Lighthouse Masonry, Inc. v. Taylor

29 Mass. L. Rptr. 492
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedApril 2, 2012
DocketNo. SUCV200803802
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 Mass. L. Rptr. 492 (Lighthouse Masonry, Inc. v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lighthouse Masonry, Inc. v. Taylor, 29 Mass. L. Rptr. 492 (Mass. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Kaplan, Mitchell H., J.

INTRODUCTION

This case presents itself to the court in an unusual posture. Plaintiff Lighthouse Masonry, Inc. (Lighthouse) was the masonry subcontractor on a public works project at the King Philip High School in Wenham (the Project). On July 12, 2006, defendant Office of the Attorney General, Fair Labor and Business Practices Division (the OAG) issued four citations to Lighthouse for an unintentional failure to pay prevailing wages to certain of its employees working on the Project, as required by G.L.c. 149, §27. Lighthouse timely appealed the citations to the Division of Administrative Law Appeals (DALA). After an evidentiary hearing and various actions internal to DALA, which included the reassignment of the matter to defendant Chief Administrative Magistrate Shelly Taylor (Taylor) from First Administrative Magistrate Kimberly Fletcher (Fletcher) and which will be discussed in greater detail below, Taylor issued a decision in which she held that one of the four citations was properly issued, but the other three must be vacated (the Taylor Decision or, simply, the Decision). In response, Lighthouse filed the complaint and amended complaint (collectively the Complaint) now before this court. The Complaint is pled in four counts. Count I is straightforward enough. It is an appeal pursuant to G.L.c. 30A, §14 and G.L.c. 149, §27C(b)(4) from so much of the Taylor Decision as affirmed the issuance of one of the citations. Counts II through IV are novel. In Count II, Lighthouse requests the court to order DALA to produce any draft decisions prepared by Fletcher and [493]*493“all records concerning [Lighthouse’s] appeal generated by or at any time in the possession and/or control of Magistrate Fletcher.” It is the court’s understanding that Fletcher’s draft decisions have been produced to Lighthouse, and Count II is, therefore, moot. In Count III, Lighthouse asks this court to declare that Fletcher’s unissued decision “is the decision binding on the parties” not the Taylor Decision. Count IV seems to request the same relief as Count III. In this Count, although the specific relief requested is less than clear, as the court understands it, Lighthouse asks the court to vacate the Taylor Decision and declare a decision of Fletcher the final decision of DALA on Lighthouse’s appeal and that Fletcher’s decision receive such deference as a DALA decision is due and the Taylor Decision receive no such deference.

The case is now before the court on Lighthouse’s motion for partial summaiy judgment on Count III, and the defendants’ cross motion for summaiy judgment on all four counts of the Complaint. For the reasons that follow, Lighthouse’s motion is DENIED, and the defendants’ cross motion is ALLOWED.

FACTS

Lighthouse was the masomy subcontractor on the Project. The Project was classified as a public construction project under the Prevailing Wage Law. The Commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Labor’s Division of Occupational Safely (the Commissioner) sets the wage rates that contractors engaged in public construction are required to pay their employees on each public construction project by issuing a wage rate sheet that lists the various occupational classifications of the workers on the project and the corresponding minimum hourly wages. See G.L.c. 149, §§26-27. Two of the classifications on the wage rate sheet issued in connection with the Project were “bricklayers/masons” and “laborers.” The OAG is charged with enforcing and ensuring compliance with the Prevailing Wage Law. See G.L.c. 23, §3(b).

At some point during the Project, the OAG was contacted by the Masomy Industry Fair Wage Alliance, which claimed that Lighthouse had classified and was paying certain of its employees working on the Project as laborers when they were performing masomy work. In response, the OAG sent an inspector to the work site on several occasions. On four of his visits, the inspector observed Lighthouse employees performing certain tasks that the inspector believed should be classified as masomy work. These tasks included smoothing masonry walls, cutting and patching wall block, and rubbing cement block with a hand stone. These employees were, however, classified as laborers, not masons, in Lighthouse’s payroll records. With respect to one employee, Antonio Ferreira, the inspector found that he was not being paid at any prevailing wage rate. Lighthouse attributed Ferreira’s pay to a clerical error and corrected it before a citation issued.

On July 12, 2006, as a result of these four putative violations, the OAG issued citations to Lighthouse, assessing fines of $500 for each — $2000 in the aggregate. Lighthouse filed a timely appeal of these citations with DALA, pursuant to G.L.c. 149, §27C(b)(4). The appeal was assigned to Fletcher as hearing officer. An evidentiary hearing on this matter convened before Fletcher on August 3, 2007. Thereafter, at some time prior to March 8, 2008, Fletcher submitted a draft of her decision to Taylor.

DALA then had in place an internal procedure pursuant to which magistrates’ draft decisions were submitted to two other magistrates for review and comment (a so-called “first reader” and “second reader”), and then to Taylor for her review, before they were issued. According to Taylor, this process is generally intended to ensure that conclusions of law are supported by the facts found by the magistrate, the legal analysis is sound and follows applicable law, and that the decision is clearly written and grammatically correct. Taylor’s predecessor as Chief Administrative Magistrate followed a similar procedure.

Taylor disagreed with Fletcher’s legal analysis. In Taylor’s view, Fletcher’s draft did not properly apply the legal principles set out in a Superior Court decision that Judge John Cratsley issued on January 7,2008.1 After Premier issued, Taylor required that all DALA appeals raising similar Prevailing Wage Law questions receive special attention. She discussed Fletcher’s draft with her and several other magistrates. She asked Fletcher to reconsider her draft in light of Premier and these discussions. On April 3, 2008, Fletcher submitted a second draft of her decision to Taylor. In this draft, Fletcher continued to take a position on the law inconsistent with that set out in Premier. Before Taylor completed her review of these drafts, Fletcher resigned from her position with DALA.

After she had resigned, Fletcher sent a letter to the parties to the Lighthouse appeal that stated:

I resigned my position with [DALA] effective June 4, 2008. Many months ago, I completed my decision in the above-captioned case. The decision has not yet been issued by DALA. I am writing this letter to let you know that I am not the cause of the delay.

In July 2008, Taylor held a status conference on the appeal. She explained that, as a consequence of Fletcher’s resignation, a new presiding officer had to be assigned to the case in accordance with 801 CMR 1.01(1 l)(e) (providing that a successor may be appointed when the presiding officer becomes unavailable prior to a decision being issued), and assigned herself to the appeal. On July 29, 2008, Taylor issüed her Decision. The result was the same as that set out in Fletcher’s drafts: three of the violations were vacated and the fourth, relating to Antonio Ferreira, was affirmed. See note 1, infra. Taylor’s legal analysis was, however, different from Fletcher’s. She vacated the three citations not on the grounds that the Commis[494]

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29 Mass. L. Rptr. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lighthouse-masonry-inc-v-taylor-masssuperct-2012.