NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2467-19
EAST BAY DRYWALL,
LLC,
Petitioner-Appellant, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
April 20, 2021
v. APPELLATE DIVISION
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
AND WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT,
Respondent-Respondent.
_________________________
Argued March 1, 2021 – Decided April 20, 2021
Before Judges Sabatino, Currier and Gooden Brown.
On appeal from the New Jersey Department of Labor
and Workforce Development, Docket No. 17-019.
Russell L. Lichtenstein argued the cause for appellant
(Cooper Levinson, PA, attorneys; Russell L.
Lichtenstein and Jennifer B. Barr, on the briefs).
Achchana Ranasinghe, Deputy Attorney General,
argued the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal,
Attorney General, attorney; Jane C. Schuster, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Achchana Ranasinghe,
on the briefs).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
SABATINO, P.J.A.D.
This administrative agency case concerns the application of the so-called
"ABC Test," N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(i)(6)(A), (B), and (C), in classifying whether a
company's service providers are either its employees or, conversely,
independent contractors, for purposes of liability for contributions to the state
unemployment and temporary disability compensation fund.
As detailed in this opinion, the parties' dispute arose out of an audit of
records conducted by the Department of Labor and Workforce Development
("the Department"). Based on that review, the auditor concluded that about half
of the drywall installers who provided services for appellant East Bay Drywall,
LLC ("East Bay") during the pertinent years of 2013-16 had been improperly
classified as independent contractors rather than as East Bay's employees. With
respect to those misclassified installers, the auditor calculated that East Bay
owed the Department for unpaid contributions to the fund.
East Bay disputed the auditor's findings of misclassification, and the
contested case was tried in the Office of Administrative Law ("OAL") before an
administrative law judge ("ALJ"). Applying the legal standards of the ABC
Test, the ALJ concluded three of the individual installers had been misclassified
by East Bay as independent contractors. However, the ALJ found that other
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installers who had formed and operated corporations or limited liability
companies ("LLCs") during the audit period could not, as a matter of law, be
deemed employees of East Bay in this regulatory context. Consequently, the
ALJ rejected the auditor's findings except for the three individuals.
On further review, the Commissioner of the Department issued a final
agency decision on January 13, 2020, reinstating in full the auditor's findings,
thereby making East Bay liable for $42,120.79 in unpaid contributions to the
fund, plus penalties and interest. East Bay now appeals the Commissioner's
rulings.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand
for recalculation of the amounts owed, consistent with this opinion.
I.
Before delving into the facts and evidence, we first briefly discuss the
relevant legal context, including the ABC Test for ascertaining employee/non-
employee status.
The Department administers the New Jersey Unemployment
Compensation and Temporary Disability Insurance Laws (the "UCL"), N.J.S.A.
43:21-1 to -71. The "primary objective of the UCL is to provide a cushion for
the workers of New Jersey 'against the shocks and rigors of unemployment.'"
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Carpet Remnant Warehouse, Inc. v. N.J. Dep't of Labor, 125 N.J. 567, 581
(1991) (quoting Provident Inst. for Sav. in Jersey City v. Div. of Emp't Sec., 32
N.J. 585, 590 (1960)). The Department collects revenue to fund this benefits
program through contributions made by New Jersey employers and employees.
The employer and employee must each contribute a specified percentage of the
employee's wages to the fund. N.J.S.A. 43:21-7. In addition, a worker who is
classified as an employee rather than as an independent contractor may collect
unemployment benefits, if otherwise eligible and not otherwise disqualified.
See generally N.J.S.A. 43:21-5 (concerning disqualification criteria); N.J.S.A.
43:21-14 (concerning eligibility conditions).
The UCL statute is remedial in nature and has been liberally construed to
achieve its purposes. Carpet Remnant, 125 N.J. at 581.
An important predicate for determining whether a business or individual
is responsible for making payments into the UCL fund for workers is whether
there is a "statutory" employer-employee relationship between the workers and
the business or individual that engages them. Ibid. Such a statutory employer-
employee relationship may potentially exist even if the relationship does n ot
satisfy common-law principles of employment. Ibid. (citing Gilchrist v. Div. of
Emp't Sec., 48 N.J. Super. 147, 153 (App. Div. 1957)).
