Lead Opinion
This appeal stems from a final order of Respondent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (the “Commission”), which vacated in part citations issued by Petitioner-Cross-Respondent Elaine Chao, Secretary of Labor (the “Secretary”), against Respondents-Cross-Petitioners Eric K. Ho (“Ho”), et al. (together, “Ho Respondents”). For the following reasons, we DENY the petitions for review and AFFIRM the decision of the Commission.
BACKGROUND
The penalties assessed by the Secretary and mostly affirmed by the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) and the Commission against Ho for various violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 651-678 (“OSH Act”), and associated safety and health regulations all concern his behavior as proprietor of a worksite where workers were exposed to asbestos in the course of a project to reno
At most, the workers were occasionally given dust masks not suitable for protection against asbestos. They were not issued protective clothing. Ho also did not provide a respiratory protection program, conduct medical surveillance, conduct asbestos monitoring, implement adequate ventilation or debris removal, inform the workers of the presence and hazards of asbestos, or provide any training whatsoever. There is no dispute that Ho was aware of the worksite conditions; he visited almost every day.
On February 2, 1998, a city inspector visited the worksite. After observing the conditions, he issued a stop-work order citing the possibility of exposure to asbestos, requiring that city approval be given before work could resume. Ho then began negotiating with a licensed contractor, Alamo Environmental (“Alamo”), to remove the asbestos. Alamo prepared an abatement estimate in accordance with Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”), amongst other federal, guidelines. On March 27, 1998, Ho notified Alamo by fax that he agreed to their proposal.
However, during this period of negotiation, Ho had resumed work at the site under the same conditions, except that he directed all work be performed at night. The workers ate, and some lived, at the site. The workers had no potable water and only one portable toilet. Tate sometimes allowed workers to leave the property to use the restroom at a nearby commercial establishment; and Tate would purchase and bring back food for the workers when they gave him money. Ho continued to visit the worksite and was aware of these conditions.
Asbestos removal continued in this fashion until March 10, 1998. On March 11, 1998, as Ho had directed, daytime work resumed at the site. Ho had been informed that either the sprinkler system or fire hydrant valves had not been turned off and thus remained available for use. To wash out the building, Ho directed Tate to tap into an unmarked valve believed to be a water line. It turned out to be a gas line. An explosion later occurred when Tate started his truck; it injured Tate and two workers. On March 12, 1998, workers were summoned to Ho’s office where they were given releases to sign, acknowledging receipt of $1000 as full payment for their work, and acknowledging receipt of $100 to release Ho from any claims that might arise from the explosion and fire. The releases were written in English, but an interpreter translated them for the workers.
After the explosion, TDH conducted an investigation. Samples of debris and the ambient air at the worksite showed levels of asbestos in excess of federal and state standards. The state notified Ho that the site remained unsafe and needed to be sealed by qualified personnel. Again, Ho used the same workers to install plywood over the windows and did not give them any protective equipment.
. OSHA also conducted an investigation. As a result, the Secretary issued a total of
Ho conceded before the ALJ that he violated the asbestos respirator and training standards. Ho argued that he was not subject to the OSH Act’s requirements because he was not engaged in a business affecting interstate commerce and that the corporate Ho Respondents should be dismissed because they were not employers of the employees engaged in asbestos removal. He also challenged the per-employee citations of the respirator and training violations. Finally, Ho contended he did not violate the general duty clause of the OSH Act, or if he had violated it, that such violation was not willful.
The ALJ ruled that Ho’s construction activities affected interstate commerce and Ho was liable for the OSH Act violations. He also found the corporate Ho Respondents liable as alter egos of Ho and under the “sham to perpetuate a fraud” doctrine because Ho exercised control over both corporations and used them to obtain funds to purchase and renovate the property. The ALJ determined the respirator and training violations were willful and upheld all 22 violations. The ALJ found also that Ho had violated the general duty clause of the OSH Act but that it could not be characterized as a willful violation because the Secretary failed to show that Ho actually knew of the danger or had a heightened awareness of the illegality of his conduct.
