Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 30, 2021
Docket37692-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries (Davey Tree Surgery Co. 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
Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED DECEMBER 30, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

DAVEY TREE SURGERY CO., ) ) No. 37692-3-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND ) INDUSTRIES OF THE STATE OF ) WASHINGTON, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. — Davey Tree Surgery Co. (Davey Tree) challenges the Washington

State Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (Board) ruling that it possessed knowledge

that its employee failed to wear protective chaps in violation of a work safety rule. The

superior court reversed the Board’s decision. Because sufficient evidence supported the

finding and the law supporting the Board’s ruling, we reverse the superior court and

affirm the Board.

FACTS

We glean the facts primarily from administrative hearing testimony. On October

7, 2016, Timothy McMinn served as a Department of Labor and Industries (DLI)

compliance safety and health officer and the lead investigator in the DLI Wenatchee

office. On that autumnal day, McMinn drove by a worksite in Wenatchee and saw a No. 37692-3-III Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries

worker operating a chainsaw. Wood chips dusted the air. McMinn stopped his vehicle to

assess whether the chainsaw operator wore the necessary personal protective equipment

(PPE).

From the street, Timothy McMinn watched worker Robert Reimer for one to two

minutes, as Reimer operated a chainsaw to cut large tree limbs into shorter pieces.

McMinn discerned that Reimer wore no leg protection. From his vehicle, McMinn took

three photographs of Reimer operating the chainsaw without chaps, which prevent injury

to the leg if the chainsaw slips and hits the leg.

After shooting photographs, Timothy McMinn approached the worksite to conduct

a safety inspection. He identified the employer on site as Davey Tree and the work as

arborist duties. McMinn took no measurements, but estimated the work site to be twenty

feet long by thirty to forty feet wide.

Timothy McMinn spoke with Michael Larsen, who identified himself as the

foreman on the worksite. Larsen spoke with his supervisor by phone and then authorized

McMinn to inspect the site. McMinn found three Davey Tree employees on site,

including Larsen, Robert Reimer, and a third unidentified worker. McMinn confirmed

that Reimer wore no leg protection.

On October 20, 2016, DLI issued a citation for a serious safety violation to Davey

Tree for violating WAC 296-800-16040 when failing to ensure that employee Robert

Reimer wore leg protection while sawing tree limbs. According to the citation, the

2 No. 37692-3-III Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries

activity “exposed him to lacerations, amputations, and death in the event of a kick back

or error on the part of the employee.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 186. The citation imposed

a penalty of $2,100 against Davey Tree.

PROCEDURE

Davey Tree appealed the citation from DLI to the Board of Industrial Insurance

Appeals. An administrative law judge (ALJ) conducted an evidentiary hearing to address

Davey Tree’s appeal. DLI only called Timothy McMinn to testify at the hearing, while

Davey Tree called no witnesses.

DLI safety compliance officer Timothy McMinn testified that Washington

employers must require employees working with chainsaws to wear ballistic leg chaps to

prevent lacerations, amputations, and death. Ballistic chaps are made from Kevlar and

other fabrics. The chaps immediately stop a chainsaw’s movement if the saw contacts a

worker’s legs. According to McMinn, ballistic chaps generally cover workers’ thighs

down over the top of their boots and are colored bright orange. McMinn opined that a

chainsaw injury can result from only one second of inattention by the operator.

Timothy McMinn explained that, when McMinn questioned Michael Larsen at the

jobsite, Larsen informed him that he did not realize Robert Reimer wore no “vest” while

using a chainsaw. CP at 229. The context of McMinn’s testimony suggests that Larsen

meant to say “chaps” instead of “vest.” CP at 229. Larsen commented to McMinn that

he stood in “the bucket” thirty feet off the ground at the time Reimer ran the chainsaw. A

3 No. 37692-3-III Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries

forestry bucket hoists crewmembers via a hydraulically-controlled boom to reach high

tree limbs.

At the administrative hearing, Timothy McMinn testified that, although he did not

know the exact locations on the worksite of Michael Larsen or the unidentified employee,

Robert Reimer remained in the sight of Larsen and the third employee. McMinn insisted

that Larsen, from the raised bucket, could have seen Reimer use the chainsaw without leg

protection. McMinn stated that DLI did not permit compliance officers to go up in

buckets during an inspection. Thus, he conceded that he could not testify with absolute

certainty as to the extent of Larsen’s view from the bucket. McMinn added, however,

that bucket workers communicate with the crew on the ground during any bucket work

and that communication requires the worker in the bucket to look below.

During his testimony, Timothy McMinn explained that Davey Tree workers had

been on site for approximately three hours. Robert Reimer probably did not wear

ballistic chaps at any time while on the site. McMinn testified that he did not “know

what their [Davey Tree’s] duties were that day off the top of my head.” CP at 223. He

added: “it isn’t logging standard flat out that you have to wear leg protection if you’re

using a chain saw bucking logs.” CP at 265. Timothy McMinn opined that, despite the

issuance of the citation, Davey Tree maintained a good safety program, provided

satisfactory training, and held safety meetings.

4 No. 37692-3-III Davey Tree Surgery Co. v. Department of Labor & Industries

The ALJ issued a ruling upholding the citation issued against Davey Tree. The

ALJ entered the following findings of fact:

2. On October 7, 2016, Davey Tree Surgery Company was engaged in arborist services at 505 Miller Street in Wenatchee, WA. Three employees of Davey Tree Surgery Company were on site. Robert Reimer was bucking and cutting limbs on the ground. Mike Larsen was in a bucket above the site trimming limbs. The third employee is unidentified, but was on the job site. 3. Inspector Mike [sic] saw Mr. Reimer using a chainsaw to cut limbs. Mr. Reimer was not using leg protection while using the saw. 4. The employer’s failure to ensure that Robert Reimer was using proper and approved personal protective equipment at the time of the inspection exposed Mr. Reimer to the risk of serious bodily harm, including serious lacerations, amputations, and death. The employer either knew or should have known about this hazard.

CP at 46-47 (emphasis added). The ALJ affirmed DLI’s citation and $2,100 penalty

against Davey Tree. CP 47.

Davey Tree petitioned the Board for review of the ALJ’s decision. The Board

denied Davey Tree’s appeal. The Board’s “decision” section of its order referenced

Michael Larsen as Davey Tree’s foreman at the jobsite.

Davey Tree petitioned for judicial review of the Board’s final order with the

superior court. The superior court reversed the Board’s ruling against Davey Tree. In its

oral ruling, the superior court stated that insufficient evidence supported the finding that,

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