Appellee brought this action to obtain injunctive relief against
a warrantless inspection of its business premises pursuant to §
8(a) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSHA),
which empowers agents of the Secretary of Labor to search the work
area of any employment facility within OSHA's jurisdiction for
safety hazards and violations of OSHA regulations. A three-judge
District Court ruled in appellee's favor, concluding, in reliance
on
Camara v. Municipal Court, 387 U.
S. 523,
387 U. S.
528-529, and
See v. Seattle, 387 U.
S. 541,
387 U. S. 543,
that the Fourth Amendment required a warrant for the type of search
involved and that the statutory authorization for warrantless
inspections was unconstitutional.
Held: The inspection without a warrant or its
equivalent pursuant to § 8(a) of OSHA violated the Fourth
Amendment. Pp.
436 U. S.
311-325.
(a) The rule that warrantless searches are generally
unreasonable applies to commercial premises as well as homes.
Camara v. Municipal Court, supra, and
See v. Seattle,
supra. Pp.
436 U. S.
311-313.
(b) Though an exception to the search warrant requirement has
been recognized for "closely regulated" industries "long subject to
close supervision and inspection,"
Colonnade Catering Corp. v.
United States, 397 U. S. 72,
397 U. S. 74,
397 U. S. 77,
that exception does not apply simply because the business is in
interstate commerce. Pp.
436 U. S.
313-314.
(c) Nor does an employer's necessary utilization of employees in
his operation mean that he has opened areas where the employees
alone are permitted to the warrantless scrutiny of Government
agents. Pp.
436 U. S.
314-315.
(d) Insofar as experience to date indicates, requiring warrants
to make OSHA inspections will impose no serious burdens on the
inspection system or the courts. The advantages of surprise through
the opportunity of inspecting without prior notice will not be lost
if, after entry to an inspector is refused, an
ex parte
warrant can be obtained, facilitating an inspector's reappearance
at the premises without further notice; and appellant Secretary's
entitlement to a warrant will not depend on his demonstrating
probable cause to believe that conditions on the premises
Page 436 U. S. 308
violate OSHA, but merely that reasonable legislative or
administrative standards for conducting an inspection are satisfied
with respect to a particular establishment. Pp.
436 U. S.
315-321.
(e) Requiring a warrant for OSHA inspections does not mean that,
as a practical matter, warrantless search provisions in other
regulatory statutes are unconstitutional, as the reasonableness of
those provisions depends upon the specific enforcement needs and
privacy guarantees of each statute. Pp.
436 U. S.
321-322.
424 F.
Supp. 437, affirmed.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and STEWART, MARSHALL, and POWELL, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J.,
filed a dissenting opinion, in which BLACKMUN and REHNQUIST, JJ.,
joined,
post, p.
436 U. S. 325.
BRENNAN, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Page 436 U. S. 309
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 8(a) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970
(OSHA or Act) [
Footnote 1]
empowers agent of the Secretary of Labor (Secretary) to search the
work area of any employment facility within the Act's jurisdiction.
The purpose of the search is to inspect for safety hazards and
violations of OSHA regulations. No search warrant or other process
is expressly required under the Act.
On the morning of September 11, 1975, an OSHA inspector entered
the customer service area of Barlow's, Inc., an electrical and
plumbing installation business located in Pocatello, Idaho. The
president and general manager, Ferrol G. "Bill" Barlow, was on
hand; and the OSHA inspector, after showing his credentials,
[
Footnote 2] informed Mr.
Barlow that he wished to conduct
Page 436 U. S. 310
a search of the working areas of the business. Mr. Barlow
inquired whether any complaint had been received about his company.
The inspector answered no, but that Barlow's, Inc., had simply
turned up in the agency's selection process. The inspector again
asked to enter the nonpublic area of the business; Mr. Barlow's
response was to inquire whether the inspector had a search warrant.
The inspector had none. Thereupon, Mr. Barlow refused the inspector
admission to the employee area of his business. He said he was
relying on his rights as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment of the
United States Constitution.
Three months later, the Secretary petitioned the United States
District Court for the District of Idaho to issue an order
compelling Mr. Barlow to admit the inspector. [
Footnote 3] The requested order was issued on
December 30, 1975, and was presented to Mr. Barlow on January 5,
1976. Mr. Barlow again refused admission, and he sought his own
injunctive relief against the warrantless searches assertedly
permitted by OSHA. A three-judge court was convened. On December
30, 1976, it ruled in Mr. Barlow's favor.
424 F.
Supp. 437. Concluding that
Camara v. Municipal Court,
387 U. S. 523,
387 U. S.
528-529 (1967), and
See v. Seattle,
387 U. S. 541,
387 U. S. 543
(1967), controlled this case, the court held that the Fourth
Amendment required a warrant for the type of search involved here
[
Footnote 4] and that the
statutory authorization for warrantless inspections was
unconstitutional. An injunction against searches or inspections
pursuant to § 8(a) was entered. The Secretary appealed, challenging
the judgment, and we noted probable jurisdiction. 430 U.S. 964.
Page 436 U. S. 311
I
The Secretary urges that warrantless inspections to enforce OSHA
are reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Among
other things, he relies on § 8(a) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 657(a),
which authorizes inspection of business premises without a warrant
and which the Secretary urges represents a congressional
construction of the Fourth Amendment that the courts should not
reject. Regrettably, we are unable to agree.
The Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment protects commercial
buildings as well as private homes. To hold otherwise would belie
the origin of that Amendment, and the American colonial experience.
An important forerunner of the first 10 Amendments to the United
States Constitution, the Virginia Bill of Rights, specifically
opposed "general warrants, whereby an officer or messenger may be
commanded to search suspected places without evidence of a fact
committed." [
Footnote 5] The
general warrant was a recurring point of contention in the Colonies
immediately preceding the Revolution. [
Footnote 6] The particular offensiveness it engendered was
acutely felt by the merchants and businessmen whose premises and
products were inspected for compliance with the several
parliamentary revenue measures that most irritated the colonists.
[
Footnote 7]
"[T]he Fourth Amendment's commands grew in large measure out of
the colonists' experience with the writs of assistance . . . [that]
granted sweeping power to customs officials and other agents of the
King to search at large for smuggled goods."
United States v. Chadwick, 433 U. S.
1,
433 U. S. 7-8
(1977).
Page 436 U. S. 312
See also G. M. Leasing Corp. v. United States,
429 U. S. 338,
429 U. S. 355
(1977). Against this background, it is untenable that the ban on
warrantless searches was not intended to shield places of business
as well as of residence.
This Court has already held that warrantless searches are
generally unreasonable, and that this rule applies to commercial
premises as well as homes. In
Camara v. Municipal Court,
supra at
387 U. S.
528-529, we held:
"[E]xcept in certain carefully defined classes of cases, a
search of private property without proper consent is 'unreasonable'
unless it has been authorized by a valid search warrant."
On the same day, we also ruled:
"As we explained in
Camara, a search of private houses
is presumptively unreasonable if conducted without a warrant. The
businessman, like the occupant of a residence, has a constitutional
right to go about his business free from unreasonable official
entries upon his private commercial property. The businessman, too,
has that right placed in jeopardy if the decision to enter and
inspect for violation of regulatory laws can be made and enforced
by the inspector in the field without official authority evidenced
by a warrant."
See v. Seattle, supra at
387 U. S.
543.
These same cases also held that the Fourth Amendment prohibition
against unreasonable searches protects against warrantless
intrusions during civil, as well as criminal, investigations.