On review, the Commission affirmed that Ho was subject to the OSH Act and that Ho’s violations of the respirator and training standards were willful. A divided Commission ruled that such violations were to be cited on a per-instance, not a per-employee, basis because it felt that the regulations plainly imposed a duty on employers to have a single training program and to provide respirators to the employees as a group. It thus vacated all but two of those citations. The Commission also concluded the record did not support the ALJ’s finding that the corporate Ho Respondents were liable because these entities’ primary business activities had nothing to do with the hospital renovation and they did not exist as mere business conduits for Ho’s own purposes.
DISCUSSION
Whether the Commission’s factual finding that Ho’s illegal asbestos abatement activities at the hospital worksite affected interstate commerce was supported by substantial evidence.
The OSH Act applies to employers, defined as “person[s] engaged in a busi
The Secretary bears “the burden of showing that the employer’s activities affect interstate commerce.” Id. at 907. This burden is “modest, if indeed not light.” Id. On appeal, this. Court only reviews the Commission’s findings of fact to ensure they are “supported by substantial evidence in the record considered as a whole.” Id. at 908; see also 29 U.S.C. § 660(a). Substantial evidence is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Consolo v. Fed. Mar. Comm’n,
Ho Respondents argue that the Secretary put forth no evidence to support the Commission’s finding that the building renovation was a business affecting interstate commerce. Because the Secretary failed to provide jurisdictional evidence, Ho Respondents contend none of them was subject to the OSH Act. Moreover, Ho Respondents charge the Secretary cannot rely on the Commission’s finding of fact because the Commission relied on an inapplicable Ninth Circuit per se rule, see Usery v. Lacy,
The Secretary responds that she provided evidence that Ho was engaged in a business affecting interstate commerce and was therefore subject to the OSH Act. The Secretary points out Ho had a majority interest in two interstate trucking firms (Ho Ho Ho Express being one). Alternatively, the Secretary argues Ho’s asbestos abatement activities at the hospital site constituted a business affecting interstate commerce. The Secretary notes this Court has previously held that Ho’s illicit asbestos operations at the hospital site, when aggregated, affected the interstate markets in asbestos removal services and commercial real estate in the context of Ho’s CAA criminal case. Id. The Secretary maintains Ho’s activities at the hospital were specifically found to affect interstate commerce substantially enough to support federal regulation; this issue cannot be relitigated. The Secretary also argues Ho misreads Austin Road to impose an evidentiary hurdle to defeat even normal application of collateral estoppel.
Even if this Court does not find jurisdiction based on collateral estoppel, the Secretary stresses she presented evidence showing that, by failing to comply with the OSH Act requirements, Ho gained a competitive advantage over licensed asbestos firms, including Alamo, and deprived them of a commercial business opportunity in the national market for asbestos removal. Moreover, the Secretary argues Ho’s illicit asbestos removal project also would increase asbestos removal costs for law-abiding commercial property owners.
This Court in Ho’s criminal appeal clearly indicated that his specific illicit construction activities concerning asbestos abatement, when considered in the aggregate,
Here, though we are informed by the aggregation principle’s application to asbestos removal activities outlined in Ho, as the Commission was also so informed, we do not rest the instant jurisdictional result based on collateral estoppel or issue preclusion from Ho’s criminal CAA case.
Despite Ho Respondents’ arguments, there is sufficient record evidence that Ho specifically deprived the asbestos removal firm Alamo of a legitimate commercial job to remove asbestos from the hospital site in accordance with the OSH Act. Ho negotiated with, but did not actually employ, Alamo to perform the licensed abatement. Instead, Ho hired illegal immigrants to remove the asbestos for $1000 each before he ever agreed to Alamo’s proposal. This evidence indicates in the context of the OSH Act, similar to what this Court has already analyzed in the context of the CAA, that Ho’s asbestos removal activities affected interstate commerce by depriving legitimate commercial asbestos abatement firms of the opportunity to perform the work at the site. Ho’s deliberate decision to have unlicensed workers perform the asbestos abatement project sidestepped, and thus supplanted, a commercial firm that operates within the legitimate national market for asbestos removal services, a licensed firm which adheres to OSH Act provisions and regulations. . We find ,Ho’s illegal asbestos activities sufficiently affected interstate commerce so as to be subject to the OSH Act. Unlike in Austin Road, here the essential fact that Ho’s abatement activities affected interstate commerce is not speculative and conclusionary, but rather is established in the record. See
Whether the Commission’s factual findings that Ho Ho Ho Express, Inc. and Houston Fruitland, Inc. were not alter egos of Ho to support reverse corporate piercing were supported by substantial evidence.
