Court Opinion

ID: 2758166
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-12-06 01:02:15.207051+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:26:09.699251
License: Public Domain

Filed 12/5/14 Sherwood Mechanical v. Cal OSHA Appeal Bd. CA4/1
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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                    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION ONE

                                           STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SHERWOOD MECHANICAL, INC.,                                          D065322

         Plaintiff and Appellant,

         v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. 37-2012-00101466-
                                                                   CU-WM-CTL)
CALIFORNIA OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY
AND HEALTH APPEALS BOARD,

         Defendant and Respondent;

DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS, DIVISION OF
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND
HEALTH,

         Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Joel R.

Wohlfiel, Judge. Affirmed.

         Lucas & Haverkamp Law Firm, Albert E. Haverkamp and Patricia Jo Custer for

Plaintiff and Appellant.
       J. Jeffrey Mojcher, Aaron R. Jackson and Autumn R. Gonzales for Defendant and

Respondent.

       Amy D. Martin and William C. Cregar for Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

       This appeal involves California's Occupational Safety and Health Act

(Cal/OSHA). (Lab. Code, § 6300 et seq.; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 330 et seq.)1 In

administrative proceedings, respondent Department of Industrial Relations, Division of

Occupational Safety and Health (Division), issued citations of serious accident-related

violations of regulations and a related assessment of a civil penalty to appellant

Sherwood Mechanical, Inc. (Sherwood) following an accident at a jobsite. Sherwood

appeals a judgment of the superior court that denied Sherwood's petition for writ of

mandate directed to the decision of respondent Occupational Safety and Health Appeals

Board (Board) following the administrative proceedings related to the citations. We

conclude the Board's decision was both reasonable and supported by substantial

evidence. (§ 6629, subds. (c), (d).) Accordingly, we will affirm.

1     Unless indicated otherwise, all undesignated statutory references are to the Labor
Code, and all undesignated regulation (title) references are to the California Code of
Regulations.

                                             2
                                              I.

                               FACTUAL BACKGROUND2

       This appeal concerns a May 19, 2008,3 accident at the site of the construction of

the Hilton San Diego Convention Center Hotel in downtown San Diego. Hensel Phelps

Construction Co. (Hensel) was the general contractor, and Sherwood was the plumbing

subcontractor. Sherwood was responsible for the installation and delivery to Hensel of

properly working industrial water heaters (also known as boilers) that would generate the

hot water and steam necessary for the hotel. As pertinent here, Sherwood was required to

bring in the water lines and gas lines to the boilers and to coordinate with the electrical

contractor to ensure sufficient power to operate the systems.

       On the date of the accident, the physical structure was almost complete — more

than 30 stories with windows already installed and the Hilton signage being elevated to

the top of the structure. Sherwood's two employees on the jobsite, Richard Brown and

Stanley Solis, were in the process of finalizing the installation of the gas lines to the four

boilers in the mechanical room on the fifth floor (5th floor MR). Jerry Barron, who

worked for another subcontractor, was in the 5th floor MR when, immediately after "a

couple [of] plumbers came in," a ball of fire rolled at him, knocking him off a ladder. As

the results of an investigation would later reveal, there had been a major explosion in the

2      We recite the facts based on having reviewed the evidence "in a light most
favorable to the Board's decision." (Teichert Construction v. California Occupational
Safety & Health Appeals Bd. (2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 883, 888.)

3      All subsequent dates are in 2008, unless indicated otherwise.

                                               3
5th floor MR, resulting in significant damage to the building and many workers being

injured, including Barron, Brown and Solis.4 The fire department determined that the

accident was the result of a gas explosion.

       Later in the day on May 19, the Division's San Diego district manager assigned

Division employee Kasthuri Ramesh to investigate the explosion. Within hours, he and

two other Division investigators arrived at the site, which by then was being controlled

by the fire department. Most of the workers had been sent home or to the hospital, and

due to the nature of the incident no one, including the Division's representatives, was

allowed in the building that afternoon. The Division's personnel talked briefly with some

of the workers and met with the Hensel and Sherwood representatives responsible for

safety. Ramesh and his associates returned to the site each of the next two or three days

to investigate.

       On the morning of May 20, Ramesh met with Bob Bridges, whom the Hensel

representative introduced as Sherwood's site foreman.5 Bridges explained not only

4      For example, a corner of the building on the fifth, sixth and seventh floors had
been blown away — with debris falling to the ground and on top of vehicles, some more
than 300 feet away from the structure; and at the time of the evidentiary hearing, three
years after the accident, Barron still could not drive, was on antibiotics and his diet was
limited to bland foods. In addition, the parties stipulated that Brown and Solis suffered
"serious injury" as that term is defined in section 6302, subdivision (h) and title 8,
section 330, subdivision (h).