Ibid. The reason is found in the
"basic purpose of this Amendment . . . [which] is to safeguard
the privacy and security of individuals against arbitrary invasions
by governmental officials."
Camara, supra at
387 U. S. 528.
If the government intrudes on a person's property, the privacy
interest suffers whether the government's motivation is to
investigate violations of criminal laws or breaches of other
statutory or
Page 436 U. S. 313
regulatory standards. It therefore appears that, unless some
recognized exception to the warrant requirement applies,
See v.
Seattle would require a warrant to conduct the inspection
sought in this case.
The Secretary urges that an exception from the search warrant
requirement has been recognized for "pervasively regulated
business[es],"
United States v. Biswell, 406 U.
S. 311,
406 U. S. 316
(1972), and for "closely regulated" industries "long subject to
close supervision and inspection."
Colonnade Catering Corp. v.
United States, 397 U. S. 72,
397 U. S. 74, 77
(1970). These cases are indeed exceptions, but they represent
responses to relatively unique circumstances. Certain industries
have such a history of government oversight that no reasonable
expectation of privacy,
see Katz v. United States,
389 U. S. 347,
389 U. S.
351-352 (1967), could exist for a proprietor over the
stock of such an enterprise. Liquor (
Colonnade) and
firearms (
Biswell) are industries of this type; when an
entrepreneur embarks upon such a business, he has voluntarily
chosen to subject himself to a full arsenal of governmental
regulation.
Industries such as these fall within the "certain carefully
defined classes of cases," referenced in
Camara, 387 U.S.
at
387 U. S. 528.
The element that distinguishes these enterprises from ordinary
businesses is a long tradition of close government supervision, of
which any person who chooses to enter such a business must already
be aware.
"A central difference between those cases [
Colonnade
and
Biswell] and this one is that businessmen engaged in
such federally licensed and regulated enterprises accept the
burdens as well as the benefits of their trade, whereas the
petitioner here was not engaged in any regulated or licensed
business. The businessman in a regulated industry in effect
consents to the restrictions placed upon him."
Almeida-Sanchez v. United States, 413 U.
S. 266,
413 U. S. 271
(1973).
The clear import of our cases is that the closely regulated
industry of the type involved in
Colonnade and
Biswell is the exception. The Secretary would make it the
rule. Invoking
Page 436 U. S. 314
the Walsh-Healey Act of 1936, 41 U.S.C. § 35
et seq.,
the Secretary attempts to support a conclusion that all businesses
involved in interstate commerce have long been subjected to close
supervision of employee safety and health conditions. But the
degree of federal involvement in employee working circumstances has
never been of the order of specificity and pervasiveness that OSHA
mandates. It is quite unconvincing to argue that the imposition of
minimum wages and maximum hours on employers who contracted with
the Government under the Walsh-Healey Act prepared the entirety of
American interstate commerce for regulation of working conditions
to the minutest detail. Nor can any but the most fictional sense of
voluntary consent to later searches be found in the single fact
that one conducts a business affecting interstate commerce; under
current practice and law, few businesses can be conducted without
having some effect on interstate commerce.
The Secretary also attempts to derive support for a
Colonnde-Biswell type exception by drawing analogies from
the field of labor law. In
Republic Aviation Corp. v.
NLRB, 324 U. S. 793
(1945), this Court upheld the rights of employees to solicit for a
union during nonworking time where efficiency was not compromised.
By opening up his property to employees, the employer had yielded
so much of his private property rights as to allow those employees
to exercise § 7 rights under the National Labor Relations Act. But
this Court also held that the private property rights of an owner
prevailed over the intrusion of nonemployee organizers, even in
nonworking area of the plant and during nonworking hours.
NLRB
v. Babcock & Wilcox Co., 351 U. S. 105
(1956).
The critical fact in this case is that entry over Mr. Barlow's
objection is being sought by a Government agent. [
Footnote 8] Employees
Page 436 U. S. 315
are not being prohibited from reporting OSHA violations. What
they observe in their daily functions is undoubtedly beyond the
employer's reasonable expectation of privacy. The Government
inspector, however, is not an employee. Without a warrant, he
stands in no better position than a member of the public. What is
observable by the public is observable, without a warrant, by the
Government inspector as well. [
Footnote 9] The owner of a business has not, by the
necessary utilization of employees in his operation, thrown open
the areas where employees alone are permitted to the warrantless
scrutiny of Government agents. That an employee is free to report,
and the Government is free to use, any evidence of noncompliance
with OSHA that the employee observes furnishes no justification for
federal agents to enter a place of business from which the public
is restricted and to conduct their own warrantless search.
[
Footnote 10]
II
The Secretary nevertheless stoutly argues that the enforcement
scheme of the Act requires warrantless searches, and that the
restrictions on search discretion contained in the Act and its
regulations already protect as much privacy as a warrant would. The
Secretary thereby asserts the actual reasonableness of OSHA
searches, whatever the general rule against warrantless searches
might be. Because "reasonableness is still the ultimate standard,"
Camara v. Municipal
Page 436 U. S. 316
Court, 387 U.S. at
387 U. S. 539,
the Secretary suggests that the Court decide whether a warrant is
needed by arriving at a sensible balance between the administrative
necessities of OSHA inspections and the incremental protection of
privacy of business owners a warrant would afford. He suggests that
only a decision exempting OSHA inspections from the Warrant Clause
would give "full recognition to the competing public and private
interests here at stake."
Ibid.
The Secretary submits that warrantless inspections are essential
to the proper enforcement of OSHA because they afford the
opportunity to inspect without prior notice, and hence to preserve
the advantages of surprise. While the dangerous conditions outlawed
by the Act include structural defects that cannot be quickly hidden
or remedied, the Act also regulates a myriad of safety details that
may be amenable to speedy alteration or disguise. The risk is that,
during the interval between an inspector's initial request to
search a plant and his procuring a warrant following the owner's
refusal of permission, violations of this latter type could be
corrected, and thus escape the inspector's notice. To the
suggestion that warrants may be issued
ex parte and
executed without delay and without prior notice, thereby preserving
the element of surprise, the Secretary expresses concern for the
administrative strain that would be experienced by the inspection
system, and by the courts should
ex parte warrants issued
in advance become standard practice.
We are unconvinced, however, that requiring warrants to inspect
will impose serious burdens on the inspection system or the courts,
will prevent inspections necessary to enforce the statute, or will
make them less effective. In the first place, the great majority of
businessmen can be expected in normal course to consent to
inspection without warrant; the Secretary has not brought to this
Court's attention any widespread pattern of refusal. [
Footnote 11] In those cases where an
owner does insist
Page 436 U. S. 317
on a warrant; the Secretary argues that inspection efficiency
will be impeded by the advance notice and delay. The Act's penalty
provisions for giving advance notice of a search, 29 U.S.C. §
666(f), and the Secretary's own regulations, 29 CFR § 1903.6 (1977)
, indicate that surprise searches are indeed contemplated. However,
the Secretary has also promulgated a regulation providing that,
upon refusal to permit an inspector to enter the property or to
complete his inspection, the inspector shall attempt to ascertain
the reasons for the refusal and report to his superior, who shall
"promptly take appropriate action, including compulsory process, if
necessary." 29 CFR § 1903.4 (1977). [
Footnote 12] The regulation represents a choice to
proceed
Page 436 U. S. 318
by process where entry is refused; and, on the basis of evidence
available from present practice, the Act's effectiveness has not
been crippled by providing those owners who wish to refuse an
initial requested entry with a time lapse while the inspector
obtains the necessary process. [
Footnote 13] Indeed, the kind of process sought in this
case and apparently anticipated by the regulation provides notice
to the business operator. [
Footnote 14]
Page 436 U. S. 319
If this safeguard endangers the efficient administration of
OSHA, the Secretary should never have adopted it, particularly when
the Act does not require it. Nor is it immediately
Page 436 U. S. 320
apparent why the advantages of surprise would be lost if, after
being refused entry, procedures were available for the Secretary to
seek an
ex parte warrant and to reappear at the premises
without further notice to the establishment being inspected.
