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Eckard Brandes, Inc. v. Department of Labor and Industrial Relations. ICA Order Dismissing Appellate Court Case Number CAAP-19-0000095 for Lack of Appellate Jurisdiction, filed 05/21/2019 [ada]. Application for Writ of Certiorari, filed 07/19/2019. S.Ct. Order Accepting Application for Writ of Certiorari, filed 08/29/2019 [ada]. S.Ct. Opinion, filed 04/20/2020 [ada], 146 Haw. 354. S.Ct. Order of Correction, filed 04/27/2020 [ada]. ICA s.d.o., filed 04/25/2024 [ada], 154 Haw. 157. Application for Writ of Certiorari, filed 07/30/2024. S.Ct. Order Accepting Application for Writ of Certiorari, filed 09/12/2024 [ada].

2025-09-18

Summary

Holding. The court affirmed the Intermediate Court of Appeals' judgment, holding that Eckard Brandes Inc. may not be penalized for retroactively applying the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations' changed interpretation of wage classification law because the employer reasonably relied on the department's 2005 guidance that sewer cleaning and inspection work was not subject to prevailing wage requirements, and equitable estoppel prevents the department from retroactively enforcing its later interpretation without notice.

This case examines whether an employer can be held liable for retroactively applying a regulatory agency's changed interpretation of a wage law when the employer relied on the agency's prior guidance. Eckard Brandes, a sewer maintenance contractor, received a 2005 letter from the Hawaii Department of Labor and Industrial Relations stating that sewer cleaning and inspection work was not subject to the state's prevailing wage requirements for public works projects. Relying on this guidance, Eckard Brandes paid its employee Scott Foyt at lower wage rates when he performed cleaning and inspection work between 2011 and 2013. In 2013, the department changed its position and determined that such work should be covered by prevailing wage rules. When Foyt filed a wage complaint in 2013, the department ultimately sought to hold Eckard Brandes liable for unpaid wages plus penalties, claiming Foyt should have been classified as a truck driver at a higher prevailing wage.

The Hawaii Supreme Court held that the doctrine of equitable estoppel applies to prevent the government from retroactively enforcing its new interpretation. The court found that Eckard Brandes had reasonably relied on clear, affirmative representations in the 2005 letter and that the company had complied with that guidance. The court emphasized that the department never clarified or retracted its 2005 position until 2013, after Eckard Brandes had already submitted bids and performed work based on the original interpretation. Requiring the employer to pay wages according to a classification that was not industry practice and was never mentioned in any of the department's communications would constitute a "bureaucratic whipsaw" that would result in manifest injustice.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether an employer can invoke equitable estoppel to prevent government agencies from retroactively applying changed regulatory interpretations
  • Whether reliance on a prior agency interpretation constitutes reasonable reliance when the agency later changes its position
  • Whether prevailing wage requirements for public works projects apply to sewer cleaning and inspection work
  • Whether the department acted arbitrarily and capriciously by retroactively changing its wage classification guidance without notifying the employer

Procedural posture

The case arose from a wage complaint filed by an employee with the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations, proceeded through administrative hearings, was appealed to the circuit court and then the Intermediate Court of Appeals, and ultimately reached the Hawaii Supreme Court on a petition for writ of certiorari.

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

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Electronically Filed

Supreme Court

SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX

18-SEP-2025

10:03 AM

Dkt. 34 OP

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI‘I

---o0o---ECKARD BRANDES, INC.,

Respondent/Appellant-Appellee,

vs.

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS,

Respondent/Appellee-Appellee,

and

SCOTT FOYT,

Petitioner/Intervenor-Appellant.

SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX

CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS

(CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CASE NO. 1CC181000011)

SEPTEMBER 18, 2025

RECKTENWALD, C.J., McKENNA, EDDINS, AND DEVENS, JJ.,

AND CIRCUIT JUDGE VIOLA IN PLACE OF GINOZA, J., RECUSED

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OPINION OF THE COURT BY RECKTENWALD, C.J.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case concerns a change in an agency’s

interpretation of a wage classification law, and whether an

employer, relying on the agency’s prior interpretation, may be

penalized for noncompliance with the agency’s subsequent

interpretation. We hold, under the circumstances of this case,

that the employer, Eckard Brandes Inc., may not be penalized.

Accordingly, we affirm the Intermediate Court of Appeals’ (ICA)

May 29, 2024 Judgment on Appeal.