5      According to Ramesh, as site foreman Bridges was responsible for ensuring that
Sherwood's work flowed timely — i.e., the labor and materials were where they should
be when they were needed. On the day of the explosion, he was at a different job in
Arizona, but immediately returned to San Diego and the jobsite once he received notice
of the accident on May 19.
                                              4
Sherwood's general responsibilities (see ante), but also the specific job Brown and Solis

were doing on May 19: they were "purging the gas" in the 5th floor MR. At the

evidentiary hearing, Ramesh explained that purging the gas involved clearing the gas

pipes of air and whatever had built up inside the pipes before putting the system into

operation. Significantly, Brown and Solis did not have any tools or meters to monitor the

detection of gas in the air inside the 5th floor MR. As Brown explained to the

investigator, when he and Solis were in the room, the only means they had of detecting

gas in the air was "the sniff test" — i.e., their sense of smell6 — which is what they used

on May 19.7 This is consistent with Bridges's testimony that Brown and Solis did not

have a gas meter or any other tools to monitor the gas while they were purging the pipes.

Brown acknowledged that the presence of natural gas over time desensitizes a person's

sense of smell and that the sniff test does not work well if the person has a cold or certain

injuries.

       Miguel San Martin, who was employed by an electrical contractor, was on the

jobsite on the day of the accident. His general responsibilities included the supervision of

the installation of any equipment that needed to be energized in order to ensure the

equipment would receive the required voltage. On May 19, about an hour before the

6      A San Diego Gas & Electric Company (SDG&E) representative testified that
although the natural gas used is odorless, the company introduces an odorant so that the
presence of the gas will be detectable by the average human nose.

7      They also had used the sniff test during Sherwood's prior installation of other
boilers on the first floor.

                                              5
explosion, a foreman for Sherwood called San Martin to advise him that Sherwood was

ready, and needed him, to energize (i.e., provide electricity to) four boilers in the 5th

floor MR. By that time, there was other equipment in the 5th floor MR that already was

receiving electricity — e.g., a transformer, a distribution board, three or four panel boards

and three pumps. At the evidentiary hearing, San Martin explained both (1) that some of

this other equipment, in particular the "booster," has "relays," which can create sparks,

and (2) that if any energized equipment produced a spark that was exposed to flammable

gas, the gas could ignite.

       Knowing that Sherwood employees had been purging gas at the time of the

explosion and the fire department had stated the explosion was caused by gas, Ramesh

proceeded to determine what the lower explosive limit (LEL) of the 5th floor MR would

be for natural gas.8 He explained that, for natural gas, 5 percent of a room's volume is

25 percent of the LEL, and for regulatory purposes, 5 percent of a room's volume is its

explosive limit. Ramesh measured the room and calculated its volume to be 19,000 to

20,000 cubic feet.9 Thus, since 5 percent of the volume would be 25 percent of the LEL

8     "The term 'lower explosive limit' . . . is used in fire science to mean the minimum
concentration of vapor in air below which propagation of a flame does not occur in the
presence of an ignition source." (Cal Energy Operating Corp. (Cal. OSHA, Nov. 12,
2010, No. 09-R3D2-3675) 2010 CA OSHA App.Bd. Lexis 152, *4 (Cal Energy-Board
Decision); see tit. 8, § 8354.)

9      Sherwood criticizes the calculation on the basis Ramesh did not deduct from the
volume of the room the presence of the equipment in the room. At best, such an
objection goes to the weight, not the admissibility of such evidence; and Sherwood could
have, but did not, present such an objection at the hearing. In any event, consideration of
                                              6
for natural gas, between 950 and 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas (5 percent of 19,000–

20,000) was the LEL for the 5th floor MR.

       In order to calculate the amount of natural gas released into the 5th floor MR prior

to the explosion, Ramesh obtained SDG&E gas meter readings for the building, a portion

of which were admitted into evidence as an exhibit at the evidentiary hearing. According

to the SDG&E witness who testified at the hearing, these readings reflected the amount

of natural gas being released at the entire hotel jobsite, beginning on the date the meter

was installed on April 3 through the date of the explosion on May 19.10 This testimony

and exhibit established: On May 18 between 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m., 100 cubic feet of

gas was used; from May 18 at 9:00 a.m. until May 19 at 2:00 a.m., no (or a small volume

of) gas was used; on May 19 between 2:00 a.m. and 3:00 a.m., 100 cubic feet of gas was

used; on May 19 between 3:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m., no (or a small volume of) gas was

used; but on May 19 between 1:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m., 4,000 cubic feet of gas was

released; and on May 19, after 2:00 p.m., no (or a small volume of) gas was used.11

Thus, according to Ramesh, between 1:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m. on the day of the explosion,

the equipment in the room would have lowered the volume of the room due to
displacement of air, and thus lowered the LEL.