[
Footnote 15]
Whether the Secretary proceeds to secure a warrant or other
process, with or without prior notice, his entitlement to inspect
will not depend on his demonstrating probable cause to believe that
conditions in violation of OSHA exist on the premises. Probable
cause in the criminal law sense is not required. For purposes of an
administrative search such as this, probable cause justifying the
issuance of a warrant may be based not only on specific evidence of
an existing violation, [
Footnote
16] but also on a showing that "reasonable legislative or
administrative standards for conducting an . . . inspection are
satisfied with respect to a particular [establishment]."
Camara
Page 436 U. S. 321
v. Municipal Court, 387 U.S. at
387 U. S. 538.
A warrant showing that a specific business has been chosen for an
OSHA search on the basis of a general administrative plan for the
enforcement of the Act derived from neutral sources such as, for
example, dispersion of employees in various types of industries
across a given area, and the desired frequency of searches in any
of the lesser divisions of the area, would protect an employer's
Fourth Amendment rights. [
Footnote 17] We doubt that the consumption of enforcement
energies in the obtaining of such warrants will exceed manageable
proportions.
Finally, the Secretary urges that requiring a warrant for OSHA
inspectors will mean that, as a practical matter, warrantless
search provisions in other regulatory statutes are also
constitutionally infirm. The reasonableness of a warrantless
search, however, will depend upon the specific enforcement needs
and privacy guarantees of each statute. Some of the statutes cited
apply only to a single industry, where regulations might already be
so pervasive that a
Colonnade-Biswell exception to the
warrant requirement could apply. Some statutes already envision
resort to federal court enforcement when entry is refused,
employing specific language in some cases [
Footnote 18] and general language in others.
[
Footnote 19] In short, we
base
Page 436 U. S. 322
today's opinion on the facts and law concerned with OSHA, and do
not retreat from a holding appropriate to that statute because of
its real or imagined effect on other, different administrative
schemes.
Nor do we agree that the incremental protections afforded the
employer's privacy by a warrant are so marginal that they fail to
justify the administrative burdens that may be entailed.
Page 436 U. S. 323
The authority to make warrantless searches devolves almost
unbridled discretion upon executive and administrative officers,
particularly those in the field, as to when to search and whom to
search. A warrant, by contrast, would provide assurances from a
neutral officer that the inspection is reasonable under the
Constitution, is authorized by statute, and is pursuant to an
administrative plan containing specific neutral criteria. [
Footnote 20] Also, a warrant would
then and there advise the owner of the scope and objects of the
search, beyond which limits the inspector is not expected to
proceed. [
Footnote 21] These
are important functions for a warrant to perform, functions which
underlie the Court's prior decisions that the Warrant Clause
applies to
Page 436 U. S. 324
inspections for compliance with regulatory statutes. [
Footnote 22]
Camara v. Municipal
Court, 387 U. S. 523
(1967);
See v. Seattle, 387 U. S. 541
(1967). We conclude that the concerns expressed by the Secretary do
not suffice to justify warrantless inspections under OSHA or
vitiate the general constitutional requirement that for a search to
be reasonable a warrant must be obtained.
Page 436 U. S. 325
III
We hold that Barlow's was entitled to a declaratory judgment
that the Act is unconstitutional insofar as it purports to
authorize inspections without warrant or its equivalent and to an
injunction enjoining the Act's enforcement to that extent.
[
Footnote 23] The judgment
of the District Court is therefore affirmed.
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
"In order to carry out the purposes of this chapter, the
Secretary, upon presenting appropriate credentials to the owner,
operator, or agent in charge, is authorized -- "
"(1) to enter without delay and at reasonable times any factory,
plant, establishment, construction site, or other area, workplace
or environment where work is performed by an employee of an
employer; and"
"(2) to inspect and investigate during regular working hours and
at other reasonable times, and within reasonable limits and in a
reasonable manner, any such place of employment and all pertinent
conditions, structures, machines, apparatus, devices, equipment,
and materials therein, and to question privately any such employer,
owner, operator, agent, or employee."
8 Stat. 1598, 29 U.S.C. § 657(a).
[
Footnote 2]
This is required by the Act.
See n 1,
supra.
[
Footnote 3]
A regulation of the Secretary, 29 CFR § 1903.4 (1977), requires
an inspector to seek compulsory process if an employer refuses a
requested search.
See infra at
436 U. S. 317,
and n. 12.
[
Footnote 4]
No
res judicata bar arose against Mr. Barlow from the
December 30, 1975, order authorizing a search, because the earlier
decision reserved the constitutional issue.
See 424 F.
Supp. 437.
[
Footnote 5]
H. Commager, Documents of American History 104 (8th
ed.1968).
[
Footnote 6]
See, e.g., Dickerson, Writs of Assistance as a Cause of
the Revolution in The Era of the American Revolution 40 (R. Morris
ed.1939).
[
Footnote 7]
The Stamp Act of 1765, the Townshend Revenue Act of 1767, and
the tea tax of 1773 are notable examples.
See Commager,
supra, n 5, at 53, 63.
For commentary,
see 1 S. Morison, H. Commager, & W.
Leuchtenburg, The Growth of the American Republic 143, 149, 159
(1969).
[
Footnote 8]
The Government has asked that Mr. Barlow be ordered to show
cause why he should not be held in contempt for refusing to honor
the inspection order, and its position is that the OSHA inspector
is now entitled to enter at once, over Mr. Barlow's objection.
[
Footnote 9]
Cf. Air Pollution Variance Bd. v. Western Alfalfa
Corp., 416 U. S. 861
(1974).
[
Footnote 10]
The automobile search cases cited by the Secretary are even less
helpful to his position than the labor cases. The fact that
automobiles occupy a special category in Fourth Amendment case law
is by now beyond doubt due, among other factors, to the quick
mobility of a car, the registration requirements of both the car
and the driver, and the more available opportunity for plain view
observations of a car's contents.
Cady v. Dombrowski,
413 U. S. 433,
413 U. S.
441-442 (1973);
see also Chambers v. Maroney,
399 U. S. 42,
399 U. S. 451
(1970). Even so, probable cause has not been abandoned as a
requirement for stopping and searching an automobile.
[
Footnote 11]
We recognize that today's holding itself might have an impact on
whether owners choose to resist requested searches; we can only
await the development of evidence not present on this record to
determine how serious an impediment to effective enforcement this
might be.
