Jacobs Field Services North America, Inc. v. Perez , 659 F. App'x 181 ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 15-60342      Document: 00513644146            Page: 1   Date Filed: 08/19/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 15-60342                            August 19, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    JACOBS FIELD SERVICES NORTH AMERICA, INCORPORATED,
    Petitioner
    v.
    THOMAS E. PEREZ, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR,
    Respondent
    Petition for Review of an Order of the
    Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
    Before BENAVIDES, DENNIS, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Jacobs Field Services North America, Inc., petitions for review of an
    order of the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission citing Jacobs
    for violations of the process safety management standards, 29 CFR
    §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3). The petition for review is DENIED.
    I
    Jacobs Field Services North America, Inc. (Jacobs) is a maintenance
    contractor     that    provides     skilled       labor   to   perform    electrical      and
    instrumentation work, pipe-fitting work, millwright work, material handling,
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
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    and warehouse work.       Jacobs is the resident maintenance contractor at a
    chemical plant in La Porte, Texas, owned and operated by Akzo Nobel Polymer
    Chemicals (Akzo).     Akzo’s La Porte facility manufactures organometallic
    specialty chemicals used in the plastics industry. To transform raw materials
    into new products, Akzo uses a pressure-rated process vessel called a reactor.
    The reactor is connected to six settler tanks, pressure-rated process vessels
    that are used to separate chemicals into heavier and lighter compounds. Each
    tank is a vertical structure with six “decant valves” mounted to its side and
    connected to pipes. Employees use the valves to regulate and direct the flow
    of chemical fluid. To open and close the valves, Akzo uses automated devices
    known as actuators, which are mounted to brackets on top of each valve.
    Actuators at the La Porte facility are mounted using two different methods: in
    the “old style,” four bolts connect the actuator to the top of the bracket and four
    additional, longer bolts hold the bottom of the bracket, the valve bonnet, and
    the valve body together; in the “new style,” the bottom four bolts connect the
    bottom of the bracket to the flange of the valve, a rim that projects from the
    valve body. All eight of the bolts can be removed from a new style mounting
    system, but removing the bottom four bolts from an old-style mounting system
    causes a loss of containment.
    On March 4, 2013, David Atcheson, Jacobs’s instrument and electrical
    supervisor, instructed Jacobs employee Toyo Gonzalez to troubleshoot four
    actuated decant valves on the T-802 BEM settler tank, which contained
    approximately 9,500 gallons of butylethylmagnesium-heptane mixture (BEM).
    BEM is pyrophoric, meaning that it ignites when exposed to air. Gonzalez
    checked the air flow on the malfunctioning actuators and replaced the fittings
    and air lines, which resolved the problem with three of the four.           When
    replacing these components did not resolve the problem with the fourth valve,
    Gonzalez attempted to remove the actuator from the bracket mounting it to
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    valve. This actuator was mounted in the old style. After removing several of
    the bolts that attached the actuator to the top part of the bracket, Gonzalez
    was still unable to remove the actuator. He then attempted to remove the
    actuator bracket by loosening the bottom four bolts. This caused a loss of
    containment: BEM was released from valve and splashed onto Gonzalez,
    causing first- and second-degree burns to his face, wrists, and neck.
    The following day, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    (OSHA) conducted an inspection of the La Porte facility. OSHA issued Jacobs
    a citation alleging six violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act
    (OSH Act) and its process safety management (PSM) standards:
    -    Item 1 alleged a serious violations of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.119(d)(3) for
    failing to make information available to employees pertaining to
    equipment in the process;
    -    Item 2a alleged a serious violation of § 1910.119(f)(4) for failing to
    develop and implement safe work practices to provide for the control of
    hazards;
    -    Item 2b alleged a serious violation of § 1910.147(c)(4)(i) for failing to
    ensure procedures were developed, documented, and utilized for the
    control of potentially hazardous energy when employees were engaged
    in maintenance activities;
    -    Item 3 alleged a serious violation of § 1910.119(j)(2) for failing to
    establish and implement written procedures for maintaining the ongoing
    integrity of process equipment;
    -    Item 4 alleged a serious violation of § 1910.119(j)(3) for failing to train
    Gonzalez in an overview of the process and its hazards and in the
    procedures applicable to his tasks; and
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    -    Item 5 alleged a serious violation of § 1910.132(d)(1)(i) for failing to
    assess hazards in the workplace and select and require affected
    employees to use appropriate personal protective equipment.
