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Legacy Roofing, Inc. v. Department of Labor & Industries

Wash. Ct. App.August 9, 2005No. No. 31722-2-IICited 31 times
Defendant WinLegacy Roofing, Inc.$600 at issue
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Brintnall, Quinn
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The court affirmed the Department of Labor & Industries citation and penalty against Legacy Roofing for a serious WISHA violation involving an employee's failure to wear fall protection gear. Legacy's affirmative defense of unpreventable employee misconduct was rejected because the company failed to prove adequate communication, discovery, and enforcement of safety rules.

What This Ruling Means

**Legacy Roofing, Inc. v. Department of Labor & Industries** This case involved a workplace safety dispute at Legacy Roofing, Inc. The Washington State Department of Labor & Industries cited the company for a serious safety violation after one of their workers failed to wear required fall protection equipment while working on a roof. The department imposed a penalty, and Legacy Roofing challenged the citation in court. The company argued they shouldn't be held responsible because the employee's failure to wear safety gear was misconduct they couldn't have prevented. However, the court disagreed and upheld the department's citation and $600 penalty. The court found that Legacy Roofing failed to prove they had properly communicated safety rules to workers, adequately monitored compliance, or consistently enforced their safety policies. **What this means for workers:** Employers cannot simply blame workers for safety violations and avoid responsibility. Companies must actively communicate safety requirements, monitor whether workers follow safety rules, and consistently enforce workplace safety policies. When employers fail to do this properly, they remain liable for safety violations even when workers don't follow the rules. This ruling reinforces that workplace safety is primarily the employer's responsibility.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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