UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 8842 |
HENKELS
& MCCOY, INCORPORATED |
|
Respondent. |
|
August 3, 1976
DECISION
BEFORE BARNAKO, Chairman;
MORAN and CLEARY, Commissioners.
CLEARY, Commissioner:
I.
On
November 22, 1974, Judge Joseph L. Chalk issued his decision, denying the
Secretary of labor’s motion to amend a citation, declaring 29 CFR §
1926.21(b)(2) unenforceable, and vacating a citation alleging a serious
violation of section 5(a)(2) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970
(29 U.S.C. § 651 et seq., hereinafter ‘the Act’). The Secretary of Labor’s
petition for review of the Judge’s decision was granted. The petition raised
the following issues:
(1)
Whether the Administrative Law Judge erred in denying the Secretary of Labor’s
motion to amend the citation?
(2) Whether the Administrative Law Judge erred
in finding the standard at 29 CFR § 1926.21(b)(2) so broad and nonspecific
as to preclude its use as a basis for citation?
We
answer both questions in the affirmative and remand for a full hearing on the
merits of the amended citation.
On
June 11, 1974, the respondent employer was issued a citation that alleged a
violation of the ‘special duty’ requirements of section 5(a)(2) of the Act for
failing to comply with 29 CFR § 1926.21(b)(2).[1] The citation described the
violation in the following terms:
At the outside
electrical substation adjacent to the Owens Corning Fiberglass Co. the employer
failed to instruct his employees in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe
conditions and the regulations applicable to his work environment to eliminate
hazards or other exposures to injury n that (2) employees were allowed to
operate a Templeton Kenly 10 Ton Jack, Serial #839, in a unsafe manner. The two
employees stood on the jack lever to exert force to operate the jack despite
the manufacturer’s recommendation not to stand over the lever while the jack is
in operation. One of the employees was subsequently fatally injured due to the
jack levers action.
The
alleged violation was characterized as ‘serious’ within the meaning of section
17(k) of the Act; a penalty of §600 was proposed.
After
respondent submitted a timely notice of contest, the Secretary filed his
Complaint, which essentially restated the factual allegations of the citation.
The Secretary, however, also sought to amend his Complaint to allege in the
alternative a violation of section 5(a)(1) of the Act, the ‘general duty’
clause. In pertinent part, the Complaint reads as follows:
On June 6 and 11,
1974 at an electrical substation located at Fiberglass Road, Barrington, New
Jersey the respondent violated 29 C.F.R. 1926.21(b)(2) promulgated pursuant to
section 6 of the Act in that respondent failed to instruct each employee in the
recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions and in the regulations
applicable to his work environment for eliminating hazards or exposure to
injury. The Respondent did not instruct two employees in the proper use of a
Templeton Kenly 10 ton jack by permitting two employees to operate the jack by
standing on its lever, contrary to recommendations by the manufacture[r] of the
jack that persons should stand clear of the lever while in operation. As a
result of respondent’s ommission [sic], an accident occurred which resulted in
a fatal injury to Lawrence Duffey, one of the respondent’s employees.
VI
The
Secretary hereby amends his citation issued on June 18, 1974, pursuant to Rule
33 of the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission Rules of Procedure
to plead in the alternative that on June 6 and 11, 1974, at an electrical
substation located at Fiberglass Road, Barrington, New Jersey, respondent
violated the provisions of section 5(a)(1) of the Act by failing to furnish its
employees with employment and a place of employment which was free from
recognized hazards that were causing or were likely to cause death or serious
physical harm.
The
respondent permitted two employees to operate a Templeton Kenly, 10 ton jack by
standing on its lever contrary to recommendations by the manufacturer of the
jack that persons should stand clear of the lever while in operation. As a
result, an accident occured [sic] which resulted in a fatal injury to Lawrence
Duffey, one of the respondent’s employees.
The
Secretary amends his citation to plead the above application provision of the
Act in the alternative because the description of the vioaltion [sic] satisfies
the requirements of either the standard cited in paragraph V above and for
section 5(a)(1) of the Act.
In
its Answer, respondent asserted that the motion to amend was improper, and
raised the affirmative defense that the cited standard was invalid for want of
specificity.
On
October 7, 1974, Judge Chalk ordered the Secretary to show cause why the
citation should not be vacated. After briefs were filed, the Judge vacated the
citation on the ground that the cited standard uses broad, introductory
language and cannot be the basis for a valid citation. He also denied the
Secretary4’s motion He also denied the Secretary’s motion ‘totally new charge.’
