Gioioso v. OSHRC ( 1997 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion








    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________


    No. 96-1807


    P. GIOIOSO & SONS, INC.,

    Petitioner,

    v.

    OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION AND CYNTHIA A.
    METZLER, ACTING SECRETARY OF LABOR,

    Respondents.

    _________________________

    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF

    THE OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION

    _________________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Coffin and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges. _____________________

    _________________________

    Richard D. Wayne, with whom Lisa Schneider and Hinckley, _________________ ______________ _________
    Allen & Snyder were on brief, for petitioner. ______________
    Barbara A.W. McConnell, with whom J. Davitt McAteer, Acting ______________________ _________________
    Solicitor of Labor, Joseph M. Woodward, Associate Solicitor, and ___________________
    Ann Rosenthal, Counsel for Appellate Litigation, were on brief, _____________
    for respondents.

    _________________________


    June 13, 1997
    ________________________


















    SELYA, Circuit Judge. The petitioner, P. Gioioso & SELYA, Circuit Judge. _____________

    Sons, Inc. (Gioioso), seeks review of a final order of the

    Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (the Commission)

    determining that it violated the Occupational Safety and Health

    Act of 1970 (OSH Act), 19 U.S.C. 651-678 (1994). The petition

    purports to raise six distinct objections to the Commission's

    order. The Secretary of Labor (the Secretary) maintains that we

    lack jurisdiction to hear three of these objections because

    Gioioso failed to raise them when it petitioned the Commission

    for review of the hearing examiner's adverse decision. The

    remaining objections, the Secretary tells us, are without force.

    The jurisdictional question is new to this court. We

    resolve it favorably to the Secretary and dispose of certain

    objections on that ground. We deny the remnants of the petition

    on the merits.

    I. THE STATUTORY SCHEME I. THE STATUTORY SCHEME

    Congress enacted the OSH Act "to assure so far as

    possible . . . safe and healthful working conditions." 29 U.S.C.

    651(b). The Act spins an intricate administrative web which,

    among other things, separates rulemaking, enforcement, and

    adjudication. See Martin v. OSHRC, 499 U.S. 144, 151 (1991). In ___ ______ _____

    general, the Secretary sets mandatory safety and health standards

    applicable to particular businesses. See 29 U.S.C. 651(b)(3). ___

    The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) enforces

    those standards. See id. 658-659, 666. Citations issued in ___ ___

    respect to alleged violations are adjudicated by the Commission.


    2












    See id. 659, 661. ___ ___

    The Commission operates in the first instance through

    administrative law judges (ALJs), who function as hearing

    officers. See id. 661(j). After hearing a contested matter, ___ ___

    the ALJ prepares a report. See 29 C.F.R. 2200.90(a) (1996). A ___

    member of the Commission may direct review of a report on his own

    motion (as long as he does so within 30 days after the docketing

    date, see id. 2200.92(b)), or on application of an aggrieved ___ ___

    party. See id. 2200.91(a). The instrument by which an ___ ___

    aggrieved party solicits the Commission's attention is called a

    petition for discretionary review (PDR), and the party must file

    it within a prescribed 20-day period following the docketing

    date. See id. 2200.91(b). The ALJ's report becomes the final ___ ___

    order of the Commission unless review is granted "on or before

    the thirtieth day following the [docketing] date." Id. ___

    2200.90(d). In other words, the Commission's failure to act on a

    PDR within the stipulated 30-day period is tantamount to a denial

    of review.

    Regardless of whether a final order comes about through

    action or inaction on the Commission's part, an aggrieved party

    may seek judicial review of it in the appropriate court of

    appeals. See 29 U.S.C. 660(a). ___

    II. THE ORIGINS OF THE DISPUTE II. THE ORIGINS OF THE DISPUTE

    Gioioso is in the construction industry, specializing

    in utilities. Some time ago, it contracted with the

    Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) to lay water lines


    3












    in Winthrop, Massachusetts. During a lengthy period beginning in

    1993, it laid several thousand feet of pipe under or near the

    access road to MWRA's Deer Island work site.

    In the course of its endeavors, Gioioso dug an 18-foot-

    long trench at the intersection of Shirley and Taft Avenues. On

    October 6, 1994, Gioioso's foreman, Salvatore Santone, and a

    laborer, Fernando Camara, were standing in this trench. At that

    moment, several OSHA compliance officers happened to pass by the

    work site.1 The meandering traffic afforded the compliance

    officers a clear view of the trench and one of their number,

    Edward Wells, did not like what he saw: the trench's walls were

    unsloped and unsupported, the two workmen standing in the trench

    were visible only from the shoulders up, and a ten-foot section

    of cast metal pipe was suspended aloft from the bucket of a piece

    of heavy construction equipment located at one end of the trench.

    Wells sounded the alarm (figuratively speaking) and the driver

    stopped the car.

