Section 110(c) of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977; Interpretation, 26982-26984 [06-4317]
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26982
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 9, 2006 / Notices
Dated at Arlington, Virginia, this 3rd day
of May, 2006.
David L. Meyer,
Director, Office of Administration and
Management.
[FR Doc. E6–7001 Filed 5–8–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–43–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Mine Safety and Health Administration
Section 110(c) of the Federal Mine
Safety and Health Act of 1977;
Interpretation
Mine Safety and Health
Administration (MSHA), Department of
Labor.
ACTION: Interpretive bulletin.
mstockstill on PROD1PC68 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This Interpretive Bulletin sets
forth a statement of the Secretary of
Labor’s interpretation of Section 110(c)
of the Federal Mine Safety and Health
Act of 1977 (Mine Act), 30 U.S.C.
820(c), as it relates to agents of Limited
Liability Companies (LLCs). The
Interpretive Bulletin is considered an
interpretive rule and provides an
explanation of the Secretary’s
interpretation of Section 110(c) and the
rationale supporting that interpretation.
For the reasons set forth below, the
Secretary’s interpretation is that Section
110(c) of the Mine Act is applicable to
agents of LLCs. The effect of the
Secretary’s interpretation is that agents
of LLCs may be held personally liable
under Section 110(c) of the Mine Act if
they knowingly authorize, order, or
carry out a violation of any mandatory
health or safety standard under the Act
or a violation of or failure or refusal to
comply with any order issued under the
Act or any order incorporated in a final
decision issued under certain provisions
of the Act.
DATES: Comments on this Interpretive
Bulletin are due June 8, 2006. The
Interpretive Bulletin is scheduled to be
put into effect July 10, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may use mail, facsimile
(fax), or electronic mail to send us your
comments regarding this Interpretive
Bulletin. Clearly identify your request
and send it one of the following ways:
(1) Fax: (202) 693–9441. Include
‘‘Interpretive Bulletin regarding Limited
Liability Companies’’ in the subject line
of the fax.
(2) By electronic mail to zzMSHAcomments@dol.gov. Include
‘‘Interpretive Bulletin regarding Limited
Liability Companies’’ in the subject line
of your electronic mail.
(3) Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier:
MSHA, Office of Standards,
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15:42 May 08, 2006
Jkt 208001
Regulations, and Variances, 1100
Wilson Blvd., Room 2350, Arlington,
Virginia 22209–3939. If hand-delivered
in person or by courier, you must stop
by the 21st floor first to check in with
the receptionist.
Docket: To access comments
electronically, go to https://
www.msha.gov and click on
‘‘Comments’’ under ‘‘Rules and
Regulations.’’ All comments received
will be posted without change at this
Web address, including any personal
information provided. Paper copies of
the comments may also be reviewed at
the Office of Standards, Regulations,
and Variances, 1100 Wilson Blvd.,
Room 2349, Arlington, Virginia.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Patricia W. Silvey, Acting Director,
Office of Standards, Regulations, and
Variances, MSHA, 1100 Wilson
Boulevard, Room 2350, Arlington, VA
22209–3939. Ms. Silvey can be reached
at Silvey.Patricia@DOL.GOV. (Internet
E-mail), (202) 693–9440 (voice), or (202)
693–9441 (facsimile).
To subscribe to the MSHA listserve
and receive automatic notification of
MSHA Federal Register publications,
visit the site at https://www.msha.gov/
subscriptions/subscribe.aspx.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Introductory Statement
The Secretary of Labor is responsible
for interpreting and applying statutes
she is authorized to administer. More
specifically, Congress delegated to the
Secretary, acting through MSHA, the
authority to administer the Mine Act.
See Secretary of Labor v. Excel Mining,
LLC, 334 F.3d 1, 5–7 (D.C. Cir. 2003);
Secretary of Labor on behalf of Wamsley
v. Mutual Mining, Inc., 80 F.3d 110,
113–14 (4th Cir. 1996). The
interpretation and application of
statutory terms to particular factual
circumstances is an ongoing process.
