OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 8275 |
NATIONAL
ROOFING OF SIOUX CITY, INC |
|
Respondent. |
|
August 3, 1976
DECISION
BEFORE BARNAKO, Chairman; MORAN and CLEARY,
Commissioners.
MORAN, Commissioner:
A
decision of Review Commission Judge Alan M. Wienman, dated March 11, 1975, is
before this Commission for review pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 661(i). That
decision, which is attached hereto as Appendix A[1] held in part that
respondent violated 29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(2) by failing to install perimeter
guarding on a flat roof in contravention of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.500(d)(§)
For reasons that follow, that holding is reversed.
In
Secretary v. Central City Roofing Co., OSAHRC Docket No. 8173, June 4,
1976, we held that 29 C.F.R. § 1926.500(d)(1) does not apply to flat roofs.
That decision is applicable in the instant case.
Complainant,
however, now moves in his review brief before this Commission to amend the
pleadings in the alternative to allege a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.28(a).[2] There being no mention
whatsoever at the hearing of this particular standards, we hold that to permit
such an amendment at this late date could prejudice respondent by not allowing
it an opportunity to introduce rebuttal evidence on the elements of the new
charge. See Secretary v. Marquette Cement Manufacturing Co., OSAHRC
Docket No. 4725, January 27, 1976;[3] Secretary v. Maryland
Shipbuilding & Drydock Co., OSAHRC Docket No. 4503, October 9, 1975.
In
so holding, we specifically reject complainant’s contention that the issue of
compliance with 29 C.F.R. § 1926.28(a) was tried by consent. Although the
parties at various times introduced evidence that might have been relevant to
the amended charge, implied consent will only be found when the party against
whom the amendment is sought was fairly apprised that the unpleaded charge was
in issue. Niedland v. United States, 338 F.2d 254, 258 (3rd Cir. 1964); Kuhn
v. Civil Aeronautics Board, 183 F.2d 839, 842 (D.C. Cir. 1950); Secretary
v. Marquette Cement Manufacturing Co., supra. It clearly cannot be
said in this case that respondent was in any way aware that the standard at 29
C.F.R. § 1926.28(a) was in issue. As noted previously, this standard was never
even mentioned by complainant until well after the hearing, and there is nothing
whatsoever in the record to indicate that respondent was aware of any need to
defend against the new charge.
Accordingly,
the citation for a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.500(d)(1) and the $100.00
penalty assessed therefor are vacated. The Judge’s finding on the remaining
citation is affirmed.
FOR THE COMMISSION:
William S. McLaughlin
Executive Secretary
DATED: AUG 3, 1976
CLEARY, Commissioner,
DISSENTING:
I
dissent from the disposition of this case because amendment to section
1926.58(a) is appropriate under Rule 15(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure and the notice provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5
U.S.C. § 554(b)(3). Kaiser Aluminum & Steel Corp., No. 3685, BNA 4
OSHC 1162, CCH 1975–76 OSHD para. 20,675 (1976); Marquette Cement
Manufacturing Co., No. 4725, BNA 3 OSHC 1928, CCH 1975–76 OSHD para. 20,353
(1976) (dissenting opinion) (appeal docketed No. 76–4083, 2d Cir.).3a
The
issue of the use of a life line rope system was dealt with in testimony no less
than five times at the hearing, without objection by respondent. In fact,
respondent raised the defense that life lines might create a greater hazard
than no protection. (Tr. 88–89) Therefore, I would amend the complaint to
allege a failure to comply with the standard at 29 CFR § 1926.28(a).
APPENDIX A
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 8275 |
NATIONAL
ROOFING OF SIOUX CITY, INC |
|
Respondent. |
|
March 11, 1975
APPEARANCES:
DONALD McCOY,
Esq., United States Department of Labor, Office of the Solicitor, Kansas City,
Missouri, for the Secretary of Labor
CHARLES R. WOLLE,
Esq., Shull, Marshall & Marks, Sioux City, Iowa, for the Respondent
Wienman, Judge, OSAHRC:
STATEMENT
OF THE CASE
This
is a proceeding pursuant to section 10 of the Occupational Safety and Health
Act of 1970 (29 USC 651 et seq., hereafter called the Act) contesting a
citation for repeated violation issued by the complainant against the
respondent May 13, 1974, under the authority vested in complainant by section
9(a) of that Act. The citation alleged on the basis of an inspection of a workplace
at 35th and G Streets, South Sioux City, Nebraska, on May 2, 1974, that the
respondent violated the Act by failing to comply with an occupational safety
and health regulation promulgated by the Secretary of Labor and codified as 29
CFR 1926.500(d)(1). The citation described the alleged violation as follows:
(Job Site) The
perimeter railings were not in use, but were stored in flatbed truck, one
employee mopping tar and another employee throwing water along south center
edge of the roof.
