Brogno v. W & J ASSOCIATES, LTD.

698 A.2d 191, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 241, 1997 WL 403955
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 17, 1997
Docket96-83-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 698 A.2d 191 (Brogno v. W & J ASSOCIATES, LTD.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brogno v. W & J ASSOCIATES, LTD., 698 A.2d 191, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 241, 1997 WL 403955 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

This case came before us on a petition for certiorari filed pursuant to G.L.1956 § 28-35-29. Salvatore Brogno (Brogno) seeks review of a final decree of the Appellate Division of the Workers’ Compensation Court that affirmed a trial judge’s finding that Brogno was not a statutory employee of W & J Associates, Ltd. (W & J) at the time of his injury and was not entitled to workers’ compensation benefits.

Omni Development Corporation (Omni) owned real estate in Providence, Rhode Island. Omni hired W & J as a general contractor for a construction project on that real estate. As part of that project, W & J subcontracted with Rocco D’Angelo (D’Angelo) for the placement of siding on two buildings. D’Angelo, in turn, subcontracted with T & M Home Improvement (T & M) for the actual installation of the siding. Richard Williams (Williams), the president of W & J, was at the job site every day and was aware that D’Angelo had subcontracted out the siding work to T & M.

No discussion of workers’ compensation insurance ever occurred among W & J, D’Angelo, and T & M, and as it was later discovered, only W & J had workers’ compensation insurance. Brogno, an employee of T & M, suffered physical injuries during the course of his employment for T & M on the Omni construction project. Soon thereafter, he filed an employee petition with the Workers’ Compensation Court, alleging that he was a statutory employee of W & J, pursuant to G.L.1956 § 28-29-6.1, and was entitled, therefore, to injured-employee benefits under W & J’s workers’ compensation insurance policy.

Section 28-29-6.1, as enacted by P.L.1994, ch. 385, § 1 provided, at the time of Brogno’s injury, as follows:

“(a) Whenever a general contractor or a construction manager shall enter into a contract with a subcontractor for work to be performed in Rhode Island, the general contractor or construction manager shall at all times require written documentation evidencing that the subcontractor carries workers’ compensation insurance with no indebtedness for its employees for the term of the contact [sic]. In the event that the general contractor or construction manager fails to obtain said written documentation from the subcontractor, the general contractor or construction manager shall be deemed to be the employer pursuant to provisions of section 28-29-2.
“(b) For the purposes of this section, ‘construction manager’ means an individual corporation, partnership or joint venture, or other legal entity responsible for supervising and controlling all aspects of construction work to be performed on the construction project, as designated in the project documents, in addition to the possibility of performing some of the construction services itself. For the purposes of this section, the construction manager need have no contractual involvement with any of the parties to the construction project other than the owner, or may contract directly with the trade contractors pursuant to its agreement with the owner.”

The Workers’ Compensation Court trial judge interpreted § 28-29-6.1 as providing that only general contractors and construction managers are responsible to employees of first-level subcontractors if they fail to procure proof of workers’ compensation insurance from those first-level contractors. He declined, however, to extend the protections of § 28-29-6.1 to employees of uninsured sub-subcontractors, reasoning that because the statute used the term “subcontractor” in the singular and because the statute was silent in regard to sub-subcontractors, the legislative intent was not to include sub-subcontractors within the purview of the statute. The trial judge also determined that D’Angelo’s role and status *193 was that of the construction manager on the project site. He concluded that the statute placed the responsibility for determining if the project subcontractors were insured for workers’ compensation coverage on D’Angelo as the statutory employer because of D’Angelo’s failure to obtain written documentation confirming the existence of workers’ compensation insurance from T & M. The trial judge additionally found Brog-no was an employee of the first-level subcontractor that D’Angelo had hired. However, because there was no evidence in the record showing that D’Angelo had workers’ compensation coverage insurance, that conclusion left Brogno without a remedy under the Workers’ Compensation statutes. 1 The Appellate Division affirmed that opinion in a two-to-one decision with one judge dissenting.

The dissent asserted that § 28-29-6.1 was intended to protect employees and that, contrary to the recognized benevolent intent of the statute, the result and effect of the majority opinion failed to protect the employees and instead served to protect general contractors and their construction managers. In keeping with its expressed legislative intent to protect injured workers, the dissenting judge opined, the General Assembly purposely placed the burden on the general contractor or its construction manager to ensure that its subcontractors carried workers’ compensation insurance and, failing to do so, would be held responsible as the statutory employer of any uninsured subcontractor’s employee injured while working on the project site. That interpretation, the dissent reasoned, was consistent with the mandate to construe the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act liberally in order to effect “its expressed and benevolent purposes.” We find that reasoning to be persuasive.

It is conceded by all the parties that W & J did not require written proof of workers’ compensation insurance from either D’Angelo or T & M. Thus, the language of § 28-29-6.1 unquestionably controls here. The question that emerges from that concession is whether the language of the statute, which refers to “subcontractor” in the singular, permits inclusion of sub-subcontractors. Clearly it does. In G.L.1956 § 43-3-4 of our General Laws, the General Assembly provided that the use of the plural and the use of the singular in our statutes are indistinguishable: “Every word importing the singular number only, may be construed to extend to and to include the plural number also; and every word importing the plural number only, may be construed to extend to and to embrace the singular number also.” Thus, even though § 28-29-6.1 uses the term “subcontractor,” we can, in a manner consistent with § 43-3-4, construe that term to mean “subcontractors.” In the plural that term can clearly and unambiguously be interpreted as including all subcontractors hired by general contractors and construction managers to perform work on the project. Pursuant to that interpretation, when general contractors and construction managers fail to get written documentary proof of workers’ compensation insurance when hiring subcontractors, they then become responsible as statutory employers to employees of a subcontractor hired by the general contractor or the construction manager as well as to employees of a sub-subcontractor hired by a subcontractor. 2

Additionally, in the case of construction managers as defined in subsection (b) of § 28-29-6.1, there need not be any “contractual involvement with any of the parties to the construction project other than the owner” before responsibility as a statutory employer attaches.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
698 A.2d 191, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 241, 1997 WL 403955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brogno-v-w-j-associates-ltd-ri-1997.