In the typical corporate veil piercing scenario, the corporate veil is pierced such that individual shareholders can be held liable for corporate acts. Maiz v. Virani,
In Permian Petroleum Co. v. Petroleos Mexicanos,
[T]he total dealings of the corporation and the individual, including the degree to which corporate formalities have been followed and corporate and individual property have been kept separately, the amount of financial interest, ownership and control the individual maintains over the corporation, and whether the corporation has been used for personal purposes.
Id. at 643 (citing Castleberry v. Branscum,
“The question of whether to pierce the corporate veil is primarily one of fact and therefore a very deferential standard of review applies.” Hollowell v. Orleans Regional Hosp. LLC,
The Secretary challenges the Commission’s finding that the corporate Ho Respondents were not suitable parties for liability under the OSH Act. The Secretary argues Ho used Ho Ho Ho Express and Houston Fruitland as mere business conduits for his illegal asbestos removal activities. The Secretary relies on the alter ego doctrine — that because Ho had control over the corporate Ho Respondents, the limited liability of the corporate form should be “reverse pierced” to hold the corporations liable for the debts of their controlling shareholder. See Century Hotels,
Ho Respondents agree with the Commission’s findings that the corporate Ho Respondents were not the alter egos of Ho to support reverse piercing them for the purpose of imposing liability. Ho Respondents argue that substantial evidence supports the Commission’s factual findings that the corporate Ho Respondents did not engage in the asbestos removal activities at issue and were not the employers of the workers at the site. Also, Ho Respondents stress the Commission was correct in finding Ho’s corporations were legitimate operating entities on their own.
Ho Respondents concede that a Ho Ho Ho Express truck was parked once at the worksite, and Ho did engage in corporate borrowing between the entities. However, Ho Respondents stress that all the respective corporate accounts and ledgers were legitimately debited and credited for each borrowing transaction. Moreover, the corporate Ho Respondents did not provide any employees to the site. Ho Respondents thus contend the Commission correctly reviewed the totality of the facts to determine that there was no alter ego relationship here. See Jon-T Chems.,
While there is evidence that Ho played a role in the corporate Ho Respondents’ day-to-day operations, and Ho’s personal assistant employed by Ho Ho Ho Express ran some errands for Ho concerning the renovation project, Houston Fruitland and Ho Ho Ho Express still maintained entirely separate corporate identities, tax identities, bank accounts, and legitimate business operations. This is not a case such as Century Hotels where payment of a family shareholder’s personal expenses, funding of his son’s checking account, and ownership of the personal family residence could directly be traced back to the family companies.
Although Ho borrowed from the corporate Ho Respondents for financing of the hospital project, an admittedly personal pursuit, the record evidence indicates distinct debit ledger entries and some repayment to the corporations by Ho. This fact also distinguishes Ho’s case from Century Hotels. See
We find substantial evidence in the record adequately supporting that the totality of the factors under the Permian alter ego test did not indicate “such unity between corporation^] and individual that the separateness of the corporation^] ha[d] ceased.”
Whether the Commission’s legal conclusion that Ho did not willfully violate the general duty clause, § 654(a)(l), of the OSH Act, was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or not in accordance with law.
Section 654(a)(1) of the OSH Act requires employers to free their
The Secretary argues the Commission’s finding that Ho’s violation of § 654(a)(1) was not willful was based on an erroneous legal standard requiring direct evidence of Ho’s state of mind. The Secretary contends Ho demonstrated plain indifference in directing Tate to tap into the unmarked pipeline in an attempt to procure water for washing the building. ' According to the Secretary, this was a clear violation of the stop-work order Ho received in February. Therefore, the Secretary maintains Ho knew tapping into the pipeline without approval was illegal, even if he may not have known of the specific explosion hazard or that it was a violation of the general duty clause of the OSH Act. The Secretary argues direct evidence of Ho’s state of mind was not required because proof of Ho’s plain indifference to legal requirements in general was clearly established.
