Chin v.
Namvar (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 994, -- Cal.Rptr.3d --
[No.
B198986. Second Dist., Div. Eight. Sep. 11, 2008.]
KYONG
T. CHIN et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. TONY NAMVAR et
al., Defendants and Respondents.
(Superior
Court of Los Angeles County, No. BC346309, Elizabeth Grimes, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Rubin, J., with Cooper, P. J., and Flier, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Henry
M. Lee for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Law
Offices of Thomas H. Mabie and Thomas H. Mabie; Robert B. Mobasseri for Defendants and Respondents.
[166 Cal.App.4th 997]
OPINION
RUBIN, J.-
INTRODUCTION
Appellant
Kyong T. Chin was injured in May 2005 when he fell off a ladder
while performing painting services at an Ontario shopping center known as Hollywood 28 (the shopping center).
Although Chin at one time had been a licensed painting
contractor, his license had expired in 2000, and he was not licensed at the time of injury. In January 2006,
Chin and his wife filed a complaint naming as respondents
Hollywood 28, L.L.C. (the limited liability corporation that owned the shopping center); Parviz Nadjat-Haiem (a
partner in a business entity that owned one-half of the Hollywood 28, L.L.C.); Tony Namvar (a partner in a
business entity that owned the other one-half of the Hollywood 28, L.L.C., and owner of Pentaco Management,
Inc., which managed the shopping center); and Pentaco Construction Services, Inc. (collectively respondents).
fn.
1 The gist of the complaint was that Chin was
respondents' employee at the time he was injured, and was entitled to wages and other compensation owed him.
Also, as an employee for whom his employer had no workers' compensation coverage, he was entitled to recover for
negligence. Finally he was wrongfully terminated. He claimed respondents' assertion that Chin was an independent contractor, not an employee, was only an attempt to
avoid complying with the wage and hour and insurance provisions of the Labor Code. fn.
2
Following
a nonjury trial, the trial court entered judgment against the Chins and in favor of respondents, finding that
Chin was an independent [166 Cal.App.4th 998] contractor and not an employee. On appeal, the Chins'
principal contentions are that the trial court erred by (1) ignoring Labor Code section 2750.5 (§ 2750.5) which
creates a rebuttable presumption that an unlicensed person who performs work requiring a license is an employee,
not an independent contractor; (2) imposing on Chin the burden
of proving that he was an employee; and (3) concluding that Chin
was estopped to assert he was an employee. fn.
3 We affirm.
FACTS
Viewed
in accordance with the usual rules on appeal, the evidence adduced at trial established the following. fn.
4
A.
Respondent Namvar
Respondent
Tony Namvar testified that Hollywood 28, L.L.C., is a limited liability corporation in the real estate
investment business; it owns two properties, one of which is the 43,000 square foot shopping center where the
injury occurred. Hollywood 28, L.L.C., has just two shareholders, each of which owns 50 percent of the company:
Woodland Partners (Woodland) and The Carston Company (Carston). Namvar is one of eight partners in Woodland.
Respondent Parviz Nadjat-Haiem is a partner in Carston. Namvar had been a managing member of Hollywood 28,
L.L.C., since its inception.
Namvar
is also president of Pentaco Management, Inc., which is responsible for hiring contractors to provide services
at the shopping center. [166 Cal.App.4th 999] fn.
5 Namvar oversees the managers who carry out the task of implementing the formal bidding
process by which these contractors are selected. It is the duty of Pentaco Management, Inc., to make sure that
the contractors who work at the shopping center are properly paid. The payments, however, are made by checks
drawn on Hollywood 28, L.L.C., bank accounts.
It
is the general business practice of Pentaco Management, Inc., to enter into written contracts with the
contractors it hires, but Namvar could not find a written contract with Chin pertaining to the work at the shopping center. Namvar attributed this
to the long business relationship he had with Chin.
