Appellant Elmer Hix, a former coal miner, applied in 1975 for benefits under the Black Lung Benefits Act. The claim was initially denied, but was later reviewed under the liberalized standards of the Black Lung Benefits Reform Act of 1977. The Administrative Law Judge (AU) found that Hix had established nine years of coal mine employment, rather than the fifteen years claimed. The AU, nevertheless, ap
Hix appealed the AU’s decision to the Benefits Review Board (the Board). Significantly, he did not challenge the AU’s finding of rebuttal. Because Hix failed to challenge the rebuttal finding, the Board did not examine that issue. Affirming the rebuttal finding as unchallenged, the Board declined to address Hix’s arguments concerning his years of coal mine employment, because a finding of rebuttal negates any presumption of disability, if a presumption properly applies. The Board therefore affirmed the order denying benefits on the basis of the rebuttal determination. Hix appealed the Board’s decision to this court.
We have recently considered a case almost exactly on point with the procedural history in this case.
See Honaker v. Benefits Review Board,
No. 85-3960 (6th Cir. Oct. 20,1986) (unpublished per curiam) [
We observed in
Honaker
that an appellate court should not review an AU’s decision on the merits when the claimant did not raise his claims before the agency.
Ho-naker,
slip op. at 2,
citing, e.g., Cox v. Benefits Review Board,
Honaker concluded that because the claimant had failed to challenge the AU’s rebuttal findings on his appeal to the Board, he had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies and could not challenge the rebuttal finding on appeal to the court. Honaker, slip op. at 2.
Although
Cox, Gibas,
and
Blevins
did not address the precise issue presented in
Honaker
and in this case, the
Honaker
opinion is based on a sound application of these cases that preclude judicial review of issues not raised before the agency. In
Blevins,
the court addressed a failure to file any petition within the thirty day limit for filing petitions with the Board, and the court held that a claimant who fails to appeal an AU’s order to the Board within the thirty day period, “depriving the [Board] of an opportunity to consider an issue, ... may not obtain review of the AU’s decision_”
Blevins,