II.
We
shall first deal with the matter of the amendment. We note at once the general
principle that a citation is not the sole vehicle by which a contesting
employer may be notified of an alleged violation. See J. L. Mabry Grading, Inc.,
9 OSAHRC 98, 108, BNA 1 OSHC 1211, CCH 1971–73 OSHD para. 15,686 (No. 285,
April 27, 1973). The Commission has accordingly made provision for the
amendment the pleadings of contested citations. Commission Rule 33(a)(3) 29 CFR
2200.33(a)(33), states the following:
Where the Secretary seeks
in his complaint to amend his citation . . . , he shall set forth the reasons
for the amendment and shall state with particularity the change sought.
On
its face, the Secretary’s motion falls well within the plainly worded terms of
the Rule. The change sought has been stated with particularity. It is also
sufficiently clear that the amendment is sought so that a decision on the
merits will be made if the standard is found to be inapplicable or invalid.[2] Respondent suggests,
however, that facial compliance with Rule 33(a)(3) is not enough, and that the
Rule should not be applied in a manner that would do violence to the language
or purpose of the Act. We agree. If so understood and applied, however, Rule
33(a)(3) should not transgress these bounds. We have recognized the
Congressional concern in section 9(a) of the Act that the prompt abatement of
hazards is aided when employers are informed with particularity of the
violative condition to be corrected. See e.g., Concrete Construction Corp.,
BNA 4 OSHC 1133, CCH 1975–76 OSHD para. 20,610 (No. 2490, April 8, 1976). To
this end Rule 33(a)(3) requires that an amendment of the citation sought by the
Secretary be stated with the same degree of particularity that is originally required.
The amended citation must enable the employer to identify adequately and
correct the conditions it addresses. Cf. National Realty & Constr. Co.,
Inc. v. O.S.H.R.C., 489 F.2d 1257, 1264 & n.31 (D.C. Cir. 1973).
Equally important, however, is the avoidance of a rigid application of the Rule
in a manner that may cripple effective enforcement. Initial determinations by
the Secretary’s safety or health experts to refer in the citation to a
particular section or standard may, upon subsequent review by the Secretary’s
legal staff, be found wrong. The cited standard may, for example, have been
found to have been invalid[3] or inapplicable as a
result of previous litigation. These matters are not within the professional
expertise of compliance personnel who may lack legal skills. It accordingly
follows that as a matter of administrative practicality, Rule 33(a)(3) may be
applied so as to change the allegations of the original citation.
Respondent
argues, however, that the Rule’s proper application is limited to insubstantial
amendments of form or language, and cannot serve to change the legal theory of
the case. Plainly stated, respondent argues that once issued, a citation
freezes the legal theory of the case, and cannot be substantially amended. The
argument, however, is founded upon a faulty premise, and must therefore be
rejected. We are not dealing here with an attempt to amend pleadings in
well-developed litigation. To argue whether the amendment would introduce
untried factual issues misses the mark because there has not yet been a
hearing. And in general, questions of prejudice rarely attain significance when
the case is still in the pleading stage. This is not to say that the
introduction of new matter is necessarily irrelevant. For example, if an attempt
to amend occurred more than six months after an alleged violation (section
9(c), last sentence), then under Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(c), such considerations
would become important. See Bloomfield Mechanical Contracting, Inc. v.
O.S.H.R.C., 519 F.2d 1257, 1262 (3d Cir. 1975). Cf. Vincent Rizzo
Constr. Co., BNA 3 OSHC 1841, CCH 1975–76 OSHD para. 20,236 (No. 4224,
December 22, 1975). Also, if the amendment were to cause a substantial
incurable injustice stemming for example from surprise, we would refuse to
permit it. But these problems do not appear here. The amendment was filed well
within the six-months limitation period. Permitting it can hardly be said to
create an injustice as a result of surprise, for it would not change the
underlying factual predicate of the case. It would only add an alternate theory
of the case, for which the proof would be essentially the same. Moreover,
respondent claims no injustice as a result of surprise.
Respondent
also urges that because a citation must be posted, and a complaint need not be,
the complaint may not make substantive changes in the citation. Henkels &
McCoy has no standing to raise this issue. The posting requirement is provided
for the benefit of employees rather than the employer. See Brennan v.
O.S.H.R.C. and Bill Echols Trucking Co., 484 F.2d 230, 236 (5th Cir. 1973).
