United
States of America
OCCUPATIONAL
SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
1120 20th Street, N.W., Ninth Floor
Washington,
DC 20036-3457
APPEARANCES:
Gregory F. Jacob,
Solicitor of Labor; Michael P. Doyle, Counsel for Appellate Litigation; Deborah
Greenfield, Acting Deputy Solicitor; Joseph M. Woodward, Associate Solicitor
for Occupational Safety and Health; Charles F. James, Counsel for Appellate
Litigation; Gary K. Stearman, Senior Appellate Attorney; U.S. Department of
Labor, Washington, DC
For
the Complainant
Ronald
W. Taylor, Esq.; Venable LLP, Baltimore, MD
For
the Respondent
Before: ATTWOOD, Acting Chairman, and MacDOUGALL, Commissioner.
BY THE COMMISSION:
Pullman
Power, LLC, a contractor on a construction project at a power plant in West
Virginia, engaged a specialty subcontractor to fabricate fiberglass-reinforced
plastic liners for use in the project. Following an inspection of the worksite,
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration issued Pullman a serious
citation alleging violations of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.55(a) and (b), which
require an employer to adopt measures to prevent employees from being exposed
to styrene levels above specified limits (Items 1a and 1b), and 29 C.F.R. § 1926.152(f)(3),
which prohibits certain flammable liquids from being used within 50 feet of an
ignition source (Item 2). The Secretary alleged under the multi-employer
worksite doctrine that Pullman was a controlling employer on the project and
therefore liable under all of the citation items for the exposure of an
employee of the specialty subcontractor to the cited conditions. The Secretary
also alleged that Pullman’s own employees were exposed to the conditions at
issue under Item 2. OSHA proposed a total penalty of $8,000.
Administrative
Law Judge Dennis L. Phillips granted partial summary judgment to Pullman; he
dismissed Items 1a and 1b, and dismissed Item 2 only to the extent it was based
on the alleged exposure of the subcontractor’s employee. In so ruling, the
judge properly relied on then-current Commission precedent under Summit
Contractors, Inc., which held that the controlling employer theory of
liability when applied to an alleged violation on a multi-employer construction
worksite was invalid. 21 BNA OSHC 2020, 2004-09 CCH OSHD ¶ 32,888 (No. 03-1622,
2007) (“Summit I”), rev’d, 558 F.3d 815 (8th Cir. 2009) (“Summit
II”), and overruled by Summit Contractors, Inc., 23 BNA OSHC 1196,
2009-12 CCH OSHD ¶ 33,079 (No. 05-0839, 2010) (“Summit III”), aff’d,
442 F.App’x. 570 (D.C. Cir. 2011).
The
Secretary subsequently informed the judge that he no longer intended to pursue
Item 2 to the extent it was based on the alleged exposure of Pullman’s own
employees and asked the judge to issue a final order dismissing that citation
item, which the judge did. The Secretary then filed a petition seeking review
of the judge’s partial summary judgment order and, after the case was directed,
Pullman filed a Motion for Reconsideration requesting that the Commission vacate
the Direction for Review. For the reasons discussed below, we deny Pullman’s
motion, vacate the judge’s order granting partial summary judgment, and remand
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DISCUSSION
I. Motion
for Reconsideration of the Direction for Review
Pullman
argues that the Commission should vacate the Direction for Review because, it
contends, the Secretary requested a voluntary dismissal and failed to properly
preserve his right to appeal. In support of its position, Pullman relies on Prime
Roofing Corp., in which the Commission noted that there is a “generally
recognize[d]” rule that “ ‘a plaintiff may not appeal a voluntary dismissal
because there is no involuntary or adverse judgment against him.’ ” 22 BNA OSHC
1892, 1895, 2009-12 CCH OSHD ¶ 33,028, p. 54,344 (No. 07-1409, 2009)
(quoting Cashmere & Camel Hair Mfrs. Inst. v. Saks Fifth Ave., 284
F.3d 302, 308-09 (1st Cir. 2002)).
