Danzer v. Department of Labor & Industries

16 P.3d 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 19, 2001
Docket24711-9-II
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 P.3d 35 (Danzer v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danzer v. Department of Labor & Industries, 16 P.3d 35 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

16 P.3d 35 (2001)
104 Wash.App. 307

Edward L. DANZER, dba Danzco, Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES, Respondent.

No. 24711-9-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

December 8, 2000.
As Amended and Publication Ordered January 19, 2001.

*37 Michael E. Ferrell, for Appellant.

Lisa Daeley Kelley, Dept. of Labor & Industries, Tacoma, for Respondent.

*36 SEINFELD, P.J.

The Department of Labor and Industries assessed a penalty against Edward L. Danzer, doing business as Danzco, for failure to abate a previously cited violation of the Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act. The Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals affirmed the penalty assessment and the superior court affirmed.

Finding that the Board correctly considered the 1995 failure to abate citation, that Danzco was not denied due process or equal protection rights, and that substantial evidence supports the Board's conclusion as to the amount of the assessment, we affirm.

FACTS

Danzco manufactures equipment used in the timber industry. At the time of the citation, Danzco's employees were using an unguarded hand held grinder with a Type 28 grinding wheel to smooth welding seams. In doing so, they held the grinder flat against the seam surface. This process, which Danzco calls "flat grinding," produces a smoother surface than can be obtained by holding the grinder at an angle. The presence of a protective guard forces the user to hold the grinder at an angle and prevents flat grinding.

On June 21, 1994, the Department cited Danzco for failing to provide tongue guards on pedestal grinders and for failing to provide safety guards on hand held grinders, a violation of WAC 296-24-66007.[1] The Department assessed a penalty of $125 for each violation. Danzco appealed this citation.

Upon receiving Danzco's appeal, the Department reassumed jurisdiction and issued a Corrective Notice of Redetermination (CNR) affirming the 1994 citation and penalty assessment. The CNR indicated that Danzco had abated the tongue guard violation and changed the abatement date for the safety guard violation to August 30, 1994. Danzco did not appeal the CNR, and the 1994 citation became final.

On August 23, 1995, Department inspectors, Kenneth Wetzel and Michael Burt, reinspected Danzco and discovered that Danzco's employees were still using hand held grinders without safety guards. Because Danzco had failed to abate the previously cited safety violation, the Department issued a failure to abate citation. The Department assessed a $42,000 fine.

Danzco appealed the failure to abate citation. The Department received this appeal on October 4, 1995.

The Department then issued a notice of reassumption of jurisdiction on October 16 and held a reassumption hearing on October 31. On November 17, more than 30 working days after it received notice of Danzco's appeal, the Department issued a CNR affirming the failure to abate citation and changing the abatement date from November 24 to December 18, 1995. Danzco appealed this CNR.

On September 16, 1996, Danzco moved that the Board dismiss the October 16, 1995, notice of reassumption of jurisdiction and strike the ruling from the reassumption hearing. Danzco asserted that the Department had lost jurisdiction over the failure to abate citation because it failed to resume jurisdiction within the statutory time limit. Danzco asserted that the only remaining valid order was the 1994 citation.

The Board found that the CNR was invalid and that the Department had lost jurisdiction over the failure to abate citation because the Department had failed to complete action on *38 the CNR within 30 days of Danzco's appeal, as mandated by RCW 49.17.140(3).[2]

The Board determined that because the Department had lost jurisdiction over the failure to abate citation, the proper remedy was to allow Danzco to appeal the failure to abate citation directly to the Board for a hearing on the merits. The Board disagreed with Danzco's assertion that the only valid order was the 1994 citation.

In its petition to the Board, Danzco argued, as it does here, that (1) the Board did not have jurisdiction over the failure to abate citation; (2) the only valid order was the 1994 citation; and (3) by allowing the Board to consider the failure to abate citation, the Board denied Danzco due process and equal protection.

At its hearing on the failure to abate citation, the Board heard testimony from Department employees and a consulting engineer about the risks of using an unguarded grinder. This testimony established that safety guards are necessary on grinders to protect users from flying debris should the grinding wheel fragment during use and to protect the users from contact with the grinding wheel should the machine bind and "kickback" toward the user.

Two Danzco employees testified that they regularly used grinders without guards and that they would be unable to achieve the same quality work if the guard was attached. The employees also testified that they had received training on the use of the grinders and that Danzco issued them protective clothing, including hats, safety boots, gloves, leather aprons, face shields, and hearing protection.

Both employees testified that they had never been injured while using the grinders without guards and were unaware of anyone else being injured using an unguarded grinder. But one of the employees had recently been injured when using the grinder for sanding; the sanding disk and its underlying soft sanding wheel had fragmented. The employee testified that he did not believe that a guard would have prevented this injury.

Danzer testified that a guard would prevent his employees from performing the same quality of work and would not provide adequate protection. He also said that he could not afford to use alternative equipment that meets the safety standards and that he must use the grinders without guards if he wants to make a living. He claimed that none of his workers had been injured while using an unguarded grinder and that, based on his own evaluations, the grinding wheels are safe to use without the guards unless they are damaged.

Danzer further asserted that Danzco is the only business in the industry using the flat grinding method so he knows more about the method and the risks involved than the grinder manufacturer, ANSI, and state regulators, and he believed he had taken adequate steps to protect his employees by providing them with protective clothing. He said that he had requested a variance, but that the Department had denied his request.

The Board denied Danzco's petition and Danzco appealed to superior court. Later, he filed a motion to supplement the record or, in the alternative, for consideration of evidence outside the record. But the scheduled hearing on the motion was canceled and apparently never renoted. The record does not show if the superior court ruled on this motion.

*39 The superior court affirmed the Board's findings on April 30, 1999. Danzco now appeals.

I. JURISDICTION OF THE BOARD

Danzco appears to challenge the Board's conclusion of law 1:

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16 P.3d 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danzer-v-department-of-labor-industries-washctapp-2001.