OPINION OF THE COURT
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) obtained a warrant to inspect the premises of appellant Metal Bank of America, Inc. (“Metal Bank”). The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania denied Metal Bank’s motion to quash the warrant and held it in civil contempt for impeding the warrant’s execution. Metal Bank appealed. After argument, a remand to the district court and additional briefing, Metal Bank now renews its attack on the validity of the inspection. We do not reach the merits of Metal Bank’s arguments, however, because one of its contentions is moot and the remainder must be exhausted before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (the “Review Commission”).
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
Metal Bank operates a scrap metal salvaging plant in Philadelphia. After receiving an anonymous telephone complaint from an individual claiming to be a Metal Bank employee, OSHA compliance officers went to the plant on December 11, 1979, and requested permission to conduct an inspection of the premises. Counsel for Metal Bank refused to consent to the search, and the compliance officers departed.
On April 28, 1980, the OSHA Area Director applied for a warrant to inspect the Metal Bank facility. In the warrant application the Area Director stated that OSHA had received the “employee’s” telephone complaint which alleged, inter alia, that Metal Bank employees were being exposed to lead and copper fumes. The Area Director also stated that OSHA had received a phone call from someone claiming to be a physician who said that he had examined a Metal Bank employee for lead poisoning. The Area Director finally asserted that a follow-up inspection was necessary to determine whether Metal Bank had corrected safety violations discovered in an OSHA inspection conducted between November 29, 1978, and January 10, 1979.
An adversary hearing was conducted before a United States Magistrate. 1 At the hearing the Area Director added that in early 1978 a compliance officer had attempted to inspect Metal Bank’s lead and copper processes, found that they were not operating, and recommended that OSHA inspect them when they were operating. On May 7, 1980, the magistrate issued an inspection warrant pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 657(a) (1976). The warrant authorized the inspection of
those areas of the workplace covered by the employee complaint, those areas involved in the [violations found in the November 1978-January 1979 search], and any area in the establishment in which there is occupational exposure to lead and copper.
App. at 12. The warrant also authorized private interviews with employees and the inspection of all pertinent records, files and papers.
Pursuant to the warrant OSHA compliance officers entered the workplace over Metal Bank’s protests on May 9, 12, and 13, 1980. Metal Bank admits that it refused to allow either private employee interviews on its premises or inspection of showers and other facilities for employees supposedly exposed to lead. Metal Bank also allegedly denied some of OSHA’s requests for documents. . OSHA then terminated the inspection.
On February 23, 1981, OSHA asked the district court to hold Metal Bank in civil contempt for obstructing the execution of the warrant. OSHA requested that the court issue an order compelling Metal Bank
On June 18, 1981, the district court filed an order denying Metal Bank’s motion to quash the warrant and holding Metal Bank in civil contempt.
Donovan v. Metal Bank of America, Inc.,
OSHA compliance officers conducted an inspection pursuant to the purge order from September 17 to September 25, 1981. OSHA was unable to take lead samples during the inspection because Metal Bank’s lead melting process had ceased operation. In addition Metal Bank allegedly did not provide the compliance officers with access to the pertinent records until the next to last day of the inspection.
On September 21, 1981, Metal Bank filed an appeal from the purge order and moved for a stay of the inspection pending appeal. The district court later denied the motion for a stay as moot. On September 25,1981, OSHA asked the district court to extend the time permitted for execution of the warrant to enable its compliance officers to complete the records inspection and to take lead samples when the lead melting process was in operation.
On March 22,1982, OSHA issued citations for violations observed in the September 1981 inspection. Because Metal Bank contested those citations, a proceeding was initiated before the Review Commission. OSHRC Docket No. 82-422.
We heard argument concerning Metal Bank’s appeal on September 13, 1982. On September 15 we remanded the case to the district court for resolution of OSHA’s September 25, 1981, motion for extension of time. We retained jurisdiction to resolve any issues remaining after the district court’s decision.
On November 8, 1982, the district court filed an order which granted OSHA’s motion for extension of time and ordered that Metal Bank permit OSHA to take samples during the operation of the lead melting process and to inspect any records within the scope of the warrant that remained unexamined. OSHA compliance officers conducted the ordered inspection. On November 19, 1982, OSHA reported to the district court that the May 7, 1980, warrant had been fully executed. The parties then returned to our court and at our request submitted letter-briefs addressing whether any issues remained after the district court’s decision.
The Review Commission proceeding dealing with the March 1982 citations is still pending. No citations have as yet resulted from the November 1982 inspection.
II. DISCUSSION
Metal Bank raises three contentions on appeal. First, it argues that there was insufficient evidence to support the district court’s June 1981 finding of civil contempt. Second, Metal Bank claims that the district court erred in denying its March 1981 motion to quash the warrant as overbroad and unsupported by probable cause. Third,
We do not reach the merits of any of Metal Bank’s contentions. Metal Bank’s first argument is moot. Its other contentions, while not moot, must be exhausted before the Review Commission.
A. Mootness
A case is moot if “the issues presented are no longer ‘live’ or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.”
In re Kulp Foundry,
Applying that analysis to Metal Bank’s appeal from the finding of civil contempt, we hold that the appeal is moot.
Kulp Foundry,
We now apply the same analysis to Metal Bank’s appeal from the denial of the motion to quash. Reversal of the district court’s refusal to quash the warrant will not accord Metal Bank any actual, affirmative relief. The warrant has already been fully executed, and cannot now “be recalled or quashed.”
Babcock & Wilcox Co. v. Marshall,
The district court’s order refusing to quash has possible collateral legal consequences, however. Based on evidence gathered in the September 1981 inspection, OSHA has issued citations which Metal Bank is now contesting in a proceeding before the Review Commission. In that proceeding Metal Bank has raised the same issues as it addressed in its motion to quash.
