Under the
ruling in Violante v. Community Southwest Development and Construction
Co., the answer was no. An employee of a subcontractor who has
not been paid prevailing wages cannot sue the prime contractor
to obtain the prevailing wages.
In
Violante, three plaintiffs (workers/employees of a subcontractor),
sued the prime contractor, the developer, and a limited liability
company, as well as various other parties for failure to pay prevailing
wages. The project was a public works project and therefore, by statute,
required the payment of prevailing wages to employees of the general
contractor and all subcontractors on the project as set forth under section
1774 of the Labor Code.
The trial
court sustained (agreed with) a demurrer (a motion that determined
plaintiffs did not have sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action
against the developer or the prime contractor). In other words, the trial
court found these plaintiffs did not have any facts to support the causes of
action for alleged violation of the prevailing wage statute against the
general contractor and developers. It is interesting there was never
any issue that the subcontractor failed to pay prevailing wages since that
fact was admitted. Rather, the issue was whether the plaintiffs had a right
to sue the prime contractor and the developers for the prevailing wage. The
trial court said there was no such right and the Court of Appeal agreed.
The Court of
Appeal determined its task was to decide whether the three plaintiffs could
state a cause of action for a statutory violation of section 1774 of the
Labor Code. The Court of Appeal determined the requirement under
Labor Code Section 1774 to be that the contractor (prime contractor) pay
its employees the prevailing wage and that the subcontractors pay their
workers the prevailing wage. The Court of Appeal, however, found no
authority whatsoever for broadening Labor Code Section 1774, to
require the prime contractor to pay the subcontractor’s employees
prevailing wage. Therefore, the Court of Appeal found no authority that the
prime contractor should be held liable to the plaintiffs when the employer
of these employees (the subcontractor) did not pay the prevailing wages.
The workers
argued that the defendants (developer and prime contractor) violated
Labor Code Section 1774 because plaintiffs were not paid prevailing
wages by their direct employer, a subcontractor. The plaintiffs based their
position on Section 1772 of the Labor Code, which states, “Workers
employed by contractors or subcontractors in the execution of any contract
for public work are deemed to be employed upon public work.” The plaintiffs
also relied upon Labor Code Section 1774 which states, “The
contractor to whom the contract is awarded, and any subcontractor under him,
shall pay not less than the specified prevailing rates of wages to all
workmen employed in the execution of the contract.” They argued that this
would require the developer and prime contractor to pay prevailing wages to
the subcontractor’s employees.
The Court of
Appeal held that Labor Code Section 1774 cannot be interpreted to
mean that the prime contractor must pay the subcontractor’s
employees the prevailing wage if that subcontractor fails to do so. The
Labor Code provides that a contractor and a subcontractor must pay
prevailing wages to their respective employees on public works projects, not
that a prime contractor must pay prevailing wages to a subcontractor’s
employees.