This petition for review involves a claim by co-respondent Harold Lockhart for disability compensation under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. § 901 et seq. (“the Act”). The Benefits Review Board (“the Board”) rejected the contention of petitioner, who is the Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs (“the Director”), that co-respondent General Dynamics Corporation, Lockhart’s former employer, did not qualify for limited liability under section 8(f) of the Act (“Section 8(f)”). See 33 U.S.C. § 908(f)(1).
In his petition for review of the Board’s final order, the Director raises only one issue: whether the Board erred in holding that the permanency of an employee’s prior disability need not have been initially “manifest” to the employer in order for the employer to qualify for Section 8(f) relief. This court has jurisdiction to hear the petition under 33 U.S.C. § 921(c).
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Harold Lockhart worked as a heavy duty carpenter for General Dynamics (“the Company”) at its Quincy, Massachusetts, shipyard. On the job on March 27, 1978, he experienced severe pain in his back while attempting to lift a plank weighing over 300 pounds. He reported the injury to his foreman and was examined the next morning by a General Dynamics physician at the shipyard clinic. The physician initially diagnosed Lockhart’s problem as muscle spasms and recommended that he take a few days off to rest at home.
On April 5, Lockhart returned to the shipyard, but was still experiencing pain in *76 his back and legs. A company physician examined Lockhart’s back and filed a company medical report which stated: “Back is sore. Taking it easy at home.” The next day, April 6, Lockhart was again examined by the company physician who, on an “Attending Physician’s Report,” declared Lockhart to be “disabled” and noted that his “range of motion [is] restricted and painful, all localized into [the left] hip.” Also on April 6, another form was completed which described how Lockhart injured his back while lifting a plank. The physician wrote “deferred” in a blank space on the form which asked for a description of the nature of the injury. X-rays of Lock-hart’s back ordered by the company doctor eventually came back with “negative” results.
Eleven days later on April 17, 1978, Lockhart was again examined by the General Dynamics physician because his back still hurt. The physician updated the Attending Physician’s Report, noting the “negative” results of certain tests, stating that Lockhart was still “disabled,” and offering a new diagnosis of “resolving acute LS [lumbosacral] spine.” The doctor also checked various boxes on the form to indicate that it was unknown when Lockhart would be able to return to work, but that, in his opinion, there would be no “permanent defect, or facial or head disfigurement.”
Sometime around April 25, 1978, the Company authorized Lockhart to return to his job without any restrictions on his duties. However, when he reported for work Lockhart informed his supervisor that his back and leg still hurt. The supervisor agreed to restrict him to light duty work, which consisted of the supervision of other carpenters without any lifting or physical exertion. There is no evidence that anyone at General Dynamics above Lockhart’s immediate supervisor knew of the light duty assignment.
Despite the light duty assignment, Lock-hart injured his back again on May 1, 1978. He had been called in to work overtime and perform heavy duty carpentry work on a ship. While attempting to lift another heavy plank, Lockhart felt a sharp pain in his back and had to be carried off the boat by his fellow workers. He was hospitalized and eventually diagnosed as having a ruptured disk in his spine. Surgery and other treatment were generally unsuccessful, leaving Lockhart with limited mobility. He never returned to his job at General Dynamics.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This case began fourteen years ago when Lockhart filed a claim for compensation under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, alleging that he was totally and permanently disabled. See S3 U.S.C. § 901 et seq. General Dynamics controverted the claim and also argued that its own liability should, in any event, be limited to 104 weeks of payments under Section 8(f) of the Act. See 33 U.S.C. § 908(f).
Under the Act, an employer must pay an employee compensation for his permanent total disability.
See
33 U.S.C. § 908(a). Section 8(f) of the Act limits the employer’s liability to 104 weeks of payments in cases in which an employee having an existing permanent partial disability suffers a second injury which renders him totally disabled.
See
33 U.S.C. § 908(f)(1);
CNA Ins. Co. v. Legrow,
After a formal hearing in 1984, an administrative law judge (“AU”) found that Lockhart was totally and permanently disabled, and awarded him benefits to be paid by General Dynamics. The AU rejected General Dynamics’s claim that it was entitled to relief under Section 8(f). The AU held that Section 8(f) did not apply because, among other reasons, General Dynamics failed to satisfy the manifest requirement. Though the employer had known about Lockhart’s first injury, “the permanent nature of the March 27, 1978 injury was [not] manifest to the Employer before May 1, 1978 [the time of the second injury].” (Emphasis added).
