982 N.E.2d 987 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2008
{¶ 1} Relators-appellants, Joseph Zimmer and Anthony Brice, appeal the trial court's judgment granting a motion to dismiss filed by respondent-appellee, the city of Cincinnati. We reverse.
{¶ 3} Parker Flats consists of a 49-unit housing development built atop a three-story parking garage. One story of the parking garage will be open to the public. The developer received a $600,000 grant from the city to expend on the project. The city also conveyed to the developer, for one dollar, the property on which the project would be constructed, although it had a fair market value of $230,000.
{¶ 4} The funding agreement between the city and the developer provided that the city funding would be expended only on certain aspects of the parking garage. They agreed that the construction of the parking garage was subject to Ohio's *590 prevailing-wage law.1 But they treated the housing development separately and proceeded as if that part of the project were exempt from the prevailing-wage law.
{¶ 5} Zimmer and Brice, as taxpayers, sent letters to the city solicitor and the Ohio Attorney General, requesting them to compel the city and the developer to comply with the prevailing-wage law for the housing aspect of the development. When the solicitor and the attorney general failed to act, Zimmer and Brice filed a taxpayer suit under R.C.
{¶ 6} The trial court granted the city's motion to dismiss. It held that Zimmer and Brice were "interested parties" under R.C.
{¶ 7} In their sole assignment of error, Zimmer and Brice contend that the trial court erred in dismissing their taxpayer suit. They argue that they were not interested parties under R.C.
{¶ 9} In their briefs, the parties cite numerous facts outside the pleadings. Though the parties also filed motions for summary judgment in the trial court, the court did not rule on them. Its opinion stated that it was granting the city's *591 motion to dismiss and did not show that the court had relied on facts outside of the pleadings. In reviewing the court's decision, we also consider only the facts alleged in the pleadings.
{¶ 11} The word "taxpayer" as used in R.C.
{¶ 13} "[T]he primary purpose of the prevailing wage law is to support the integrity of the collective bargaining process by preventing the undercutting of employee wages in the private construction sector."8 It "manifests a genuine statewide concern for the integrity of the collective bargaining process in the building and construction trades through a comprehensive statutory plan of worker rights and remedies." It also "has significant extra-territorial effects, beyond the scope of any municipality's local self-government or police powers."9 Thus, the prevailing-wage law benefits the public as a whole and is of "great general interest."10
{¶ 15} R.C.
{¶ 16} The city argues that Zimmer and Brice met the definition of a "bona fide organization of labor" in R.C.
{¶ 17} While the Ohio Supreme Court and this court have broadly interpreted the definition of a "bona fide organization of labor,"11 no court has ever held that union officers are the same as the organization. The unambiguous language of the statute refers to an "organization," which, under its plain and ordinary meaning, is an organized group of individuals.12 Zimmer and Brice were individual taxpayers, and we can find no case law that says that their status as union officials alone rendered them one and the same as their organizations or stripped them of their rights as taxpayers. On the record before us, we cannot hold, as a matter of law, that Zimmer and Brice were interested parties as defined in R.C.
{¶ 19} Only one appellate district has directly decided the issue. In Rossford ex rel. Seger v.Zuchowski, 13 an individual who was both a taxpayer and a union member filed suit under R.C.
{¶ 20} The court of appeals reversed. It held that the taxpayer had "met the jurisdictional and procedural prerequisites for maintaining an R.C.
{¶ 21} The court reiterated that holding in a later case, stating that "[t]his court has previously determined that a taxpayer has the requisite standing to bring suit under R.C.
{¶ 22} We find Zuchowski and its progeny to be persuasive.16 We also find that they are consistent with both Ohio Supreme Court and our own precedent. InZuchowski the court cited an Ohio Supreme Court decision, United States Corrections Corp. v. Ohio Dept. ofIndus. Relations.17 That case involved statutes relating to taxpayer suits against county officials.18 A county had originally filed a declaratory-judgment action involving competitive-bidding and prevailing-wage-law issues on a county project. The taxpayer filed a counterclaim challenging the county's failure to follow the competitive-bidding statutes. The court held that the taxpayer was "clearly entitled to maintain a taxpayer's action in his counterclaim against the board of [county] commissioners."19
{¶ 23} This court has also decided a case in which the parties used a taxpayer suit to raise issues under the prevailing-wage law. In State ex rel. Jones v. Hamilton Cty.Bd. of Commrs., 20 a union and two taxpayers filed a taxpayer suit challenging the county's use of inmates to paint the county jail. They contended that the project was a public improvement subject to the prevailing-wage laws. We rejected the claim on the merits, holding that the prevailing-wage laws did not apply to inmates performing voluntary labor because they were not employees and did not receive wages.21
{¶ 24} We did not specifically address the issue whether a taxpayer suit was the appropriate vehicle to raise the prevailing-wage-law issue. We could have raised it sua sponte if we had found it to be dispositive, but we did not. *595
{¶ 25} Persuaded by Zuchowski and following our own precedent, we hold that individuals who are not interested parties under R.C.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
HILDEBRANDT, P.J., and PAINTER, J., concur.