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Worth & Co. v. Department of Labor & Industry

PADecember 27, 2007No. 117 MAP 2005Cited 5 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Cappy, Castille, Newman, Saylor, Eakin, Baer, Baldwin, Former
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed the Commonwealth Court's reversal of the Department of Labor's order, holding that the Department erred in directing the School District to withhold payment from the prime contractor when the prime contractor owed no further payment to the subcontractor, as this violated the Prevailing Wage Act's plain language protecting the prime contractor's right to final payment.

What This Ruling Means

**Construction Company Wins Payment Dispute Over Wage Requirements** This case involved a payment dispute between construction companies working on a Lower Merion School District project. The state Department of Labor ordered the school district to withhold money from the main contractor (Worth & Co.) because a subcontractor allegedly wasn't paying proper wages to its workers under Pennsylvania's Prevailing Wage Act. Worth & Co. argued this was unfair since they had already paid the subcontractor in full and weren't responsible for the subcontractor's wage violations. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court sided with Worth & Co. The court ruled that the Department of Labor made a mistake by trying to withhold payment from the main contractor when that contractor had already fulfilled its payment obligations to the subcontractor. The court said Pennsylvania's Prevailing Wage Act protects contractors' rights to receive final payment once they've met their contractual duties. **What This Means for Workers:** While this ruling favored the contractor, it clarifies how wage enforcement works on public construction projects. Workers should know that if their employer (a subcontractor) fails to pay proper wages, the government may have limited ability to recover those wages from other parties in the construction chain. This makes it especially important for workers on public projects to monitor their pay closely and report wage violations promptly.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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