IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
POTELCO INC.,
No. 78433-1-1
Appellant,
DIVISION ONE
V.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
WASHINGTON STATE,
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
INDUSTRIES,
Respondent. FILED: June 10, 2019
APPELWICK, C.J. — The Department cited Potelco for failing to ensure that
a crane was certified and proof load tested. The Board of Industrial Insurance
Appeals and the trial court affirmed the citation. Potelco argues that WAC 296-
155-52901 does not apply because it reasonably believed it was operating a digger
derrick and not a crane, and it was not performing "construction work" as statutorily
defined. It argues alternatively that this court should downgrade the violation from
general to de minimis. We affirm. ,
FACTS
In November 2015, Potelco Inc., a utility contractor, was performing utility
maintenance work on an existing utility line on NE 116th Street in Bellevue. On
November 6, Ronald Solheim, a crane safety supervisor with the Department of
Labor and Industries (Department), drove by the worksite on his way to work.
Solheim noticed some peculiarities with the equipment the workers were using.
No. 78433-1-1/2
He notified Potelco that he was going to visit the jobsite for an inspection the
following morning.
Solheim went to the site the next day and photographed the equipment'
Potelco had been using the day before. A company called Elliott Equipment
Company manufactured the equipment, and its model number was 30105. The
equipment had a nylon hoist line at its base, which Solheim testified was "very
unusual on this type of crane."
Potelco line crew foreman Dean Davis was present at the jobsite when
Solheim did his inspection. Davis testified that he believed the equipment that
Potelco was using was a digger derrick, not a crane.
Of his inspection, Solheim stated,
[W]hat caught my attention was that yellow hoist rope or hoist line. I
wanted to see exactly what it was because I'd only heard of one other
mobile boom truck in the entire industry that had been approved to
use the nylon type line for hoisting and that was manufactured by
Grove.
Solheim also photographed the manufacturer's plate, which was attached
to the base of the boom near the operator station. This plate identifies the
machine's serial number, load charts, manufacture date, whether it has an
insulating boom, and the standard under which it was manufactured. Solheim
testified that the Elliott 30105 complied with the ANSI/ASME-B30.5 standard.2
ASME B-30.5 is a national standard that applies specifically to all mobile cranes.
I The Department refers to the equipment as a "crane," while Potelco refers
to the same piece of equipment as "equipment," "vehicle" or "digger derrick."
21'ASME" is an acronym for the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
"ANSI" is an acronym for American National Standards Institute.
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Solheim testified that all of the digger derricks that he has seen have been
manufactured under a different standard. Solheim also testified that the load chart
attached to the operation station for the equipment indicated that it met the ASME
B30.5 requirements. He stated that if the crane had been manufactured under the
digger derrick standard, the load chart "would definitely be different."
Describing how the piece of equipment that he inspected differed from a
digger derrick, Solheim stated,
[I]t doesn't have the right number, D115, on the boom or on the load
charts. [A digger derrick] has a different size hoist line on the load
chart than the one that 1 inspected. And so the [Load Moment
Indicator (LMI)] would be -- information being put out by the LMI
would be definitely different and require some modification to the
computer, possibly.
The outriggers on a Digger Derrick are allowed to be extended
at three different positions which changes the load charts. The one
[I inspected] is not allowed to be at three different positions.
Solheim further explained that the different standards under which the two
products are manufactured is a "definite indication in determining whether it's a
Digger Derrick." Solheim testified that Potelco had both digger derricks and cranes
in their fleet.
Based on his investigation, Solheim determined that the Elliott 30105 was
a "mobile crane with attachments," and not a digger derrick. Solheim testified that
he asked Potelco for documents establishing that the equipment in question was
a digger derrick as they claimed, but never received that information. Following
Solheim's inspection, the Department cited Potelco for failing to ensure the Elliott
30105 was certified and proof load tested, as required by WAC 296-155-52901.
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Potelco appealed the citation. Potelco argued that WAC 296-155-52901
did not apply because (1) it was performing "utility work," and not "construction
work," and (2) it reasonably believed it was operating a digger derrick and not a
crane. In a proposed decision and order, the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals
(Board) rejected Potelco's argument that it was not engaged in construction work.
But, it concluded that Potelco, through exercising reasonable diligence, could not
have known that the equipment was a crane subject to WAC 296-155-52901, and
vacated the citation.