On February 24, 1988, the Benefits Review Board ruled on an appeal brought by General Dynamics, affirming the AU’s decision that Lockhart was entitled to disability benefits, but reversing in part and vacating in part the AU’s holding that General Dynamics was not entitled to Section 8(f) relief. With regard to the manifest requirement, the Board stated that
The administrative law judge determined that the permanent nature of the first injury was not manifest to the employer. This conclusion is also flawed by the administrative law judge’s use of the wrong standard in determining whether claimant had a pre-existing permanent partial disability_ The medical records need not indicate the severity or the precise nature of the pre-existing condition for it to be manifest, so long as there is sufficient information regarding the existence of a serious lasting problem which would motivate a cautious employer to consider terminating the employee because of the risk of compensation liability.
(citing Board precedent) (emphasis in original). Among other issues, the Board vacated and remanded the case to the AU for a new finding as to whether Lockhart’s preexisting disability was manifest to General Dynamics before the second injury.
Because the original AU had retired by the time the Board remanded the case in 1988, a different AU reconsidered the case in light of the Board’s decision. On January 11, 1989, the second AU ruled that General Dynamics had met all of Section 8(f)’s requirements, including the manifest requirement. The AU found that the pri- or disability was manifest because the Company had “sufficient information regarding the existence of a serious lasting problem which would motivate a cautious employer [to consider terminating Lock-hart] because of the risk of compensation liability.”
The Director, who by this stage had joined the action as a party-in-interest, moved for reconsideration, arguing that the manifest requirement was unfulfilled because General Dynamics did not have sufficient information prior to the second injury that the prior disability, caused by the March 27 accident, was permanent. The AU rejected the Director’s motion on March 28, 1989, reiterating that “the full ramifications, of a condition need not be determinable” to fulfill the manifest requirement.
Finally, on August 29, 1991, the Board rejected the Director’s appeal and affirmed the AU’s decision, stressing again that “the permanency of a pre-existing condition need not be manifest prior to the claimant’s second injury for the condition to support an award of Section 8(f) relief.” The Director now petitions for review of the Board’s final order, contending that the Board’s statement of the law on the manifest requirement is reversible error.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Reversal of the AU by the Board is warranted only if either the AU’s findings of fact are unsupported by substantial evidence in the record considered as a whole, or if the decision is contrary to law. 33 U.S.C. § 921(b)(3);
Legrow,
The Director, however, argues that we must defer to
his
construction of Section 8(f) because the Office of Workers' Compensation Programs is the agency authorized to administer the Act.
See
20 C.F.R. § 701.202. The Director contends that, under the principles of deference articulated in
Pauley v. BethEnergy Mines, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
This court recently stated in
Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.,
We again refrain from deciding whether deference is due to the Director’s interpretation of the Act because in this case “[t]he Director’s position concerns merely his interpretation of the case law, not his interpretation of the controlling statute.”
Liberty Mutual,
In addition, the Director takes his position as a litigating party, not in support of his rule-making capacity. Generally, agency positions raised adversarially for the first time in the course of litigation are not owed deference.
Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp.,
The Director fulfills various functions in the administration of the Act, including promulgating rules and regulations implementing the Act,
see
33 U.S.C. § 939(a), and administering the special fund- from which Section 8(f) payments are made to disabled employees,
see
33 U.S.C. § 944.
See also
20 C.F.R. § 701.202 (transferring Secretary of Labor’s authority over the Act to the Director);
Ingalls Shipbuilding Div. v. White,
In any event, as the Director's position does not involve the textual interpretation either of the Act or of regulations promulgated under the Act, but rather is based upon an interpretation of judge-made case law, we accord no special deference to his views.