Chin was one of three bidders who participated in the bidding
process for the contract to paint the shopping center exterior. Chin's handwritten bid for $7,941.35 was introduced into evidence as
Exhibit No. 101. Chin was awarded the contract in late 2003,
early 2004. When accepting a bid from a new contractor (i.e., one with whom there is no prior business
relationship), it is the usual practice of Pentaco Management, Inc., to obtain references and check license
and insurance coverage. Namvar explained that this practice was not followed after Chin's bid was accepted because Chin had worked for Namvar on a number of projects over many years.
Namvar recalled that he first hired Chin in 1995 or 1996 to
paint a building in downtown Los Angeles. fn.
6 At that time, Chin provided the usual
information, including a valid contractor's license. It was not Namvar's practice to re-check the
qualifications of contractors who worked for him over many years on different projects.
Namvar
had I.R.S. Form 1099's reflecting that Chin was routinely
treated as an independent contractor. The Hollywood 28, L.L.C., vendor list identified Chin as "KPC Painting," but Namvar understood that this was a "dba" and a
sole proprietorship so Chin was paid with checks made payable to
him personally. The 1099's were similarly in his name.
Namvar
believed that Chin was trustful and would tell Namvar if his
license was revoked. Chin said nothing about his license
expiring. The first time Namvar learned that Chin was unlicensed
was the week before trial, [166 Cal.App.4th 1000] when his
lawyer showed him a document from the State Contractor's Licensing Board. Namvar would not have hired
Chin on the shopping center project if he knew that
Chin was no longer a licensed contractor.
Namvar
recalled that, a few weeks after he heard that Chin had been
injured, Chin came to Namvar's office on crutches and said he
would be back on the job in a few weeks. Namvar told Chin to "
'[j]ust go take care of yourself right now, and you can come back when you're done; and in the meantime, just
clean everything that's out there so it's not in anybody's way.' [¶] So the next thing we saw was a lawsuit, and
I don't know if that -- that would be the time his services got terminated, but we never terminated him." After
Chin filed suit, Namvar made other arrangements to complete the
unfinished painting work.
B.
Respondent Nadjat-Haiem
Parviz
Nadjat-Haiem testified that he is involved in Hollywood 28, L.L.C., only through his partnership in Carston.
Although Nadjat-Haiem does not participate in the day-to-day operations of the shopping center, he is a
signatory on the Hollywood 28, L.L.C, bank accounts and may have signed checks for daily business operations.
Pentaco
Management, Inc., manages properties owned by Carston including the shopping center. Pentaco Management, Inc.,
has the authority to hire contractors and pays workers with checks drawn on the Hollywood 28, L.L.C., bank
account.
Nadjat-Haiem
recalled that he first met Chin "several years" prior to the May
2007 trial, when Chin made "some restorations or repairs in the
restroom" of a building owned by Carston. Nadjat-Haiem had never checked licenses of people who performed work
for him, nor did he ask Chin whether he was licensed,
Nadjat-Haiem assumed Chin was in good standing. Nadjat-Haiem
recalled that Chin did business under a separate name, but he
did not know that name. Chin also "did some jobs as a contractor
in my house . . . [¶] [¶] It was [on an] on-and-off basis. Sometimes he was there; sometimes he was not." When
Nadjat-Haiem would ask Chin why he did not work on a particular
day, Chin would explain that, as a contractor, he had other
clients. Nadjat-Haiem did not buy tools or equipment for Chin,
nor was he involved in setting Chin's hours or limiting his
lunch breaks. Chin did not complain about his pay or that taxes
should have been withheld.
Nadjat-Haiem
was aware that Chin was performing painting services at the
shopping center in 2004. He believed that Namvar was the person with the [166 Cal.App.4th 1001] final decisionmaking authority over Chin's work. Nadjat-Haiem's only involvement in the project was picking the
paint color. He did not participate in negotiations but recalled that Chin gave an estimate for the work. He could not remember whether a written
contract existed between any of the Pentaco companies and Chin,
but he thought there was a written contract between Hollywood 28, L.L.C., and Chin. Nadjat-Haiem could not recall whether he had seen the agreement.
C.
