Eastwind, Inc. v. State

951 P.2d 844, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 182, 1997 WL 790572
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1997
DocketS-6914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 951 P.2d 844 (Eastwind, Inc. v. State) 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
Eastwind, Inc. v. State, 951 P.2d 844, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 182, 1997 WL 790572 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

At issue in this appeal is whether the new wage rate determination provisions of the 1993 amendments to AS 36.05.010 apply to public construction contracts bid on prior to the effective date of the amendments. We hold that they do not.

*845 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Effective September 22, 1993, the legislature amended AS 36.05.010, the Little Davis-Bacon Act (Act). 1 Prior to amendment the Act required that all contractors with public works contracts pay their employees no less than the prevailing wage rate for work of a similar nature in the relevant locale. Alaska Statute 36.05.010 specifically directed contractors to adjust their wage rates every time that the Department of Labor (DOL) issued new prevailing wages. 2 Thus, by contract, a public works contractor agreed to immediately adjust employee wages for the subsequent pay period after each DOL issuance of new prevailing wage rates. 3

In 1993, the legislature amended AS 36.05.010 and AS 36.05.070. Under the system established by the 1993 amendments, which became effective September 22, 1993, minimum wages are fixed at the prevailing wage rates in effect ten days prior to the final date for submission of bids on the public contract. These wage rates remain constant for twenty-four months or the life of the contract, whichever is shorter. 4 Thus, wages are frozen for the first twenty-four months of the contract and the contractor will only have to adjust pay rates when performance of the contract will take longer than twenty-four months. On September 1, 1993, DOL issued an Interpretive Bulletin which concluded that the 1993 amendments applied only to public contracts with a final bid date after September 22,1993.

Eastwind, Inc., and the other party corporations are public works contractors who have contracts with bid dates prior to September 22, 1993. Work on their contracts continued after the effective date of the 1993 amendments. The contractors filed a declaratory judgment action, asserting that the amendments in question should apply to their pre-existing contracts and seeking an invalidation of the DOL’s Interpretive Bulletin. Both sides subsequently moved for summary judgment.

The superior court granted the State’s motion for summary judgment. The court held that applying the 1993 amendments to preexisting contracts would “amount to making the statute retroactive,” which the legislature *846 did not expressly intend. The State subsequently moved for attorney’s fees and was awarded $1,485.04 pursuant to Civil Rule 82. The contractors now bring this appeal.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Are the Amendments to AS S6.05.010 Applicable to Contracts with a Bid Date Prior to Enactment?

We start from the undisputed proposition that all statutes are presumptively non-retroactive. Alaska Statute 01.10.090 provides: “Retrospective statutes. No statute is retrospective unless expressly declared therein.” Though the amendments to the Act were made effective September 22, 1998, the contractors contend that the legislature intended to include all pay periods following enactment, regardless of the bid date of the contract. Moreover, the contractors assert that this interpretation of the amendments does not constitute a retroactive application.

1. Legislative history 5

The contractors argue that legislative intent to include pre-enactment contracts in the scope of the amendments is evidenced by several sources. They observe that Representative Gail Phillips, the amendments’ sponsor, stated that under the amended version of the Act, the DOL wage rate would “no longer apply immediately to contracts in progress.”

Representative Phillips’ full statement on this subject is as follows:

Current law provides that a construction contractor or subcontractor who performs work on public construction in the state shall pay not less than the current prevailing wage for work of a similar nature. However, an increase in the prevailing wage in the middle of a contract creates a financial hardship on the contractor; and anticipation of interim increases may also serve to inflate the cost of construction projects, because the contractor or subcontractor must absorb the costs....
The bill before you proposes to address these concerns.
Sponsor Substitute for House Bill 126 was introduced to amend AS 36.05.010 so that the prevailing wage as determined by the Department of Labor will no longer apply immediately to contracts in progress. The wage in effect at least 10 days before final bid submission will remain in effect for 24 months from the date the contract is awarded....
Representatives from Unions, Alaska General Contractors and the Department of Labor worked together to find appropriate language to be introduced, and it is my understanding that the bill now meets with the approval of each.

The contractors conclude that the term “in progress” must refer to all contracts already in place at the time of enactment. We disagree. The more plausible interpretation of this phrase is that it is used merely to refer to contracts which are being performed when DOL issues a new determination of prevailing wage rates. Thus in the quoted statement the phrase “contracts in progress” is another way of referring to, as Representative Phillips put it, “an increase in the prevailing wage in the middle of a contract.” The phrase is nowhere keyed to the date a particular contract might have been let..

The contractors’ reliance on similar statements by legislators and DOL is also misplaced. These pronouncements indicate only that the amendments were intended to relieve contractors of the burden of continually adjusting wages during the term of the contract. While the statements may be generally indicative of legislative motivation for amending the Act, they fail to establish that the amendments were meant to apply to contracts with a bid date prior to September 1993.

We conclude that the contractors have not shown that the legislature specifically intended for the 1993 amendments to apply to pre-enactment contracts. We note that in the past this court has strictly applied the requirements of AS 01.10.090 when determining whether a statute is meant to be applied retroactively. For instance, in State, Alco *847 holic Beverage Control Bd. v. Odom Corp., 671 P.2d 375, 377 (Alaska 1983), we stated:

AS 01.10.090 provides that no Alaskan statute can be applied retrospectively “unless expressly declared therein.” This statute has been applied strictly....

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Bluebook (online)
951 P.2d 844, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 182, 1997 WL 790572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastwind-inc-v-state-alaska-1997.