The Secretary of Labor is authorized to inspect work sites to uncover noncompliance with the Occupational Safety and
If an employer contests the citation, and the Secretary intends to seek its enforcement, the Secretary must file a complaint with the Commission within 20 days, and the employer must file an answer within 15 days. 29 CFR § 2200.33 (1985). Once these pleadings are filed, a hearing to determine the validity of the citation will be held before an administrative law judge (ALJ), with discretionary review by the Commission. 29 U. S. C. §§ 659(c), 661(j).
In the present cases, the Secretary cited Cuyahoga Valley Railway Company for a violation of the Act. Cuyahoga contested the citation, the Secretary filed a complaint with the Commission, and Cuyahoga filed an answer. Respondent United Transportation Union, which represents Cuyahoga employees, properly moved to intervene in the proceedings. At the hearing, however, the Secretary moved to vacate the citation on the ground that the Federal Railway Administration, not the Secretary, had jurisdiction over the relevant safety conditions. Despite the Union’s objection, the ALJ granted the Secretary’s motion and vacated the citation. Thereafter, the Commission directed review of the ALJ’s order. The Secretary promptly objected to this action, as
The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed the Commission’s holding that it could review the Secretary’s decision to withdraw a citation.
Donovan
v.
United Transportation Union,
It is apparent that the Court of Appeals’ decision is inconsistent with the detailed statutory scheme which contemplates that the rights created by the Act are to be protected by the Secretary. See
Atlas Roofing Co.
v.
Occupational Safety and Health Comm’n,
The Sixth Circuit’s conclusion that the Commission can review the Secretary’s decision to withdraw a citation would discourage the Secretary from seeking voluntary settlements with employers in violation of the Act, thus unduly hampering the enforcement of the Act.
Whirlpool, supra,
at 1420;
Mobil Oil, supra,
at 927. Such a procedure would also allow the Commission to make both prosecutorial decisions and to serve as the adjudicator of the dispute, a commingling of roles that Congress did not intend.
Whirlpool, supra,
at 1419;
Mobil Oil, supra,
at 930-931;
Sun Petroleum Products, supra,
at 1187. Indeed, the Commission itself was created to avoid giving the Secretary both prosecutorial and adjudicatory powers. See generally Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, Subcommittee on Labor, 92d Cong., 1st Sess., Legislative History of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (S. 2193, Pub. L. 91-596) (Comm. Print 1971). Accord,
Whirlpool, supra,
at 1419;
Mobil Oil, supra,
at 930-931, and n. 21. The other Courts of Appeals to address this problem have recognized the distinct roles of the Secretary and the Commission and accordingly have acknowledged that the Secretary’s decision to withdraw a citation against an employer under the Act is
Reversed.
Notes
Vacating the citation thus did not rest solely on jurisdictional grounds. Nor did the Court of Appeals’ decision sustaining the Commission’s order focus on jurisdiction. Its holding would permit review by the Commission of the Secretary’s withdrawal of any citation, whatever the reason, provided the adversarial process was sufficiently advanced to vest control in the Commission. For these reasons and because the issue relates to the statutory division of authority between the Secretary and the Commission, rather than the question of judicial review of administrative action, the cases do not pose the question whether an agency’s decision, resting on jurisdictional concerns, not to take enforcement action is presumptively immune from judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U. S. C. § 701(a)(2). See
Heckler
v.
Chaney,
The Court of Appeals also relied to some extent on the position of the Commission as to the scope of its powers. The Commission, however, has