Cf. Lee Way Motor Freight, Inc., BNA 3 OSHC 1843, 1846, CCH 1975–76 OSHD
para. 20,250 at 24,144, 24,145 (No. 7674, December 22, 1975). Moreover, a copy
of the complaint would be available for inspection by employees.[4] Also, so far as employees
are concerned, the change could hardly be considered substantive. Under these
circumstances, we find no reason why Rule 33(a)(3) should not be applied.[5] The Secretary’s motion to
amend is granted.
We
also find nothing objectionable about pleading or citing violations of
subsections (1) and (2) of section 5(a) in the alternative. See Sun
Shipbuilding & Drydock Co., 4 OSAHRC 1020, BNA 1 OSHC 1381, CCH 1971–73
OSHD para. 16,725 (No. 161, October 3, 1973) (concurring opinion). Fed. R. Civ.
P. 8(a) clearly states that ‘[r]elief in the alternative . . . may be
demanded.’ Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(e) provides that ‘[a] party may set forth two or
more statements of a claim . . . alternatively . . ..’ It is no answer that the
section 5(a)(1) claim may eventually be found to lack merit because the section
5(a)(2) claim would, if proved, displace it. Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(e) specifically
states that ‘[a] party may also state as many claims . . . as he has regardless
of consistency . . .’ The complaint states a claim upon which relief may be granted
and that is sufficient.[6]
III.
We
turn now to the merits of the original section 5(a)(2) allegation. We do not
adopt the Judge’s view that 29 CFR § 1926.21(b)(2) is unenforceable on the
ground that it is broad, introductory or nonspecific, or that it cannot be
applied when a specific hazard is caused by a failure to instruct one’s
employees. Nothing in the Act forbids the adoption of standards which address a
broad range of hazards or which speak in general terms. In Eichleay
Corporation, 15 OSAHRC 635, BNA 2 OSHC 1635, CCH 1974–75 OSHD paras.
19,324, 16,811 (No. 2610, February 20, 1975), we specifically approved Judge
Burroughs determination that a similar standard, which refers generally to
unsafe conditions and refers the employer to other standards, is enforceable.
In his opinion Judge Burroughs stated:
The argument that
the phrase ‘hazardous condition’ contained in 29 CFR 1926.28(a) contravenes
Section 5(a)(1) of the Act in essence infers that the Secretary is prohibited
from using the word ‘hazard’ in a standard. There is nothing in the Act or
legislative history which remotely suggests that Section 5(a)(1) was enacted to
achieve this result. The general duty provisions of Section 5(a)(1) were enacted
to provide protection for employees where no standards existed to cover a
condition which constituted a recognized hazard. In this case the phrase
‘hazardous conditions’ is used in a duly promulgated standard and takes
precedence over the general duty clause. The standard is not unenforceable
merely because it contains the word ‘hazard.’
We
also find no merit in respondent’s argument that the cited standard is
unconstitutionally vague. The standard is broad but clear. It requires: (1)
instruction in safety measures and applicable regulations, and (2) instruction
on how employees may recognize and thereby avoid unsafe conditions. See Brennan
v. Butler Lime & Cement Co., 520 F.2d 1011 (7th Cir. 1975) (by
implication); Ames Crane & Rental Service, Inc. v. Dunlop, No.
75–1591 (8th Cir., April 1, 1976) (same).[7] The scope of the remand
will accordingly reach to the section 5(a)(2) allegations.
We
make one more comment on this issue. In substance, the Judge decided the case
on the pleadings. It is well settled that a motion under Fed. R. Civ. P.
12(b)(6) may not be granted ‘unless it appears beyond a reasonable doubt that
the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim that would
entitle him to relief.’ Smith’s Transfer Corp., BNA 3 OSHC 1088, CCH
1974–75 OSHD para. 19,544 (No. 5786, April 18, 1975), quoting and citing
authorities. Though no hearing was held, the Judge’s conclusion of law that the
cited standard is unenforceable relies heavily on ‘the factual setting of this
case.’ We therefore note that the Judge’s finding of invalidity should not in
any event have been made until the record was fully developed. See River
Terminal Railway Co., BNA 3 OSHC 1808, CCH 1975–76 OSHD para. 20,215 (No.
4419, December 12, 1975).
In
view of the delay of this case, we order an expedited and full hearing. The
Administrative Law Judge shall prepare findings of fact and conclusions of law,
based on the presentations of both parties. See generally, White v. Rimrock
Tidelands, Inc., 414 F.2d 1336, 1340 (5th Cir. 1969).
