From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

State, ex Rel., v. Indus. Comm

Supreme Court of Ohio
Oct 16, 1991
62 Ohio St. 3d 81 (Ohio 1991)

Summary

In Lake Erie, Lake Erie Construction Company ("Lake Erie") challenged a decision by the Bureau of Workers' Compensation to combine the experience rating of its predecessor, the Paul E. Bleile Company, with that of its own.

Summary of this case from State ex Rel. Crosset Co., Inc. v. Conrad

Opinion

No. 90-991

Submitted July 17, 1991 —

Decided October 16, 1991.

APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Franklin County, No. 88AP-894.

Paul E. Bleile Company ("Bleile"), incorporated in 1957, constructed highway guardrails, installed signs and landscaped roadways. Appellant, Lake Erie Construction Company, does similar work.

Bleile's Board of Directors met on April 4, 1983. The minutes of the meeting state that the board decided to cease competitive bidding as of June 1, 1983 because so many government contracts were being lost to minority-owned businesses. The board's minutes indicated that they were negotiating to sell Bleile's tools and equipment to appellant, and that pursuant to these negotiations, appellant had already agreed to continue the employment of all Bleile employees, assume Bleile's leases and purchase inventory and equipment. The minutes also noted that:

"As a result of the reduced activity of The Paul E. Bleile Co. in the business community, the Company should thusly be eliminated from making future contributions into the profit-sharing plans; therefore steps must be taken to amend the plans for The Lake Erie Construction Company employees profit-sharing plan and all participants would retain their eligibility through their employment with Lake Erie Construction Company. * * *"

Bleile stopped competing for new projects as planned. The following March, Bleile shareholders agreed to Bleile's stock repurchase. The resolution generated by their meeting spoke of a "winding down" of Bleile's business "with a view to getting out of the business of highway landscaping and construction."

On April 1, 1984, Bleile began its final construction project (which had been awarded before the June 1, 1983 cessation of bidding). Approximately three weeks into the project, five Bleile employees died in a plane crash en route to the Georgia construction site. Claims for Ohio workers' compensation death benefits were allowed on behalf of the deceased. Bleile's workers' compensation premium rates increased substantially as a result.

After the Georgia project ended, Bleile discontinued all operations. Purchase agreements between appellant and Bleile followed, and Bleile formally dissolved in late 1986.

In May 1987, appellee Bureau of Workers' Compensation completed a final audit of Bleile and recommended that Bleile's experience rating be combined with appellant's. The appellee Industrial Commission's Adjudicating Committee, after hearing, adopted the recommendation. Appellant unsuccessfully appealed to the commission.

Appellant filed a complaint in mandamus in the Court of Appeals for Franklin County, alleging that the commission abused its discretion in combining the two rate experiences. The appellate court disagreed and denied the writ.

This cause is before the court upon an appeal as of right.

Millisor Nobil, John R. Slater, Keith L. Pryatel and Roger L. Sabo, for appellant.

Lee I. Fisher, Attorney General, and Jeffrey W. Clark, for appellees.


R.C. 4123.32 provided in part:

"The industrial commission shall adopt rules with respect to the collection, maintenance, and disbursements of the state insurance fund among which rules shall be the following:

"* * *

"(D) Such special rules as the commission considers necessary to safeguard the fund and as are just in the circumstances, covering the rates to be applied where one employer takes over the occupation or industry of another * * * and the commission may require that if any employer transfers his business in whole or in part or otherwise reorganizes such business, the successor in interest shall assume, in proportion to the extent of such transfer, as determined by the commission, such employer's account and shall continue the payment of all contributions due under Chapter 4123. of the Revised Code[.]" Am.Sub.H.B. No. 1017, 137 Ohio Laws, Part II, 3710, 3711. (Current R.C. 4123.32 gives similar rule-making power to the Administrator of the Bureau of Workers' Compensation.)

Acting under this grant, the commission adopted Ohio Adm. Code 4121-7-02(B), which states:

"(B) Succeeding employers — experience.

"* * *

"(3) Where a legal entity having an established coverage or having had experience in the most recent experience period wholly succeeds one or more legal entities having established coverage or having had experience in the most recent experience period and at least one of the entities involved has a merit rating experience, the experience of all the involved entities shall be combined to establish the rate of the successor.

"(4) Where a legal entity succeeds in the operation of a portion of a business of one or more legal entities having an established coverage or having had experience in the most recent experience period, the successor's rate shall be based on the predecessor's experience within the most recent experience period, pertaining to the portion of the business acquired by the successor."

Appellant proposes that (1) it is not Bleile's successor in interest, and (2) it does not meet the common-law criteria for successor liability assumption and, therefore, cannot assume Bleile's rate experience. We disagree.