IV. DISCUSSION
In his appeal before the Board, the Director conceded that virtually all of the requirements for Section 8(f) relief are satisfied in this case: that is, prior to May 1, 1978 (the date of the second injury), Lock-hart had suffered from what was, in fact, a permanent partial ■ disability; his second back injury combined with his preexisting disability to render him totally disabled; General Dynamics knew that Lockhart injured his back on March 27, 1978; and General Dynamics had sufficient information prior to May 1, 1978 about the March 27 back injury to know that it disabled Lockhart. The Director’s only contention before the AU, the Board, and this court, is that the information possessed by General Dynamics prior to the second injury did not establish that Lockhart’s disability was permanent rather than temporary. The Company’s physicians did not expressly diagnose Lockhart, at the time of the first injury, as permanently disabled, nor was it determined then that his back pain was caused by a ruptured disk. Because the permanent nature of the prior disability was not then manifest, the Director reasons, the Company failed to satisfy the manifest requirement altogether, and thus should not have been awarded Section 8(f) relief. The Board rejected this argument and reaffirmed its statement that:
The medical records need not indicate the severity or the precise nature of the preexisting condition for it to be manifest, so long as there is sufficient information regarding the existence of a serious lasting problem which would motivate a cautious employer to consider terminating the employee because of the risk of compensation liability.
The Director argues that this version of the manifest requirement misstates the law.
Before deciding whether the Board erred in so construing the manifest requirement, we must clarify exactly what it held. We disagree with the Director that the Board’s formulation means that an employer who had every reason to believe a claimant’s preexisting condition would resolve, and no reason to believe that it was permanent, will nonetheless be permitted to reap the benefit of Section 8(f). The Director makes the faulty assumption that an employer can know only one of two things: either that the disability is permanent, or else that it is temporary.
A disability is, to be sure, either temporary or permanent.
Palombo v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
We construe the Board’s statement as excluding (1) and (2). There has to be “sufficient information regarding the existence of a serious lasting problem which would motivate a cautious employer to consider terminating the employee because of the risk of compensation liability.” This standard would not be met if the injury appeared to be merely temporary. Only if apparently permanent, or else so lasting
*81
and serious as to cause cautious employers to consider terminating, does the injury meet the Board’s requirement. While the latter standard does not call for absolute certainty as to permanency, the “serious lasting” language calls for an injury of substantial duration and consequence, such as might lead a cautious employer to terminate. An injury of that description carries, at least, some apparent risk of permanency. This court has said, “To be considered permanent, a disability need not be ‘eternal or everlasting;’ it is sufficient that the ‘condition has continued for a lengthy period, and it appears to be of
lasting or indefinite
duration, as distinguished from one in which recovery merely awaits a normal healing period.’ ”
Air America, Inc. v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
We turn next to whether a standard of this nature is legally correct. No court has squarely confronted the question posed by the Director in this case, so we must examine the Board’s standard in light of the purpose of the manifest requirement. The manifest requirement was developed by the courts to further the Congressional purpose underlying Section 8(f): to discourage discrimination against handicapped workers “by ensuring that the employer would not have to compensate in full for a subsequently incurred permanent disability when that disability was attributable in part to a previously existing handicap.”
CNA Ins. Co. v. Legrow,
The manifest requirement and the other requirements of Section 8(f) have been expressed in various forms in our decisions. In White v. Bath Iron Works Corp. we wrote that:
The courts have accordingly construed [Section 8(f) ] to apply only to situations in which the existing disability is “manifest,” and therefore capable of causing or supporting discrimination against disabled workers.... [Rjegardless of the employer’s actual knowledge, a condition has been considered “manifest” if it was diagnosed and identified in medical records available to the employer.
Section 8(f) first requires the employer to prove that the claimant had a manifest permanent partial disability prior to the accident which, in combination, caused the claimant permanent total disability. Stated differently, the employer must show that the disability is serious enough to motivate a cautious employer either not to hire or to fire employee because of the “greatly increased risk of employment-related accident and compensation liability.”
The language of the Board’s standard is identical to that of another case which explored the scope of the manifest requirement. In
Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs v. Berkstresser,
As we have previously held,
... “Disability” under new § 8(f) is necessarily of sufficient breadth to encompass those cases, like that before us, wherein the employee had such a serious physical disability in fact that a cautious employer would have been motivated to discharge the handicapped employee because of a greatly increased risk of employment-related accident and compensation liability.
C & P Telephone Co. v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,564 F.2d 503 , 513 (D.C.Cir.1977). This broad definition of “disability” governs the manifest requirement under § 8(f). When the evidence shows that such a “disability” was objectively apparent, the “manifest” requirement has been met. Thus, contrary to the Director’s contention, the manifest condition need not be “a serious condition that actually impairs the employee” at the time of hiring or retention; an asymptomatic disability may be sufficient to motivate an employment decision and fulfill the “manifest” requirement.