[
Footnote 12]
It is true, as the Secretary asserts, that § 8(a) of the Act, 29
U.S.C. § 657(a), purports to authorize inspections without warrant;
but it is also true that it does not forbid the Secretary from
proceeding to inspect only by warrant or other process. The
Secretary has broad authority to prescribe such rules and
regulations as he may deem necessary to carry out his
responsibilities under this chapter, "including rules and
regulations dealing with the inspection of an employer's
establishment." § 8(g)(2), 29 U.S.C. § 657(g)(2). The regulations
with respect to inspections are contained in 29 CFR Part 1903
(1977). Section 1903.4, referred to in the text, provides as
follows:
"Upon a refusal to permit a Compliance Safety and Health
Officer, in the exercise of his official duties, to enter without
delay and at reasonable times any place of employment or any place
therein, to inspect, to review records, or to question any
employer, owner, operator, agent, or employee, in accordance with §
1903.3, or to permit a representative of employees to accompany the
Compliance Safety and Health Officer during the physical inspection
of any workplace in accordance with § 1903.8, the Compliance Safety
and Health Officer shall terminate the inspection or confine the
inspection to other areas, conditions, structures, machines,
apparatus, devices, equipment, materials, records, or interviews
concerning which no objection is raised. The Compliance Safety and
Health Officer shall endeavor to ascertain the reason for such
refusal, and he shall immediately report the refusal and the reason
therefor to the Area Director. The Area Director shall immediately
consult with the Assistant Regional Director and the Regional
Solicitor, who shall promptly take appropriate action, including
compulsory process, if necessary."
When his representative was refused admission by Mr. Barlow, the
Secretary proceeded in federal court to enforce his right to enter
and inspect, as conferred by 29 U.S.C. § 657.
[
Footnote 13]
A change in the language of the Compliance Operations Manual for
OSHA inspectors supports the inference that, whatever the Act's
administrators might have thought at the start, it was eventually
concluded that enforcement efficiency would not be jeopardized by
permitting employers to refuse entry, at least until the inspector
obtained compulsory process. The 1972 Manual included a section
specifically directed to obtaining "warrants," and one provision of
that section dealt with
ex parte warrants:
"In cases where a refusal of entry is to be expected from the
past performance of the employer, or where the employer has given
some indication prior to the commencement of the investigation of
his intention to bar entry or limit or interfere with the
investigation, a warrant should be obtained before the inspection
is attempted. Cases of this nature should also be referred through
the Area Director to the appropriate Regional Solicitor and the
Regional Administrator alerted."
Dept. of Labor, OSHA Compliance Operations Manual V-7
(Jan.1972). The latest available manual, incorporating changes as
of November, 1977, deletes this provision, leaving only the details
for obtaining "compulsory process"
after an employer has
refused entry. Dept. of Labor, OSHA Field Operations Manual, Vol.
V, pp. V-4 - V-5. In its present form, the Secretary's regulation
appears to permit establishment owners to insist on "process", and
hence their refusal to permit entry would fall short of criminal
conduct within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. §§ 111 and 1114 (1976 ed.),
which make it a crime forcibly to impede, intimidate, or interfere
with federal officials, including OSHA inspectors, while engaged in
or on account of the performance of their official duties.
[
Footnote 14]
The proceeding was instituted by filing an "Application for
Affirmative Order to Grant Entry and for an Order to show cause why
such affirmative order should not issue." The District Court issued
the order to show cause, the matter was argued, and an order then
issued authorizing the inspection and enjoining interference by
Barlow's. The following is the order issued by the District
Court:
"IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the United
States of America, United States Department of Labor, Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, through its duly designated
representative or representatives, are entitled to entry upon the
premises known as Barlow's Inc., 225 West Pine, Pocatello, Idaho,
and may go upon said business premises to conduct an inspection and
investigation as provided for in Section 8 of the Occupational
Safety and Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 651,
et seq.), as
part of an inspection program designed to assure compliance with
that Act; that the inspection and investigation shall be conducted
during regular working hours or at other reasonable times, within
reasonable limits and in a reasonable manner, all as set forth in
the regulations pertaining to such inspections promulgated by the
Secretary of Labor, at 29 C.F.R., Part 1903; that appropriate
credentials as representatives of the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration, United States Department of Labor, shall be
presented to the Barlow's Inc. representative upon said premises
and the inspection and investigation shall be commenced as soon as
practicable after the issuance of this Order and shall be completed
within reasonable promptness; that the inspection and investigation
shall extend to the establishment or other area, workplace, or
environment where work is performed by employees of the employer,
Barlow's Inc., and to all pertinent conditions, structures,
machines, apparatus, devices, equipment, materials, and all other
things therein (including but not limited to records, files,
papers, processes, controls, and facilities) bearing upon whether
Barlow's Inc. is furnishing to its employees employment and a place
of employment that are free from recognized hazards that are
causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to
its employees, and whether Barlow's Inc. is complying with the
Occupational Safety and Health Standards promulgated under the
Occupational Safety and Health Act and the rules, regulations, and
orders issued pursuant to that Act; that representatives of the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration may, at the option of
Barlow's Inc., be accompanied by one or more employees of Barlow's
Inc., pursuant to Section 8(e) of that Act; that Barlow's Inc., its
agents, representatives, officers, and employees are hereby
enjoined and restrained from in anyway whatsoever interfering with
the inspection and investigation authorized by this Order and,
further, Barlow's Inc. is hereby ordered and directed to, within
five working days from the date of this Order, furnish a copy of
this Order to its officers and managers, and, in addition, to post
a copy of this Order at its employee's bulletin board located upon
the business premises; and Barlow's Inc. is hereby ordered and
directed to comply in all respects with this order and allow the
inspection and investigation to take place without delay and
forthwith."
[
Footnote 15]
Insofar as the Secretary's statutory authority is concerned, a
regulation expressly providing that the Secretary could proceed
ex parte to seek a warrant or its equivalent would appear
to be as much within the Secretary's power as the regulation
currently in force and calling for "compulsory process."
[
Footnote 16]
Section 8(f)(1), 29 U.S.C. § 657(f)(1), provides that employees
or their representatives may give written notice to the Secretary
of what they believe to be violations of safety or health standards
and may request an inspection. If the Secretary then determines
that
"there are reasonable grounds to believe that such violation or
danger exists, he shall make a special inspection in accordance
with the provisions of this section as soon as practicable."
The statute thus purports to authorize a warrantless inspection
in these circumstances.
[
Footnote 17]
The Secretary, Brief for Petitioner 9 n. 7, states that the
Barlow inspection was not based on an employee complaint, but was a
"general schedule" investigation. "Such general inspections," he
explains,
"now called Regional Programmed Inspections, are carried out in
accordance with criteria based upon accident experience and the
number of employees exposed in particular industries. United States
Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration,
Field Operations Manual,
supra, 1 CCH Employment Safety
and Health Guide � 4327.2 (1976)."
[
Footnote 18]
The Federal Metal and Nonmetallic Mine Safety Act provides:
"Whenever an operator . . . refuses to permit the inspection or
investigation of any mine which is subject to this chapter . . . a
civil action for preventive relief, including an application for a
permanent or temporary injunction, restraining order, or other
order, may be instituted by the Secretary in the district court of
the United States for the district. . . ."
30 U.S.C. § 733(a).
"The Secretary may institute a civil action for relief,
including a permanent or temporary injunction, restraining order,
or any other appropriate order in the district court . . . whenever
such operator or his agent . . . refuses to permit the inspection
of the mine. . . . Each court shall have jurisdiction to provide
such relief as may be appropriate."
30 U.S.C. § 818. Another example is the Clean Air Act, which
grants federal district courts jurisdiction "to require compliance"
with the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency's
attempt to inspect under 42 U.S.C. § 7414 (1976 ed., Supp. 1), when
the Administrator has commenced "a civil action" for injunctive
relief or to recover a penalty. 42 U.S.C. § 7413(b)(4) (1976 ed.,
Supp. 1).