The
Judge’s decision is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion. So ORDERED.
FOR THE COMMISSION:
William S. McLaughlin
Executive Secretary
DATED: AUG 3, 1976
BARNAKO, Chairman, concurring:
I
agree that the Judge erred by vacating the citation on the pleadings rather
than preserving the questions for disposition following a hearing. And pleading
in the alternative is permitted by the letter of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure although I question whether it is within the spirit of the Rules for
the Secretary to employ this tool of pleading in prosecuting a civil penalty
proceeding.* Accordingly, I concur in
the remand and in permitting the amendment.
I
do not at this time venture any opinion as to whether the cited standard is
valid, nor do I venture any opinion as to whether the amendment inserts new
factual matters into the case not growing out of the original citation. There
is a basis for Judge Chalk’s conclusion that the amendment is in effect a new
citation; the original citation charged a failure to ‘instruct’ whereas the
amendment speaks in terms of permitting employees ‘to operate.’ But on review,
the Secretary asserts that the violation is the same whether under the standard
or under section 5(a)(1). As Commissioner Cleary indicates, there is doubt on
the question of the validity of the standard. Since it appears that the
amendment only adds an alternative legal theory of the case, I concur.
MORAN, Commissioner, Dissenting:
Judge
Chalk correctly decided this case in a well-reasoned decision, which is
attached hereto as Appendix A, and that decision should be affirmed. I am in
complete agreement with Judge Chalk that complainant’s motion to amend the
citation to allege an alternative charge is incorrect in law and, further, that
29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2) is not enforceable because its vagueness precludes it
from qualifying as an occupational safety and health standard.
Complainant’s
effort to insert a 29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(1) charge into the pleadings by amendment
is a simple contravention of the mandatory requirement that citations
shall describe:
‘. . . with
particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the
provision of the chapter, standard, rule, regulation, or order alleged to have
been violated.’ 29 U.S.C. § 658(a) (emphasis supplied).
In
the case before us the respondent was initially issued a citation alleging a
failure to comply with 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2) because respondent failed to
instruct its employees in use of a Templeton Kenly jack. Thereafter, a
complaint was filed which attempted to amend the citation to add an alternative
charge that respondent violated 29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(1), the so-called general
duty clause, by permitting its employees to operate this jack in an unsafe
manner.
As
I have previously pointed out in some detail,[8] the liberal amendment
rules provided in Rule 15 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, do not apply to the
amendment of a job safety citation because it is a unique creature of statute
to which Congress attached the particularity requirements enumerated in 29
U.S.C. § 658(a). Considering those requirements, it is clear that at most only
minor editorial changes are permissible under Commission Rule 33(a)(3).
Obviously, the Commission cannot circumvent the intent of Congress by
construing its own procedural regulations in a manner that conflicts with
congressional intent. However, that is exactly what the Commission is doing by
allowing complainant to add a totally new charge in the complaint as no
citation has been issued which sets out that particular allegation.
As
one final observation on this matter I note that although my colleagues cite
footnote 31 of National Realty and Construction Company, Inc. v. OSAHRC,
489 F.2d 1257 (D.C. Cir. 1973), they completely disregard its content in
disposing of this case. In particular, I refer to the Circuit Court’s statement
that
‘[A]n
employer cannot be penalized for failing to correct a condition which the citation
did not fairly characterize.’ (Emphasis supplied.)
A
citation, of course, does not fairly characterize an allegation which adds a
totally new charge.
As
I stated at the outset, I fully agree with Judge Chalk’s conclusions regarding
the vagueness of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2). Those conclusions are consistent
with several Circuit Court decisions. For example, Brennan v. OSAHRC and
Raymond Hendrix, d/b/a Alsea Lumber Company, 511 F.2d 1139 (9th Cir. 1975),
holds that an employer is not liable for an alleged violation of the Act unless
the complainant establishes that the employer knew or should have known of the
violation. Where a standard is as vague as the instant one, an employer has no
notice of what he is supposed to do and, therefore, cannot have possessed the
requisite knowledge which is necessary to support a violation.
As
the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit so appropriately
stated in Diamond Roofing Company v. osahrc, 528 F.2d 645, 649 (5th Cir.