The current controversy centers on the definition of "successor in interest." Appellees define the term by the statutory language that precedes it — successor in interest being the transferee of a "business in whole or in part." Appellant responds that R.C. 4123.32 does not define the term and, therefore, under R.C. 1.49, the court must adopt a common-law definition. This argument fails.

We find no evidence in either R.C. 4123.32(D) or Ohio Adm. Code 4121-7-02(B) that "successor in interest" is intended to be the term of art that appellant claims. Both sections imply that a successor in interest, for workers' compensation purposes, is simply a transferee of a business in whole or in part. Presumably, the General Assembly would have expressly set forth a more specialized meaning if that was its intent. Contrary to appellant's representation, there is no need to look beyond these provisions.

Appellant also proposes that the successorship liability principles enunciated in Flaugher v. Cone Automatic Machine Co. (1987), 30 Ohio St.3d 60, 30 OBR 165, 507 N.E.2d 331, control the assumption of Bleile's rate experience. Flaugher stated:

"The general rule in products liability is that a successor corporation's amenability to suit will depend on the nature of the transaction which gave rise to the change in ownership. * * * Where the transfer is accomplished by means of a statutory merger or consolidation, the liability of the former corporation will be assumed by the new entity. * * * Where there is merely a sale of a corporation's assets, the buyer corporation is not liable for the seller corporation's tortious conduct unless one of the following four exceptions applies:

"(1) the buyer expressly or impliedly agrees to assume such liability;

"(2) the transaction amounts to a de facto consolidation or merger;

"(3) the buyer corporation is merely a continuation of the seller corporation; or

"(4) the transaction is entered into fraudulently for the purpose of escaping liability. * * *" (Citations omitted.) Id. at 62, 30 OBR at 167, 507 N.E.2d at 334.

We reject appellant's assertion for several reasons. First, the General Assembly in R.C. 4123.32(D) has already stated the experience-assumption criteria that it wants applied. Second, Flaugher involved products liability and amenability to common-law suit. Third, the criterion of Flaugher that there is "merely a sale of a corporation's assets" does not apply to appellant. Here, in addition to the purchase of the assets, appellant contractually agreed to retain all Bleile employees. Arrangements were also made for a successor profit-sharing plan and there was partial commonality of directors. Accordingly, we find Flaugher inapplicable.

For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

MOYER, C.J., SWEENEY, HOLMES, DOUGLAS, WRIGHT, H. BROWN and RESNICK, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

State, ex Rel., v. Indus. Comm

Supreme Court of Ohio
Oct 16, 1991
62 Ohio St. 3d 81 (Ohio 1991)

In Lake Erie, Lake Erie Construction Company ("Lake Erie") challenged a decision by the Bureau of Workers' Compensation to combine the experience rating of its predecessor, the Paul E. Bleile Company, with that of its own.

Summary of this case from State ex Rel. Crosset Co., Inc. v. Conrad

In Lake Erie, this court expressly declined to adopt a narrower common-law definition of "successor in interest" of the type suggested by the majority here, and expressly rejected a proposed analogy to the definition of a "successor corporation" under the law of products liability.

Summary of this case from State ex Rel. Crosset Co., Inc. v. Conrad

In Lake Erie, we concluded that the successor employer qualified as a successor in interest under R.C. 4123.32(D) (and an associated rule) because an existing entity, the successor employer, bought the predecessor employer's tools and equipment, agreed to employ the predecessor's employees, and assumed the predecessor's leases — even though the successor continued operations under a distinct name.

Summary of this case from State ex Rel. Crosset Co., Inc. v. Conrad

In Lake Erie, we refused to apply common-law theories of corporate successor liability to determine when succeeding employers must assume their predecessor's experience rating.

Summary of this case from State ex Rel. v. Workers' Comp

In State ex rel. Lake Erie Constr. Co. v. Indus. Comm. (1991), 62 Ohio St.3d 81, the Ohio Supreme Court held that "a successor in interest, for workers' compensation purposes, is simply a transferee of a business in whole or in part."

Summary of this case from State ex rel. Daily Servs., LLC v. Buehrer

In Lake Erie, company A and company B performed similar work: constructed highway guardrails, installed signs, and landscaped roadways.

Summary of this case from Valley Roofing v. Bur. of Work. Comp.
Case details for

State, ex Rel., v. Indus. Comm

Case Details

Full title:THE STATE, EX REL.] LAKE ERIE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, APPELLANT, v…

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Oct 16, 1991

Citations

62 Ohio St. 3d 81 (Ohio 1991)
578 N.E.2d 458

Citing Cases

State ex Rel. Crosset Co., Inc. v. Conrad

II In reaching their decisions, both the court of appeals and the Bureau relied on this court's decision in…

State ex Rel. v. Workers' Comp

1979-1980 Ohio Monthly Record 4-359. The agencies rely principally on R.C. 4123.32(D), as interpreted and…