II. BACKGROUND

Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (HRS) chapter 104 governs

“Wages and Hours of Employees on Public Works” and regulates

labor practices for contractors and other entities that engage

in public works projects. HRS § 104-2(a) (2012) (“This chapter

shall apply to every contract in excess of $2,000 for

construction of a public work project[.]”). Like its federal

counterpart, the Davis-Bacon Act, 1 HRS chapter 104 requires every

laborer “performing work on the job site for the construction of

1 Originally enacted in 1931, the Davis-Bacon Act “set certain minimum labor standards for workers employed in federal contract construction.” Cong. Rsch. Serv., 94-408, The Davis-Bacon Act: Institutional Evolution and Public Policy (updated Nov. 30, 2007). Notably, the Act mandates that contractors must pay their employees no less than the locally prevailing wage. 40 U.S.C. § 3142(b).

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any public work project” to be paid “no less than [the]

prevailing wage[],” which is “established by the [Department of

Labor and Industrial Relations (DLIR)] director[.]” HRS § 104-2(b).

DLIR regulations define “[c]onstruction of public

work” to include:

[W]ithout limitation new construction, reconstruction,

development, improvement, alteration, repair, renovation,

painting, decorating, dredging, shoring, simultaneous sewer

inspection and repair, and any other activity performed by

a laborer or mechanic employed at the site of a public work

or at any property used by the contractor, dedicated for

the performance of the contract, such as batch plants,

borrow pits, fabrication plants, mobile factories, job

headquarters, and tool yards. As used in this section,

“other activity performed by a laborer or mechanic employed

at the site” includes the following if the activity is an

integral part of or is in conjunction with a construction

contract, or if there is substantial construction activity

involved in a supply, service, or other type of nonconstruction contract:

(1) Manufacturing or furnishing of materials,

articles, supplies, or equipment on the job site;

(2) Warranty work except when done by the manufacturer

on defective products or equipment;

(3) Demolition or excavation;

(4) Landscaping;

(5) Termite treatment; and

(6) Installation at the construction site of items or

articles fabricated off-site, such as shelving,

drapery, and communications equipment.

Hawaiʻi Administrative Rules (HAR) § 12-22-1 (eff. 1996). 2

2 HAR § 12-22-1 has since been amended effective July 23, 2018, but the definition of “[c]onstruction of public work” remains the same.

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Here, the underlying dispute centers around the wage

classification for cleaning and inspection of sewer pipes, and

the subsequent impact of the DLIR’s differing interpretations of

this question.

A. Factual Background

Since 1988, Eckard Brandes, Inc. has performed sewer

pipeline cleaning, closed-circuit television (CCTV) inspection

of pipes, and occasional repairs for various state, county, and

private projects in Hawaiʻi. Cleaning, inspection, and repairs

did not occur simultaneously. Eckard Brandes employees would

first operate a tandem axel Vactor truck with a high-pressure

pump to clean the pipe. Once cleaning was complete, Eckard

Brandes employees would then use CCTV cameras mounted on selfpropelled tractors to inspect the inside of pipes and identify

needed repairs. Eckard Brandes occasionally performed repair

work following cleaning and inspection. Such repair work

required specialized equipment and was a much more time

intensive process than cleaning and inspection.

Prior to 2005, Eckard Brandes paid every employee on

public works sewer projects the “Sewer Line Tele-Repairer”

classification regardless of whether employees completed

cleaning and inspection, or further undertook repairs. In 2005,

Nelson Befitel, then-Director of the DLIR, sent Eckard Brandes a

letter pertaining to wages on public works projects. The letter

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indicated the wage classification for “Sewer Line Tele-Repair”

would be discontinued because sewer cleaning and inspection were

not considered construction work under HRS chapter 104:

This is the time of year when the Department of Labor

and Industrial Relations (DLIR) would usually request your

assistance in determining the prevailing wages for the

Sewer Line Tele-Repairer classification for the Chapter

104, Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS), Wage Rate Schedule.

This letter is to inform you that you will not receive a

survey this year because the classification of Sewer Line

Tele-Repairer will be discontinued as of the next Wage Rate

Schedule, Bulletin Number 461, which will be issued in

September 2005.

Input from the industry brought to our attention the

distinction between inspection and cleaning versus repair.

The inspection and cleaning function is not considered

construction work as covered under Chapter 104, HRS,

therefore it will not be included in the prevailing wage

rate schedule. The repair work is same work that would be

classified as Laborer I, a classification that already

exists.