1976):
The respondents
contend that the regulations should be liberally construed to give broad
coverage because of the intent of Congress to provide safe and healthful
working conditions for employees. An employer, however, is entitled to fair
notice in dealing with his government. Like other statutes and regulations
which allow monetary penalties against those who violate them, an occupational
safety and health standard must give an employer fair warning of the conduct it
prohibits or requires, and it must provide a reasonably clear standard of
culpability to circumscribe the discretion of the enforcing authority and its
agents.
***
‘If a violation of
a regulation subjects private parties to criminal or civil sanctions, a
regulation cannot be construed to mean what an agency intended but did not
adequately express. . . . We recognize that OSHA was enacted by Congress for
the purpose stated by the respondents. Nonetheless, the Secretary as enforcer
of the Act has the responsibility to state with ascertainable certainty what is
meant by the standards he has promulgated.
The
standard here in issue does not meet these requirements.
Finally,
I must disagree with the ‘DECISION’ label on the first page of the lead
opinion. After attempting to decipher the gibberish in the concurring opinion,
it is obvious to me that there is no decision in this case. Chairman Barnako
has simply not taken a position on the two salient issues that are before the
Commission.[9]
It is quite clear, however, that he has not registered agreement with
Commissioner Cleary thereon. Therefore, the action purportedly ordered in the
lead opinion is invalid because ‘official action can be taken only on the
affirmative vote of at least two members’ of the Commission. 29 U.S.C. §
661(e). Since no two members of the Commission have voted to hold the Judge in
error on the issues before it, the action ordered by Commissioner Cleary’s
opinion is null and void. See Shaw Construction Inc. v. OSAHRC, —— F.2d
——, 5th Cir., No. 75–3495, decided July 12, 1976.
In
many decisions my colleagues have been making a concentrated effort to
downgrade the posture of decisions rendered by Judges of this Commission. In
some of the discussions, consistent with the last paragraph of footnote 5 of
the lead opinion in the instant case, they have taken the position that
decisions of Judges which are not reviewed by the Commission members have no
precedential value. See, e.g., Secretary v. Leone Construction Company,
OSAHRC Docket No. 4090, February 10, 1976, in which, as in all of these
decisions, I recorded my disagreement with that concept. Furthermore, Chairman
Barnako has consistently used misnomers such as ‘report’ or ‘recommendation’
when referring to decisions of Commission Judge’s. See, e.g., Secretary v.
Ringland-Johnson, Inc., OSAHRC Docket No. 3028, June 16, 1976. In view of
such action, I am unable to understand how the Chairman can condone the use of
the ‘DECISION’ label at the outset of this document.
APPENDIX A
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 8842 |
HENKELS
& MCCOY, INCORPORATED |
|
Respondent. |
|
FINAL ORDER DATE:
December 23, 1974
DECISION
AND ORDER
Chalk, Judge
This
case presents the following two questions:
Whether
the charge that Respondent violated 29 USC 654(a)(2) by not complying with 29
CFR 1926.21(a)(2) is correct in law, and
Whether
the Secretary, in his Complaint, may be permitted to amend the Citation to
allege in the alternative another violation different from that charged in the
Citation.
My
answer to both of these questions is in the negative and the Citation for
Serious Violation and proposed penalty assessment accordingly will be vacated
without a hearing.
The
Citation for Serious Violation charged Respondent with the following alleged
violation:
29 CFR
1926.21(b)(2) ‘At the outside electrical substation adjacent to the Owens
Corning Fiberglass Co. the employer failed to instruct his employees in the
recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions and the regulations applicable
to his work environment to eliminate hazards or other exposures to injury in
that (2) employees were allowed to operate a Templeton Kenly 10 Ton Jack,
Serial #839, in an unsafe manner. The two employees stood on the jack lever to
exert force to operate the jack despite the manufacturer’s recommendation not
to stand over the lever while the jack is in operation. One of the employees
was subsequently fatally injured due to the jack levers [sic] action.’
Respondent
duly contested this charge.
When
he filed his Complaint, the Secretary, in paragraph VI thereof, purported to
amend the Citation in the following manner:
‘The Secretary
hereby amends his citation issued on June 18, 1974, pursuant to Rule 33 of the
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission Rules of Procedure to plead in
the alternative that on June 6 and 11, 1974, at an electrical substation
located at Fiberglass Road, Barrington, New Jersey, respondent violated the
provisions of section 5(a)(1) of the Act by failing to furnish its employees
with employment and a place of employment which was free from recognized
hazards that were causing or were likely to cause death or serious physical
harm.
