Ramirez Bros v. Special fund/ortega/diaz ( 2022 )


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  •                      NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    RAMIREZ BROS LANDSCAPING DBA RAMIREZ BROS
    LANDSCAPING, FERNANDO RAMIREZ, Petitioner Employer,
    v.
    THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION OF ARIZONA, Respondent,
    MARIO ORTEGA, LUIS I DIAZ, Respondent Employees,
    SPECIAL FUND DIVISION/NO INSURANCE SECTION, Respondent Real
    Party in Interest.
    No. 1 CA-IC 21-0011
    FILED 11-16-2021
    Special Action - Industrial Commission
    ICA Claim No. 20190-0590269
    Claim No. 20200-910025
    Carrier Claim No. NONE
    The Honorable Marceline A. Lavelle, Administrative Law Judge
    AWARD AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Zazueta Law, PLLC, Scottsdale
    By Fabian Zazueta (argued), Garrett Respondek
    Counsel for Petitioner Employer
    Industrial Commission of Arizona, Phoenix
    By Gaetano J. Testini
    Counsel for Respondent
    Nunez Law Firm, PLLC, Phoenix
    By Jason H. Forcier
    Counsel for Respondent Employees
    Industrial Commission of Arizona, Phoenix
    By Scott J. Cooley
    Counsel for Respondent Real Party in Interest
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Paul J. McMurdie delivered the Court’s decision, in which Presiding
    Judge Peter B. Swann and Judge David D. Weinzweig joined.
    M c M U R D I E, Judge:
    ¶1           Fernando Ramirez (“Ramirez”), doing business as Ramirez
    Bros. Landscaping (“Ramirez Bros.”), brings this special action review
    challenging an Industrial Commission of Arizona (“ICA”) Award that
    found Ramirez Bros. subject to Arizona workers’ compensation liability.
    Because the evidence shows that Ramirez Bros. regularly employed
    workers in conducting its business, we affirm the award.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2          We view the facts in a light most favorable to sustaining the
    Award. Salt River Project v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    128 Ariz. 541
    , 544–45 (1981).
    Ramirez Bros. is a sole proprietorship of Fernando Ramirez that provides
    landscaping maintenance and other landscaping-related services to clients.
    Ramirez sometimes hired workers to help Ramirez Bros.
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    ¶3             In February 2019, Mario Ortega and Luis Diaz traveled in a
    pickup truck to work for Ramirez when they were involved in an auto
    accident. They went to the emergency room afterward, but the men
    suffered no serious injuries. Later, they received treatment from a
    chiropractor. They both filed workers’ compensation claims. Ramirez
    denied liability under workers’ compensation law, arguing that he did not
    regularly hire employees and was, therefore, not an employer subject to
    workers’ compensation liability.
    ¶4           The ICA held a hearing to determine whether Ramirez was an
    employer as prescribed in A.R.S. § 23-902(A), which provides that
    [e]mployers subject to this chapter are . . . every person who
    employs any workers or operatives regularly employed in the
    same business or establishment under contract of hire
    . . . . For the purposes of this subsection, “regularly
    employed” includes all employments, whether continuous
    throughout the year, or for only a portion of the year, in the
    usual trade, business, profession or occupation of an
    employer.
    An employer is not subject to the Workers’ Compensation Act if it “hires
    only occasionally and unpredictably.” Donahue v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    178 Ariz. 173
    , 179 (App. 1993).
    ¶5             The administrative law judge (“ALJ”) needed to decide
    whether Ramirez hired only occasionally and unpredictably, not regularly.
    Both Ortega and Diaz testified at the hearing, explaining that Ramirez had
    consistently hired them from September 2018 until the accident, and they
    worked full time for Ramirez Bros. They repaired irrigation systems,
    planted vegetation, and installed pavers. They were paid weekly in cash.
    And Ramirez supplied a truck to Ortega equipped with tools. Ortega kept
    the truck at his house so that when Ramirez called in the mornings, Ortega
    could pick up Diaz and drive to job locations. On the morning of the
    accident, the truck had been kept at Ortega’s house for two weeks. After the
    accident, Ramirez asked the men to do more work for him, but they
    declined because they were recovering from their injuries.
