Cates v. Mosher Enterprises, Inc.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 2 Opinion Number: ___________ 3 Filing Date: May 31, 2017 4 NO. 34,867 5 WILLIAM SHAWN CATES and 6 BOBBY CHERESPOSY, on behalf of 7 themselves and all others similarly situated, 8 Plaintiffs-Appellants, 9 v. 10 MOSHER ENTERPRISES, INC., 11 Defendant-Appellee/Third-Party Plaintiff, 12 v. 13 FLINTCO WEST, INC., 14 Third-Party Defendant. 15 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY 16 Nan G. Nash, District Judge 17 Youtz & Valdez, P.C. 18 Shane C. Youtz 19 Stephen Curtice 20 James A. Montalbano 21 Albuquerque, NM 22 for Appellants 1 Bingham, Hurst & Apodaca, P.C. 2 Wayne E. Bingham 3 Albuquerque, NM 4 for Appellee 1 OPINION 2 SUTIN, Judge. 3 {1} Plaintiffs William Shawn Cates and Bobby Cheresposy, on behalf of 4 themselves and all others similarly situated, appeal, contending that the district court 5 erred in determining that it did not have jurisdiction to entertain their private action 6 under the Public Works Minimum Wage Act (the Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 13-4-10 to 7 -17 (1937, as amended through 2011). Plaintiffs sought to recover from Defendant 8 Mosher Enterprises, Inc. wages for 2009 work that they allege were incorrectly based 9 on the 2008 prevailing wage determined by the Department of Workforce Solutions 10 (the Department). The district court determined that the Act did not confer a private 11 right of action and dismissed Plaintiffs’ action for lack of jurisdiction, without 12 prejudice, so that Plaintiffs could pursue their administrative remedies. We hold that 13 the Legislature intended to create a private right of action under the Act. 14 BACKGROUND 15 {2} Plaintiffs sued, alleging that they and others similarly situated were not 16 compensated the appropriate wage rate for all hours worked on a renovation project 17 for the University of New Mexico. A class was certified, and each party filed a 18 motion for summary judgment as to liability. During the hearing on the parties’ 19 motions for summary judgment, the district court raised sua sponte the question of 1 whether the Act provided for a private right of action. Plaintiffs argued that “the 2 intent of the [L]egislature was to make [a] provision for a private right of action.” 3 Plaintiffs referenced a ruling from a different district court judge determining that 4 there was a private right of action under the Act and represented that “[i]t is one of 5 those legal issues . . . that parties to these cases don’t litigate anymore.” Plaintiffs 6 explained that it was “generally accepted that there is a private right of action.” 7 {3} Following the hearing, the district court issued a letter to counsel expressing 8 concern about whether the Act permits a private action for damages without first 9 exhausting administrative remedies. And the court invited supplemental briefing on 10 the question. After supplemental briefing, the court determined that, unlike the New 11 Mexico Minimum Wage Act, the Act does not confer a private right of action. The 12 court reasoned that the “[Act] contemplates an administrative procedure and directs 13 the Director to make the initial determination of [the Act] violations and the 14 subsequent reference for appropriate legal action. The [Act] provides an appeal 15 process of the Director’s decision, first to the Labor and Industrial Commission and 16 then to the District Court.” (Citations omitted.) The court dismissed the case without 17 prejudice to allow Plaintiffs the opportunity to pursue their administrative remedies 18 before bringing the case before the district court. This appeal followed. 2 1 DISCUSSION 2 {4} At the heart of the controversy are statutory provisions that, with apologies for 3 the length of the quoted material, we fully set out here. Section 13-4-14 reads: 4 A. The director shall certify to the contracting agency the 5 names of persons or firms the director has found to have disregarded 6 their obligations to employees under the . . . Act and the amount of 7 arrears. The contracting agency shall pay or cause to be paid to the 8 affected laborers and mechanics, from any accrued payments withheld 9 under the terms of the contract or designated for the project, any wages 10 or fringe benefits found due to the workers pursuant to the . . . Act. The 11 director shall, after notice to the affected persons, distribute a list to all 12 departments of the state giving the names of persons or firms the 13 director has found to have willfully violated