    One of Wells' colleagues, Patrick Griffin, exited the

    vehicle and hurried toward the trench. Griffin noticed that the

    dangling pipe was connected to the bucket of a large excavating

    machine by only a single attachment point and watched as it

    rotated into a position parallel to the trench and directly over

    the workmen's heads. When Griffin reached the trench, he
    ____________________

    1The exquisite timing of this coincidence suggests that
    Emerson's epigram ("Wherever a man commits a crime, God finds a
    witness." Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Natural Religion," Essays ______
    (1875)) may apply to breaches of administrative regulations as
    well as to violations of the criminal code.

    4












    discovered that it measured no less than six feet deep and four

    feet wide and had been dug in gravelly soil. No trench box was

    in place to guard against a cave-in (although Santone claimed

    that he and Camara had been measuring the trench to ascertain if

    it could accommodate one). Moreover, because the trench lay

    adjacent to the only road providing access to Deer Island,

    vibrations from traffic increased the risk of a cave-in. A gas

    pipe, six inches in diameter, traversed the width of the trench.

    Wells corroborated many of Griffin's observations.

    In due course, OSHA issued citations alleging three

    serious violations (one of which the Secretary later withdrew)

    and a repeat violation.2 The two serious violations (which we

    shall label "A" and "B") were as follows:

    A. Permitting employees to work beneath
    the suspended pipe in violation of 29 C.F.R.
    1926.651(e) (1996) (which instructs that
    "[n]o employee shall be permitted underneath
    ____________________

    2A serious violation occurs

    if there is a substantial probability that
    death or serious physical harm could result
    from a condition which exists, or from one or
    more practices, means, methods, operations,
    or processes which have been adopted or are
    in use . . . unless the employer did not, and
    could not with the exercise of reasonable
    diligence, know of the presence of the
    violation.

    29 U.S.C. 666(k). While the OSH Act does not define the term
    "repeat violation," courts typically require proof that the
    respondent violated the same standard on an earlier occasion in a
    substantially similar fashion. See, e.g., D & S Grading Co. v. ___ ____ __________________
    Secretary of Labor, 899 F.2d 1145, 1147 (11th Cir. 1990); Bunge __________________ _____
    Corp. v. Secretary of Labor, 638 F.2d 831, 836-37 (5th Cir. _____ ___________________
    1981); George Hyman Constr. Co. v. OSHRC, 582 F.2d 834, 838-39 ________________________ _____
    (4th Cir. 1978).

    5












    loads handled by lifting or digging
    equipment").

    B. Permitting workers to use a ladder
    that did not extend at least three feet above
    the top of the trench in violation of 29
    C.F.R. 1926.1053(b)(1) (1996) (which
    directs that "[w]hen portable ladders are
    used for access to an upper landing surface,
    the ladder side rails shall extend at least 3
    feet (.9m) above the upper landing").

    The repeat violation (which we shall label "C") was as

    follows:

    C. Failing to provide an adequate
    protective system for workers in an unshored
    trench, in violation of 29 C.F.R.
    1926.652(a)(1) (1996) (which provides that,
    except when excavations are made entirely in
    stable rock or are less than five feet in
    depth, "[e]ach employee in an excavation
    shall be protected from cave-ins by an
    adequate protective system").

    The petitioner filed a timely notice of contest. At

    the outset of the hearing, it moved for disqualification on the

    ground that the ALJ, several years earlier (while employed as an

    attorney in the Department of Labor), had prosecuted one or more

    similar cases involving Gioioso. The ALJ refused to recuse

    himself. After considering the evidence, he found that the

    violations had in fact occurred, accepted OSHA's

    characterizations of them, and imposed penalties of $1,600 for

    each of the two serious violations and $8,000 for the repeat

    violation.

    Gioioso petitioned the Commission for discretionary

    review of the ALJ's decision. Its PDR called attention to only

    three issues (described infra Part IV). The PDR generated no _____


    6












    interest and the ALJ's decision ripened into the Commission's

    final order.3 Gioioso then sought a judicial anodyne.

    III. THE JURISDICTIONAL ISSUE III. THE JURISDICTIONAL ISSUE

    We turn first to the jurisdictional quandary. In

    pressing its cause before this court, the petitioner raises not

    only the three issues which it enumerated in the PDR but also

    three additional issues, namely, whether the ALJ erred in (1)

    failing to recuse himself, (2) characterizing violation B as

    serious, and (3) assessing substantial penalties. The question,

    then, is whether Gioioso's failure to press these points in the

    PDR constitutes a forfeiture of the right to bring them before a

    reviewing court. We think that it does.

    We begin with bedrock. In the administrative state,

    exhaustion of administrative remedies is "generally required."

