Commissioner of Labor v. Eustis Cable Enterprises, LTD
No. 2018-214
Supreme Court
2019 VT 2
Michael J. Harris, J.
On Appeal from Superior Court, Orange Unit, Civil Division. October Term, 2018.
Annika Green, Department of Labor, Montpelier, for Petitioner-Appellee.
Pietro J. Lynn and Sean M. Toohey of Lynn, Lynn, Blackman & Manitsky, P.C., Burlington, for Respondent-Appellant
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
¶ 1. ROBINSON, J. Following a workplace accident involving one of its trucks, Eustis Cable Enterprises, LTD (Eustis) appeals the civil division‘s affirmance of the Vermont Occupational Safety and Health Act (VOSHA) review board‘s determination that Eustis failed to meet VOSHA‘s motor-vehicle requirements and the resulting assessment of a fine for the violations. We conclude that the evidence and findings do not support the board‘s conclusion that Eustis was on notice of the violation and accordingly reverse and strike the citation alleging a violation of
¶ 2. During road-construction operations on March 11, 2016, a truck owned or operated by Eustis, which was participating in the construction activity, struck and killed a flagger for Green
¶ 3. At the hearing in April 2017, the VOSHA hearing officer dismissed the first alleged violation of
While an argument could be made that constructive knowledge of the violation could be imputed to Eustis by virtue of Carrier‘s status as foreman, it is unnecessary to do so here. Carrier‘s failure to prepare and submit “Driver Vehicle Inspection Reports” for six of the thirty-four workdays preceding the accident should have put Eustis on notice of something amiss.
The hearing officer based this conclusion on the fact that, for a six-week period in 2016, Eustis
¶ 4. Eustis filed a petition for discretionary review by the VOSHA review board, challenging the hearing officer‘s determinations that the truck was “off-highway” under
¶ 5. In July 2017, the VOSHA review board upheld the hearing officer‘s findings and conclusions and denied Eustis‘s request for discretionary review. The VOSHA review board concluded that because the jobsite was closed to public traffic, it was an “off-highway jobsite” subject to
¶ 6. Eustis appealed the board‘s decision to the civil division, asserting that: (1) the Eustis truck was not a motor vehicle covered by
¶ 7. Eustis now makes the same arguments to this Court. We conclude that the board‘s conclusion that the driver‘s violation can be imputed to Eustis is not supported by the record, and thus the Commissioner‘s case against Eustis cannot stand. We therefore need not decide whether Eustis‘s truck was a motor vehicle covered by
¶ 8. “Where, as here, review by the [superior court] is on the record, our standard of review on appeal is the same as that used by the trial court.” In re Ferrera & Fenn Gravel Pit, 2013 VT 97, ¶ 6, 195 Vt. 138, 87 A.3d 483. We will affirm the board‘s findings if supported by substantial evidence. Whittington v. Office of Prof‘l Regulation, 2013 VT 93, ¶ 8, 195 Vt. 181, 87 A.3d 489; see also
¶ 10. The VOSHA review board‘s finding that Eustis was on constructive notice of “something amiss” because the driver had not submitted documentation of daily inspections for six days during a recent period cannot stand. The board had no evidence concerning whether the driver actually worked on the days for which Eustis did not submit Driver Vehicle Inspection Reports to the hearing officer, or whether the vehicle was in use on those dates. For that reason, no evidence supports the board‘s inference that on the six days for which Eustis did not submit a Driver Vehicle Inspection Report the driver came to work, drove the truck, but failed to conduct an inspection and submit a report documenting that inspection. This is speculation. While a “factfinder may draw rational inferences . . . those inferences must add up to more than mere suspicion, and the factfinder cannot bridge evidentiary gaps with speculation.” State v. Wisowaty, 2015 VT 97, ¶ 16, 200 Vt. 24, 128 A.3d 876. The evidence is equally consistent with the possibility that the driver did not work on the dates in question—half of which were Saturdays. The board‘s suggestion that Eustis‘s argument on this point relies on evidence outside of the record misapprehends the burden of proof in this case: The Commissioner bears the burden of establishing the essential elements of the violation. N.Y. State Elec. & Gas Corp., 88 F.3d at 105. The absence of evidence supporting the board‘s inference defeats the Commissioner‘s case; we need not consider Eustis‘s representations about what days the driver did and did not work to conclude that the absence of documentation of the driver‘s safety checks on certain dates is only relevant if the driver worked on those dates. The burden to lay the evidentiary foundation to
Reversed. The citation alleging a violation of
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
