Simpkins v. DuPage Housing Authority et al
Filing
112
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order. Signed by the Honorable Charles R. Norgle, Sr on 9/19/2019. Mailed notice (rp, )
Case: 1:15-cv-09103 Document #: 112 Filed: 09/19/19 Page 1 of 10 PageID #:1949
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT
COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT
OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION
ANTHONY SIMPKINS,
Plaintiff,
No. l:15-CV-9103
v.
Case
DUPAGE HOUSING AUTHORITY And
DHA MANAGEMENT INC.,
Judge Charles R. Norgle
Defendants.
ORDER
Defendants' motion for partial summary judgment [98] is granted in part and denied in part.
Defendants' motion to for leave to file excess pages for reply brief [107] is granted. Plaintifls
motion for partial summary judgment [86] is denied.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Anthony Simpkins ("PlaintifP) sued Defendants DuPage Housing Authority
("DHA") and DHA Management, Inc. ("DHA Management") (collectively, "Defendants") for
several employment law violations. Plaintiff currently presses four claims against Defendants,
alleging violations of: (1) the Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA"),29 U.S.C. $201 et seq.,for
failure to pay overtime wages; (2) the Illinois Minimum Wage Law ("IMWL"),820ILCS l05i I
et seq.,
for failing to pay overtime wages at the statutorily required rate; (3) the lllinois Employee
Classification Act ("IECA"), 820 ILCS
l85ll
et seq., for erroneously failing to classify
as an employee rather than an independent contractor; and (4) the
("IPWA"), 820 ILCS
130 et seq., for
Plaintiff
Illinois Prevailing Wage Act
failing to compensate Plaintiff at no less than the prevailing
hourly wage for the duration of Plaintiff s work for Defendants. Before the Court now are crossmotions for partial summary judgment that deal only with the IECA and IPWA claims.
Before delving into the substance of the cross-motions,
it is helpful to consider
the
somewhat circuitous path that has led to this point of the litigation. In August 2017, this Court
Case: 1:15-cv-09103 Document #: 112 Filed: 09/19/19 Page 2 of 10 PageID #:1949
granted summary judgment
jurisdiction
in favor of
as to the pendent state
Defendants on the FLSA claim and relinquished
law claims. See Dkt. 65. The Court specifically held as a matter
of law that Plaintiff could not be considered an employee (and rather was an independent
contractor) for purposes of the FLSA. Plaintiff appealed, and the Seventh Circuit reversed and
remanded. See Simpkins v. DuPage Housing Authority, 893 F.3d 962,967 (7th Cir. 2017). The
Seventh Circuit held that genuine disputes of fact exist that are material to the determination of
Simpkins's employment status (for purposes of the FLSA). The Seventh Circuit outlined various
factual disputes in the record, including in relation to Plaintiff s alleged schedule, his investment
in necessary tools, and the nature and length of the contractual relationship between the parties.
Thus, and needless to say, this case will proceed on the FLSA claim regardless of the outcome
of
this motion. The Seventh Circuit also reinstated the state law claims without any discussion as to
the merits of those claims.
The parties now move forward on cross-motions for partial summary judgment related to
those state law claims. Plaintiff argues that, as a matter of law, the Court should hold that Simpkins
is an employee for purposes of the IECA. Plaintiff specifically argues that the IECA has a more
expansive definition
of "employee" than the FLSA,
meaning this Court can make that
determination yet remain consistent with the Seventh Circuit's findings related to the various
material factual disputes that directly appertain to Plaintiff s status as an "employee" under the
FLSA. Defendants, on the other hand, argue that they are shielded from liability under the IECA
because
of its status
as a
political subdivision of the State of Illinois and that the IPWA does not
create a private right of action for individuals in
Plaintiff
s shoes.
The Court agrees with Defendants as to the IECA claim, meaning Plaintiffls argument as
to his status as an employee for purposes of the IECA is denied. The Court disagrees with respect
to the IPWA claim, and if Plaintiff is in fact an independent contractor, Plaintiff is entitled to
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attempt to prove an IPWA violation as an alternative to his FLSA claim. As such, Plaintiffs
motion for partial summary judgment is denied, and Defendants' motion for partial summary
judgment is granted in part and denied in part for the following reasons.
I. BACKGROUND
The facts in this case have been well-laid out by two orders of this Court and in one
published Seventh Circuit opinion. See Dkts. 63, 66,83. As such, and because the resolution of
the issues relevant to the present motion are nearly-purely legal, as opposed to factual, in nature,
this opinion provides only a high-level recitation of the general facts of the case, drawn heavily
from the Seventh Circuit opinion.