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Under the UCL statute, "employment" consists of any service performed
for remuneration or under any contact of hire, written or oral, express or
implied. N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(i)(1)(A). Once it has been established that a
worker's service has been performed for remuneration, that service is deemed
to be employment, unless statutory criteria, commonly referred to as the "ABC
Test," are all satisfied to establish non-employee status. N.J.S.A. 43:21-
19(i)(6).
Specifically, the ABC Test prescribes that, for purposes of the UCL, an
arrangement in which an individual performs services for remuneration is
considered employment "unless and until" the following three requirements are
proven:
(A) Such individual has been and will continue to be
free from control or direction over the performance of
such service, both under his contract of service and in
fact; and
(B) Such service is either outside the usual course of
the business for which such service is performed, or
that such service is performed outside of all the places
of business of the enterprise for which such service is
performed; and
(C) Such individual is customarily engaged in an
independently established trade, occupation, profession
or business.
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[N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(i)(6)(A), (B), and (C) (emphasis
added).]
These three facets of the test (A, B, and C) have been explained by the
Supreme Court in Carpet Remnant as follows.
"Part A of the [ABC] test requires a showing that the provider of services
'has been and will continue to be free from control or direction over the
performance of such services.'" Carpet Remnant, 125 N.J. at 582 (quoting
N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(i)(6)(A)). "The person must establish not only that the
employer has not exercised control in fact, but also that the employer has not
reserved the right to control the individual's performance." Ibid. "An employer
need not control every facet of a person's responsibilities, however, for that
person to be deemed an employee." Ibid.
"Part B of the ABC test is satisfied by a showing either that the services
performed are outside the employer's usual course of business or that the service
is performed outside of all of the employer's places of business." Id. at 584
(emphasis added). "[S]atisfaction of either of the B standard's alternatives is a
prerequisite for avoiding designation as an employee." Ibid. (citing N.J.S.A.
43:21-19(i)(6)(B)).
"Part C of the ABC test is also inherited from the common law." Id. at
585. Citing Gilchrist, the Court explained that part C's requirement that a person
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be customarily engaged in an independently-established business "calls for an
enterprise that exists and can continue to exist independently of and apart from
the particular service relationship. The enterprise must be one that is stable and
lasting—one that will survive the termination of the relationship." Ibid. (quoting
Gilchrist, 48 N.J. Super. at 158). "Thus, if the person providing services is
dependent on the employer, and on termination of that relationship would join
the ranks of the unemployed, the C standard is not satisfied." Id. at 585-86.
"Conversely, the C standard is satisfied when a person has a business, trade,
occupation, or profession that will clearly continue despite termination of the
challenged relationship." Id. at 586.
The application of these three ABC criteria is highly fact-sensitive. In
Carpet Remnant, for example, the Court reversed the Commissioner's finding of
employee status concerning workers who performed carpet installations for the
appellant company. Disagreeing with the Commissioner's findings under parts
A and B, the Court held those workers were not employees because they were
not, under part A, subject to the control of the company who had hired them,
and also because, as to part B, they had installed the carpeting at the locations
of individual customers rather than at the appellant's business office. Id. at 590-
93.
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The Court in Carpet Remnant cited with approval, see id. at 583-84, a
then-recent opinion of this court in Trauma Nurses, Inc. v. Bd. of Rev., 242 N.J.
Super. 135 (App. Div. 1990), applying the ABC Test. We held in Trauma
Nurses that nursing professionals who were placed by an employment broker
with hospitals and other health care facilities on a temporary basis were
independent contractors and not the broker's employees. Among other things ,
with respect to part A of the test concerning the element of control, "the nurses
were free to choose where and when to work, including working for other
brokers or independently," "not obligated to comply with any rules, practices,
or procedures set by [the broker]," that the broker "exercised no supervision over
the nurses . . . [and] provided no training," that the broker "furnished no supplies,
equipment, or uniforms," that the broker "did not provide any fringe benefits,"
and that "the nurses were responsible for their own insurance coverage." Id. at
584 (citing Trauma Nurses, 242 N.J. Super. at 144–45).