Publication of all interpretive positions
taken by the Secretary is impossible; at
times, however, the Secretary has found
it useful as a means of notifying the
public in general, and interested
segments of the public in particular, to
publish an Interpretive Bulletin or other
documents setting forth the Secretary’s
interpretive positions with respect to
particular provisions of statutes she
administers.
The question has arisen whether
Section 110(c) of the Mine Act is
applicable to agents of LLCs. The LLC
is a relatively new business entity
which combines the limited liability
provided by a corporation with the
‘‘pass-through’’ tax treatment accorded
to a partnership. LLCs are like
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corporations in that they shield
individuals from personal liability; for
that reason, they raise concerns similar
to those which led Congress to enact
Section 110(c).
The status of LLCs under Section
110(c) has become a significant issue
under the Mine Act because, in recent
years, the number of mine operators
organized as LLCs has steadily
increased. According to MSHA records,
782 of the Nation’s 7,287 active mine
operators—approximately 10 percent—
now identify themselves as LLCs. The
actual number may be significantly
greater because MSHA’s mine
identification forms do not list ‘‘LLC’’ as
an option and many LLCs may not
identify themselves as LLCs. A number
of the Nation’s large operators are LLCs.
The purpose of this Interpretive
Bulletin is to make the public aware of
the Secretary’s interpretation of the
applicability of Section 110(c) to agents
of LLCs—an interpretation the Secretary
will apply in administering and
enforcing the Mine Act. The Secretary is
soliciting comments on the Interpretive
Bulletin and will carefully review all
comments received. The Secretary
believes, however, that the position set
forth in the Interpretive Bulletin
represents an ‘‘interpretive rule’’ as that
term is used in the Administrative
Procedure Act, and is therefore not
required to go through notice-andcomment rulemaking. See 5 U.S.C.
§ 553(b)(3)(A); AMC v. MSHA, 995 F.2d
1106, 1108–13 (D.C. Cir. 1993). So that
the Secretary may carefully consider all
comments received, the Interpretive
Bulletin is scheduled to be put into
effect 60 days after it is published in the
Federal Register.
Limited Liability Companies
The LLC is a hybrid business entity
first recognized in 1977 by the State of
Wyoming. LLCs did not attain any
significant popularity until 1988;
however, when the Internal Revenue
Service announced that LLCs could be
taxed as partnerships despite their
corporation-like liability shield. When
the IRS announced in 1997 that LLCs
could elect pass-through taxation
without regard to the number of
corporation-like characteristics they
possessed, the number of LLCs grew
dramatically.
Text and History of Section 110(c)
Section 110(c) of the Mine Act states
as follows:
Whenever a corporate operator violates a
mandatory health or safety standard or
knowingly violates or fails or refuses to
comply with any order issued under this Act
or any order incorporated in a final decision
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 9, 2006 / Notices
under this Act, except an order incorporated
in a decision issued under Subsection (a) or
Section 105(c), any director, officer, or agent
of such corporation who knowingly
authorized, ordered, or carried out such
violation, failure, or refusal shall be subject
to the same civil penalties, fines, and
imprisonment that may be imposed upon a
person under subsections (a) and (d).
30 U.S.C. 820(c) (emphases added).
Section 110(c) of the Mine Act was
carried over essentially unchanged from
the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act of 1969 (Coal Act). See 30 U.S.C.
819(c) (1969). The legislative history of
the Mine Act, quoting from the
legislative history of the Coal Act,
stated:
Civil penalties are not a part of the
enforcement scheme of the Metal Act, but
they have been part of the enforcement of the
Coal Act since its enactment in 1969. The
purpose of such civil penalties, of course, is
not to raise revenues for the federal treasury,
but rather, is a recognition that: ‘[s]ince the
basic business judgments which dictate the
method of operation of a coal mine are made
directly or indirectly by persons at various
levels of corporate structure, [the provision
for assessment of civil penalties is] necessary
to place the responsibility for compliance
with the Act and the regulations, as well as
the liability for violations on those who
control or supervise the operation of coal
mines as well as on those who operate them.’
In short, the purpose of a civil penalty is to
induce those officials responsible for the
operation of a mine to comply with the Act
and its standards.
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S. Rep. 95–181, Federal Mine Safety and
Health Act of 1977, 95th Cong. 1st
Session, at 40 (quoting S. Rep. 91–411,
Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act of 1969, 91st Cong. 1st Session, at
39).
