SECRETARY OF
LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC Docket No.
04-1300 |
DANIEL KOURY
CONSTRUCTION, INC., |
|
Respondent. |
|
DIRECTION
FOR REVIEW AND REMAND ORDER
Daniel Koury Construction, Inc., (Daniel Koury) timely
filed with the Commission a Petition for Discretionary Review of Administrative
Law Judge G. Marvin Bober’s default judgment against it, in which the judge
affirmed a citation for a single alleged violation of a standard under the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, 29 U.S.C. §§ 651-78. The judge also
imposed the proposed penalty of $600. For the following reasons, we hereby
direct review of this case, vacate the default judgment, and remand the case to
the judge, ordering him to reinstate the case for further proceedings on the
merits of the citation allegations in a manner consistent with this opinion.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Following issuance of the citation on July 1, 2004,
and timely-filed notice of contest, the parties and judge participated in two
pre-trial telephone conferences in this case designated for the Commission’s
E-Z Trial simplified procedures, Commission Rules of Procedures, Subpart M, 29
C.F.R. § 2200.200 et seq. On October 25, 2004, the judge granted the
Secretary’s motion to amend the citation and, on October 27, 2004, he scheduled
another pre-trial telephone conference to be held on November 16, 2004, at 9:15
am.
At an undetermined time on November 16, the judge
issued an “Order to Show Cause” pursuant to Rule 41 of the Commission Rules of
Procedure, 29 C.F.R § 2200.41, for Respondent’s “fail[ure] in his
responsibility to be available for the pre-trial telephone conference.” The
judge ordered that Respondent “shall no later than 5:00 p.m. EST on Thursday,
November 18, 2004, provide in affidavit form a statement as to reason(s) the
Respondent should not be declared to be in default and the Citation and
Notification of Penalty issued July 1, 2004, should not be affirmed.” The Certificate
of Service stated that the Order “was mailed to the parties . . . by first
class mail on November 16, 2004.” Underneath that statement, the words “VIA
FACSIMILE” are printed, but there is no Facsimile Transmission sheet or
verification report, as there is in the file for a different document sent by
facsimile. Also printed above the Respondent’s Warwick, Rhode Island address on
the Certificate of Service, are the words “FEDERAL EXPRESS.” There is no
verification in the file of Respondent’s receipt via any means of the Order to
Show Cause.
On Friday, November 19, 2004, the judge sent to the
parties, via facsimile (with transmission sheet and verification report), a
copy of his Decision and Order on Default Judgment, which he submitted to the
Commission on November 29, 2004. In its Petition before us, Respondent
explained that “on the day that we were supposed to have the conference call I
had to go to a jobsite to meet with one of our customers. I act as the project
manager, and these days it is very difficult to get any work, so when we do get
work we need to comply with the wishes of general contractors when the[y] order
me to the jobsite . . . .”
DISCUSSION
Commission Rule 41 governs the imposition of sanctions
providing, in relevant part, as follows.
(a) Sanctions.
When any party has failed to plead or otherwise proceed as provided by these
rules or as required by the Judge, he may be declared to be in default either:
(1) on the initiative of the Commission or Judge, after having been afforded an
opportunity to show cause why he should not be declared to be in default; or
(2) on the motion of a party.
. . .
(d) Show
cause orders. All show cause orders issued by the Commission or Judge under
paragraph (a) of this section shall be served upon the affected party by
certified mail, return receipt requested.
Commission precedent recognizes the appropriateness of
sanctions “to ensure compliance with prehearing procedures and to adjudicate
cases fairly and efficiently,” but prohibits imposition of “a sanction that is
too harsh under the circumstances of the case.” E.g., Architectural Glass
& Metal Co., Inc., 19 BNA OSHC 1546, 1547, 2001 CCH OSHD ¶ 32,424, p.
49,975 (No. 00-0389, 2001), and cases there cited. Dismissal of a citation for
noncompliance with prehearing orders is generally permissible only where “the
record shows contumacious conduct by the noncomplying party or prejudice to the
opposing party.” Id., citing Noranda Aluminum, Inc., 9 BNA OSHC
1187, 1189, 1981 CCH OSHD ¶ 25,086, p. 30,988 (No. 79-1059, 1980) (finding
dismissal “too harsh a sanction for failure to comply with a discovery order”);
Circle T. Drilling Co., 8 BNA OSHC 1681, 1682, 1980 CCH OSHD ¶ 24,583,
p. 30,155 (No. 79-2667, 1980).
The Commission’s case law is consistent with that of
reviewing courts, which “universally recognize the harshness of dismissal with
prejudice and generally require that lesser sanctions first be considered.” Duquesne
Light Co., 8 BNA OSHC 1218, 1222, 1980 CCH OSHD ¶ 24,384, p. 29,719 (No.
