Alaska Contracting & Consulting, Inc. v. Alaska Department of Labor

8 P.3d 340, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 89, 2000 WL 1308792
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 2000
DocketS-9022
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 8 P.3d 340 (Alaska Contracting & Consulting, Inc. v. Alaska Department of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Contracting & Consulting, Inc. v. Alaska Department of Labor, 8 P.3d 340, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 89, 2000 WL 1308792 (Ala. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I, INTRODUCTION

In 1990 the Alaska Department of Labor determined that a trucking company was not a "Hable employer" required to make contributions under the Alaska Employment Seeu-rity Act. In a 1994 ruling, an administrative hearing officer barred the department's 1998 attempt to assess the company for contributions for 1990. Did the 1990 determination or the 1994 ruling prevent the department from prospectively determining the company's liability for calendar periods after March 1993, when the department sent the company a new notice of assessment? We hold that (1) res judicata and collateral estoppel did not preclude that prospective determination; (2) AS 23.20.315 permitted a determination of the company's liability for new calendar periods; and (8) the department did not err in finding the company statutorily liable We therefore affirm the - superior court decision that affirmed the administrative finding of lability.

*343 II, FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Alaska Employment Security Act 1 creates an unemployment - compensation fund. 2 The act requires employers to pay "contributions" to the Department of Labor 3 for each calendar year in which the employers are subject to the act. 4 They must also withhold employee contributions from their employees' wages, hold the contributions in trust, and pay them to the department when due 5 The department determines whether an "employing unit is an employer and whether service performed for it constitutes employment." 6 The department's Employment Security Division oversees collection of contributions. 7

This appeal concerns the department's determination that Alaska Contracting & Consulting, Inc. is an employer liable for making contributions to the fund. Alaska Contracting hauls dirt and other road-building materials to construction sites, and provides road-building equipment including dirt-moving trucks, primarily as a subcontractor. It sometimes completes its projects by leasing its own equipment to individual drivers who then lease the equipment back to Alaska Contracting; these "lease-drivers" then operate the equipment and perform the trucking and hauling on the projects. This appeal relates only to these lease-back operations involving the lease-drivers.

In January 1990 the division sent Alaska Contracting a "notice of non-liability" stating that the company was "not a liable employer," that Alaska Contracting had "no employees," and that the wages it paid "[were] not subject to coverage" under the act.

In March 1998 the division sent Alaska Contracting a "notice of coverage" stating that Alaska Contracting was a "liable employer" which was required to provide unemployment coverage for its employees as of March 1, 1990. The division then retroactively assessed contributions for 1990, 1991, and 1992. Alaska Contracting appealed.

Sitting as the appeal tribunal, Hearing Officer Dan A. Kassner heard the appeal and in June 1994 issued his decision. He invalidated the division's March 1998 retrospective coverage determination for 1990, reasoning that because Alaska Contracting had relied on the division's January 1990 non-liability determination, quasi-estoppel prevented the division from retroactively determining Alaska Contracting's status for that year. But he concluded that for the years after 1990, the division could re-audit Alaska Contracting's status and make a new coverage determination based on new or additional evidence. Neither party appealed the June 1994 decision.

In August 1994 the division requested and examined Alaska Contracting's available records for 1991, 1992, and 1998. The division then determined that certain services performed for Alaska Contracting constituted "covered employment" under the act, and that Alaska Contracting was therefore a "liable employer." In May 1995 the division issued a notice of assessment to Alaska Contracting for two calendar quarters in 1991 and one calendar quarter in 1994. Alaska Contracting appealed; it claimed that the June 1994 decision completely barred the assessments.

Sitting as the appeal tribunal, Hearing Officer Stan Jenkins heard the appeal from the May 1995 notice of assessment. In his written decision of July 1996, he ruled that "Icloverage determinations are subject to yearly review and determination." He concluded that Hearing Officer Kassner's June 1994 decision both specifically restricted its application of quasi-estoppel to 1990 and permitted audits and coverage determinations for years after 1990.

*344 Hearing Officer Jenkins next concluded that truck operators who leased trucks from Alaska Contracting to use on Alaska Contracting's projects performed "services," and that Alaska Contracting had failed to show that these drivers fell outside the seope of covered services or employment. But because Alaska Contracting had not received notice until March 19983 that it could be liable, he also decided that Alaska Contracting was liable only for contributions after April 1, 1998. He therefore modified the May 1995 notice of assessment and remanded the assessment liability to the division for recalculation.

Alaska Contracting appealed the July 1996 decision to the Commissioner of Labor, who affirmed. Alaska Contracting then appealed to the superior court, which also affirmed.

Alaska Contracting appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

When the superior court acts as an intermediate court of appeal from an administrative determination, we review the agency's underlying determination independent ly. 8 Different standards of review apply to Alaska Contracting's three legal arguments and we discuss them below where relevant.

B. Neither Res Judicato nor Collateral Estoppel Precludes the Department from Determining that Alaska Contracting Is a Liable Employer.

Invoking the doctrines of res judi-cata and collateral estoppel, Alaska Contracting first argues that the division's 1990 non-liability determination had a "preclusive ef-feet on subsequent administrative proceedings." - It also argues that collateral estoppel barred the division from litigating the coverage issue in 1996, reasoning that the division could have litigated that issue at the 1994 hearing. 9 Whether res judicata or collateral estoppel applies is a question of law that we review de novo. 10

After entry of a judgment on the merits of a controversy, res judicata bars subsequent actions between the same parties on the same claim, or on claims that the parties were required to bring in the original action. 11

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 P.3d 340, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 89, 2000 WL 1308792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-contracting-consulting-inc-v-alaska-department-of-labor-alaska-2000.