Querry v. State Highway & Transportation Commission

60 S.W.3d 630, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1513, 2001 WL 1001122
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 4, 2001
DocketWD 59472
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 60 S.W.3d 630 (Querry v. State Highway & Transportation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Querry v. State Highway & Transportation Commission, 60 S.W.3d 630, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1513, 2001 WL 1001122 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1

NEWTON, Presiding Judge.

Digital Teleport, Inc. (“DTI”) is a Missouri corporation that holds several types of competitive telephone service authority obtainable from the Missouri Public Service Commission under Missouri law, except for private pay phone telephone authority. It is a facilities-based telecommunications public utility. DTI is creating a 20,000 route mile digital fiber optic network comprised of twenty regional rings interconnecting primary, secondary, and tertiary cities in thirty-seven states.

Missouri Highway Transportation Department issued a draft Request for Proposal to a number of certificated telephone companies to solicit interest in the exclusive use of freeway right-of-way for the installation of a fiber optic cable that would be allowed in order to provide Intelligent Vehicle Highway System (“IVHS”) capabilities on the freeways in the State of Missouri. In March 1994, the Missouri Highway and Transportation Commission (“MHTC”) issued an invitation for bid titled “Fiber Optic Cable on Freeways in Missouri” (“RFP”). On April 1, 1994, MHTC released the final RFP. MHTC offered exclusive location on its right-of-way in exchange for fiber optic communications to be used by MHTC via a system of offsetting charges that would result in no net cost for MHTC. On April 18, 1994, DTI submitted its response to the RFP. DTI’s proposal was accepted by MHTC, and, on or about July 29,1994, MHTC and DTI entered into a Fiber Optic Cable Agreement on Freeways in Missouri Agreement (“Agreement”).

*632 As provided by the Agreement, MHTC granted DTI a forty-year exclusive easement in the Fiber Optic Cable Corridor, which consists of the three-dimensional area above, below, and at ground level, within the metes and bounds description of MHTC’s airspace. In exchange, DTI dedicated to MHTC six fiber optic cable strands in the statewide system and the necessary connections, and DTI will maintain them in good operating condition. MHTC will use the six fiber optic cable strands for highway purposes only, in the operation and maintenance of the state highway system in Missouri, and not for commercial use or resale. MHTC intends to use the fiber optic cable strands primarily for Missouri’s IVHS statewide network.

Under the Agreement, DTI will own the Fiber Optic Cable System (“FOCS”), which consists of all fiber optic cable, conduits, splices, buildings and enclosures, manholes and hand holes, and optical termination equipment to provide DSI’s, OC 3, and OC 12 circuit capacity. 2 Also under the Agreement, MHTC may own the FOCS if DTI abandons the FOCS or sells the FOCS to MHTC.

DTI’s exclusive easement in the Fiber Optic Cable Corridor is essentially the same as any other utility that is permitted by MHTC in the utility corridor of roadways on the state highways systems. The major difference between DTI’s implementation of the FOCS and other utilities permitted on the MHTC right-of-way was that the FOCS is a statewide utility installation that MHTC permitted. MHTC supervised the construction of the DTI FOCS to the same extent which it supervises other permitted utilities on the MHTC right-of-way. No state, federal, or public funds of any kind have been used in the construction or maintenance of the FOCS. The actual construction of the FOCS was privately financed exclusively through private equity funding, commercial loans obtained through bank lending arrangements, private placement debts, and internal cash generated through sales of services and dark fiber sales.

Paragraph 27 of the Agreement provided that the Fiber Optic Contractor (“Contractor”) and its subcontractors would pay “the prevailing hourly rate for each craft or type of workmen required to execute this project work as determined by the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations of Missouri.” Further, the Contractor agreed to comply with minimum wage laws, and “Federal wage rates under the Davis Bacon or other federal acts apply to and govern this Agreement. ...” On or about November 7, 1994, MHTC and DTI executed a second amendment to the Agreement, which deleted Paragraph 27, ‘Wage Laws,” in its entirety. The new contract stated that it was a service contract, not a public works contract, and, thus, DTI would not be subject to the Missouri Prevailing Wage Law, § 290.210, 3 et seq.

Appellants are officers and representatives of various locals of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (“IBEW”). Pursuant to § 536.150, they filed a “Petition for Declaratory Judgment” in the Circuit Court of Cole County against MHTC and DTI. Appellants sought a declaration that the Agreement was subject to the Missouri Prevailing Wage Law, and that all future similar agreements entered into by MHTC and DTI and other fiber optic contractors of a public works nature involving the installa *633 tion of fiber optic systems on Missouri Federal Highway rights-of-way are also subject to the Missouri Prevailing Wage Law. Further, appellants prayed that DTI be ordered to pay the appropriate wage rates for all future work under the Agreement in accordance with the Missouri Prevailing Wage Law.

The appellants and the class had no direct involvement with the fiber optic cable project. In fact, the construction of the FOCS was entirely performed by private underground cable contractors totally supervised by DTI construction and engineering staff. The petition stated instead that the appellants were Missouri taxpayers acting on behalf of hundreds of members of several IBEW Locals with offices in Missouri or whose members perform work within the State of Missouri of the type and nature that was the subject of the Agreement between MHTC and DTI.

All parties filed motions for summary judgment. The circuit court granted summary judgment for MHTC and DTI on the grounds that appellants failed to avail themselves of administrative remedies and failed to show that there was an action or decision by MHTC subject to review under Chapter 536. Further, the trial court found, on the merits, that appellants failed to show that under either state or federal law the actual work for which wages were paid is a public works or work done with public funds. This appeal followed.

Appellants raise three points on appeal. First, they argue that the trial court erred in concluding that the actual work for which wages were paid was not a public works as defined in § 290.210(7). They assert that the project consisted of construction for public use or benefit, or construction that was paid for wholly or in part out of public funds. They claim that the original Agreement recognized that the Prevailing Wage Law applied and that six strands of the fiber optic system were dedicated solely for highway purpose use by MHTC, which therefore constituted a public use or benefit. They maintain that, therefore, the actual payment of public funds was not required, but the conveyance of an exclusive easement in return for the exclusive use of a portion of the fiber optic system constituted the payment in whole or in part of public funds in any event.

Secondly, the appellants assert that the trial court erred in concluding that appellants failed to avail themselves of state administrative remedies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.3d 630, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1513, 2001 WL 1001122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/querry-v-state-highway-transportation-commission-moctapp-2001.