Purpose of Section 110(c)
When a ‘‘corporate operator’’ violates
a mandatory health or safety standard
under the Mine Act, Section 110(c) of
the Act imposes personal liability on
‘‘any director, officer, or agent’’ of the
corporation who knowingly authorized,
ordered, or carried out the violation.
Because a corporation generally serves
as a shield against personal liability,
corporate directors, officers, and agents
generally are not personally liable for
legal violations committed by the
corporation.1 Congress’s enactment of
Section 110(c) reflected its concern that
corporate mine operators would have a
reduced incentive to comply with Mine
Act standards because a corporation
would shield the individuals who
control and supervise the mine—the
corporation’s directors, officers, and
agents—from personal liability. Section
1 In contrast, a partnership generally does not
shield individuals from personal liability.
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110(c) imposes liability for Mine Act
violations directly on the individuals
responsible for the violations. As the
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has
explained:
In a practical sense, any non-corporate
mining operation is going to be relatively
small, and the probability is that the
decision-maker is going to fit the statutory
definition of ‘‘operator.’’ In a larger, corporate
structure, the decision-maker may have
authority over only a part of the mining
operation. [Section 110(c)] assures that this
makes him no less liable for his actions.
In a noncorporate structure, the sole
proprietor or partners are personally liable as
‘‘operators’’ for violations; they cannot pass
off these penalties as a cost of doing business
as a corporation can. Therefore, the
noncorporate operator has a greater incentive
to make certain that his employees do not
violate mandatory health or safety standards
than does the corporate operator. [Section
110(c)] attempts to correct this imbalance by
giving the corporate employee a direct
incentive to comply with the Act.
Richardson v. Secretary of Labor, 689
F.2d 632, 633–34 (6th Cir. 1982), cert.
denied, 461 U.S. 928 (1983). Accord
United States v. Jones, 735 F.2d 785,
792–93 (4th Cir.) (‘‘Congress may have
believed that in a noncorporate coal
mining operation the threat of criminal
sanctions against the operator
personally would provide a sufficient
incentive to comply with the mandatory
safety standards. By contrast, in a
corporate mining operation, those who
are in control might well be insulated
from criminal responsibility, the
corporation being an impersonal legal
entity.’’), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 918
(1984).
The Interpretive Issue
The threshold issue in this situation
is ‘‘whether Congress has spoken to the
precise question’’ of the applicability of
section 110(c) to agents of LLCs.
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467
U.S. 837, 842–43 (1984). If Congress
unambiguously expressed an intent that
section 110(c) was not to apply to agents
of LLCs, that is the end of the matter.
Ibid. If the Mine Act is silent or
ambiguous with respect to the question,
however, an agency interpretation that
section 110(c) is applicable to agents of
LLCs should be accepted as long as it is
reasonable. Ibid.
By its terms, Section 110(c) applies
when a ‘‘corporate operator’’ violates a
Mine Act standard and a director,
officer, or agent ‘‘of such corporation’’
knowingly authorized, ordered, or
carried out the violation. The threshold
issue is thus whether, in enacting
section 110(c), Congress unambiguously
expressed an intent that section 110(c)
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26983
was not to apply to agents of LLCs. The
Secretary believes that Congress did not
express, and could not have expressed,
any intent with respect to agents of
LLCs because, when Congress enacted
Section 110(c), LLCs effectively did not
exist.
The courts have recognized that, over
time, conditions may come into
existence which Congress did not
contemplate when it enacted a statute,
but which implicate the concerns
Congress was addressing when it
enacted the statute. As the Supreme
Court stated in Browder v. United
States, 312 U.S. 335 (1941):
There is nothing in the legislative history to
indicate that Congress considered the
question of use by returning citizens. Old
crimes, however, may be committed under
new conditions. Old laws apply to changed
situations. The reach of the act is not
sustained or opposed by the fact that it is
sought to bring new situations under its
terms.