10    The SDG&E witness explained, "[T]he electronic device is basically a
microprocessor-based piece of equipment that calculates that total gas value passing
through that mechanical gas meter, and it has data storage capabilities."

11     From the afternoon of April 3, when the meter was installed, until the reading on
May 18 between 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m., there was no (or a small volume of) use of
natural gas. By 4:00 p.m. on May 19, the gas supply to the meter had been shut off.

                                              7
"there was a spike of about 4000 cubic feet of gas consumption," which the SDG&E

representative described as "the most significant flow that went through the meter since it

was installed" through the date of the explosion.

       Ramesh determined that "almost all" of the 4,000 cubic feet of gas was released

into the 5th floor MR. He reasoned: First, all other gas usage at the property was "[v]ery

minimal" (as confirmed by the SDG&E representative and the gas meter printout);

second, the 5th floor MR "was the only place where there was a gas explosion"; and

finally, gas from the 5th floor MR could not have been vented to the outside atmosphere,

because the uncontradicted testimony was that there were no such vents. Bridges further

supported Ramesh's determination that the gas had been released in the 5th floor MR,

when he (Bridges) testified that upon arriving at the jobsite the morning after the

explosion, May 20, the gas valve on the pipe that supplies the gas to the 5th floor MR

was open. In this regard, Ramesh explained that the accident could have been prevented

had the workers ensured proper ventilation in the 5th floor MR so that the natural gas

could have been vented outside instead of accumulating inside the room.

                                             II.

                              PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       Based on its investigation of the May 19 incident at the Hilton construction site,

the Division issued Sherwood four citations on November 18. Only citation 3 and

citation 4 are at issue in this appeal.

       Citation 3 proposed a penalty of $27,000 and alleged a serious accident-related

violation, as follows:

                                             8
      "The employer did not install natural gas piping in accordance with good
      engineering practice, or in a manner which provided reasonable safety for
      employees. On 05/19/08, three employees were seriously burned by a gas
      explosion, at the location where natural gas piping was being installed for
      boilers for a hotel under construction. Piping being purged of air was not
      vented from the enclosed space to the outside atmosphere, and the vent was
      not closed following the purging of air from the piping."

Citation 3 referenced the following applicable regulation and applicable engineering

standard of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)/American Society of

Mechanical Engineers (ASME):

          "[Title 8, section ]3329. Pipe Lines.

          "(b) All pressure piping shall be designed, constructed, installed, and
          maintained in accordance with good engineering practice. Piping which
          meets the requirements of the applicable ANSI B31 standard shall be
          considered as providing reasonable safety."

          "ANSI/ASME B31.2-1968. Fuel Gas Piping.

          "Appendix E3.1. When a piping system full of air is placed in service,
          the air may be safely cleared with gas provided that a moderately rapid
          and continuous flow of gas is introduced at one end of the line and the
          air is vented out the other end. The gas flow should be continued
          without interruption until the vented gas is free from air. The vent
          should then be closed."

      Citation 4 proposed a penalty of $27,000 and alleged a serious accident-related

violation, as follows: "On 05/19/08, the employer, Sherwood Mechanical Inc., was

allowing natural gas to escape from piping in the mechanical room, the employer failed

                                            9
to test for the concentration of gas in the room. [Sic.]"12 Citation 4 referenced the

following applicable regulation:

       "[Title 8, section ]5416. Flammable Vapors.

       "(c) No source of ignition shall be permitted in any location, indoors or
       outdoors, where the concentration of the flammable gases or vapors
       exceeds or may reasonably be expected to exceed 25 percent of the lower
       explosive limit. Tests shall be made to ascertain that this limit is not
       exceeded before a source of ignition is introduced into such location, and
       such tests shall be repeated frequently (or a continuous indicator used) as
       long as conditions giving rise to such concentrations of flammable vapors
       or gases continue and a source of ignition is present. If electronic or
       thermal testing equipment is used, it must be approved for use in such
       flammable conditions as required by [California Code of Regulations]
       section 2540.2."

       Sherwood appealed the Division's citations, and an ALJ presided over an

evidentiary hearing in August 2011. The Division presented its case and rested;

Sherwood did not put on a defense, instead arguing only that the Division did not meet its

burden.13 The ALJ dismissed citations 3 and 4 and set aside their penalties on the basis

the Division did not meet its burden of proof.