Ho Respondents reply that the Commission was correct to find that the Secretary had not met her burden of proof in showing Ho’s violation as rising to the intent of willful. Ho Respondents maintain the Commission applied the correct legal standard, and substantial evidence on the record supports its decision that the § 654(a)(1) violation was not willful. Ho respondents argue the Commission’s reference to direct evidence amounted to a recognition that the Secretary had not put forth any evidence relevant to the specific circumstances of the violation in question. Ho Respondents emphasize that the Secretary did not put forth any evidence of Ho’s state of mind to show that he had a heightened awareness that instructing Tate to open the valve might be hazardous or that Ho consciously disregarded a known safety hazard related to the valve — that is, for this action to meet a showing of either intentional disregard of the OSH Act or plain indifference to employee safety. Ho Respondents stress there was no evidence directed to the intent accompanying this particular incident.
The Secretary argues that Ho’s action here was part of a consistent illegal and voluntary course of conduct; all his actions were plainly indifferent to employee safety. However, although there may be evi
Though the evidence need not indicate “bad purpose” or “evil motive” to commit a particular act, Georgia Elec. Co.,
Whether the citations against Ho should have been assessed on a per-employee or per-instance basis.
The Secretary’s discretion to cite multiple violations of an OSH Act standard is restricted “to those standards which are capable of such interpretation.” Sec. of Labor v. The Hartford Roofing Co., Inc.,
The Secretary argues the per-employee citations for asbestos training and respirator violations, with which she charged Ho Respondents, should have been affirmed by the Commission. The Secretary maintains that each time an employer commits a prohibited act or allows a prohibited condition to exist, the employer violates the OSH Act. The Secretary contends the Commission’s analysis ignores the standards’ plain language and the established test for determining which conditions or actions constitute separate violations under the OSH Act, as enunciated in the Commission’s own prior cases and in this Court’s caselaw. The Secretary insists the Commission also ignored basic precepts of prosecutorial discretion.
The Secretary argues that if a standard prohibits individual acts or conditions, the standard is violated each time the prohibited act or condition occurs. See Sec. of Labor v. Andrew Catapano Enters., Inc.,
The general construction training standard, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2),
As to training violations, the Secretary maintains that Ho violated § 1926.1101(k)(9)(i) and (viii)
As to respirator violations, the Secretary points again to the plain language of § 1926.1101(h)(l)(i): “[t]he employer shall provide respirators, and ensure that they are used ... [d]uring all Class I asbestos jobs.” 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(l)(i) (1997).
In addition, the Secretary maintains the Commission used a flawed analysis to in
Finally, the Secretary argues that even if the standards were ambiguous, the Secretary’s per-employee construction was reasonable and entitled to deference. That is, it sensibly conformed to the purpose and wording of the regulations. See Martin v. OSHRC,
Ho Respondents agree with the Commission’s treatment of the plain language of the respirator and training regulations. Ho Respondents argue the Secretary’s position that she can choose to issue- citations on - a -per-employee basis as opposed to a per-violation basis is not supported by the language of the standards. Ho Respondents contend such plain language cannot be expanded under the guise of interpretation. Ho Respondents stress the Commission properly vacated the 20 citations that were entirely duplicative, except as to the name of the worker involved. Ho Respondents rely on Arcadian,
Ho Respondents contend it is violative employer conduct or a violative condition, as opposed to the number of employees, that is the proper unit of prosecution. Ho Respondents also argue the ■ Secretary’s position is not to be accorded deference because the regulations are unambiguous and thus applied not per employee, but rather per violation. Even if the language were ambiguous, Ho Respondents maintain the Secretary’s per-employee interpretation is not reasonable because the Secretary used a punitive citation here to publish her inconsistent interpretation of the standard. Ho Respondénts argue the Secretary’s per-employee citations are not in accordance with law because they were beyond the scope of her authority pursuant to the OSH Act and are not entitled to deference because they were neither consistent with the language of the, standards nor consistently applied.
