UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 11752 |
GENERAL
SUPPLY COMPANY, INC., |
|
Respondent. |
|
January 25, 1977
DECISION
Before BARNAKO, Chairman;
MORAN and CLEARY, Commissioners.
BARNAKO, Chairman:
A decision of Administrative Law Judge William J. Risteau is before us for review pursuant to section 12(j)
of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. § 651 et seq.,
hereinafter ‘the Act’). Judge Risteau affirmed
Complainant’s (Labor) citation, as amended, which alleges that Respondent
(General) violated the Act by failing to comply with the standard published at
29 C.F.R. § 1926.451(a)(4)[1] in that it did not provide
guardrails on open sides and ends of a scaffold more than four but less than
ten feet high.[2]
We reverse and vacate for the reason that the cited standard is not applicable
to the type of scaffold used by General.
General is a contractor for the installation of
acoustical building material and for steel fabrication. At the time of Labor’s inspection it was installing an acoustic ceiling in a store
which was being rebuilt following a fire. It used a Baker mobile scaffold
mounted on casters for this purpose.
The height at which the ceiling was to be installed was
measured by means of a laser. In order to check whether the laser was level
General’s superintendent stepped onto a 2 by 10-inch or 2 by 12-inch board
which had been placed on top of guardrails located at the ends of the scaffold
such that the board extended along the length of the scaffold. The scaffold
platform itself was about six feet above the floor and the guardrails and board
which they supported were approximately three feet higher such that the board
was nine feet above the floor. The board was not equipped with guardrails, but
there was a ceiling joist at a height of about 12 feet above the floor. The
superintendent held onto this joist while checking the laser.
General argues that the cited standard does not apply to
the scaffolding it used. Specifically, General says that the cited standard by
its terms imposes guardrail requirements for scaffolds in general but its
scaffold is of a particular type which is governed by
§ 1926.451(e). This standard is entitled ‘Manually propelled mobile scaffolds.’[3] Subparagraph (10) of § 1926.451(e)
provides that ‘[g]uardrails . . . and toeboards, shall be installed at all open sides and ends on
all scaffolds more than 10 feet above the ground or floor . . ..’ This
provision does not specify a guardrail requirement for manually propelled
mobile scaffolds having heights of less than 10 feet. Therefore
in General’s view the citation must be vacated and the complaint dismissed
because its scaffold does not fail to comply with the applicable standard.
Labor agrees that in the circumstances General’s scaffold
is not required to have a guardrail under the provisions of § 1926.451(e)(10). However, Labor contends that the requirements of this
standard are in addition to those of the cited general standard. Labor
therefore would have us affirm the citation on the basis that the scaffold did
not comply with that portion of § 1926.451(a)(4) requiring guardrails on
scaffold platforms which are between four and ten feet in height.
We resolved an analogous question of applicability
arising under Labor’s standards governing excavations and trenches in Lloyd
C. Lockrem, No. 4553, BNA 3 OSHC 2045, CCH OSHD
para. 20,444 (OSHRC, Feb. 24, 1976). We noted that pursuant to Labor’s
definitions the term ‘excavation’ is the broader term and as such includes a
‘trench’ as a specific type of excavation. Speaking through Commissioner
Cleary, we said:
Where a particular
type of hazard is addressed by a standard applying to the broad class of
‘excavations’ and no corollary standard addressing such hazard specifically
applies to ‘trenches,’ the protective provisions of the former will be extended
to the latter. . . .
The particular hazard that §
1926.651(s) is designed to eliminate is that of mobile equipment falling into
excavations and causing injury not only to workers in and around the
excavation, but also to the operators of such equipment. There is no corollary
standard specifically applicable to trenches although it is patently clear that
the same dangers exist. We therefore hold that § 1926.651(s) is entirely
applicable to those excavations otherwise classified as ‘trenches.’[4]
The hazard in this case is one of falling from a
scaffold. As in Lockrem there is a general
provision designed to protect against the hazard; it is the provision Labor
cited. But unlike Lockrem there is a corollary
standard which addresses the same hazard and is specific to the type of
scaffold General used. In these circumstances it is of no significance that the
general standard may, as Labor argues, require fall protection on scaffolds at
a lesser height than that to which the specific standard applies. The height
provision of § 1926.451(e)(10) reflects the judgment
of its drafters as to the kind of fall protection appropriate for a manually
propelled mobile scaffold. General therefore is entitled to rely on the
provisions of the standard which is specific on its face apart from and
independent of any general provision which may also speak to the same hazard.[5] Compare Irvington Moore,
16 OSAHRC 608 09, BNA 3 OSHC 1018, 1019, CCH OSHD para. 19,523 at 23,294
(1975), petition for review docketed, No. 75 2159 (9th Cir., May 27, 1975),
with Diebold, Inc., Nos. 6767, 7721, and 9496, BNA 3 OSHC 1897, 1901,
CCH OSHD para. 20,333 at 24,251 (OSHRC, Jan. 22, 1976), petition for review
docketed, No. 76 1278 (6th Cir., Mar. 8, 1976).