    ¶6            Ramirez testified that he started Ramirez Bros. by himself
    “[a]round two or three years ago” and usually did the work himself. He
    first asked Ortega and Diaz to work for Ramirez Bros. in September 2018
    because they could not find work, and he wanted to help them. Ramirez
    sent Ortega and Diaz to work on an irrigation system on the morning of the
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    RAMIREZ BROS v. SPECIAL FUND/ORTEGA/DIAZ
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    accident. He usually hired them to install irrigation pipes and sprinklers,
    which he could do himself if he wanted. He loaned his truck and tools to
    Ortega to keep at his house and use when Ramirez had work for them. He
    denied, however, that he regularly hired workers to help him.
    ¶7             The ALJ found Ortega and Diaz more credible than Ramirez.
    She issued an initial award that did not address whether Ramirez was a
    covered employer. Instead, the initial award found that Ortega and Diaz
    were Ramirez’s employees, not independent contractors under A.R.S.
    § 23-902(B) and (C). After Ramirez requested review, directing her attention
    to whether Ramirez was a covered employer, the ALJ found that Ramirez
    had offered Ortega and Diaz work regularly, showing that Ramirez Bros.
    regularly employed the men such that Ramirez Bros. was a covered
    employer to whom workers’ compensation liability applied. This petition
    for special action review followed.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8           The question presented, whether Ramirez is an employer
    subject to workers’ compensation liability, is a mixed question of fact and
    law. Donahue, 178 Ariz. at 179. We deferentially review the ALJ’s factual
    findings and apply the law de novo to determine whether Ramirez is an
    employer covered by the workers’ compensation law. See Grammatico v.
    Indus. Comm’n, 
    208 Ariz. 10
    , 12, ¶ 6 (App. 2011).
    ¶9            The record contains evidence to support the ALJ’s finding
    that Ramirez Bros. regularly employed Ortega and Diaz under A.R.S.
    § 23-902(A). The testimony shows that Ortega and Diaz worked and
    remained “on call” for Ramirez Bros. from September 2018 until the
    accident. But Ramirez Bros. argues it was not a “covered employer” under
    Arizona law and relies on Donahue and Putz v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    203 Ariz. 146
    (App. 2002). Its reliance is misplaced.
    ¶10            In Donahue, a sole proprietor handyman, who predominately
    worked alone, at times hired others to do electrical, plumbing, and air
    conditioning work for his projects. 178 Ariz. at 175. He never had a regular
    employee. Id. Over five years, he also hired “casual laborers” several times
    a year to help him out. Id. He hired Donahue to work for a “‘couple’ of
    days” on two ramadas he was building. Id. Donahue was injured on the job,
    and whether the handyman was a covered employer became dispositive.
    Id. at 174–75.
    ¶11          As noted above, we construed A.R.S. § 23-902(A) to be an
    inquiry of “whether it is in the employer’s regular or customary business to
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    RAMIREZ BROS v. SPECIAL FUND/ORTEGA/DIAZ
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    employ workers, not . . . whether the employee in question is performing a
    task in the employer’s usual trade.” Id. at 176. We concluded that the statute
    renders an employer subject to the [Workers’ Compensation]
    Act only when he employs at least one employee in the
    regular course of his business. If the employer ordinarily does
    not regularly employ any workers—if he hires only
    occasionally and unpredictably—he is not subject to the
    [Workers’ Compensation] Act.
    Id. at 179. Applying that standard to the situation in Donahue, we found that
    the handyman’s employment of others was “infrequent and
    unpredictable,” putting him outside the statutory meaning of a covered
    employer. Id.
    ¶12           Similarly, in Putz we held that a sole proprietor residential
    contractor was not a covered employer after a welder helping Putz put
    together a prefabricated metal building was injured. 
    203 Ariz. at 147, ¶¶ 1-2
    .
    Putz worked alone and hired help only when he needed another person to
    help him lift something heavy or for other two-person jobs. 
    Id. at 147, ¶ 2
    .
    He testified that in the year before the welder was injured, he had hired
    others to work “a number of hours totaling approximately thirty-two
    eight-hour workdays.” 