Regulation
29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1) provides:
(1) Every
open-sided floor or platform 6 feet or more above adjacent floor or ground
level shall be guarded by a standard railing, or the equivalent, as specified
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section, on all open sides, except where there is
entrance to a ramp, stairway, or fixed ladder. The railing shall be provided
with the standard toe board wherever, beneath the open sides, persons can pass,
where there is moving machinery, or there is equipment with which falling materials
could create a hazard.
Pursuant
to enforcement procedures set forth in section 10(a) of the Act, respondent was
notified by letter dated May 13, 1974, from Warren Wright, Area Director,
Occupational Safety and Health Administration, United States Department of
Labor, that he proposed to assess a penalty of $596 for the alleged repeated
violation. Respondent gave due notice of its intention to contest the citation
and the proposed penalty.[4] After complaint and answer
were filed by the parties, hearing was held on December 20, 1974, at which time
both complainant and respondent appeared and presented evidence.
THE
ISSUES
No
jurisdictional issues are in dispute, the parties having pleaded facts
sufficient to establish that the respondent is subject to the Act, and that the
Commission has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter.
The
primary issue for resolution is whether the respondent violated occupational
safety regulation 29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1) as alleged in the citation for repeated
violation, and, if so, what penalty is appropriate for said violation.
SUMMARY
OF THE EVIDENCE AND DISCUSSION
OSHA
Compliance Officer Robert Bruno testified that on May 2, 1974, he inspected
respondent’s worksite at a schoolhouse in South Sioux City, Nebraska. Bruno had
been assigned to conduct a reinspection after an earlier inspection at the same
worksite resulted in a citation for roofing violations including regulation 29
CFR 1926.500(d)(1) (T. 10). (The citation issued March 12, (1974, was not
contested. On April, 24, 1974, respondent’s president, Robert Wiskus, wrote
Warren Wright a letter describing respondent’s efforts to correct violations
(Ex. G–2, G–3).)
Bruno
testified that he and Ray Larson, respondent’s foreman, climbed ladders to the
second elevation of the structure (T. 13) where respondent’s employees were
applying tar within two feet of the roof’s south edge (T. 13–17). The distance
between the two roof elevations was approximately 13 feet (T. 17). No guarding
was in place, and the employees were not wearing life lines, belts, or any
other form of protection (T. 16, 18). Bruno, who believed that the likelihood
of a fall was quite high while employees were working within three or four feet
of the edge, computed the proposed penalty for repeated violation. After
according the respondent a 10 percent credit for history, 5 percent for size
and zero for good faith, a penalty of $596 was proposed (T. 24, 26).
On
cross-examination Bruno repeated his observation that one employee mopping tar
initially was within 2 feet of the edge of the floor, although he moved away
from the edge as he mopped (T. 35, 36). Bruno recalled that Larson showed him
guard devices which were stored in a truck and told him how they were employed.
The devices consisted of wooden standards or platforms with ropes strung
between them. They were customarily placed atop the roof and held in position
with sandbags (T. 37, Ex. R–5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10). Bruno did not see them erected
(T. 36, 37), but it was his opinion that devices could not have been employed
close to the roof edge because an employee would have to mop where the standard
would be erected (T. 38). Bruno believed the roofers could have been equipped
with safety lines and belts while working at the edge, and the barriers could
have been employed after the men moved in four feet (T. 38, 39). Bruno also
testified that the guard devices would not constitute a ‘standard railing’ but
would serve to warn employees rather than prevent a fall (T. 46, 48).
Robert
Wiskus, respondent’s president and general manager, testified that after
receiving the first citation he met with OSHA Area Director, Warren Wright, to
discuss compliance with perimeter guarding regulations. He showed Wright a
sketch of a railing and rope arrangement designed to provide a warning to
employees and Wiscus understood that this type of ‘railing for warning’ would
constitute compliance with the Act as interpreted by Mr. Wright (T. 62).
Wiskus
also stated that the nature of the construction made is impossible to put a
fixed barricade around the perimeter of all the roof areas at the school; the
fascia system was constructed of light concrete panels and there was no way of
fastening to it without ruining the material (T. 62–63). Wiskus stated that he
knew no practical way to provide perimeter protection other than a warning line
on this project (T. 63). He also testified that none of his employees had ever
fallen from a flat roof and he knew of no laborer in the area who had done so
(T. 66).
Wiskus
testified candidly that the function of the apparatus he designed was to warn
an employee he was approaching the edge of the roof rather than support him (T.
72).
Under
cross-examination Mr. Wiskus admitted that he could not recall his conversation
with Warren Wright exactly and could neither admit nor deny that Wright told
him that either a standard guardrail or a life line with a safety belt was
required when it was necessary for men to work at the edge of the roof (T.