Appellant Kyong T. Chin
Chin testified
that in 1996 he was a licensed painting contractor doing business as KPC Painting. At that time, Chin began providing painting services to Namvar on several projects and Namvar
paid KPC Painting for that work. In 2000, Chin allowed his painting
contractor's license to lapse. fn.
7 He closed KPC Painting and worked as a handyman -- a job for which no license is required.
Chin testified
that, in late 2001, Namvar introduced Chin to Nadjat-Haiem. After
Chin did a few handyman projects for Nadjat-Haiem,
Chin accepted Nadjat-Haiem's offer to pay him $3,500 a month
($1,750 every two weeks) in exchange for Chin working
exclusively for Nadjat-Haiem. Although there was no written contract, from 2001 through 2004 Chin worked exclusively for Nadjat-Haiem and Namvar on various properties
including their personal residences. On the occasions when Chin used his own money to purchase supplies, Nadjat-Haiem reimbursed
him. Even when he worked at Namvar's residence, and even though Chin was paid with checks from different business entities, Chin understood that he was always Nadjat-Haiem's employee. During this
time, Chin consistently worked 6 days a week 10 hours a day
without any extended breaks and just 10 minutes for lunch. Chin denied performing handyman services for any one else other than
Nadjat-Haiem and Namvar, and denied receiving IRS Form 1099's.
In
2004, Chin began performing handyman services at the shopping
center. He discussed his work with Namvar who signed Chin's
Hollywood 28, L.L.C., paychecks. Chin understood that he was an
employee of Hollywood 28, L.L.C. He was familiar with a company called Pentaco; he understood that Namvar was
somehow related to Pentaco and that Hollywood 28, L.L.C., and Pentaco [166 Cal.App.4th 1002] were also related. fn.
8 While Chin worked at the shopping center,
Nadjat-Haiem and his secretary came by every two weeks to "check from a distance and then leave." Another man
used to come every day.
During
his work at the shopping center, Chin was asked to give painting
estimates, including materials, labor and how long the job would take to complete. Chin provided the estimate (Trial Exh. No. 101). Chin did not believe this "estimate" was a "bid"; he was not competing for
the job against other painting contractors. Chin knew that he
was no longer a licensed painting contractor, and that he could not get paid for doing the work of a licensed
painting contractor. At Nadjat-Haiem's instruction, Chin hired
workers to help out but Nadjat-Haiem paid these workers.
On
May 5, 2004, Chin was climbing a ladder at the shopping center
when he fell and broke his leg. fn.
9 At the time of his injury, Chin did not have
a painting contractor's license and was working as Nadjat-Haiem's employee.
Two
weeks after his injury, Chin was still on crutches when he and
his wife went to Pentaco's office to ask for Chin's salary.
Nadjat-Haiem told them that Chin would not get paid until his
wife cleaned the gum off the floor. Chin also asked for
Pentaco's insurance information but Namvar said he would not provide the information because of the negative
impact it would have on Pentaco's premiums. At that same meeting, Namvar terminated Chin's employment. Chin's
claim for workers' compensation was denied.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Chin filed
a complaint for discrimination with the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) on May 5, 2005, in which
he alleged that Namvar and Nadjat-Haiem fired him because of his physical disability and because he protested
illegal activity. After obtaining a right to sue notice, Chin and
his wife filed the instant action on January 24, 2006. The complaint alleged causes of action for unfair
competition, various Labor Code violations, [166 Cal.App.4th 1003]
wrongful termination and negligence, and included a claim by Chin's
wife for loss of consortium. Following a three day nonjury trial, the trial court ruled in favor of respondents. In
its statement of decision, the court found that Chin worked at the
shopping center as an independent contractor, not an employee of any of the respondents. fn.
10 Because each of Chin's causes of action rested
on the premise that Chin was an employee, each cause of action
necessarily failed, as did his wife's.
