Matter of National Bldg. & Restoration Corp. v. New York State Dept. of Labor

2025 NY Slip Op 02247
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 17, 2025
DocketCV-23-1528
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 02247 (Matter of National Bldg. & Restoration Corp. v. New York State Dept. of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Matter of National Bldg. & Restoration Corp. v. New York State Dept. of Labor, 2025 NY Slip Op 02247 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Matter of National Bldg. & Restoration Corp. v New York State Dept. of Labor (2025 NY Slip Op 02247)
Matter of National Bldg. & Restoration Corp. v New York State Dept. of Labor
2025 NY Slip Op 02247
Decided on April 17, 2025
Appellate Division, Third Department
Lynch, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered:April 17, 2025

CV-23-1528

[*1]In the Matter of National Building & Restoration Corp. et al., Petitioners,

v

New York State Department of Labor et al., Respondents.


Calendar Date:February 20, 2025
Before: Garry, P.J., Lynch, Reynolds Fitzgerald, Fisher and McShan, JJ.

Coughlin & Gerhart, LLP, Binghamton (Joseph J. Steflik Jr. of counsel), for National Building & Restoration Corp. and others, petitioners.

Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC, New York City (Jason F. Kaufman of counsel), for National Construction Services, Inc., petitioner.

Letitia James, Attorney General, New York City (Seth Kupferberg of counsel), for respondents.



Lynch, J.

Proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 (initiated in this Court pursuant to Labor Law §§ 220 and 220-b) to review a determination of respondent Commissioner of Labor finding that petitioners willfully failed to pay prevailing wages and supplements.

In July 2009, respondent Department of Labor (hereinafter DOL), Bureau of Public Work, received a complaint from a laborer on a public works project alleging that the project's contractor — petitioner National Building & Restoration Corp. (hereinafter NBRC) — was not paying him the statutorily prescribed prevailing wage (see Labor Law article 8 et seq.). The Bureau opened an investigation and, based upon information obtained during the course thereof, also began investigating whether NBRC had made prevailing wage underpayments on eight other public works projects between 2008 and 2010. In 2015, following a lengthy investigation, DOL sent a notice of hearing to NBRC and its alleged corporate officers, i.e., petitioners Joseph K. Salerno and his son, Joseph K. Salerno II (hereinafter collectively referred to as petitioners), alleging prevailing wage violations on each of the nine projects [FN1] and scheduling a hearing on the matter (see Labor Law §§ 220 [8]; 220-b [2] [c]). The hearing commenced in 2016, with testimony taken over several nonconsecutive days spanning through December 2018. On the December 10, 2018 hearing date, DOL elicited testimony that certain payroll records produced during the investigation were issued by a different corporate entity, i.e., petitioner National Construction Services, Inc. (hereinafter NCS). When challenged about the relevance of such testimony, DOL explained that it was material as to whether NCS was a "substantially owned-affiliated entity" of NBRC, which could be held financially liable for any penalty imposed upon a finding of prevailing wage violations (Labor Law § 220 [5] [g]; see Labor Law § 220-b [3] [b] [1]).

In an amended notice of hearing dated April 23, 2019, DOL added a claim against NCS, alleging that it was a substantially owned-affiliated entity of NBRC as defined in Labor Law § 220 (5) (g). Over NCS' objection, the hearing continued on several dates, concluding in September 2021. By Amended Report and Recommendation dated July 24, 2023, respondent Hearing Officer found violations of the prevailing wage law on each project at issue, that the violations were willful and both Salerno and Salerno II knowingly participated in the willful violations, that NBRC falsified payroll records and engaged in illegal wage-kickbacks, and that NCS was a substantially owned-affiliated entity of NBRC that could be held to account for the penalty imposed. The Hearing Officer recommended that petitioners be required to pay interest on the total underpayment for each project at a rate of 16% per annum. However, given the delay in the proceeding attributable, in part, to DOL's belated addition of NCS as a party, the Hearing Officer recommended tolling the accrual of interest for [*2]a period of six years. The Hearing Officer also recommended that NBRC be assessed a civil penalty in the amount of 25% of the underpayment and interest due. Respondent Commissioner of Labor adopted the Hearing Officer's recommendations and, due to the affirmed findings that NBRC had falsified payroll records and engaged in illegal kickbacks, DOL issued a debarment letter on July 21, 2023 advising that NBRC and NCS were, by operation of law, prohibited from bidding on future public works projects for a period of five years (see Labor Law § 220-b [3] [b] [1]). Petitioners commenced this CPLR article 78 proceeding challenging the Commissioner's determination.[FN2]

We begin by addressing petitioners' procedural arguments. Without specifying a statute of limitations that governs the claim against NCS, petitioners argue that, by the time the claim was interposed against NCS, "any conceivable statute of limitations had run." Upon a careful examination of Labor Law article 8, we find petitioners' argument unavailing.

Labor Law article 8 vests DOL with broad enforcement authority to investigate and remedy violations of the prevailing wage law (see Labor Law §§ 220, 220-b, 223). Pertinent here, Labor Law § 220-b (2) (a) (1) provides, in relevant part, that when DOL receives a complaint from an interested person "alleging unpaid wages or supplements due for labor performed on a public improvement" and the labor is alleged to have been performed "within the two-year period immediately preceding the date of the filing of said complaint," DOL "shall immediately so notify the financial officer of the civil division interested" and shall direct a contracting public agency to withhold funds earned or due to the contractor pending an investigation into the matter (see Matter of RLI Ins. Co., Sur. Div. v New York State Dept. of Labor, 97 NY2d 256, 260-261 [2002]). Labor Law § 220-b (2) (c) contains a look-back period limiting the scope of DOL's investigation to work performed within the three years preceding the complaint's filing "or the commencement of the investigation on [the Comptroller's] own initiative." Although petitioners cite the two- and three-year time frames set forth in Labor Law § 220-b in support of their argument that the claim against NCS was time-barred, these time limitations speak to the filing of a complaint and the look-back period for an ensuing investigation. Neither provision speaks to a time frame within which DOL must file a notice of charges after its investigation has concluded (see generally Jones v Cattaraugus-Little Val. Cent. Sch. Dist., ___ NY3d ___, 2025 NY Slip Op 01007, *2 [2025] ["(A) statute of limitations is a law that bars claims after a specified period" (internal quotation marks, brackets and citation omitted)]). In fact, no such time frame is specified in Labor Law § 220-b, which merely states that DOL's investigation must be "expeditiously conducted" and that, at the conclusion thereof, a notice shall be served personally [*3]or by mail on all interested persons, who shall have the opportunity to be heard at the ensuing administrative hearing (Labor Law § 220-b [2] [c]).

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