312 U.S. at 339 (footnotes omitted).
Accord Weems v. United States, 217
U.S. 349, 373 (1910) (‘‘Time works
changes, brings into existence new
conditions and purposes. Therefore a
principle, to be vital, must be capable of
wider application than the mischief
which gave it birth.’’). When confronted
with a question of statutory application
with respect to which Congress did not
express or could not have expressed an
intent when it enacted the statute,
courts have treated the question as one
the resolution of which was delegated to
the agency Congress authorized to
administer the statute. See NBD Bank,
N.A. v. Bennett, 67 F.3d 629, 632–33
(7th Cir. 1995); Zoelsch v. Arthur
Andersen & Co., 824 F.2d 27, 33 (D.C.
Cir. 1987). See also Kauthar SDN BHD
v. Sternberg, 149 F.3d 659, 663–67 (7th
Cir. 1998) (where resolution of the
question was not delegated to any
agency, the court itself filled the void
created by Congressional silence by
examining the underlying policy
concerns), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 1114
(1999); Robinson v. TI/US West
Communications Inc., 117 F.3d 900,
904–07 (5th Cir. 1997) (same).
Because Congress expressed no intent
with respect to agents of LLCs, the
question becomes whether an
interpretation that Section 110(c) is
applicable to agents of LLCs is
reasonable. See Chevron, 467 U.S. at
842–43; Excel Mining, 334 F.3d at 6.
The Secretary believes that it is. LLCs
generally create the same sort of shield
against personal liability which led
Congress to impose personal liability on
the directors, officers, and agents of
corporations. Indeed, LLCs fit within
the legal definition of a ‘‘corporation.’’
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26984
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 9, 2006 / Notices
See Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed.
1999) at 341 (a ‘‘corporation’’ is ‘‘[a]n
entity (usu. a business) having authority
under law to act as a single person
distinct from the shareholders who own
it * * *; a group or succession of
persons established in accordance with
legal rules into a legal or juristic person
that has legal personality distinct from
the natural persons who make it up
[and] exists indefinitely apart from them
* * *’’). See also Webster’s Third New
International Dictionary (2002) at 510 (a
‘‘corporation’’ is ‘‘a group of persons
* * * treated by the law as an
individual or unity having rights and
liabilities distinct from those of the
persons * * * composing it * * *’’).
Significantly, a number of LLCs in the
mining industry are the sort of relatively
large and corporately structured entities
which Congress had in mind when it
enacted Section 110(c). The Secretary
believes that the underlying objective
Congress identified when it enacted the
Coal Act in 1969 and reiterated when it
enacted the Mine Act in 1977—to place
responsibility for compliance and
liability for violations ‘‘on those who
control or supervise the operation of
* * * mines as well as on those who
operate them’’—will best be advanced if
Section 110(c) is interpreted as being
applicable to agents of LLCs.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the
Secretary believes that the interpretation
set forth in this Interpretive Bulletin is
permissible under the Mine Act, and
that it will advance the Act’s objectives
in cases involving LLCs by imposing
legal liability on those individuals
within the LLC who actually make the
decisions with regard to safety and
health in the mine.2
Dated: May 3, 2006.
David G. Dye,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety
and Health.
[FR Doc. 06–4317 Filed 5–8–06; 8:45 am]
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
National Science Board; Hearing on
International Science Partnerships
Date And Time: May 11, 2006.
Place: George Washington University,
Elliott School of International Affairs,
1957 E Street 7th Floor, City View
Room, Washington, DC.
Contact Information: Please refer to
the National Science Board Web site
(https://www.nsf.gov/nsb) for updated
schedule.
NSB Office: Amanda K Slocum, (703)
292–7000.
Status: This hearing is open to the
public.
Agenda:
7:30 a.m.–8 a.m.: Registration
8 a.m.–8:10 a.m.: Opening Comments
• Dr. Jon Strauss, Chair, Task Force
on International Science
8:10 a.m.–8:20 a.m.: Welcoming
Remarks
• Dr. Stephen Joel Trachtenberg,
President, George Washington
University
8:20 a.m.–8:30 a.m.: Introductions and
Overview of Proceedings
• Dr. Michael Crosby, Executive
Officer, NSB
8:30 a.m.–9:30 a.m.: Panel I—The Role
of Mission Agencies in International
Science Partnerships
9:30 a.m.–10:45 a.m.: Panel II—Funding
for International Science Partnerships
10:45 a.m.–11 a.m.: Break
11 p.m.–12:15 p.m.: Panel III—The Role
of Non-Governmental Organizations
in International Science
1:45 p.m.–3:15 p.m.: Panel IV—Policy
Perspectives on International Science
Partnerships
3:15 p.m.–3:30 p.m.: Summaries of
Discussions and Next Steps for the
Task Force
Michael P. Crosby,
Executive Officer and NSB Office Director.