Additionally, under Section 104-2(b), HRS, the law

states that “prevailing wages shall not be less than the

wages payable under federal law to corresponding classes”.

The U.S. Department of Labor does not include a separate

classification for sewer line tele-repairer work for

construction projects covered by the federal Davis-Bacon

Act. Work of that nature is classified as Laborer I.

Thus, maintaining the rate classification of Sewer Line

Tele-Repairer creates a prevailing wage that is less than

the wages payable under federal law to corresponding

classes, and is contrary to the law.

(Emphasis added.)

Between November 2009 and January 2015, Eckard Brandes

was a subcontractor or general contractor on ten public works

sewer rehabilitation projects, performing pipe cleaning,

inspection, and repair for the State of Hawaiʻi and City and

County of Honolulu sewer lines. Eckard Brandes’s president

testified that whenever Eckard Brandes was conducting repairs on

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sewer pipes, it paid its employees at the Laborer I or II wage

classification rates pursuant to HRS chapter 104, depending on

the tools they used. On days where Eckard Brandes was

conducting cleaning and inspection work only, employees were

paid the regular company rate, as the work was no longer

considered a construction activity under HRS chapter 104. When

bidding on the ten public works projects at issue, Eckard

Brandes – relying on the 2005 Befitel letter – assumed their

employees would be paid at the lower company rate because

cleaning and inspection work was not covered by HRS chapter 104.

From May 2011 to July 2013, Petitioner Scott Foyt was

employed by Eckard Brandes and worked on the ten public works

projects at issue. Foyt primarily operated Eckard Brandes’s

Vactor truck, and occasionally drove a water truck and roll-off

debris truck to conduct Eckard Brandes’s cleaning work. Foyt

also occasionally assisted other Eckard Brandes employees with

CCTV inspection and repairs. Following the DLIR’s guidance

under the 2005 Befitel letter, Foyt was paid the Laborer I or

Laborer II rates when Eckard Brandes conducted repair work on

the project site, and was otherwise paid the lower company rate

when performing cleaning and inspection only, including

operating the Vactor truck. Had Foyt been classified as a

Laborer I for the cleaning and inspection work he performed at

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Eckard Brandes’s company rate, he would have been paid an

additional $29,719.07.

In 2012, the City and County of Honolulu requested

clarification from the DLIR on the proper wage classification

for workers who perform sewer pipe cleaning and inspection. The

City noted their understanding that “in previous determinations

from [DLIR],” cleaning and inspection work was determined not to

be subject to prevailing wages, but expressed their position

that it should be subject to the Laborer I rate as the work “is

an integral part of the construction project” under HAR

§ 12-22-1.

Nine months later, on September 6, 2013, DLIR

Administrator Pamela Martin responded, writing that while DLIR’s

position remained “unchanged for strictly CCTV inspection and

cleaning work only,” cleaning and inspection work would be

subject to HRS chapter 104 when it is required for the repair of

sewer pipes:

[U]nder Section 12-22-1, Hawai‘i Administrative Rules,

the definition of “construction of a public work” includes

without limitation new construction, reconstruction,

development, improvement, alteration, repair, renovation,

painting, decorating, dredging, shoring, simultaneous sewer

inspection and repair, and any other activity performed by

a laborer or mechanic employed at the site of a public

work.

City and County repair and/or rehabilitation of sewer

pipe projects which require cleaning and CCTV inspection

are covered under Chapter 104, HRS. The cleaning and CCTV

inspection activities are deemed an integral part of or in

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conjunction with a construction contract subject to Chapter

104, HRS. Workers must be classified and paid the closest

existing classification as published in the Wage Rate

Schedule.

(Emphasis added.)