Berkstresser,
These cases and the Board’s standard in Lockhart’s case all rely on the original rationale for creating the manifest requirement. In the seminal case on the issue, American Mutual Insurance Co. v. Jones, the court wrote that:
[Section] 8(f)(1) does not apply to every case of permanent total disability in which a present injury is not the sole cause of the disability. It was not intended to provide a windfall to employers, nor to actively encourage employment of the handicapped. Its purpose was simply to remove that aspect of discrimination against the disabled which would otherwise be encouraged by the very statute intended to protect them. Any such discrimination, however, must rest upon knowledge of the characteristic upon which the discrimination is to be based. In consequence, courts have distinguished between “manifest” and “latent” conditions for purposes of apportioning claims between employers and special funds such as the present one.
American Mutual Ins. Co. v. Jones,
In summary, we find no error in the Board’s standard. It effectuates the purpose of the manifest requirement and Section 8(f) by making only potential discriminators eligible for Section 8(f) relief. The Board’s test properly denies Section 8(f) relief to those employers who know little or nothing about the disability or incorrectly *83 believe the disability to be merely temporary. At the other end, it finds that the disability is manifest to those employers who know that the disability is permanent or who are uncertain, but have objective evidence of a serious lasting problem that would motivate a cautious employer to discharge the employee because of a greatly increased risk of liability.
The Director proposes that we adopt the first AU’s holding that the manifest requirement is not fulfilled when an employer does not know with absolute certainty that the disability is permanent. If we adopted this position, an employer would be required to know without a doubt, or have medical records conclusively indicating, that the disability was permanent. Such a rule would severely restrict the coverage of Section 8(f) and conflict with the purposes of the manifest requirement and of Section 8(f) itself. To deny limited liability to all employers who, at the early stage of a disabling injury, are not 100% certain that it will be permanent would exclude even those employers who have a strong incentive to discriminate. For example, under the Director’s proposed rule an employer who knew that a worker had sustained a disabling knee injury and had substantial, but not yet conclusive, information that the knee condition was permanent would fail to meet the manifest requirement and thus be ineligible for Section 8(f) relief. However, the uncertain employer would have had as much a financial incentive to fire the worker with the weak knee as the employer who knew conclusively that the knee was permanently weakened. Awarding limited liability under Section 8(f) to the latter but denying it to the former would severely restrict the availability of Section 8(f) relief in a manner inconsistent with the purposes of the manifest requirement and Section 8(f). In many circumstances, it is impossible until years have passed to definitively determine whether an injury has caused permanent damage.
See Liberty Mutual,
The Director suggests that a tightened rule would prevent windfalls to undeserving employers who know of no reason to discriminate against a disabled worker. We are not convinced that the Board’s standard, if properly applied, will create windfalls. The Director’s narrow rule would eliminate that small danger at the expense of handicapped workers.
In locating the proper place of [a] factual situation within the framework of [court] precedents, ... we must remember that manifestness is a matter of degree, and we must not guard so zealously against windfalls that the explicit congressional intent to protect the handicapped worker is sacrificed to an auxiliary purpose elaborated by the courts.
Brandt Airflex,
We also reject the Director’s argument that the terms “serious and lasting” used by the Board are too flexible and vague, and will result in Section 8(f) relief being granted to employers who have no reason to believe that a preexisting condition is permanent. As with any standard, especially in the field of disability compensation, the Board’s version of the manifest requirement is not self-applying. However, as already discussed, the words “serious and lasting” are plainly not equivalent merely to “temporary.”
See Air America, Inc. v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
V. CONCLUSION
The Director argues only that the Board’s statement of the manifest requirement was an error of law. The Director does not argue that, assuming this stan *84 dard to be correct, the record is without substantial evidence to support the Board’s finding that Lockhart’s disability was, under the standard as so articulated, manifest. Because we find no reversible error in the Board’s formulation of the manifest requirement in this case, we deny the petition for review.
Petition for review denied.
Notes
. This court has previously indicated some willingness to defer to the Board. "[Ejven though [an] issue may be looked upon as largely legal in nature, a reviewing court should accord the Board’s interpretation considerable deference."
General Dynamics Corp. v. Sacchetti,
. The sole reference in the Director’s brief to the text of the statute is a conclusory statement that because the word "permanent” appears in Section 8(f), the permanent nature of a disability must be manifest to an employer to qualify for limited liability. This point is neither developed *79 nor relied upon in the rest of the Director's brief. Except for this off-hand reference to the statute, the Director’s position is supported only by his.interpretation of case law.