    Proposed penalties totaled $33,000.00.
    Jacobs contested the citation and a hearing was held before an
    administrative law judge (ALJ) on April 16-17, 2014. Jacobs asserted that as
    the owner and operator of the plant, Akzo was the appropriate “employer”
    responsible for fulfilling the requirements set forth in the cited PSM standards
    and that the cited standards did not apply to Jacobs. Jacobs also argued that
    the lockout/tagout standard, § 1910.147(c)(4)(i), did not apply to the cited
    activity, and that Gonzalez was wearing appropriate personal protective
    equipment under § 1910.132(d)(1)(i). Finally, Jacobs asserted the affirmative
    defense of unpreventable employee misconduct. On September 4, 2013, the
    Secretary of Labor (Secretary) withdrew Item 1 of the Citation.
    On February 5, 2015, the ALJ issued an order vacating Items 2a, 2b, and
    5 of the citation, 1 affirming Items 3 and 4, and assessing a penalty of $7,000
    for each affirmed violation. In affirming Items 3 and 4, the ALJ expressly
    rejected Jacobs’s argument that §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) do not apply to
    contract employers, finding that, under OSHA’s multi-employer policy, the
    cited standard applied “to the cited conditions, not to the cited employer.”
    Because Jacobs was the “exposing employer,” it was responsible “for all
    violative conditions to which its employee had access.” The ALJ also expressly
    rejected Jacobs’s argument that standard did not apply because the actuator
    The ALJ found that Items 2a and 2b were duplicative and therefore struck Item 2a.
    1
    After analyzing Item 2b, he determined that the Secretary had failed to establish that Jacobs
    had actual or constructive knowledge that its employee would have access to the release of
    chemical energy and thus failed to prove a violation of § 1910.147(c)(4)(i). The ALJ vacated
    Item 5 after determining that the Secretary’s citation incorrectly focused on “the adequacy of
    the PEE used by Gonzalez, [rather than] the lack of a hazard assessment.”
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    was not a part of the “process equipment” covered by §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3).
    Finding that “Jacobs’s focus on the actuator as the component to which sections
    1910.119(j)(2) and (3) apply is too narrow,” the ALJ concluded that the
    standard applied “to the bracket and bolts used to mount to actuator to the
    valve bonnet,” and thus to the cited condition.
    On March 2, 2015, Jacobs filed a petition for discretionary review with
    the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC or
    Commission). In its petition, Jacobs argued that the ALJ erred in affirming
    Items 3 and 4 because “Jacobs was not tasked by Akzo Novel with performing
    mechanical integrity work, and Jacobs did not otherwise task its employee to
    perform mechanical integrity work.” The Commission did not direct the case
    for review, and the ALJ decision became the final order of the Commission on
    March 23, 2015. On May 12, 2015, Jacobs filed a timely petition for review
    with this court.
    II
    The Commission’s factual findings are conclusive on review if they are
    supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole. 29 U.S.C. § 660(a);
    MICA Corp. v. OSHRC, 
    295 F.3d 447
    , 449 (5th Cir. 2002). We will uphold the
    Commission’s legal conclusions unless they are arbitrary, capricious, an abuse
    of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law. MICA Corp., 
    295 F.3d 449
    . We apply these same standards to an unreviewed ALJ decision. Austin
    Indus. Specialty Servs., L.P. v. OSHRC, 
    765 F.3d 434
    , 438-39 (5th Cir. 2014).
    The Secretary’s interpretation of his own standard must be upheld if it is
    reasonable, that is, if it “sensibly conforms to the purpose and wording of the”
    standard. Martin v. OSHRC (CF&I Steel Corp.), 
    499 U.S. 144
    , 150-52 (1991);
    MICA 
    Corp., 295 F.3d at 449
    . The Secretary’s reasonable interpretation of the
    OSH Act is likewise entitled to deference. National Ass’n of Home Builders v.
    OSHA, 
    602 F.3d 464
    , 468 (D.C. Cir. 2010).