A few weeks later on September 23, 2013,

representatives from Eckard Brandes and DLIR met to clarify

DLIR’s position on the applicability of HRS chapter 104 to sewer

cleaning and inspection. Eckard Brandes representatives came

away from the meeting understanding that all cleaning,

inspection, and repair work would be classified at the Laborer I

rate effective the date of the meeting, September 23, 2013 —

“not retro-actively for contracts already awarded or work

performed on.” Thereafter, Eckard Brandes began paying its

employees the Laborer I rate on every public works project for

cleaning and inspection work, regardless of whether the cleaning

and inspection was performed simultaneous to the repairs. 3

B. DLIR Proceedings

On October 30, 2013, Foyt filed a complaint with the

DLIR Wage Standards Division, disputing his wage classification

3 On November 20, 2014, DLIR Director Dwight Takamine determined that workers who perform sewer line pipe cleaning and CCTV inspection work on public works projects were classified under HRS chapter 104 as Plumber, Laborer I, or Laborer II, depending the type of project and work performed. “[W]orkers who do cleaning and inspection of sewer lines” are classified as plumbers “when the work is within a building to the property line.” “[W]hen the work is through the public disposal system (sewer mains),” workers are classified Laborer I for “performing inspection, operating the CCTV equipment and performing cleaning with the use of power tools and equipment,” and Laborer II for “using non-powered hand tools to perform the cleaning.” Because the public works projects at issue pre-date 2014, these classifications are not applicable here.

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for the public works projects on which he performed sewer

cleaning and repair work as an Eckard Brandes employee.

Over one year later in January 2015, Foyt’s complaint

was assigned to Labor Law Enforcement Specialist Sheryl Lee

(Investigator Lee), who after investigating Foyt’s complaint,

recommended that Eckard Brandes be issued a Notification of

Violation because it should have paid Foyt the prevailing wage

for truck drivers regardless of whether he was performing sewer

cleaning and inspection or repair. Investigator Lee conferred

with representatives from the Operating Engineers Union,

Hawaiian Dredging, and the Laborers Union, and understood that

workers who drove trucks requiring a commercial driver’s license

(CDL) to and from the jobsite would be paid the truck driver

rate. Investigator Lee found that Foyt should have been paid

the prevailing wage as a “Truck Driver Tandem Dump Truck, over 8

cu. Yds. (water level); Water Truck (over 2,000 gallons)” (Truck

Driver) rather than the Laborer I or Laborer II prevailing wage

because Foyt was “one of few employees who would operate the

vacuum truck because a CDL is required.”

On May 4, 2017, then-DLIR Director Linda Chu Takayama

adopted Investigator Lee’s recommendations and issued Eckard

Brandes a Notification of Violation of HRS chapter 104. Because

Foyt should have been paid under the Truck Driver wage

classification rather than the Laborer I or Laborer II

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classifications, the DLIR assessed back wages due and a 10%

penalty totaling $60,131.12.

Eckard Brandes appealed the Notification of Violation

pursuant to HRS § 104-23(b) (2012), and a hearing was held in

August 2017. Eckard Brandes primarily argued that sewer

cleaning and inspection work was not covered under HRS chapter

104, and in any event, it relied on the 2005 Befitel letter,

which was consistent with the DLIR’s longstanding position that

cleaning and inspection work was not subject to wage

classification. It also emphasized that the Truck Driver

classification was not “industry practice,” and that there is no

reference in DLIR Adminstrator Martin’s 2013 letter to sewer

workers being classified as truck drivers.

In support of Eckard Brandes’s arguments, President

Jeff Iwasaki-Higbee, Mark Goodrowe, owner of Eckard Brandes’s

competitor Underground Services, Inc., and Eldon Franklin,

retired Wastewater Division Chief for the City and County of

Honolulu’s Department of Design and Construction testified at

the hearing. Iwasaki-Higbee testified about Eckard Brandes’s

work on public works projects, its reliance on the 2005 Befitel

letter, and its understanding that the Laborer I or Laborer II

wage classification would only apply to cleaning and inspection

work prospectively effective September 2013. Iwasaki-Higbee

recounted the September 23, 2013 meeting with DLIR

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representatives, and testified that he primarily sought to

ensure ongoing projects would not be impacted by the DLIR’s new

position that cleaning and inspection work be paid at the

Laborer I or Laborer II wage. Although there was no written

agreement, Iwasaki-Higbee testified that he walked away from the

meeting with the understanding that Eckard Brandes was not

required to retroactively adjust its wages for ongoing public

works projects.

Mark Goodrowe of Underground Services, Inc. testified

that from 2006 until DLIR Administrator Martin’s September 2013

letter, it similarly paid its employees conducting sewer

cleaning and CCTV inspection their lower company rate on public

works projects, regardless of whether an employee operated a

Vactor truck. Goodrowe further testified that at no time was he

or other Underground Services representatives informed that

their employees operating trucks needed to be paid the Truck

Driver wage.

