The Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, Department of Labor, asks this court to decide whether administrative law judges have the power to approve compromise settlements under the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA), 33 U.S.C. § 901 et seq. The Director argues that the power to approve settlements under the LHWCA lies solely in the offices of the deputy commissioner and the Secretary. Appellant Ingalls Shipbuilding Division, Litton Systems, Inc., and Bethlehem Steel Corp. and Triple A Shipyards as amicus insist that administrative law judges share this authority. Ingalls urges in addition that the Director lacks standing either to appeal the approved compromise settlement to the Benefits Review Board or to appear before this court as an appellee defending the Board’s order.
This dispute began with an event that appears far removed from the issues in this appeal. The LHWCA claimant, John W. White, was injured on February 17,1977, in the course of his employment as a shipfitter for Ingalls Shipbuilding, when a 350-pound pressing ram crushed his right hand. After receiving compensation for temporary total disability, White sought relief under the LHWCA for any permanent injury he had sustained. His claim could not be resolved in the deputy commissioner’s office because the parties could not agree on the extent of injury. The deputy commissioner, therefore, referred the claim to an administrative law judge (ALJ) for a formal hearing as permitted under 33 U.S.C. § 919.
Before a hearing could be held, however, on January 11, 1979, the parties informed the AU that they had agreed to a compromise settlement under 33 U.S.C. § 908(i)(A). The settlement was based on a medical report by Dr. L. Conrad Rowe, who found that White was suffering from a 25% permanent partial disability of the right hand, but that he could continue to work if he refrained from lifting heavy objects. Under the terms of the settlement, Ingalls agreed to pay White $25,000, on the condition that it did not have to rehire him, and to pay all medical bills related to his injury. It also promised to pay White’s attorney $2,300. The ALJ did not remand the case to the deputy commissioner to obtain his approval of the settlement terms. Instead, he issued an Order Approving Settlement on January 30,1979. The order stated that the settlement was “in the best interests of Claimant” and “in accord with Clefstad v. Perini North River Associates, 9 BRBS 217, BRB No. 77-584 (1978).” The judge’s reference to Clefstad is a crucial part of any order approving settlement. In this instance, however, it proved to be insufficient to sustain the order.
Upholding the authority of administrative law judges to approve settlements, the Benefits Review Board held in Clefstad that before he approves a proposed settlement, an ALJ must consider the claimant’s age, education, work history, medical condition, and the availability of the type of work that the claimant is able to perform. 9 BRBS at 222. While the ALJ below cited Clefstad, he did not discuss the evidence underlying each Clefstad factor. This failure to follow Clefstad to the letter as well as fear that the $25,000 lump sum settlement would be inadequate to compensate the claimant for his injuries prompted the Director to appeal the order to the Benefits Review Board under 33 U.S.C. § 921(b)(3).
With the advantage of full briefing and oral argument, the Board rejected appellant’s contention that the Director lacked standing to. appeal the ALJ’s order. It *278 found that Congress intended the standing requirement to appear before the Board to be satisfied more easily than the standing criteria for appearance in federal court. In fact, the Board held that the Director had “automatic” standing “in any . case before the Board.” Thus able to reach the merits of the ALJ’s order approving settlement, the Board found the ALJ’s treatment of Clefstad to be inadequate and remanded the order for “a complete rationale according to the guidelines set forth in Clefstad.” Ingalls then appealed to this court under 33 U.S.C. § 921(c).
I. JURISDICTION
Section 921(c) of the LHWCA provides that “[a]ny party adversely affected or aggrieved by a final order of the Board may obtain a review of that order in the United States court of appeals for the circuit in which the injury occurred. ...” 33 U.S.C. § 921(c) (emphasis supplied). Although none of the parties has raised the issue of whether the Board’s action in this case constitutes a “final order,” it is our threshold duty to determine whether we have subject-matter jurisdiction of this petition for review. Accordingly, we must inquire whether Ingalls’ petition for review from a remand order of the Benefits Review Board is final under § 921(c).
The “final order” requirement of § 921(c) furthers the same policies as the finality rule embodied in 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1976). Thus, finality under both statutes holds the same meaning.
Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs v. Brodka,
Like every rule, however, this principle of appellate jurisdiction has exceptions.
National Steel & Shipbuilding Co., supra,
The Court recognized that the question of finality was frequently so close that “it is impossible to devise a formula to resolve all marginal cases coming within what might well be called the ‘twilight zone’ of finality.”
