47 Mass. App. Ct. 121 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1999
Pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 149, § 27, the plaintiffs (employees) filed a complaint in the Superior Court against the defendant (employer) seeking to recover back pay based on the alleged failure of the employer to pay them the prevailing wage rate set by the Department of Labor and Industries for work performed under a public construction project at the Logan International Airport. The employer filed an answer denying the claim and made a request for a jury trial.
On appeal, the employer alleges several errors.
As noted in the Dalis case, it is not a question whether, in the absence of a legislative directive, we should imply a right to a jury trial, but, rather whether, under the Massachusetts Constitution, we should preserve and protect the right to a trial by jury on claims under G. L. c. 149, § 27. Id. at 225. Under the broad language of art. 15 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, the right to a trial by jury is preserved “[i]n all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between two or more persons, except in cases in which it has heretofore been other-ways used and practiced . ...” An action under G. L. c. 149, § 27, is certainly a suit “between two [or more] persons which clearly sets forth a controversy concerning property.” Id. at 223. We must determine “whether the plaintiff’s claim is analogous, in either subject matter or remedy sought, to cases within the court’s equity jurisdiction, as it existed at the time of the adoption of the Constitution.” Ibid.
At common law, parties were entitled to a jury trial to establish, or defend against, a debt. Stockbridge v. Mixer, 215 Mass. 415, 418 (1913). See Parker v. Simpson, 180 Mass. 334, 344-346 (1902). The subject of this action is the establishment
Having concluded that the employer was entitled to a trial by jury on the employees’ claim, we must also decide whether the denial of this right was prejudicial to it. Whalen v. NYNEX Information Resources Co., 419 Mass. 792, 797 (1995). In Whalen, the court concluded that the erroneous denial of a jury trial was not prejudicial because the record clearly established that the plaintiff was not a “qualified handicapped person” who could bring a cause of action for handicap discrimination in employment, the subject matter of the suit. This case does not involve the resolution of a similar threshold legal issue but, instead, requires the evaluation of conflicting evidence by the fact finder. The employees presented evidence they had not been paid for all of their work on the Logan Airport project at the prevailing wage rate. The employer challenged the employees’ claims on several alternate grounds by presenting evidence that (1) the bulk of the work for the completion of the public contract required off-site work fabricating insulation material which did not require the payment of the prevailing wage
We need not discuss the employer’s other claims of error which are not likely to arise upon retrial.
Judgment reversed.
The employer claims that the judge erred in allowing the plaintiffs’ motion for sequestration of witnesses; in denying its motion “for a required finding”; and in denying its request for a hearing on attorney’s fees and costs.
It is noteworthy that the employer failed to present any payroll records demonstrating that the employees had been paid a nonprevailing wage for this off-site work.