Retired Wastewater Division Chief Eldon Franklin

testified about the confusion in 2012 and 2013 surrounding

whether sewer cleaning and inspection were subject to HRS

chapter 104 wage classification. Goodrowe and Franklin attended

the September 23, 2013 meeting with DLIR and Eckard Brandes, and

both testified that they also came out of the meeting with the

understanding that moving forward, workers performing sewer

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cleaning and inspection would be paid the Laborer I or II

classification.

In support of the DLIR’s Notification of Violation,

the Hearings Officer heard testimony from Investigator Lee,

Brandon Ili of the International Union of Operating Engineers,

Local 3, and Foyt. Both Investigator Lee and Ili testified that

under the work practices of the Operating Engineers, persons

driving and operating a vacuum truck would be compensated at the

higher truck driver wage classification. Ili further testified

that although workers such as Foyt may be cleaning sewer pipes

at a construction job site, the Truck Driver classification

would be appropriate because the operation and use of a Vactor

truck with vacuum and water capabilities requires the driver to

hold a CDL. Foyt testified in detail about the scope of work he

performed as an Eckard Brandes employee, noting his primary role

was to operate the Vactor truck and to drive it to and from the

jobsite, and on occasion, to assist other Eckard Brandes

employees with CCTV inspection and repairs.

In a December 6, 2017 written decision and order, the

Hearings Officer determined that the DLIR correctly classified

Foyt as a Truck Driver. “Based on a misclassification of work

as a [L]aborer I or [L]aborer II, rather than Truck Driver,” the

Hearings Officer concluded Foyt was owed $54,664.65 in back

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wages under the Truck Driver classification. 4 The Hearings

Officer reasoned that without Eckard Brandes employees like Foyt

“performing the cleaning and inspection, the general

contractor[s] would not be able to perform their repair or

replacement of the sewer pipe line,” and therefore concluded

that cleaning and inspection “was an integral part of or in

conjunction with a construction repair or replacement sewer pipe

project” and thus subject to HRS chapter 104.

The Hearings Officer determined that the 2005 Befitel

letter “appear[ed] to have confusing or conflicting information”

and “reflect[ed] disagreements in the prevailing practice that

were being resolving under different administrations.” However,

the Hearings Officer determined that while the “letter does not

address or clarify the workers classification [for an employee]

who drives the truck and operates the equipment of the job

site,” federal precedent “gives the International Operating

Engineers the authority to set the prevailing area practices,

and their classification is Truck Driver[.]”

C. Appellate Proceedings

Eckard Brandes appealed the Hearing Officer’s decision

and order to the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit

4 It appears that the Hearings Officer mistakenly found that Foyt was paid at the Laborer I or Laborer II wage classification for all work he performed as an Eckard Brandes employee. However, the record reflects that Foyt was paid the lower company rate for cleaning and inspection work.

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court) in 2018. 5 Following briefing and oral argument, the

circuit court orally reversed the DLIR Hearing Officer’s

decision and order. The circuit court’s basis for reversal was

Eckard Brandes’s reasonable reliance on the 2005 Befitel letter:

The basis for the [circuit court’s] decision is that

it was arbitrary and capricious for the [DLIR] to vary from

clear statements made in the director’s July 26, 2005

letter upon which [Eckard Brandes] reasonably relied in

calculating its expenses to submit its bids on state

contracts. So basically the State cannot change the rules

after a clear statement like this without notice being

given to the employer, such as it arguably was in 2013 in

the meeting with [Eckard Brandes representatives and DLIR].

So the court is not ruling that [the 2013 letter] was a

correct decision by [DLIR]. The court is just ruling that

it cannot be applied retroactively.

So it was a misapplication of the law for the Wage

Standards Division not to apply the directives contained in

the director’s July 26, 2005 letter. So because the

parties did not controvert and [Foyt] agreed that he was

paid for the correct number of hours, the only things he

was contesting was the classification. And since the

classification used by [Eckard Brandes] was consistent with

the statements made in Mr. Befitel’s or the director’s July

26, 2005 letter, it was error for the Wage Standards

Division to find otherwise.

(Emphases added.)

In its written order, the circuit court further stated

that the DLIR “was bound by the July 2005 letter, from then

Director Nelson Befitel, that the work of sewer line cleaning

was not subject to Chapter 104 HRS and therefore, the work

performed by [Foyt] at the time, was not subject to Chapter 104

HRS.”