‘The respondent
permitted two employees to operate a Templeton Kenly, 10 ton Jack by standing
on its lever contrary to recommendations by the manufacturer of the jack that
persons should stand clear of the lever while in operation. As a result, an
accident occured [sic] which resulted in a fatal injury to Lawrence Duffey, one
of the respondent’s employees.
‘The Secretary
amends his citation to plead the above applicable provision of the Act in the
alternative because the description of the violation [sic] satisfies the
requirements of either the standard cited in paragraph V above and for section
5(a)(1) of the Act.’
The
two questions will be discussed seriatim.
I
29
CFR 1926.21, the basis of the charge in this case, is a part of Subpart C of
the construction standards entitled ‘General Safety and Health Provisions.’ For
the most part, this entire subpart, as its title indicates, is general in
nature and serves as an introduction to specific standards that follow in other
subparts. Hence, many of its subsections, after making broad and general
statements, direct attention to other subparts that specifically inform
employers what they must do or not do (see 29 CFR 1926.21(b)(5), 29 CFR
1926.23, 29 CFR 1926.24, 29 CFR 1926.26, 29 CFR 1926.27, and 29 CFR 1926.28, as
examples).
Standing
alone, many of the subsections under Subpart C cannot serve as a basis for a
charge against an employer, for want of specificity. Thus, Judge James D.
Burroughs set aside a charge involving 29 CFR 1926.20(a) on the ground that
that subsection was nonspecific and did no more than impose a general duty upon
employers not to allow their employees to work under conditions which were
unsanitary, hazardous or dangerous to health and safety (Secretary v. Rentenbach
Engineering Co., McDowell-Purcell, Inc., 1 OSAHRC 1033(1972)). Other judges
of the Commission have reached the same conclusion with respect to 29 CFR
1926.20(b)(1) and (2) (Secretary v. Granite-Seabro Corp., Docket No.
923, July 31, 1973; Secretary v. AMP Construction Co., 2 OSAHRC 1251
(1973)).
29
CFR 1926.21, the subsection involved in this case, also employs broad,
introductory language that raises a serious question as to whether it is
legally sufficient to serve as a basis to charge an employer with a violation
of the Act (see Secretary v. Keibler Industries, Inc., Docket No. 1689,
June 28, 1973; see also Secretary v. Granite-Seabro Corp., supra). At
the very least, its language is so broad and nonspecific as to preclude its use
as the basis for a charge that involves solely a particular condition believed
to constitute a chargeable hazard under the Act (Id.). This subsection
is entitled ‘Safety training and education,’ and subparagraph (a) thereof
places responsibility upon the Secretary of Labor to establish and supervise
training programs for both employers and employees in the recognition,
avoidance and prevention of unsafe conditions in the work environment. After
stating in subparagraph (b)(1) that the employer ‘should’ avail himself of such
programs, subparagraph (b)(2), that in issue, provides as follows:
‘The employer
shall instruct each employee in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe
conditions and the regulations applicable to his work environment to control or
eliminate any hazards or other exposure to illness or injury.’
The
charge in this case was predicated upon a specific, hazardous condition and a
related fatal accident. Accordingly, it is legally deficient and must be set
aside (Secretary v. Keibler Industries, Inc., supra; Secretary v.
Granite-Seabro Corp., supra; Secretary v. AMP Construction Co., supra).[10]
II
Proposed
amendments to Citations attempting to charge alternative violations not
included in the Citation seems to have become a popular practice with counsel
since the promulgation of the concurring opinion in Secretary v. Sun
Shipbuilding and Drydock Co., Docket No. 161, October 3, 1973. Indeed, the
Secretary relies primarily on this opinion to support his proposed amendment in
this instance. But what the Secretary apparently overlooks is the important
fact that the opinion relied upon addressed itself to ‘citations issued in the
alternative’ or, more precisely, to alternative charges alleged in citations, a
procedure vastly different and apart from that which proposes to introduce new
charges into the proceedings not mentioned in the Citation, as in this case.
Such a procedure does not comport with the law (Secretary v. Roof
Engineering Corp., Docket No. 6972, September 17, 1974).
