Dept. Of Labor & Industries, V. Potelco, Inc.:jeff Lampman & Brett Mongomery ( 2024 )


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  •           IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
    INDUSTRIES,                                       No. 86066-6-I
    Appellant,                   DIVISION ONE
    v.                                  UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    POTELCO, INC.; JEFF LAMPMAN;
    and BRET MONTGOMERY;
    Respondents.
    MANN, J. — The Department of Labor and Industries (Department) issued
    citations to Potelco, Inc., Jeff Lampman, and Bret Montgomery, (collectively Potelco) for
    electrical work done installing Verizon 5G equipment on Seattle City Light utility poles.
    Potelco appealed arguing that its work was exempt from the licensing requirements of
    ch. 19.28 RCW because the “utility exemption” in RCW 19.28.010(1) applied. The
    Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) and the Electrical Board of the State of
    Washington (Board) affirmed the citations. The King County Superior Court reversed
    concluding that the utility exemption applied. We agree with the superior court and
    conclude the utility exemption applied to Potelco’s work. We affirm the superior court,
    reverse the Board’s final order, and remand to the Board to vacate the citations.
    No. 86066-6-I/2
    I
    Potelco is a licensed electrical contractor. Potelco’s electrical administrator is
    Jeff Lampman whose role is to ensure that Potelco complies with all applicable laws
    and regulations. Bret Montgomery is a journey-level, high-voltage lineman and has
    worked for Potelco off and on since 2007.
    Potelco has a multi-year contract with Seattle City Light to perform electrical
    work on its utility poles. Verizon contracted with Seattle City Light to have 5G
    equipment installed on Seattle City Light utility poles. Seattle City Light paid Potelco to
    perform the installations. Between August and December 2020, Potelco obtained 52
    permits for installing the Verizon 5G equipment on Seattle City Light utility poles.
    Potelco began performing these installations in fall 2020.
    Montgomery was the project foreman. The project involved installing a
    disconnect switch on the utility pole. Montgomery testified that installation involved a
    simple wiring process performed on a box with individual breakers, similar to a fuse box
    in a residential house.
    On December 4, 2020, Annette Lake, an inspector with the City of Seattle
    inspected one of the installations. While investigating, she learned that Montgomery
    made the installation, but he was not an 01 certified electrician. Lake reported her
    concern to her supervisor, Tim Rasmussen, and to Sergey Zinakov, an electrical
    inspector with the Department. Zinakov investigated and confirmed that Montgomery
    did not meet the licensing requirements of ch. 19.28 RCW. Prior to the citations, 35 of
    the 52 installations had been inspected and approved by the City of Seattle.
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    No. 86066-6-I/3
    Zinakov issued noncompliance citations to Potelco, Lampman, and Montgomery.
    Potelco was cited for employing an individual to perform electrical work for which he
    was not licensed, a violation of RCW 19.28.271. Lampman was cited for failing as an
    administrator to ensure all the electrical work performed by Potelco followed the law, a
    violation of RCW 19.28.061(5)(d). Montgomery was cited for performing electrical work
    without the proper license, a violation of RCW 19.28.161. The Department fined
    Potelco, Lampman, and Montgomery $250 for each of the 52 installations, for a total of
    $13,000 each.
    Potelco, Lampman, and Montgomery jointly appealed their citations to OAH. An
    OAH administrative law judge affirmed the citations in an initial order. The OAH
    reasoned that none of the exemptions in RCW 19.28.010(1) apply. The OAH
    specifically rejected the argument that the utility exemption applied. The OAH reduced
    the penalties to $12,500 because the evidence showed only 50 of the 52 installations
    had been completed.
    Potelco appealed the initial order to the Board. The Board adopted and
    incorporated the OAH’s findings and conclusions of law. Potelco then appealed to the
    King County Superior Court. The superior court reversed, finding that the Board
    erroneously interpreted the law when it concluded that the utility exemption did not
    apply. The court concluded that the utility exemption applied because Potelco and
    Montgomery performed the work for the purpose of communication under a contract
    that was under the control of an electric utility. The court reversed the citations under
    RCW 34.04.574(1) and remanded to vacate the citations.
    The Department appeals.
