OPINION
The plaintiffs in this labor dispute are trustees of an association of various benefit funds established under the Labor-Management Relations Act of 1947 (LMRA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 141-67, 171-97, and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), as amended, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461, and maintained for the benefit of members of the Michigan Regional Council of Carpenters, AFL-CIO (the union). They filed this action against defendants Industrial Contracting, LLC, and LaSalle Group, Inc., claiming that “[f]or all relevant purposes, [the two companies] are one and the same, constituting a single employer, with each being the alter ego of the other” and seeking to audit the books of both defendants to verify the accuracy of the contributions that they were con
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, based on its determination that, as a matter of law, the “alter ego” doctrine was inapplicable in this case because the plaintiffs had “failed to present any evidence to show that Industrial was formed or operated with the intended purpose of evading any of LaSalle’s preexisting contractual obligations.” We conclude that this decision cannot be reconciled with our opinion in
NLRB v. Allcoast Transfer, Inc.,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
As we noted in
Allcoast Transfer,
“th[e] factors relevant to a finding of alter ego status include “whether the two enterprises have substantially identical management, business purpose, operation, equipment, customers, supervision and ownership.’”
Id.
at 579 (quoting
Nelson Electric v. NLRB,
wherein the Employer (including its officers, directors, owners, partners, or stockholders) exercises either directly or indirectly (such as through family members) any significant degree of ownership, management, or control, the terms and conditions of this Agreement shall be applicable to all such work and to such successor or alter ego entity.
The controversy arose because of the overlapping establishment and convergence of the defendant companies. LaSalle was incorporated in 1990. Steven Palermo became a minority owner of LaSalle in 1995 and a majority owner approximately five years later. Although LaSalle was a signatory to the CBA with the union at the time Palermo purchased his ownership interest, the company declined to renew the contract when it expired on June 1, 2003. In the meantime, Steven Palermo and his brother Randy had formed another company in 2001 that was the predecessor to Industrial Contracting, LLC. Three years later, Steven Palermo sold his half-interest in Industrial Contracting to his former brother-in-law, Chester Jablonski, who purchased an additional 1.8 percent interest from Randy Palermo. Industrial Contracting was not a signatory to any
In addition to his majority interest in Industrial Contracting, Jablonski was LaSalle’s chief financial officer and had previously served as its vice president, secretary, and treasurer. He managed the day-to-day operations for both Industrial Contracting and LaSalle, and he acted as the contact with the union for both companies. Jablonski testified that he had the authority to sign Steven Palermo’s signature on LaSalle documents for “pretty much whatever I need his signature on.”
According to the LaSalle website as accessed in 2006, the company was a general contractor and construction management company that had a total of 110 field employees, including in-house carpenters and other tradespeople. However, in a deposition taken in September 2003, a LaSalle official said that the company did not hire tradespeople directly at that time and had only ten laborers on its payroll, down from the “40 or 50” workers employed by LaSalle on June 1 of that year, at the termination of its collective bargaining agreement with the union. Industrial Contracting was a subcontractor that provided labor and supervision for construction projects, also referred to by Jablonski as an “employee leasing company.” At the time the lawsuit was filed, Industrial Contracting had never supplied laborers to any company other than LaSalle.
LaSalle and Industrial Contracting shared many of the same supervisory personnel during the relevant period. For example, Matthew Bertrang and Dave Walasek were listed as employees and supervisors at both companies. Dave Walasek, a labor superintendent and union member, worked for LaSalle until “they switched over,” when he was notified by Wes Gerecke, the Field Operations Manager for LaSalle, that he would be working for Industrial Contracting. He testified that his job did not change in any way after he went to work for Industrial Contracting and that Wes Gerecke continued to exercise direction over the projects on which he worked. Matthew Bertrang, a carpenter superintendent and union member, worked for LaSalle until the middle of 2003. After LaSalle terminated its collective bargaining agreement, Bertrang testified that he was given the choice of looking for another job or working for Industrial Contracting. Bertrang, too, said that his job did not change when he moved to Industrial Contracting and that his “direct boss” was Wes Gerecke. Gerecke also assigned Bertrang to various projects and procured equipment for him. Gerecke testified that he supervised Industrial Contracting employees and monitored their needs for material, equipment, and manpower on a day-to-day basis.
