Total Mechanical Heating & Air Conditioning v. EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS DIVISION

2002 MT 55, 50 P.3d 108, 309 Mont. 84, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 71, 2002 WL 1591698
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 2002
Docket01-057
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 2002 MT 55 (Total Mechanical Heating & Air Conditioning v. EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS DIVISION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Total Mechanical Heating & Air Conditioning v. EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS DIVISION, 2002 MT 55, 50 P.3d 108, 309 Mont. 84, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 71, 2002 WL 1591698 (Mo. 2002).

Opinion

JUSTICE COTTER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 On June 26,2000, the Workers’ Compensation Court of the State of Montana reversed the State of Montana Department of Labor and Industry Hearings Bureau, concluding that the thirteen petitioner companies were uninsured employers for specified periods of time and, as such, were subject to the statutory penalties originally assessed by the Department of Labor and Industry, Employment Relations Division, Uninsured Employers’ Fund. We affirm.

ISSUES

¶2 The following issues are raised by the parties:

a. Was the correct burden of proof applied to the parties in this case?
b. Were the Montana Department of Labor and Industry’s (DLI) hearing officer’s findings of fact supported by substantial credible evidence in the record?
c. Were the Workers’ Compensation Court’s (WCC) conclusions of law legally correct?
d. Did the WCC erroneously decide this case on a previously unraised issue?
e. Did the WCC err in affirming the penalty assessments issued by the Uninsured Employers’ Fund (UEF or Fund)?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 The factual and procedural background of this case is lengthy and complicated. The WCC took 19 single-spaced pages to recite the facts relevant to its decision. This Court will attempt to more briefly summarize while still presenting those facts pivotal to our decision.

¶4 In January 1994, the Human Dynamics Corporation (Dynamics) 1 , an employee leasing company operating in Mesa, Arizona, began employee leasing operations in Montana. Between January and October 1994, Dynamics contracted with thirteen Montana companies *88 (Client Companies). Under the Agreement for Services executed by the Client Companies with Dynamics, Dynamics agreed to act as “co-employer” for the Client Companies’ employees. As co-employer, Dynamics specifically assumed responsibility for various employee-related activities including responsibility for providing “Workers’ Compensation Coverage or it’s [sic] equivalent.” At some time after entering into this Agreement for Services with Dynamics, each Client Company canceled the workers’ compensation coverage it had previously held.

¶5 Several months into Dynamics’ Montana operations, the UEF 2 contacted Dynamics to determine whether Dynamics was complying with Montana’s workers’ compensation requirements. Dynamics informed the UEF that it was providing workers’ compensation coverage for its employees under a federal Employment Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) plan which it claimed preempted the State of Montana’s requirements. Despite having been told by state agencies in some of the other states in which Dynamics operates that ERISA did not preempt their programs, Dynamics did not contact the DLI or the UEF prior to starting its Montana operations to confirm whether ERISA coverage was acceptable under Montana’s program. Very shortly thereafter, the UEF notified Dynamics in a June 1994 letter that the federal ERISA program did not preempt Montana’s workers’ compensation program and that Dynamics must take the necessary steps to comply with Montana’s regulations. In July 1994, Dynamics’ attorney acknowledged that Dynamics did not have Montana-approved workers’ compensation coverage, but indicated that Dynamics was working on getting UEF-acceptable retroactive coverage. At that time, the UEF accepted policies providing retroactive coverage of previously-uninsured employers.

¶6 While Dynamics subsequently professed difficulty in finding retroactive coverage that was not prohibitively expensive, in August 1994, Dynamics’ counsel provided the UEF with Policy Number SWC-100-060-00 (SWC-00) issued by Credit General Insurance Company (CGIC). Dynamics claimed that this policy provided it with coverage retroactive to January 1, 1994. The effective date of the policy was *89 March 23, 1993 to April 1,1994.

¶7 The UEF attorney who reviewed the policy to determine its compliance with Montana’s coverage requirements was selected because he had previously worked with employee leasing companies, which present unique concerns for regulators. This particular UEF representative had learned in a training class that some employee leasing companies attempt to mislead regulators as to the existence of proper workers’ compensation coverage and that careful review is therefore prudent. The UEF’s review of the policy revealed several deficiencies, including: 1) the policy was issued to an unrelated Texas company by the name of Allied Resource Management Corporation (“Allied”) and listed “HDC, Inc.” as an additional insured on an unsigned, undated endorsement page; 2) the policy also was unsigned and undated and had expired in April 1994; 3) the policy was silent as to a deductible; and 4) the policy contained a provision requiring specific notification to CGIC if an insured was operating in Montana, or any other “uncovered” state (the “other states’ notification provision”). While the UEF noted all these deficiencies, its representatives testified that the “fatal” deficiency was that the policy did not list “Human Dynamics Corporation” as an insured.

¶8 The UEF attempted to resolve these deficiencies. It contacted the Montana Secretary of State to confirm that “HDC, Inc.” was the same entity as Human Dynamics Corporation but was unsuccessful. The Secretary of State had a listing for Human Dynamics Corporation but no listing for “HDC, Inc.” Additionally, there were no records with the DLI that suggested Dynamics had ever operated as “HDC, Inc.” Again, being aware of some of the fraudulent tactics some companies employed to avoid coverage obligations and the potential for coverage denial in the event of a dispute over the identity of the insured, the UEF requested additional proof that “HDC, Inc.” and “Human Dynamics Corporation” were the same entity. It was imperative to the UEF that the named insured exactly match the name of the leasing company doing business in the State. No such additional proof was presented. As a result of these deficiencies, the UEF declined to endorse the presented policy at that time.

¶9 In September 1994, Dynamics informed the UEF that it was selling its Montana “book of business” to Dallas-based Human Resources Corporation (Resources) 3 for the purpose of securing *90 Montana-approved workers’ compensation coverage retroactive to January 1,1994. According to the Client Assignment contract between Resources and Dynamics, the effective date of the contract was October 1,1994. Under this contract, Dynamics claimed to Resources to have existing workers’ compensation insurance or its equivalent and agreed to maintain such coverage through the effective date of the contract “or such other dates as shall be agreed to by the parties.”

¶10 Resources’ counsel testified that Resources did not take over the actual operation of Dynamics’ Montana business on October 1. He specifically recalled that, in late October, he was still working on the final papers that were to be signed at closing.

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2002 MT 55, 50 P.3d 108, 309 Mont. 84, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 71, 2002 WL 1591698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/total-mechanical-heating-air-conditioning-v-employment-relations-mont-2002.