Fairfax County Department of Public Works v. C. Ray Davenport, Commissioner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 22, 2009
Docket0745094
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fairfax County Department of Public Works v. C. Ray Davenport, Commissioner (Fairfax County Department of Public Works v. C. Ray Davenport, Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairfax County Department of Public Works v. C. Ray Davenport, Commissioner, (Va. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Kelsey, Haley and Powell Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

FAIRFAX COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS AND ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY v. Record No. 0745-09-4 JUDGE CLEO E. POWELL DECEMBER 22, 2009 C. RAY DAVENPORT, COMMISSIONER, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Dennis J. Smith, Judge

Brian S. Yellin (David P. Bobzien, County Attorney; Cynthia L. Tianti, Senior Assistant County Attorney; Law Office of Adele L. Abrams, P.C.; Office of the County Attorney, on brief), for appellant.

Crystal Y. Twitty, Assistant Attorney General (William C. Mims, Attorney General; Maureen Riley Matsen, Deputy Attorney General; Peter R. Messitt, Senior Assistant Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Fairfax County Department of Public Works and Environmental Services (DPWES)

appeals a final order of the circuit court finding that substantial evidence supported all but two of

the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health (VOSH) civil penalty citations issued by the

Virginia Department of Labor and Industry (DOLI) for violations of the safety standards

incorporated by the VOSH program. On appeal, DPWES contends that the circuit court erred

by: 1) determining that substantial evidence proved that the confined space at issue here requires

a permit; 2) concluding that the commissioner of DOLI met his burden of proving employer

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. knowledge by substantial evidence; 3) failing to address DPWES’s affirmative defense of

employee misconduct; and 4) classifying citation 2, item 3 as willful because this classification is

not supported by substantial evidence. Finally, DPWES asserts that the commissioner of DOLI

impermissibly withheld documents from DPWES that supported the commissioner’s

determination that several violations were willful. On cross-appeal, DOLI argues that the circuit

court erred in vacating citation 2, item 4b where substantial evidence supported the

commissioner’s decision.

We hold that DPWES failed to preserve its objections that the circuit court erred by

failing to address its affirmative defense of employee misconduct and the commissioner

impermissibly withheld documentation from it that supported the willful violations because

DPWES never made these arguments to the circuit court. Further, we affirm the circuit court’s

decision to uphold DOLI’s determination that the space in question was a permit-required

confined space, that there was substantial evidence proving employer knowledge, and that the

classification of citation 2, item 3 as willful was supported by substantial evidence. Finally, we

reverse the circuit court’s decision to vacate citation 2, item 4b because there is substantial

evidence in the record to support the commissioner’s finding.

I. BACKGROUND 1

As an inspector in the Storm Water Management Division of DPWES, Phillip Miley was

responsible for inspecting the internal structures of private and public wet pond facilities,

underground retention facilities, manholes, catch basins, and risers. He inspected the internal

structures of these facilities for blockages, cracks, and other structural faults. On August 1,

2005, during the performance of his duties, Miley inspected a private wet pond facility in Fairfax

1 Because the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case and this memorandum opinion carries no precedential value, we recite only those facts and incidents of the proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this appeal. -2- County. Before entering the manhole at this location, Miley placed two cones near the manhole

but did not place any barrier on the manhole. Miley then entered the manhole without an

attendant present and, while inside, fell down a shaft that was ten feet, nine inches deep. 2 During

the fall, Miley struck his head on a storm water valve and received cuts on the back of his head

and abrasions on his right arm. Miley then crawled into another pipe, where he died from these

injuries. Miley did not have any communications equipment with him and was, therefore, unable

to summon any assistance.

Gregory Pappas, a compliance officer with DOLI, investigated the fatality and

determined that the confined space that Miley was inspecting when he died contained or had the

potential to contain several safety hazards: falls, engulfment, atmospheric, and other hazards

(i.e., being struck by objects falling or being thrown into the open manhole). Pappas learned

from DPWES employees, including safety analyst Dean Blackwell, that because DPWES had a

program in place to evaluate potential hazards in confined spaces on public but not private land,

the wet pond that Miley entered on August 1, 2005 was not inspected for hazards before or

during his entry. Pappas’s investigation revealed that Miley was not equipped to test for

atmospheric hazards. Pappas further learned from Tim Fink, an engineering technician with

DPWES, that prior to Miley’s death, DPWES employees routinely “[broke] the plane” of

confined spaces to take photographs, but employees received no training on how to do so. 3

2 Miley entered similar spaces at least twenty-two times in the year preceding his death, but the permits associated with those entries do not indicate that an attendant was present for all of those entries. Photographs taken during some of those entries and other records associated with those entries, however, reveal that an attendant was present for some entries. 3 By “breaking the plane,” these employees entered the confined space in violation of VOSH regulations as the regulations consider “entry” to have occurred as soon as any part of the entrant’s body breaks the plane of an opening into the space.

-3- Following Pappas’s investigation, DOLI determined that DPWES violated the provisions

of the VOSH standards and issued numerous serious and willful citations against DPWES on

January 20, 2006. The DPWES requested an informal fact-finding conference, which was held

on May 22 and 23, 2007 before Ellen Marie Hess, a hearing officer for DOLI. On August 17,

2007, Hess submitted the results and recommendations of her fact finding to the commissioner.

Hess recommended that the commissioner vacate two violations, reduce three others from willful

to serious, and uphold the remaining twenty violations. The DOLI vacated four additional

violations. The commissioner accepted the results and recommendations as the final agency

decision on September 12, 2007. In so doing, DOLI determined that the space Miley entered

was a permit-required confined space, that DPWES knew or should have known that employees

were entering permit-required confined spaces in violation of VOSH’s regulations, that DPWES

employees were not provided with required safety equipment, that DPWES policies and forms

were deficient, and that the employees’ proficiencies were not evaluated as required.

DPWES appealed the agency’s final decision to the circuit court and alleged that DOLI’s

decisions lacked substantial evidence to support them. In a letter opinion, the circuit court held

that “a reasonable mind would accept the facts set forth in the record as substantial evidence to

support DOLI’s conclusion regarding all of the violations” except two violations that the circuit

court then vacated.

Specifically, the circuit court held that under 29 C.F.R.

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