Excel Modular Scaffold & Lsng v. OSHC

943 F.3d 748
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 26, 2019
Docket19-60067
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 943 F.3d 748 (Excel Modular Scaffold & Lsng v. OSHC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excel Modular Scaffold & Lsng v. OSHC, 943 F.3d 748 (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Case: 19-60067 Document: 00515214651 Page: 1 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED November 26, 2019 No. 19-60067 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk EXCEL MODULAR SCAFFOLD & LEASING COMPANY, doing business as Excel Scaffold & Leasing,

Petitioner

v.

OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION; EUGENE SCALIA, SECRETARY, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR,

Respondents

Petition for Review of an Order of the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission

Before WIENER, HIGGINSON, and HO, Circuit Judges. STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge: On September 12, 2016, an employee of Excel Modular Scaffold & Leasing Company (“Excel”) was killed when a scaffold he was constructing collapsed into Galveston Bay in Texas City, Texas. In the aftermath of this tragedy, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) conducted an investigation into the incident and issued Excel a number of safety citations. One of those citations charged Excel with a “serious” violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.106(d), a regulation which required Excel to ensure the presence of a “lifesaving skiff” at all jobsites where employees were required to work over water. Excel contested the issuance of the citation and the resulting Case: 19-60067 Document: 00515214651 Page: 2 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 19-60067 penalty, but it was upheld by an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”). The ALJ’s decision became a final order when the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (“the Commission”) declined to conduct further review. For the reasons explained below, we deny Excel’s petition for review.

I. Excel manufactures scaffolds and provides scaffold construction and dismantling services to companies in the refining industry. In 2015, Marathon Refinery hired Excel to build a series of scaffolds beneath three docks on Galveston Bay. The scaffolding system was comprised of “hanging scaffolds,” which were constructed by attaching a horizontal bar to hanging vertical legs that were connected to I-beams under the docks. The project required Excel’s employees to work both above and below the docks, and the water surrounding the docks was approximately eighteen feet deep. On September 12, 2016, Luis Gonzalez was a member of an Excel crew working on the construction of a scaffold bay beneath one of Marathon’s three docks. At the time, all crew members, including Gonzalez, were wearing safety harnesses with lanyards and personal flotation devices. While he worked, Gonzalez connected his lanyard to the vertical leg of one of the scaffold systems. As he attempted to attach the vertical leg to the existing scaffold bay, the leg became detached and fell into the water, dragging Gonzalez along with it. Two other members of the crew jumped into the water in an attempt to save Gonzalez, but they were unable to retrieve him. Tragically, by the time rescue personnel arrived, it was too late to save him, and Coast Guard divers recovered his body later that day. After the incident, OSHA commenced an investigation into the fatality and the conditions at the jobsite. The Secretary of Labor (“the Secretary”) issued Excel four safety citations. Only one of the citations is at issue in this 2 Case: 19-60067 Document: 00515214651 Page: 3 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 19-60067 appeal. 1 That citation charged Excel with a “serious” violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.106(d), which requires employers to ensure that “[a]t least one lifesaving skiff” is made “immediately available at locations where employees are working over or adjacent to water.” Id. A lifesaving skiff is a small boat located close enough to a jobsite that it can attempt to rescue someone who falls into the water within three or four minutes. The Secretary classified Excel’s violation of the regulation as “serious,” and proposed that Excel pay a penalty of $12,675. Excel contested the citation by submitting a Notice of Contest form along with an answer containing twenty-five affirmative defenses, including “impossibility/infeasibility of compliance.” A two-day hearing was scheduled to begin on March 19, 2018 before an ALJ. A month before the hearing, the parties filed a joint Prehearing Statement with the ALJ. The Prehearing Statement stipulated that Excel violated the regulation requiring a skiff and informed the ALJ that the following two “issues of fact” were the only ones that “remain[ed] to be litigated” with respect to that citation: 1. Whether failing to have a lifesaving skiff immediately available exposed [Excel’s] employees to a substantial probability of death or serious injury under the facts and circumstances of this case; and 2. Whether the proposed penalty is appropriate. The Prehearing Statement made no reference to Excel’s earlier contention that compliance with the regulation was either impossible or infeasible. At the beginning of the hearing, the ALJ sought to further clarify the issues in dispute. She asked counsel for Excel to explain the nature of the company’s stipulation regarding the lifesaving skiff citation. Excel’s lawyer

1 The other three citations were subsequently dismissed. The Secretary voluntarily withdrew two of the citations before the ALJ issued her decision, and one was dismissed by the ALJ in her order, which was affirmed by the Commission. 3 Case: 19-60067 Document: 00515214651 Page: 4 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 19-60067 explained that the company stipulated that it “did not comply with the standard,” but continued to “challenge the serious type of the violation classification.” The ALJ asked once again whether Excel was “only challenging the classification,” and Excel responded that it was challenging “[t]he classification and, of course, that goes along with that, the penalty amount.” Throughout this exchange, Excel omitted any reference to the infeasibility or impossibility defense. During the hearing, Excel introduced testimony from employees who explained that, given the layout of the docks at the Marathon Refinery, it would have been difficult for a boat to navigate under the dock where Gonzalez fell. The Secretary did not object to the introduction of this testimony. After the hearing, the parties submitted post-hearing briefs. In Excel’s brief, the company argued that the testimony introduced during the hearing established that compliance with the lifesaving skiff regulation “was infeasible because a skiff could not have been deployed and successfully navigated underneath Dock 34 to rescue Luis Gonzalez.” Excel further argued that, in the event the ALJ disagreed with the company’s defense, the citation’s classification of the violation should be reduced to “other than serious.” The ALJ issued a decision and order on October 26, 2018. The order held that Excel had abandoned the defense of infeasibility by failing to preserve the defense in the parties’ joint Prehearing Statement. As a result, the ALJ disregarded the section of Excel’s post-hearing brief pertaining to the infeasibility defense. In the alternative, the ALJ held that the evidence submitted during the hearing failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have been infeasible for Excel to comply with the lifesaving skiff regulation, in part because the evidence established that partial compliance with the regulation was possible. After reviewing the evidence

4 Case: 19-60067 Document: 00515214651 Page: 5 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 19-60067 presented at the hearing, the ALJ concluded that Excel’s violation of the citation was “serious,” and imposed the Secretary’s proposed penalty.

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Bluebook (online)
943 F.3d 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excel-modular-scaffold-lsng-v-oshc-ca5-2019.