Wagner & Sons Construction, Inc. v. Pagels

720 P.2d 987, 1986 Colo. App. LEXIS 845
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1986
Docket85CA0321
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 720 P.2d 987 (Wagner & Sons Construction, Inc. v. Pagels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner & Sons Construction, Inc. v. Pagels, 720 P.2d 987, 1986 Colo. App. LEXIS 845 (Colo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Wagner & Sons Construction, Inc. seeks review of an order of the Industrial Commission which determined that it was liable to pay unemployment insurance taxes for a category of workers known as laborers. Wagner also seeks review of the Commission’s holding that neither the evidence nor the findings were sufficient to uphold the referee’s determination that carpenters and carpenters’ helpers (helpers) were within *988 covered employment. We affirm the order with respect to the laborers. We dismiss the petition with respect to the carpenters and helpers because the Commission lacked jurisdiction to consider that issue.

Wagner was a subcontractor who contracted with large residential developers to do exterior framing on new houses. The chain of events leading to this appeal began in November 1983 when Phillip Pagels, a construction laborer, filed a claim for unemployment benefits and listed Wagner as his employer. Pagels asserted that he was employed by Wagner from August to October 1983.

The Division of Employment and Training (Division) discovered that Wagner was not paying unemployment insurance taxes. Therefore, it solicited information from Wagner concerning laborers on a form F-49. On March 21, 1984, Richard Kitashima (Kitashima), an auditor for the Division, issued a “Liability Determination.” The determination stated that pursuant to § 8-70-103(10)(a), C.R.S., Pagels and others performing the same or similar functions were considered to be within covered employment.

Wagner appealed the determination and a hearing before a referee was scheduled for May 31, 1984. Then, the referee ascertained that in addition to laborers, Wagner was ostensibly employing additional classes of workers, the carpenters and helpers. To avoid duplication in the hearing process, a continuance was granted to permit Kitashi-ma, representing the Division at the hearing, to investigate the additional classes and make a determination of liability.

Subsequently, the Division obtained form F-49s from Wagner concerning the carpenters and helpers. However, when the second hearing commenced on July 10, 1984, the Division had not issued a liability determination concerning these classes. Nevertheless, the parties proceeded to present evidence on all three categories of workers.

The evidence indicated that laborers were relatively unskilled workers paid by the hour. Their principal duties included cleaning up the job site, fetching materials for skilled workers, and running errands. Laborers reported to the job in the morning and received general instructions concerning what work was to be accomplished that day. The instructions were given by a carpenter whom Wagner paid extra to function as a “foreman.”

While on the job, laborers received little instruction or supervision concerning the methods of doing their job. However, one witness testified that the laborers’ tasks were simple and required no instruction. There was evidence that Wagner occasionally moved laborers from job to job to meet its construction schedules.

When Wagner hired a laborer, the laborer was required to sign a “Subcontract Agreement.” The laborer, as “subcontractor,” agreed to perform construction services, assume liability for “insurance, taxes, and personnel,” and to reimburse Wagner at the rate of $15 per hour to repair unsatisfactory work.

The evidence further indicated that laborers obtained work through word of mouth. They sought work under their own names and did not have business listings in the phone book.

Wagner was required by the general contractor to carry workmen’s compensation insurance, and Wagner would deduct premium payments from a laborer’s check if the laborer was not carrying his own insurance.

Wagner retained the right to terminate laborers but claimed that it did so only when the laborer was not meeting construction schedules. However, Pagels testified that Wagner terminated him for missing too many days of work.

We do not set out the evidence with respect to the carpenters and helpers because we find that the Commission lacked jurisdiction to consider those worker classifications.

Based on the evidence presented, the referee concluded that all three worker classifications were employees within the meaning of § 8-70-103(10)(a). The referee cited *989 Wagner’s “promotion” of certain workers to foreman, Wagner’s ability to “discharge” workers without liability, the payment of hourly wages, and the direction and control exercised by Wagner’s president and foreman.

The Commission made additional findings of fact, and adopted the referee’s conclusion that the laborers were not free of Wagner’s control. Therefore, it affirmed the referee’s decision that laborers were in covered employment. However, the Commission held that there was not “sufficient evidence in detail, or findings and conclusions” with respect to carpenters and helpers. Further, the Commission stated that there was “no showing of service of the notice of the hearing ... upon those of such classes.” Therefore, the Commission “vacated” the referee’s order insofar as it adjudicated the status of carpenters and helpers.

I.

On review, Wagner contends that the Commission erred in holding that the evidence and findings were insufficient to adjudicate the status of carpenters and helpers. Wagner also challenges the finding that the notice of hearing was inadequate. Wagner argues that this court should hold, based on the record, that these two classes of workers were independent contractors and not in covered employment. The Commission responds that we may not consider these arguments because we lack jurisdiction.

We agree with the Commission that the absence of an administrative determination of liability by the Division deprived the referee, the Commission, and this court of jurisdiction. Section 8-76-113(1), C.R.S. (1985 Cum.Supp.), governing appeals from determinations of unemployment tax liability and coverage under the Employment Security Act, provides that: “No appeal shall be heard unless the notice of appeal has been postmarked or received by the division within fifteen calendar days from the date the notice of such determination is mailed by the division to the employer.” (emphasis added)

The foregoing statute indicates the General Assembly’s intent that tax and coverage questions should be decided, in the first instance, by the Division itself. The reason for such a provision is to permit proper investigation and promote resolution without an administrative appeal.

Furthermore, failure to follow the path of administrative review established by the General Assembly is jurisdictionally fatal. See Sanchez v. Straight Creek Constructors, 41 Colo.App. 19, 580 P.2d 827 (1978). The requirement that the employer obtain the Division’s determination of liability pri- or to appealing is nothing more than a requirement that it exhaust its administrative remedies. Failure to exhaust remedies is, in most cases, a jurisdictional bar to appellate review. See Gramiger v. Crowley, 660 P.2d 1279 (Colo.1983).

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720 P.2d 987, 1986 Colo. App. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-sons-construction-inc-v-pagels-coloctapp-1986.