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    III
    Jacobs raises three challenges to the Commission’s final order. First, it
    argues that the ALJ erred in applying the requirements of §§ 1910.119(j)(2)
    and (3) to it, a contract employer. Second, it argues that, even if it were subject
    to the requirements of §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3), the ALJ erred in determining
    that the injured employee was tasked with performing “mechanical integrity”
    work such that those requirements applied. Finally, in its reply brief, Jacobs
    argues that the ALJ erred in determining that it knew or should have known
    of the hazardous condition. We find that the first and third arguments are
    forfeited, and we reject the second.
    A
    Section 11(a) of the OSH Act states that “[n]o objection that has not been
    urged before the Commission shall be considered by the court, unless the
    failure or neglect to urge such objection shall be excused because of
    extraordinary circumstances.” 29 U.S.C. § 660(a). “The language of section
    660(a) indicates that proceedings targeted towards the Commission, not those
    before the administrative law judges, are the predicate to judicial review.”
    McGowan v. Marshall, 
    604 F.2d 885
    , 890 (5th Cir. 1979).             “While great
    specificity is not required in a review petition, this court may not consider an
    argument unless the Commission has been alerted to the issues.” Power Plant
    Div., Brown & Root, Inc. v. Occupational Safety & Health Review Comm’n, 
    659 F.2d 1291
    , 1294 (5th Cir. 1981) reh’g granted, opinion modified on other
    grounds, 
    673 F.2d 111
    (5th Cir. 1982). Our sister circuits have explained that
    to preserve an argument for appellate review, the employer’s petition for
    discretionary review must “offer a modicum of developed argumentation in
    support of” the objection, P. Gioioso & Sons, Inc. v. OSHRC, 
    115 F.3d 100
    , 107
    (1st Cir. 1997), and that an employer’s “abbreviated mention of its challenge
    to the validity of the [cited] Standard is ‘wholly inadequate to satisfy the
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    requirement of § 660(a) that an objection be urged before the Commission,’”
    Durez Div. of Occidental Chem. Corp. v. OSHA, 
    906 F.2d 1
    , 5 (D.C. Cir. 1990)
    (quoting Brown & 
    Root, 659 F.2d at 1293
    ).
    In its petition for discretionary review, Jacobs did not urge an objection
    to the ALJ’s finding that 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) properly applied
    to it as a contract employer. The petition expressly “takes exception” to only
    two portions of the ALJ’s Decision and Order: (1) that “wherein the [ALJ] finds
    as a fact that ‘the same bolts hold the valve bonnet and valve together also
    connect the actuator to the valve,” and (2) that “wherein the [ALJ] concluded
    that the actuator is ‘process equipment.’” Jacobs’s only mention of the ALJ’s
    finding that the standard is applicable to it as a contract employer occurred in
    the context of the second objection. The company wrote:
    The ALJ rejected Jacobs’ argument that under the circumstances,
    the requirements of paragraph (j) were intended to apply to Akzo
    Nobel as the host employer, and not to Jacbos, a contract[]
    employer. Even assuming the ALJ is correct and the requirements
    of paragraph (j) are applicable to Jacobs under the circumstances,
    then Jacobs’ determination that the actuator was not critical
    process equipment controls.
    At best, this is an “abbreviated mention” of Jacobs’s challenge to the
    application of the standard; plainly read, the objection fails to contest the ALJ’s
    determination.
    In its reply brief, Jacobs asserts that “[t]he issue is the applicability of
    (j)(1) and (j)(3) to Jacobs, a contractor” and that “[i]n supporting its position
    that those provisions do not apply, Jacobs is not precluded from arguing each
    of the multiple reasons these requirements do not apply to Jacobs under the
    circumstances of this case.” But this argument proves too much; extending its
    logic, the issue in any petition for discretionary review could be framed as “the
    impropriety of the OSHA citation” and any reason could then be presented as
    an objection in a petition for appellate review. Furthermore, Jacobs’s attempt
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    to distinguish an “issue” from a “reason” is inconsistent with the language of
    29 U.S.C. § 660(a), which speaks of “objections,” and with this court’s
    precedent. See Brown & 
    Root, 659 F.2d at 1294
    (finding the petition for
    discretionary review “insufficient to alert the Commission to the arguments it
    now seeks to raise”) (emphasis added).