78-5034, 1980). The First Circuit, in which this case arises, has recently
emphasized that the “ultimate sanction of dismissal . . . for lack of
prosecution is appropriate only when plaintiff’s misconduct is serious,
repeated, contumacious, extreme, or otherwise inexcusable.” Bachier-Ortiz v.
Colon-Mendoza, 331 F.3d 193, 195 (1st Cir. 2003) (per curiam). See
also Crissman v. Raytheon Long Term Disability Plan, 316 F.3d 36 (1st
Cir. 2002) (reversing dismissal sanction for counsel’s failure to appear at
scheduling conference as unduly harsh where inconvenience to opposing party did
not rise to the level of prejudice justifying dismissal).
We find that the judge’s dismissal of the citation
here was both procedurally and substantively flawed. As a procedural matter,
the judge erred on two counts. First, he failed to comply with Commission Rules
of Procedure, Rule 41(a)(1) by sending the Order to Show Cause by means other
than certified mail, return receipt requested, and there is no indication in
the file whether Respondent ever, in fact, received it. In addition, that Order
mandated a response from a pro se party in affidavit form within two days. Rule
41(a) requires not just that a show cause order be sent; the party must be
afforded an opportunity to show why default is not warranted. We find
that the two-day response time provided in the judge’s order for this pro se
respondent was patently inadequate and unreasonable, and inconsistent with the
intent of the E-Z Trial procedures applied in this case. In these
circumstances, the judge effectively provided Daniel Koury Construction no
opportunity to respond at all. See Richard A. Pulaski Construction Co., Inc.,
1995-97 CCH OSHD ¶ 30,811 (No. 94-1973, 1995) (reversing and remanding
dismissal of notice of contest for failure to telephone judge for scheduled
prehearing conference where employer not provided opportunity to show cause and
reasons for missing phone call deemed sufficient).
Substantively, the judge made no finding that
Respondent’s failure to be present for a single telephone conference was
contumacious and, on this record, we find that he could not. Thus, Respondent
participated in two prior telephone conferences and, as stated in his Petition
before the Commission, was urgently and unexpectedly called away at the
scheduled time of the third. Although Respondent’s failure to contact the judge
at that time may have been thoughtless and inconvenient, we find that it falls
far short of the type of “serious, repeated, contumacious, extreme, or
otherwise inexcusable” conduct that would warrant dismissal. Nor do we see any
basis to establish that the Secretary suffered prejudice from this single
missed telephone conference. See Amsco Inc., 19 BNA OSHC 2189, 2191-92
(No. 02-0220, 2003) (vacating default sanction for counsel’s failure to miss a
single pre-hearing teleconference).
In these circumstances we conclude that the judge
abused his discretion in dismissing the case. Accordingly, we hereby grant
Respondent’s Petition for Discretionary Review and vacate Judge Bober’s
November 29, 2004 Decision and Order on Default Judgment. We also order that
the case be remanded to the judge for reinstatement and proceedings on the
merits of the citation in a manner consistent with this opinion.
SO ORDERED
/s/_____________________
W.
Scott Railton
Chairman
/s/_____________________
Thomasina
V. Rogers
Commissioner
/s/_____________________
James
M. Stephens
Commissioner
Dated:
December 30, 2004
SECRETARY OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC Docket No.04-1300 |
D. KOURY CONSTRUCTION, INC., |
|
Respondent. |
|
DECISION
AND ORDER ON DEFAULT JUDGEMENT
On
October 27, 2004, an order notified all parties including the Respondent̓s
representative, Daniel E. Koury, President, of a pre-trial telephone conference
to be held on Tuesday, November 16, 2004 at 9:15 a.m. EST. Mr. Koury failed to
notify the undersigned of its unavailability for the pre-trial telephone
conference, and thus failed in its responsibility to this Court.
Thereafter,
the undersigned on November 16, 2004, issued an order requiring the Respondent
to provide in affidavit form a statement as to reason(s) the Respondent should
not be declared to be in default and the Citation and Notification of Penalty
issued July 1, 2004, should not be affirmed.
The
Respondent did not file a reply.
DISCUSSION
AND CONCLUSION
The
Respondent has failed to comply with the Order To Show Cause and is declared to
be in default.
IT
IS ORDERED that Default Judgement is GRANTED.
IT
IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Citation and Notification of Penalty issued July 1,
2004, is affirmed in its entirety.
Dated: NOV 29, 2004
Washington,
D.C. /s/
G.
Marvin Bober
Administrative
Law Judge