Erie County Industrial Development Agency v. Roberts

94 A.D.2d 532, 26 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 627, 465 N.Y.S.2d 301, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18503
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 11, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 94 A.D.2d 532 (Erie County Industrial Development Agency v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erie County Industrial Development Agency v. Roberts, 94 A.D.2d 532, 26 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 627, 465 N.Y.S.2d 301, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18503 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

SCHNEPP, J.

In this CPLR article 78 proceeding, which also seeks declaratory relief, we are asked to determine whether the prevailing wage requirement of section 220 of the Labor Law is applicable to private construction projects which are financed by industrial development agencies through the issuance of tax exempt industrial development revenue bonds. Special Term rejected the determination of the Commissioner of Labor that the prevailing wage requirement applies and prohibited the commissioner from taking any further action to apply the requirement either to the petitioner Quo Vadis Editions, Inc., or a typical industrial development bond project of the petitioner Erie County Industrial Development Agency. We agree with Special Term that such projects are not “public works” within the meaning of section 220 of the Labor Law.

The New York State Legislature enacted the New York State Industrial Development Agency Act in 1969 (General Municipal Law, art 18-A [as added by L 1969, ch 1030]) with the expressed purpose to attract commercial and industrial development. The act declares it to be the policy of this State “to promote the economic welfare * * * and prosperity of its inhabitants and to actively promote, attract, encourage and develop * * * economically sound commerce and industry * * * through governmental action for the purpose of preventing unemployment and economic deterioration by the creation of industrial development agencies”. (General Municipal Law, § 852; see, also, General Municipal Law, § 858.) It authorizes the organization of industrial development agencies and directs that each “shall be a corporate governmental agency, constituting a public benefit corporation” (General Municipal Law, § 856, subd 2). A function of the agency is to make private financing available to private developers at tax exempt interest rates through the sale of industrial development revenue bonds. The Erie County Industrial Development [534]*534Agency was created in 1970 to accomplish the purposes of the act for the benefit of the County of Erie and its inhabitants. (General Municipal Law, § 891, as added by L 1970, ch 293, renum § 891-a by L 1977, ch 834.)

In a typically financed project, a private business company seeking industrial development revenue bond (IDB) financing makes all the necessary preliminary decisions concerning land acquisition, construction and budgeting of the project and submits an application to the agency for approval. Upon receiving approval the company negotiates the economic terms of the financing with a private lender, usually a bank, willing to purchase an IDB from the agency. Once a commitment is agreed to by the bank and the company, a formal commitment letter is delivered to the bond counsel for the agency who translates the terms of the commitment letter into a bond purchase agreement1 between the agency and the lending bank and certain other IDB documents to which the company, the bank and the agency are parties. The documents which provide for the flow of loan and repayment funds between the bank and the company and for the security for the loan are as follows: (1) a deed from the company to the agency, which vests formal legal title to the project in the agency, and a lease2 back to the company which requires the company to pay rent equivalent to the principal and interest due on the IDB; (2) a mortgage on the property to secure the loan and an assignment to the bank of the agency’s rights under the lease; and, (3) an IDB with tax exempt status issued by the agency to the bank which is payable only from the rents [535]*535paid under the lease. All the documents are part of a single, integrated transaction with delivery of each document dependent upon delivery of each of the others. When the financing transaction is closed, the bank does not pay the agency for the IDE but instead holds the loan funds in a project fund which it controls as trustee. Disbursements from the fund are made to finance, in part, the construction of the project and are paid by the bank directly to the company as the project is built. Rents under the lease are paid by the company to a bond fund held by the bank which is used to pay the interest and amortize the principal amount of the IDE. When the IDE is paid in full, the agency returns to the company the title to the project.

Interest received by the bank on the IDE is exempt from Federal income tax (Internal Revenue Code of 1954 [US Code, tit 26, § 103, subd (b)]) and from New York State income tax (General Municipal Law, § 874), allowing these bonds to be marketed well below prevailing interest rates. Projects financed by an IDE are also exempt from State and local sales taxes (General Municipal Law, § 874) and from local property taxes so long as the agency holds title (Real Property Tax Law, § 412-a). Thus, the real purpose of this complex financial arrangement is to provide the company developing the project with tax relief and to insure the tax exempt status of the bonds which are used to finance the construction of the project.

In March, 1981 the Erie County Industrial Development Agency authorized the issuance of an $825,000 IDE for a part of the cost of the construction of a new printing and binding plant in the Town of Hamburg, Erie County, by Quo Vadis Editions, Inc., a subsidiary of the French corporation Quo Vadis, S. A., which is incorporated under Delaware law and is qualified to do business in New York State. Upon negotiating the terms of the financing and receiving a commitment by Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company to purchase the IDE from the Erie County Industrial Development Agency, Quo Vadis purchased land in the Ravenwood Industrial Park, Hamburg, New York, for the building site and, under the date of May 24,1982, entered [536]*536into a construction contract3 in the amount of $1,271,439. Quo Vadis, the bank and the agency then consummated the typical IDE financing agreement on June 30,1982 and construction of the plant started soon thereafter. On September 2, 1982 the commissioner advised the agency, as well as the other industrial development agencies in the State, of her determination that construction projects financed with IDEs are subject, inter alia, to the prevailing wage requirement of section 220 of the Labor Law, and, under date of October 12, 1982, notified Quo Vadis that it was in violation of the Labor Law for failure to comply with the requirements of the section. This proceeding was then brought by petitioners which sought a determination that the Quo Vadis project and other typically financed construction projects by the Erie County Industrial Development Agency are not subject to the prevailing wage requirement of section 220 and to prohibit the commissioner from applying the requirement to these projects.

The prevailing wage requirement embodied in section 220 is a legislative enactment which has as its genesis the 1905 amendment of section 1 of article XII of the State Constitution of 1894.4 Section 220 is part of article 8 of the Labor Law which is entitled “Public Work”. Subdivision 2 of section 220 provides that “[ejach contract to which the state or a public benefit corporation or a municipal corporation or a commission appointed pursuant to law is a party and which may involve the employment of laborers, workmen or mechanics shall contain a stipulation that no laborer, workman or mechanic * * * shall be permitted or required to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day or more than five days in any one week”.

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94 A.D.2d 532, 26 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 627, 465 N.Y.S.2d 301, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-county-industrial-development-agency-v-roberts-nyappdiv-1983.