    Weinberger v. Salfi, 422 U.S. 749, 765 (1975). This requirement __________ _____

    is more than a matter of form. "Insisting on exhaustion forces

    parties to take administrative proceedings seriously, allows

    administrative agencies an opportunity to correct their own

    errors, and potentially avoids the need for judicial involvement

    altogether." Portela-Gonzalez v. Secretary of the Navy, 109 F.3d ________________ _____________________

    74, 79 (1st Cir. 1997). In this way, the exhaustion doctrine

    creates a win-win situation: adhering to it simultaneously

    enhances the efficacy of the agency, fosters judicial efficiency,

    ____________________

    3By its inaction, the Commission effectively adopted the
    ALJ's recommended findings and report. We sometimes will refer
    to these findings as if they had been made by the Commission in
    the first instance.

    7












    and safeguards the integrity of the inter-branch review

    relationship. See Power Plant Div., Brown & Root, Inc. v. OSHRC, ___ ____________________________________ _____

    673 F.2d 111, 113 (5th Cir. 1982); see also Ezratty v. ___ ____ _______

    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, 648 F.2d 770, 774 (1st Cir. 1981) ____________________________

    (stating that the "doctrine serves interests of accuracy,

    efficiency, agency autonomy and judicial economy").

    The OSH Act warmly embraces the exhaustion doctrine.

    It provides in relevant part that persons such as Gioioso who are

    "adversely affected or aggrieved by an order of the Commission"

    may obtain judicial review in the "court of appeals for the

    circuit in which the violation is alleged to have occurred." 29

    U.S.C. 660(a). The right to judicial review, however, is

    carefully cabined. Congress specifically directed that "[n]o

    objection that has not been urged before the Commission shall be

    considered by the court, unless the failure or neglect to urge

    such objection shall be excused because of extraordinary

    circumstances." Id. The regulations complement the statute, ___

    explaining that an aggrieved party's failure to file a PDR "may

    foreclose court review of the objections to the [ALJ's]

    decision." 29 C.F.R. 2200.91(f).

    Interestingly, the commentary accompanying this part of

    the regulations directs the reader to the Third Circuit's opinion

    in Keystone Roofing Co. v. OSHRC, 539 F.2d 960 (3d Cir. 1976), ____________________ _____

    for guidance. The Keystone court considered the question of ________

    whether the OSH Act "permits a reviewing court to consider an

    employer's objection to an OSHA citation which was argued to the


    8












    OSHA hearing examiner, but which was neither the subject of a

    petition to the . . . [Commission] for discretionary review, 29

    C.F.R. 2200.91, nor the subject of review by the full

    Commission at the direction of a single member, 29 U.S.C.

    661(i)." Id. at 961. The court answered this question in the ___

    negative. See id. at 964. ___ ___

    Although the rule announced in Keystone makes eminently ________

    good sense both textually (that is, as a matter of statutory

    interpretation) and practically (that is, as a matter of policy),

    the petitioner attempts to elude its grasp. Gioioso first notes

    that the regulations say only that an aggrieved party's failure

    to file a PDR "may foreclose court review of . . . objections to ___

    the [ALJ's] decision." 29 C.F.R. 2200.91(f) (emphasis

    supplied). Gioioso contends that the use of the word "may"

    implies that raising the objections in the PDR is not a

    prerequisite to judicial review. We disagree. For one thing,

    the regulations cannot alter the statutory scheme. For another

    thing, the statute leaves a door ajar for cases in which

    extraordinary circumstances obtain. See 29 U.S.C. 660(a). The ___

    regulation's use of the verb "may" is no doubt intended to

    preserve this narrow exception to the exhaustion doctrine, not to

    widen it beyond all recognition.4

    The petitioner has a fallback position. It maintains

    that it in fact "urged" the three omitted issues "before the
    ____________________

    4We need not dwell on the exception itself as the petitioner
    does not even venture to suggest that extraordinary circumstances
    existed in this case.

    9












    Commission" in the statutorily required sense. The linchpin of

    this assertion is the petitioner's claim that urging an objection

    before the ALJ is functionally and legally equivalent to urging

    it before the Commission. The Fifth Circuit has encouraged the

    petitioner's view, suggesting in dicta that an objection might be

    preserved for judicial review if the aggrieved party articulated

    it sufficiently before the ALJ. See Cleveland Consolidated, Inc. ___ ____________________________

    v. OSHRC, 649 F.2d 1160, 1165 (5th Cir. 1981) (assuming, without _____

    deciding, that an issue had been preserved for judicial review

    because it was "evident from the record below," even though the

    aggrieved party did not specify it in the PDR).

    This dictum distorts the clear congressional intent.5

    We believe it follows from the bifurcation of duties contained in

    the statutory scheme, as well as from plain meaning, that the OSH

    Act precludes judicial review of those objections not urged in

    front of the Commission. To be specific, the OSH Act

    acknowledges the existence of two separate adjudicators the

    Commission and the ALJs and assigns very different

    responsibilities to each. The Commission members, whom the

    President appoints based on their training, expertise, and

    experience, see 29 U.S.C. 661(a), carry out the broad ___

    adjudicatory functions required by the OSH Act. Conversely, the

    ALJs' functions are case-specific. This division of labor

    ____________________

    5This dictum goes much further than the position originally
    taken by the Fifth Circuit in McGowan v. Marshall, 604 F.2d 885, _______ ________
    889-91 (5th Cir. 1979). Our preference is for that court's
    earlier iteration.