We conclude that a decision on the merits of this appeal does not raise the spector of piecemeal review before the court. The only issue presented that is directly related to the remand order is whether the ALJ made the appropriate findings in his original order approving settlement. The remaining issues, which involve the standing of the Director and the authority of the ALJ to approve lump-sum settlements, are purely matters of law and are “final” in that they have been litigated and decided by the Benefits Review Board. The question of whether the ALJ’s order approving settlement conformed with Clefstad does not undermine finality in this instance for the following reasons.
If we were to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction to allow the ALJ to reconsider the settlement and if we were to find on a later appeal that the ALJ lacked authority to approve lump-sum settlements, a dismissal at this stage in the proceedings would be entirely purposeless, for the ALJ’s power to reconsider the settlement depends completely on our interpretation of the relevant enabling statute. This result would create much greater “cost and inconvenience” than would an immediate decision on the merits. Moreover, a dismissal with the threat of reversal on future appeal ultimately could work a harsh injustice on the claimant, since the delay caused by dismissal could put him that much further off from the recovery to which he unquestionably is entitled. Failure to dismiss, by contrast, poses no similar potential for prejudice to Ingalls.
Wescott v. Impresas Armadoras, S. A. Panama,
Upon balancing the competing considerations above, we find that the facts here fall within the unique situation that is established as an exception to technical finality in
Gillespie. See Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
II. ORDER APPROVING SETTLEMENT
Appellant contends at the outset that the ALJ’s order approving settlement is analogous to a consent decree and that the Director, therefore, cannot appeal to the Benefits Review Board in the absence of proof that would nullify the parties’ consent. Appellant cites no law to justify this conclusion, and we find it both unpersuasive and erroneous.
Though there is no authority specifically addressing the reviewability of an order approving settlement of a LHWCA claim, there is instructive precedent on the re-viewability of consent decrees in other contexts.
See United States v. City of Miami,
Thus, even if we accept Ingalls’ contention that an order approving settlement is like a consent decree, we find that an ALJ, in approving the settlement of a LHWCA claim, is limited in the same manner as a district judge approving a compromise in a class action or stockholders’ derivative suit. Though the criteria for approval are different, the purpose of approval is the same — to protect the interests of the parties within constitutional and statutory strictures and to ensure that the decree is consistent with the public policy objectives sought to be attained by Congress in enacting the statutory right of action.
City of Miami, supra,
III. DIRECTOR’S STANDING TO APPEAL
As this court explained in
Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs v. Donzi Marine, Inc.,
A. The Director’s Standing to Respond to Proceedings Brought Under § 921(c)
First, we must dispose of Ingall’s argument that the Director lacks standing to respond in this court. Ingalls relies for the strength of its argument on a line of cases that deny the Director standing as a petitioner under § 921(c) because he is not a “person adversely affected or aggrieved.”
See Director, Office Workers’ Compensation Programs v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
While this Court has recognized previously that the Director must establish some pecuniary or administrative interest to petition the court of appeals for review under 33 U.S.C. § 921(c),
Bethlehem Steel Corp., supra,
We have discovered three possible grounds for decision. First, we could require the Director to demonstrate some injury in fact, economic or otherwise, to justify his standing as respondent in § 921(c) proceedings, just as we did when the Director sought to petition this Court for review in
Donzi, supra.
Second, we could rely on the broad language of Fed.R.App.P. 15(a), which requires a petitioner for review of an agency order to name the agency as a respondent. Finally, we could consider the statutory scheme of the LHWCA and regulations promulgated thereunder as the D.C. Circuit did in
Shahady, supra,
Ingalls urges us to adopt the first approach, which has been articulated most strongly by judges in the Fourth Circuit. In
I.T.O.,
a divided en banc panel held that the Director was required to show a stake in the outcome of the controversy in order to respond to a petition for review under § 921(c).
I.T.O., supra,
We do not follow the Fourth Circuit. If the Director has standing to petition the Review Board under § 921(b)(3), an issue that we will examine subsequently, then he should have the right to appear in this court to defend a decision by the Board in his favor. The absence of any contrary language in § 921(c), or elsewhere in the LHWCA, referring to the agency’s capacity to respond suggests to us, not that the Director should be included in the “adversely affected or aggrieved” requirement that governs who may petition for review, but that his standing to respond is governed by other rules.
Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure provides the method for obtaining review of an order of an administrative agency in the court of appeals: “The petition shall specify the parties seeking review and shall designate the respondent and the order or part thereof to be reviewed .... In each case, the agency shall be named respondent.” “Agency” as defined in the rule includes “agency, board, commission or officer.” Rule 15(a) is generally applicable to statutory review proceedings within this Court’s original jurisdiction. This Court has such jurisdiction under § 921(c). Prior to 1972, § 921(c) identified the “deputy commissioner making the order” as a respondent. The amended version *283 of § 921(c) is silent as to who shall appear as respondent for the agency, but the Secretary has filled that gap by promulgating 20 CFR § 802.410(b), which names the Director to represent the Department of Labor in review proceedings. Thus, it appears that the rule requires Ingalls to name the Director as respondent in its petition.