Judgment
was entered on March 21, 2007. An amended judgment was filed on April 6, 2007, which added an award of
attorney's fees to respondents on the second, fourth, and fifth cause of action pursuant to Labor Code section
218.5, and on the tenth and eleventh causes of action pursuant to Government Code section 12965, subdivision
(b). Chin filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
A.
Labor Code section 2750.5
Appellants
contend the trial court erred in concluding that section 2750.5 was not applicable. As we understand
Chin's argument, there was insufficient evidence to support
the finding that he was an independent contractor because, under section 2750.5, the undisputed evidence was
that Chin was performing painting services for which a
license was required, but Chin had no license; therefore, by
law, he was an employee. We disagree.
1.
Standard of Review
We
begin with the appropriate standard of review: in determining whether the trial court properly applied section
2750.5, we review the trial court's statutory interpretation de novo and its factual determinations for
substantial evidence. ( Cedillo v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd. (2003)
106 Cal.App.4th 227 ,
232.)
2.
Statutory Scheme
[1]
Section 2750.5 establishes "a rebuttable presumption affecting the burden of proof that a worker performing
services for which a [contractor's] [166 Cal.App.4th 1004]
license is required . . . is an employee rather than an independent contractor." (See Ramirez v. Nelson
(2008)
44 Cal.4th 908 [unlicensed
contractor who becomes injured on the job is the employee of the party who hired him, not an independent
contractor, for purposes of determining eligibility for workers' compensation benefits].) Section 2750.5,
subdivisions (a), (b), and (c) describe the proof that may satisfactorily rebut the presumption. fn.
11 The penultimate paragraph in section 2750.5 provides: "In addition to the factors contained in
subdivisions (a), (b), and (c), any person performing any function or activity for which a [contractor's] license
is required [] shall hold a valid contractor's license as a condition of having independent contractor status." In
other words, under the statute, the presumption of employee status can be rebutted only as to persons who hold a
valid contractor's license; the presumption cannot be rebutted as to persons who do not hold a valid contractor's
license. (See Mendoza v. Brodeur (2006)
142 Cal.App.4th 72 , 77
[presumption that a person who hires an unlicensed contractor is an employer is conclusive].)
3.
Estoppel
[2]
Notwithstanding the conclusive presumption established by the second to last paragraph of section 2750.5, one
who misrepresents himself as a licensed contractor is estopped from asserting that his unlicensed status makes
him an employee under the statute. ( Rinaldi v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd. (1988)
199 Cal.App.3d 217 ,
223 ( Rinaldi ).) "The essence of an estoppel is that the party to be estopped has by false language or
conduct 'led another to do that which he would not otherwise have done and as a result thereof that he has suffered
injury.' [Citation.]" ( State Compensation Ins. Fund v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd. (1985)
40 Cal.3d 5 , 16
( Meier ).) In the absence of a representation by the contractor that he or she is licensed, there can be no
[166 Cal.App.4th 1005] estoppel. ( Meier , supra , at
p. 16; see also Travelers Ins. Co. v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd. (1983)
147 Cal.App.3d 1033 ,
1038 ( Travelers ) [same].)
In
Meier , Meier had held a general contractor's license until 1969 when he went bankrupt; after that, he
did concrete work, carpentry and job estimates. Using his brother's license, Meier built a home for Leon, and
Leon recommended him to Chichester to help Chichester with a room addition. Chichester did not ask Meier whether
he was licensed and Meier did not say that he was not. While doing the remodel, Meier fell and sustained
injuries that left him a quadriplegic. Concluding that Meier was an independent contractor, not an employee,
Chichester's insurer refused to pay Meier any benefits. The workers' compensation judge found that, under
section 2750.5, the defense proffered by the workers' compensation carrier that Meier was an independent
contractor was not available because Meier was doing work that required a license. ( Meier , supra
, 40 Cal.3d at p. 8.) The relevant issue on appeal was whether, by failing to disclose that he was not licensed
when he contracted for the job, Meier should be estopped from denying that he was an independent contractor. Our
Supreme Court affirmed the workers' compensation ruling, reasoning: ". . . Meier at no time represented that he
held a valid contractor's license and [] there was no reliance on any such representation. . . . [¶] Moreover,
State Fund has failed to establish that as a matter of law Chichester was misled and would not have entered into
the agreement if he had been aware that Meier was unlicensed." ( Id . at p. 16.)