Asbestos training standard, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h) (9) (i) and (viii).
To begin, we find this standard’s language ambiguous. Thus, unlike the Commission, which found the standard to be stated solely in inclusive terms, we agree with the Secretary that the language of the asbestos training standard allows the Secretary, in her discretion, to reasonably assess penalties on a per-employee basis.
Subpart (i) expressly refers to “a training program for all employees” performing Class I asbestos work and also speaks to the employer’s requirement to “ensure their participation in the program,” which language tends to indicate that one training program is to be provided for all employees as a unit and does not appear to make allowance for a per-employee assessment. 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(k)(9)(i) (1997). However, although subpart (viii) again refers to the singular “training program,” it also goes on to state that the program “shall be conducted in a manner the employee is able to understand” and that the employer “shall ensure that each such employee is informed of the following.” Id. § 1926.1101(k)(9)(viii).
These express references to the ability of the employee to understand and to “each such employee” being informed implicate the possibility that on an individual basis, employees may need distinct, discrete information not provided to “each such” other employee, perhaps due to differences in experience, language, and job skills. Although this Court has treated the reference to “each of his employees” in the general duty clause of the OSH Act to be entirely inclusive, this reading was made in the context of § 654(a)(1) being a “catchall provision” governing any recognized hazards of the workplace not covered by a specific regulation. Arcadian,
In contrast, subpart (viii) of the asbestos training standard instructs employers that the training program must be conducted in such a way that the employees understand and are informed of various asbestos-related hazards. See 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(k)(9)(viii) (1997). Whether an employee understands and is informed by a training program, as the regulation requires, may depend on his “individual susceptibilities.” See Arcadian,
However, we find the Secretary’s discretionary decision to cite Ho on a per-employee basis on these facts was unreasonable. In Martin, the Supreme Court explained the division of powers between the Secretary and the Commission under the OSH Act.
We note first that this case does not present any employee-specific unique circumstances that could merit citation based on each failure to train an individual employee. See, e.g., Catapano,
Nothing in this record indicates that one training program regarding this Class I asbestos removal at the hospital site would not have abated the violation of both sub-parts (i) and (viii), nor that unique individual training sessions, or even more than one session, would have been necessary to abate the violation. The ALJ indicated that one training session, if all 11 workers had attended, would have been sufficient to meet the training standard here. The citations and evidence support that this was one Class I asbestos removal job on a single site at one address, performed by all the same 11 untrained workers, from the beginning to the end. Thus, although we acknowledge that there may be cases where per-employee citations ■ of § 1926.1101(k)(9) based on unique circumstances of the employees might be considered reasonable, here we do not defer to the Secretary’s unreasonable interpretation of the asbestos training regulation as applied to Ho. As the Commission’s interpretation of the standard here was reasonable as applied to Ho’s case, we affirm its assessment of one citation instead of 11 individual citations.
Asbestos respirator standard, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h) (l)(i).
Unlike the asbestos training standard, we read the plain language of the portion of the respirator standard for which Ho was cited as not allowing the Secretary the discretion to charge employers with per-employee citations. The regulation states: “The employer shall provide respirators, and ensure that they are used ... [djuring all Class I asbestos
In contrast, language in other parts of the asbestos respirator standard suggests citation on a per-employee basis might be appropriate. Subsection (h)(2)(iii) of the asbestos respirator standard contains language directing employers to provide an air-purifying respirator instead of a negative-pressure respirator to employees, but only when “[a]n employee chooses to use this type of respirator.” 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(2)(iii)(A)(l).
While we agree with the Secretary that in dicta in Arcadian we stated that per-employee citation may be appropriate in certain cases “only if the regulated condition or practice was unique to the individual,”
After considering the plain language of subsection (h)(l)(i) of the asbestos respirator standard, we agree with the Commission and find that the regulation does not provide for the assessment of citations on a per-employee basis, but rather on the basis of an employer’s course of conduct in failing to provide respirators to his employees during a Class I asbestos job. Thus, Ho’s failure to provide respirators to all 11 workers at the hospital site for the single Class I asbestos removal project was a single violation of the respirator regulation. Therefore, we affirm the Commission’s assessment of one violation of § 1926.1101(h)(l)(i).
