her employment subject to this title. 

Because we conclude that TAK has failed to meet the first prong of the test, we need 
not address the others. 

[¶14.] The ALJ's findings, which TAK does not dispute, indicate Dillman had 
never been considered an independent contractor, nor had she owned or operated 
her own business outside of her relationship with TAK. Dillman never obtained a 
sales tax license. Outside of her relationship with TAK, Dillman had no sales 
experience prior to, during, or after the conclusion of her relationship with TAK. 
The record also indicates that during the time Dillman sold for TAK she never used 
a business name, did not advertise for the sale of other products and had no 
separate business premises. Dillman also had no peddler's license until TAK's 
representative ordered her to stop selling until she obtained one. Even then, the 


license contained TAK's name above Dillman's own, and TAK's address rather than 
Dillman's. 

[¶15.] The facts of this case most closely resemble those in Appeal of 
Hendrickson's Health Care Serv.; Lake Preston Housing Corp.; and Moonlight Rose 
Co. In each case, none of the salespersons held themselves out as proprietors of an 
independent business by having a sales tax license, business cards, a separate 
business premises or phone listing. In each of those cases, no evidence existed 
indicating that the salespersons sold products independently of the relationship in 
question. Additionally, in Moonlight Rose Co., each peddler's license similarly listed 
Moonlight Rose Company. 2003 SD 96, ¶20, 668 NW2d at 311. Lacking sales tax 
and peddler's licenses in her own name, Dillman could not lawfully engage in sales 
for others as an independent contractor. 

[¶16.] TAK directs us to our decisions in Tri State Insulation Co. and 
Midland Atlas Co. Inc., both cases involving salespersons, to support its position. It 
points to our language in Tri State Insulation Co. that those in sales need "little 
more than an automobile and a ballpoint pen" to operate as independent 
contractors. 315 NW2d at 317. While true, the statement provides paltry aid in 
resolving whether Dillman was customarily engaged in an enterprise independent 
of her relationship with TAK. Unlike Tri State Insulation Co., where we concluded 
that were the salesmen not "selling Tri State's products surely they would be 
engaged in selling those of someone else," the facts here indicate the contrary - that 
Dillman had never - either before, during or after her relationship with TAK - 
similarly engaged herself, nor established a business entity through which to do so. 
Id. at 318. In Midland Atlas Co., Inc., we reviewed the status of five sales 


representatives. 538 NW2d at 235. Four held themselves out as engaged in an 
enterprise independent of Midland. Id. at 236. The fifth did not sell for other 
companies. Id. There we noted that the fact the remaining sales representative 
chose to sell only for Midland did not, in itself, mean he had no independently 
established trade. Id. Our holding in Midland Atlas Co., Inc., did not, as TAK 
suggests, prohibit the agency from concluding that some of its salespeople are 
employees and others independent contractors. Our decision there merely reflected 
our conclusion that the ALJ mistakenly applied facts concerning the issue of control 
to the issue of independent calling. 

[¶17.] In each case where wages are paid, the test is whether both elements 
of SDCL 61-1-11 are met. Under the second element of the statute, the issue is not 
whether TAK's salespersons generally were free under the terms of the agreement 
to sell for others, but whether the individual in question actually was "customarily 
engaged in an independently established trade, occupation or business." Under 
these facts, TAK simply did not meet its burden to establish that Dillman and 
others similarly situated were so engaged. 

[¶18.] The decision of the trial court is affirmed. 

[¶19.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and KONENKAMP, ZINTER and 
MEIERHENRY, Justices, concur. 

[¶20.] BJORKMAN, Circuit Judge, for SABERS, Justice, disqualified.