[
Footnote 19]
Exemplary language is contained in the Animal Welfare Act of
1970 which provides for inspections by the Secretary of
Agriculture; federal district courts are vested with
jurisdiction
"specifically to enforce, and to prevent and restrain violations
of this chapter, and shall have jurisdiction in all other kinds of
cases arising under this chapter."
7 U.S.C. § 2146(c) (1976 ed.). Similar provisions are included
in other agricultural inspection Acts;
see, e.g., 21
U.S.C. § 674 (meat product inspection); 21 U.S.C. § 1050 (egg
product inspection). The Internal Revenue Code, whose excise tax
provisions requiring inspections of businesses are cited by the
Secretary, provides:
"The district courts . . . shall have such jurisdiction to make
and issue in civil actions, writs and orders of injunction . . .
and such other orders and processes, and to render such . . .
decrees as may be necessary or appropriate for the enforcement of
the internal revenue laws."
26 U.S.C. § 7402(a). For gasoline inspections, federal district
courts are granted jurisdiction to restrain violations and enforce
standards (one of which, 49 U.S.C. § 1677, requires gas
transporters to permit entry or inspection). The owner is to be
afforded the opportunity for notice and response in most cases, but
"failure to give such notice and afford such opportunity shall not
preclude the granting of appropriate relief [by the district
court]." 49 U.S.C. § 1679(a).
[
Footnote 20]
The application for the inspection order filed by the Secretary
in this case represented that
"the desired inspection and investigation are contemplated as a
part of an inspection program designed to assure compliance with
the Act and are authorized by Section 8(a) of the Act."
The program was not described, however, or any facts presented
that would indicate why an inspection of Barlow's establishment was
within the program. The order that issued concluded generally that
the inspection authorized was "part of an inspection program
designed to assure compliance with the Act."
[
Footnote 21]
Section 8(a) of the Act, as set forth in 29 U.S.C. § 657(a),
provides that, "[i]n order to carry out the purposes of this
chapter," the Secretary may enter any establishment, area,
workplace or environment "where work is performed by an employee of
an employer" and "inspect and investigate" any such place of
employment and all
"pertinent conditions, structures, machines, apparatus, devices,
equipment, and materials therein, and . . . question privately any
such employer, owner, operator, agent, or employee."
Inspections are to be carried out "during regular working hours
and at other reasonable times, and within reasonable limits and in
a reasonable manner." The Secretary's regulations echo the
statutory language in these respects. 29 CFR § 1903.3 (1977). They
also provide that inspectors are to explain the nature and purpose
of the inspection and to "indicate generally the scope of the
inspection." 29 CFR § 1903.7(a) (1977). Environmental samples and
photographs are authorized, 29 CFR § 1903.7(b) (1977), and
inspections are to be performed so as "to preclude unreasonable
disruption of the operations of the employer's establishment." 29
CFR § 1903.7(d) (1977). The order that issued in this case
reflected much of the foregoing statutory and regulatory
language.
[
Footnote 22]
Delineating the scope of a search with some care is particularly
important where documents are involved. Section 8(c) of the Act, 29
U.S.C. § 657(c), provides that an employer must "make, keep and
preserve, and make available to the Secretary [of Labor] or to the
Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare" such records regarding
his activities relating to OSHA as the Secretary of Labor may
prescribe by regulation as necessary or appropriate for enforcement
of the statute or for developing information regarding the causes
and prevention of occupational accidents and illnesses. Regulations
requiring employers to maintain records of and to make periodic
reports on "work-related deaths, injuries and illnesses" are also
contemplated, as are rules requiring accurate records of employee
exposures to potential toxic materials and harmful physical
agents.
In describing the scope of the warrantless inspection authorized
by the statute, § 8(a) does not expressly include any records among
those items or things that may be examined, and § 8(c) merely
provides that the employer is to "make available" his pertinent
records and to make periodic reports.
The Secretary's regulation, 29 CFR § 1903.3 (1977), however,
expressly includes among the inspector's powers the authority
"to review records required by the Act and regulations published
in this chapter, and other records which are directly related to
the purpose of the inspection."
Further, § 1903.7 requires inspectors to indicate generally "the
records specified in § 1903.3 which they wish to review" but "such
designations of records shall not preclude access to additional
records specified in § 1903.3." It is the Secretary's position,
which we reject, that an inspection of documents of this scope may
be effected without a warrant.
The order that issued in this case included among the objects
and things to be inspected
"all other things therein (including but not limited to records,
files, papers, processes, controls and facilities) bearing upon
whether Barlow's, Inc. is furnishing to its employees employment
and a place of employment that are free from recognized hazards
that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical
harm to its employees, and whether Barlow's, Inc. is complying with
. . ."
the OSHA regulations.
[
Footnote 23]
The injunction entered by the District Court, however, should
not be understood to forbid the Secretary from exercising the
inspection authority conferred by § 8 pursuant to regulations and
judicial process that satisfy the Fourth Amendment. The District
Court did not address the issue whether the order for inspection
that was issued in this case was the functional equivalent of a
warrant, and the Secretary has limited his submission in this case
to the constitutionality of a warrantless search of the Barlow
establishment authorized by § 8(a). He has expressly declined to
rely on 29 CFR § 1903.4 (1977) and upon the order obtained in this
case. Tr. of Oral Arg.19. Of course, if the process obtained here,
or obtained in other cases under revised regulations, would satisfy
the Fourth Amendment, there would be no occasion for enjoining the
inspections authorized by § 8(a).
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN and MR.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, dissenting.
Congress enacted the Occupational Safety and Health Act to
safeguard employees against hazards in the work areas of businesses
subject to the Act. To ensure compliance, Congress authorized the
Secretary of Labor to conduct routine, nonconsensual inspections.
Today the Court holds that the Fourth Amendment prohibits such
inspections without a warrant. The Court also holds that the
constitutionally required warrant may be issued without any showing
of probable cause. I disagree with both of these holdings.
The Fourth Amendment contains two separate Clauses, each
Page 436 U. S. 326
flatly prohibiting a category of governmental conduct. The first
Clause states that the right to be free from unreasonable searches
"shall not be violated"; [
Footnote
2/1] the second unequivocally prohibits the issuance of
warrants except "upon probable cause." [
Footnote 2/2] In this case, the ultimate question is
whether the category of warrantless searches authorized by the
statute is "unreasonable" within the meaning of the first
Clause.
In cases involving the investigation of criminal activity, the
Court has held that the reasonableness of a search generally
depends upon whether it was conducted pursuant to a valid warrant.
See, e.g., Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.
S. 443. There is, however, also a category of searches
which are reasonable within the meaning of the first Clause even
though the probable cause requirement of the Warrant Clause cannot
be satisfied.
See United States v. Martinez-Fuerte,
428 U. S. 543;
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1;
South Dakota v. Opperman, 428 U.
S. 364;
United States v. Biswell, 406 U.
S. 311. The regulatory inspection program challenged in
this case, in my judgment, falls within this category.
I
The warrant requirement is linked "textually . . . to the
probable cause concept" in the Warrant Clause.
South Dakota v.
Opperman, supra at
428 U. S. 370
n. 5. The routine OSHA inspections are, by definition, not based on
cause to believe there is a violation on the premises to be
inspected. Hence, if the inspections were measured against the
requirements of the Warrant Clause, they would be automatically and
unequivocally unreasonable.