In this regard we note that the provisions of section
1926.451 specify particular guardrail requirements for
twelve other specific kinds of scaffolds. Without exception, all
of these specific requirements explicitly require guardrails only at
heights in excess of 10 feet. Prior to November 29, 1972, these paragraphs
uniformly required guardrails and toeboards at
heights of over six feet, and the general standard, paragraph (a), required
guardrails at heights between four and six feet. On that date, Labor amended
the standards to their present form. The stated purpose of the amendment was
‘to bring about a greater uniformity between the Construction Safety Standards
[part 1926] and the general industry standards contained in 29 CFR Part 1910.’[6]
The pertinent general industry standards, 29 C.F.R. §§
1910.28 and 1910.29, did then and now include specific provisions regulating
guardrail and toeboard protection on named kinds of
scaffolds. The former also includes a general provision. None of the specific
provisions require guardrails or toeboards at heights
less than 10 feet. The general industry standards were themselves adopted
respectively from the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) standards
A10.8 1969, Safety Requirements for Scaffolding, and A92.1 1971, Standard for
Manually Propelled Mobile Ladder Stands and Scaffolds (Towers).[7] The former is comprised of
provisions addressed specifically to particular types
of scaffolds, and it includes a general provision. The latter ‘is intended to
prescribe rules and requirements for the design, construction, and use of
mobile work platforms . . . and rolling (mobile) scaffolds (towers). . . .’[8]
We therefore conclude that by its amendment of the
construction safety standards at issue in this case Labor confirmed its
intention that particular types of scaffolds would be
subject to specific standards. Had Labor desired the result for which it argues
in this case, it could have so provided. Instead, it purposely brought the
construction safety standards pertaining to scaffolding into conformity with
industry consensus standards (the ANSI standards) by which the affected
industries have plainly determined to designate separately the requirements
appropriate for each individual type of scaffold.
For the reasons given above we conclude that in the
circumstances the cited general scaffold standard is inapplicable to General’s
scaffold. The facts are, and there is no dispute, that General has not failed
to comply with the applicable standard. Accordingly, we reverse the Judge’s
decision and vacate the citation.
So
ORDERED.
FOR THE COMMISSION:
William S. McLaughlin
Executive Secretary
BY: Gloria W. White, Acting
Executive Secretary
DATE: JAN 25, 1977
MORAN, Commissioner,
Concurring:
I agree with the vacation of the citation because the
cited standard does not apply to respondent’s scaffold and respondent did not
violate the applicable standard. However, since I dissented in Secretary v.
Lloyd C. Lockrem, Inc., OSAHRC Docket No. 4553,
February 24, 1976, it is unnecessary for me to join in my colleague’s
discussion which distinguishes the majority decision in Lockrem
from the instant case, and I do not do so.
CLEARY, Commissioner,
DISSENTING:
In my opinion the majority errs in applying the law to
the facts. An employer is entitled to rely upon the provisions of a specific
standard when a general standard also addresses the same hazard. This is the
rule of construction published in 29 CFR § 1910.5(c)(1). But that is not this
case.
The specific provision relied upon by the majority,
section 1926.451(e), prescribes safety conditions for ‘manually propelled
mobile scaffolds’ that are more than 10 feet above the ground or floor. That
provision prescribes no safety conditions for mobile scaffolds that are less
than 10 feet above the ground or floor. In this case, the only protection from
the hazard of falling from the six-foot scaffold was to have the employee hang
onto the ceiling joist. The provision therefore is not an ‘occupational safety
and health standard’ for the smaller mobile scaffolds because it does not
prescribe a safety requirement. See section 3 (8) of the Act. Because of the
absence of a specific requirement, the general requirement of section
1926.451(a)(4), second sentence, applies. See Melody Home & Insulation
Co, BNA 4 OSHC 1852, 1976 77 OSHD para. 21,290 (No. 6908, 1976).
