No. 62264-1-I.The Court of Appeals of Washington, Division One.
June 8, 2009.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court for King County, No. 08-2-03140-3, Richard McDermott, J., entered August 21, 2008.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part by unpublished opinion per Agid, J., concurred in by Grosse and Cox, JJ.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
AGID, J.
Madsen Trucking owed the Department of Labor and Industries (L I) premiums for its workers’ compensation coverage when it went out of business with assets consisting of four working trucks, four trailers, two damaged trucks, $60,000 in accounts receivable, three or four employees, and a customer list. Madsen Trucking directly and indirectly conveyed the trucking equipment to Orca Logistics (Orca), a trucking company that formed as Madsen Trucking was closing. Madsen Trucking’s owner went to work as Orca’s manager, bringing most of the remaining employees with him in addition to the customer that provided 77 percent of Madsen Trucking’s 2004 income. Because this evidence supports the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals’ (Board’s) finding that Madsen Trucking conveyed a major part of its assets to Orca, we affirm the Board’s order requiring Orca, Madsen Trucking’s successor, to pay the premiums owed.
FACTS
Erik Madsen started Madsen Trucking in 1992. He formed the company to transport goods and products around the nation. Madsen began shutting his company down in late 2004 after experiencing “severe financial difficulties.” By the time Madsen finished closing Madsen Trucking in early 2005, the company owed L I insurance premiums for its workers’ compensation coverage. Orca incorporated in December 2004 for the purpose of engaging in transportation, warehousing, logistics, and transloading. At its Initial Shareholders’ and Directors’ Consent to Corporate Action in Lieu of Organizational Meeting, Orca passed a resolution stating that “it is to the advantage of this corporation to secure the services of Erik Madsen as manager of this corporation for a minimum period of three years.” Madsen signed an employment contract with Orca in December 2004 and started work in early 2005.
When it shut down, Madsen Trucking had four working trucks, two damaged trucks, and four trailers. The trucking equipment was a key part of Madsen’s business. Besides the trucking equipment and about $60,000 due for accounts receivable, Madsen Trucking had few other tangible assets by the time it closed. The company owed money on the trucks, and Madsen worked hard to avoid a default on his equipment. He applied the $10,000 insurance settlement that Madsen Trucking received for the damaged trucks to the amount due on the remaining trucks.[1]
Orca leased the four trucks and four trailers from February 2005 to October 2005 under a lease-to-own arrangement. Leasing the trucks was “necessary for the continued operation and success” of Orca. In October 2005, Orca bought the trucks and trailers from Madsen Trucking for the amount Madsen Trucking owed its lender for the equipment.
Brent Redmond Logistics, Inc., was Madsen Trucking’s largest customer and accounted for $714,000 of Madsen Trucking’s $926,000 income in 2004.[2] Brent Redmond Logistics did business with Orca after Madsen Trucking closed. Madsen Trucking had 130 customers in 2004, 19 of which, including Brent Redmond Logistics, Inc., transferred their business to Orca. Madsen Trucking had 12 employees in the year before it shut down. By December 2004, Madsen Trucking had only three or four employees. After Madsen Trucking shut down, three of its employees, including Madsen, went to work for Orca.
L I determined that Orca qualified as Madsen Trucking’s successor under RCW 51.08.177 and was therefore liable for Madsen Trucking’s unpaid premiums under RCW 51.16.200. Orca appealed the notice of assessment to the Board. The Board found that Orca was a successor to Madsen Trucking as shown by the “sale or transfer of four trucks, four trailers, common business purpose, four former employees to include Mr. Madsen in the operation of Orca Logistics, Inc., several former customers doing business, to include Brent Redmond Logistics, . . . which was Madsen’s largest customer by dollar volume, and the same corporate attorney.”[3] The Board denied Orca’s petition for review. Orca appealed the Board’s decision to the superior court, which reversed the Board and vacated the notice of assessment.[4] The State appeals, arguing that substantial evidence supports the Board’s order that Orca pay Madsen Trucking’s back taxes.