    10












    carries with it disparate responsibilities, leaving in the

    Commission's hands the task of ensuring the development of a

    cohesive body of decisional rules which comport with the

    objectives of the OSH Act.

    Given this framework, we think that the wiser course is

    to construe the statute according to its letter. Only if an

    issue is actually called to the attention of the Commission,

    through the PDR or by a Commission member's spontaneous

    initiative, will the Commission have the informed opportunity

    that Congress intended a meaningful chance to correct a mistake

    before an order becomes final. Thus, the model that Congress

    envisioned can function optimally only if the aggrieved party

    alerts the Commission to those issues which that party thinks are

    worthy of review. Accord McGowan v. Marshall, 604 F.2d 885, 890- ______ _______ ________

    91 (5th Cir. 1979); Keystone, 539 F.2d at 963. ________

    The language set forth in the OSH Act drives home the

    point. While the statute recognizes the existence of both the

    Commission and the ALJs, compare 661(a) with 661(e), it _______ ____

    specifically precludes judicial review of those issues which

    "h[ave] not been urged before the Commission." 29 U.S.C. ______________________

    660(a) (emphasis supplied). In our view, the omission of the

    term "ALJ" or words of like import from section 660(a) can only

    be regarded as intentional, not inadvertent. See Russello v. ___ ________

    United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983) (explaining that "where ______________

    Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute

    but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally


    11












    presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the

    disparate inclusion or exclusion") (citation and internal

    quotation marks omitted); 2A Norman J. Singer, Sutherland Stat. ________________

    Const. 47.23 (5th ed. 1992) (explaining that the inference that ______

    an omission is an intentional exclusion is strengthened "where a

    thing is provided in one part of the statute and omitted in

    another"). In short, we agree with the Fifth Circuit's

    statement, albeit in a case that predates Cleveland Consolidated, ______________________

    that "[t]he language of section 660(a) indicates that proceedings

    targeted towards the Commission, not those before the ALJs, are

    the predicate to judicial review." McGowan, 604 F.2d at 890. _______

    The language of the statute is not only plain, but it

    is also fortified by the regulations (which, if ambiguity lurks,

    are deserving of deference, see Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural ___ ____________________ _______

    Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843 (1984)),6 and ________________________________

    by the agency's stated adherence to the Third Circuit's seminal

    decision in Keystone, 539 F.2d at 964. Against this backdrop, we ________

    are persuaded that merely raising an issue before the ALJ no

    matter how clearly fails to preserve the issue for judicial

    review. Something more is needed: the issue thereafter must be
    ____________________

    6The regulations underscore the importance that the agency
    attaches to raising an issue before the Commission. 29 C.F.R. ______ ___ __________
    2200.91(d) exemplifies this emphasis. It provides, inter alia, _____ ____
    that a PDR should state specifically why review should be
    directed, including whether the ALJ's "decision raises an
    important question of law, policy or discretion" and "whether
    review by the Commission will resolve a question about which the
    Commission's [ALJs] have rendered differing opinions." These
    directives would be emptied of meaning if we construed the
    statute to relieve the aggrieved party of any responsibility to
    identify issues with particularity in the PDR itself.

    12












    brought to the Commission's attention either by its inclusion in

    a PDR or by the unilateral act of a single commissioner.

    Consistent with this conclusion, we next examine the

    PDR which Gioioso filed. We find absolutely no reference in it

    either to the alleged mischaracterization of the ladder violation

    or to the supposedly excessive nature of the penalty assessments.

    Because Gioioso failed to urge these objections before the

    Commission, we are without jurisdiction to entertain them.

    The recusal issue presents a variation on the theme.

    Although the PDR did not list this objection as an issue for

    review, there was a glancing mention of it in a footnote.7 The

    petitioner claims to have preserved the issue in this fashion.

    But the exhaustion doctrine demands more than oblique references,

    and the statute's use of the verb "urge" in this contest is

    telling. See Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 1300 (10th ed. ___

    1993) (defining "urge" as meaning "to present, advocate, or

    demand earnestly or pressingly" or "to declare, advance, or press

    earnestly a statement, argument, charge or claim"); The American

    Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 1965 (3d ed. 1992)

    (defining "urge" as "[t]o entreat earnestly and often repeatedly;
    ____________________

    7The footnote reads in its entirety:

    Gioioso moved to recuse the ALJ based upon
    the fact that the ALJ had previously
    prosecuted Gioioso for similar citations
    while a solicitor and that prosecution could
    impact the ALJ's judgment in this case. The
    ALJ denied the motion. Later, Complainant
    introduced into evidence the settlement
    agreement in that case to establish the
    appropriateness of the penalty in this case.