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    No. 86066-6-I/4
    II
    Potelco argues that the citations should be vacated because the work was
    exempt from the licensing requirements in ch. 19.28 RCW under the “utility exemption”
    in RCW 19.28.010(1). We agree.
    A
    Under the Washington Administrative Procedure Act (APA), ch. 34.05 RCW, we
    directly review the Board’s decision based on the record before the agency. Pilchuck
    Contractors, Inc. v. Dep’t of Lab. & Indus., 
    170 Wn. App. 514
    , 517, 
    286 P.3d 383
    (2012). When reviewing an agency decision under the APA, we sit in the same position
    as the superior court and give no deference to the superior court’s findings.
    Darkenwald v. Emp’t Sec. Dep’t, 
    183 Wn.2d 237
    , 244, 
    350 P.3d 647
     (2015). “The
    burden of demonstrating the invalidity of agency action is on the party asserting
    invalidity.” RCW 34.05.570(1)(a). While the Department is the appellant before this
    court, Potelco has the burden of demonstrating the invalidity of the Board’s decision.
    We review the Board’s conclusions of law de novo. Whatcom County v. Hirst,
    
    186 Wn.2d 648
    , 667, 
    381 P.3d 1
     (2016). An appellant is entitled to relief if the Board
    erroneously interpreted or applied the law, if the conclusions are not supported by the
    findings, or if the decision is inconsistent with an agency rule. Clausing v. State, 
    90 Wn. App. 863
    , 870, 
    955 P.2d 394
     (1998).
    We interpret statutes and regulations alike, de novo. Wash. Cedar & Supply Co.
    v. Dep’t of Lab. & Indus, 
    137 Wn. App. 592
    , 598, 
    154 P.3d 287
     (2007). When
    interpreting statutes and regulations we look first to the plain language. HomeStreet,
    Inc. v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, 
    166 Wn.2d 444
    , 451, 
    210 P.3d 297
     (2009). Where the
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    No. 86066-6-I/5
    plain language is unambiguous, the statute or regulation’s meaning must be derived
    from the wording itself. HomeStreet, 166 Wn.2d at 451. “Absent ambiguity or a
    statutory definition, we give words in a statute their common and ordinary meaning. . . .
    To determine the plain meaning of an undefined term, we may look to the dictionary.”
    HomeStreet, 166 Wn.2d at 451 (citing Garrison v. Wash. State Nursing Bd., 
    87 Wn.2d 195
    , 196, 
    550 P.2d 7
     (1976)).
    B
    RCW 19.28.161(1) requires individuals engaging in the “electrical construction
    trade” to have certain required electrical certificates or licenses. “Electrical construction
    trade” includes “installing or maintaining electrical wires and equipment that are used for
    light, heat, or power and installing and maintaining remote control, signaling, power
    limited, or communication circuits or systems.” RCW 19.28.006(7); see also RCW
    19.28.161(1), (2).
    RCW 19.28.010(1) exempts from ch. 19.28 RCW’s licensing requirements “[a]ll
    wires and equipment that fall within section 90.2(b)(5) of the National Electrical Code,
    1981 edition.”1 Section 90.2(b)(5) of the National Electrical Code (NEC), in turn,
    provides that installations under the exclusive control of the utility, “for the purpose of
    communication, or metering; or for the generation, control, transformation, transmission,
    and distribution of electric energy” are not covered by the NEC.
    WAC 296-46B-925(18)(a)(i)-(ii) implements RCW 19.28.010(1) and provides the
    following definition:
    1 RCW 19.28.010(1) was amended in 2019 by Substitute House Bill 1594.   It added new
    exemptions but it did not modify the utility exemption.
    -5-
    No. 86066-6-I/6
    (a) Utility system exemption – RCW 19.28.010(1) and 19.28.091(1).
    (i) Neither a serving electrical utility nor a contractor or
    subcontractor employed by the serving electrical utility is required to have
    an electrical contractor's license for work on the “utility system” or on
    service connections or on meters or other apparatus used to measure the
    consumption of electricity.
    (ii) Exemption from inspection. The work of a serving electrical
    utility and its contractor(s) on the work exempted by NEC 90.2(b)(5), 1981
    edition, is not subject to inspection.