74–77). However, Wiskus was of the opinion that attaching a life line to a
roofer would serve to restrict his movements and make the job more hazardous
(T. 77–78).
Foreman
Raymond Larson testified that on the morning of the inspection his crew had
worked with warning railings in place, but they took them down and quit work because
of wind conditions after dinner. However, when the wind died they returned to
work without erecting the railings (T. 85). This was his sole decision and was
done to save time. (T. 94)
Larson
testified that his crew was applying asphalt no closer than three feet from the
sough edge of the roof (T. 91). He disputed Bruno’s observation that one
employee was working within two feet of the edge (T. 92). The warning devices
were generally erected about two or three feet from the edge, and Larson stated
that they could have been placed in their usual position without interfering
with the work (T. 94).
Also
testifying for respondent was Chester Vandever, a ‘partially retired’ roofing
foreman with 44 years experience in the industry (T. 96–97). He testified that
he knew of no practical way that a permanent or fixed perimeter railing could
be placed on a roof while people were working on it; that during his years in
the industry no outside barriers or warning lines were used on flat roofs (T.
98). When asked if a stable series of uprights could support a guardrail
without physically fastening to the roof, Mr. Vandever indicated such an
arrangement might be possible but would require a carpenter’s skill for its
construction (T. 103).
A
review of the record reveals no dispute about the physical facts, i.e.,
respondent’s employees were working on an open-sided flat roof some 13 feet or
more above the next adjacent level, and the roof sides were not guarded by a
standard railing or its equivalent. Respondent readily concedes this fact, but
nevertheless resists the enforcement action on several counts. The first and
foremost defense is the proposition that regulation 29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1) is
not applicable to flat roofs. Respondent maintains that a roof is not an ‘open-sided
floor or platform’ and that a reasonable interpretation of the regulation makes
it inapplicable to a flat roof. Unfortunately for respondent’s position, this
argument has been considered and rejected by the Commission. See Secretary
of Labor v. Diamond Roofing Company, 4 OSAHRC 1415 (Docket No. 459) and Secretary
of Labor v. Heyse Sheet Metal and Roofing Company, 4 OSAHRC 1395 (Docket
No. 681). The Diamond Roofing Company case is presently pending on
appeal, but the decision is controlling at this point.
In
addition to challenging the validity of the regulation, respondent also
contends that (1) compliance with the cited regulation was impossible under the
conditions existing at the worksite, and that (2) respondent reasonably relied
on conversations with the Area Director which indicated that a ‘standard
railing’ had been discarded as a requirement on the particular project.
Considerable testimony was devoted to these contentions, and each merits
discussion.
Impossibility
of compliance is a well-recognized defense in construction cases. See Secretary
of Labor v. Brown and Kerr, Inc., 4 OSAHRC 1429 (Docket No. 3055). However,
employers utilizing this defense customarily make an affirmative showing that
the requirements of the standard would have made performance of the work
impossible. Such was not the case existing at the instant worksite.
Respondent’s employees were performing no work at the very edge of the roof,
and perimeter railings would not have interfered with their labors. Respondent,
however, suggests ‘impossibility’ in another sense, namely that no means were
available to erect railings without damage to the roof structure. The record
does not reveal that respondent sought technical assistance to solve the
problem, and complainant suggests that a carpenter might have erected a
satisfactory railing system without damaging any fragile roofing material. In
the present state of the record we conclude that respondent has not established
the defense of impossibility of performance by a preponderance of the evidence.
Respondent’s
final defense gives us pause. It is axiomatic that the government cannot be
estopped by the acts of its agents entering into arrangements to do or cause to
be done that which the law does not sanction or permit. See Utah Power and
Light Company v. United States, 243 U.S. 389, 409, 37 S.Ct. 387, 391. There
is no reason to doubt the bona fides of Mr. Wiskus’ belief that erection of a
warning device system would serve to comply with perimeter railing regulations.
Wiskus’ April 24, 1974, letter to Warren Wright makes specific reference to
construction of a railing to provide warning at the perimeter (Ex. G–3).
Despite the classic legal principles which deny the assertion of estoppel in
this situation, it would be strange justice if an employer who abated a
hazardous condition in conformity with an agreement reached in discussions with
an OSHA Area Director were later subjected to a substantial penalty as a result
of his reliance upon the agreement. Had respondent’s warning devices been in
place on the afternoon of May 2, 1974, this would indeed be a difficult case.
However, the record is clear that neither railings nor warning devices were
employed to diminish the hazard when Bruno inspected the project, and
respondent’s final defense fails. In this regard it avails the respondent
little to point out that the citation makes reference to perimeter railings
stored in the flatbed truck when the devices in the truck were not, in fact,
standard railings as defined in the regulations. The citation clearly charged a
violation of regulation 29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1) and provided adequate notice of
the charge so fully contested at the December 20, 1974, hearing.
