Oxbow Carbon & Minerals, LLC v. Department of Industrial Relations

194 Cal. App. 4th 538, 122 Cal. Rptr. 3d 879, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 455
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 2011
DocketNo. B219504
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 194 Cal. App. 4th 538 (Oxbow Carbon & Minerals, LLC v. Department of Industrial Relations) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxbow Carbon & Minerals, LLC v. Department of Industrial Relations, 194 Cal. App. 4th 538, 122 Cal. Rptr. 3d 879, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 455 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

BOREN, P. J.

Oxbow Carbon & Minerals, LLC, appeals from a judgment denying its petition for writ of mandate. The petition for writ of mandate followed an adverse administrative ruling by respondents State of California, Department of Industrial Relations (Department or DIR), and its director, John C. Duncan (Director). The Director found that work performed under two separate contracts constituted “public works” pursuant to Labor Code section 1720 because the work was paid for in part out of public funds, and it was therefore subject to California’s prevailing wage law.1 The trial court agreed. We affirm.

[542]*542FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Factual Background

The subject of this appeal is a building at Pier G, Pad 14 (Pad 14) in the City of Long Beach, which appellant Oxbow Carbon & Minerals, LLC (Oxbow), uses pursuant to a lease agreement with real party in interest City of Long Beach (Long Beach). Oxbow’s involvement with Pad 14 began after its purchase in 2003 of Applied Industrial Materials Corporation (AIMCOR), a company which, like Oxbow, was in the business of buying and selling petroleum coke, a by-product of the oil refining process.

AIMCOR originally leased Pad 14 from Long Beach in 1974. For a time, AIMCOR used the premises to receive petroleum coke by truck and store it until it could be loaded onto oceangoing vessels.

In 1990, AIMCOR entered into a new lease with Long Beach, pursuant to which AIMCOR constructed a four-wall structure that was open at the top (i.e., roofless), and various other implements. The purpose of these improvements was for the storage and conveyance of petroleum coke, which was delivered by truck to a location outside the structure. Coke would be lifted up by a stacker and dumped into the structure from overhead. After sitting in storage, it was conveyed from the floor of the structure to available ships.

In 1999, the South Coast Air Quality Management District amended its rule 1158 (Storage, Handling, and Transport of Coke, Coal and Sulfur) (hereinafter, rule 1158). The amendment required that coke be maintained in enclosed (non-open-air) storage.2 The amendment to rule 1158 and subsequent enactment of the related Health and Safety Code section 404593 thus rendered the existing four-walled structure unusable for coke storage as of January 1, 2001. The enclosed storage requirement also made the use of a stacker impossible, because stackers operated by dropping coke through the open top of the structure. In light of these new enclosure requirements, AIMCOR’s operations at the site ceased on December 31, 2000.

[543]*543In December 2003, AIMCOR was sold and merged into Oxbow. Oxbow planned to enclose the structure at Pad 14 by placing a roof on it. In February 2005, Long Beach and Oxbow (as a successor to AIMCOR) executed an amendment to the lease. This amendment stated that Long Beach would reimburse Oxbow up to $2,258,000 for the construction of conveyors at Pad 14, and that, following the construction and upon reimbursement, title to the conveyors would be transferred to Long Beach. The lease amendment also stated, “Construction of the Pad 14 Conveyors shall be accomplished in accordance with the laws governing ‘public works.’ Lessee acknowledges that the reimbursement . . . makes this work paid for in whole or part out of Public funds within the meaning of California Labor Code §1720.” The conveyors would be used to transport coke from the outside of the structure to the inside, a task previously performed by the stacker.

The lease amendment did not mention the planned roof. However, a December 15, 2004 memorandum from the director of properties for the Port of Long Beach requesting approval of the lease amendment by the board of harbor commissioners noted how the goal of Long Beach and Oxbow was to maximize the use of the facility in compliance with rule 1158, and “[i]n order to accomplish this, a roof and receiving conveyors will have to be constructed . . . .” The memorandum further explained that Oxbow would be responsible for the cost of constructing the roof, while Long Beach would reimburse at least part of the cost of the conveyors. In addition, a South Coast Air Quality Management District permit was issued for a “petroleum coke receiving and storage system” at the site, “consisting of,” among other things, enclosed conveyors and a storage building. A harbor development permit described the approved work as: “Install a roof on the existing 22-foot walls on Pad 14; upgrade existing conveyors and add new conveyors to bring the facility into full rule 1158 compliance; upgrade an existing dust suppression system; and upgrade the existing electrical system.”

Oxbow entered into a “New Conveyors Erection Contract” (Conveyors Contract) with Bragg Investment Co., Inc., for erection of the new conveyor system. It entered into a separate “Petroleum Coke Enclosure Design and Erection Contract” (Enclosure Contract) with W.B. Allen Construction, Inc., for construction of the roof, which it paid for with private funds.4

The Conveyors Contract called generally for a system consisting of three conveyors—two enclosed conveyors, an open “shuttle” conveyor, and also an [544]*544enclosed transfer tower. The first conveyor, which is completely enclosed, runs outside the storage building and conveys coke from ground level up to the enclosed transfer tower, which is also outside the building. Once it reaches the transfer tower, coke is transferred to the second conveyor, which takes coke from the transfer tower through a cupola in the roof of the storage building. The second conveyor is independently enclosed up to the point where it encounters the cupola. The coke is then dumped onto the third conveyor, which runs the length of the structure just under the new roof and dumps it into piles on the floor. The third conveyer is not independently enclosed but, as with the rest of the interior of the building, it is covered by the roof.

The Enclosure Contract stated that its purpose was “to completely enclose the existing storage facility for compliance with” rule 1158. Pursuant to the Enclosure Contract, a roof was built over the storage building, a cupola was built to allow entry of the second conveyor into the building, and framing was built to support the third conveyor inside the structure. It appears that construction of the enclosure and the conveyor system occurred relatively contemporaneously.

Administrative Determination and Decision

In January 2006, real party in interest Iron Workers Union Local No. 433 requested a determination from the Department as to whether “construction of the building enclosing the conveyors” on Pier G was a public work under section 1720.5 On October 12, 2007, the Director issued a public works coverage determination (Determination) that found the “replacement conveyor and enclosure improvement work ... is a single, integrated public works project subject to prevailing wage requirements.” The Determination stated that “[cjonstruction under the Enclosure and Conveyor Contracts produced one structure that functioned as a unified system for the distribution and storage of coke,” and that “the replacement conveyors were designed as an essential element of the improved enclosure, not as a stand-alone undertaking.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 Cal. App. 4th 538, 122 Cal. Rptr. 3d 879, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxbow-carbon-minerals-llc-v-department-of-industrial-relations-calctapp-2011.