Five Star Guttering, LLC v. Dep't of Labor & Industries

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 25, 2025
Docket40138-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Five Star Guttering, LLC v. Dep't of Labor & Industries (Five Star Guttering, LLC v. Dep't of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Five Star Guttering, LLC v. Dep't of Labor & Industries, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FILED FEBRUARY 25, 2025 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

FIVE STAR GUTTERING, LLC, ET AL ) ) No. 40138-3-III Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT OF ) LABOR & INDUSTRIES, ) ) Respondent. )

FEARING, J. — Five Star Guttering, LLC (Five Star), a gutter contractor as its

name suggests, and Oscar Curiel, the owner of the company, appeal a Department of

Labor & Industries (DLI) award of back wages owed to Marcelina Torres. Torres, the

former girlfriend of Curiel, performed services for the company when it began operations

in 2017 until 2019. Five Star contends it entered into no employment relationship with

Torres. On appeal, Curiel and Five Star challenge the findings of fact and conclusions of

law entered by the DLI during its administrative hearing process. Because substantial

evidence supports all of the critical findings of fact and those findings support the

conclusions of law, we affirm. No. 40138-3-III Five Star Guttering, LLC. v. Dep’t of Labor & Industries

FACTS

We draw the following narrative from testimony before the DLI administrative

law judge (ALJ) and from unchallenged findings of fact. We view the facts in the light

most favorable to the prevailing party, respondent DLI.

In 2007, Oscar Curiel and Marcelina Torres began a romantic relationship and

three years later begat a son. The couple lived together for an unidentified length of time,

but briefly, after the son’s birth. Torres later resided with her parents. She became the

primary custodian for the son.

In 2017, Oscar Curiel and Marcelina Torres became engaged and decided to start a

construction business, Five Star, but not necessarily in that priority. Curiel was employed

by Hayden Masonry, and Torres worked as a State Farm Insurance Company sales agent.

Curiel charged Torres’ credit cards to pay the startup costs of Five Star. Torres’ cards

purchased a gutter forming machine, tools, computer software, software applications,

Facebook ads, promotional items, and business lunches.

Oscar Curiel owns and operates Five Star and serves as its registered agent. Curiel

promised to reimburse Marcelina Torres for the costs of starting the business. Torres

used her savings to retire the resulting credit card debt.

On May 29, 2017, Marcelina Torres quit her job with State Farm to work full-time

for Five Star. Her tasks included procuring contractor bonds, insurance, and a license for

2 No. 40138-3-III Five Star Guttering, LLC. v. Dep’t of Labor & Industries

the business. Torres created and produced promotional brochures and swag, including

pens and water bottles with a logo she designed. She distributed marketing materials at

local companies and parades. She walked door-to-door and collected potential

customers’ names. She commenced and managed social media accounts to promote the

company. She posted promotional videos and job site photos on Instagram and Facebook

and solicited feedback and reviews of company projects. By mid-summer 2017, Torres

attended business networking meetings, meetings with prospective customers, scheduling

estimates, measuring homes, and arranging installations.

At some unidentified time but shortly after Five Star began operations, Oscar

Curiel and Marcelina Torres ended their marriage engagement. They continued with a

romantic relationship, however.

Oscar Curiel paid $2,000 every three to four months to Marcelina Torres. Torres

considered the payments as reimbursement for the debt incurred in Five Star’s startup

costs and for court-ordered child support obligations rather than compensation.

According to Torres, she informed Curiel that the payments failed to cover the business

debt, child support, and compensation for her employment. Curiel denies being told of

any expectation of receiving wages. Curiel deemed the payments sufficient for Torres’

assistance to his business, Five Star.

3 No. 40138-3-III Five Star Guttering, LLC. v. Dep’t of Labor & Industries

Five Star, through Oscar Curiel, did not view Marcelina Torres as an employee

and kept no records of her hours worked. Curiel never requested that Torres complete a

W-2 or a 1099 form, and he withheld no taxes from any payments to her. In late 2017,

Curiel hired Eric Glascow of Insight Accounting to manage the business’s bookkeeping

and accounting. Glascow believed Five Star should place Torres on its payroll because

she performed extensive administrative duties such as customer scheduling, advertising,

and all customer contact. Later, Scott Alan Williams assumed the business’ accounting

duties. Williams never saw any written salary agreement for Torres. He received no

timecards from Torres for hours worked. Like Glascow, Williams believed that Five Star

should add Torres to its payroll.

On December 1, 2018, Marcelina Torres informed Oscar Curiel that she intended

to quit working for Five Star. She resigned on February 8, 2019. Her resignation email

to Curiel reads, in part:

I am giving you my immediate resignation since I have not been compensated adequately for the amount of work that I have performed for 5 Star Guttering. I had been receiving an amount in cash for the last few years of $2000 (sometimes) that according to you should have covered all my expenses including rent, bills and raising an 8 year old all on my own.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 182 (emphasis omitted). Torres and Curiel’s romantic relationship

also ended.

4 No. 40138-3-III Five Star Guttering, LLC. v. Dep’t of Labor & Industries

On March 30, 2019, Marcelina Torres filed a worker rights complaint with DLI

and against Five Star for withheld wages throughout her employment. DLI Industrial

Relations Agent Yocelin Martinez investigated the complaint. Torres claimed she was an

hourly employee at $16 per hour, plus a 10% commission. Torres submitted, to Agent

Martinez, timecards, tracked with “Time Card Calculator Geek,” covering the period

from May 29, 2017, to February 10, 2019. Torres also tendered social media posts

documenting her work activities for Five Star and copies of estimates created for

prospective customers. The estimates mentioned a 10 percent commission. After

collecting additional information from other parties, Agent Martinez calculated that Five

Star owed Torres $129,357.04 in wages.

On April 23, 2020, Agent Yocelin Martinez, on behalf of DLI, sent Five Star a

request for a response to Marcelina Torres’ wage complaint. Agent Martinez followed

with a letter asking for business records or other documents that would demonstrate that

Torres was not an employee or that Five Star owed no wages.

On May 13, 2020, Five Star responded:

Regarding Time Records: the agreement with Marcelina Torres was never to have actual payroll. We were in a relationship, shared a child, and she was performing business tasks under the assumption that it was helping the functionality of our households, and miscellaneous other charges such as her credit card bill. .... There was no written contract with Marcelina, no employee paperwork ever discussed, completed or obtained.

5 No. 40138-3-III Five Star Guttering, LLC. v. Dep’t of Labor & Industries

CP at 468-69. Five Star provided no paystubs or any records of Marcelina Torres’s

employment or work.

At the later DLI hearing, Oscar Curiel presented his Numerica credit card

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