Secretary of Labor ex rel. Keene v. Mullins

888 F.2d 1448, 281 U.S. App. D.C. 251
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1989
DocketNo. 88-1765
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 888 F.2d 1448 (Secretary of Labor ex rel. Keene v. Mullins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Secretary of Labor ex rel. Keene v. Mullins, 888 F.2d 1448, 281 U.S. App. D.C. 251 (D.C. Cir. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge WALD.

WALD, Chief Judge:

The Secretary of Labor, Mine Safety and Health Administration (“MSHA” or “Secretary”), on behalf of Bobby G. Keene, petitions for review of two of three holdings in a decision by the Mine Safety and Health Review Commission (“MSHRC” or “Commission”).1 First, the Secretary seeks review of the Commission’s holding that since S & M had already been found liable under § 105(c) for unlawfully discharging Keene for complaining of illegal and hazardous working conditions, Keene could not also recover under § 105(c) for Tolbert Mullins’2 subsequent offer to reemploy him under the same illegal and hazardous working conditions because that offer was merely an outgrowth of S & M’s prior unlawful discharge and not a separate violation of the Act. The Secretary also seeks review of the Commission’s holding that Prestige is not a successor-in-interest to S & M and therefore is not jointly and severally liable to Keene for S & M’s discriminatory discharge.

Because the Commission misinterpreted the law in holding that Mullins’ conditional offer to reemploy Keene was part and parcel of Keene’s original unlawful discharge and thus did not constitute a separately actionable violation of § 105(c), we reverse its ruling on the reemployment issue. We affirm the Commission’s conclusion, however, that Prestige is not a successor-in-interest to S & M and therefore is not jointly and severally liable to Keene for the original violation.

I. Background 3

On February 13, 1986, Keene was dismissed from his job as an electrician and maintenance foreman with S & M for refusing to “bridge-out.” Bridging-out is the practice of rewiring electrical equipment in order to bypass the equipment’s disconnecting devices, thereby rendering the safety features ineffective. The next day, Keene filed a complaint with the MSHA alleging that he was discriminatorily discharged in violation of § 105(c) of the Mine Act.4

Keene subsequently phoned Mullins to try and settle the dispute. After failing to agree on a monetary settlement, Mullins asked Keene to return to his job. In re[253]*253sponse, Keene explained that he would not return to his old position because he did not want to be “responsible for the [electrical] examination books and conditions that everybody was bridging-out inside the mines.” J.A. 61. Keene further testified that when he requested a second-shift job operating a shuttle car, Mullins replied that only Keene’s original job on the day shift was available and that he could not pay electrician’s wages to someone not doing an electrician’s job. Id. Mullins added that if Keene returned to his old job, he would not have to record everything, he saw or found in the examination books.5 Keene summed up the conversation as follows: “Mullins told me that I would have to come back to my original job under the original circumstances I was working under.... I told him that it was too big a hazard for me to come back as electrician on the day shift.” J.A. 62-63.

In May of 1986, S & M shut down for economic reasons. Prestige commenced operations in November. While Mullins and his wife owned all of S & M, they own approximately 55% of Prestige.6 Prestige’s mine is located a mile and a half from S & M’s mine and Prestige mines under its own coal lease. Prestige is a surface coal mining company while S & M mined underground. Consequently, Prestige employs different mining techniques and uses different types of machinery and equipment than did S & M. Finally, Prestige and S & M employ different supervisors at S & M and only two of Prestige’s eight employees worked previously at S & M.

After a hearing, the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) found that Mullins was liable to Keene under § 105(c) for conditioning his offer of reemployment to Keene upon Keene’s willingness to engage in unlawful and hazardous activity. The AU also found that Prestige is a successor-in-interest to S & M and thus is jointly and severally liable for S & M’s discriminatory discharge of Keene.

A majority of the Commission’s panel reversed the ALJ on both rulings, explaining that the record is void of substantial evidence to support either of them.7

II. Analysis

The Secretary takes issue both with the Commission’s legal conclusions regarding Mullins’ offer of reemployment and with its legal and factual conclusions regarding Prestige’s successorship liability.

The Secretary first contends that the Commission misinterpreted § 105(c) when it concluded that Mullins’ offer to rehire Keene under illegal and unsafe conditions did not constitute a violation of the Act separate from Keene’s unlawful discharge for complaining of those same conditions.

The Secretary next contends that the Commission misinterpreted the law of successorship liability and that under the correct interpretation of the law, the record contains substantial evidence showing that Prestige is a successor-in-interest to S & M.

We will address each contention in turn.

A. Mullins’ Conditional Offer of Reemployment to Keene

In its opinion, the Commission asserts that the facts compel it to overrule the ALJ’s conclusion that Mullins transgressed § 105(c) by refusing to rehire Keene except under illegal and unsafe conditions. Thus the Commission says that “substantial evidence does not support the ALJ’s finding that Mullins ... unlawfully discriminated against Keene.” J.A. 17 (emphasis added).

While the Commission’s opinion is not a model of clarity, a careful reading of its discussion of the reemployment issue indi[254]*254cates that it overturned the ALT on legal and not factual grounds:8

While this offer [of reemployment under the same circumstances] did not resolve Keene’s safety concerns, neither did it suggest any additional adverse action against Keene by Mullins____ We find no evidence that would cause the conversation to be characterized as anything other than an attempt by Keene and Mullins, in his role as President of S & M, to settle the original discrimination complaint____ Thus we view this conversation as an outgrowth of the original illegal discharge by S & M and not as a separate act of discrimination by Mullins individually. Under these circumstances, we hold that Keene’s testimony regarding the crucial aspects of the conversation does not support a finding by the judge of a separate act of discrimination by Mullins individually.

J.A. 17 (emphasis added).9

The first clue that the Commission’s analysis hinges on its view of the law and not on its view of the facts is that the Commission found precisely the same dis-positive facts as did the ALJ—that Mullins offered Keene his old job back under the conditions that prevailed prior to his original discharge except that he would “not have to report” the violations he found. J.A. 31-32. The second clue is that while the Commission emphasizes the nexus between an unlawful discharge and a refusal to rehire, the ALJ did not even mention the relationship. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
888 F.2d 1448, 281 U.S. App. D.C. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/secretary-of-labor-ex-rel-keene-v-mullins-cadc-1989.