In Prime
Roofing, the Secretary voluntarily dismissed his entire complaint in order
to seek Commission review of the judge’s interlocutory determination that the
respondent’s notice of contest was valid. Id. at 1893, 2009-12 CCH OSHD
at p. 54,343. Although the Commission acknowledged that a plaintiff generally
may not file an appeal after voluntarily dismissing its complaint, the
Commission determined that, under the circumstances, it was proper to consider
the Secretary’s petition. In reaching its decision, the Commission discussed a
First Circuit opinion, Scanlon v. M.V. SUPER SERVANT 3, as that circuit
would have had jurisdiction over an appeal. 429 F.3d 6 (1st Cir. 2005). In Scanlon,
the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their complaint after the lower court
issued an order requiring the parties to arbitrate, and then sought appellate
review of the judge’s interlocutory order. Id. at 8. The First Circuit
held that an appeal is permissible under such circumstances only if the
plaintiff sought dismissal “without delay,” “made explicit” its intent to
appeal in the dismissal motion, and requested a dismissal with prejudice. Id. at 9-10. In Prime Roofing, the Commission
noted the presence of all three factors as grounds weighing in favor of its
decision to consider the Secretary’s petition. 22 BNA OSHC at 1895, 2009-12 CCH
OSHD at p. 54,344.
We
find that Pullman’s reliance on Prime Roofing, and its discussion of the
Scanlon opinion, is misplaced. The Commission addressed Scanlon
because Prime Roofing arose in the First Circuit. See 29
U.S.C. § 660(a), (b); Kerns Bros. Tree Serv., 18 BNA OSHC 2064, 2067,
2000 CCH OSHD ¶ 32,053, p. 48,003 (No. 96-1719, 2000) (Commission generally
applies law of the circuit where it is probable a case will be appealed). Here,
the relevant circuits are the Fourth, Eighth, and D.C. Circuits, none of which impose any of the special requirements discussed
by the First Circuit in Scanlon. See Volvo Constr. Equip. N. Am.,
Inc. v. CLM Equip. Co., 386 F.3d 581, 591 n. 9 (4th Cir. 2004); Helm
Fin. Corp. v. MNVA R.R., Inc., 212 F.3d 1076, 1080 (8th Cir. 2000); Blue
v. D.C. Pub. Schs., 764 F.3d 11, 17 (D.C. Cir. 2014). While the
Commission did consider the Scanlon requirements in Prime Roofing
and found that they had been met, it did not adopt them as precedent.
Moreover,
the circumstances at issue in both Prime Roofing and Scanlon are
very different from those in the instant matter. Those cases addressed
situations in which the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed its entire
complaint and then sought to appeal an interlocutory order that had not
resolved the merits of the claims at issue. Here, in contrast, after the judge
ruled against the Secretary by granting Pullman partial summary judgment, the
only issue that remained was, as the Secretary later stipulated, the allegation
under Item 2 that Pullman’s own employees were exposed to the cited condition.
Once the Secretary voluntarily withdrew this remaining allegation, all issues
in the citation and complaint were resolved.
All
federal circuits allow a plaintiff to appeal a partial summary judgment or
partial dismissal order after voluntarily dismissing any remaining claims. See,
e.g., Blue, 764 F.3d at 17 (“Every circuit permits a plaintiff, in
at least some circumstances, voluntarily to dismiss remaining claims or
remaining parties from an action as a way to conclude the whole case in the
district court and ready it for appeal.”) (and cases cited therein); Ali v.
Fed. Ins. Co., 719 F.3d 83, 89 (2d Cir. 2013) (“A party who loses on a
dispositive issue that affects only a portion of his claims may elect to
abandon the unaffected claims, invite a final judgment, and thereby secure
review of the adverse ruling.”) (internal
citation and quotation marks omitted);
Helm Fin. Corp., 212 F.3d at 1080 (“[W]hen a party voluntarily
dismisses its claims with prejudice in order to expedite appellate review, the
dismissal is a final judgment which can be immediately appealed.”); Volvo
Constr. Equip. N. Am., Inc., 386 F.3d at 591 n. 9. Indeed, as the Third
Circuit has explained:
When a plaintiff has had all but one of her claims
dismissed and is willing to abandon the remaining claim, a stipulation agreeing
to the dismissal of the remaining claim promotes judicial economy by
eliminating unnecessary proceedings at the trial level without posing any
danger of piecemeal litigation. Although the entry of the final order in such a
situation is in one sense invited, the reality of the matter is that the
plaintiff has suffered an adverse judgment.
Trevino-Barton v.
Pittsburgh Nat’l Bank, 919 F.2d 874, 878 (3d Cir. 1990). When a plaintiff
withdraws its remaining claim with prejudice, as the Secretary did here, there
is “universal consensus” that the appeal is permissible. Blue, 764 F.3d
at 17.
Accordingly,
we find that it was permissible for the Secretary to seek review of the judge’s
partial summary judgment order after voluntarily withdrawing his remaining
claim with prejudice and, therefore, we deny Pullman’s motion.