The Department petitioned for review of the proposed order. The Board
found that Potelco's work replacing utility poles was "construction," as statutorily
defined. The Board also found the equipment Potelco used was a crane as defined
by WAC 296-155-52902. Finally, the Board found that Potelco, through exercising
reasonable diligence, could have known that the Elliott 30105 was a crane. The
Board affirmed the citation. Potelco appealed the Board's decision and order to
the superior court, which also affirmed. Potelco appeals.
DISCUSSION
Potelco makes three arguments. First, it argues that, because it reasonably
believed it was operating a digger derrick and not a crane, WAC 296-155-52901
does not apply. Second, it argues that, because Potelco was not performing
"construction work" as statutorily defined, this court should vacate the citation.
Third, it argues alternatively that this court should downgrade the violation from
general to de minimis.
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I. Standard of Review
This court reviews a decision by the Board directly, based on the record
before the agency. Pilchuck Contractors, Inc. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 170 Wn.
App. 514, 517, 286 P.3d 383 (2012). We review findings of fact to determine
whether they are supported by substantial evidence and, if so, whether the findings
support the conclusions of law. Id. Substantial evidence is evidence in sufficient
quantum to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth of the declared premise.
Id. We review questions of law de novo, including an agency's construction of a
regulation, but substantial weight is given to an agency's interpretation of a
regulation. Id. Proposed decisions and orders are not the decisions and orders of
the Board—they do not become the official Board decision until the Board formally
adopts them. Stratton v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 1 Wn. App. 77, 79,459 P.2d 651
(1969).
II. Type of Equipment
Potelco asserts first that it reasonably believed it was operating a digger
derrick and not a crane, and, therefore, WAC 296-155-52901 does not apply.
All cranes and derricks covered in WAC 296-155-52900 and not exempt in
subsection (3) of that section must be certified and proof load tested annually by
an accredited crane certifier recognized by the Department. WAC 296-155-52901.
The crane statutes and regulations define "crane" as "power-operated equipment
used in construction that can hoist, lower, and horizontally move a suspended
load." RCW 49.17.400(5); WAC 296-155-52902.
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No. 78433-1-1/6
The Board found that the Elliot 30105 was a mobile crane.3 Potelco asserts
that the "equipment at issue has all of the characteristics of a digger derrick, and
the evidence presented would lead a rational, fair-minded person to find that
Potelco reasonably believed it was operating a digger derrick." It claims that it
ordered a digger derrick, was told that it had received a digger derrick, and
"operated the equipment only as a digger derrick." And, Potelco contends that,
other than the data plate, nothing suggested that the equipment was anything other
than a digger derrick.
Citing Erection Co., Inc. v. Department of Labor and Industries, 160 Wn.
App. 194, 248 P.3d 1085(2011), Potelco asserts that the Department fails to show
how Potelco did not exercise reasonable diligence. In Erection Co., the court
stated,
"Reasonable diligence involves several factors, including an
employer's obligation to inspect the work area, to anticipate hazards
to which employees may be exposed, and to take measures to
prevent the occurrence." Constructive knowledge of a violative
condition may be demonstrated by the department in a number of
ways, including evidence showing that the violative condition was
readily observable or in a conspicuous location in the area of the
employer's crews.
160 Wn. App. at 206-07 (citations omitted) (quoting Kokosing Constr. Co. v.
Occupational Safety & Hazard Review Comm'n, 232 F. App'x 510, 521, 2007 WL
1544150, at *2)(6th Cir. 2007)).
3 Potelco assigns error to the trial court's adoption of the Board's finding that
the equipment was a crane, but does not argue this issue in its brief. This court
will not consider an assignment of error where there is no argument in the brief to
support it. DeHeer v. Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 60 Wn.2d 122, 126, 372 P.2d 193
(1962).
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No. 78433-1-1/7
The Board found that Potelco, through exercising reasonable diligence,
could have known that the equipment was in fact a crane that was not certified
prior to being used in 'crane operations. The Elliott 30105's load chart stated that
the equipment was a crane. The data plate and load chart both showed that the
Elliott 30105 complied with the ASME B-30.5 standard, which applies specifically
to all mobile cranes, but not digger derricks. Elliott's company website identified
the 30105 model as a "boom truck," which is a mobile crane.
Furthermore, when Potelco first received the Elliott 30105, it had a metal
wire hoist line. The wire line was then switched to a nylon one at Potelco's request.
Both Potelco's fleet manager and foreperson understood that companies use
digger derricks to conduct high voltage work because they "generally have nylon
ropes for winch lines, whereas cranes have steel winch lines."
Potelco points to its employee's testimony to argue that it reasonably
believed that the equipment was a digger derrick. It argues that "the truck had all
of the unique characteristics of a digger derrick, such as an auger, the nylon hoist
line, and pole claw attachment." But, we do not reweigh the evidence on appeal.