       On its own motion, the Board ordered reconsideration of the ALJ's decision,

directing the issue on reconsideration to be "[w]hether the record contains evidence

12     Citation 4 originally contained an additional violation, but at the evidentiary
hearing the administrative law judge (ALJ) granted the Division's motion to withdraw it.

13     This is significant because without a showing that a witness had a particular
interest in the outcome (and Sherwood made no attempt at such a showing here), the
Board was required to accept as true the intended meaning and significance of the
Division's uncontradicted and unimpeached evidence. (Martori Brothers Distributors v.
Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (1981) 29 Cal.3d 721, 728.)

                                            10
sufficient to sustain the violations alleged in Citations 3 and 4." Following briefing, in

June 2012 the Board issued its decision, in which it reversed the ALJ (thereby reinstating

citations 3 and 4), found sufficient evidence to sustain the violations (and their

classification as both "serious" and "accident-related") in citations 3 and 4 and assessed

an $18,000 penalty for citation 3 only.

       Sherwood filed the underlying mandamus action (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5),

challenging the Board's decision after reconsideration. The parties briefed and argued the

matter, after which the superior court denied Sherwood's petition, ruling that the Board's

decision was neither clearly erroneous, unreasonable nor unsupported by substantial

evidence. (§ 6629, subds. (c), (d).) The court entered judgment, the Board gave notice of

its entry and Sherwood timely appealed. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (a)(1); Cal.

Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a)(1)(A).)

                                             III.

                                STANDARD OF REVIEW

       "Our function on appeal is the same as that of the trial court in ruling on the

petition for the writ [of mandate]. We must determine whether based on the entire record

the Board's decision is supported by substantial evidence and whether it is reasonable."

(Lusardi Construction Co. v. California Occupational Safety & Health Appeals Bd.

(1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 639, 643 (Lusardi Construction); see § 6629, subds. (c), (d).) In

determining the sufficiency of the evidence, as an appellate court we "may not weigh the

evidence or consider the credibility of witnesses. Instead, the evidence most favorable to

[the respondent] must be accepted as true and conflicting evidence must be disregarded[,]
                                             11
'. . . indulging every legitimate inference which may be drawn from the evidence in [the

respondent's] favor . . . .' " (Campbell v. General Motors Corp. (1982) 32 Cal.3d 112,

118 (Campbell).) The testimony of a single witness, including that of a party, may be

sufficient (In re Marriage of Mix (1975) 14 Cal.3d 604, 614; Evid. Code, § 411); whereas

even uncontradicted evidence in favor of an appellant does not establish the fact for

which the evidence was submitted (Foreman & Clark Corp. v. Fallon (1971) 3 Cal.3d

875, 890 (Foreman).) The issue is not whether there is evidence in the record to support

a different finding, but whether there is evidence that, if believed, would support the trier

of fact's findings. (Bowers v. Bernards (1984) 150 Cal.App.3d 870, 872-873 (Bowers).)

Finally, the substantial evidence standard of review applies to both express and implied

findings of fact (Ermoian v. Desert Hospital (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 475, 501) and

requires consideration of the evidence in the entire record, not just the evidence recited in

the underlying decision (Gaehwiler v. Occupational Safety & Health Appeals Bd. (1983)

141 Cal.App.3d 1041, 1045, fn. 2).

       If an appellant challenges a finding for insufficiency of the evidence to support it,

the appellant is required to set forth in its opening brief all the material evidence on that

issue or finding, not merely what other evidence might have been favorable to its

position. (Foreman, supra, 3 Cal.3d at p. 881.) "In furtherance of its burden, the

appellant has the duty to fairly summarize all of the facts in the light most favorable to

the judgment." (Boeken v. Philip Morris, Inc. (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1640, 1658; see

Huong Que, Inc. v. Luu (2007) 150 Cal.App.4th 400, 410 [before appellate court

considers a lack of substantial evidence argument, appellant must first present "a fair

                                              12
summary of the evidence bearing on the challenged finding, particularly including

evidence that arguably supports it"].) Unless this is done, the asserted error is deemed

waived or forfeited. (Foreman, at p. 881.) In sum, unless the "party who challenges the

sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding . . . set[s] forth, discuss[es], and

analyze[s] all the evidence on that point, both favorable and unfavorable" (Doe v. Roman

Catholic Archbishop of Cashel & Emly (2009) 177 Cal.App.4th 209, 218, italics added),

the reviewing court may deem the substantial evidence contention to have been waived or

forfeited (ibid.; Foreman, at p. 881).

