Arc Plumbing & Heating Corp. v. Board of Responsibility of the Department of General Services

135 Misc. 2d 413, 515 N.Y.S.2d 685, 1987 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2237
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 Misc. 2d 413 (Arc Plumbing & Heating Corp. v. Board of Responsibility of the Department of General Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arc Plumbing & Heating Corp. v. Board of Responsibility of the Department of General Services, 135 Misc. 2d 413, 515 N.Y.S.2d 685, 1987 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2237 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Harold Tompkins, J.

In this proceeding, the court reviews the process of agency [414]*414contract disqualification and the required level of cooperation by a contractor operating in corporate form. Petitioner Arc Plumbing seeks to annul a determination of the respondent Board of Responsibility on May 29, 1986 that found it a nonresponsible bidder as a result of false and misleading answers given on its bid application for the plumbing work at the White Street detention facility and the indictment of Anthony Gurino, its sole stockholder and president, on charges of obstruction of justice involving the concealment of assets of Salvatore Ruggiero (according to the indictment which is annexed to the papers), before his death, reputedly a prominent member of organized crime in New York City.

The Board also found a pattern of evasiveness and inaccuracy in the documents Arc submitted in connection with bid applications and a lack of proper and adequate supervision by Arc management in filling out required forms. Finally, the Board found Arc to be noncooperative by the failure of its president and sole stockholder, Anthony Gurino, to answer questions regarding his indictment, the underlying relationship with Mr. Ruggiero and the failure to produce as witnesses John Gotti, according to the city’s papers, a leading member of an organized crime family in New York and a salesman for Arc, and Paul Gonzalez whom Arc claimed resigned immediately prior to his scheduled appearance.

Arc Plumbing had initiated this proceeding seeking a writ of prohibition restraining the city from preventing its work on plumbing contracts for Shea Stadium. This court in July 1986 declined to dismiss the petition as moot in light of the Board’s nonresponsibility determination and directed the bid information be supplied to Arc. Thereafter, Arc sought to amend to directly challenge the Board’s determination and the city consented to the amendment. This court may therefore review now on the underlying merits of this matter.1

[415]*415The petitioner challenges the determination of nonresponsibility on several grounds — due process relating to the adequacy of the notice, penalization for invocation of the self-incrimination privilege, the composition and authority of the Board, the conduct of the hearings, as well as the rational support for the agency’s finding.

DUE PROCESS

Adequate notice is a prerequisite to fundamental fairness that underlies due process, and this requirement is applicable in the administrative hearing process (Matter of Murray v Murphy, 24 NY2d 150 [1969]; Matter of Hecht v Monaghan, 307 NY 461 [1954]). There must be an adequate specification of charges and complaints to be reviewed so that Arc Plumbing could be aware of the claims asserted and able to properly defend itself (see, Matter of Alvarado v State of New York, Dept. of State, Div. of State Athletic Commn., 110 AD2d 583 [1st Dept 1985]; Matter of Aprile v Lo Grande, 89 AD2d 563 [2d Dept 1982]).

In this case, the Board advised Arc that Mr. Gurino’s indictment and the bid submission as well as specific questions on the experience questionnaire were at issue. At the hearing Michele Day, the secretary who filled out the forms, testified about the manner in which the forms were filled out. By checking off corporate status, she and Mr. Gurino believed questions relating to Grand Jury testimony, indictments, financial interests, officer status and board membership in other businesses related solely to Arc and not to Mr. Gurino, its president and owner, who signed the application. She also testified that she completed this application, like all others Arc submitted, by the rote copying of information from earlier forms. This knowledge of the process of filling out forms is attributable to Arc Plumbing and the notice of hearing which raised the bid application therefore adequately apprised Arc Plumbing to defend itself. To the extent that inconsistencies in other applications were used at the hearing for purposes other than impeachment, their consideration by the Board, except as noted above for the manner of filling out forms, was improper. Numerous questions were also raised relating to Mr. Gurino’s other financial interests. The financial relationships of Mr. Gurino were properly raised by the notice given. [416]*416The financial connections with Mr. Ruggiero are the underlying acts charged in the indictment and were thus properly before the Board and capable of being considered.

SELF-INCRIMINATION

At the hearing, Mr. Gurino refused to answer various questions relating to the indictment under his privilege against self-incrimination. His right to decline to testify is protected by both the Federal and State Constitutions (US Const 5th Amend; NY Const, art I, §6). The exercise of this right may not be used to penalize Mr. Gurino (Lefkowitz v Turley, 414 US 70 [1973]). In this case the entity held accountable for Mr. Gurino’s failure to testify is Arc Plumbing, a corporation. It is well settled that the privilege is a personal one and, accordingly, a corporation has no Fifth Amendment right (Campbell Painting Corp. v Reid, 392 US 286 [1968]; Matter of Moe v Kuriansky, 120 AD2d 594 [2d Dept 1986]). This applies even if the corporation is owned by a sole shareholder as in this case (State of New York v Carey Resources, 97 AD2d 508 [2d Dept 1983]). The Board is therefore entitled to consider a corporation’s failure to produce evidence and entitled to consider failure to do so as noncooperation.

COMPOSITION AND AUTHORITY OF THE BOARD

The challenge to the Board of Responsibility’s composition, including pursuant to the Board of Estimate regulation2 a member of the agency as one of the three members of the Board, runs against the long-established administrative law procedure that permits combination of adjudicative and investigative functions (Withrow v Larkin, 421 US 35 [1975]; Matter [417]*417of Young v Board of Educ., 100 AD2d 515 [2d Dept 1984]). The conduct of the hearing, while spirited, does not reflect either bias by the agency member on the Board or personal knowledge and involvement by the agency member on the Board prior to the hearing (Matter of Young v Board of Educ., supra; Matter of Pelaez v Waterfront Commn., 88 AD2d 443 [2d Dept 1982]).

RESPONSIBILITY

The Board’s ultimate finding in this case was that Arc Plumbing was not a responsible bidder. It based this finding on the noncooperation of Mr. Gurino, Arc’s president, the failure to call John Gotti, an Arc salesman and, according to the city’s papers, the leader of an organized crime family, and Paul Rodriguez as witnesses,3 the evasive manner it found Arc had used in answering questions in the bid application, the laxity in supervision by Arc management of filling out documents to be filed in connection with bid applications and the documents’ inaccuracy as they were often filled out without attempts to gather true facts but were merely copied from earlier forms or filled in arbitrarily with false information, and lastly, Mr. Gurino’s indictment. There was conflict on certain of the above factual findings but there was a rational basis in the evidence for the agency’s findings (Matter of Bentley v Perales, 103 AD2d 1005 [4th Dept 1984]).

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135 Misc. 2d 413, 515 N.Y.S.2d 685, 1987 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arc-plumbing-heating-corp-v-board-of-responsibility-of-the-department-nysupct-1987.