    Consistent with RCW 19.28.010, WAC 296-46B-100 defines “utility system” as:
    “Utility system” means electrical equipment owned by or under the control
    of a serving utility that is used for the transmission or distribution of
    electricity from the source of supply to the point of contact and is defined
    in section 90.2(b)(5) of the National Electrical Code, 1981 edition (see
    RCW 19.28.010(1)).
    (Emphasis added.) Thus, both RCW 19.28.010(1), and its implementing regulation,
    WAC 296-46B-925(18)(a)(i)-(ii), incorporate and rely on section 90.2(b)(5) of the NEC.
    1
    The parties dispute the meaning of the term “communication” as used in section
    90.2(b)(5) of the NEC. The Department argues that the use of “communication” means
    “communication of the power to the machine.” Potelco responds that “communication”
    includes systems relating to telephone systems, which are the installations that Potelco
    did here. We agree with Potelco.
    The NEC does not define “communication.” Nor does ch. 19.28 RCW.
    Webster’s defines “communication” in relevant part to mean “the act or action of
    imparting or transmitting.” W EBSTER'S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 460 (2002).
    Webster’s defines “communications” in relevant part as a “means of communicating: (1)
    -6-
    No. 86066-6-I/7
    a system (as of telephones or telegraphs) for communicating information.” W EBSTER’S
    at 460.
    The ALJ and Board ignored the phrase “for the purpose of communication” in
    NEC 90.2(b)(5). The ALJ’s conclusion of law 5.6 and Board’s conclusion of law 3.3
    concluded that the utility exemption did not apply because the exemption only
    addresses “work involving utility-owned electrical equipment for the transmission or
    distribution of electricity,” which the Board concluded ‘[w]as not the case here.”
    (Emphasis added.) While equipment for the transmission or distribution of electricity is
    one of the categories covered by the utility exemption, NEC 90.2(b)(5) uses “or” to
    separate “for the purpose of communication” or “metering” or “for the generation,
    control, transformation, transmission, and distribution of electric energy.” (Emphasis
    added.) The Board ignored that NEC 90.2(b)(5) defines three distinct types of utility
    installations that are exempt from licensing and instead focused on one.
    The Department argues that its interpretation of communication is supported by
    reading “communication” and “metering” together. But the code does not say
    communication and metering, it says communication or metering. Based on the plain
    language of the regulation, the Department’s argument fails. 2
    2
    The Department argues that “the lynchpin of this case is whether the installation
    and wiring of the electrical service disconnect box was under the exclusive control of the
    utility.” The Department contends it was not because the work was performed on
    2 The Department also advances several policy-based, safety arguments.      But these arguments
    do not defeat the plain meaning of the statute that exempts Potelco from the licensing requirements of ch.
    19.28 RCW.
    -7-
    No. 86066-6-I/8
    Verizon’s project, with Verizon’s equipment, and under Verizon’s supervision. In
    contrast, Potelco argues that the contract Potelco was working under was with Seattle
    City Light, Potelco was paid by Seattle City Light, and the work was performed on
    Seattle City Light property. We agree with Potelco.
    The record demonstrates that Seattle City Light, not Verizon, was in exclusive
    control. The work Potelco was doing was at the request of, and under direct contract
    with, Seattle City Light. Potelco was paid for the work by Seattle City Light, not Verizon.
    The work was being performed on Seattle City Light’s utility poles and involved Seattle
    City Light power lines and connections. Verizon’s equipment was being installed on
    Seattle City Light utility poles only with Seattle City Light’s express permission. And the
    schematics Verizon prepared were submitted to Seattle City Light for its approval and
    then Seattle City Light provided the approved schematics to its subcontractor, Potelco.
    Accordingly, Potelco was exempt from the licensing requirements of ch. 19.28
    RCW because the installations were performed for the purpose of communication under
    the exclusive control of a utility. The Board incorrectly found that the utility exemption
    did not apply relying solely on the last half of NEC 90.2(b)(5) and ignoring the “for the
    purpose of communication” section of the code.
    For these reasons, the utility exemption applied to Potelco’s work. We affirm the
    superior court, reverse the Board’s final order, and remand to the Board to vacate the
    citations.
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    No. 86066-6-I/9
    WE CONCUR:
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 86066-6

Filed Date: 11/25/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/25/2024