the . . . Act. No contract or 14 project shall be awarded to the persons or firms appearing on this list or 15 to any firm, corporation, partnership or association in which the persons 16 or firms have an interest until three years have elapsed from the date of 17 publication of the list containing the names of the persons or firms. A 18 person to be included on the list to be distributed may appeal the finding 19 of the director as provided in the . . . Act. 20 B. If the accrued payments withheld under the terms of the 21 contract, as mentioned in Subsection A of this section, are insufficient 22 to reimburse all the laborers and mechanics with respect to whom there 23 has been a failure to pay the wages or fringe benefits required pursuant 24 to the . . . Act, the laborers and mechanics shall have the right of action 25 or intervention or both against the contractor or person acting as a 26 contractor and the contractor’s or person’s sureties, conferred by law 27 upon the persons furnishing labor and materials, and, in such 28 proceeding, it shall be no defense that the laborers and mechanics 29 accepted or agreed to less than the required rate of wages or voluntarily 30 made refunds. The director shall refer such matters to the district 31 attorney in the appropriate county, and it is the duty and responsibility 32 of the district attorney to bring civil suit for wages and fringe benefits 33 due and liquidated damages provided for in Subsection C of this section. 3 1 C. In the event of any violation of the . . . Act or implementing 2 rules, the contractor, subcontractor, employer or a person acting as a 3 contractor responsible for the violation shall be liable to any affected 4 employee for the employee’s unpaid wages or fringe benefits. In 5 addition, the contractor, subcontractor, employer or person acting as a 6 contractor shall be liable to any affected employee for liquidated 7 damages beginning with the first day of covered employment in the sum 8 of one hundred dollars ($100) for each calendar day on which a 9 contractor, subcontractor, employer or person acting as a contractor has 10 willfully required or permitted an individual laborer or mechanic to 11 work in violation of the provisions of the . . . Act. 12 D. In an action brought pursuant to Subsection C of this 13 section, the court may award, in addition to all other remedies, attorney 14 fees and costs to an employee adversely affected by a violation of the 15 . . . Act by a contractor, subcontractor, employer or person acting as a 16 contractor. 17 (Citation omitted.) We note Plaintiffs’ care to highlight Subsections (A) and (B) of 18 Section 13-4-14 are comparable to sections of the federal Davis-Bacon Act (Davis- 19 Bacon), 40 U.S.C. § 3144 (2013), which read as follows: 20 (a) Payment of wages.-- 21 (1) In general.--The Secretary of Labor shall pay directly to 22 laborers and mechanics from any accrued payments withheld 23 under the terms of a contract any wages found to be due laborers 24 and mechanics under this subchapter. 25 (2) Right of action.--If the accrued payments withheld under 26 the terms of the contract are insufficient to reimburse all the 27 laborers and mechanics who have not been paid the wages 28 required under this subchapter, the laborers and mechanics have 29 the same right to bring a civil action and intervene against the 30 contractor and the contractor’s sureties as is conferred by law on 31 persons furnishing labor or materials. In those proceedings it is 4 1 not a defense that the laborers and mechanics accepted or agreed 2 to accept less than the required rate of wages or voluntarily made 3 refunds. 4 (b) List of contractors violating contracts.-- 5 (1) In general.--The Comptroller General shall distribute to all 6 departments of the Federal Government a list of the names of 7 persons whom the Comptroller General has found to have 8 disregarded their obligations to employees and subcontractors. 9 (2) Restriction on awarding contracts.