    13












    exhort . . . [t]o present a forceful argument, claim, or case").

    In an OSHA case, an objection is not "urged" in the requisite

    sense (and will not be deemed preserved for judicial review)

    unless the PDR conveys the substance of the objection face up and

    squarely, in a manner reasonably calculated to alert the

    Commission to the crux of the perceived problem.8

    The petitioner's treatment of the recusal issue fails

    to meet this benchmark. As the PDR reads, the matter of recusal

    is little more than a passing comment, designed to provide

    information buttressing another argument rather than to carve out

    an independent ground for inquiry. Since the footnote failed to

    place the Commission on proper notice, it did not suffice to

    preserve the issue of recusal for judicial review.

    The upshot of the matter is simply this: in order to

    effectuate the statute that Congress wrote and assure the

    efficiency, effectiveness, and autonomy of the administrative

    structure, an aggrieved party desiring to preserve an issue for

    judicial review must raise it before the ALJ, articulate it

    clearly in its PDR, and offer a modicum of developed

    argumentation in support of it. See Durez Div. of Occidental ___ __________________________

    Chem. Corp. v. OSHA, 906 F.2d 1, 5 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (refusing to ___________ ____
    ____________________

    8To be sure, some courts have speculated that "[b]road
    language in a petition for review might be sufficient to satisfy
    this requirement." Power Plant, 659 F.2d at 1294 (quoting ____________
    Cleveland Consolidated, 649 F.2d at 1164-65). But short of _______________________
    holding that the Commission is satisfactorily alerted to an issue
    if it appears anywhere in the record below (a proposition that we
    already have rejected), no court has suggested that so
    nondescript a reference as is contained in the quoted footnote is
    enough to satisfy the imperative of section 660(a).

    14












    hear an issue listed as one of five issues in the PDR, but

    neither discussed nor supported by citations of authority

    therein); see also 29 C.F.R. 2200.91(d) ("[A] petition should ___ ____

    concisely state the portions of the decision for which review is

    sought."); cf. Paterson-Leitch Co. v. Massachusetts Mun. ___ _____________________ ___________________

    Wholesale Elec. Co., 840 F.2d 985, 990 (1st Cir. 1988) (holding ___________________

    that to preserve an issue for review on an appeal from a

    magistrate's report to a district judge, a party must "spell out

    his arguments squarely and distinctly"). Because the petitioner

    did not satisfy this criterion with respect to three of its six

    putative issues, we lack jurisdiction to hear those issues in

    this proceeding.

    IV. THE MERITS IV. THE MERITS

    Our conclusion that we lack jurisdiction to hear three

    of the petitioner's six objections marks only the end of the

    beginning. We still must resolve the three preserved claims,

    namely, (1) whether substantial evidence supports the finding

    that the petitioner's employees worked below a suspended pipe

    (Violation A); (2) whether the Commission erred in finding that

    the petitioner's employees were exposed to trench-related hazards

    without an adequate protection system (Violation C); and (3)

    whether the record supports the rejection of the petitioner's

    unpreventable employee misconduct defense. We discuss each of

    these contentions separately, pausing first to delineate certain

    principles affecting the standard of appellate review.

    A. Principles Affecting Review. A. Principles Affecting Review. ___________________________


    15












    A reviewing court customarily defers to an agency's

    reasonable interpretation of a statute that it administers. See ___

    Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843-44 & n.11; Strickland v. Commissioner, _______ __________ _____________

    Me. Dep't of Human Servs., 96 F.3d 542, 547 (1st Cir. 1996). The _________________________

    impetus for deference escalates when the agency interprets its

    own regulations. See Lyng v. Payne, 476 U.S. 926, 939 (1986); ___ ____ _____

    Udall v. Tallman, 380 U.S. 1, 16 (1965). In the final analysis, _____ _______

    a reviewing court should respect an agency's interpretation of

    its own regulation as long as the interpretation meshes sensibly

    with the regulation's language and purpose. See Martin, 499 U.S. ___ ______

    at 151. These principles apply to the regulations that the

    Secretary of Labor promulgated to implement the OSH Act. See id. ___ ___

    at 152.

    The OSH Act, see 29 U.S.C. 660(a), incorporates the ___

    basic judicial review provisions of the Administrative Procedure

    Act. Under those provisions, agency determinations should be

    upheld unless they are "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of

    discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 5 U.S.C.

    706(2)(A) (1994).

    The Commission's findings of fact are conclusive as

    long as they are "supported by substantial evidence on the record

    considered as a whole." 29 U.S.C. 660(a). The Court

    delineated the contours of the "substantial evidence" standard

    nearly half a century ago in Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 ______________________ ____

    U.S. 474, 477, 491 (1951), and they are by now too familiar to

    warrant repetition. We mention specially, however, that the


    16












    standard applies with undiminished force where, as here, an

    administrative body, like the Commission, does not itself hear

    witnesses but instead adopts an ALJ's findings of fact. See ___

    Truck Drivers & Helpers Union, Local No. 170 v. NLRB, 993 F.2d ______________________________________________ ____

    990, 998-99 (1st Cir. 1993). As a corollary to the standard, the

    hearing examiner's credibility determinations are entitled to

    great deference. See General Dynamics Corp. v. OSHRC, 599 F.2d ___ ______________________ _____

    453, 463 (1st Cir. 1979).