II. Decision
Granting Partial Summary Judgment
In
his Petition for Discretionary Review, the Secretary argues that the Commission
should vacate the judge’s partial summary judgment order because the Summit
I precedent on which it relied was wrongly decided and should be reversed
by the Commission. At the time the judge granted Pullman partial summary
judgment, the Commission’s Summit I decision was pending on appeal to
the Eighth Circuit. Specifically at issue before the court was whether the
Secretary’s policy of citing a controlling employer on a multi-employer
construction worksite for the exposure of another employer’s employee violated
29 C.F.R. § 1910.12(a).
After the
judge issued a final order dismissing the present case and the matter was
directed for review, the Eighth Circuit issued a decision reversing Summit I
and holding that the Secretary’s policy does not violate § 1910.12(a). Solis
v. Summit Contractors, Inc., 558 F.3d 815, 829 (8th Cir. 2009) (“Summit
II”). Following the Eighth Circuit’s decision, the Commission considered
another case in which the Secretary again cited Summit based on its status as
the controlling employer at a multi-employer construction worksite and exposure
of a subcontractor’s employee to an alleged hazard. Summit Contractors, Inc.,
23 BNA OSHC 1196, 2009-12 CCH OSHD ¶ 33,079 (No. 05-0839, 2010) (“Summit III”),
aff’d, 442 F.App’x. 570 (D.C. Cir. 2011). In Summit III, the
Commission stated that it was persuaded by the Eighth Circuit’s analysis in Summit
II, and overruled Summit I, holding that § 1910.12(a) does
not prevent the Secretary from citing a “non-exposing, controlling employer” at
a multi-employer construction worksite. Id. at 1202-03, 2009-12 CCH OSHD
at pp. 54,692-93.
Because the Summit I decision has now been overruled by the
Commission and the Eighth Circuit, we vacate the judge’s order granting partial
summary judgment for Pullman and remand for further proceedings with regard to
Items 1a and 1b in their entirety, and Item 2 to the extent it is based solely
on the Secretary’s allegation that Pullman was a controlling employer liable
for the exposure of the subcontractor’s employee. The Secretary’s allegation in
Item 2 that Pullman’s own employees were exposed to the cited condition remains
dismissed.
SO ORDERED.
/s/
Cynthia
L. Attwood
Acting
Chairman
/s/
Heather
L. MacDougall
Dated: June 24,
2015 Commissioner
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC Docket No. 07-1796 |
PULLMAN POWER, LLC, |
|
Respondent. |
|
FINAL ORDER
I. FACTS
Respondent, Pullman Power, LLC (“Pullman”), is a chimney and stack
services company. Pullman was the general contractor at a power plant in St.
Albans, West Virginia, on a stack construction project. Pullman contracted with
Ershigs, Inc., a specialty subcontrator, to fabricate fiberglass reinforced
plastic liners on the project. The Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (“OSHA”) inspected the work site on May 31, 2007. As a result,
OSHA issued a serious citation to Pullman. Citation 1, Items 1a and 1b, allege
violations of 29 C.F.R. §§ 1926.55(a) and (b), respectively, based upon
employee exposure to styrene in concentrations above the allowable limit.
Citation 1, Item 2, alleges a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.152(f)(3), based
upon flammable liquids being used within 50 feet of an ignition source.
The Complainant filed her complaint on February 25, 2008.
On May 6, 2008, the Court granted
Respondent summary judgment as to Citation 1, Items 1a and 1b, and dismissed
these items. The Court also granted Respondent summary judgment as
to
Citation 1, Item 2, to the extent the Secretary alleged Pullman was the
controlling employer. The Court further denied Respondent’s summary judgment as
to Citation 1, Item 2, to the extent the Secretary alleged Pullman employees
were exposed to the cited hazard.
On
July 28, 2008, Complainant filed her Request for Issuance of a Final Order (Request).1 The
Secretary of Labor has determined, pursuant to her prosecutorial discretion,
not to pursue Item 2 based on the allegation that Respondent is as an exposing
employer. The Complainant now agrees and stipulates that the only basis for
Respondent’s liability for the violation in Item 2 is the allegation that
Respondent was the controlling employer. Respondent has not filed a response to
Complainant’s Request.
A trial is scheduled to commence on October 21,
2008 at Charleston, West Virginia.
II. DISCUSSION.
Under these circumstances, the
Secretary’s citation and complaint may be dismissed by the Court upon motion of
the Secretary.
III. CONCLUSION
On Complainant’s
Request, good cause having been demonstrated and no response filed by
Respondent, the Request is allowed and GRANTED to the extent indicated herein.