Whether the Commission abused its discretion in imposing the maximum penalties for Ho’s OSH Act violations.
The Commission has the exclusive authority to assess penalties once a proposed penalty is contested. Arcadian,
Ho Respondents argue that the Commission abused its discretion in failing to consider each of the four elements set forth in § 666© in its determination of the amounts of penalties to assess. Ho Respondents maintain it was an abuse of discretion to consider Ho’s bad faith alone because all four factors are equally important.
The Secretary responds that the Commission did not err in assessing the maximum penalty for the two violations of the asbestos training and respirator standards it affirmed. The Secretary argues the Commission gave proper consideration to the statutory penalty criteria but concluded that Ho’s extreme and appalling disregard for employee safety — his lack of good faith — outweighed other considerations in the context of this case.
CONCLUSION
Having carefully considered the record of the case and the parties’ respective briefing and arguments, for the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the Commission’s decision.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although the Commission determined the corporate Ho Respondents were not liable under both the "alter ego” and "sham to perpetuate a fraud” theories, the Secretary did not brief any argument based on the "sham” doctrine. Thus, we do not address it.
. It would not be prudent to do so because even if Ho Respondents had presented any constitutional challenge to the specific OSH Act and implementing regulations at issue here, these provisions are entirely different from the Clean Air Act ("CAA”) provisions challenged in the prior criminal litigation. Thus, the issue at stake here would not be "the precise constitutional claim” involved in the prior litigation. See Montana v. United States,
. We provide no discussion of whether state or federal alter ego law applies in this administrative case not arising under diversity jurisdiction. See Century Hotels v. United States,
. The general duty clause of the OSH Act provides, in part:
(a) Each employer- — •
(1) shall furnish to each of his employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees ....
29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(1) (1970).
. Section 1926.21, Safety training and education, provides, in part:
(b) Employer responsibility.
(2) The employer shall instruct each employee in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions and the regulations applicable to his work environment to control or eliminate any hazards or other exposure to illness or injury.
29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2) (1989),
. Section 1910.1025, Lead, provides, in part:
(k) Medical Removal Protection.
(l) Temporary medical removal and return of an employee.
(i) Temporary removal due to elevated blood lead levels.
(D) Fifth year of the standard, and thereafter. Beginning with the fifth year following the effective date of the standard, the employer shall remove an employee from work having an exposure to lead at or above the action level on each occasion that the average of the last three blood sampling tests conducted pursuant to this section (or the average of all blood sampling tests conducted over the previous six (6) months, whichever is longer) indicates that the employee's blood lead level is at or above 50 micrograms per 100 g of whole blood; provided, however, that an employee need not be removed if the last blood sampling test indicates a blood lead level at or below 40 micrograms per 100 g of whole blood.
29 C.F.R. § 1910.1025(k)(l)(i)(D) (1986).
. Section 1910.1025, Lead, provides, in part:
(f) Respiratory protection.
(3) Respirator usage.
(ii) Employers shall perform either quantitative or qualitative face fit tests at the time of initial fitting and at least every six months thereafter for each employee wearing negative pressure respirators. The qualitative fit tests may be used only for testing the fit of half-mask respirators where they are permitted to be worn, and shall be conducted in accordance with Appendix D. The tests shall be used to select facepieces that provide the required protection as prescribed in table II.
29 C.F.R. § 1910.1025(f)(3)(h) (1986).
. Section 1926.1101, Asbestos, provides, in part:
(k) Communication of hazards.
(9) Employee Information and Training.
(i) The employer shall, at no cost to the employee, institute a training program for all employees who are likely to be exposed in excess of a PEL and for all employees who perform Class I through IV asbestos operations, and shall ensure their participation in the program.
(viii) The training program shall be conducted in a manner that the employee is able to understand. In addition to the content required by provisions in paragraphs (k)(9)(iii) through (vi) of this section, the employer shall ensure that each such employee is informed of the following:
29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101 (k)(9)(i) and (viii) (1997).
. Section 1926.1101, Asbestos, provides, in part:
(h) Respiratory protection.