Page 436 U. S. 327
Because of the acknowledged importance and reasonableness of
routine inspections in the enforcement of federal regulatory
statutes such as OSHA, the Court recognizes that requiring full
compliance with the Warrant Clause would invalidate all such
inspection programs. Yet, rather than simply analyzing such
programs under the "Reasonableness" Clause of the Fourth Amendment,
the Court holds the OSHA program invalid under the Warrant Clause
and then avoids a blanket prohibition on all routine, regulatory
inspections by relying on the notion that the "probable cause"
requirement in the Warrant Clause may be relaxed whenever the Court
believes that the governmental need to conduct a category of
"searches" outweighs the intrusion on interests protected by the
Fourth Amendment.
The Court's approach disregards the plain language of the
Warrant Clause and is unfaithful to the balance struck by the
Framers of the Fourth Amendment --
"the one procedural safeguard in the Constitution that grew
directly out of the events which immediately preceded the
revolutionary struggle with England. [
Footnote 2/3]"
This preconstitutional history includes the controversy in
England over the issuance of general warrants to aid enforcement of
the seditious libel laws and the colonial experience with writs of
assistance issued to facilitate collection of the various import
duties imposed by Parliament. The Framers' familiarity with the
abuses attending the issuance of such general warrants provided the
principal stimulus for the restraints on arbitrary governmental
intrusions embodied in the Fourth Amendment.
"[O]ur constitutional fathers were not concerned about
warrantless searches, but about overreaching warrants. It is
perhaps too much to say that they feared the warrant more than the
search, but it is plain enough that the warrant was the prime
object of their concern. Far from
Page 436 U. S. 328
looking at the warrant as a protection against unreasonable
searches, they saw it as an authority for unreasonable and
oppressive searches. . . . [
Footnote
2/4]"
Since the general warrant, not the warrantless search, was the
immediate evil at which the Fourth Amendment was directed, it is
not surprising that the Framers placed precise limits on its
issuance. The requirement that a warrant only issue on a showing of
particularized probable cause was the means adopted to circumscribe
the warrant power. While the subsequent course of Fourth Amendment
jurisprudence in this Court emphasizes the dangers posed by
warrantless searches conducted without probable cause, it is the
general reasonableness standard in the first Clause, not the
Warrant Clause, that the Framers adopted to limit this category of
searches. It is, of course, true that the existence of a valid
warrant normally satisfies the reasonableness requirement under the
Fourth Amendment. But we should not dilute the requirements of the
Warrant Clause in an effort to force every kind of governmental
intrusion which satisfies the Fourth Amendment definition of a
"search" into a judicially developed, warrant preference
scheme.
Fidelity to the original understanding of the Fourth Amendment,
therefore, leads to the conclusion that the Warrant Clause has no
application to routine, regulatory inspections of commercial
premises. If such inspections are valid, it is because they comport
with the ultimate reasonableness standard of the Fourth Amendment.
If the Court were correct in its view that such inspections, if
undertaken without a warrant, are unreasonable in the
constitutional sense, the issuance of a "new-fangled warrant" -- to
use Mr. Justice Clark's characteristically expressive term --
without any true showing of particularized probable cause would not
be sufficient to validate them. [
Footnote 2/5]
Page 436 U. S. 329
II
Even if a warrant issued without probable cause were faithful to
the Warrant Clause, I could not accept the Court's holding that the
Government's inspection program is constitutionally unreasonable
because it fails to require such a warrant procedure. In
determining whether a warrant is a necessary safeguard in a given
class of cases, "the Court has weighed the public interest against
the Fourth Amendment interest of the individual. . . ."
United
States v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 555.
Several considerations persuade me that this balance should be
struck in favor of the routine inspections authorized by
Congress.
Congress has determined that regulation and supervision of
safety in the workplace furthers an important public interest and
that the power to conduct warrantless searches is necessary to
accomplish the safety goals of the legislation. In assessing the
public interest side of the Fourth Amendment balance, however, the
Court today substitutes its judgment for that of Congress on the
question of what inspection authority is needed to effectuate the
purposes of the Act. The Court states that, if surprise is truly an
important ingredient of an effective, representative inspection
program, it can be retained by obtaining
ex parte warrants
in advance. The Court assures the Secretary that this will not
unduly burden enforcement resources because most employers will
consent to inspection.
The Court's analysis does not persuade me that Congress'
determination that the warrantless inspection power as a necessary
adjunct of the exercise of the regulatory power is unreasonable. It
was surely not unreasonable to conclude that the rate at which
employers deny entry to inspectors would increase if covered
businesses, which may have safety violations on their premises,
have a right to deny warrantless entry to a compliance inspector.
The Court is correct that this problem could be avoided by
requiring inspectors to obtain a warrant prior to every inspection
visit. But the adoption of
Page 436 U. S. 330
such a practice undercuts the Court's explanation of why a
warrant requirement would not create undue enforcement problems.
For, even if it were true that many employers would not exercise
their right to demand a warrant, it would provide little solace to
those charged with administration of OSHA; faced with an increase
in the rate of refusals and the added costs generated by futile
trips to inspection sites where entry is denied, officials may be
compelled to adopt a general practice of obtaining warrants in
advance. While the Court's prediction of the effect a warrant
requirement would have on the behavior of covered employers may
turn out to be accurate, its judgment is essentially empirical. On
such an issue, I would defer to Congress' judgment regarding the
importance of a warrantless search power to the OSHA enforcement
scheme.
The Court also appears uncomfortable with the notion of
second-guessing Congress and the Secretary on the question of how
the substantive goals of OSHA can best be achieved. Thus, the Court
offers an alternative explanation for its refusal to accept the
legislative judgment. We are told that, in any event, the
Secretary, who is charged with enforcement of the Act, has
indicated that inspections without delay are not essential to the
enforcement scheme. The Court bases this conclusion on a regulation
prescribing the administrative response when a compliance inspector
is denied entry. It provides:
"The Area Director shall immediately consult with the Assistant
Regional Director and the Regional Solicitor, who shall promptly
take appropriate action, including compulsory process, if
necessary."
29 CFR § 1903.4 (1977). The Court views this regulation as an
admission by the Secretary that no enforcement problem is generated
by permitting employers to deny entry and delaying the inspection
until a warrant has been obtained. I disagree. The regulation was
promulgated against the background of a statutory right to
immediate entry, of which covered employers are presumably
Page 436 U. S. 331
aware and which Congress and the Secretary obviously thought
would keep denials of entry to a minimum. In these circumstances,
it was surely not unreasonable for the Secretary to adopt an
orderly procedure for dealing with what he believed would be the
occasional denial of entry. The regulation does not imply a
judgment by the Secretary that delay caused by numerous denials of
entry would be administratively acceptable.
Even if a warrant requirement does not "frustrate" the
legislative purpose, the Court has no authority to impose an
additional burden on the Secretary unless that burden is required
to protect the employer's Fourth Amendment interests. [
Footnote 2/6] The essential function of the
traditional warrant requirement is the interposition of a neutral
magistrate between the citizen and the presumably zealous law
enforcement officer so that there might be an objective
determination of probable cause. But this purpose is not served by
the newfangled inspection warrant. As the Court acknowledges, the
inspector's
"entitlement to inspect will not depend on his demonstrating
probable cause to believe that conditions in violation of OSHA
exist on the premises. . . . For purposes of an administrative
search such as this, probable cause justifying the issuance of a
warrant may be based . . . on a showing that 'reasonable
legislative or administrative standards for conducting an . . .
inspection are satisfied with respect to a particular
[establishment].'"