    B. Violation A. B. Violation A. ___________

    The Commission found that Gioioso breached the

    excavation standard, 29 C.F.R. 1926.651(e), which mandates that

    "[n]o employee shall be permitted underneath loads handled by

    lifting or digging equipment." The petitioner assigns error. We

    see none.

    The citation underpinning Violation A states in

    relevant part that Gioioso's personnel "were exposed to serious

    injury while working in a trench in which a section of 12" water

    line was being lowered." In adjudicating this citation, the ALJ

    credited the testimony of two compliance officers who described

    seeing a ten-foot section of cast metal pipe suspended from the

    bucket of an excavating machine by a chain sling. As the pipe

    moved, it rotated around the single point of suspension and

    passed over the heads of the men who were working in the trench.

    While the observations of the two compliance officers were not

    entirely congruent, the ALJ determined that the modest

    discrepancies in their accounts were easily explained by the


    17












    officers' differing vantage points. He also found that a

    photograph taken shortly thereafter corroborated their testimony.

    Keeping in mind the frailty of Gioioso's rebuttal its foreman,

    Santone, stated only that he did not recall the pipe passing

    overhead there is no principled basis on which a court could

    justify substituting its judgment for the factfinder's. See ___

    General Dynamics, 599 F.2d at 463. ________________

    C. Violation C. C. Violation C. ___________

    The Commission found that Gioioso failed to provide an

    adequate protective system within the trench, thereby violating

    29 C.F.R. 1926.652(a)(1). The petitioner again spies error.

    We do not.

    It is undisputed that the petitioner neglected to

    furnish a support system, shield system, or other adequate

    safeguarding within the trench as required by 29 C.F.R.

    1926.652(c). Additionally, the petitioner failed to comply with

    the provisions of 29 C.F.R. 1926.652(b)(1)(i) (which delineates

    a protection option accomplished by the gradual sloping of the

    excavation's walls). But the regulations exempt some unsloped

    excavations that are less than five feet in depth, see id. ___ ___

    1926.652(a)(1)(ii), and the petitioner seeks the shelter of this

    exemption. The petitioner hypothesizes that its workers never

    were exposed to the hazards inherent in an excavation exceeding

    five feet in depth because they were standing on a pipe that

    traversed the width of the trench. The ALJ rejected this

    defense: although he believed it was unlikely that the workmen


    18












    were standing on the floor of the trench when the compliance

    officers arrived, he found that "no matter where they were

    standing, [they] were still inside a trench that was not

    protected in accordance with 1926.652(a)(1)." We review this

    essentially legal judgment de novo.

    In reaching this conclusion, the ALJ relied heavily on

    Ford Dev. Corp., 15 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) 2003 (1992). There, the ________________

    employer claimed that its employees were supposed to stand on a

    pipe while in a trench, and that in so doing they effectively

    would be exposed to a depth of only 3.5 feet (the distance from

    the upper surface of the pipe to the top of the trench). The

    Commission rejected this argument. It noted that the depth

    exception applies only if an excavation is "less than 5 feet

    (1.52m) in depth and examination of the ground by a competent

    person provides no indication of a potential cave-in." 29 C.F.R.

    1926.652(a)(1)(ii). The Commission then explained that "[t]he

    standard speaks of the depth of the trench, not of the position

    of employees in the trench." Ford Dev. Corp., 15 O.S.H. Cas. at _______________

    2011. On this basis, the Commission held that the depth

    exception did not apply. See id. ___ ___

    The reasoning in Ford embodies a sensible construction ____

    of the regulation and one that comports with its wording and

    purpose. The safety standard is implicated by the depth of a

    particular trench, without regard to an individual worker's






    19












    precise position in it.9 The notion that having workers stand on

    a laid pipe within a trench is a satisfactory method of

    protecting them from the risk of cave-ins is nonsense. While the

    regulations are performance-oriented, they only allow employers

    to choose from a limited universe of acceptable procedures, not

    to jury-rig convenient alternatives and impose them on an

    imperilled work force. See Conie Constr., Inc. v. Reich, 73 F.3d ___ ___________________ _____

    382, 384 (D.C. Cir. 1995).

    We have said enough on this score. Because the

    excavation regulation applies to the trench in question whereas

    the depth exception does not, the Commission's resolution of

    Violation C must stand.

    D. Unpreventable Employee Misconduct. D. Unpreventable Employee Misconduct. _________________________________

    The Commission rejected the petitioner's affirmative

    defense of unpreventable employee misconduct (the UEM defense).