(l) General. The employer shall provide respirators, and ensure that they are used, where required by this section. Respirators shall be used in the following circumstances:
(i) During all Class I asbestos jobs.
29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(l)(i) (1997).
. Section 1926.1101, Asbestos, provides, in part:
(h) Respiratory protection.
(2) Respirator selection.
(iii)(A) The employer shall provide a tight fitting powered, air-purifying respirator in lieu of any negative-pressure respirator specified in Table 1 whenever:
(1) An employee chooses to use this type of respirator....
29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101 (h)(2)(iii)(A)(1) (1997).
. Section 1926.1101, Asbestos, provides, in part:
(h) Respiratory protection.
(4) Respirator fit testing.
(i) The employer shall ensure that the respirator issued to the employee exhibits the least possible facepiece leakage and that the respirator is fitted properly.
29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101 (h)(4)(i) (1997).
. Section 1926.1101, Asbestos, provides, in part:
(h) Respiratory protection.
(4) Respirator fit testing.
(ii) Employers shall perform either quantitative or qualitative face fit tests at the time of initial fitting and at least every 6 months thereafter for each employee wearing a negative-pressure respirator. The qualitative fit tests may be used only for testing the fit of half-mask respirators where they are per-*375 mittedto be worn, or of full-facepiece air purifying respirators where they are worn at levels at which half-facepiece air purifying respirators are permitted. Qualitative and quantitative fit tests shall be conducted in accordance with Appendix C to this section. The tests shall be used to select facep-ieces that provide the required protection as prescribed in Table 1 in paragraph (h)(2)(i) of this section.
29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101 (h)(4)(ii) (1997).
. Section 1910.1025, Lead, provides, in part:
(f) Respiratory protection.
(1) General. Where the use of respirators is required under this section, the employer shall provide, at no cost to the employee, and assure the use of respirators which comply with the requirements of this paragraph. Respirators shall be used in the following circumstances....
29 C.F.R. § 1910.1025(f)(1) (1986).
. See n.7.
. Section 1926.500, Guardrails, handrails, and covers, provides, in part:
(g) Guarding of low-pitched roof perimeters during the performance of built-up roofing work.
(1) General provisions. During the performance of built-up roofing work on. low-pitched roofs with a ground to eave height greater than 16 feet (4.9 meters), employees engaged in such work shall be protected from falling from all unprotected sides and edges of the roof as follows:
(i) By the use of a motion-stopping-safety system (MSS system)....
29 C.F.R. § 1926.500(g)(l)(i) (1992).
. Section 1926.500, Guardrails, handrails, and covers, provides, in part:
(g) Guarding of low-pitched roof perimeters during the performance of built-up roofing work!
(4) Mechanical equipment. Mechanical equipment may be used or stored only in areas where employees are being protected by either a warning line or an MSS system. Mechanical equipment may not be used or stored between the warning line and the roof edge unless the employees are being protected by an MSS system. Mechanical equipment may not be used or stored where the only protection provided is by a safety monitoring system.
. We pause to note that the instant result does not foreclose the possibility of a different result if an employer refuses to provide respirators to his employees for multiple and distinct Class I asbestos jobs; then each of those violations could be separately cited by the Secretary.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Because the majority opinion fails to defer to the Secretary of Labor’s (“Secretary”) reasonable interpretations of the ambiguous language of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) ‘ and 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(k)(9); incorrectly finds that the Ho Ho Ho Express and Houston Fruitland (collectively, “Ho Entities”) are not Erik Ho’s (“Ho”) alter egos; and holds that Ho’s instruction to tap an unmarked pipe was a “serious” rather than “willful” violation of the General Duty Clause, 29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(1), I respectfully dissent.
I
The majority opinion holds that the language of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) unambiguously precludes per-employee citations and, thus, affirmed the Commission’s ruling that the regulation does not require an individualized' duty but instead applies to a single course of conduct. The majority opinion also finds that the language of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(k)(9) which the Commission determined addresses a single course of conduct, prohibiting per-employee citations is ambiguous; however, it holds that the Secretary’s interpretation is unreasonable and, hence, that the per-employee citations are prohibited. I disagree. The language of both provisions is ambiguous, and the majority opinion fails to defer to the Secretary’s reasonable interpretation allowing per-employee citations.