Plaintiff began working as a handyman for DHA in November 2009 under an agreement
titled "Independent Contractor Agreement" and performed general labor as needed to complete
the rehabilitation of vacant properties. He performed carpentry, maintenance, and handyman
works such as demolition, remodeling, removing fixtures, and discarding trash in that role.
In 201l, the rehab work slowed down and Simpkins began working primarily at Ogden
Manor, a townhome community for which DHA served as the on-site management. He performed much of the same work, but eventually focused specifically on maintenance work. Ogden
Manor's property manager and maintenance supervisor, who were DHA employees, gave
Simpkins his list ofjob duties and prioritized the order in which he needed to complete those tasks.
In May
2012, Simpkins and DHA entered into another "lndependent Contractor
Agreement." This agreement described the scope of work as "general labor for maintenance" at
Ogden Manor. The agreement originally stated that the expected completion date for that work
was July 2012. However, that date was later crossed out by hand and replaced with "To Be
Determined." Simpkins continued to work at Ogden Manor until May 2015.
Case: 1:15-cv-09103 Document #: 112 Filed: 09/19/19 Page 4 of 10 PageID #:1949
From November 2009 through May 2015, Simpkins worked full-time and exclusively for
DHA. Pursuant to DHA's instructions, Simpkins reported his hours by submitting invoices, and
he was paid bi-weekly via paper check. DHA issued Simpkins 1099-MISC tax forms to file his
taxes, while others whom DHA considered employees were issued W-2 forms. Simpkins was
aware that DHA considered him an independent contractor, and he repeatedly requested, to no
avail, that his supervisors convert him to a regular employee. DHA did not provide him with
pension, insurance, or other similar fringe benefits.
In May 2015, Simpkins was injured in a car accident, after which his relationship with
DHA ended. He filed this lawsuit in October 2015, claiming that DHA had repeatedly failed to
pay him overtime, and that DHA was required to provide him with certain disability benefits. The
parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. As noted, this Court entered judgment in favor
of Defendants on the FLSA claim, which the Seventh Circuit reversed. The Court now considers
the cross-motions for summary judgment dealing with Counts 3 and
4-the IECA
and IPWA
claims respectively.
As to the DHA itself, it is a municipal corporation created pursuant to the Illinois Housing
Authorities Act, 310 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann.
l0ll et seq., and is charged
with administering various
federal and state housing programs. The President of DuPage County's Board of Commissioners
appoints DHA's Board
of Commissioners. DHA is
funded by grants and subsidies from
goverrrment bodies, including the Department of Housing and Urban Development,
DHA Management was a non-profit subsidiary of DHA designated as "the on-site
management entity for Ogden
Manor." Dkt. 100, at2. DHA Management received its operating
income from government grants.
It
was completely controlled by DHA. DHA's Executive
Director and Board members held those same positions for DHA Management. DHA
Management's assets and financial activity were rolled into DHA's financial statements for public
4
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reporting. DHA Management did not have its own office, and its registered address was the same
address as DHA's office.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate where no genuine issues of material fact exist, and the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Selective Ins. Co. of S.C. v. Target Corp., 845
F.3d263,265 (7th Cir.2016), as amended (Jan. 25,2017). Where parties file cross-motions for
summary judgment, the standard of decision does not change.
one at a time," Black Earth Meat Mkt.. LLC v.
Id. The Court "take[s]
the motions
Vill. of Black Earth, 834 F.3d 841,847 (7th Cir.
2016), and "construe[s] all facts and inferences therefrom in favor of the party against whom the
motion under consideration is made." Target Corp., 845 F.3d at 265 (internal quotation and
citation omitted).
B. The IECA Claim and Defendants' Status as a Political Subdivision of the State
Turning first to Defendants' argument as to the IECA, Defendants urge that that they are
exempt from liability under the statute's plain language. The Court agrees. The operative
provision of the IECA is within the definitions section of the statute, at820ILCS 185/60. There,
"Employer" is defined as follows:
"Employer" means any contractor that employs individuals deemed
employees under Section l0 of this Act; however,'oemployer" does
not include (i) the State of Illinois or its officers, agencies, or
political subdivisions or (ii) the federal govemment.
820 ILCS 185/60. The question, then, is whether DHA and DHA Management fall within the
exclusion
in subdivision (i)
subdivisions."
as "the state
of Illinois or its officers, agencies, or
political
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The parties have cited no controlling authority that directly addresses whether a housing
authority, like DHA, or a subsidiary of such an entity, like DHA Management, is exempt under
the statute. The Court likewise has found no such authority. Defendants argue the Court should
treat this language as analogous to that in other statutes that use identical language, and which
courts, in other statutory contexts, have found housing authorities (though not the DuPage Housing
Authority) to be "political subdivision(s)" of the State of Illinois.
