Kirk v. Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 9, 2020
DocketN19A-04-005 CEB
StatusPublished

This text of Kirk v. Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners (Kirk v. Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirk v. Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners, (Del. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

TOM L. KIRK ) ) Appellant, ) ) C.A. No. N19A-04-005 CEB v. ) ) DELAWARE BOARD OF ) ELECTRICAL EXAMINERS, ) ) Appellees. )

Submitted: December 31, 2019 Decided: July 9, 2020

Appeal from a Decision of the Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners. AFFIRMED

ORDER

1. The Court has under consideration an appeal of Tom L. Kirk (“Kirk”)

from a decision of the Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners (“Board”). The

Board agreed with the recommendations of the Hearing Officer and found that Mr.

Kirk violated Delaware law by permitting an unlicensed employee to perform

electrical work. The Board’s decision is affirmed for the reasons stated below.

2. Kirk is a licensed electrician whose company won a bid to complete a

majority of the electrical work for a Planet Fitness project in 2018. A complaint was

1 filed against Kirk’s company. 1 The complaint alleged that Kirk’s company

employed a worker, Mr. Aldaz, who performed electrical work without an electrical

license. 2

3. There is no dispute that at the time of the incident and the hearing, Mr.

Aldaz was not a licensed electrician. There is no dispute that Mr. Aldaz was

employed at the time by respondent Mr. Kirk and Mr. Kirk was, therefore, subject

to the sanctions of 24 Del. C. §1423 (duty to report) and §1412 (grounds for

discipline) to the extent that one of his employees engaged in electrical work.

4. The only real dispute before the Board was whether Mr. Aldaz was

performing “electrical work,” with Respondent taking the position that he was

working on low voltage data or telephone wiring, which concededly does not require

an electrician’s license and the Board’s inspector and witnesses taking the position

that he was working on 120 volt electrical wiring. Whatever it was, the inspector

observed him, 20 feet up on a scissor jack platform, labeling (or relabeling) wires.

The Hearing Examiner found that the evidence preponderated that Aldaz was

working on electrical wiring and not telephone or data wires. That finding, being

subject to the credibility of the witnesses, is supported by some of the conflicting

evidence and must be credited on this appeal.

1 Board of Electrical Examiners’ Record. D.I. 15 at Tab E. 2 Id. 2 5. The primary objective of the Board of Electrical Examiners “to which

all other objectives and purposes are secondary, is to protect the general public.”3

The Boards secondary objective is to maintain professional competency in the

electrical field and to adjudicate violations of non-compliance.4 One cannot “engage

in the practice of providing electrical services” without a license issued by the

Board.5

6. As to what constitutes, “providing electrical services,” the term is not

defined by the Code precisely. A regulation issued by the Board states that

"To perform ‘electrical services’ or ‘electrical work’ means to perform, maintain, troubleshoot or supervise any electrical work covered by the National Electrical Code (NEC) as adopted by the Delaware State Fire Prevention Commission which may include but is not limited to the installation, erection, or repair of any electrical conductor, molding, duct, raceway, conduit, machinery, apparatus, device, or fixture for the purpose of lighting, heating, or power in or on any structure.”6

7. Throughout the proceedings, Respondent has made much of the fact

that the NEC was not introduced as an exhibit nor was a specific definition culled

from the NEC that defined “electrical service” or “electrical work.” Three

explanations are possible: 1) the Board did not have a copy, 2) electrical work is a

defined term and connecting or labeling 120 volt wires on a scaffold is not

3 24 Del. C. § 1401. 4 Id.; 24 Del. C. § 1412(a)(2). 5 24 Del. C. § 1407. 6 24 DE ADC 1400-1.0. 3 considered electrical work (in which case the Respondent would surely have raised

it), or 3) these terms are simply not defined by the NEC at all.

8. Further complicating matters is the fact that the Board’s definition of

“electrical work” is that it is “electrical work” covered by the NEC. We might avoid

the linguistic tautology presented by this unfortunate phrase if we consider that the

goal was to include everything “covered” by the NEC, which we can presume is an

exhaustive catalogue of all things involving electrical connections, loads, overloads,

etc. Support for this proposition is found in the fact that the regulation goes on to

state that it “includes, but is not limited to the installation, erection, or repair of any

electrical conductor, molding, duct, raceway, conduit, machinery, apparatus, device,

or fixture…”7

9. The Court notes how much easier this review would have been if a copy

of the NEC were in the record and the Hearing Examiner had referred to it in her

ruling. But it is not for the Hearing Examiner to propound the evidence; that is a

function left to the parties. Here, neither did. Because neither did, the Court must

conclude that the NEC is not helpful in resolving the question whether working on

a raised platform with 120 volt wiring either labeling or relabeling wires is “electrical

work.”

7 24 DE ADC 1400-1.0. 4 10. One can imagine a dispute where the term “electrical work” is more

closely questioned. For example, had the Hearing Examiner concluded that Mr.

Aldaz was indeed labeling low voltage telephone wires as Respondent maintained,

the question whether this constituted electrical work would be more eventful. The

fact findings made by the Hearing Examiner in this case, however, make the decision

relatively easy. Because the regulation explains that the NEC is inclusive, and not a

limitation on the definition of electrical work, the conclusion that Respondent does

not have a winning argument is clear. Mr. Aldaz was installing, erecting or repairing

an electrical conductor (wires are generally known to conduct electricity), as found

as a fact by the Hearing Examiner and the Court finds that Respondents argument

that his specific conduct must be defined in the NEC is unavailing.

11. The Court will note further that it was the Respondent’s license that

was placed on probation; the Board’s ruling had no direct effect on Mr. Aldaz.

Respondent is a licensed electrician. If Mr. Aldaz did not know what “electrical

work” is, the Court may fairly presume that the Respondent did. The Respondent’s

liability stems from the fact that he permitted his employee Mr. Aldaz to work on

what we may fairly presume Respondent knew was electrical work.

12. This was not Kirk’s first time before the Board. In 2015 Mr. Aldaz was

found at another one of Kirk’s building sites “working with electrical conduits”

5 without a valid license.8 Kirk as the supervisor of the project was found in violation

of 24 Del. C. § 1423(a)(c) and § 1412(a)(2).9 Kirk, during the hearing in 2015,

claimed that he did not know Mr. Aldaz was required to have a license to perform

that work. The Board disagreed and found Kirk noncompliant with the statute. The

Board also noted that a laborer is permitted to work on the site without a valid license

provided the individual only performs task such as hauling materials, loading trucks,

and cleaning the site.10

13. Here again, Kirk was found to be in violation of the same statutes

involving the same employee from 2015. The investigators who arrived on the

Planet Fitness site witnessed Mr.

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Kirk v. Delaware Board of Electrical Examiners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-v-delaware-board-of-electrical-examiners-delsuperct-2020.