Henry Schein, Inc., V. Dept. Of L & I, State Of Wa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 25, 2024
Docket86858-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Henry Schein, Inc., V. Dept. Of L & I, State Of Wa (Henry Schein, Inc., V. Dept. Of L & I, State Of Wa) 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.

Bluebook
Henry Schein, Inc., V. Dept. Of L & I, State Of Wa, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

HENRY SCHEIN, INC., and DANIEL STALFORD, DIVISION ONE

Appellants, No. 86858-6-I

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES,

Respondent.

DWYER, J. — Henry Schein, Inc., and its employee, Daniel Stalford, appeal

from the final order of the Washington State Electrical Board affirming citations

imposed by the Department of Labor and Industries arising from their alleged

violations of the electrical code. The Board erred, they assert, because Stalford’s

actions occurred during the installation of a medical device and were, therefore,

exempt from the electrical code requirements set forth in chapter 19.28 RCW.

However, because the statutory exemption for medical device installation does

not include the work performed by Stalford, this claim fails. Accordingly, we

affirm the final order of the Board and uphold the citations issued by the

Department.

I

Henry Schein, Inc. is an international distributor of health care products

and services, providing those products and services primarily to office-based

dental and medical practitioners. Schein employed Daniel Stalford as a senior No. 86858-6-I/2

installation technician. For over 12 years, Stalford installed, repaired, and

maintained dental equipment sold by Schein. He received specialized training

from the equipment manufacturers on the subjects of installation, removal, repair,

and troubleshooting of their devices. It is undisputed that Schein was not a

licensed electrical contractor and Stalford was not a licensed electrician. Rather,

Stalford often worked with electricians and other licensed professionals to install

the equipment.

During the time in question, a dental clinic informed Schein that its dental

evacuation system had ceased to operate properly. Schein dispatched Stalford

in his role as an installation technician to remediate the emergency. That day,

Stalford procured a replacement dental evacuation system—a Vac-Star 80 wet-

ring vacuum pump manufactured by Air-Techniques—and arrived at the dental

clinic at 7:00 a.m. the next morning to remove the inoperable unit and install the

new one.

The Vac-Star 80 is a pre-fabricated unit with a pre-attached whip that is

directly integrated into the vacuum pump. Both the inoperable unit and the new

unit operated through a connection to an electrical disconnect by way of the

whip, rather than a wall outlet. For the equipment at issue, the whip is flexible

conduit containing three equipment leads, consisting of two black wires for the

electrical current and a green grounding wire. Those wires connect to the

service disconnect with retention nuts.

Stalford described the work he completed to replace the equipment. He

began his work by first turning off the electrical power at the clinic’s service

2 No. 86858-6-I/3

disconnect as well as at the circuit breaker. He then verified that the power was

off through use of a “line checker.” At that time, Stalford removed the three

equipment leads of the inoperable unit from the service disconnect using a flat-

bladed screwdriver.

After removing the inoperable unit, Stalford put the new vacuum unit in

place. Stalford connected the electrical leads in the whip belonging to the new

unit to the service disconnect, attaching the one green and two black wires to the

disconnect using a screwdriver and retention nuts supplied by the factory. As he

was installing the electrical leads, Stalford observed that the wire gauge of the

existing electrical system was improper and also observed that the service

disconnect was not in the correct location. Stalford contacted a licensed

electrician with whom Schein regularly works to meet him at the jobsite and

repair the faulty wiring.

Before the electrician arrived, two electrical inspectors from the

Department of Labor and Industries, Erik Methe and trainee Victor Kraakmo, who

had been driving nearby, noticed the Schein van parked outside the dental office.

They proceeded to investigate. The inspectors met Stalford who stated that he

was replacing a VacStar unit and had already disconnected the inoperable unit

and installed the new unit. Stalford informed Methe and Kraakmo of the

electrical issues he had encountered and that he would not turn on the service

disconnect until those issues were addressed by the electrician who was on his

way to the site. Methe also spoke with the electrical contractor to coordinate the

3 No. 86858-6-I/4

arrival of the electrician. Methe and Kraakmo departed the jobsite after 20

minutes, before the licensed electrician arrived.

The electrical contractor applied for the proper electrical permits shortly

after dispatching the licensed electrician to the jobsite. The electrician

performed the necessary repairs and upgrades, which included pulling new wires

from the panel, removing the disconnects and installing new ones with correct

clearance and rating, and installing additional conduit to ameliorate code violation

from excessive wire in the existing conduit feeding the disconnect.

As a result of the visit by Methe and Kraakmo, the Department issued

three citations to Schein, one citation for failing to have an electrical permit, one

citation for performing work without a licensed electrician, and one citation for

employing an individual without valid electrical competency.1 Two of the

citations—for performing electrical work without a license and employing an

individual without valid electrical competency—were Schein’s second such

citations. Stalford received a single citation for performing electrical work without

a certificate of competency or electrical training certificate in violation of RCW

19.28.161.

Schein and Stalford (collectively Schein), together, appealed the citations

to the Office of Administrative Hearings. An Administrative Law Judge conducted

a hearing in which employees of the Department testified, as did Stalford, his

supervisor, and an expert witness. After the hearing, the Administrative Law

1 The citations were issued for violations of RCW 19.28.010, RCW 19.28.041, and RCW

19.28.271, respectively.

4 No. 86858-6-I/5

Judge entered an initial order in which he concluded that Stalford, on behalf of

Schein, had performed electrical work when he installed a line voltage whip from

the power disconnect to the VacStar system and, therefore, affirmed the four

citations.

Schein appealed the initial order from the Office of Administrative

Hearings to the Electrical Board. The Electrical Board considered briefing and

arguments from the parties and found that “the work conducted in this case was

electrical work requiring certified electricians to comply with state law.” The

Board therefore concluded that Schein and Stalford violated the Washington

State Electrical Code by installing the dental vacuum pump without the proper

building permits or electrical certification. Accordingly, the Board affirmed the

four citations and issued a final order to that effect.

Schein subsequently petitioned the Thurston County Superior Court for

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