Foyt filed a motion to intervene and appealed the

circuit court’s reversal of the DLIR’s Hearing Officer’s

5 The Honorable Keith K. Hiraoka presided.

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decision and order, arguing the matter directly resulted in his

loss of $54,664.65 in wages under the Truck Driver

classification. After the ICA dismissed Foyt’s appeal for lack

of jurisdiction, this court vacated the ICA’s dismissal and

instructed the ICA to address the merits of the case. 6 Eckard

Brandes, Inc. v. Dep’t of Lab. & Indus. Rels., 146 Hawaiʻi 354,

364, 463 P.3d 1011, 1021 (2020).

On remand, Foyt argued that the hearing officer’s

decision was supported by substantial evidence and was not

clearly erroneous. He contended his cleaning and inspection

work were subject to HRS chapter 104 because they are an

“integral part” of construction projects on which Eckard Brandes

was a subcontractor. Therefore, Foyt argued, Eckard Brandes

could not have reasonably relied on the 2005 Befitel letter, nor

could it have been used to invoke estoppel against DLIR’s 2017

Notice of Violation.

The ICA disagreed. Addressing the merits of Foyt’s

appeal, the ICA affirmed the circuit court’s decision. It

reasoned that the wages Eckard Brandes paid Foyt were consistent

with the 2005 Befitel letter, which Eckard Brandes reasonably

relied upon before receiving conflicting instructions from the

6 Although Foyt’s appeal to the ICA was untimely, we held his untimely appeal was “excusable neglect” because Foyt was not a party to the case and due to the timing of the holiday season, Foyt was only able to retain counsel the day before the deadline to appeal the circuit court’s decision. Eckard Brandes, 146 Hawaiʻi at 360-61, 463 P.3d at 1017-18.

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DLIR in 2013. Therefore, the ICA held the circuit court did not

err when it determined the DLIR was arbitrary and capricious

when it “retroactively” applied its 2013 interpretation of HRS

chapter 104’s applicability to sewer cleaning and inspection

“without notifying [Eckard Brandes] that it was not entitled to

rely on Director Befitel’s 2005 Letter.”

Foyt applied for writ of certiorari, which we

accepted.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

[W]hen reviewing a determination of an administrative

agency, we first decide whether the legislature granted the

agency discretion to make the determination being reviewed.

If the legislature has granted the agency discretion over a

particular matter, then we review the agency’s action

pursuant to the deferential abuse of discretion standard

(bearing in mind the legislature determines the boundaries

of that discretion). If the legislature has not granted

the agency discretion over a particular matter, then the

agency’s conclusions are subject to de novo review.

Paul’s Elec. Serv., Inc. v. Befitel, 104 Hawai‘i 412, 419–20, 91

P.3d 494, 501–02 (2004).

An agency’s conclusions of law are reviewed de novo, while

an agency’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error.

A conclusion of law that presents mixed questions of fact

and law is reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard

because the conclusion is dependent upon the facts and

circumstances of the particular case.

Del Monte Fresh Produce (Haw.), Inc. v. Int’l Longshore &

Warehouse Union, Local 142, AFL-CIO, 112 Hawai‘i 489, 499, 146

P.3d 1066, 1076 (2006) (internal quotation marks, citations, and

brackets omitted).

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IV. DISCUSSION

Foyt contends that Eckard Brandes erroneously relied

upon the 2005 Befitel letter. He argues the letter was in

“direct conflict” with HRS chapter 104 and its related

regulations. In other words, Foyt contends that because the

2005 DLIR interpretation of HRS chapter 104 and its relevant

regulations was erroneous as a matter of law, the DLIR could not

be estopped from penalizing Eckard Brandes. We disagree, and

conclude Eckard Brandes’s reliance on the 2005 Befitel letter,

under the facts of this case, was reasonable and the DLIR was

estopped from applying its later interpretation of HRS chapter

104 retroactively to Eckard Brandes.

Although the doctrine of equitable estoppel is limited

in its application against the government, this court has

“explicitly maintained the validity of the notion that a

government can be estopped.” Filipo v. Chang, 62 Haw. 626, 635,

618 P.2d 295, 300 (1980); see Yamada v. Nat. Disaster Claims

Comm’n, 54 Haw. 621, 629, 513 P.2d 1001, 1006 (1973) (“[T]he

doctrine of equitable estoppel is fully applicable against the

government if it is necessary to invoke it to prevent manifest

injustice.”). Consistent with courts’ “reluctance” to apply

estoppel against the government, we have recognized that

“estoppel cannot be applied to actions for which the agency or

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agent of the government has no authority.” Filipo, 62 Haw. at

634, 618 P.2d at 300.