[FR Doc. E6–6940 Filed 5–8–06; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4510–43–P
mstockstill on PROD1PC68 with NOTICES
2 The
Secretary recognizes that Section 110(c) has
been held not to apply to agents of partnerships
because, by its terms, Section 110(c) applies only
to agents of corporations. Paul Shirel and Donald
Guess, employed by Pyro Mining Co., 15 FMSHRC
2440 (1993), aff’d, 52 F.3d 1123 (D.C. Cir. 1995)
(unpublished). That holding has no bearing in this
situation, however, because partnerships, unlike
LLCs, existed and were a well-known form of
business organization when Congress enacted the
Mine Act.
The Secretary does not address in this
Interpretive Bulletin whether Section 110(c) is
applicable to agents of non-traditional business
entities other than LLCs. The Secretary will address
the applicability of Section 110(c) to the agents of
such entities as the question arises.
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Nuclear Regulatory
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ACTION: Notice of the OMB review of
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The NRC has recently
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1. Type of submission, new, revision,
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Comments and questions should be
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E:\FR\FM\09MYN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 89 (Tuesday, May 9, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 26982-26984]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-4317]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Mine Safety and Health Administration
Section 110(c) of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977;
Interpretation
AGENCY: Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), Department of
Labor.
ACTION: Interpretive bulletin.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This Interpretive Bulletin sets forth a statement of the
Secretary of Labor's interpretation of Section 110(c) of the Federal
Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 (Mine Act), 30 U.S.C. 820(c), as it
relates to agents of Limited Liability Companies (LLCs). The
Interpretive Bulletin is considered an interpretive rule and provides
an explanation of the Secretary's interpretation of Section 110(c) and
the rationale supporting that interpretation. For the reasons set forth
below, the Secretary's interpretation is that Section 110(c) of the
Mine Act is applicable to agents of LLCs. The effect of the Secretary's
interpretation is that agents of LLCs may be held personally liable
under Section 110(c) of the Mine Act if they knowingly authorize,
order, or carry out a violation of any mandatory health or safety
standard under the Act or a violation of or failure or refusal to
comply with any order issued under the Act or any order incorporated in
a final decision issued under certain provisions of the Act.
DATES: Comments on this Interpretive Bulletin are due June 8, 2006. The
Interpretive Bulletin is scheduled to be put into effect July 10, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may use mail, facsimile (fax), or electronic mail to
send us your comments regarding this Interpretive Bulletin. Clearly
identify your request and send it one of the following ways:
(1) Fax: (202) 693-9441. Include ``Interpretive Bulletin regarding
Limited Liability Companies'' in the subject line of the fax.
(2) By electronic mail to zzMSHA-comments@dol.gov. Include
``Interpretive Bulletin regarding Limited Liability Companies'' in the
subject line of your electronic mail.
(3) Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier: MSHA, Office of Standards,
Regulations, and Variances, 1100 Wilson Blvd., Room 2350, Arlington,
Virginia 22209-3939. If hand-delivered in person or by courier, you
must stop by the 21st floor first to check in with the receptionist.
Docket: To access comments electronically, go to https://
www.msha.gov and click on ``Comments'' under ``Rules and Regulations.''
All comments received will be posted without change at this Web
address, including any personal information provided. Paper copies of
the comments may also be reviewed at the Office of Standards,
Regulations, and Variances, 1100 Wilson Blvd., Room 2349, Arlington,
Virginia.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Patricia W. Silvey, Acting Director,
Office of Standards, Regulations, and Variances, MSHA, 1100 Wilson
Boulevard, Room 2350, Arlington, VA 22209-3939. Ms. Silvey can be
reached at Silvey.Patricia@DOL.GOV. (Internet E-mail), (202) 693-9440
(voice), or (202) 693-9441 (facsimile).