--No contract shall be 10 awarded to persons appearing on the list or to any firm, 11 corporation, partnership, or association in which the persons have 12 an interest until three years have elapsed from the date of 13 publication of the list. 14 Our Supreme Court has similarly noted the parallels between Subsections (A) and (B) 15 of the Act and the Davis-Bacon legislation. See Mem’l Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Tatsch 16 Constr., Inc., 2000-NMSC-030, ¶ 26, 129 N.M. 677, 12 P.3d 431. Subsections (C) 17 and (D) of the Act, however, have no Davis-Bacon counterpart. Federal cases split 18 on whether a private right of action exists under Davis-Bacon, with the majority 19 holding against a private right of action. Compare Operating Eng’rs Health & 20 Welfare Tr. Fund v. JWJ Contracting Co., 135 F.3d 671, 676 (9th Cir. 1998) 21 (recognizing that Davis-Bacon “does not create a private cause of action for 22 employees”), with McDaniel v. Univ. of Chicago, 548 F.2d 689, 695 (7th Cir. 1977) 23 (“In sum, we hold that implying a private right of action in the Davis-Bacon Act is 24 necessary to effectuate the intention of Congress in passing the statute.”). 5 1 {5} On appeal, Plaintiffs argue that: (1) the Act, unlike Davis-Bacon, “clearly 2 contemplates” a private right of action, as evidenced by the fact that the Act includes 3 language making violators liable to employees and allowing employees to recover 4 attorney fees; (2) employees are not required to exhaust administrative remedies prior 5 to pursuing a private right of action; and (3) the district court erred in concluding that 6 it lacked jurisdiction to hear this case. Because we hold that there is a private right of 7 action that is separate and distinct from any administrative remedies in the Act, we 8 need not and do not address Plaintiffs’ second and third arguments regarding 9 exhaustion of administrative remedies and jurisdiction, which would only be relevant 10 if Plaintiffs’ access to the district court were somehow contingent on an 11 administrative process. 12 {6} Plaintiffs acknowledge that many courts have concluded there is no private 13 right of action under Davis-Bacon, but they rely on our Legislature’s departure from 14 Davis-Bacon in enacting Subsections (C) and (D) of the Act. Plaintiffs contend that 15 these subsections reflect an intent to create a private right of action that is different 16 from the remedial scheme in federal law. 17 {7} In addition to their position that a private right of action is expressly provided 18 for in the statute, Plaintiffs turn to factors in Yedidag v. Roswell Clinic Corp., 2015- 6 1 NMSC-012, ¶ 31, 346 P.3d 1136, that are used to evaluate whether to imply a private 2 right of action. These factors are: 3 (1) Was the statute enacted for the special benefit of a class of which the 4 plaintiff is a member? (2) Is there any indication of legislative intent, 5 explicit or implicit, to create or deny a private remedy? and (3) Would 6 a private remedy either frustrate or assist the underlying purpose of the 7 legislative scheme? 8 (Alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted.) These factors stem from 9 Cort v. Ash, 422 U.S. 66, 78 (1975), and we will refer to them as the Cort factors. 10 {8} Plaintiffs assert that there can be no dispute that they were members of a class 11 for whose “special benefit” the statute was enacted. And they assert that under the 12 remaining two Cort factors, the Legislature, in Subsection (D), expressly allowed a 13 court to award attorney fees and costs to an employee adversely affected in an action 14 under Subsection (C), and also, Subsection (C) provides that a contractor “shall be 15 liable to any affected employee[.]” See § 13-4-14(C), (D). Plaintiffs indicate that, in 16 an administrative process handled by the administrative agency, the employee would 17 have no right to recover attorney fees and that reading the Act so as not to allow for 18 a private right of action would render Subsection (D) superfluous. 19 {9} Defendant argues that no private right of action exists, because the Act “does 20 not expressly allow a private right” of action and because “there is no basis to imply 21 a private right of action where the Legislature intended the only remedies to come 7 1 through the administrative process.” Defendant notes that the Act was modeled after 2 Davis-Bacon and lists federal cases holding that Davis-Bacon does not provide a 3 private right of action. See, e.g., Grochowski v. Phoenix Constr., 318 F.3d 80, 85 (2d 4 Cir. 2003) (recognizing that Davis-Bacon does not provide an aggrieved employee 5 with a private right of action for unpaid wages and stating that “the great weight of 6 authority indicates that it does not” confer such a right for back wages); JWJ 7 Contracting Co., 135 F.3d at 676 (same); United States ex rel. Glynn v. Capeletti 8 Bros., Inc., 621 F.2d 1309, 1313-14 (5th Cir. 1980) (same); see also Tatsch Constr., 9 Inc., 2000-NMSC-030, ¶ 26 (stating that the Act is modeled after Davis-Bacon). 