    The petitioner challenges this determination as a matter of law

    and as a matter of fact. We reject both challenges.

    The OSH Act requires that an employer do everything

    reasonably within its power to ensure that its personnel do not

    violate safety standards. But if an employer lives up to that

    billing and an employee nonetheless fails to use proper equipment

    ____________________

    9The record in this case aptly illustrates the wisdom of
    this conclusion. A compliance officer, Griffin, testified to the
    close proximity of traffic on the adjacent roads and warned that
    this could cause vibrations along the trench walls, thus
    heightening the risk of a cave-in. If a cave-in occurred in a
    trench of this depth, Griffin believed that workers within it
    would "probably . . . be buried" regardless of where they were
    standing.

    20












    or otherwise ignores firmly established safety measures, it seems

    unfair to hold the employer liable. To address this dilemma,

    both OSHRC and the courts have recognized the availability of the

    UEM defense.

    The contours of the UEM defense are relatively well

    defined. To reach safe harbor, an employer must demonstrate that

    it (1) established a work rule to prevent the reckless behavior

    and/or unsafe condition from occurring, (2) adequately

    communicated the rule to its employees, (3) took steps to

    discover incidents of noncompliance, and (4) effectively enforced

    the rule whenever employees transgressed it. See New York State ___ ______________

    Elec. & Gas Corp. v. Secretary of Labor, 88 F.3d 98, 105 (2d Cir. _________________ __________________

    1996); General Dynamics, 599 F.2d at 458-59; Jensen Constr. Co., ________________ __________________

    7 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) 1477, 1479 (1979).

    The employer must shoulder the burden of proving all

    four elements of the UEM defense. See Brock v. L.E. Myers Co., ___ _____ ______________

    818 F.2d 1270, 1276 (6th Cir. 1987); General Dynamics, 599 F.2d ________________

    at 459. Sustaining this burden requires more than pious

    platitudes: "an employer must do all it feasibly can to prevent

    foreseeable hazards, including dangerous conduct by its

    employees." General Dynamics, 599 F.2d at 458; accord H.B. _________________ ______ ____

    Zachry Co. v. OSHRC, 638 F.2d 812, 818 (5th Cir. 1981). __________ _____

    The mainstay of Gioioso's argument is that the ALJ

    unnecessarily required repetitive documentary proof referable to

    the UEM defense. But this is smoke and mirrors; the record

    reveals quite clearly that the ALJ applied the appropriate legal


    21












    standard in a wholly unremarkable way and found that the employer

    failed to carry the devoir of persuasion on both the

    implementation and enforcement components of the defense. This

    deficit is fatal. Even if an employer establishes work rules and

    communicates them to its employees, the defense of unpreventable

    employee misconduct cannot be sustained unless the employer also

    proves that it insists upon compliance with the rules and

    regularly enforces them. See Centex-Rooney Constr. Co., 16 ___ __________________________

    O.S.H. CAS. (BNA) 2127, 2130 (1994).

    Contrary to the petitioner's insinuations, the ALJ did

    not presume to establish a per se rule requiring documentation.

    Rather, he counted the absence of documentation against the

    proponent of the defense in the circumstances of this case. We __________________________________

    cannot fault this approach. Given the nature of the issue, there

    is no reason why a factfinder must accept an employer's anecdotal

    evidence uncritically. And in this instance, we agree with the

    ALJ that the absence of any vestige of documentary proof was not

    only a relevant datum but a telling one.

    The petitioner also questions whether the Commission's

    rejection of its UEM defense is supported by substantial evidence

    in the record. After giving due deference to the ALJ's

    credibility determinations, we conclude that the ruling passes

    muster.

    While the record reflects that Gioioso made a

    meaningful effort to develop a satisfactory safety program, it is

    much less conclusive on the issues of implementation and


    22












    enforcement. The petitioner's best case is that it distributes

    safety manuals to all new employees; that these manuals contain

    information regarding, inter alia, the lifting of loads, methods _____ ____

    of trench protection, and the proper placement of ladders in

    trenches; and that it supplements these materials in various

    ways. The petitioner's safety chairman testified that the

    company sponsors weekly "toolbox talks" at its work sites,10

    monthly safety meetings for supervisory personnel, and biennial

    safety seminars for all employees. But this evidence left some

    fairly conspicuous gaps as to the content of the training

    exercises, who conducted each session, and who attended them.

    Documentation say, syllabi or attendance rosters would have

    gone a long way toward filling these gaps, but the petitioner

    proffered none. Absent such documentation, it cannot

    persuasively argue that it effectively communicated the rules to

    its employees.

    The ALJ found most compelling the lack of any

    substantial evidence in the record that the petitioner

    effectively enforced its safety program. It provided no evidence

    of unscheduled safety audits or mandatory safety checklists, and

    no documentation that it ever executed its four-tiered

    disciplinary policy. This lacuna in the proof undermines its

    attempt to mount a viable UEM defense. See Hamilton Fixture, 16 ___ ________________

    O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) 1073, 1090 (1993) (finding the evidence
    ____________________

    10The safety chairman submitted a newsletter published by
    the National Utility Contractors Association summarizing various
    representative "toolbox talks."

