Performance Contracting, Inc. v. State of Washington , Dept. of L & I

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 22, 2015
Docket32377-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Performance Contracting, Inc. v. State of Washington , Dept. of L & I (Performance Contracting, Inc. v. State of Washington , Dept. of L & I) 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
Performance Contracting, Inc. v. State of Washington , Dept. of L & I, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED

SEPTEMBER 22, 2015

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

PERFORMANCE CONTRACTING, ) INC., ) No. 32377-3-111 ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND ) INDUSTRIES, ) ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, C.]. - Lincoln County Superior Court dismissed Perfonnance

Contracting Inc.' s attempted appeal of a decision of the Board of Industrial Insurance

Appeals after the court found that the company's notice of appeal was untimely served on

the director of the Department of Labor and Industries. It is undisputed that the company

filed its notice well within the deadline for appeal, accompanied by a certificate that the

notice had been mailed to the department at the same time. But the department

disclaimed receipt of the notice, as did another intended recipient. After reviewing a

number of sworn statements submitted by the parties and weighing the likelihood of the

parties' competing theories as to what went wrong with service, the trial court reluctantly

dismissed the appeal. No. 32377-3-III

Performance Contracting v. L&!

Performance Contracting assigns error to the dismissal on a number of grounds,

but we find persuasive only its argument that the parties' dispute over perfection of the

appeal should not have been resolved summarily. While a motion is ordinarily heard on

affidavits, it may be heard wholly or in part on oral testimony. Where, as here, a

substantial right is at stake; both sides can point to material evidence and argument in

support of their theory of what happened; competing improbabilities, if equal, will be

resolved based on the burden of proof; and oral testimony could assist the superior court

in assessing credibility, it was an abuse of discretion to deny Performance Contracting's

request that the court resolve the dispute by trial. We reverse the trial court's order

dismissing the appeal and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The Department of Labor and Industries charged Performance Contracting Inc.

with a serious violation of the Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act of 1973

(WISHA), chapter 49.17 RCW. The company petitioned the Board of Industrial

Insurance Appeals to review the citation. On August 14,2013, the board issued an order

denying the petition and affirming the citation.

The company appealed the board's order to Lincoln County Superior Court. A

company representative testified that Performance Contracting strives to comply with

safety laws and regulations, in part because

No. 32377-3-III

[e]ven when the monetary penalty is relatively small, the effect of a serious violation can be substantial. Many federal and state construction projects, and increasingly projects of sophisticated private owners, often prequalify and limit bidders to those with minimal or zero safety violations over a period of a few years preceding the bidding opportunity. Thus, even one serious safety violation can have a detrimental effect on PCl's [(Performance Contracting)] ability to bid and compete for such contracts.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 269. In appealing to the superior court, the Ohio lawyers who had

represented the company in proceedings before the board associated a Seattle law firm.

To perfect its appeal, the company was required to file a notice of appeal with the

superior court within 30 days of the board's order denying review and to serve notice on

both the board and the director of the department. RCW 49.17.150(1).

According to declarations thereafter filed with the court, one of the company's

Ohio lawyers prepared a draft notice of appeal and a motion for the limited admission

(pro hac vice) of Gary Auman, the lead Ohio lawyer, on or before Tuesday, September

3-almost two weeks before the September 16 deadline for appeal. Mr. Auman signed

the certification for limited admission in Dayton, Ohio, on September 3. Robert Olson,

the lead Seattle lawyer, signed both the notice of appeal and the motion for limited

admission on September 4.

The certificates of service appended to the notice of appeal and the motion for

limited admission state that Laurel Barton, an assistant with the Seattle law firm,

"arranged for service of true and correct copies" of the notice, motion, and proposed

order "via first class mail" to the board, the department, the department's lawyer, and the

No. 32377-3-111 Performance Contracting v. L&I

company's Ohio lawyer on September 5. CP at 24-25,248. The Lincoln County

Superior Court clerk received her copy of the materials (which had been sent to her by

priority mail) on Monday, September 9. The court granted the order for limited

admission on September 16.

On October 17, one of the company's Ohio lawyers called the board's office to

find out why the certified board record had not yet been filed with the court. He was told

that the board had not received the notice of appeal. He promptly faxed a duplicate copy

of the notice of appeal to the board.

The next day, the executive secretary of the board sent a letter to Mr. Auman

acknowledging receipt of the notice of appeal and stating, "The Certified Appeal Board

Record will be sent to the court and parties." CP at 197. A notation below the signature

block suggests that copies of the letter were sent to the department, the Office of the

Attorney General, and others. 1

Two weeks later, on November 4, the assistant attorney general who had

represented the department before the board e-mailed Performance Contracting's Ohio

I Below the executive secretary's signature, the following appears: c: Local 82 Int'l Union of Painters & Allied Trades Local 427 Office of the Attorney General DLI- Wisha PO 4604 Steve Gossman CP at 197.

No. 32377-3-111 Performance Contracting v. L&1

lawyers, stating, "I hate to be the bearer of bad news but there appears to be a problem

with your appeal." CP at 232. After recounting that he had confirmed filing with the

Lincoln County court, the assistant attorney general reported having determined that

neither the board, the department, nor his office had received copies of the notice of

appeaL His e-mail stated that the department would file a motion to dismiss the appeal

because service on the department was not timely.

On November 7, Performance Contracting's Seattle lawyers mailed what they

characterized by cover letter as "another copy" of the company's notice of appeal to the

board, the department, and the attorney general. CP at 259. This time, they sent the

copies by certified mail with return receipt requested.

The certified record of proceedings before the board was filed with Lincoln

County Superior Court on November 25.

On December 11, the department moved to dismiss Performance Contracting's

appeal on account of its alleged failure to timely serve the notice of appeal on the

department. It supported its motion with two affidavits: the affidavit of a legal assistant

for the board stating that the board did not receive a notice of appeal until October 17,

and the affidavit of an employee of the department stating that as of November 4, 2013,

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