       Finally, to the extent there is a challenge to the Board's interpretation of a

regulation it enforces, it is a question of law that we review de novo. (Lusardi

Construction, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 643.)

                                              IV.

                                      DISCUSSION14

A.     Citation 3 Is Reasonable and Supported by Substantial Evidence

       1.     Substantial Evidence Supports the Findings That Sherwood Was Purging
              Gas into an Enclosed Space Without Venting It

       Sherwood's lead argument is that the Board improperly relied on unreliable

hearsay from Bridges in finding that Sherwood employees were purging gas into the 5th

floor MR without venting it. Sherwood acknowledges that the hearsay objection was

14     The court grants the Board's unopposed request for judicial notice, which attached
copies of 10 Board decisions in Cal/OSHA reconsideration proceedings. (Evid. Code,
§ 452, subd. (c); United Assn. Local Union 246, AFL-CIO v. Occupational Safety &
Health Appeals Bd. (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 273, 279, fn. 5.)

                                              13
overruled on the basis that any statement from Bridges was "an 'authorized admission' "

of Sherwood. Then, without an argument or citation to legal authority, Sherwood

continues: "Even if technically admissible, the hearsay statement is not strong credible

evidence . . . ." Accordingly, we consider any potential hearsay argument related to

Bridges forfeited15 (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B) [appellate brief must

"support each point by argument and, if possible, by citation of authority"]; In re Estate

of Cairns (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 937, 949 (Cairns) [issue "waived" where party fails to

cite authority or present argument]); and we will focus on Sherwood's challenges to

Bridges's statements on credibility/reliability grounds.

       Sherwood asks us to "look at the overall reliability and trustworthiness" of

Bridges's hearsay statements, criticizing the depth of some, the lack of foundation of

some, and the conclusory nature of some, suggesting instead what other evidence the

Division could or should have been presented. However, those types of objections are for

the consideration of the ALJ or the Board when trying the facts — either as objections to

admissibility prior to the testimony or as argument going to the weight at the close of the

evidence — not for judicial review in an appeal, where we are limited to a determination

of whether the decision is reasonable and supported by substantial evidence.16 (§ 6629,

15      In any event, we agree with the Board's and the ALJ's decisions and analyses that
all of the statements attributed to Bridges (Sherwood's foreman) were authorized
admissions of a party (Sherwood). (Evid. Code, § 1222; see tit. 8, § 376.2.)

16     One respected treatise describes the substantial evidence rule as being based on
two principal factors: (1) appellate courts defer to trial courts' resolution of facts, because
only the trial court, having observed a witness's demeanor, is able to assess credibility
                                              14
subds. (c), (d); Lusardi Construction, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 643.) Bridges's

statements were allowed into evidence and considered by the Board in reaching its

decision.17 We decline Sherwood's request and will neither reweigh the evidence

(Campbell, supra, 32 Cal.3d at p. 118) nor consider what other evidence was or could

have been presented (Bowers, supra, 150 Cal.App.3d at pp. 872-873).

       Sherwood next focuses on the evidence related to Barron's statements regarding

the presence of " 'a couple [of] plumbers' " in the 5th floor MR just prior to " 'a ball of

fire coming up at him.' " These statements were presented at the hearing by Barron's

boss, Tony Anderson. Barron communicated this information to Anderson during a

telephone conversation, within 10 minutes of the explosion, in which Barron called

Anderson to ask Anderson to take him to the hospital. Once again, Sherwood does not

present any objection to the admission of the hearsay statements, but only to weight that

should be accorded them since he (not Anderson) was in the 5th floor MR at the time of

the explosion. Again, however, we will not reweigh the evidence (Campbell, supra, 32

(Escobar v. Flores (2010) 183 Cal.App.4th 737, 748-749); and (2) trial courts decide
questions of fact, whereas appellate courts decide issues of law (Tupman v. Haberkern
(1929) 208 Cal. 256, 262-263). (Eisenberg, et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Appeals and
Writs (The Rutter Group 2014) ¶¶ 8:40 to 8:42, pp. 8-20 to 8-21.) Both factors apply
here.

17     For this reason, Sherwood's reliance on Korsak v. Atlas Hotels, Inc. (1992)
2 Cal.App.4th 1516 is misplaced. In Korsak, the reasons listed to exclude hearsay apply
to foundational matters for expert testimony in the trial court in the first instance (id. at
p. 1524), not to substantial evidence review on appeal.

                                              15
Cal.3d at p. 118), and we will not consider what other evidence was or could have been

presented (Bowers, supra, 150 Cal.App.3d at pp. 872-873).