    23












    insufficient where there was no proof to establish adequate

    enforcement even though the written work rule was adequate),

    aff'd, 28 F.3d 1213 (6th Cir. 1994). Even when a safety program _____

    is thorough and properly conceived, lax administration renders it

    ineffective (and, thus, vitiates reliance on the UEM defense).

    See Brock, 818 F.2d at 1274, 1278 (in which the ALJ rejected a ___ _____

    UEM defense when the employer could not produce records

    evidencing employees' receipt of safety manuals, the occurrence

    of safety meetings, and the like).

    Brock also illustrates another point which has _____

    pertinence here. The Brock court regarded the circumstances _____

    surrounding the actions of the employer's foreman as further

    evidence that the employer's program was lax. See id. at 1277. ___ ___

    The case at hand is not dissimilar; Santone, the petitioner's

    foreman, in effect acknowledged that his actions directly

    contravened the company's safety policies. And while the

    petitioner argues that a foreman should not be regarded as a

    supervisor, the company's own safety manual identifies the

    foreman as the "safety foreman for his crew," instructs employees

    to "listen to your foreman" in respect to safety matters, and

    directs foremen (along with other company safety officers) to

    inspect work sites regularly and to enforce safety rules. Seen

    in the context of these instructions, the foreman's breach of

    safety rules supplies the basis for an inference that the

    employer's implementation of safety procedures and/or its

    enforcement policies left something to be desired. See id.; see ___ ___ ___


    24












    also H.B. Zachry, 638 F.2d at 819. The same circumstance also ____ ___________

    buttresses the ALJ's finding that Gioioso's employees probably

    were unaware that a threat of disciplinary action existed for

    nonobservance of safety rules.

    Finally, it bears mentioning that one of the violations

    (Violation C) is a repeat violation. Recent violations provide

    some evidence of ineffective safety enforcement. See Jensen ___ ______

    Constr. Co., 7 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) at 1479 & nn. 5-6. The ALJ was ___________

    entitled to draw such an inference here.

    We need go no further. Taking into account the

    totality of the circumstances and the allocation of the burden of

    proof, we find the petitioner's claim that the Commission

    improperly rejected its UEM defense to be without merit.



    The petition for review is denied and dismissed. The petition for review is denied and dismissed. _______________________________________________
























    25






Document Info

Docket Number: 96-1807

Filed Date: 6/17/1997

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015

Authorities (26)

Astrid L. Portela-Gonzalez v. Secretary of the Navy , 109 F.3d 74 ( 1997 )

Strickland v. Commissioner, Maine Department of Human ... , 96 F.3d 542 ( 1996 )

Laurice J. Ezratty v. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico , 648 F.2d 770 ( 1981 )

Truck Drivers & Helpers Union, Local No. 170 v. National ... , 993 F.2d 990 ( 1993 )

Paterson-Leitch Company, Inc. v. Massachusetts Municipal ... , 840 F.2d 985 ( 1988 )

7-osh-casbna-1373-1979-oshd-cch-p-23573-general-dynamics , 599 F.2d 453 ( 1979 )

Power Plant Division, Brown & Root, Inc. v. Occupational ... , 673 F.2d 111 ( 1982 )

BUNGE CORPORATION, Petitioner, v. SECRETARY OF LABOR and ... , 638 F.2d 831 ( 1981 )

GEORGE HYMAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Appellant, v. ... , 582 F.2d 834 ( 1978 )

H. B. Zachry Company v. Occupational Safety and Health ... , 638 F.2d 812 ( 1981 )

John W. McGowan v. F. Ray Marshall, Secretary of Labor, and ... , 604 F.2d 885 ( 1979 )

D & S Grading Company, Inc. v. Secretary of Labor , 899 F.2d 1145 ( 1990 )

New York State Electric & Gas Corporation v. Secretary of ... , 88 F.3d 98 ( 1996 )

keystone-roofing-company-inc-v-occupational-safety-and-health-review , 539 F.2d 960 ( 1976 )

Conie Construction, Inc. v. Robert B. Reich, Secretary of ... , 73 F.3d 382 ( 1995 )

Durez Division of Occidental Chemical Corp. v. Occupational ... , 906 F.2d 1 ( 1990 )

William E. Brock, Secretary of Labor v. The L.E. Myers ... , 818 F.2d 1270 ( 1987 )

Duncan (Jeffrey Wayne) v. United States , 28 F.3d 1213 ( 1994 )

9-osh-casbna-1563-9-osh-casbna-2043-1981-oshd-cch-p , 649 F.2d 1160 ( 1981 )

Universal Camera Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board , 71 S. Ct. 456 ( 1951 )

View All Authorities »