In
contrast to Meier is Rinaldi : There, homeowners contracted with Smyth, a licensed but uninsured
contractor, to remodel their home. Smyth contracted with Butler, who falsely represented himself as a licensed
contractor, to finish the job; Butler was also uninsured. Butler hired Zagainoff to do some rough framing;
Zagainoff suffered multiple injuries when he fell nine feet to a concrete floor. In a claim filed with the
Uninsured Employers Fund (the fund), Zagainoff alleged that both Smyth and Butler were his employers. The Fund
settled with Zagainoff, reserving its reimbursement rights against the employer. Following a hearing, the
workers' compensation judge found that Zagainoff was an employee of Butler, not Smyth. The judge reasoned that
Butler had misrepresented his status as a licensed contractor, as a result, he was estopped from denying that he
was an independent contractor; Smyth was dismissed as a party defendant. In a petition for reconsideration to
the Worker's Compensation Appeals Board (WCAB), the fund contended that Zagainoff was an employee of Smyth as a
matter of law. The Board affirmed the judge's findings. ( Rinaldi , supra , 199 Cal.App.3d at p.
220.) The appellate court found that Butler's false representation estopped Butler from denying his independent
contractor status. "[T]he evidence of estoppel against Butler is overwhelming. Butler falsely represented that
he had two [166 Cal.App.4th 1006] contractor's licenses when, in
fact, his license was under suspension. Smyth testified that he would not have entered into the agreement with
Butler if he had been aware that Butler was unlicensed. The facts of this case, as found by the [worker
compensation judge and WCAB], establish all the elements of estoppel against Butler. [Citation.]" ( Id at
p. 223.) fn.
12
B.
Substantial Evidence Supported the Trial Court's Estoppel Findings
[3]
Whether a party's conduct estops it from taking a particular legal position usually, though not always, involves
a factual determination. "The existence of an estoppel is generally a question of fact, and the party relying on
the estoppel must prove all of the elements." ( Meier, supra, 40 Cal.3d at pp. 19-20.) Occasionally, a
court may rule on estoppel as a matter of law. (See General Accident Ins. Co. v. Workers' Comp Appeal Bd.
(1996)
47 Cal.App.4th 1141 ,
1149.) We acknowledge that it is difficult to create a hard and fast rule for every situation in which the status
of a contractor's license changes over a period of time. On the one end of the spectrum might be the following:
Worker affirmatively lies when asked if he is licensed, commences work, and shortly thereafter is injured. These
were essentially the facts discussed in Rinaldi . We agree that in the absence of extenuating circumstances,
the unlicensed worker in this setting is estopped from claiming employee status.
On
the other end of the spectrum: the hirer does not inquire and the worker makes no representation about his
licensing status. In this situation, in order to effect the mandatory language of the penultimate paragraph of
section 2750.5, the unlicensed worker cannot be estopped, and is deemed an employee. This is akin to
Meier which suggests estoppel in this context may be a matter of law. (See Meier , supra ,
40 Cal.3d at p. 16.) To apply estoppel in this settling would convert estoppel from a defense to the rule.
[166 Cal.App.4th 1007]
The
gray part of the spectrum is presented by the worker who initially accurately informs the hirer that he or she
is licensed but over time his or her license expires or is revoked, the worker says nothing, and the employer
makes no further inquiry. In this situation, our case being an example, estoppel becomes a factual question to
be resolved by the trier of fact. We uphold that determination if supported by substantial evidence. (See
Feduniak v. California Coastal Com. (2007)
148 Cal.App.4th 1346 ,
1360.) Relevant factors include the nature of the worker's initial disclosure and the hirer's initial inquiry, the
length of time the license was valid and how long since it had lapsed, the parties' expectations, the nature and
length of the relationship between worker and hirer, and custom and practice in the industry, among others. It may
be reasonable for a hirer to assume a worker remains licensed when the valid license was presented a few weeks
before the start of work. It may be unreasonable to require written proof on a weekly or monthly basis on a long
project. On the other hand, oral representation of valid license status, though reasonable to accept at the time,
may require further investigation, even written proof, later on depending on the circumstances.