Courts have fashioned a test, in those other contexts, as to whether an entity is can be
considered a "political subdivision" for purposes
of exemption from liability under various
statutes. In the context of the Labor Management Relations Act,29 U.S.C. $ 185, "[T]he general
test for determining whether an employer is an exempt political subdivision is whether it was
"'(l)
created directly by the state, so as to constitute a [department] or administrative [arm] of the
government, or (2) [is] administered by individuals who are responsible to public officials or to
the general electorate."' N.L.R.B. v. Parents and Friends of Specialized Living Center, 879 F.2d
1442,1448 (7th Cir.1989) (quoting N.L.R.B. v. Natural Gas Utility Dist. of Hawkins County,402
U.S. 600, 604-05,91 S.Ct. 1746 (1971))." Brooks v. Chicago Hous. Auth., No. 89 C 9304,1990
WL 103572, at* I (N.D. Ill. July 5, 1990).
One other court similarly applied this test when considering an exemption for purposes
of
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA") in Issa v. Chicago Hous. Auth., No. 0l
C9439,2002WL909279, at *3 (l.J.D. Ill. May 6,2002).
In each of those cases, the court held that the Chicago Housing Authority, which, like the
DuPage Housing Authority, was created pursuant to the Illinois Housing Act, was a political
subdivision for purposes of those statutes' exemptions. Moreover, at least one Illinois appellate
court appears to have taken for granted that the Chicago Housing Authority was a political
subdivision of Illinois-there for pu{poses of the requirement of a contractor bond. See Chicago
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Hous. Auth. for Use of Gen. Bronze Corp. v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co.
,49lll. App. 2d 407,410,799
N.E.2d 217,219 (Ill. App. Ct.1964).
With respect to the DuPage Housing Authority and for purposes of the IECA, the test
outlined above is an apt mechanism to consider the "political subdivision" exemption that is both
fair and promotes consistency across the law. In applying this test, it is clear to the Court that the
DHA should be considered such a political subdivision because it "is administered by individuals
who are responsible to public officials[.]" As noted above, the DHA's Board of Commissioners
is appointed by the President of DuPage County's Board of Commissioners. This satisfies the
"political subdivision" test laid out above. Moreover, as a practical matter, the DHA serves
a
goverrrmental function through its administration of state and federal housing programs, which are
funded through public money. It is also structured as a municipal corporation and, as noted above,
was created pursuant to the
Illinois Housing Act.
Plaintiff makes much ado in its briefing regarding
a deposition response
of DHA's 30(b)(6)
witness Kenneth Coles, who, when asked whether DHA is considered a public entity, responded
"no." Dkt.
106, at
1. Even
so, the answer of this witness is not binding on this Court, which has
the benefit of briefing and research on this complex legal issue. The witness's absence of
familiarity
as to
the subtleties of the "political subdivision" test and, perhaps (as Defendants argue)
his confusion by the poorly-phrased broad question asked by Plaintiff s counsel, is not dispositive
on this issue, and Cole's opinion of what unidentified persons or entities consider the DHA is
of
no value.
Given these facts, and its similarity to the Chicago Housing Authority, the Court holds as
a matter of law that the DuPage Housing Authority is a "political subdivision" of the State
of
Illinois for purposes of the IECA and that as such it is exempt from liability under the IECA given
Case: 1:15-cv-09103 Document #: 112 Filed: 09/19/19 Page 8 of 10 PageID #:1949
the definitional exemption quoted above. As such, Defendant DHA's motion for summary
judgment as to the IECA claim, Count 3, is granted.
Turning to the applicability of the IECA to DHA Management, the Court holds that DHA
Management is encompassed by the DHA exemption. DHA Management is a wholly-owned
subsidiary completely controlled by DHA, with the same Executive Board and Board members as
DHA. The Court is persuaded by the reasoning in Barnes v. Chicaeo Housing Authority,326lll.
App. 3d 710 (lst Dist. 2001) and Smith v. Northern lll. Regional Commuter Railroad Corp,,2l0
Ill. App. 3d 223 (lst Dist.
1991) and its applicability in the present situation. As the Seventh
Circuit in Amoco Corp. v. C.I.R., observed, "the Supreme Court has eschewed bright-line rules in
favor of a more functional approach" when it comes to considering state-owned enterprises as the
functional equivalents as the states which own them. 138 F.3d 1139 (1998). Thus, summary
judgment is likewise granted as to DHA Management as to the IECA claim.