    Id. at 147, ¶ 5
    . We rejected an approach that merely
    compared percentages, noting that while such information may help
    determine an employer’s hiring practices, such comparisons in and of
    themselves do not serve the purpose of the statute, which is to provide
    stability in knowing when workers’ compensation liability applies. 
    Id. at 150
    , ¶¶ 18–19. Thus, we posed the issue as: “Did Putz customarily or
    regularly employ at least one worker or was his hiring of extra labor only
    occasional and unpredictable?” 
    Id. at 150, ¶ 20
    .
    ¶13            We concluded the latter, noting that Putz’s need for
    short-term labor was not predictable because it depended on the
    requirements of each job, that most of his projects required only his labor,
    which he performed himself, and his need for extra help was inconsistent.
    
    Id. at 150
    , ¶¶ 22–23.
    [N]o bright-line rule exists notifying self-employed
    employers when they become subject to the [Workers’
    Compensation] Act. The analysis . . . calls for occasional
    case-by-case determinations when the facts regarding the use
    of extra short-term labor are close. Thus, there is risk involved
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    RAMIREZ BROS v. SPECIAL FUND/ORTEGA/DIAZ
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    when those who are self-employed hire others without
    purchasing workers’ compensation insurance.
    
    Id. at 151, ¶ 25
    .
    ¶14           The facts show that Ramirez Bros. had regularly hired Ortega
    and Diaz for five months before the accident. In addition, Ramirez Bros.
    provided Ortega with a truck and tools, showing a lasting relationship with
    ongoing expectations and responsibilities. Nor did Ortega and Diaz work
    alongside Ramirez; they worked independently. Thus, unlike Donahue and
    Putz, this evidence shows a plan of regular employment, placing Ramirez
    Bros. within the coverage of workers’ compensation liability.
    ¶15           Finally, Ortega and Diaz request an award of reasonable
    attorney’s fees, stating that Ramirez’s petition for special action review of
    the Award is without substantial justification and was not made in good
    faith. But Ortega and Diaz do not explain the contention that this special
    action review has no justifiable basis.
    ¶16           Both A.R.S. § 12-349(A) and Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate
    Procedure 25 give this court authority to impose sanctions for bringing
    appeals that have no substantial justification or are frivolous. The purpose
    of such a sanction is to “discourage similar conduct in the future.” ARCAP
    25. We are guided in this decision by several principles. First, we note that
    [f]rivolous appeals are not new or novel theories raised upon
    colorable claims, nor positions on appeal that simply fail to
    prevail. Instead, a frivolous appeal is one brought for an
    improper purpose or based on issues which are unsupported
    by any reasonable legal theory.
    Johnson v. Brimlow, 
    164 Ariz. 218
    , 222 (App. 1990) (citations omitted). We are
    mindful of the chilling effect these sanctions might have on other litigants.
    Price v. Price, 
    134 Ariz. 112
    , 114 (App. 1982) (Courts “should not deter the
    filing of appeals out of fear of reprisal.”). A meritless appeal is not
    necessarily frivolous. 
    Id.
     “Because the line between a frivolous appeal and
    one which simply has no merit is fine, indeed, the power to punish
    attorneys or litigants for prosecuting frivolous appeals ‘should be used
    most sparingly[.]’” 
    Id.
    ¶17          In this context, we recall our ruling in Lou Grubb Chevrolet v.
    Indus. Comm’n, 
    171 Ariz. 183
     (App. 1991), where we agreed with the
    claimant that the carrier’s briefs were “a jeremiad” that was “both ill
    conceived and calculated to fail.” 
    Id. at 191
    . Yet we still did not impose
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    RAMIREZ BROS v. SPECIAL FUND/ORTEGA/DIAZ
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    sanctions because we did not find “the questions that it raised or the novel
    arguments that it presented [to be] frivolous.” 
    Id.
     We take a similar view
    here. Thus, even though the record provides little support for Ramirez’s
    appeal, without any bright-line rule and the case-by-case nature of the legal
    issue raised, we exercise our discretion in favor of not imposing sanctions
    in this case.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶18          Because the facts support a determination that Ramirez Bros.
    regularly employed Ortega and Diaz, we agree with the ALJ’s conclusion
    that Ramirez is a covered employer and affirm the Award.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
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