That is not the case here. The plain language of HRS

chapter 104 makes clear that “[t]he prevailing wages shall be

established by the [DLIR] director.” HRS § 104-2(b)(1). ThenDLIR Director Befitel was therefore properly authorized to

instruct Eckard Brandes that the Sewer Line Tele-Repairer

classification would no longer be recognized, and that cleaning

and inspection work would not be covered under HRS chapter 104.

Cf. Turner v. Chandler, 87 Hawaiʻi 330, 334, 955 P.2d 1062, 1066

(App. 1998) (holding that since the state agency had no

authority to confer benefits on appellant during a particular

period, the contrary representation made to the appellant by an

agency caseworker was unauthorized and ultra vires).

Foyt cites to the Ninth Circuit’s test in applying the

government estoppel doctrine, and argues that Eckard Brandes is

unable to meet its test “to provide a shield to [his] prevailing

wage claim.” See Wagner v. Dir., Fed. Emergency Mgmt. Agency,

847 F.2d 515, 519 (9th Cir. 1988). In Wagner, the Ninth Circuit

adopted a “stringent test” requiring parties invoking government

estoppel to “establish affirmative misconduct going beyond mere

negligence; even then, estoppel will only apply where the

government’s wrongful act will cause a serious injustice, and

the public’s interest will not suffer undue damage by imposition

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of the liability.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).

However, this court has suggested Hawaiʻi has a less stringent

standard than the Ninth Circuit – that “[o]ne invoking equitable

estoppel must show that he or she has detrimentally relied on

the representation or conduct of the person sought to be

estopped, and that such reliance was reasonable.” Doherty v.

Hartford Ins. Grp., 58 Haw. 570, 573, 574 P.2d 132, 134–35

(1978) (emphasis added).

Articulating a similar standard, courts in the First

Circuit have expressed that a defense of equitable estoppel may

be viable where “there has been reasonable reliance on

affirmative misconduct attributable to the [government].”

Griffin v. Reich, 956 F. Supp. 98, 107 (D.R.I. 1997) (quoting

United States v. Ven-Fuel, Inc., 758 F.2d 741, 761 (1st Cir.

1985) (internal quotation marks omitted). The measure of what

amounts to “affirmative misconduct” is “only moderately

demanding,” but nonetheless must rise above “mere inaction,

delay or sloth on the part of the government.” Id. at 108.

Griffin involved the applicability of prevailing wages

at a public housing development funded by the United States

Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Id. at 100-01. There, the plaintiff contractor challenged a determination

by the Wage and Hour Division of the United States Department of

Labor (DOL) that the contractor should have been paying

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prevailing wages under the Davis-Bacon Act to its workers at an

off-site fabrication facility related to the HUD project. Id.

at 100-04. The plaintiff had sought advice from HUD regarding

the wages of workers at the off-site facility. Id. at 101. The

HUD Director of Housing Management replied with a letter stating

that “Davis-Bacon Wage Rates do not apply to the fabrication of

building components.” Id. On review, the United States

District Court for the District of Rhode Island opined “that if

ever there was a case where equitable estoppel should explicitly

apply against the government, this is it, provided the factual

predicates are found to exist.” Id. at 108. That court

remanded the proceedings to DOL to make factual determinations

concerning the application of equitable estoppel and directed

that “[DOL]’s inquiry should focus first on whether plaintiffs

reasonably relied on affirmative representations by HUD,” and

second, “whether plaintiffs, in fact, complied with HUD’s

policies.” Id. at 109. Summarizing the administrative and

procedural history of the case, the court noted that the

disparate interpretation of policy by the two government

agencies had resulted in a “bureaucratic whipsaw” for the

plaintiff. Id. “To right this wrong,” the court held that

equitable estoppel should apply if plaintiffs relied on and were

in compliance with “HUD’s policies and representations

concerning the applicability of Davis-Bacon requirements.” Id.