[4]
The burden is on the hirer to prove that the worker is estopped from claiming employee status. This is in
keeping with estoppel being a defense ( Meier, supra, 40 Cal.3d at pp. 19-20), and with the language and
purpose of section 2750.5. It is also consistent with evidentiary realities. Usually, it will be the hirer who
claims he or she was misled by the worker and is excused from the legal effect of the absence of a contractor's
license. The hirer knows what those mitigating factors are.
Here,
the trial court reasonably found respondents met that burden. There was no dispute that Chin was a licensed painting contractor doing business as KPC Painting when
he first began work for Namvar in 1996, and no dispute that Namvar, at the time he first hired Chin, discussed with Chin
that the latter was licensed. There was also no dispute that Chin continued to provide painting services to Namvar on a number of
different projects over the next several years. Namvar testified that he believed Chin would advise him of any license revocation but Chin said nothing. Namvar testified that Chin was one of several bidders for the contract to paint the shopping
center. Namvar would not have awarded Chin the contract to paint
the shopping center if he knew that Chin was no longer licensed.
This was consistent with respondent's business practices of checking license status and not hiring unlicensed
contactors. [166 Cal.App.4th 1008]
During
the time he worked at the shopping center, Chin testified that
Nadjat-Haiem and his secretary came by every two weeks to check on the progress of the work "from a distance and
then leave." And there was evidence that Chin brought his own
ladder and scaffolding to the job site. Thus, there was evidence that Chin was in fact engaged in an independently established painting business
(§ 2750.5, subd. (b)); Chin had the "right to control and
discretion as to the manner of the performance" of the painting work which he contracted to do (§ 2750.5, subd.
(a)); Chin had held himself out as a licensed painting
contractor, bargained for the contract to paint the shopping center, and supplied the tools used in that work (§
2750.5, subd. (c)). This evidence was sufficient to support the finding that Chin was an independent contractor. (Cf. Torres v. Reardon
(1992)
3 Cal.App.4th 831 ,
837 [gardener injured while tree-trimming was independent contractor where undisputed evidence was that he provided
tree-trimming service in course of his independently established business, supplied his own equipment and did not
discuss with homeowners means by which tree trimming was to be done].)
[5]
This evidence was also sufficient to support the finding that Chin was in fact an independent contractor and that he is estopped from
denying otherwise. This case is in the stark contrast to Meier, where the injured worker "at no time represented
that he held a valid contractor's license and [] there was no reliance on any such representation." (
Meier , supra , 40 Cal.3d at p. 16.) Here, respondents knew Chin was at one time licensed, and Chin failed to disclose to respondents that the license had since lapsed.
The trial court reasonably could have found that respondents understandably relied on Chin to their detriment.
[6]
Chin's citation to Zellers v. Playa Pacifica, Ltd.
(1998)
61 Cal.App.4th 129 (
Zellers ), for a contrary result is misplaced. In Zeller, a property owner hired a licensed
contractor and the licensed contractor hired Zeller to help with the work. Shortly thereafter, the contractor's
license expired and three weeks later, Zeller was injured on the job. After the property owner's insurance carrier
paid Zeller's workers' compensation claim, Zeller "switched hats, decided he was an independent contractor and not
the owner's employee, and sued the owner for tort damages. The trial court granted the owner's motion for summary
judgment, finding that Zeller's exclusive remedy was under the Workers' Compensation Act." ( Id . at p.
131.) The appellate court affirmed, but it did not consider application of estoppel. " 'A decision, of course, does
not stand for a proposition not [166 Cal.App.4th 1009] considered
by the court.' [Citation.]" ( Novartis Vaccines & Diagnostics, Inc. v. Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty USA,
Inc. (2006)
143 Cal.App.4th 1284 ,
1299.)