More recently, in Hargrove v. Sleepy's, LLC, 220 N.J. 289 (2015), the
Court ruled that the ABC Test is the applicable legal standard for determining
employee status under the New Jersey Wage Payment Law, N.J.S.A. 34:11-4.1
and the New Jersey Wage and Hour Law, N.J.S.A. 34:11-56a. Although the
Court in Hargrove was not required to resolve any factual issues because it was
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simply answering an abstract legal question referred by the federal courts
pursuant to Rule 2:12A-1, the Court did reiterate the basic principles of the ABC
Test set forth and applied previously in Carpet Remnant and in Trauma Nurses.
Id. at 305-06.
II.
With this backdrop in mind concerning the ABC Test, we summarize the
facts and procedural history of this matter.
East Bay's Business Operations & The Department's Audit
East Bay, a partnership, is a drywall installation business in New Jersey
that utilized various parties to perform drywall installation and taping. East Bay
obtained their services based on need and availability.
Installers were compensated for the work completed, and East Bay issued
them IRS Forms 1099-MISC ("1099") for tax reporting purposes. Form 1099 is
used when payments are made to what is purported to be an independent
contractor. Subject to an analysis under the ABC Test, a company making
payments evidenced by 1099s generally is not required to make unemployment-
compensation and temporary-disability contributions.
As found by the ALJ, all of the drywall work performed by the installers
used by East Bay was performed at locations determined by the builder. East
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Bay did not own or control those locations. East Bay did not instruct the
installers on how to perform the work or how many persons they should use to
complete the job in the timeframe provided by the builder.
East Bay did not supply the installers with any tools, but did provide the
raw materials such as sheetrock and tape. The installers brought to the job sites
their own ladders, scaffolding, stilts, chalk lines, electric tools, planks, and other
tools required to complete the work. Other than delivering and reviewing the
blueprints, East Bay did not control or direct the performance of the installers.
A Department auditor conducted a routine audit of East Bay between
January 17, 2017 and April 6, 2017. Based on his review, the auditor determined
that about half of the drywall installers that had received 1099s from East Bay
were bona fide independent contractors under the ABC Test, and therefore East
Bay owed no UCL contributions for those installers. However, the auditor
concluded the remaining sixteen installers were "non-bona fide" entities and
should have been classified as employees of East Bay during one or more of the
audit years 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016.
Of the sixteen alleged non-bona fide providers identified by the auditor,
four were individuals listed by name and the remaining twelve were business
entities. In the course of his review, the auditor sent letters to those twelve
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business entities in February 2017 but did not receive any responses. All twelve
of the businesses had ceased operations prior to the audit. Based on the lack of
response, the auditor concluded there was insufficient information to determine
that any of those twelve business entities were bona fide subcontractors eligible
for 1099 status.
Of the four individuals the auditor classified as non-bona fide
subcontractors, the auditor was able to correspond with two of them. One such
person, Dan Martin, responded to the auditor by supplying a Schedule C, "Profit
and Loss from Business" tax return form for 2015. The Schedule C form stated
that Martin did not have any other clients other than East Bay in 2015.
Consequently, the auditor deemed Martin was not truly independent, and not a
bona fide subcontractor for the audit period. Another one of the individuals,
Ami Serra, spoke to the auditor and acknowledged that he did not operate a
business.
As a result of these audit findings, the Department initially assessed East
Bay $42,120.79 for unpaid unemployment compensation and temporary
disability contributions, plus interest and penalties.
The OAL Hearing & the ALJ’s Initial Decision
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East Bay challenged the auditor's findings with respect to the business
entities he had classified as its employees. The dispute was transmitted to the
OAL for hearing as a contested case. The ALJ presided over two days of
hearings in February and March 2019.
Benjamin DeScala, the managing member of East Bay, testified for
appellant. DeScala described in depth the nature of East Bay's operations and
its interactions with the drywall installers. The ALJ accepted DeScala’s
testimony as "credible and truthful."
According to DeScala, once East Bay secured a contract with a builder,
he would then contact providers to see if they wished to install the drywall for
that customer, based on need and availability. Sometimes an installer would
pass up the opportunity, for reasons such as a conflicting project timeline or the
location was too far away. In situations where an installer accepted the work,
DeScala would verify that the installer was an independent business entity by
obtaining and reviewing its Certificate of Insurance.