10 According to Defendant, employees making claims pursuant to the Act, like Davis- 11 Bacon claimants, must follow the administrative process provided by the Act and not 12 attempt to circumvent the Act based on provisions they do not like. 13 {10} According to Defendant, Plaintiffs’ argument regarding Section 13-4-14(D) 14 that because an employee would not have attorney fees if there were no private right 15 of action, therefore they may file suit under Section 13-4-14(C), is “illogical.” 16 Defendant’s point, to the contrary, is that a party can incur attorney fees pursuing 17 administrative remedies as easily as it can by filing a lawsuit. Moreover, Defendant 18 argues, while fee provisions in statutes have led some courts to infer a private right 19 of action, others have held that it is a sign that no remedy exists outside of 8 1 administrative relief, citing for support San Carlos Apache Tribe v. United States, 417 2 F.3d 1091, 1099 (9th Cir. 2005), which states, “At best, the absence of any private 3 right of action language . . . and the presence of the fee provision render the 4 [National Historic Preservation Act] ambiguous on the cause of action point. Without 5 explicit language, such an ambiguity can hardly be converted into an implied right of 6 action.” 7 {11} In analyzing and responding to Plaintiffs’ argument that a private right of 8 action may be implied under the Cort factors, Defendant assumes, for purposes of this 9 appeal, only that Plaintiffs come within the first Cort factor. But Defendant asserts 10 that “this is not determinative, as the Legislature has many different ways to protect 11 classes of people aside from giving them private enforcement rights[,]” citing 12 Capeletti Bros., 621 F.2d at 1313, as “[r]ecognizing that Congress intended [Davis- 13 Bacon] to benefit laborers and mechanics, however, [Davis-Bacon] does not establish 14 that Congress intended additionally that [it] would be enforced through private 15 litigation.” 16 {12} Defendant asserts that the second Cort factor “definitively speaks against an 17 implied right of action, because the Legislature has already refused to add one.” 18 Defendant explains that in 2005, Senate Bill 634 was introduced, proposing 9 1 amendments to Section 13-4-141 that included a new Subsection (D), which read: “In 2 addition to all other remedies, an employee adversely affected by a violation of the 3 . . . Act by a contractor, subcontractor, employee or a person acting as a contractor 4 shall have a private right of action for damages, attorney fees and reasonable costs.” 5 (Emphasis added.) However, a Senate committee struck the language that would have 6 conferred a private right of action, and the bill passed without that language. 7 According to Defendant, “Senate Bill 634 shows that in this context, as in others, the 8 Legislature will provide an express damages remedy if it wants to[,]” citing the New 9 Mexico Minimum Wage Act that specifies a private right of action for its violation. 10 See NMSA 1978, § 50-4-26(D) (2013). Defendant concludes that the committee’s 11 explicit rejection of a private right of action “should conclude the inquiry into its 12 intended scope.” In a supplement to its answer brief, Defendant also directed this 13 Court to House Bill 335, 53rd Leg., 1st Sess. (N.M. 2017), which again sought to 14 amend Section 13-4-14(D) to include the phrase “private right of action[.]” According 15 to Defendant, “The proposed amendments to the [Act] contained in HB 335 once 16 again establish that the [Act] applicable to the instant appeal contains no private right 17 of action.” The phrase “private right of action” was once again removed in House 1 18 Although Defendant states that the relevant amendment was made to Section 19 13-4-11, the at-issue amendment was to Section 13-4-14. We correct this error as 20 needed throughout this opinion. 10 1 Judiciary Committee Substitute for House Bill 335, 53rd Leg., 1st Sess. (N.M. 2017), 2 and was never voted on by the Legislature. 3 {13} Turning to the third Cort factor, Defendant asserts that “the underlying purpose 4 of the legislative scheme indicates that the Legislature did not intend to allow workers 5 to bring suit.” Defendant argues that the Act “carefully balances the interests of 6 contractors and their employees”; that the contractor “is able to work approximate 7 labor costs into its bid, while the worker enjoys the government’s help in collecting 8 the prevailing wage”; and that to imply “a private right of action to sue for [Act] 9 wages would destroy this careful balance.” Defendant similarly makes this “balance” 10 argument in the form of a due process claim. According to Defendant, the process by 11 which the Department investigates claims prudently balances the rights of workers 12 and contractors, and to allow Plaintiffs to skip this measured practice or to create a 13 private right of action where none exists, would deny Defendant the due process it is 14 afforded in the determination and appeal process. 