The penalty provisions of the OSH Act permit penalties on a per-violation basis. Kaspar Wire Works, Inc. v. Sec’y of Labor,
When the statutory language is not clear, “the Secretary’s interpretation would be entitled to deference given her official duty, specialized expertise, investigatory knowledge and other experience relevant to carrying out the purposes of the Act.” Kaspar Wire Works, Inc.,
A
At the time of the violations, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) stated, “[t]he employer shall provide respirators, and ensure that they are used.... ” The majority opinion finds that this language unambiguously precludes per-employee citations. The majority finds that, “there is simply no language in the general respirator protection section that suggests the unit of prosecution could be based on each individual employee not receiving a respirator versus the employer’s course of action in failing to provide respirators to his employees as a whole for the Class I asbestos job.” (emphasis added). However, there is also no language in the general respirator section that suggests the section is violated only when the employer does not provide respirators to “employees as a whole.”
The next step in the inquiry is whether the Secretary’s interpretation is reasonable. It is irrelevant whether the Commission’s interpretation is also reasonable as the discretion is in the Secretary’s hands. Martin,
The subsections of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) also suggest the potential for per-employee citations (or, at the very least, suggest the absurdity of precluding per-employee citations for the general respirator protection section). For instance, employers are required to perform periodic individual face fittings for the respirators. 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(4). In addition, employers are required to provide specific types of respirators depending on employee requests. 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(4). These requirements are clearly employee specific. The employer cannot provide any respirator; it must conform to the subsections of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) in providing employee specific respirators. Thus, the Secretary reasonably interpreted the ambiguous language of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) and we must defer to her interpretation.
B
Section 1926.1101(k)(9)(i) states, “[t]he employer shall, at no cost to the employee, institute a training program for all employees ..., and shall ensure their participation in the program.” Section 1926.1101(k)(9)(viii) states, “[t]he training program shall be conducted in a manner that the employee is able to understand.” The majority opinion finds that, while the language is ambiguous, the Secretary’s interpretation allowing per-employee citations is unreasonable. The majority opinion reasons that one training program could have abated the violation if all eleven employees had attended and understood. Ho, of course, did not conduct a training program for any of his employees. While the majority provides a reasonable interpretation of the training requirement, it fails to show how the Secretary’s interpretation is unreasonable.
The majority opinion relies on Sec’y of Labor v. Andrew Catapano Enters., Inc., Nos. 90-0050, 90-0189, 90-0190, 90-0191, 90-0192, 90-0193, 90-0771, 90-0772, 91-0026,
Even the majority’s “employee-specific unique circumstances” standard is met by
II
The majority opinion affirms the Commission’s finding that the Ho Entities are not alter egos of Ho because they “maintained separate corporate identities, tax identities, bank accounts, and legitimate business operations.” In determining whether a corporation is an alter ego of an individual for reverse corporate piercing purposes, courts consider the totality of the circumstances, including “the total dealings of the corporation and the individual, the amount of financial interest the individual has in the corporation, the ownership and the control that the individual maintains over the corporation, and whether the corporation has been used for personal purposes.” Estate of Lisle v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue,
Courts nééd to look beyond formalities and records to determine the true economic relationship between the entities. United States v. Jon-T Chems., Inc.
The evidence shows that Ho has complete control over the Ho Entities. Ho owns two-thirds of the stock and is president of both companies. The Ho Entities advanced the vast majority of Ho’s personal investment of the property.
Ill
The majority opinion affirmed the Commission’s finding that the violation of the General Duty Clause was “serious” instead of “willful,” reasoning that there was no evidence compelling a willful finding for
“A violation is willful if it is committed with intentional, knowing or voluntary disregard for the requirements of the Occupational Safety and Health Act.” Hartford Roofing Co.,
For the above stated reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. Such an aggregate reading of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.1101(h)(1) could be read to mean that when an employer provides most but not all of its employees with respirators, it is still not in violation of the general respirator protection section.
. An undisclosed "outside source” and two other corporations, one of which Ho owns, contributed the rest. These sources are not involved in the OSHA proceedings.