See
Appellee’s December 9 Letter-Brief attachment D;
see also Whittaker Corp.,
The same holds true for Metal Bank’s objections to the district court’s order granting the extension of time. Because the extension has expired and the additional inspection has been completed, reversal of that order would provide Metal Bank with no actual, affirmative relief. The dispute over the extension would not have evaded review had Metal Bank obtained a stay or refused entry. Nonetheless, the appeal presents “possible collateral legal consequences” because OSHA may yet issue citations based on evidence gathered in the extended inspection. 4 If those citations are contested before the Review Commission, our decision of the appeal might have in that proceeding collateral legal consequences for the admission of the evidence.
B. Exhaustion
Metal Bank’s appeal from the denial of the motion to quash and from the granting of the extension of time are thus not moot. Its appeal on those issues must nonetheless be dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies.
We have held that where a warrant has been fully executed, and where only the pendency of OSHA citations keeps the employer’s arguments from becoming moot, the employer may not raise its challenges to an OSHA inspection in the first instance in federal court but instead must exhaust its remedies before the Review Commission.
Whittaker Corp.,
Metal Bank’s appeal from the denial of its motion to quash must therefore be dismissed for failure to exhaust its administrative remedies in the pending OSHA proceeding.
Whittaker Corp.,
Metal Bank raises two major reasons why its appeal should be exempted from the exhaustion requirement. It first contends that unlike the employer in
Whittaker Corp.
it quickly moved to stay the inspection and thus preserve the status quo. Appellant’s January 4 Letter-Brief at 2. We are not persuaded that such efforts remove the need to exhaust. Metal Bank’s attempts to preserve the status quo, however salutary, failed. The injury to Metal Bank’s right to' be free of an unjustified search has already occurred,
see
note 5; the only relevant issue which remains is what evidence should be before the Review Commission.
See Babcock & Wilcox,
Second, Metal Bank asserts that because the facts necessary to resolve the merits of its appeal are already in the record, “judicial economy will not be served by relegating this case to the Review Commission.” Appellant’s January 4 Letter-Brief at 4r-5. It is certainly true that if we considered this case “in isolation," judicial economy might well require us to consider Metal Bank’s contentions at this time.
Whittaker Corp.,
We therefore hold that Metal Bank must raise the challenges made in its motion to quash in the first instance before the Review Commission. Similarly, it must present to the Review Commission its objections to the extension of time for the war
C. Conclusion
We conclude that Metal Bank’s appeal from the finding of civil contempt is moot, and therefore we will vacate that portion of the district court’s June 1981 order and will remand to the district court with instructions to dismiss. We also conclude that Metal Bank has not exhausted before the Review Commission the contentions raised in its motion to quash and in its objections to the extension of time. Because the need to exhaust those contentions arose only after the district court had acted, we will dismiss the appeal from that portion of the district court’s June 1981 order denying the motion to quash and from its November 1982 order granting the extension of time. The underlying dispute as to whether evidence obtained pursuant to the warrant should be suppressed will be preserved for consideration by the Review Commission.
Whittaker Corp.,
Notes
. Then-existing OSHA regulations did not authorize the agency to seek inspection warrants ex parte. Cerro Metal Products v. Marshall, 620 F.2d 964 (3d Cir.1980). OSHA has since promulgated a regulation authorizing ex parte warrant applications. See 29 C.F.R. § 1903.-4(d) (1982).
. We have recently decided that “Congress did not intend to allow the Secretary to inspect records pursuant to a warrant issued under section 8(a),” 29 U.S.C. § 657(a) (1976).
In re Kulp Foundry,
. A third exception to the mootness doctrine was identified in
United States v. Frumento,
Metal Bank argues that the Frumento exception should apply because its constitutional right to be free of unreasonable searches is at stake. Appellant’s December 13 Letter-Brief at 38 n. 5. Without denigrating that right, we reaffirm our statement in Kulp Foundry that a personal liberty interest such as imprisonment must be at stake for the Frumento exception to apply.
. The Secretary of Labor states in his brief that he “does not intend to issue citations as a result of the extended inspection.” Appellee’s December 9 Letter-Brief at 1. The period of limitations on such citations has not yet run, however.
See
29 U.S.C. § 658(c) (1976) (“No citation may be issued ... after the expiration of six months following the occurrence of any violation”);
cf. Kulp Foundry,
. In contrast, before an OSHA warrant is executed an employer may move to quash and may appeal the denial of its motion without having to exhaust its administrative remedies before the Review Commission. The Review Commission is incapable of
preventing
an illegal search; “no proceeding in the Review Commission may commence until a citation is issued and contested.”
Cerro Metal Products v. Marshall,
. Metal Bank also claims that unlike the employer in
Whittaker Corp.
it “did not invoke the administrative process, then attempt to disrupt it by resorting to the courts.” Appellant’s January 4 Letter-Brief at 5. While such behavior is an additional reason to require exhaustion,
Cerro Metal Products,
. Metal Bank also argues that it should not be required to exhaust because OSHA did not issue its citations until six months after the September 1981 inspection, “thereby denying the company any resort to the administrative process until all briefing before this Court had been completed.” Appellant’s January 5 Letter-Brief at 3 (note omitted). We agree that in this case OSHA has not proceeded with dispatch. OSHA’s delay in filing the citations, however, merely postponed the onset of any cognizable injury to Metal Bank; it did not alter the need to exhaust.
. If properly raised before the Review Commission,
see Universal Auto Radiator Mfg. Co. v. Marshall,
