In this action, the Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs (OWCP) seeks the reversal of a ruling of the Benefits Review Board dismissing the Director’s appeal to the Board. More than three years after the Director had filed the appeal, the Board dismissed it because the Director had failed to transmit the administrative record of the proceeding to the Board for its use in ruling on the appeal. We hold that the Board acted within its discretion when it interpreted its regulations to permit the dismissal of the appeal. We therefore affirm.
I.
The OWCP initially denied claimant Hile-man’s claim for benefits under the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. §§ 901-945, but on July 9, 1984, an AU awarded benefits to the claimant. In response to the AU’s holding, the Director filed an appeal to the Benefits Review Board. On August 13, 1984, the Board acknowledged the appeal, transmitting a copy of the acknowledgment to the Division of Coal Mine Workers’ Compensation (DCMWC). As the official custodian of the administrative record, the DCMWC fell under the Director’s supervision. The acknowledgement that the Board sent to the DCMWC served to notify that office that it must transmit the administrative record to the Board. Although it received the acknowl-edgement, the DCMWC failed to transmit the record. On March 26, 1986, the Board again requested the record and the DCMWC again failed to respond to the request. On August 19, 1987, over three years after it had sent the original ac-knowledgement, the Board issued an order dismissing the appeal as abandoned.
On September 23, 1987, the Director filed a motion with the Board for en banc reconsideration of the dismissal. Although this filing fell outside the thirty-day period within which the applicable statutes and regulations require that such motions be filed, the Board entertained the motion and granted a rehearing. Before the Board sitting en banc, the Director argued that the dismissal was not authorized by the Act or regulations, that it was the responsibility of the DCMWC, rather than the Director, to transmit the record, and that, in dismissing the appeal, the Board had abused its discretion. Rejecting these arguments, the Board affirmed the dismissal on February 29, 1988. It held that, although the regulations do not specifically provide for the dismissal of an appeal under these circumstances, such action was consistent with the purpose behind the regulations. The Board further held that, for the purposes of transmitting the record, there was no distinction between the Director’s role as a party-litigant and his status as the head of the OWCP which vested *1279 him with supervisory authority over the custodian of the record. As a result of this unity of the Director’s roles, the Board held that the failure to transmit the record constituted a failure to “participate significantly” in the proceedings which, the regulations specifically state, justified the dismissal of an appeal. The Director then petitioned this court for a review of the Board’s ruling.
II.
We first address the issue, raised by the respondent claimant, of this court’s jurisdiction to entertain the instant petition for review. The claimant argues that we lack jurisdiction because the Director filed his motion for reconsideration with the Board outside of the thirty-day period prescribed for such motions. Hileman asserts that, since the motion was not timely filed, it did not toll the running of the period within which the Director may seek review in this court. Under the claimant’s argument, the period within which the Director may petition this court for review began running on August 19,1987, the date of the Board’s original dismissal of the appeal. The Act prescribes a sixty-day period during which an aggrieved party may petition for review in a court of appeals. 33 U.S.C. § 921(c). Since the Director filed his petition for review with this court later than sixty days from August 19, 1987, the claimant contends that he has failed to meet the jurisdictional requirements for review in this court.
The Supreme Court addressed this question in
Bowman v. Loperena,
[t]he filing of an untimely petition for rehearing which is not entertained or considered on its merits, or a motion for leave to file such a petition out of time, if not acted on or if denied by the trial court, cannot operate to extend the time for appeal. But where the court allows the filing and, after considering the merits, denies the petition, the judgment of the court as originally entered does not become final until such denial, and the time for appeal runs from the date thereof.
Id.
at 266,
Ill
We now come to the central question before us for review: the propriety of the Board’s dismissal of the Director’s appeal for his failure to ensure that the DCMWC transmitted the administrative record to the Board. In dismissing the *1280 Director’s appeal and in its en banc affirmance of that dismissal, the Board relied primarily on three sections of the regulations that govern its operation. The first regulation charges the deputy commissioner of the DCMWC with transmitting the administrative record to the Board:
Upon receipt of a copy of the notice of appeal or upon request of the Board, the deputy commissioner or other office having custody of such record shall immediately forward to the Clerk of the Board the official record of the case, which record includes the transcript or transcripts of all formal proceedings with exhibits, all decisions and orders rendered in the case.
20 C.F.R. §§ 802.209. Section 802.218 of the regulations states:
(a) Failure to file any paper when due pursuant to this part, may, in the discretion of the Board, constitute a waiver of the right to further participation in the proceedings.
(b) When a petition for review and brief has not been submitted to the Board within the time limitation prescribed by § 802.211, or within an enlarged time limitation granted pursuant to § 802.217, the petitioner shall be ordered to show cause to the Board why his or her appeal should not be dismissed pursuant to § 802.402.
20 C.F.R. § 802.218. Finally, section 802.-402(a) provides:
Upon motion by any party or representative or upon the Board’s own motion, an appeal may be dismissed upon its abandonment by the party or parties who filed the appeal. Within the discretion of the Board, a party may be deemed to have abandoned an appeal if neither the party nor his representative participates significantly in the review proceedings.
20 C.F.R. § 802.402(a).
In reviewing the Board’s dismissal of the Director’s appeal, we are guided by the Supreme Court’s admonition in
Udall v. Tallman,
Given this standard of review, we hold that the Board committed no reversible error in dismissing the Director’s appeal. The Director correctly states that the regulations do not explicitly provide for the dismissal of an appeal as the sanction for the failure to file the record with the Board; however, our role in this action is not to hold the agency to the most narrow construction of the regulations. Important considerations dictate that the Board “should retain the greatest leeway possible to control its own docket,”
Kephart v. Director, OWCP,
In affirming the dismissal of the Director’s appeal, the Board relied on the purpose behind §§ 802.290, 802.218(a) and 802.402. It held that, “read in conjunction with one another,” the regulations authorized the dismissal for the Director’s failure to transmit the record. We are not prepared to hold that such an interpretation of the regulations constitutes an arbitrary and capricious exercise of the Board’s power.
See Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
The Director argues that the failure of the DCMWC to transmit the record cannot be treated as a failure on the part of the Director to participate significantly in the proceeding within the meaning of § 802.402(a). He contends that the regulations charge the deputy commissioner of the DCMWC, not the Director, with transmitting the record. This argument, however, ignores the fact that the DCMWC falls under the supervisory authority of the Director.
See Director, OWCP v. Brodka,
The relationship in which the Director stood to the deputy commissioner also obviated the need for the Board to send notice of the impending dismissal directly to the Director. It is a truism of the law of agency that notice to an agent acting within the scope of his agency will be imputed to the principal.
See, e.g., Eitel v. Schmidlapp,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Benefits Review Board is affirmed.
Notes
. The claimant offers
Bolling v. Director, OWCP,
Regardless of whether the Board in Bolling ruled on the merits of the motion for reconsideration, however, we decline to adopt a rule that would go directly contrary to the clear import of the Supreme Court’s decision in Bowman. Also counseling against the adoption of the claimant’s argument is the deference that we accord to agency action. That deference militates against ignoring the Board’s decision to treat a motion as if it were timely filed when we are determining this court’s jurisdiction.
. In an attempt to avoid the effect of his agent’s dereliction of duty, the Director relies on
Director, OWCP v. Brodka,