A
Citation is unique to the safety and health statute, setting the stage for many
important steps in the enforcement and adjudicatory procedures that follow its
issuance. In the first instance, it is the designated document by which the
Secretary is required to notify the employer ‘with particularity’ of the nature
of the violation (29 USC 658(a)). In the last instance, it serves as the final,
unimpeachable order of this Commission where no contest is filed by the
employer or an employee or his representative (29 USC 659(a)). In between these
two perimeters, it sets the tone for the proceedings before this Commission by
informing the Commission of what the Secretary thinks the employer did wrong,
the disputed issue in light of the timely contest of the charge. But even the
Citation itself has its limitations, for it is unenforceable against an
employer unless and until the employer is notified of the penalty the Secretary
proposes for the alleged violation (29 USC 659(a)). There are also other
important limitations attached to it by statute in that it not only must be
issued with reasonable promptness, but it must be issued within six months of
the occurrence of the alleged violation (29 USC 658(a) and (c)).
Where
a contest of a Citation is timely filed, jurisdiction over the cause
immediately vests with this Commission by operation of law (Secretary v. FMC
Corp.-Fibers Div., et al, Docket No. 5355, July 17, 1974). The addition of a
totally new charge from that stage of the proceedings on, by whatever means,
would in effect not only place this Commission in the business of writing
Citations, a procedure I am certain the Congress never intended (see Dale M.
Madden Construction, Inc. v. James D. Hodgson, Secretary of Labor et al,
No. 72–1874 (9th Cir., July 29, 1974)), but would circumvent other important
procedures required by the statute, such as the issuance of a Citation and its
service upon the employer, the issuance of the Notification of Proposed Penalty
and its service upon the employer, thereby breathing life into the Citation and
invoking the running of the fifteen working day contest period, The election
accorded the employer and employee to contest or not to contest, and the
posting of Citations.
In
sum, the Citation is not a document that can be treated lightly, much less cast
aside, as the Secretary’s proposed amendment and argument of counsel
necessarily imply. Yet that would be the result were the Secretary’s motion
granted in this case, for the proceedings would then involve two charges
instead of the one alleged in the Citation.[11]
The
Secretary also argues that National Realty and Construction Company,
Incorporated v. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission et al, 489
F2d 1287 (1973) supports his proposed amendment. His reliance on this decision,
however, is similarly misplaced, for the Court’s remarks therein must be read
in the contest in which they were made (I. A. Watson, Jr., et al v. City of
Memphis, Tenn., 83 Sp. Ct. 1314, 373 US 526 (1963); White v. Aronson,
58 Sp. Ct. 95, 302 US 16 (1937); 248 US 113 (1918); Westway Theatre, Inc.
248 US 113 (1918); Westway Theatre, inc. v. Twentiety Century-Fox Film Corp.
et al, 30 Fed. Sup. 830 (D.C. Md., 1940)).
A
cursory examination of National Realty reveals that the Court was
carefully analyzing the allegations of the Citation, construing them liberally,
and then concluding that these allegations were sufficiently broad to permit
the Secretary to adduce evidence tending to show that National Realty’s lack of
a safety program was the primary cause of the fatal accident. And the Court’s
additional remark that so long as fair notice is afforded the parties, an issue
litigated at the hearing may be decided by the hearing agency ‘even though the
formal pleadings did not squarely raise the issue,’ is consistent with this
interpretation. In the context of the case, it would be clearly incongruous to
conclude that the Court meant to equate the phrase ‘did not squarely raise’
with the phrase ‘did not raise.’ Therefore, National Realty was not even
remotely concerned with the proposed in this case. Rather, it dealt with
issues, amendments and proof reasonably flowing directly from a liberal
construction of the allegations of the Citation.
The
proposed amendment in this case to introduce an alternative charge into the
proceedings is incorrect in law. The motion to amend, accordingly, must be
denied.
III
Inherent
in the foregoing are the following conclusions of law:
1.
That this Commission has jurisdiction over the cause.
2.
That Respondent did not violate 29 USC 654(a)(2) by not complying with 29 CFR
1926.21(b)(2), as that regulation cannot serve as a basis for a charge in the
factual setting of this case.
3.
That the Secretary’s motion to amend the Citation to allege an alternative
charge is incorrect in law.
The
motion to amend the Citation is denied and the Citation and Notification of
Proposed Penalty are vacated without a hearing.
So ORDERED.
JOSEPH L. CHALK
Judge, OSHRC
November 22, 1974
[1] § 1926.21 Safety
training and education.
(b) Employer
responsibility.
(2) The employer shall instruct each employee in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions and the regulations applicable to his work environment to control or eliminate any hazards or other exposure to illness or injury.