    Because the contention that 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) were not
    properly applicable to Jacobs as a contract employer was not urged before the
    Commission in a petition for discretionary review, we find that this argument
    was forfeited and thus hold that this court lacks jurisdiction to consider it. See
    
    McGowan, 604 F.2d at 889
    (characterizing the requirements of 29 U.S.C.
    § 660(a) as jurisdictional in nature).
    B
    Jacobs argues that, even if §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) do apply to contract
    employers, the ALJ erred in applying them in this case because the actuator
    was not “process equipment” within the meaning of § 1910.119(j)(1). In its
    Compliance     Guidelines    and     Recommendations        for   Process    Safety
    Management, OSHA observes that “[e]quipment used to process, store, or
    handle highly hazardous chemicals needs to be designed, constructed, installed
    and maintained to minimize the risk of releases of such chemicals.” § 1910.119
    App’x C (Feb. 8, 2013). The preamble to the final PSM rule explains:
    [T]he goal of the mechanical integrity provisions is to ensure that
    highly hazardous chemicals covered by the standard are contained
    within the process and not released in an uncontrolled manner.
    The equipment OSHA has listed in proposed paragraph (j)(1)
    constitutes process equipment that the Agency considers critical in
    achieving this goal.
    57 FR at 6389. Section 1910.119(j)(1) lists six types of process equipment to
    which the mechanical integrity requirements apply: pressure vessels and
    storage tanks; piping systems (including piping components such as valves);
    relief and vent systems and devices; emergency shutdown systems; controls
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    (including monitoring devices and sensors, alarms, and interlocks); and
    pumps.
    The citation alleged that Jacobs failed to have written procedures, in
    violation of § 1910.119(j)(2), and failed to provide training, in violation of
    § 1910.119(j)(3), to maintain the on-going integrity of process equipment with
    regard to “separating the valve and actuator to repair the valves in the piping
    of the BEM Settlers.” After hearing testimony on the issue from Ronald
    Wilson, Akzo’s safety manager; Tony Cornwell, Jacobs’s expert in chemical
    engineering and process safety management; and James Johnstone, the
    Secretary’s expert, the ALJ agreed with the Secretary and found that
    § 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) “apply to the bracket and bolts used to mount the
    actuator to the valve bonnet.” He therefore concluded that the cited standards
    applied to the cited condition.
    Jacobs argues that the Secretary failed to establish that the mechanical
    integrity standards applied to Gonzalez’s work on the actuated valves. It
    argues that the actuator is not covered process equipment.          However, in
    making its argument, Jacobs misinterprets the regulation and misreads the
    ALJ’s decision.      Jacobs asserts that “to establish the applicability of
    subparagraphs (j)(2) and (j)(3), the Secretary must establish that the actuator
    is on the enumerated list of process equipment identified in paragraph (j)(1).”
    This is not strictly accurate; in fact, the Secretary must establish that Gonzalez
    was “involved in maintaining the on-going integrity of process equipment.”
    § 1910.119(j)(3). And the regulatory definition of piping systems, one of the
    listed types of process equipment, is expressly open-ended: “piping systems
    (including piping components such as valves).” § 1910.119(j)(1)(ii) (emphasis
    added). As previously noted, the ALJ observed that “Jacobs’s focus on the
    actuator as the component to which sections 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) apply is too
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    narrow,” and concluded that the standard in fact applied to the actuator’s
    mounting system.
    Jacobs also attacks the ALJ’s observation that “[t]he same bolts that hold
    the [valve] bonnet and valve together also connect the actuator to the valve.”
    According to testimony at the hearing, the four bolts attaching the actuator to
    its bracket were distinct from the four bolts that attached the bracket, the
    valve, and the valve bonnet.           Jacobs contends that the ALJ’s suggestion
    otherwise is “a critical error of fact that contributed to the ALJ’s erroneous
    conclusions of law.” However, the ALJ’s observation is not clearly inaccurate.
