Or. Admin. Code § 471-031-0076 - Common Paymaster
(1) As
provided in ORS 657.477, a common paymaster
established for a group of related corporations is any member thereof that
disburses remuneration to employees of two or more of those corporations on
their behalf. However, the common paymaster is not required to disburse
remuneration to all employees of the two or more related corporations:
(a) A common paymaster making disbursements
on behalf of related corporations to employed individuals shall be responsible
for taxes, interest and penalties imposed by ORS Chapter 657 on all wages
disbursed by it;
(b) For purposes
of charging benefits paid and mailing notices to base year employers, the
common paymaster shall be considered the employer for all wages disbursed to
individuals by the common paymaster whether payment was for services performed
for the common paymaster or for a related corporation.
(2) If the common paymaster fails to remit
taxes, interest and penalties on all wages disbursed by it as required by ORS
Chapter 657, the Director may hold each of the related corporations liable for
a proportionate share of the obligation. Such proportionate share may be based
on sales, property, corporate payroll or any other reasonable basis that
reflects the distribution of services of the pertinent employees between the
related corporations. When there is no reasonable basis for allocating the
amount owed, it shall be divided equally among the related corporations. If a
related corporation fails to pay any amount allocated to it pursuant to this
section, the Director may hold any or all of the other related corporations
liable for the full amount of the unpaid taxes, interest and
penalties.
(3) Two or more
corporations shall be considered related corporations for an entire calendar
quarter if they satisfy any of the following tests at any time during that
calendar quarter:
(a) More than 50 percent of
the total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote or
more than 50 percent of the value of shares of all classes of stock of each
corporation is owned by one or more of the other corporations, and the common
parent corporation owns stock possessing more than 50 percent of the total
combined voting power or more than 50 percent of the total value of shares of
all classes of stock of at least one of the other corporations;
(b) Five or fewer persons who are
individuals, estates or trusts own more than 50 percent of the total combined
voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote or more than 50 percent
of the total value of all classes of stock of each corporation, taking into
account the stock ownership of each person only to the extent such stock
ownership is identical with respect to each such corporation;
(c) A group of two or more corporations is
combined with a common parent corporation as described in subsection (a) of
this section and also such parent corporation is a member of a group of
corporations as described in subsection (b) of this section;
(d) Fifty percent or more of one
corporation's officers are concurrently officers of the other
corporation;
(e) Thirty percent or
more of one corporation's employees are concurrently employees of the other
corporation;
(f) When a corporation
that does not issue stock is involved, either:
(A) Fifty percent or more of the members of
one corporation's board of directors (or other governing body) are members of
the other corporation's board of directors (or other governing body);
or
(B) The Holders of fifty percent
or more of the voting power to select members of one corporation's board of
directors (or other governing body) are concurrently the holders of more than
fifty percent of that power with respect to the other corporation.
(4) For purposes of
section (3) of this rule, concurrent employment means the simultaneous
existence of an employment relationship (within the meaning of ORS Chapter 657)
between an individual and two or more corporations. Such a relationship
contemplates the performance of services by the individual for the benefit of
the employing corporation, not merely for the benefit of the group of
corporations:
(a) The simultaneous existence
of an employment relationship with each corporation is a decisive factor. If it
exists, the fact that a particular employee is on leave or otherwise
temporarily inactive is immaterial;
(b) Employment is not concurrent with respect
to one of the related corporations if the employee's employment relationship
with that corporation is completely nonexistent during the periods when the
employee is not performing services for that corporation;
(c) An individual who does not perform
substantial services for a corporation is presumed not employed by that
corporation;
(d) A corporation
which has no employees performing services for it in Oregon cannot be the
common paymaster for Oregon employees of its related corporations.
(5) Related corporations which
compensate their employees through a common paymaster shall file with the
Director the details of their plan. The detail shall include the names of the
related corporations, the name of the common paymaster corporation and the
class or classes of workers involved. The filing shall include documentation to
substantiate the corporations are related as defined in section (3) of this
rule and that employees are concurrently employed. An amendment to the plan
shall be filed whenever there is a change in the related corporations
participating in the plan, a change in the common paymaster or a change in the
class or classes of workers involved.
(6) Plans submitted pursuant to section (5)
of this rule shall be filed within the 30 day period following the end of the
calendar quarter in which the plan is in effect. Eligibility of an employee to
be compensated through a common paymaster shall be determined on a quarterly
basis.
(7) A common paymaster is
not a successor corporation pursuant to ORS
657.480 for concurrent employees
unless the related corporation ceases operations and is acquired in its
entirety by the paymaster corporation.
(8) An employing unit may not report the
payroll of any other employing unit, except as provided in this rule. For the
purposes of ORS 657.095, wages paid by separate
employing units may not be aggregated or combined for purposes of reporting
payroll unless there is an actual transfer of entity and experience rating as
provided by ORS 657.480.
(9) The term "common agent" as defined by
federal law, is not recognized for the purposes of ORS 657.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 657
Stats. Implemented: ORS 657.030 & ORS 657.477
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.