Zarala v. Twin City Foods, 185 Wn. App. 838, 867, 343 P.3d 761 (2015). Instead,
we view this evidence in the light most favorable to the party that prevailed before
the Board—here, the Department. Frank Coluccio Constr. Co. v. Dep't of Labor &
Indus., 181 Wn. App. 25, 35, 329 P.3d 91 (2014).
Substantial evidence supports the Board's finding that Potelco, through
exercising reasonable diligence, could have known that the equipment was in fact
a crane and not a digger derrick.
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III. Construction Work
Potelco argues second that, because it was performing utility work and not
construction work, WAC 296-155-52901 does not apply.
The Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act of 1973(WISHA), chapter
49.17 RCW, certification rule applies to "[p]ower-operated cranes and derricks
used in construction that can hoist, lower and horizontally move a suspended
load." WAC 296-155-52900(1)(a) (emphasis added). WAC 296-155-52902
defines "construction work" as,
[A]ll or any part of excavation, construction, erection, alteration,
repair, demolition, and dismantling of buildings and other structures
and all related operations; the excavation, construction, alteration,
and repair of sewers, trenches, caissons, conduits, pipelines, roads,
and all related operations; the moving of buildings and other
structures, and the construction, alteration, repair, or removal of
wharfs, docks, bridges, culverts, trestles, piers, abutments, or any
other related construction, alteration, repair, or removal work.
Construction work does not include the normal day-to-day activities
at manufacturing facilities or powerhouses.
Potelco states that on November 6 and 7, 2015, it was replacing existing
poles to raise power lines. It argues that this work does not qualify as construction
work. And, it asserts that the work it was performing is more similar to the activities
covered under WAC 296-155-52900(4)(t), which provides an exemption from the
crane certification requirements for "[d]igger derricks when used for activities that
are covered under chapter 296-45 WAC,[4]Safety standards for electrical workers."
WAC 296-45 applies to "the operation, maintenance, and construction of
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electric power generation, control, transformation, transmission, and distribution
lines and equipment." WAC 296-45-015(1).
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No. 78433-1-1/9
The Board found that Potelco's work replacing existing utility poles
constitutes construction as defined by the WAC. Potelco ultimately argues that it
was exempt from the certification and load testing requirements because it
"reasonably believed" that it was using a digger derrick for activities covered by
WAC 296-45, which applies to safety standards for electrical workers. But, this
exception does not apply to cranes:"Cranes other than digger derricks when used
for activities that are covered under chapter 296-45 WAC, Safety standards for
electrical workers, or chapter 296-32 WAC, Safety standards for
telecommunications are NOT exempt." WAC 296-155-52900(4)(t). We found
above that substantial evidence supports the Board's finding that the Elliott 30105
was a mobile crane. Thus, we do not reach the issue of whether Potelco was
performing construction work, because it would not be exemptfrom WAC 296-155-
52900 regardless.
IV. Violation Classification
Alternatively, Potelco argues that this court should downgrade the violation
from general to de minimis.
There are several classifications of WISHA citations: willful, serious,
general, and de minimis. See RCW 49.17.180(1)-(3); WAC 296-900-14010.
Under RCW 49.17.180(3),
Any employer who has received a citation for a violation . . . where
such violation is specifically determined not to be of a serious nature
as provided in subsection (6) of this section, may be assessed a civil
penalty not to exceed seven thousand dollars for each such violation,
unless such violation is determined to be de minimis.
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WAC 296-900-14010 provides that a general violation occurs where there
are "[c]onditions that could cause injury or illness to an employee but would not
result in serious physical harm." Under RCW 49.17.120(2), the Department may
develop procedures under which it will issue "a notice in lieu of a citation with
respect to de minimis violations which have no direct or immediate relationship to
safety or health."
Potelco asserts that "there were no injuries, accidents, or incidents involved
in this inspection." But, actual injury is not required for the Department to cite an
employer. See, e.q., Mowat Constr. Co. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 148 Wn. App.
920, 931, 201 P.3d 407 (2009) ("Nor is the Department required to wait for
someone to go deaf before citing the employer.").
"The legislature intend[ed] to promote the safe condition and operation of
cranes used in construction work by establishing certification requirements for
construction cranes and qualifications for construction crane operators." RCW
49.17.400; LAWS OF 2007, ch. 27, § 1. Potelco's argument that the crane
certification violation has no direct relationship to employee health and safety fails.
We affirm.
WE CONCUR:
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