Currie v. Indus. Sec., Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 17, 2005
DocketAROcv-03-055
StatusUnpublished

This text of Currie v. Indus. Sec., Inc. (Currie v. Indus. Sec., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Currie v. Indus. Sec., Inc., (Me. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

IRVING FOREST PRODUCTS, INC. Defendants

AROOSTOOK, ss DOCKET NO. CV-03-055 HERSCHEL CURRIE ) Plaintiff ) ) ) vs. ) ORDER ON MOTION ) FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT ) ) INDUSTRIAL SECURITY, INC. — and ) Ocls ) )

MAY 3 2005

Pending before the court is the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. I The Plaintiff has brought suit against the Defendants claiming that they terminated his employment in violation of Maine’s Whistle Blower Protection ACT (26 M.R.S.A. § 831, et seq.)(Counts | and II). The Plaintiff also claims that the Defendant Irving Forest Products, Inc. is liable to him for tortiously interfering with a contractual advantage. (Count II). For the reasons set forth herein, the court grants the Defendants’ motion in its entirety.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The material facts of this matter may be summarized as follows. Defendant Irving Forest Products, Inc. (Irving) owns and operates a lumber mill in Portage, Maine. Starting in March of 1999, the Plaintiff worked at the mill as a security guard supervisor. He began this employment as an employee for Hall Security (Hall), a company that had

contracted with Irving to provide security at the mill. In May of 2000, Irving ended its

' The Plaintiff has maintained that the two Defendants named in this case constitute one “integrated

enterprise” or a “single employer” in this case. (See, e.g. Lyes v. City of Riviera Beach Florida, 166 F.3d

1332,1341 (11™ Cir. 1999) In prosecuting this motion, the Defendants do not seem to take issue with this contention.

relationship with Hall and contracted with the Defendant Industrial Security, Inc (Industrial) to provide security at the mill.2 At approximately the same time, Industrial hired the Plaintiff to do the same job for it that he had been previously doing for Hall. The Plaintiffs immediate supervisor was Steve Varga (Varga). Varga’s supervisor was Dave Johnson (Johnson). Varga and Johnson were responsible for all Industrial decisions regarding hiring and firing. (Currie Dep. page 37, line 10 to 16).

At all relevant times, the Plaintiff was the security supervisor and had a variety of duties and responsibilities associated with his job. Those duties included monitoring people who came and went or were otherwise present in the mill yard. The Plaintiff had no particular expertise regarding immigration law and he was not responsible for monitoring the immigration status of people coming onto Irving’s mill property.

In January of 2000, while he was still an employee for Hall, it came to the Plaintiff's attention that two of Industrial’s Canadian employees had come to the mill property in Portage to do compliance audits and equipment checks on logging trucks. * During the course of interacting with these two Canadian men at that time, the Plaintiff asked them if they had legal permission to be working in the United States. Based on what he regarded to be equivocal responses, the Plaintiff suspected that the two men did not have the required work visas.* He told the men that they would probably get into

trouble if they worked without the required visas. The Plaintiff also stated that he did not

? Industrial has its principal place of business in Canada.

* In and of itself, the presence of Canadian workers on site was not particularly remarkable as Canadian timber harvesters were in and out of the mill yard all the time. At this particular time however, it appears that a labor dispute involving a work stoppage was in progress at the mill and that Irving may have had a heightened concern regarding protection of its property during this period of labor unrest.

* Although the Plaintiff is not an immigration law expert, it appears that from working in and around the timber harvesting industry, he had acquired a basic understanding, common to many people living in

northern Maine, that Canadian workers required a work visa before engaging in any work in the United States. want to become involved in anything that might be illegal and he declined to work with them. The two men then left the mill.

The next day, and without first speaking to his supervisor, the Plaintiff called U.S.Customs to look into the matter on his own. He gave a customs officer the names of the two Canadians and asked if they were authorized to engage in work in the United States. The customs officer reported that he didn’t know and that he would look into it. Several days later, U.S. Border Patrol agent John Merrick called to let him know that although the two men had not been apprehended, to his knowledge they had no right to work in the United States and that he would look into it. Agent Merrick never reported back to the Plaintiff on what if anything he had found out. In fact, no one ever gave the Plaintiff any definitive confirmation regarding whether the two Canadians were authorized to work in the United States or not. The Plaintiff never heard another word about this matter. Industrial subsequently hired the Plaintiff when it took over the contract to provide security services at the mill.

Approximately one year later, in February of 2001, the mill shut down its operations. Industrial was still providing security during this time and an Irving employee, Stan Saucier (Saucier), called the Plaintiff at home on the weekend to report that two Canadians were in the mill yard. Saucier didn’t indicate what if anything the two Canadians were doing, just that they were present. The Plaintiff was conscious of what he believed to be a high level of unemployment in Aroostook County and thought

that it would be unlikely that immigration authorities would have issued work visas for the kind of relatively unskilled work the Plaintiff assumed that they were doing.° He also remembered that a year earlier two Canadians had come to the mill yard and left after he had made inquiries about the legality of their presence in the United States. The Plaintiff called his supervisor; reported to him that two Canadian men were at the mill and asked him if the Canadian men were legal. Varga responded clearly that the men were legal and that they had work permits. Notwithstanding his supervisor’s assurance that the men had valid work permits, the Plaintiff harbored doubts and said that he was going to check it out. The Plaintiff concedes that Varga assured him that the Canadians had every right to be where they were.

The Plaintiff then called the U.S. Customs office and again gave the names of the Canadians involved to an officer and asked if they were legally working in the United States.° The customs officer was not able to give the Plaintiff an immediate answer. Soon thereafter, Agent Merrick called the Plaintiff back and reported that the two men did not have valid work permits and that they had been apprehended and deported.’ When the Plaintiff next returned to work, Varga also discussed the matter with the Plaintiff and reported that the two men had been arrested and deported.®

Thereafter, the Plaintiff continued to work for Industrial until July 18,2001. On

this date, Johnson called him into the office, told him that he had to do something that he

° The suggestion is that the two Canadians were engaged in checking woods trucks and this was not skilled work. According to the Plaintiff, “you haven’t got to be a genius to check a truck”. (Currie dep. p.96 line 20.)

* It isn’t clear to the court if the two men were the same two men who had been at the mill yard a year earlier.

’ The parties have made a considerable effort to determine whether the workers in fact were legal (they were able to produce a receipt for payment of the required fee for a work visa) or were not legal (no one appears to have a record of an actual visa that issued).

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