It is just and appropriate at this time to dismiss Citation 1, Item 2, in its
entirety, with prejudice.2
1 The
Court is treating Complainant’s Request as a motion.
2 Since
Citation 1, Items 1a and 1b, were dismissed by Court Order Granting Partial
Summary Judgment dated May 6, 2008, the dismissal of Citation 1, Item 2, herein
results in the resolution of all issues related to the underlying Citation and
Complainant’s corresponding Complaint.
ORDER
WHEREFORE IT IS ORDERED THAT, Complainant’s Request is
GRANTED as to Citation 1, Item 2, and that item is accordingly DISMISSED WITH
PREJUDICE IN ITS ENTIRETY, and
FURTHER, the hearing is cancelled.
Dated: _August 25, 2008 Washington, D.C.
/s/
The Honorable Dennis L. Phillips
20.S. OSHRC Judge
UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC Docket No. 07-1796 |
PULLMAN POWER, LLC, |
|
Respondent. |
|
ORDER GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
I. FACTS
Respondent,
Pullman Power, LLC (“Pullman”), is a chimney and stack services company.
Pullman was the general contractor at a power plant in St. Albans, West
Virginia, on a stack construction project. Pullman contracted with Ershigs,
Inc., a specialty subcontrator, to fabricate fiberglass reinforced plastic
liners on the project. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(“OSHA”) inspected the work site on May 31, 2007. As a result, OSHA issued a serious
citation to Pullman. Citation 1, Items 1a and 1b, allege violations of 29
C.F.R. §§ 1926.55(a) and (b), respectively, based upon employee exposure to
styrene in concentrations above the
allowable
limit. Citation 1, Item 2, alleges a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.152(f)(3),
based upon flammable liquids being used within 50 feet of an ignition source.
The Complainant filed her complaint on
February 25, 2008.
Pullman has moved to dismiss, or, in the
alternative, has requested summary judgment with respect to the Secretary’s
complaint and citation items in this matter. The Secretary does not oppose the
granting of summary judgment as to Items 1a and 1b of the citation. The
Secretary does, however, oppose the granting of summary judgment as to Item 2
of the citation.
At the parties’ request, by Order dated April 7, 2008, a
hearing scheduled to commence on June 16, 2008 on the merits of this case was
postponed sine die.
II. DISCUSSION.
It is undisputed that only Ershigs
employees were exposed to styrene and that Items 1a and 1b were issued to
Pullman pursuant to OSHA’s multi-employer work site doctrine.
Specifically, the basis of Items 1a and 1b is that Pullman
was the controlling employer as to those items. In regard to Item 2, on the
other hand, the Secretary asserts that Pullman was the controlling employer and
that employees of both Pullman and Ershigs were exposed to the cited condition.
As the Secretary notes, summary
judgment is appropriate only when the moving party meets its burden of
demonstrating that “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and
admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
a judgment as a matter of law.” See Fed.
R.
Civ. P. 56(c). See also, e.g., N&N Contractors, Inc., 18 BNA OSHC
2121, 2128 (No. 96
0606,
2000), aff’d, 255 F.3d 122 (4th Cir. 2001).
In regard to
Items 1a and 1b, the Secretary concedes summary judgment is appropriate due to
Pullman being the controlling employer at the site and the Commission’s
decision in Summit Contractors, Inc., 21 BNA OSHC 2020 (No. 03-1622,
2007) (“Summit”). In that case, the Commission reviewed its
long-standing precedent regarding multi-employer work sites. The Commission
concluded the Secretary may not cite a general contractor at a work site due
solely to its control of the site. However, the Commission did not otherwise
disturb the multi-employer work site doctrine. Id. at 2025. The
Secretary points out that she disagrees with the Commission’s decision in Summit
and that that case is currently on appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Eighth Circuit. Regardless, she acknowledges that Commission judges are
bound by Commission precedent in this instance.3 She also acknowledges
that Summit requires summary judgment with respect to Items 1a and 1b in
this matter.4 As the Secretary concedes that the Summit decision
mandates dismissal of Items 1a and 1b in this case, summary judgment is granted
as to those items.5
3 The
Commission generally applies the precedent of the circuit where it is highly
probable an appeal would be taken even though it may differ from the
Commission’s precedent. Kerns Brothers Tree Service, 18 BNA OSHC 2064,
2067 (No. 96-1719, 2000). Here, the Fourth Circuit would have jurisdiction over
the site of the alleged violation. The Eighth Circuit would have jurisdiction
due to the site of Respondent’s principal office and Respondent alone may also
appeal to the District of Columbia Circuit. Id; 29 U.S.C. §§ 660(a) and
(b). None of these three circuits has directly addressed whether the
multi-employer work site doctrine is not enforceable because it is contrary to
29 C.F.R. § 1910.12(a), the gravamen of the Commission’s Summit decision.
Accordingly, the undersigned cannot and will not ignore the existing Commission
Summit precedent.