       Next, Sherwood argues that there is no exception to the hearsay rule that allowed

the Board to rely on the hearsay statement from San Martin, the employee of the

electrical contractor who testified that "the foreman for Sherwood" on the job on May 19

called him to request that he energize four boilers in the 5th floor MR. As the Board

correctly counters, however, Board proceedings are not strictly subject to the hearsay

rules. (§ 6612; tit. 8, § 376.2.)18 Moreover, without a showing of prejudice (Code Civ.

Proc., § 475) that resulted in a "miscarriage of justice" (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13), even

the erroneous admission of hearsay evidence does not require a reversal. (Pool v. City of

Oakland (1986) 42 Cal.3d 1051, 1069; see Evid. Code, § 353, subd. (b).) Thus, even

assuming (without deciding) the statement was inadmissible, because Sherwood does not

18     Section 6612 is entitled "Effect of informalities" and provides: "No informality in
any proceeding or in the manner of taking testimony shall invalidate any order, decision,
or finding made and filed as specified in this division. No order, decision, or finding
shall be invalidated because of the admission into the record, and use as proof of any fact
in dispute of any evidence not admissible under the common law or statutory rules of
evidence and procedure." (Italics added.)
       Title 8, section 376.2 is entitled "Evidence Rules" and provides in part: "The
hearing need not be conducted according to technical rules relating to evidence and
witnesses. Any relevant evidence shall be admitted if it is the sort of evidence on which
responsible persons are accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious affairs, regardless of
the existence of any common law or statutory rule which might make improper the
admission of such evidence over objection in civil actions. Hearsay evidence may be
used for the purpose of supplementing or explaining other evidence but over timely
objection shall not be sufficient in itself to support a finding unless it would be
admissible over objection in civil actions." (Italics added.)

                                             16
even attempt to explain how it may have been prejudiced by the admission into evidence

of San Martin's statement, any alleged error is necessarily harmless.

       In closing, Sherwood argues that, given the lack of "strong, credible and direct

evidence from witnesses with personal knowledge," the finding that Sherwood vented

4,000 cubic feet of gas into the 5th floor MR was not supported by substantial evidence.

Unfortunately, this type of criticism is not helpful in assessing whether the finding is

supported by substantial evidence. Sherwood's failure to have fairly presented all the

evidence and inferences that support the Board's decision compels us to deem Sherwood

to have forfeited its substantial evidence argument related to this finding. (Foreman,

supra, 3 Cal.3d at p. 881.) Were we to consider the argument on its merits, however, the

record contains the requisite substantial evidence: Bridges's uncontradicted testimony

was that that Brown and Solis were in the 5th floor MR purging the gas from the pipes on

May 19; Ramesh's and the SDG&E representative's uncontradicted testimony and exhibit

established that on May 19 between 1:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m. 4,000 cubic feet of gas was

released at the jobsite; and Ramesh's uncontradicted testimony was that "almost all" of

the 4,000 cubic feet of gas was released into the 5th floor MR; and Bridges's

uncontradicted testimony was that on the morning of May 20, when people were once

again allowed into the building, the gas valve on the pipe that supplies gas to the 5th floor

MR was open.

                                             17
       2.     Sherwood Has Not Established Error Related to the Finding It Was in the
              Process of Installing Piping

       Citation 3 charges Sherwood with failing to "install natural gas piping in

accordance with good engineering practice, or in a manner which provided reasonable

safety for employees." Sherwood argues that, without expert testimony, the record does

not contain substantial evidence to establish that the opening of a valve on an existing

pipe to purge gas without the opening of a vent to the outside qualifies as installing a

pipe. We disagree.

       Once again, Sherwood has forfeited this issue. First, Sherwood presents no

argument or authority in support of its statement that expert testimony was necessary to

establish this fact.19 (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B); Cairns, supra, 188

Cal.App.4th at p. 949.) Second, Sherwood fails to fairly present the evidence and

inferences that support the finding. (Foreman, supra, 3 Cal.3d at p. 881.)

       Nevertheless, the record does contain substantial evidence that Sherwood was in

the process of installing piping. Clearing the gas pipe of air and whatever else had built

up inside the pipe before putting the system into operation (i.e., purging the gas) is but

19     As a separate issue, Sherwood argues that none of Ramesh's testimony regarding
the standards for purging the gas (e.g., purging the pipe, ventilation, etc.) should have
been considered by the Board, because he lacks the qualifications to testify about
plumbing. First, Sherwood has forfeited this argument by failing to object at the time the
evidence was offered at the evidentiary hearing. (Evid. Code, § 353, subd. (a); Platzer v.
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area (2002) 104 Cal.App.4th 1253, 1260 [failure to object to
inadmissible evidence waives the defect].) In any event, Sherwood has not argued that
expert testimony was necessary. Thus, at best Sherwood's objections to the qualifications
of the witness go to the weight of his testimony, not its admissibility; and, once again, we
will not reweigh the evidence. (Campbell, supra, 32 Cal.3d at p. 118.)