Ante at
436 U. S. 320.
To obtain a warrant, the inspector need only show that "a specific
business has been chosen for an OSHA search on the basis of a
general administrative plan for the enforcement of the Act
derived
Page 436 U. S. 332
from neutral sources. . . ."
Ante at
436 U. S. 321.
Thus, the only question for the magistrate's consideration is
whether the contemplated inspection deviates from an inspection
schedule drawn up by higher level agency officials.
Unlike the traditional warrant, the inspection warrant provides
no protection against the search itself for employers who the
Government has no reason to suspect are violating OSHA regulations.
The Court plainly accepts the proposition that random health and
safety inspections are reasonable. It does not question Congress'
determination that the public interest in workplaces free from
health and safety hazards outweighs the employer's desire to
conduct his business only in the presence of permittees, except in
those rare instances when the Government has probable cause to
suspect that the premises harbor a violation of the law.
What purposes, then, are served by the administrative warrant
procedure? The inspection warrant purports to serve three
functions: to inform the employer that the inspection is authorized
by the statute, to advise him of the lawful limits of the
inspection, and to assure him that the person demanding entry is an
authorized inspector.
Camara v. Municipal Court,
387 U. S. 523,
387 U. S. 532.
An examination of these functions in the OSHA context reveals that
the inspection warrant adds little to the protections already
afforded by the statute and pertinent regulations, and the slight
additional benefit it might provide is insufficient to identify a
constitutional violation or to justify overriding Congress'
judgment that the power to conduct warrantless inspections is
essential.
The inspection warrant is supposed to assure the employer that
the inspection is in fact routine, and that the inspector has not
improperly departed from the program of representative inspections
established by responsible officials. But to the extent that
harassment inspections would be reduced by the necessity of
obtaining a warrant, the Secretary's present enforcement scheme
would have precisely the same effect.
Page 436 U. S. 333
The representative inspections are conducted "
in accordance
with criteria based upon accident experience and the number of
employees exposed in particular industries.'" Ante at
436 U. S. 321
n. 17. If, under the present scheme, entry to covered premises is
denied, the inspector can gain entry only by informing his
administrative superiors of the refusal and seeking a court order
requiring the employer to submit to the inspection. The inspector
who would like to conduct a nonroutine search is just as likely to
be deterred by the prospect of informing his superiors of his
intention and of making false representations to the court when he
seeks compulsory process as by the prospect of having to make bad
faith representations in an ex parte warrant
proceeding.
The other two asserted purposes of the administrative warrant
are also adequately achieved under the existing scheme. If the
employer has doubts about the official status of the inspector, he
is given adequate opportunity to reassure himself in this regard
before permitting entry. The OSHA inspector's statutory right to
enter the premises is conditioned upon the presentation of
appropriate credentials. 29 U.S.C. § 657(a)(1). These credentials
state the inspector's name, identify him as an OSHA compliance
officer, and contain his photograph and signature. If the employer
still has doubts, he may make a toll-free call to verify the
inspector's authority,
Usery v. Godfrey Brake & Supply
Service, Inc., 545 F.2d 52, 54 (CA8 1976), or simply deny
entry and await the presentation of a court order.
The warrant is not needed to inform the employer of the lawful
limits of an OSHA inspection. The statute expressly provides that
the inspector may enter all areas in a covered business "where work
is performed by an employee of an employer," 29 U.S.C. §
657(a)(1),
"to inspect and investigate during regular working hours and at
other reasonable times, and within reasonable limits and in a
reasonable manner . . . all pertinent conditions, structures,
machines, apparatus,
Page 436 U. S. 334
devices, equipment, and materials therein. . . ."
29 U.S.C. § 657(a)(2).
See also 29 CFR § 1903 (1977).
While it is true that the inspection power granted by Congress is
broad, the warrant procedure required by the Court does not purport
to restrict this power, but simply to ensure that the employer is
apprised of its scope. Since both the statute and the pertinent
regulations perform this informational function, a warrant is
superfluous.
Requiring the inspection warrant, therefore, adds little in the
way of protection to that already provided under the existing
enforcement scheme. In these circumstances, the warrant is
essentially a formality. In view of the obviously enormous cost of
enforcing a health and safety scheme of the dimensions of OSHA,
this Court should not, in the guise of construing the Fourth
Amendment, require formalities which merely place an additional
strain on already overtaxed federal resources.
Congress, like this Court, has an obligation to obey the mandate
of the Fourth Amendment. In the past the Court
"has been particularly sensitive to the Amendment's broad
standard of 'reasonableness' where . . . authorizing statutes
permitted the challenged searches."
Almeida-Sanchez v. United States, 413 U.
S. 266,
413 U. S. 290
(WHITE, J., dissenting). In
United States v.
Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U. S. 543, for
example, respondents challenged the routine stopping of vehicles to
check for aliens at permanent checkpoints located away from the
border. The checkpoints were established pursuant to statutory
authority and their location and operation were governed by
administrative criteria. The Court rejected respondents' argument
that the constitutional reasonableness of the location and
operation of the fixed checkpoints should be reviewed in a
Camara warrant proceeding. The Court observed that the
reassuring purposes of the inspection warrant were adequately
served by the visible manifestations of authority exhibited at the
fixed checkpoints.
Page 436 U. S. 335
Moreover, although the location and method of operation of the
fixed checkpoints were deemed critical to the constitutional
reasonableness of the challenged stops, the Court did not require
Border Patrol officials to obtain a warrant based on a showing that
the checkpoints were located and operated in accordance with
administrative standards. Indeed, the Court observed that
"[t]he choice of checkpoint locations must be left largely to
the discretion of Border Patrol officials, to be exercised in
accordance with statutes and regulations that may be applicable . .
. [and] [m]any incidents of checkpoint operation also must be
committed to the discretion of such officials."
428 U.S. at
428 U. S.
559-560, n. 13. The Court had no difficulty assuming
that those officials responsible for allocating limited enforcement
resources would be "unlikely to locate a checkpoint where it bears
arbitrarily or oppressively on motorists as a class."
Id.
at
428 U. S.
559.
The Court's recognition of Congress' role in balancing the
public interest advanced by various regulatory statutes and the
private interest in being free from arbitrary governmental
intrusion has not been limited to situations in which, for example,
Congress is exercising its special power to exclude aliens. Until
today, we have not rejected a congressional judgment concerning the
reasonableness of a category of regulatory inspections of
commercial premises. [
Footnote 2/7]
While businesses are unquestionably entitled to Fourth Amendment
protection, we have
"recognized that a business, by its special nature and voluntary
existence, may open itself to intrusions that would not be
permissible in a purely private context. "
Page 436 U. S. 336
G. M. Leasing Corp. v. United States, 429 U.
S. 338,
429 U. S. 353.
Thus, in
Colonnade Catering Corp. v. United States,
397 U. S. 72, the
Court recognized the reasonableness of a statutory authorization to
inspect the premises of a caterer dealing in alcoholic beverages,
noting that "Congress has broad power to design such powers of
inspection under the liquor laws as it deems necessary to meet the
evils at hand."
Id. at
397 U. S. 76.
And in
United States v. Biswell, 406 U.