We
turn next to whether the trial court improperly placed the burden of proof on this issue on Chin.
B.
The Trial Court Did Not Improperly Impose on Chin the Burden
of Proving He Was an Employee
[7]
In Meier, supra , our Supreme Court "placed the burden of determining workers' license status squarely on
the [hirer] and in the absence of a misrepresentation by the contractor as to license status, the unlicensed
contractor cannot be estopped from denying independent contractor status and claiming benefits as an employee."
( Rosas v. Dishong (1998)
67 Cal.App.4th 815 ,
820.)
Chin contends
the trial court improperly imposed upon him the burden of proving that he was an employee. He points to the written
statement of decision which states in part: "Plaintiff did not establish that he was an employee of any defendant
at the time of his accident or otherwise." "Since Plaintiff did not prove he was an employee of any defendant, his
first through seventh causes of action fail because they rely on the finding that defendants violated the wage and
hour laws." We disagree.
On
appeal, we presume the judgment is correct and indulge all intendments and presumptions in favor of its
correctness. ( Steele v. Youthful Offender Parole Bd. (2008)
162 Cal.App.4th 1241 ,
1251.) Applying that general rule, we conclude that, while the language quoted by Chin was inartful, the statement of decision as a whole does not establish that
the trial court improperly imposed the burden of proof on Chin. On
the contrary, the trial court's statements reflect it found respondents credible and Chin not: it did not believe Chin's testimony that he allowed his license to expire because he became
employed by the respondents; it did not believe Chin's testimony
that Trial Exhibit No. 101 was not a bid; and it did not believe Chin's testimony that the respondents' controlled the manner and hours of
Chin's work. By implication, the trial court believed respondents'
contrary evidence. Chin has not established that the trial court
misplaced the burden of proof, and, since substantial evidence supported the trial court's finding, we affirm the
judgment. [166 Cal.App.4th 1010]
DISPOSITION
The
judgment is affirmed. Respondents to recover their costs.
Cooper,
P. J., and Flier, J., concurred.
FN 1. The
record on appeal for the most part refers to respondent Tony Namvar as "Numbar." Because respondent spelled his
name for the reporter during the trial, we use that spelling in the case caption and throughout our opinion.
FN 2. In
addition to Chin's Labor Code and other claims, Chin's wife sought recovery for loss of consortium.
FN 3. The
Chins also contend the trial court erred in (1) failing to find that respondents were joint employers; (2) applying
Business and Professions Code section 7031, which precludes unlicensed contractors from bringing an action for
compensation for the performance of work that requires a contractor's license; and (3) failing to enter judgment in
Chin's favor on his unpaid wage and other claims. Since it is
undisputed that Chin was performing work for which a license is
required but was unlicensed, the trial court properly applied Business and Professions Code section 7031. (See
Filmore v. Irvine (1983)
146 Cal.App.3d 649 ,
657.) And since, as we explain, Chin was estopped from denying that
he was an independent contractor, the claims arising out his alleged status as an employee necessarily fail, and we
need not decide whether respondents were joint employers.
FN 4. "In
reviewing the evidence on appeal, we resolve all conflicts in favor of the prevailing party, and we indulge in all
legitimate and reasonable inferences to uphold the finding if possible. Our power begins and ends with a
determination as to whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, that will support
the finding. When two or more inferences can be reasonably deduced from the facts, we cannot substitute our own
deductions for those of the trial court. [Citation.]" ( Air Couriers Internat. v. Employment Development
Dept. (2007)
150 Cal.App.4th 923 ,
937 ( Air Couriers ).)
FN 5. Namvar
was familiar with Pentaco Construction Services, Inc. At the time of trial, it had been dormant for about a year.