                                             18
one step of the process in the installation of the piping, a prerequisite to delivering

operable boilers20 — i.e., the process of connecting the boilers to the source of fuel that

will allow them to heat the water in the boilers. According to Bridges (Sherwood's

foreman), on May 19 Sherwood was "set[ting] up the boiler system on the fifth floor,"

two of Sherwood's employees (Brown and Solis) were at the jobsite, and "their

responsibility was[] to get the boiler going . . . to get the system started." Consistently,

ASME B31.2-1968 is entitled "Fuel Gas Piping," and Appendix E3 is entitled "Purging

and Clearing" and provides:

       "E3.1 When a piping system full of air is placed in service, the air may be
       safely cleared with gas provided that a moderately rapid and continuous
       flow of gas is introduced at one end of the line and the air is vented out the
       other end. The gas flow should be continued without interruption until the
       vented gas is free from air. The vent should then be closed." (Italics
       added.)

According to Ramesh, ASME is an association that establishes standards for mechanical

equipment installation, including specifically "gas pipe installation work." (Italics

20      To the extent Sherwood's challenge requires an interpretation of the word
"installed" as used in title 8, section 3329, subdivision (b), we independently review the
Board's interpretation. (Lusardi Construction, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 643.) Because
the word is not defined in the regulations (tit. 8, §§ 330, 3329), we will "ascertain the
ordinary, usual meaning of a word" by "appropriately refer[ring] to the dictionary
definition of that word." (Wasatch Property Management v. Degrate (2005) 35 Cal.4th
1111, 1122.) According to Webster's Third New International Dictionary (2002),
"install" is "to set up for use or service  ." (Id. at p. 1171, col. 1.) Given this definition, we have no difficulty
concluding that Sherwood was setting up for use or service — i.e., installing for purposes
of citation 3 — natural gas piping.

                                              19
added.) Thus, the record contains substantial evidence that the purging of the gas pipes

on May 19 was part of the installation of the boilers.

       Accordingly Sherwood has not established reversible error related to the finding it

was in the process of installing piping.

       3.      Substantial Evidence Supports the Board's Finding of a "Serious" Violation

       Sherwood contends the record does not contain substantial evidence to support the

Board's finding that the violation in citation 3 was "serious." At the time of the

explosion, former section 6432 provided that, for Cal/OSHA purposes, a " 'serious

violation' " existed "if there is a substantial probability that death or serious physical harm

could result from a violation." (Former § 6432, subd. (a); Stats. 1999, ch. 615, § 10,

p. 4342; see tit. 8, § 334, subd. (c)(1) [rebuttable presumption of " 'serious violation' . . . if

the [D]ivision demonstrates that there is a realistic possibility that death or serious

physical harm could result from the actual hazard created by the violation"].) As used in

former section 6432, " 'substantial probability' refers not to the probability that an

accident or exposure will occur as a result of the violation, but rather to the probability

that death or serious physical harm will result assuming an accident or exposure occurs as

a result of the violation." (Id., subd. (c).)

       Thus, at the hearing, the Division was required to prove that a serious injury was

more likely than not to occur as a result of the accident. (Benicia Foundry & Iron Works,

Inc. (Cal. OSHA, Apr. 24, 2003, No. 00-R2D2-2976) 2003 CA OSHA App.Bd. Lexis 43,

*16.) Now, on appeal, we must determine whether substantial evidence supports the

Board's finding that a serious injury was more likely than not to result from the

                                                20
explosion. We disagree with Sherwood's suggestion that the only evidence the Division

presented was the existence of serious injuries rather than the substantial probability of

death or serious harm following the accident of May 19.

       The Division introduced into evidence 11 full-page color photographs depicting

the extensive property damage resulting from the gas explosion. Within the 5th floor

MR, damage included severely warped and disfigured metal panels and struts, as well as

burns to piping insulation. Outside the room, the force of the explosion is further

substantiated by large pieces of wall, wire mesh, and other building materials being

thrown long distances onto the ground and adjacent buildings. Windows were

completely blown out, including windows on adjacent floors, and the large Hilton

overhead signage in the process of being installed on the roof was thrown onto the

adjacent parking structure. Indeed, an entire corner of the building on the fifth, sixth and

seventh floors was completely blown away. This is substantial evidence that someone

exposed to the gas explosion in the 5th floor MR on May 19 would more likely than not

suffer serious injury.