To subscribe to the MSHA listserve and receive automatic
notification of MSHA Federal Register publications, visit the site at
https://www.msha.gov/subscriptions/subscribe.aspx.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Introductory Statement
The Secretary of Labor is responsible for interpreting and applying
statutes she is authorized to administer. More specifically, Congress
delegated to the Secretary, acting through MSHA, the authority to
administer the Mine Act. See Secretary of Labor v. Excel Mining, LLC,
334 F.3d 1, 5-7 (D.C. Cir. 2003); Secretary of Labor on behalf of
Wamsley v. Mutual Mining, Inc., 80 F.3d 110, 113-14 (4th Cir. 1996).
The interpretation and application of statutory terms to particular
factual circumstances is an ongoing process. Publication of all
interpretive positions taken by the Secretary is impossible; at times,
however, the Secretary has found it useful as a means of notifying the
public in general, and interested segments of the public in particular,
to publish an Interpretive Bulletin or other documents setting forth
the Secretary's interpretive positions with respect to particular
provisions of statutes she administers.
The question has arisen whether Section 110(c) of the Mine Act is
applicable to agents of LLCs. The LLC is a relatively new business
entity which combines the limited liability provided by a corporation
with the ``pass-through'' tax treatment accorded to a partnership. LLCs
are like corporations in that they shield individuals from personal
liability; for that reason, they raise concerns similar to those which
led Congress to enact Section 110(c).
The status of LLCs under Section 110(c) has become a significant
issue under the Mine Act because, in recent years, the number of mine
operators organized as LLCs has steadily increased. According to MSHA
records, 782 of the Nation's 7,287 active mine operators--approximately
10 percent--now identify themselves as LLCs. The actual number may be
significantly greater because MSHA's mine identification forms do not
list ``LLC'' as an option and many LLCs may not identify themselves as
LLCs. A number of the Nation's large operators are LLCs.
The purpose of this Interpretive Bulletin is to make the public
aware of the Secretary's interpretation of the applicability of Section
110(c) to agents of LLCs--an interpretation the Secretary will apply in
administering and enforcing the Mine Act. The Secretary is soliciting
comments on the Interpretive Bulletin and will carefully review all
comments received. The Secretary believes, however, that the position
set forth in the Interpretive Bulletin represents an ``interpretive
rule'' as that term is used in the Administrative Procedure Act, and is
therefore not required to go through notice-and-comment rulemaking. See
5 U.S.C. Sec. 553(b)(3)(A); AMC v. MSHA, 995 F.2d 1106, 1108-13 (D.C.
Cir. 1993). So that the Secretary may carefully consider all comments
received, the Interpretive Bulletin is scheduled to be put into effect
60 days after it is published in the Federal Register.
Limited Liability Companies
The LLC is a hybrid business entity first recognized in 1977 by the
State of Wyoming. LLCs did not attain any significant popularity until
1988; however, when the Internal Revenue Service announced that LLCs
could be taxed as partnerships despite their corporation-like liability
shield. When the IRS announced in 1997 that LLCs could elect pass-
through taxation without regard to the number of corporation-like
characteristics they possessed, the number of LLCs grew dramatically.
Text and History of Section 110(c)
Section 110(c) of the Mine Act states as follows:
Whenever a corporate operator violates a mandatory health or safety
standard or knowingly violates or fails or refuses to comply with
any order issued under this Act or any order incorporated in a final
decision
[[Page 26983]]
under this Act, except an order incorporated in a decision issued
under Subsection (a) or Section 105(c), any director, officer, or
agent of such corporation who knowingly authorized, ordered, or
carried out such violation, failure, or refusal shall be subject to
the same civil penalties, fines, and imprisonment that may be
imposed upon a person under subsections (a) and (d).