The other witness who testified before the ALJ was the auditor. He
acknowledged that he did not issue any subpoenas in his investigation because
he believed that East Bay had provided all the records required to perform the
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audit. The auditor's written report was moved into evidence, and he explained
the steps he had taken in his review and the bases for his findings.
The core issue before the ALJ was whether the personnel in question
qualified as employees of East Bay within the meaning of the ABC Test. After
sifting through the testimony and the various exhibits, the ALJ found there was
"no evidence that any of the independent contractors deemed non-bona fide [by
the auditor] were treated any differently from an operational standpoint than
those [the auditor] deemed bona fide." Guided by the relevant case law, statutes
and regulations, the ALJ concluded that all of the installers satisfied all three
parts of the ABC Test (i.e., A, B, and C) except for Ami Serra, Dan Martin, and
Kyle Cuevas.
The ALJ reasoned that all of the installers in question satisfied part A
because they were not under East Bay’s control, nor did they take instruction or
tools from East Bay to complete the jobs. Additionally, the ALJ found that all
of the installers at issue satisfied part B because the work was completed at the
customers' job sites and not East Bay's place of business.
Lastly, under part C, the ALJ found East Bay had provided sufficient
business entity information to demonstrate that, apart from the three individuals
mentioned above, the installers were all "viable entities that existed
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independently of and apart from the particular service relationship with East
Bay." As to the three individuals who did not qualify: Dan Martin failed part C
because he had no other source of income; Ami Serra failed part C because he
did not operate a business; and Kyle Cuevas also failed part C because there was
no evidence provided by East Bay about him or his role with East Bay.
Accordingly, the ALJ reversed the Department's contribution liability
assessment for the installers as to which there was sufficient evidence showing
they were independent business entities but affirmed the Department's
assessment for the remaining three individuals (Martin, Serra, and Cuevas).
The Commissioner’s Final Agency Decision
After considering written exceptions to the ALJ's ruling, the
Commissioner issued on January 13, 2020 a final agency decision that reversed
the ALJ and reinstated the auditor's findings. The Commissioner concurred with
the auditor's classification of sixteen installers as non-bona fide independent
contractors, and agreed those installers should have been classified as employees
of East Bay.
East Bay appeals, arguing the Commissioner's decision misapplies the
ABC Test and is not consistent with the evidence adduced before the ALJ.
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III.
In reviewing this matter, we are mindful that appellate review of
administrative agency decisions generally affords substantial deference to the
agency's expertise. We ordinarily defer to the agency's findings if they are
supported by substantial credible evidence in the record. Carpet Remnant, 125
N.J. at 587; Clowes v. Terminix Int'l, Inc., 109 N.J. 575, 587 (1988). That said,
we are "in no way bound" by an agency's legal determinations. Mayflower Sec.
Co. v. Bureau of Sec., 64 N.J. 85, 93 (1973); see also Allstars Auto Group, Inc.
v. N.J. Motor Vehicle Comm'n, 234 N.J. 150, 158 (2018). The "policies that
require us to view with deference the decisions of administrative agencies and
to liberally construe remedial social legislation do not compel us to blindly
sustain a clearly erroneous result." Trauma Nurses, 242 N.J. Super. at 142.
Indeed, the Supreme Court's opinion in Carpet Remnant and our opinion in
Trauma Nurses, which we discussed above in Part I of this opinion, illustrate
that we will reverse the Department's misapplication of the ABC Test where its
reasoning is legally flawed.
Three of the twelve companies classified by the auditor and the
Commissioner as "non-bona fide" independent contractors were limited liability
companies headed by a single member, specifically Force 1 Drywall, LLC;
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AMA Construction, LLC, and Serra Drywall, LLC. 1 A pivotal aspect of the
Commissioner's decision with respect to those three LLCs was his reliance on a
New Jersey statute, N.J.S.A. 42:2C-92, and a state administrative regulation,
N.J.A.C. 12:16-11.2, as well as certain federal tax provisions. In particular, the
Commissioner observed that "under pertinent State and Federal law and
regulations, single-member LLCs are treated as 'disregarded' entities for the
purpose of employment tax liability and are properly classified by their tax filing
status with the IRS [Internal Revenue Service]." This observation, respectfully,
is an overstatement, and does not control the outcome here under the ABC Test.