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 11752 |
GENERAL
SUPPLY COMPANY, INC., |
|
Respondent. |
|
July 8, 1975
DECISION
AND ORDER
APPEARANCES:
Jane Matheson,
Esq., of Dallas, Texas, for the Secretary of Labor
H. Peter Herff, II, Esq., of San Antonio, Texas, for the Respondent
Risteau,
Judge:
This is a proceeding under section 10(c) of the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 651 et seq., hereinafter
called the Act), in which the respondent contests a citation issued by the
complainant pursuant to section 9(a) of the Act. The citation, which was issued
on January 3, 1975, alleges that as the result of an inspection on December 31,
1974, of a workplace under the ownership, operation or control of the
respondent, located at 803 S. W. Military Dr., San Antonio, Texas, and
described as: ‘Acoustic ceiling,’ respondent violated section 5(a)(2) of the
Act in the following manner:
NONSERIOUS
VIOLATION
Item No. |
Standard |
Description of
Alleged Violation |
1 |
29 CFR
1926.451(a)(4) |
Failure to
provide standard guardrails and toeboards on all
open sides and ends of platforms more than ten (10) feet in height on the
following equipment: a. One employee
working on a scaffold 12 feet above floor level on the northeast end of the
building. |
The cited standard provides:
1926.451(a)(4)
Guardrails and toeboards shall be installed on all
open sides and ends of platforms more than 10 feet above the ground or floor,
except needle beam scaffolds and floats . . .. Scaffolds 4 feet to 10 feet in
height, having a minimum horizontal dimension in either direction of less than
45 inches, shall have standard guardrails installed on all open sides and ends
of the platform.
Pursuant to the enforcement procedure set forth in
section 10(a) of the Act, respondent was notified by letter dated January 3,
1975 from Herbert M. Kurtz, Director of Area 6090, Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA), United States Department of Labor, proposing the
following penalty for the alleged violations:
NONSERIOUS
VIOLATION: Item No. 1 $30
After the filing of a Notice of Contest, Complaint, and
Answer, the case came on for hearing at San Antonio, Texas, on March 28, 1975.
DISCUSSION
At the hearing and prior to the taking of testimony,
complainant moved to amend the ‘Description of Alleged Violation’ in the
citation to charge that respondent had failed to provide standard guard rails
on all open sides and ends of a scaffold platform which was more than four feet
but less than ten feet above ground (Tr. 4). Respondent objected strenuously to
this motion, upon which runing was reserved.
The leading case on amendment of pleadings in proceedings
under the Act is National Realty and Construction Co., Inc. v. Occupational
Safety and Health Review Commission, 489 F. 2d 1257, 1264 (D.C. Cir. 1973)
where the Court said:
. . . any
ambiguities surrounding the Secretary’s allegations could have been cured at
the hearing itself. So long as fair notice is afforded, an issue litigated at
an administrative hearing may be decided by the hearing agency even though the
formal pleadings did not squarely raise the issue. This follows from the
familiar rule that administrative pleadings are very liberally construed and
very easily amended. The rule has particular pertinence
here; for citations under the 1970 Act are drafted by non-legal personnel,
acting with necessary dispatch. Enforcement of the Act would be crippled if the
Secretary were inflexibly held to a narrow construction of citations issued by
his inspectors.
As this holding
indicates, a pleading need only give fair notice of the issues in order to be
adequate, and it is the opinion of the undersigned that such notice was given
in the present case.
In the first place, when the unamended citation is considered as a whole, including the cited regulation, it is
apparent that reference to the exact height of the platform is surplusage. The
gist of the alleged violation, as described in the regulation, is the failure
of a platform to conform to safety requirements if it exceeds certain minimum
heights.1 Litigation of these issues requires the presentation of evidence as
to the height of the platform and scaffold under consideration. Far from being
deceived by the citation as to the need for evidence on this point, respondent
came to the hearing fully prepared to show the height with as much exactitude
as possible (Ex. R 1–R 6).
Under these circumstances, it is simply not enough for
respondent to claim surprise because its ‘whole defense rests on a fact
question as to the allegations in the Complainant’s complaint of twelve feet’
(Tr. 10). It must show further that it was unable to defend because it was
unaware that the height of the scaffold would be in issue. As pointed out
above, this is clearly not the case, and complainant’s motion to amend is
therefore granted.