When it was operating, the company oversaw project management services. Pentaco Construction Services, Inc., never
provided any management services to Hollywood 28, L.L.C. There was no such company as "Pentaco Management Namco
Capital Group, Inc." "Namco Capital Group, Inc." was a company owned by Namvar's brother and it was not affiliated
with the Pentaco companies. In its statement of decision, the trial court clarified that respondent Pentaco
Construction Services, Inc., is not the same as Pentaco Management, Inc., against whom Chin was pursuing a contemporaneous workers' compensation claim.
FN 6. According
to the Reporter's Transcript, Namvar stated that this occurred in 1985 or 1986. But Namvar testified that he had an
"eight to nine year relationship" with Chin. And Chin answered affirmatively when asked whether he heard Namvar testify that
they first met to do a project in 1996. Thus, it appears that the reference in the Reporter's Transcript to 1985 or
1986 is erroneous.
FN 7.
Chin testified
that he lost his painting contractor's license in 2000 because the paperwork in English - Chin testified with a Korean interpreter - was too much for him to handle.
Earlier at his deposition, Chin testified that his license had been
suspended because of something his son did.
FN 8. As
on the previous projects, Chin worked 10 hours a day 6 days a week
at Hollywood 28, L.L.C. For this work, Chin was paid with checks
from Hollywood 28, L.L.C. These checks were dated February 10, 2004; February 17, 2004; March 4, 2004; April 8,
2004; April 20, 2004; and May 11, 2004. The February 17 and April 20 checks were for $1,500. The other four were of
differing amounts ranging from $500 to $2,000.
FN 9.
Chin testified
that the ladder from which he fell and the scaffolding onto which he fell were provided by Nadjat-Haiem;
Chin never provided any materials for that job. At his deposition,
Chin testified that he brought his own ladder and scaffolding to
the job site. At trial, Chin said the deposition transcript was
incorrect and he clarified that he brought the ladder and scaffolding from where they were stored to the job site.
FN 10. The
trial court noted that in the workers' compensation proceedings against Pentaco Management, Inc.,
Chin testified that he was an employee of Pentaco Management,
Inc; the court expressly made "no finding as to whether [Chin] was an employee of Pentaco Management, which is not a party to this
litigation and against which [Chin] has a workers'
compensation claim."
FN 11. Section
2750.5 provides in part: "Proof of independent contractor status includes satisfactory proof of these factors: [¶]
(a) That the individual has the right to control and discretion as to the manner of performance of the contract for
services in that the result of the work and not the means by which it is accomplished is the primary factor
bargained for. [¶] (b) That the individual is customarily engaged in an independently established business. [¶] (c)
. . . [T]he presence of cumulative factors such as substantial investment other than personal services in the
business, holding out to be in business for oneself, bargaining for a contract to complete a specific project for
compensation by project rather than by time, control over the time and place the work is performed, supplying the
tools or instrumentalities used in the work . . . , hiring employees, performing work that is not ordinarily in the
course of the principal's work, performing work that requires a particular skill, holding a license pursuant to the
Business and Professions Code, the intent of the parties that the work relationship is of an independent contactor
status, or that the relationship is not severable or terminable at will by the principal but gives rise to an
action for breach of contract."
FN 12. In
Rinaldi , the precise question for the court was whether the unlicensed subcontractor's (Butler) estoppel
extended to his injured employee (Zagainoff) as against the general contractor (Smyth). The Court of Appeal held it
did not; it found Smyth was the ultimate hirer and that the fund could proceed against Smyth to recover monies paid
to Zagainoff under the settlement agreement. ( Rinaldi , supra , 199 Cal.App.3d at pp. 223-224; see
Hunt Building Corp. v. Bernick (2000)
79 Cal.App.4th 213 ,
220 [general contractor is employer of its unlicensed subcontractors as well as of those employed by the unlicensed
subcontractors].) We are not faced with a similar situation here, as there is no injured "Zagainoff" in the present
case. Chin is the unlicensed contractor, it was Chin who misrepresented the status of his contractor's license by omitting to
tell respondents that his license had lapsed, and it was Chin who
was injured. We conclude the Rinaldi court's comments about Butler being estopped apply here.
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