B. The IPWA Claim and Plaintiffls Potential Entitlement to Contractor Relief
With respect to the IPWA claim, Plaintiff has conceded that if he was an employee of
DHA, he would not be entitled to relief under the IPWA, which (as Illinois case law makes clear)
does not require public bodies to pay their own employees the prevailing wage under the Act.
Plaintiff argues, however, that if he was in fact an independent contractor, Defendants should have
been paying him the prevailing wage. Defendants counter by arguing that, in fact, the
IPWA does
not create a private cause of action in this type of scenario. The IPWA, according to Defendants,
only provides a cause of action for employees against their (non-public body) employers-the
contractors or subcontractors they work for.
To support this proposition, Defendants point to the following language at 820 ILCS
130/l
l:
Case: 1:15-cv-09103 Document #: 112 Filed: 09/19/19 Page 9 of 10 PageID #:1949
Any laborer, worker or mechanic employed by the contractor or by
any sub-contractor under him who is paid for his services in a sum
less than the stipulated rates for work done under such contract, shall
have a right of action for whatever difference there may be between
the amount so paid, and the rates provided by the contract.
Defendants infer a restriction on Plaintiff from this provision-that a laborer, worker, or mechanic
seeking to enforce the IPWA must be employed by a contractor and must seek remedy against that
contractor (or subcontractor) itself. Defendants also cite two Illinois cases they argue stands for
the proposition that a public body itself cannot be sued if it fails to pay an independent contractor
the prevailing wage: Cent. Laborers' Pension Fund v. Nicholas & Associates.
Inc.,20ll IL App
(2d) 100125,n47 ("Under section 11, an employee or an employee representative may sue a
contractor or subcontractor in state court to recover the difference between the wages paid and the
'prevailing wage'as defined in section 2."); People ex rel. Dept. of Labor v. Valdivia,20ll IL
App (2d) 100998,
fl 13 ("The [PWA]
requires both general contractors and subcontractors on
public-works projects to pay the prevailing wage to their employees."). Dkt. 100, at 4.
Although Defendants have not altered these quotations, they do not stand for the broad
(and supposedly obvious) restriction that Defendants claim they do. Pronouncements that certain
suits may be brought against contractors and subcontractors is not the same as saying that only
such suits may be brought. In fact,
Illinois
case law appears to suggest
just the opposite. Shempf
v. Chaviano,2019lL App (lst) 173146,n60,126 N.E.3d 503,514 ("Units of local government
pay the wages, based on those rates. And the Prevailing Wage Act, as we've just noted, permits
suits against those public bodies for underpayment of wages. 820 ILCS 130/l
have similarly not read in such a restriction on the statute.
l").
Our sister courts
E4. Murphy v. Prof I Transportation.
Inc., No. l4-CV-378-SMY-DGW,2017 WL 5665901, at x3 (S.D. Ill. Nov. 27, 2017) ("The IPWA
provides a cause of action for any covered laborer, worker or mechanic "who is paid for his
services in a sum less than the stipulated rates for work done under such contract" for the difference
9
Case: 1:15-cv-09103 Document #: 112 Filed: 09/19/19 Page 10 of 10 PageID #:1949
there may be between the amount paid and the stipulated rate, together with costs and attorney's
fees. 820 ILCS 130/11."); Madero v. Peters Eng's. Inc.,
*
I (N.D. Ill. May 12,2015) ("Any
No. l2 C 50157,2015 WL 2220727,at
laborer, worker or mechanic employed by the contractor or by
any sub-contractor under him who is paid for his services in a sum less than the stipulated rates
for work" under a contract for public works "shall have a right of action for whatever difference
there may be between the amount so paid, and the rates provided by the contract together with
costs and such reasonable attorney's fees as shall be allowed by the court." 820 ILCS 130/l
The Court thus agrees with Plaintiff that,
if the factfinder
L)
determines that Plaintiff is an
independent contractor rather than an employee, Plaintiff could seek recourse under the IPWA
(assuming that the other conditions necessary to be entitled to relief are met, that is, that Plaintiff
was not in fact paid the prevailing wage). As such, Defendants' motion for summary judgment as
to the IPWA claim is denied.
C. PlaintifPs Motion under the IECA
Turning finally to Plaintifls motion for summary judgment, in which Plaintiff asks to be
declared an employee under the IECA as a matter
of law, because the Court
has held that
Defendants are political subdivisions exempt from liability under the IECA, Plaintifls motion
thus is denied.
III. CONCLUSION
In sum, judgment is entered in favor of Defendants as to Count 3 (related to the IECA) and
Defendants' motion is denied as to Count 4 (the IPWA claim). In light of that ruling, Plaintiff
motion for partial summary judgment is denied in full.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
%
DATE: September 19, 2019
ENTER:
CHARLES RONALD NORGL
United States District Court
l0
s
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