    The actuator bracket is designed to hold the actuator in place, and the bottom
    four bolts were necessary to hold the bracket to the valve. Furthermore, this
    finding is not critical to the ALJ’s conclusion that the § 1910.119(j)(2) and (3)
    apply to the actuator’s mounting system. The same bolts connect the bracket,
    the valve, and the valve bonnet, and removing the bracket would both remove
    the actuator and “break the line.” And Johnstone testified that “the bracket is
    as much of the piping system as the bonnet is on the valve . . . it has to be there
    for that valve to work.” The conclusion that the bracket and bolts used to
    mount the actuator to the valve bonnet are process equipment within the
    meaning of § 1910.199(j)(1) was thus not arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
    discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.
    Finally, Jacobs argues that the standard should not apply because
    Gonzalez went beyond his assigned task when he removed the bottom four
    bolts. 2 Jacobs contends that “[t]he release resulted when the employee went
    2 Jacobs’s argument is based on the ALJ’s dismissal of Item 2(b) on the grounds that
    “[t]he task assigned to the employee did not require the employee to cause a line break.” But
    this observation was related to the conclusion that the Secretary failed to establish that
    Jacobs had actual or constructive knowledge of the need to use energy control procedures.
    The mechanical integrity standards do not apply only to situations in which a line break is
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    beyond the scope of troubleshooting the actuator, the task to which he was
    assigned, and attempted to remove the bottom four bolts securing the bracket
    to the valve.”    As a result, Jacobs argues, Gonzalez was not “involved in
    maintaining the on-going integrity of process equipment.” § 1910.119(j)(3).
    But Jacobs admits that Gonzalez “was tasked with troubleshooting an actuator
    that may have required [him] to remove the actuator from the top of the
    bracket.” His assignment therefore required him to work on the actuator’s
    mounting system, which the ALJ fairly considered to be covered process
    equipment.     And his alleged deviation from his assigned task, although
    disastrous, was understandable. When he could not remove the actuator from
    the bracket, he tried to remove the bracket from the valve; this would have
    been safe on an actuator mounted in the new style, the system with which
    Gonzalez had more experience. The fact that the accident occurred while
    Gonzalez was trying to fulfill his work order demonstrates that the Secretary’s
    interpretation of the regulations and issuance of the citation “sensibly
    conform[ed] to the purpose and wording of the” standard. CF&I Steel 
    Corp., 499 U.S. at 150-52
    .
    The definition of covered piping systems is open-ended: “piping systems
    (including piping components such as valves).” § 1910.119(j)(1)(ii) (emphasis
    added). Because one set of bolts connects the actuator bracket, the valve, and
    the valve bonnet, and because removing the bracket would “break the line,”
    the ALJ’s conclusion that the bracket and bolts used to mount the actuator to
    the valve bonnet are process equipment within the meaning of § 1910.119(j)(1)
    was not arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
    anticipated, but rather where a line break is possible. See Process Safety Management of
    Highly Hazardous Chemicals; Explosives and Blasting Agents 57 FR at 6389.
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    accordance with law. Neither, consequently, was the ALJ’s determination that
    §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) applied to Jacobs.
    C
    To support a citation, the Secretary must show by a preponderance of
    the evidence that: (1) the OSHA standard invoked applies to the cited
    conditions; (2) the requirements of the standard were not met; (3) employees
    were exposed to or had access to the hazardous condition; and (4) the employer
    knew or should have known of the hazardous condition with the exercise of
    reasonable diligence. Secretary of Labor v. Icarus Industrial Painting and
    Contracting Co., 
    19 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) 2101
    , 2102 (2002). In its reply brief,
    Jacobs argues that the Secretary failed to carry his burden under Icarus
    because “Jacobs did not know, and could not have known through the exercise
    of reasonable diligence, that Mr. Gonzales would disassemble the valve while
    troubleshooting the actuator and thereby be exposed to hazard of a release.”
    This argument was not raised before the Commission and was not addressed
    in Jacobs’s opening brief. As a result, the argument is forfeited. 29 U.S.C.
    § 660(a); Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(8)(A).
    IV
    In summary, we hold that the Commission’s final order affirming
    violations of §§ 1910.119(j)(2) and (3) and assessing violations was not
    arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance
    with law. Jacob’s petition for review is therefore DENIED.
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