N.J.S.A. 42:2C-92 is a tax statute. Subsection (b) of that statute provides
that "[f]or all purposes of taxation on income under the laws of this State and
only for those purposes," a single-member LLC formed in New Jersey or
qualified to do business in this State as a foreign LLC "is disregarded as an entity
separate from its owner, unless classified otherwise for federal tax purposes . . .
." (Emphasis added).
1
The record refers to both a Serra Drywall, LLC, operated by Dennis Serra, and
an individual named Ami Serra. The exhibits show that Ami Serra admitted to
the auditor that he does not operate a business. It appears he is not an owner or
principal of Serra Drywall, LLC.
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The statutory provision plainly is limited to the treatment of "single
member limited liability companies as sole proprietorships for State income tax
purposes unless the company is classified otherwise for federal income tax
purposes." Stanard v. Dir., Div. of Tax'n, 31 N.J. Tax 459, 468 (Tax 2020)
(emphasis added) (quoting Assemb. Judiciary Comm. Statement to S. Comm.
Substitute for S. 378 (June 4, 1998)). As explained in Stanard the provision was
intended to "treat[] a single member limited liability company as a sole
proprietorship for purposes of the classification requirements under the GIT
[Gross Income Tax] Act." Id. at 469 (emphasis added). The statute does not
dictate how to treat a single-member LLC for non-income tax purposes such as
determining whether there exists an employer-employee relationship for
purposes of unemployment and disability contributions.
Nor does N.J.A.C. 12:16-11.2 compel a determination that the principals
of the three single-member LLCs in this case should each be treated as
"employees" of East Bay. Subsection (c) of that regulation states as follows:
(c) An LLC consisting of one member shall be
classified as a sole proprietorship unless the LLC
elected a corporate classification for Federal income
tax purposes by completing IRS Form 8832; or if the
member is a corporation. In the event that the member
is a corporation, and where the LLC is disregarded for
Federal income tax purposes, the member shall be
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considered the employer with regard to all individuals
performing services for the LLC.
The provision literally concerns whether the LLC's sole member "shall be
considered the employer with regard to all individuals performing services for
the LLC." (Emphasis added). The provision does not address whether the LLC
itself or its sole member is to be treated as the employee of another entity, such
as East Bay. This interpretation is further supported by the economic impact
statements accompanying the legislative history, which stated: "The proposed
amendment to N.J.A.C. 12:16–11.2 will have a positive economic impact in that
it will assist LLCs in remitting appropriate payments to the State on behalf of
their employees." 31 N.J.R. 3037(a) (Oct. 18, 1999) (rule proposal). See also
31 N.J.R. 4284(b) (Dec. 20, 1999) (rule adoption); 29 N.J.R. 834(b) (Mar. 17,
1997) (rule proposal); 29 N.J.R. 2463(a) (May 19, 1997) (rule adoption).
Here, the parties' dispute over the three single-member LLCs is about
whether those LLCs should be classified as employees of East Bay, not whether
the LLCs might themselves owe contributions as an employer for any persons
who might work for them. 2 The regulation is not on point here. Hence, we reject
2
See also I.R.B. 2007-39 (Sept. 24, 2007) (noting that since "most states
recognize disregarded entities as employers for reporting, payment, and
collection of state employment taxes, [the updated IRS] regulations [concerning
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the Commissioner's categorical reasoning as to the classification of the three
LLCs. Instead, we must consider them, and the rest of the disputed installers,
under the elements of the ABC Test.
The Commissioner's final agency decision did not set forth an installer-
by-installer analysis of the ABC factors. Instead, the Commissioner discussed
the facts and the ALJ's findings in generic terms, except that he provided
individualized comments with respect to part C regarding five of the installers:
JEC Construction, Inc., Caslo Drywall Corporation, plus the three individuals
(Dan Martin, Ami Serra, and Kyle Cuevas) we have already mentioned.
With respect to parts A and B, the Commissioner rejected the ALJ's
findings and concluded that East Bay had failed to meet its legal burden under
those two parts. We disagree.