S. 311, the Court sustained the authority to conduct
warrantless searches of firearm dealers under the Gun Control Act
of 1968 primarily on the basis of the reasonableness of the
congressional evaluation of the interests at stake. [
Footnote 2/8]
The Court, however, concludes that the deference accorded
Congress in
Biswell and
Colonnade should be
limited to situations where the evils addressed by the regulatory
statute are peculiar to a specific industry and that industry is
one which has long been subject to Government regulation. The Court
reasons that only in those situations can it be said that a person
who engages in business will be aware of and consent to routine,
regulatory inspections. I cannot agree that the respect due the
congressional judgment should be so narrowly confined.
In the first place, the longevity of a regulatory program does
not, in my judgment, have any bearing on the reasonableness of
routine inspections necessary to achieve adequate enforcement of
that program. Congress' conception of what constitute
Page 436 U. S. 337
urgent federal interests need not remain static. The recent
vintage of public and congressional awareness of the dangers posed
by health and safety hazards in the workplace is not a basis for
according less respect to the considered judgment of Congress.
Indeed, in
Biswell, the Court upheld an inspection program
authorized by a regulatory statute enacted in 1968. The Court there
noted that
"[f]ederal regulation of the interstate traffic in firearms is
not as deeply rooted in history as is governmental control of the
liquor industry, but close scrutiny of this traffic is
undeniably"
an urgent federal interest. 406 U.S. at
406 U. S. 315.
Thus, the critical fact is the congressional determination that
federal regulation would further significant public interests, not
the date that determination was made.
In the second place, I see no basis for the Court's conclusion
that a congressional determination that a category of regulatory
inspections is reasonable need only be respected when Congress is
legislating on an industry-by-industry basis. The pertinent inquiry
is not whether the inspection program is authorized by a regulatory
statute directed at a single industry, but whether Congress has
limited the exercise of the inspection power to those commercial
premises where the evils at which the statute is directed are to be
found. Thus, in
Biswell, if Congress had authorized
inspections of all commercial premises as a means of restricting
the illegal traffic in firearms, the Court would have found the
inspection program unreasonable; the power to inspect was upheld
because it was tailored to the subject matter of Congress' proper
exercise of regulatory power. Similarly, OSHA is directed at health
and safety hazards in the workplace, and the inspection power
granted the Secretary extends only to those areas where such
hazards are likely to be found.
Finally, the Court would distinguish the respect accorded
Congress' judgment in Colonnade and Biswell on the ground that
businesses engaged in the liquor and firearms industry "
accept
the burdens as well as the benefits of their trade. . .
.'"
Page 436 U. S.
338
Ante at 436 U. S. 313.
In the Court's view, such businesses consent to the restrictions
placed upon them, while it would be fiction to conclude that a
businessman subject to OSHA consented to routine safety
inspections. In fact, however, consent is fictional in both
contexts. Here, as well as in Biswell, businesses are
required to be aware of and comply with regulations governing their
business activities. In both situations, the validity of the
regulations depends not upon the consent of those regulated, but on
the existence of a federal statute embodying a congressional
determination that the public interest in the health of the
Nation's workforce or the limitation of illegal firearms traffic
outweighs the businessman's interest in preventing a Government
inspector from viewing those areas of his premises which relate to
the subject matter of the regulation.
The case before us involves an attempt to conduct a warrantless
search of the working area of an electrical and plumbing
contractor. The statute authorizes such an inspection during
reasonable hours. The inspection is limited to those areas over
which Congress has exercised its proper legislative authority.
[
Footnote 2/9] The area is also one
to which employees
Page 436 U. S. 339
have regular access without any suggestion that the work
performed or the equipment used has any special claim to
confidentiality. [
Footnote 2/10]
Congress has determined that industrial safety is an urgent federal
interest requiring regulation and supervision, and further, that
warrantless inspections are necessary to accomplish the safety
goals of the legislation. While one may question the wisdom of
pervasive governmental oversight of industrial life, I decline to
question Congress' judgment that the inspection power is a
necessary enforcement device in achieving the goals of a valid
exercise of regulatory power. [
Footnote 2/11]
I respect.fully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,
shall not be violated. . . ."
[
Footnote 2/2]
"[A]nd no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the
place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
[
Footnote 2/3]
J. Landynski, Search and Seizure and the Supreme Court 19
(1966).
[
Footnote 2/4]
T. Taylor, Two Studies in Constitutional Interpretation 41
(1969).
[
Footnote 2/5]
See v. Seattle, 387 U. S. 541,
387 U. S. 547
(Clark, J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 2/6]
When it passed OSHA, Congress was cognizant of the fact that in
light of the enormity of the enforcement task "the number of
inspections which it would be desirable to have made will
undoubtedly for an unforeseeable period, exceed the capacity of the
inspection force. . . ." Senate Committee on Labor and Public
Welfare, Legislative History of the Occupational Safety and Health
Act of 1970, 92d Cong., 1st Sess., 152 (Comm.Print 1971).
[
Footnote 2/7]
The Court's rejection of a legislative judgment regarding the
reasonableness of the OSHA inspection program is especially
puzzling in light of recent decisions finding law enforcement
practices constitutionally reasonable, even though those practices
involved significantly more individual discretion than the OSHA
program.
See, e.g., Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S.
1;
Adams v. Williams, 407 U.
S. 143;
Cady v. Dombrowski, 413 U.
S. 433;
South Dakota v. Opperman, 428 U.
S. 364.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The Court held:
"In the context of a regulatory inspection system of business
premises that is carefully limited in time, place, and scope, the
legality of the search depends . . . on the authority of a valid
statute."
"
* * * *"
"We have little difficulty in concluding that where, as here,
regulatory inspections further urgent federal interest, and the
possibilities of abuse and the threat to privacy are not of
impressive dimensions, the inspection may proceed without a warrant
where specifically authorized by statute."
406 U.S. at
406 U. S. 315,
406 U. S.
317.
[
Footnote 2/9]
What the Court actually decided in
Camara v. Municipal
Court, 387 U. S. 523, and
See v. Seattle, 387 U. S. 541,
does not require the result it reaches today.
Camara
involved a residence, rather than a business establishment;
although the Fourth Amendment extends its protection to commercial
buildings, the central importance of protecting residential privacy
is manifest. The building involved in
See was, of course,
a commercial establishment, but a holding that a locked warehouse
may not be entered pursuant to a general authorization to "enter
all buildings and premises, except the interior of dwellings, as
often as may be necessary," 387 U.S. at
387 U. S. 541,
need not be extended to cover more carefully delineated grants of
authority. My view that the
See holding should be narrowly
confined is influenced by my favorable opinion of the dissent
written by Mr. Justice Clark and joined by Justices Harlan and
STEWART. As
Colonnade and
Biswell demonstrate,
however, the doctrine of
stare decisis does not compel the
Court to extend those cases to govern today's holding.
[
Footnote 2/10]
The Act and pertinent regulation provide protection for any
trade secrets of the employer. 29 U.S.C. §§ 664-665; 29 CFR §
1903.9 (1977).
[
Footnote 2/11]
The decision today renders presumptively invalid numerous
inspection provisions in federal regulatory statutes.
E.g., 30 U.S.C. § 813 (Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act of 1969); 30 U.S.C. §§ 723, 724 (Federal Metal and Nonmetallic
Mine Safety Act); 21 U.S.C. § 603 (inspection of meat and food
products). That some of these provisions apply only to a, single
industry, as noted above, does not alter this fact. And the fact
that some "envision resort to federal court enforcement when entry
is refused" is also irrelevant, since the OSHA inspection program
invalidated here requires compulsory process when a compliance
inspector has been denied entry.
Ante at
436 U. S.
321.