Jeremy J. Moberg v. Terraqua, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 18, 2017
Docket34390-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jeremy J. Moberg v. Terraqua, Inc. (Jeremy J. Moberg v. Terraqua, Inc.) 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
Jeremy J. Moberg v. Terraqua, Inc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FILED JULY 18, 2017 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

JEREMY J. MOBERG, ) ) No. 34390-1-111 Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) TERRAQUA, INC., a/k/a TERRAQUA ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ENVIRONMENTAL CONSUL TING; ) MICHAEL B. WARD a/k/a MICHAEL B. ) WARDSKI; and UNKNOWN ) CORPORATION, ) ) Respondents. )

SIDDOWAY, J. - Jeremy Moberg sued Terraqua, Inc. for whom he worked for

over a decade, and its owner, Michael Ward. He claims Terraqua misclassified him as an

independent contractor, thereby avoiding the company's financial obligations as an No. 34390-1-111 Moberg v. Terraqua, LLC

employer; reneged on oral offers to give him ownership in the company; and delayed for

months in delivering his final paycheck. The trial court dismissed his claims on summary

judgment. He appeals dismissal of his claims alleging state wage law violations and

entitlement to an ownership interest based on theories of promissory estoppel and unjust

enrichment.

Terraqua's alleged promises of an ownership interest were too indefinite and Mr.

Moberg's evidence of unjust benefit is insufficient to support his promissory estoppel and

unjust enrichment claims. But under the test for employee status that we apply to his

wage claims-whether, as a matter of economic reality, he was dependent for fish

ecology work on Terraqua-material facts are disputed. We reverse dismissal of the

wage claims and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Terraqua is a small business established in 1995 that provides fisheries research

and consulting. Michael Ward is its sole owner and principal officer. After working for

Terraqua as an intern in college, and then through an employment service firm, Jeremy

Moberg began working for Terraqua under a direct contract in 2001. He continued

entering into annual contracts with it to serve as a fish ecologist nearly every year until

2011. Terraqua declined to enter into further contracts with Mr. Moberg after the 2010

2 No. 34390-1-111 Moberg v. Terraqua, LLC

contract expired on June 30, 2011.

In September 2011, Mr. Moberg sued Terraqua, asserting four claims for relief.

One claim, alleging violations of several of Washington's labor laws, was viable only if

Mr. Moberg had been an employee of Terraqua. Yet all ofTerraqua's contracts with Mr.

Moberg characterized him as an independent contractor.

Following the conduct of discovery, Terraqua moved for summary judgment

dismissing all of Mr. Moberg's claims. In support, it filed a 49-page declaration of Mr.

Ward and much shorter declarations from Holiday Sloan (Mr. Ward's ex-wife and a

former co-owner and officer of Terraqua); Mr. Moberg's ex-wife; and three individuals

(Joseph Ezell, Loren Doner, and Rueben Miller) who, like Mr. Moberg, had worked for

Terraqua under contracts characterizing them as independent contractors. Terraqua's

declarations included many attacks on Mr. Moberg as a person and an employee, and

addressed the fact that when he was not working for Terraqua, he had other business

ventures, including growing marijuana at a time when it was not legal. The declarations

of Messrs. Ezell, Doner, and Miller expressed satisfaction with being characterized by

Terraqua as independent contractors. Terraqua also presented evidence that Mr. Moberg

had spoken favorably in the past of his independent contractor relationship with the

company.

3 No. 34390-1-III Moberg v. Terraqua, LLC

Ms. Sloan, who "essentially ran the business" for Mr. Ward between 2007 and

2010, when he took a sabbatical, testified in her declaration as to why Terraqua "used the

independent contractor business model":

T erraqua used the independent contractor business model because it is common in our industry, especially among small businesses, and because it is an easy way to involve multiple people on the same project with minimal coordination effort required and it kept the administrative burden on the individual subcontractors' businesses rather than Terraqua.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 962, 961.

Mr. Ward's declaration acknowledged that Terraqua's classification and use of

independent contractors was examined but not challenged in a 2009 audit by the Internal

Revenue Service (IRS). He also acknowledged that after terminating its relationship with

Mr. Moberg, Terraqua "transition[ ed] to a more employee-dominant business model over

the 2011 to 2013 time period." CP at 483. Mr. Ward attributed the company's revised

"employment" of workers to growth in Terraqua's business and resulting changes in its

administrative needs and demands, rather than to any belief that workers had previously

been misclassified. Messrs. Miller and Doner both acknowledged in their declarations

that they ceased to be treated as independent contractors by Terraqua in spring 2012,

becoming seasonal employees thereafter. Both claimed the change in status went hand-

in-hand with changes in their working relationship with T erraqua.

Most important for present purposes is the evidence Mr. Moberg presented in

4 No. 34390-1-III Moberg v. Terraqua, LLC

opposition to the motion for summary judgment and whether a jury could reasonably find

it supports his contention that he was, in fact, an employee. Mr. Moberg testified that

Terraqua's post-2012 "employees" did the same work they did when they were

subcontractors and that the company's transition to "employing" the workers is evidence

they had been misclassified earlier. But for the most part, his response keyed off this

court's 2010 decision in Anfinson v. FedEx Ground Package System, Inc., which held as

a matter of first impression that "employ" and "employee" under the Washington

Minimum Wage Act (MWA), chapter 49.46 RCW, have the broad "economic reality"

meaning applied under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA), 29 U.S.C.

§§ 201-219. Anfinson, 159 Wn. App. 35,244 P.3d 32 (2010), aff'd, 174 Wn.2d 851,281

P.3d 289 (2012). That meaning has been characterized as "comprehensive enough to

require its application to many persons and working relationships, which prior to [the

FLSA], were not deemed to fall within an employer-employee category." Walling v.

Portland Terminal Co., 330 U.S. 148, 150-51, 67 S. Ct. 639, 91 L. Ed. 809 (1947).

Mr. Moberg's opposition materials addressed the six factor test adopted in

Anfinson, which is used by a majority of the federal circuits to determine as a matter of

economic reality, whether a worker is dependent on the business to which he renders

service or is, instead, in business on his own. The six nonexclusive factors are:

( 1) the permanence of the working relationship between the parties; (2) the degree of skill the work entails;

5 No. 34390-1-111 Moberg v. Terraqua, LLC

(3) the extent of the worker's investment in equipment or materials; (4) the worker's opportunity for profit or loss; (5) the degree of the alleged employer's control over the worker; (6) whether the service rendered by the worker is an integral part of the alleged employer's business.

159 Wn. App. at 52.

On the matter of the permanence of his working relationship with Terraqua, Mr.

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