As to part A, we concur with the ALJ that East Bay has sufficiently shown
that, on balance, East Bay did not exert sufficient control over the work of the
installers to function as their employer. We incorporate by reference the ALJ's
sound analysis of this part and the numerous facts he cited as indicative of a lack
of sufficient control. Among other things, we find noteworthy the ability of the
federal employment taxes] will more closely align Federal and state reporting,
payment and collection of employment taxes") (emphasis added).
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installers to decline proposed projects offered by East Bay, the absence of
significant direction and supervision by East Bay at the job sites, the autonomy
of the installers in deciding how many workers to enlist to complete the work,
and the installers' furnishing of their own tools and equipment while East Bay
supplied the drywall and materials. We recognize that some facts point in the
other direction, but agree with the ALJ's assessment that the circumstances here
under part A bear similarity to those in Carpet Remnant.
The Commissioner's conclusion under part B is likewise legally
erroneous. The drywall installations occurred at the customers' job sites, not at
East Bay's offices. Faced with comparable locational facts in Carpet Remnant,
the Court noted that the phrase "places of business" under part B "refers only to
those locations where the enterprise has a physical plant or conducts an integral
part of its business." 125 N.J. at 592. Guided by that concept, the Court held
that the residences of the customers where the carpet was installed were
"clearly" outside of the appellant's "places of business." Ibid. The same must
be said about the locations where the drywall was installed in this case.
That brings us to part C, which concerns whether the alleged employee is
"customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation,
profession or business." N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(i)(6)(C). We agree with the
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Commissioner that East Bay did not prove such independent businesses with
respect to Dan Martin, Ami Serra, and Kyle Cuevas. The auditor found no
evidence that they had operated as businesses; instead, by all indications they
were single workers. We therefore affirm the Commissioner's classification of
them as employees.
We also affirm the Commissioner's determination that East Bay failed to
establish the business independence of JEC Construction and Caslo Drywall
Corporation during the pertinent audit years, in which they provided services for
East Bay. As the Commissioner noted, the record shows that JEC Construction,
although formed as a corporation in 2011, filed no annual report in either
October 2012 or October 2013, and consequently its corporate charter was
revoked in May 2014. Similarly, Caslo Drywall Corporation, although formed
as a corporation in May 2013, never filed a single annual report and its corporate
status was revoked in May 2015. The Commissioner's conclusion that part C
was not met concerning those two companies is amply supported by the record.
We part company with the Commissioner with respect to the remaining
installers at issue. Each of those installers had provided certificates of insurance
to East Bay, which is significant, albeit not necessarily dispositive, indicia of
their independent business status under part C. The fact that each of those other
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companies was apparently not in business when the audit was conducted in 2017
does not mean they were inactive in the pertinent years of 2013, 2014, 2015, and
2016.3 The Commissioner's decision does not individually discuss those other
companies and only singles out JEC Construction and Caslo Drywall
Corporation. It is not our task to fill in such gaps in the agency's determination,
particularly where, as here, it conflicts with the fact-finding of the ALJ. When
an agency head strays from the factual findings of an ALJ, we need not accord
the agency the high level of deference we ordinarily apply in reviewing
administrative decisions. See H.K. v. State, 184 N.J. 367, 384 (2005).
In reaching this result, we by no means endorse the use of sham
corporations or LLCs created as a means to evade UCL contributions. However,
except for the two entities singled out and analyzed in the Commissioner 's
decision, the record in this case generally supports the ALJ's findings of bona
fide entity status for the remaining companies during the pertinent audit period.
Nor does the record establish that East Bay illicitly orchestrated with the
installers a coordinated effort to evade UCL payment obligations.
3
Of these, only Serra Drywall was determined by the auditor to have acted as
an employee in 2016.
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In conclusion, we affirm the Commissioner's final agency decision
treating East Bay as the employer of Dan Martin, Ami Serra, Kyle Cuevas, JEC
Construction, and Caslo Drywall Corporation to the extent they were found to
fail part C of the ABC Test because they were not viable independent business
entities. We reverse as to the remaining disputed installers. The matter is
remanded to the Department for recalculation of the amount of owed UCL
contributions due, in a manner consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
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