4The
Secretary notes that she has argued her position with respect to Summit and
Items 1a and 1b in this case for purposes of preserving the issue for the
Commission and appellate review. See Dover Elevator Co., Inc., 16 BNA
OSHC 1281, 1285-86 (No. 91-862, 1993).
5 See
also Standard Building Company, Inc., and Standard Systems, Inc., Consolidated, 2007 WL 4724128 (O.S.H.R.C.)(Secretary withdrew eight citation
items based upon Commission’s Summit decision).
In regard to Item 2, the Secretary agrees that summary
judgment is also appropriate to the extent she has alleged that Pullman was the
controlling employer at the work site. For all of the reasons stated above,
summary judgment is granted as to Item 2 to the extent Pullman was the
controlling employer at the site. Pullman contends, however, that summary
judgment must also be granted with respect to the Secretary’s claim that
employees of Pullman were exposed to the cited hazard. It asserts that the
Secretary has not met her pleadings burden. It also asserts that there are no
material facts in dispute. Finally, it asserts that summary judgment as to this
item is not premature due to the fact that discovery has not yet occurred. I
disagree, for the following reasons.
First, I have noted that the OSHA-1B relating
to Item 2 states that the “Violation [was]
based on controlling employer.”6 However,
as the Secretary points out, the OSHA-1B also states, on page 2 in paragraph
25, that “Pullman Power employees working in the stack would also be exposed
employees in the event of an ignition at the base of the stack where Ershigs is
working.”7
Pullman argues that this statement is “simply
too vague and conclusory to support her position.” I find that it is not, and I
agree with the Secretary that she need not, at this point, identify in detail
all the evidence relied upon in issuing the citation item. See, e.g., Del
Monte Corp., 4 BNA OSHC 2035, 2037 (No. 11865, 1977); Gold Kist, Inc.,
7 BNA OSHC 1855, 1861
6 The OSHA 1-B’s relating to the citation items are attached
to Pullman’s motion.
7 The Complaint, at ¶ 9,
alleges “One or more of Respondent’s employees was present on the construction
project at the worksite and was exposed to the violative conditions alleged in
Item 2 at the time that these conditions existed.” The Complaint, at ¶ 3, also
alleges Respondent had 19 employees at the workplace.
(No.
76-2049, 1979). I find that the Secretary has met her pleading burden with
respect to Item 2.
Second, I also find that there are material facts in
dispute. Pullman, for example, contends that the cited standard does not apply.
It notes that the standard refers to “flammable liquids” and that the citation
refers to a resin described as a “flammable material.” Further, the Secretary
points out that Pullman will presumably dispute that there were ignition
sources within 50 feet of the flammable material and that Pullman’s employees
were exposed to the cited condition. As the Secretary asserts, Pullman has not
shown the absence of any genuine issues of material fact, a requirement of prevailing
in a motion for summary judgment. See Aman v. Cort Furniture Rental Corp.,
85 F.3d 1074, 1080 (3d Cir. 1996).
Third, I find that the Secretary is entitled to a
reasonable opportunity to obtain additional information from Pullman during the
discovery process. See Doe v. Abington Friends School, 480 F.3d 252, 257
(3d Cir. 2007) (noting that if discovery is incomplete in any way material to a
pending summary judgment motion, a court is justified in not granting the
motion, particularly when relevant facts are under the control of the moving
party). Discovery has not run its course in this case. The Secretary is
therefore entitled to seek additional information from Pullman with respect to
the alleged violation through the discovery process.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, partial summary judgment is
appropriate to the extent so ordered below.
IV. ORDER
WHEREFORE IT IS ORDERED THAT, summary judgment is GRANTED
as to Citation 1, Items 1a and 1b. Those items are accordingly DISMISSED.
Summary judgment is also GRANTED as to Citation 1, Item 2,
to the extent the Secretary alleges Pullman was the controlling employer.
Summary judgment is DENIED as to Citation 1, Item 2, to the
extent the Secretary alleges Pullman employees were exposed to the cited
hazard.
Dated: _May 6, 2008
Washington, D.C.
/s/
The Honorable Dennis
L. Phillips
U.S. OSHRC Judge