30 U.S.C. 820(c) (emphases added). Section 110(c) of the Mine Act was
carried over essentially unchanged from the Federal Coal Mine Health
and Safety Act of 1969 (Coal Act). See 30 U.S.C. 819(c) (1969). The
legislative history of the Mine Act, quoting from the legislative
history of the Coal Act, stated:
Civil penalties are not a part of the enforcement scheme of the
Metal Act, but they have been part of the enforcement of the Coal
Act since its enactment in 1969. The purpose of such civil
penalties, of course, is not to raise revenues for the federal
treasury, but rather, is a recognition that: `[s]ince the basic
business judgments which dictate the method of operation of a coal
mine are made directly or indirectly by persons at various levels of
corporate structure, [the provision for assessment of civil
penalties is] necessary to place the responsibility for compliance
with the Act and the regulations, as well as the liability for
violations on those who control or supervise the operation of coal
mines as well as on those who operate them.' In short, the purpose
of a civil penalty is to induce those officials responsible for the
operation of a mine to comply with the Act and its standards.
S. Rep. 95-181, Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977, 95th Cong.
1st Session, at 40 (quoting S. Rep. 91-411, Federal Coal Mine Health
and Safety Act of 1969, 91st Cong. 1st Session, at 39).
Purpose of Section 110(c)
When a ``corporate operator'' violates a mandatory health or safety
standard under the Mine Act, Section 110(c) of the Act imposes personal
liability on ``any director, officer, or agent'' of the corporation who
knowingly authorized, ordered, or carried out the violation. Because a
corporation generally serves as a shield against personal liability,
corporate directors, officers, and agents generally are not personally
liable for legal violations committed by the corporation.\1\ Congress's
enactment of Section 110(c) reflected its concern that corporate mine
operators would have a reduced incentive to comply with Mine Act
standards because a corporation would shield the individuals who
control and supervise the mine--the corporation's directors, officers,
and agents--from personal liability. Section 110(c) imposes liability
for Mine Act violations directly on the individuals responsible for the
violations. As the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has explained:
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\1\ In contrast, a partnership generally does not shield
individuals from personal liability.
In a practical sense, any non-corporate mining operation is going to
be relatively small, and the probability is that the decision-maker
is going to fit the statutory definition of ``operator.'' In a
larger, corporate structure, the decision-maker may have authority
over only a part of the mining operation. [Section 110(c)] assures
that this makes him no less liable for his actions.
In a noncorporate structure, the sole proprietor or partners are
personally liable as ``operators'' for violations; they cannot pass
off these penalties as a cost of doing business as a corporation
can. Therefore, the noncorporate operator has a greater incentive to
make certain that his employees do not violate mandatory health or
safety standards than does the corporate operator. [Section 110(c)]
attempts to correct this imbalance by giving the corporate employee
a direct incentive to comply with the Act.
Richardson v. Secretary of Labor, 689 F.2d 632, 633-34 (6th Cir. 1982),
cert. denied, 461 U.S. 928 (1983). Accord United States v. Jones, 735
F.2d 785, 792-93 (4th Cir.) (``Congress may have believed that in a
noncorporate coal mining operation the threat of criminal sanctions
against the operator personally would provide a sufficient incentive to
comply with the mandatory safety standards. By contrast, in a corporate
mining operation, those who are in control might well be insulated from
criminal responsibility, the corporation being an impersonal legal
entity.''), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 918 (1984).
The Interpretive Issue
The threshold issue in this situation is ``whether Congress has
spoken to the precise question'' of the applicability of section 110(c)
to agents of LLCs. Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense
Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-43 (1984). If Congress unambiguously
expressed an intent that section 110(c) was not to apply to agents of
LLCs, that is the end of the matter. Ibid. If the Mine Act is silent or
ambiguous with respect to the question, however, an agency
interpretation that section 110(c) is applicable to agents of LLCs
should be accepted as long as it is reasonable. Ibid.
By its terms, Section 110(c) applies when a ``corporate operator''
violates a Mine Act standard and a director, officer, or agent ``of
such corporation'' knowingly authorized, ordered, or carried out the
violation. The threshold issue is thus whether, in enacting section
110(c), Congress unambiguously expressed an intent that section 110(c)
was not to apply to agents of LLCs. The Secretary believes that
Congress did not express, and could not have expressed, any intent with
respect to agents of LLCs because, when Congress enacted Section
110(c), LLCs effectively did not exist.
The courts have recognized that, over time, conditions may come
into existence which Congress did not contemplate when it enacted a
statute, but which implicate the concerns Congress was addressing when
it enacted the statute. As the Supreme Court stated in Browder v.