In
summary, we find the conditions existing at the worksite on the afternoon of
May 2, 1974, constituted a violation of regulation 29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1). In
view of the record that respondent had earlier violated the identical
regulation at the same worksite we are constrained to conclude that the May 2,
1974, violation was ‘repeated’ within the meaning of section 17(a) of the
statute. We do not, however, agree with the Area Director that a civil penalty
in the sum of $596 is appropriate for the violation. Rather, we find that the
employer made a bona fide albeit ineffective attempt to achieve compliance, and
the lack of any perimeter guarding or railing on the afternoon of May 2, 1974,
resulted from a foreman’s decision and not from company policy. The testimony
that no roofer in the area had ever fallen over the edge of a flat roof was unrebutted,
and we conclude that the probability of an accident occuring under the
conditions revealed by the inspection was remote. After due consideration of
all relevant factors, including the gravity of the offense, respondent’s size,
good faith and safety history, we find a penalty of $100 appropriate.
FINDINGS
OF FACT
Having
held a hearing and considered the entire record herein, it is concluded that
the substantial evidence in the record as a whole supports the following
findings of fact:
1.
Respondent, National Roofing of Sioux City, Inc., is a corporation with its
principal office at 1819 Dace Avenue, Sioux City, Iowa, where it is engaged in
construction contracting in the roofing industry.
2.
Respondent employs approximately 22 employs in its construction activities,
regularly receives goods and equipment in commerce, performs construction work
in states other than the state of Iowa, and is engaged in a business affecting
commerce.
3.
On May 2, 1974, OSHA Compliance Officer Robert Bruno inspected a worksite of
respondent located at South Sioux City, Nebraska. On May 13, 1974, respondent
was issued a citation for nonserious violation, a citation for repeated
violation, and a notification of proposed penalty.
4.
In its answer respondent admitted that at the time of the inspection it was in
violation of occupational safety regulation 29 CFR 1926.300(b)(2) as alleged in
the citation for nonserious violation.
5.
Representatives of the Secretary of Labor had previously inspected the same
worksite at 35th and G Street, South Sioux City, Nebraska, on February 26,
1974, and issued a citation to respondent alleging various violations of
occupational safety standards including regulation 29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1). The
foregoing citation, issued March 12, 1974, was not contested by respondent, but
by letter dated April 24, 1974, respondent’s president, Robert Wiskus, advised
the OSHA Area Director that the items cited therein ‘had been corrected.’
6.
On May 2, 1974, three employees of respondent were laying tar along the south
edge of the second roof elevation of the worksite, a high school building under
construction. The employees were exposed to a fall of approximately 13 feet
from the upper roof elevation to the next lower floor or ground level. No
guardrails or perimeter guards were in place along the edge of the upper roof
elevation, nor were the employees wearing lifelines or any other form of
protection.
CONCLUSIONS
OF LAW
1.
Respondent is and at all times material hereto was an employer engaged in a
business affecting commerce within the meaning of the Act.
2.
On May 2, 1974, respondent violated occupational safety and health regulation
29 CFR 1926.300(b)(2).
3.
On May 2, 1974, respondent violated occupational safety and health regulation
29 CFR 1926.500(d)(1). Said violation constituted a repeated violation within
the meaning of section 17(a) of the Act, and a civil penalty of $100 is
appropriate for said violation.
ORDER
Based
on the above finding of facts and conclusions of law, it is ORDERED that:
1.
The citation for nonserious violation issued to respondent May 13, 1974, is
hereby affirmed.
2.
The citation for repeated violation issued to respondent May 13, 1974, is
hereby affirmed and a civil penalty in the sum of $100 is assessed therefor.
Alan M. Wienman
Judge, OSAHRC
Dated: March 11, 1975
[1] Chairman Barnako
does not agree to this attachment.
[2] That standard
provides as follows:
The employer is
responsible for requiring the wearing of appropriate personal protective
equipment in all operations where there is an exposure to hazardous conditions
of where this part indicates the need for using such equipment to reduce the
hazards to the employees.
[3] Appeal
docketed, No. 76–4083, 2d Cir., March 24, 1976.
3a In addition, although I agree that
Central City Roofing Co. is dispositive of the 29 CFR § 1926.500(d)(1) issue in
this case, I would limit the application of Central City to only the roofing
industry.
[4] Respondent also contested a citation issued May 13, 1974, for nonserious violation of regulation 29 CFR 1926.300(b)(2) in connection with an unguarded chain drive on a tar pump. However, no penalty was proposed in connection with this citation, and in subsequent pleadings respondent admitted the violation, thereby terminating any dispute with reference to the nonserious citation.