[2] Consideration of the motion is appropriate because of the possibility that a developed record may reveal the inapplicability of the cited standard, and the possibility that a reviewing court may disagree on the validity issue. Atlantic & Gulf Stevedores, Inc. v. O.S.H.R.C., infra supra, note 3; Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc. v. O.S.H.R.C., 529 F.2d 649 (8th Cir. 1976).
[3] In this case,
respondent claims that the standard is, and has already been declared, invalid.
See note 7, infra. A divided Commission has taken the position that it
can review the validity of standards. Santa Fe Trail Transport Co., BNA
1 OSHC 1457, CCH 1973–74 OSHD para. 17,029 (No. 331, December 18, 1973)
(dissenting opinion), rev’d, 505 F.2d 869 (10th Cir. 1974). See Atlantic
& Gulf Stevedores, Inc. v. O.S.H.R.C., No. 75–1584 (3d Cir., March 26,
1976).
[4] Commission Rule
7(g) requires that employees be informed of where pleadings may be inspected.
[5] We have
considered other objections and we find them to lack force. The Judge’s
opinion, for example, disapproves of the Commission rewriting citations. We
agree that the Commission should not engage in a prosecutorial role. But
granting a timely and otherwise meritorious motion of a party does not do this.
General Electric Co., 17 OSAHRC 49, 60, 62 n.20, BNA 3 OSHC 1031, 1039,
1040 n.20, CCH 1974–75 OSHD para. 19,567 (No. 2739, April 21, 1975). As to the
service upon the employer of the citation and notification of proposed
penalties, it is enough that he is notified of the amendment to the citation
when he is served with the Secretary’s Complaint. Rules 33(a)(2)(iii) and
33(a)(3) require that he be so informed. As to the 15-day contest period, we
note that in every case where a Complaint amends a citation, the employer has
already filed a notice of contest.
Finally, we note
that although not without significance, the Judge’s unreviewed decisions
holding that a citation once issued may not be amended by a complaint are not
precedent binding upon the Commission. Leone Construction Co., BNA 3
OSHC 1979, 1981, CCH 1975–76 OSHD para. 20,387 (No. 4090, February 10, 1976),
petition for review dismissed per stipulation, No. 76–4070 (2d Cir., May 17,
1976).
[6] The application
of the displacement principle of Brisk Waterproofing Co., 3 OSAHRC 1132,
BNA 1 OSHC 1263, CCH 1973–74 OSHD para. 16,345 (No. 1046, July 27, 1973) must
await the receipt and evaluation of all the evidence. We note this point
because upon the remand we expect that evidence relevant to the alleged section
5(a)(1) violation may well be introduced. The displacement principle will not
serve as a valid ground to exclude such evidence. The two alternative theories
must be treated equally until the section 5(a)(2) allegations may be said to
fail for lack of proof.
[7] The Commission
decision in Granite-Seabro Corp., 11 OSAHRC 1, BNA 2 OSHC 1163, CCH
1974–75 OSHD para. 18,470 (No. 923, August 16, 1974) does not compel a
different result. We there affirmed a Judge’s decision on the ground that it
contained no prejudicial error. The Judge’s decision rested primarily on his
finding that the Secretary failed to carry his burden of proof; the
unenforceability finding was but an alternative holding and cannot be considered
to have been finally adopted as correct.
* The Federal Rule
applies since the Commission has not promulgated a rule concerning alternative
pleadings. However, on June 29, 1976, we
did publish an advance notice of proposed rulemaking whereby we requested comments
on all of our Rules. I, for one, would
welcome comments on the question of alternative pleadings.
[8]Secretary v.
Warnel Corporation,
OSAHRC Docket No. 4537, March 31, 1976 (dissenting opinion).
[9] In Secretary
v. P & M Sales, Inc., OSAHRC Docket No. 3443, May 3, 1976, Chairman
Barnako had no trouble in concluding that a change from a charge of failing to
provide eye and face protection to a charge involving the failure of employees
to wear that equipment would introduce a totally different charge. Accordingly,
it is strange that he cannot now see that a charge based on a failure to
instruct is distinguishable from one involving operation of equipment.
[10] If a standard covers the hazard, noncompliance with that standard should be charged. If a standard does not cover the hazard, a violation of 29 USC 654(a)(1) should be charged.
[11] I note that Judge Donald K. Duvall expressed somewhat the same view in Secretary v. Dorey Electric Co., Urban Builders, Inc., and Craft Construction Co., Docket Nos. 4598, 4626, and 4627 (consolidated) (July 29, 1974), where a similar motion was made.