United States, 312 U.S. 335 (1941):
There is nothing in the legislative history to indicate that
Congress considered the question of use by returning citizens. Old
crimes, however, may be committed under new conditions. Old laws
apply to changed situations. The reach of the act is not sustained
or opposed by the fact that it is sought to bring new situations
under its terms.
312 U.S. at 339 (footnotes omitted). Accord Weems v. United States, 217
U.S. 349, 373 (1910) (``Time works changes, brings into existence new
conditions and purposes. Therefore a principle, to be vital, must be
capable of wider application than the mischief which gave it birth.'').
When confronted with a question of statutory application with respect
to which Congress did not express or could not have expressed an intent
when it enacted the statute, courts have treated the question as one
the resolution of which was delegated to the agency Congress authorized
to administer the statute. See NBD Bank, N.A. v. Bennett, 67 F.3d 629,
632-33 (7th Cir. 1995); Zoelsch v. Arthur Andersen & Co., 824 F.2d 27,
33 (D.C. Cir. 1987). See also Kauthar SDN BHD v. Sternberg, 149 F.3d
659, 663-67 (7th Cir. 1998) (where resolution of the question was not
delegated to any agency, the court itself filled the void created by
Congressional silence by examining the underlying policy concerns),
cert. denied, 525 U.S. 1114 (1999); Robinson v. TI/US West
Communications Inc., 117 F.3d 900, 904-07 (5th Cir. 1997) (same).
Because Congress expressed no intent with respect to agents of
LLCs, the question becomes whether an interpretation that Section
110(c) is applicable to agents of LLCs is reasonable. See Chevron, 467
U.S. at 842-43; Excel Mining, 334 F.3d at 6. The Secretary believes
that it is. LLCs generally create the same sort of shield against
personal liability which led Congress to impose personal liability on
the directors, officers, and agents of corporations. Indeed, LLCs fit
within the legal definition of a ``corporation.''
[[Page 26984]]
See Black's Law Dictionary (7th ed. 1999) at 341 (a ``corporation'' is
``[a]n entity (usu. a business) having authority under law to act as a
single person distinct from the shareholders who own it * * *; a group
or succession of persons established in accordance with legal rules
into a legal or juristic person that has legal personality distinct
from the natural persons who make it up [and] exists indefinitely apart
from them * * *''). See also Webster's Third New International
Dictionary (2002) at 510 (a ``corporation'' is ``a group of persons * *
* treated by the law as an individual or unity having rights and
liabilities distinct from those of the persons * * * composing it * *
*''). Significantly, a number of LLCs in the mining industry are the
sort of relatively large and corporately structured entities which
Congress had in mind when it enacted Section 110(c). The Secretary
believes that the underlying objective Congress identified when it
enacted the Coal Act in 1969 and reiterated when it enacted the Mine
Act in 1977--to place responsibility for compliance and liability for
violations ``on those who control or supervise the operation of * * *
mines as well as on those who operate them''--will best be advanced if
Section 110(c) is interpreted as being applicable to agents of LLCs.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Secretary believes that the
interpretation set forth in this Interpretive Bulletin is permissible
under the Mine Act, and that it will advance the Act's objectives in
cases involving LLCs by imposing legal liability on those individuals
within the LLC who actually make the decisions with regard to safety
and health in the mine.\2\
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\2\ The Secretary recognizes that Section 110(c) has been held
not to apply to agents of partnerships because, by its terms,
Section 110(c) applies only to agents of corporations. Paul Shirel
and Donald Guess, employed by Pyro Mining Co., 15 FMSHRC 2440
(1993), aff'd, 52 F.3d 1123 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (unpublished). That
holding has no bearing in this situation, however, because
partnerships, unlike LLCs, existed and were a well-known form of
business organization when Congress enacted the Mine Act.
The Secretary does not address in this Interpretive Bulletin
whether Section 110(c) is applicable to agents of non-traditional
business entities other than LLCs. The Secretary will address the
applicability of Section 110(c) to the agents of such entities as
the question arises.
Dated: May 3, 2006.
David G. Dye,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health.
[FR Doc. 06-4317 Filed 5-8-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-43-P