15 {14} We review interpretation of statutory provisions de novo. Eisert v. Archdiocese 16 of Santa Fe, 2009-NMCA-042, ¶ 29, 146 N.M. 179, 207 P.3d 1156 (“Whether a 17 private right of action can be implied from a statute is a question of law that we 18 review de novo.”); see also Hovet v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2004-NMSC-010, ¶ 10, 135 11 1 N.M. 397, 89 P.3d 69 (“Statutory interpretation is a question of law, which we review 2 de novo.”). 3 {15} Because the Act lacks the clarity necessary for an express private right of 4 action, we focus on the implication based on the Cort factors. See Yedidag, 2015- 5 NMSC-012, ¶ 31 (stating that the “determination of whether to imply a private cause 6 of action is influenced by [the Cort] factors”). The parties do not dispute that, for the 7 purposes of this appeal, the Act was enacted for the purpose of benefitting Plaintiffs, 8 as required under the first Cort factor; we therefore focus on the second and third 9 Cort factors. 10 {16} The second Cort factor requires us to consider whether the Legislature intended 11 to create or deny a remedy and calls upon traditional statutory construction tools 12 requiring that we “look[] first to the plain language of the statute[.]” State v. 13 Almanzar, 2014-NMSC-001, ¶ 14, 316 P.3d 183 (internal quotation marks and 14 citation omitted). 15 {17} Here, we hold that the plain language of Section 13-4-14(C) and (D) evidences 16 legislative intent to create a private right of action that is separate and distinct from 17 the administrative scheme in Section 13-4-14(A) and (B). Subsection (C) states that 18 an “employer . . . shall be liable to any affected employee for the employee’s unpaid 19 wages” and “shall be liable to any affected employee for liquidated damages[.]” 12 1 Section 13-4-14(C) (emphasis added). Subsection (D) specifically points to “an action 2 brought pursuant to Subsection C” and indicates that “the court may 3 award . . . attorney fees and costs to an employee adversely affected[.]” Section 13-4- 4 14(D). Plain language in these subsections contemplates a private right of action in 5 which an employer can be liable to an employee for unpaid wages and attorney fees, 6 separate from the administrative scheme contained in Subsections (A) and (B). 7 {18} Defendant’s proffered interpretations of Subsection (D)—i.e., that an employee 8 could incur attorney fees through the administrative process or that a district attorney 9 pursuing a claim as required by Subsection (B) could recover attorney fees under 10 Subsection (D)—are not persuasive.2 The language of Subsection (D) specifically 11 references an action brought pursuant to Subsection (C) and allows for an award of 12 attorney fees to an employee. We are not convinced that a district attorney could 13 collect attorney fees, given the statutory restrictions on their pay. See NMSA 1978, 14 § 36-1-7 (1968) (“No district attorney shall receive to his own use any salary, fees or 15 emoluments other than the salary and per diem and travel allowances prescribed by 2 16 We also note that at oral argument defense counsel represented that, under the 17 Act, the district attorney pursuing a wage claim as required by Subsection (B) does 18 so as the private attorney of an employee. We see no basis for that statement. If, 19 however, it were true, and the district attorney is not acting on behalf of the State or 20 some other governmental entity, but rather as an employee’s private attorney, it would 21 further support the position that there is a private right of action under the Act. 13 1 law.”). We “read the statute in its entirety and construe each part in connection with 2 every other part to produce a harmonious whole.” Key v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 3 1996-NMSC-038, ¶ 14, 121 N.M. 764, 918 P.2d 350. We do not read any provision 4 of a statute in a way that would render another provision of the statute “null or 5 superfluous.” State v. Rivera, 2004-NMSC-001, ¶ 18, 134 N.M. 768, 82 P.3d 939; see 6 also Katz v. N.M. Dep’t of Human Servs., 1981-NMSC-012, ¶ 18, 95 N.M. 530, 624 7 P.2d 39 (“A statute must be construed so that no part of the statute is rendered 8 surplusage or superfluous.”). To read Subsection (D) as part of the administrative 9 scheme contained in Subsections (A) and (B) would require us to ignore the express 10 cross-reference to Subsection (C). This could lead to an absurd result where attorney 11 fees are permitted under the Act but not actually recoverable. We thus reject 12 Defendant’s proffered interpretations and hold that Section 13-4-14(D) contemplates 13 a private right of action. 