At the time the dispute arose, Industrial Contracting and LaSalle were housed in the same building and had rental agreements with the same real estate company, owned by Steven Palermo. LaSalle paid $9500 a month for the building, and Industrial Contracting rented an office in the building for $200 a month. Before 2005, Industrial Contracting employees received reimbursement checks from LaSalle’s account and were covered by LaSalle’s workers’ compensation insurance policy. In addition, LaSalle paid for Industrial Contracting’s general liability insurance policy and Industrial Contracting employees continued to use LaSalle’s telephone system and LaSalle business cards. Until 2005, Industrial Contracting billed LaSalle only for its wages and direct costs; in 2005 Industrial Contracting began charging a three-percent markup. During the
Several LaSalle documents in the record refer to Industrial Contracting employees as LaSalle employees. For example, on the “GM Catering Kitchen” job, the daily report lists the superintendent and foreman as LaSalle employees when they were actually employed by Industrial Contracting. Likewise, on a bid for the “GM Hines Theater” project, an Industrial Contracting employee is listed as a LaSalle employee. For the “DCX Walbridge Aldinger” project, LaSalle was placed on an approved list for bids for which only union signatories were eligible, and a Walbridge Aldinger project manager testified that he mistakenly thought that LaSalle was a union signatory. Moreover, LaSalle failed to list Industrial Contracting as a subcontractor on DCX project documents requiring a list of all subcontractors. LaSalle also submitted invoices for work done by Industrial Contracting employees on the DCX project as “self-perform” work, enabling the company to charge five percent more for work purportedly performed “in house” by LaSalle.
Despite the virtual mountain of evidence establishing the intermingling of the two companies, the district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, holding that, even though the plaintiffs “ha[d] shown most of the similarities between LaSalle and Industrial that were required under Fullerton,” 1 the defendants were entitled to prevail as a matter of law simply because the record was devoid of “any evidence to show that Industrial was formed or operated with the intended purpose of evading any of LaSalle’s preexisting contractual obligations.” The plaintiffs now appeal that ruling and also complain that the district court improperly struck a portion of the brief they filed in response to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, in which they raised an alternative theory of recovery that had not been raised prior to the close of discovery. The defendants have filed a cross-appeal, contending that as prevailing parties below, they should have been awarded costs and attorneys’ fees.
The latter two rulings represent an exercise of the district court’s discretion, and nothing in the record suggests to us that the court abused its discretion in reaching the decisions that it did. Moreover, in view of the result we reach today, both of these issues have become moot and, therefore, need not be resolved.
DISCUSSION
A district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo,
see International Union v. Cummins, Inc.,
The alter ego doctrine is an equitable doctrine “developed to prevent em
The Sixth Circuit test for determining whether two companies are alter egos has been adopted from the case law of the National Labor Relations Board. We look to see “ ‘whether the two enterprises have substantially identical management, business, purpose, operation, equipment, customers, supervision and ownership.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Nelson Elec. v. NLRB,
In double-breasting cases, we have confronted two common fact patterns: (1) the “classic” double-breasting operation in which a union contractor creates a second, nonunion company, and (2) the “reverse” double-breasting situation in which a nonunion company opens a sister company that becomes a union signatory. A paradigm example of classic double-breasting can be found in
Allcoast Transfer,
in which the respondent, a unionized moving and storage company, formed an ostensibly separate non-union corporation in order to serve as a licensee for a nationwide moving company.
See
An example of reverse double-breasting was involved in
Trustees of the Resilient Floor Decorators Insurance Fund v. A & M Installations, Inc.,
In this case, the district court relied upon our observation in
Resilient Floor
that the union had “disregard[ed] the fact that ‘an intent to evade’ preexisting obligations is ‘clearly the focus of the alter ego doctrine’” and that, in the absence of proof that the union had been shortchanged in some manner by changes in the structure of the two entities involved in the dispute, there could be “no inequity that would justify a court’s imposition of liability.”
Id.
at 248 (quoting
Cement Masons’ Pension Trust Fund v. O’Reilly,
We conclude that the district court’s analysis does not stand up to
de novo
review. The
Resilient Floor
opinion is of limited authority, given its alternative holdings and its ultimate conclusion that the workers in question were independent contractors and not, in fact, covered employees. Moreover, the excerpt from
Resilient Floor
quoted by the district court— that “ ‘an intent to evade’ preexisting obligations is ‘clearly the focus of the alter ego doctrine’ ”■ — is taken from the statement in
Allcoast
that “[t]he alter ego doctrine was developed to prevent employers from evading obligations under the [LMRA] merely by changing or altering their corporate form.”
Allcoast,
It bears repeating at this point that evidence of an intent to evade, when it presents itself, is a relevant factor to be considered in determining whether the alter ego doctrine is applicable, along with “the well-established factors of substantial identity of management, business purpose, operation, equipment, customers, supervision and ownership” — but it is
not
essential to the imposition of alter ego status.
Id.
at 581;
see also Fullerton Transfer,
That brings us to the application of the recognized factors to the situation in this case. As noted above, the record is replete with evidence of entanglement between LaSalle and Industrial Contracting. The defendants do not contest those facts on appeal, nor could they, given the documentary nature of the plaintiffs’ proof. Instead, they maintain that they have never acted purposefully to evade union obli
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set out above, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for entry of judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
Notes
.
NLRB v. Fullerton Transfer & Storage Ltd., Inc.,
