ARB Case No. 00-050
ALJ Case No. 96-DBA-37
DATE: December 6, 2001
In the Matter of:
Disputes concerning the payment of
prevailing wage rates and overtime
pay:
THOMAS & SONS BUILDING
CONTRACTORS, INC., Contractor
and
ZAGARI & SONS CONSTRUCTION CORP.,
Subcontractor, JOSEPH ZAGARI, President
Debarment for labor standards
violations by:
ZAGARI & SONS CONSTRUCTION CORP.
and JOSEPH ZAGARI, President
With respect to laborers and mechanics
employed by the subcontractor on Contract
No. F28609-90-D-0010 and Contract No.
F28609-93-D-0009 at McGuire Air Force
Base, Wrightstown, New Jersey.
BEFORE: THE ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW BOARD
ORDER DENYING RECONSIDERATION
The Board has before it the motion of Petitioner Thomas & Sons Building Contractors, Inc. (Thomas & Sons), seeking reconsideration of our Final Decision and Order (F.D. & O.) issued on August 27, 2001. In the F.D. & O. we affirmed, inter alia, an administrative law judge's (ALJ's) finding that Thomas & Sons' subcontractor, Zagari & Sons Construction Corp., had underpaid workers employed on Federal construction contracts at McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey. These contracts were subject to the prevailing wage requirements of the Davis-Bacon Act, 40 U.S.C. §276a et seq. (1994) and the overtime requirements of the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act, 40 U.S.C. §327 et seq. (1994). The amount of the underpayments was $143,192.96. Because prime contractors on projects subject to the Davis-Bacon Act are responsible for proper payment of prevailing wages by their subcontractors (see, e.g., Silverton Construction Co., WAB No. 92-09 (Sept. 30, 1992)), we ordered the contracting agency to pay over to the underpaid workers monies that had been withheld from Thomas & Sons' contracts. Thomas & Sons Building Contractors, Inc., ARB No. 00-050, ALJ No. 96-DBA-37 (ARB Aug. 27, 2001), 2001 WL 1031629, *4-5.
[Page 2]
In support of its request for reconsideration, Thomas & Sons argues that the employee witnesses who testified at the hearing in this case did not meet their burden of proving wage underpayments under the burden of proof scheme outlined by the Supreme Court in Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co., 328 U.S. 680 (1946), and that the ALJ and this Board misapplied the Anderson standard. We disagree.
The central problem in the Petitioner's reconsideration request is a misunderstanding of the applicable burdens of proof in a wage underpayment case. Thomas & Sons asserts that under Anderson, "the employee bears the burden of providing the performance paper work [sic] and they [i.e., the Zagari employee witnesses] didn't have any." Thus it appears that Thomas & Sons is claiming that in the absence of written documentation, the employees must lose. There are two fundamental errors in this claim.
First, this enforcement case was initiated by the Wage and Hour Administrator. As the party who brought the case, the initial burden of proof falls on the Administrator not the workers. See, e.g., 1 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence §63 (2d ed. 1994) ("[The] broadest and most accepted idea [is] . . . that the person who seeks court action should justify the request, which means that the plaintiffs bear the burdens on the elements in their claims."). The Zagari employees participated in this case only as witnesses, not as parties, and therefore did not personally bear any proof burden. This is in contrast to Anderson a case under the Fair Labor Standards Act which was brought directly by the employees, and in which the employees therefore assumed the initial burden of proof.
Second, nothing in the Anderson methodology requires that any plaintiff or prosecuting party present "written documentation" of a wage underpayment. All that is required is evidence sufficient to show that the employees "in fact performed work for which [they were] improperly compensated[,]" and also "sufficient . . . to show the amount and extent of that work as a matter of just and reasonable inference." Anderson, 328 U.S. at 687. In this case, the Administrator presented the employees' testimony about their work hours and wage rates, coupled with an analysis of various payroll records. This evidence (testimonial and documentary) was credited by the ALJ and this Board. Significantly, neither Thomas & Sons nor Zagari presented the kind of rebuttal documentation needed under the Anderson approach to demonstrate with precision the hours worked and the wage rates paid. Accordingly, it was appropriate for the ALJ and this Board to "award damages to the employee[s], even though the result be only approximate." Id. at 687-88.
1SeeThomas and Sons Building Contractors, Inc., Order Denying Reconsideration, ARB No. 98-164, ALJ No. 96-DBA-33 (ARB June 8, 2001), 2001 WL 706733, *3-5. As explained in this earlier Thomas and Sons order, the Board's authority to reconsider Davis-Bacon Act cases is particularly problematic when debarment has been ordered. Id. Although the subcontractor in the instant case (Zagari & Sons Construction Corp.) and its principal (Joseph Zagari) were ordered debarred by the ALJ, the subcontractor's debarment was not an issue in the case when it was appealed to the Board, and thus debarment is not an issue in this request for reconsideration.
2 We note in passing that Thomas & Sons apparently did not serve a copy of its request for reconsideration on the Wage and Hour Administrator. Ordinarily, we would strike the motion and direct Thomas & Sons to resubmit the document with proper service on the opposing party before considering it. However, further participation by the Administrator is unnecessary in light of our decision summarily to deny the reconsideration request.