14 {19} We are also not persuaded by Defendant’s argument that the history of Senate 15 or House bills involving the inclusion or removal of the phrase “private right of 16 action” provides evidence that the Legislature specifically intended to deny a private 17 right of action. As noted in Regents of University of New Mexico v. New Mexico 18 Federation of Teachers, 1998-NMSC-020, ¶ 30, 125 N.M. 401, 962 P.2d 1236, 19 “[u]nlike some states, we have no state-sponsored system of recording the legislative 14 1 history of particular enactments. [The appellate courts] do not attempt to divine what 2 legislators read and heard and thought at the time they enacted a particular item of 3 legislation. If the intentions of the Legislature cannot be determined from the actual 4 language of a statute, then we resort to rules of statutory construction, not legislative 5 history.” Further, during oral argument in this matter, both parties provided equally 6 plausible ways of interpreting the history of the proposed bills. To favor one 7 interpretation over the other would require this Court to engage in exactly the type 8 of speculation as to legislative intent that is disfavored. 9 {20} Finally, to the extent either party attempts to make an argument regarding the 10 similarities or differences of the Act as compared to Davis-Bacon, we are unable to 11 divine any meaning or application to the present case. The fact that Davis-Bacon is 12 different from the Act is clear and undisputed. 13 {21} Because we reject Defendant’s arguments as to legislative intent and because 14 we hold that the plain language of Section 13-4-14(C) and (D) evidences legislative 15 intent to create a private right of action under the Act, we hold that the second Cort 16 factor favors Plaintiffs. 17 {22} The third Cort factor, which requires us to determine whether an implied cause 18 of action furthers or frustrates the purpose of the Act, also favors Plaintiffs. In Tatsch 19 Construction, Inc., our Supreme Court held that the purpose behind the Act was 15 1 remedial, that remedial statutes ought to be read broadly, and that the Act should be 2 read “broadly so as to effectuate the intent of the [L]egislature.” 2000-NMSC-030, 3 ¶ 26. We hold that broadly interpreting the Act to imply a private right of action under 4 Subsections (C) and (D) would further the remedial purpose of the Act, rather than 5 frustrate it. Conversely, limiting employees to the administrative remedies under 6 Subsections (A) and (B) would be overly narrow and would frustrate the broad 7 remedial purpose of the Act. Although Defendant argues that the Act carefully 8 balances the interests of contractors and their employees, that implying a private right 9 of action would destroy this careful balance, and that destroying that balance has due 10 process implications, Defendant provides no authoritative support for those positions. 11 We decline to address unsupported and undeveloped arguments on appeal. See In re 12 Adoption of Doe, 1984-NMSC-024, ¶ 2, 100 N.M. 764, 676 P.2d 1329 (holding that 13 arguments unsupported by citations to authority will not be reviewed); see also 14 Headley v. Morgan Mgmt. Corp., 2005-NMCA-045, ¶ 15, 137 N.M. 339, 110 P.3d 15 1076 (declining to entertain a cursory argument that included no explanation of the 16 party’s argument and no facts that would allow the claim to be evaluated). 17 {23} Because the Cort factors all weigh in favor of Plaintiffs’ assertion of a private 18 right of action, we hold that there is an implied private right of action. 16 1 CONCLUSION 2 {24} We reverse the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs’ complaint and remand 3 for proceedings consistent with this opinion. 4 {25} IT IS SO ORDERED. 5 __________________________________ 6 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge 7 WE CONCUR: 8 _______________________________ 9 LINDA M. VANZI, Chief Judge 10 _______________________________ 11 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge 17