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Similar circumstances are present here, although

unlike Griffin, the record makes clear that Eckard Brandes

reasonably relied on “affirmative representations” by the DLIR

in the 2005 Befitel letter, and accordingly complied with its

guidance. Cf. id. The 2005 letter differentiated between

repair versus inspection and cleaning, stating that employees

doing repair work must be paid the prevailing Laborer I wage,

while employees doing inspection and cleaning need not be as it

“is not considered construction work.” Eckard Brandes, having

received the 2005 Befitel letter, adjusted how it paid its

employees and how it submitted bids for the public works

projects Foyt worked on between 2011 and 2013. Notably, the

record reflects that until DLIR Administrator Martin’s

September 6, 2013 letter, the DLIR did not clarify or retract

its 2005 guidance. Indeed, more than a year after the 2005

Befitel letter, DLIR Director Befitel again confirmed that the

“cleaning of sewer lines, [CCTV] recording of sewer lines,

bypassing of wastewater, reporting, documenting, and other

incidentals, does not warrant any determination under [HRS]

Chapter 104, because the work is not considered as construction

work,” in a November 2006 letter to the County of Maui

Wastewater Reclamation Division.

Furthermore, the record reflects that the Truck Driver

classification is not industry practice as none of the

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applicable wage classifications prior to the DLIR’s 2017

Notification of Violation were based on operating a truck.

Rather, prior to 2005, workers who performed any kind of sewer

cleaning, inspection, or repair were classified as Sewer Line

Tele-Repairers. 7 From 2005 until DLIR Administrator Martin’s

September 2013 letter, the pertinent wage classification for

workers conducting sewer repairs was Laborer I or Laborer II,

depending on the equipment used. Additionally, the DLIR’s

September 2013 letter made no distinction between cleaning,

inspection, or operating a Vactor truck (which is part of sewer

pipe cleaning), and made no indication a separate Truck Driver

classification should apply. 8 Therefore, because the Truck

Driver classification was not an applicable classification prior

to the DLIR’s 2017 Notification of Violation, we conclude the

circuit court did not err when it determined that it was

7 Although a description of the Sewer Line Tele-Repairer classification is not in the record before this court, subsequent applicable wage classifications of sewer line workers are in the record. Notably, they do not differentiate between workers who operate trucks and those who do not, suggesting the pre-2005 Sewer Line Tele-Repairer classification also did not differentiate truck drivers from other sewer line workers.

8 The record further suggests that other Hawaiʻi companies that conduct sewer work do not use the Truck Driver wage classification. For example, the owner of Eckard Brandes’s competitor, Underground Services, Inc., testified at the hearing that at no time was he informed by the DLIR or the City and County of Honolulu that his employees who operate Vactor trucks must be paid at the Truck Driver rate. Additionally, Eckard Brandes’s President testified that another competitor, whose employees are members of the Operating Engineers, Local 3 union and conduct similar sewer cleaning and inspection, paid their employees the Laborer I rate regardless of whether the employee operated a Vactor truck.

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“arbitrary and capricious for the [DLIR] to vary from the clear

statements made in the director’s July 26, 2005 letter upon

which [Eckard Brandes] reasonably relied[.]”

Given these circumstances, to require Eckard Brandes

to have paid Foyt and other similarly situated employees the

Truck Driver wage, when it could not have anticipated that the

DLIR would later switch course in 2013, would result in a

“bureaucratic whipsaw.” See Griffin, 956 F. Supp. at 109. In

reaching this conclusion, we need not determine whether the 2005

Befitel letter’s interpretation that sewer cleaning and

inspection is outside the scope of HRS chapter 104 when

performed as “an integral part of or in conjunction with a

construction contract” was erroneous as a matter of law. See

HAR § 12-22-1.

Even if the 2005 Befitel letter’s analysis of the

applicability of HRS chapter 104 to sewer cleaning and repair

was faulty, we conclude that DLIR retroactively changing its

2005 position without notifying Eckard Brandes that it was not

entitled to rely on the 2005 letter was arbitrary and

capricious. See Paul’s Elec. Serv., Inc., 104 Hawai‘i at 419-20,

91 P.3d at 501-02. And we further conclude that the ICA did not

err when it applied the government estoppel doctrine to this

case.

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V. CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the ICA’s May 29,

2024 Judgment on Appeal affirming the circuit court’s December

19, 2018 Order Reversing Decision of the Department of Labor and

Industrial Relations and Final Judgment.

Shawn A. Luiz /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald for petitioner

/s/ Sabrina S. McKenna

Richard M. Rand

for respondent /s/ Todd W. Eddins

/s/ Vladimir P. Devens

/s/ Matthew J. Viola

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