With respect to the facts, there is little real dispute.
On December 31, 1974 respondent’s employees were engaged in the installation of
an acoustic ceiling at the workplace. In the course of the work it became
necessary to check readings on a laser device used to measure ceiling height.
The device was well above ground level and it was necessary to use a platform
to reach it. The platform chosen was that illustrated in Exhibits C 1 and R 1
through R 6. As shown in those Exhibits, the scaffold used was a standard one
used in the construction industry; it had a platform at the six
foot level and was equipped with guardrails along the sides and ends
approximately three feet above this platform. A 2‘ x
12‘ plank had been placed across the end rails and it was on this plank that an
employee stood to check the laser. There were no guardrails around the plank,
which was, without question, more than 4 feet above ground. The employee who
examined the laser and who is shown in Exhibit C 1 was in that position for
approximately two minutes (Tr. 95).
On these facts, it must be held that respondent was in
violation of the cited regulation. The exposure to falling hazard was limited,
however, and the violation was of low gravity. Considering these circumstances,
the relatively low proposed penalty of $30 is appropriate.
FINDINGS
OF FACT
1. On December 31, 1974, employees of respondent were at
work in a building located at 803 S.W. Military Drive, San Antonio, Texas.
2. In the course of this work, one employee stood on a
work platform consisting of a board approximately 2 inches thick by 12 inches
wide which was positioned more than 4 feet above ground level; standard
railings were not installed at the sides and ends of this board.
3. The employee referred to in Finding 2 above was
engaged in the observation of a laser device used in establishing the height of
a ceiling preparatory to the installation of acoustic tile. Observations made
by the employee while on the platform required about two minutes to perform.
4. The laser device referred to above was manufactured in
the State of California (Tr. 24).
CONCLUSIONS
OF LAW
1. Respondent is an ‘employer’ engaged in ‘commerce’ as
those terms are defined in sections 3(3) and 3 (5) of the Act.
2. This Commission has jurisdiction over the parties and
issues raised by the citation.
3. On December 31, 1974,
respondent was in violation of Section 1926.451(a)(4) of Title 29, Code of
Federal Regulations, a regulation promulgated by the Secretary pursuant to
Section 6 of the Act.
4. The violation referred to in Conclusion No. 3 above
constituted a nonserious violation of Section 5(a)(2) of the Act; a penalty of
$30 should be assessed for such violation.
ORDER
On the basis of the above
Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and the entire record, it is hereby
ORDERED that the citation issued on January 3, 1975 be affirmed and that a
penalty of $30 be assessed.
WILLIAM J. RISTEAU
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE
July 8, 1975
[1] This standard in
pertinent part requires that
[g]uardrails and
toeboards shall be installed on all open sides and ends of platforms more than
10 feet above the ground or floor . . . . Scaffolds 4 to 10 feet in height . .
. shall have standard guardrails installed on all open sides and ends of the
platform.
[2] The citation
originally alleged that General failed to provide guardrails and toeboards on
open sides and ends of a platform on a scaffold 12 feet above floor level.
Labor moved to amend at the outset of the hearing, and General objected. The
Judge granted the motion. General excepts to his ruling and argues before us
among other things that in the circumstances the motion is untimely. General
says it has been denied fair notice of the charge against it since the amendment
changes the basis for the charge.
In view of our
disposition it is not necessary to consider whether the Judge erred by granting
the motion to amend, nor need we consider other defenses which General raises
in addition to the question whether the cited standard applies to General’s
scaffold.
[3] § 1926.452(b)(17) defines a ‘manually propelled mobile scaffold’ as ‘[a] portable rolling scaffold supported by casters.’
[4]
BNA 3 OSHC
at 2047, CCH OSHD para. 20,444 at 24,411 12.
[5] Labor itself agrees with this principle for in its regulations it states ‘[i]f a particular standard is specifically applicable to a condition, practice, means, method, operation, or process, it shall prevail over any different general standard which might otherwise be applicable to the same condition, practice, means, method, operation, or process. . . .’ 29 C.F.R. 1910.5(c)(1).
[6] 37 Fed. Reg. 25712 (1972).
[7] 29 C.F.R. § 1910.31.
[8] ANSI Standard A92.1 1971, section
1.1; 29 C.F.R. § 1910.29(a)(1).