DISCUSSION
The judicial review provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), chapter 34.05 RCW, govern our review of the Board’s order.[5] Under the APA, Orca bears the burden of proving the invalidity of the Board’s order.[6] This court will grant relief if the Board’s order is not supported by substantial evidence based on the record before the Board.[7] Substantial evidence is evidence sufficient to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth or correctness of the matter.[8] We view the evidence and its reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the prevailing party — here, L I — in the highest forum that exercised fact-finding authority — here, the Board.[9] We will also grant relief from the Board’s order if it erroneously interpreted or applied the law.[10]
RCW 51.16.200 makes successors liable for the unpaid taxes of the business they succeed.[11] RCW 51.08.177 defines “successor” as “any person to whom a taxpayer quitting, selling out, exchanging, or disposing of a business sells or otherwise conveys, directly or indirectly, in bulk and not in the ordinary course of the taxpayer’s business, a major part of the property, whether real or personal, tangible or intangible, of the taxpayer.” WAC 296-17-31030(1) defines “major part” as “a significant or substantial portion of a business’s property.”[12] “Significant” means “having or likely to have influence or effect.”[13] “Substantial” means “being that specified to a large degree or in the main.”[14] Accordingly, selling or conveying a significant or substantial portion Page 6 of the closing business’s property to another business triggers successor liability.[15]
The legislature amended RCW 51.08.177 in 2004.[16] The clause in the statute describing the type of property that triggers successor liability when conveyed previously read, “a major part of the materials, supplies, merchandise, inventory, fixtures, or equipment of the taxpayer.”[17] As compared to the predecessor statute, the current language clarifies that intangible assets may also be considered a major part of a business that is shutting down. WAC 296-17-31030(3) defines intangible property as “property that has no physical existence, but may have value” and names goodwill and customer lists as examples of intangible property.[18]
Here, the Board correctly focused its review of L I’s assessment on whether Madsen Trucking conveyed a major part of its tangible and intangible property to Orca. We review the Board’s decision to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to persuade a fair-minded person that Madsen Trucking conveyed a significant or substantial portion of its property to Orca. By the time it closed, Madsen Trucking’s tangible and intangible property consisted of four working trucks, two non-working trucks, four trailers, $60,000 in accounts receivable, four employees, including an experienced manager, and a customer list.[19] Madsen Trucking was engaged in the trucking business. Having working trucks and trailers is an integral part of that business. The evidence supports the Board’s finding that Madsen Trucking conveyed all of its working trucks and trailers to Orca.[20]
Orca claims that the working trucks and trailers were valueless to Madsen Trucking because it did not own them outright. Thus, Orca contends that L I did not lose anything when Madsen conveyed the trucking equipment because L I could not have made a claim to those assets. But whether L I could have collected a debt from Madsen is not relevant to the statutory scheme.[21] Rather than focusing on what might have happened to Madsen Trucking’s assets, L I must determine who got the major part of the business that owed the premiums. Nor were the trucks and trailers valueless. They allowed Madsen Trucking to engage in trucking, through which it earned $926,000 in 2004 income. And the evidence before the Board showed that Orca paid the balance due on the trucks, relieving Madsen Trucking of a debt.
The evidence also shows that Madsen Trucking conveyed some of its non-tangible property, its goodwill and customer lists, to Orca. Nineteen of Madsen Trucking’s customers, including Brent Redmond Logistics, continued to patronize the successor company when Madsen and two of his remaining three employees transferred to Orca.[22] On the basis of this evidence, a reasonable trier of fact could have determined that the tangible and non-tangible property Madsen Trucking conveyed to Orca comprised a major part of Madsen Trucking’s assets. Substantial evidence supports the Board’s conclusion that Orca succeeded Madsen Trucking.
We reverse the superior court’s August 21, 2008 order vacating the notice of assessment against Orca and affirm the Board’s December 17, 2007 order.
[w]henever any employer quits business, or sells out, exchanges, or otherwise disposes of the employer’s business or stock of goods, any tax payable hereunder shall become immediately due and payable, and the employer shall, within ten days thereafter, make a return and pay the tax due; and any person who becomes a successor to such business shall become liable for the full amount of the tax and withhold from the purchase price a sum sufficient to pay any tax due from the employer.
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