       In addition, where a Division witness provides an opinion, based on his or her

experience in the field of safety, that an accident would more likely than not result in

serious injury — and the testimony is uncontroverted and neither impeached nor called

into question under cross-examination — the Division has met its burden of establishing

the classification that a violation was properly classified "serious." (Forklift Sales of

Sacramento, Inc. (Cal. OSHA, July 7, 2011, No. 05-R2D1-3477) 2011 CA OSHA

App.Bd. Lexis 102, *12.) Here, Ramesh testified that, in his experience investigating

                                             21
accidents, serious injury would more likely than not result from the explosion on May 19

due to the resulting heat and displacement of objects — including but not limited to

burns, broken bones, serious cuts, and head injuries from objects being hurled through the

air. Also, Michele Boswell (one of the Division investigators who accompanied Ramesh

on May 20) testified, based on her past investigations dealing with burn injuries, that the

heat that caused the type of burn marks on property evidenced in the photos would lead to

second- and third-degree burns when subjected to human skin; that skin grafts would be

required for such second- and third-degree burns since tissue cannot regenerate; and that

scarring would result. Notably, no evidence contradicted these witnesses' experience or

the testimony based on their experience.

       Accordingly, the photographs and uncontradicted testimony described ante are

sufficiently substantial evidence to support the Board's finding that a worker who was

exposed to the May 19 natural gas explosion while in the 5th floor MR would more likely

than not suffer serious physical harm. Stated differently, the record contains substantial

evidence to support the Board's finding that the violation in citation 3 was "serious."21

B.     Citation 4 is Reasonable and Supported by Substantial Evidence

       Citation 4 is based on title 8, section 5416, which provides in relevant part:

       "(c) No source of ignition shall be permitted in any location, indoors or
       outdoors, where the concentration of the flammable gases or vapors
       exceeds or may reasonably be expected to exceed 25 percent of the lower
       explosive limit. Tests shall be made to ascertain that this limit is not

21     Because we reject Sherwood's argument that citation 3 be reduced from a
"serious" violation to a "general" violation, we need not consider Sherwood's related
argument that the penalty be recalculated.
                                             22
       exceeded before a source of ignition is introduced into such location, and
       such tests shall be repeated frequently (or a continuous indicator used) as
       long as conditions giving rise to such concentrations of flammable vapors
       or gases continue and a source of ignition is present." (Italics added.)

The description of the violation is: "On 05/19/08, the employer, Sherwood Mechanical

Inc., was allowing natural gas to escape from piping in the mechanical room, the

employer failed to test for the concentration of gas in the room. [Sic.]" (Italics added.)

       Relying on the lack of direct evidence of the amount of natural gas in the 5th floor

MR and whether the spike in the release of the gas was before or after the explosion,

Sherwood argues that the violation in citation 4 is not supported by substantial evidence.

In so doing, however, Sherwood reads the violation too narrowly. By itself, "[f]ailure to

test is violative of [title 8,] section 5416[, subdivision ](c)." (Cal Energy-Board

Decision, supra, 2010 CA OSHA App.Bd. Lexis 152 at p. *7.) "Specifically, the

regulation requires [Sherwood] to conduct tests 'to ascertain that the [lower explosive]

limit is not exceeded,' before a source of ignition is introduced into the area." (Petrolite

Corp. (Cal. OSHA, Mar. 3, 1998, No. 93-R2D3-2083) 1998 CA OSHA App.Bd. Lexis 7,

*8-*9, italics added.)

       Because Sherwood once again has not presented any evidence in support of the

challenged finding, Sherwood has forfeited its substantial evidence argument related to

this finding. (Foreman, supra, 3 Cal.3d at p. 881.) Were we to consider the argument on

its merits, however, the record contains substantial uncontroverted evidence that

Sherwood did not conduct tests or otherwise monitor for gas concentration levels: at the

time when Sherwood employees were purging the gas in the 5th floor MR and a source of

                                             23
ignition was present, the employees had no gas detection devices, and the only means

they had of detecting gas in the air was the sniff test — i.e., their sense of smell.

       Accordingly, Sherwood did not meet its burden of establishing reversible error

with regard to citation 4.

                                       DISPOSITION

       The judgment of the superior court is affirmed. The Board and the Division are

each entitled to recover costs on appeal from Sherwood. (Cal. Rules of Court,

rule 8.278(a).)

                                                                                        IRION, J.
WE CONCUR:

NARES, Acting P. J.

MCDONALD, J.

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