Despite the blunt, and seemingly mandatory requirement of Rule 15(a), however, the courts have created an exception to its applicability in cases where the private parties seeking review of an agency proceeding are sufficiently adverse. As the D.C. Circuit explained in
McCord, supra:
“Normally, a single private party is contesting the action of an agency, which [the] agency must appear and defend on the merits to insure the proper adversarial clash requisite to a ‘case or controversy.’ .. . Here there is sufficient adversity between McCord and Mrs. Cepthas (the claimant) to insure proper litigation without participation by the Board.”
The D.C. Circuit recently has avoided reliance on Rule 15(a) when faced with the issue.
Shahady, supra,
First, the broad language of Rule 15(a) 7 suggests an intent to encompass a wide *284 variety of agency proceedings. It also indicates a recognition that the agency would not be the only respondent in a petition for review of an agency order. This would account for the potential “three party case” that may arise under the LHWCA, in which the claimant, his employer, and the Director participate. The only express limitation on the applicability of Rule 15(a) is found in Fed.R.App.P. 1(b), which provides that the rules cannot be construed to extend or limit the jurisdiction of the courts of appeals. Allowing the Director to respond to a petition for review in proceedings under § 921(c) does not cross the bounds of this restriction.
Second, the review procedures established by the 1972 Amendments to the LHWCA and the regulations promulgated thereunder suggest that Rule 15(a) applies to proceedings under § 921(c). As the Third Circuit in Krolick recognized, the failure of the Act to name a respondent is instructive:
The reference to a specific agency respondent in the pre-1972 version of 33 U.S.C. § 921(b) was included prior to the adoption of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. Perhaps although no clear legislative history on the subject has been called to our attention, the omission of a reference to the proper respondent when § 921(b) was amended in 1972 was a conscious recognition of the more general reference in Rule 15(a).
Krolick, supra,
The broad language of Rule 15(a) must be applied with a common sense regard for the variety of agency proceedings that produce appealable administrative orders. When a party decides to petition for review of an agency’s order, it generally should name as respondent under Rule 15(a) that entity within the agency that the agency head has designated to respond on behalf of the agency. We conclude, then, reading Rule 15(a) together with the LHWCA and the regulations promulgated thereunder, that the Director is the agency-respondent within the contemplation of Rule 15(a), and that therefore, he is entitled to respond in this Court over Ingall’s objection.
B. The Director’s Standing to Petition the Benefits Review Board
Having decided that the Director is a proper party respondent in this appeal, we now must turn to the issue of whether the Director was entitled to petition the Board for review of the ALJ’s order approving settlement as a “party in interest” under 33 U.S.C. § 921(b)(3). The Board found that the Director had automatic standing under 20 C.F.R. § 802.201(a), which defines “party” or “party in interest” to mean “The Secretary or his designee and any person or business entity directly affected by the decision or order from which an appeal to the Board is taken.” Though this Circuit has recognized the Director’s right to seek review automatically in dicta, it has not faced squarely the contention that Congress never intended the Director to appear before the Board in a case where the claimant and employer agree. Donzi, supra, 586 F.2d at *285 378 n.5. We hold today that the Director is a “party in interest” under § 921(b)(3) as defined in 20 C.F.R. § 802.201(a), and therefore, that he was entitled to petition the Benefits Review Board for review of the order approving settlement of White’s claim.
Ingalls asks this Court to apply the analysis of Donzi to this question of administrative standing. Again, we point out that Donzi was limited to the issue of whether the Director had judicial standing to petition this Court for review under § 921(c). Donzi would control standing under § 921(b)(3) only if this Court found that § 921(c) and § 921(b)(3) designate the same class of persons as parties. We reject In-galls’ proposed rationale for several reasons.
First, and fundamentally, administrative proceedings before the Benefits Review Board are not Article III proceedings to which either the “case or controversy” or prudential standing requirements apply.
See American Trucking Associations, Inc. v. ICC,
Second, by using two distinct phrases— “parties in interest” and “persons adversely affected or aggrieved” — Congress reveals an intent to establish two distinct tests for standing to petition for review of administrative orders issued under the Act. The Secretary of Labor, pursuant to his general authority to prescribe regulations under the LHWCA, treats § 921(b)(3) and § 921(c) as if they created different standards. “Party in interest” means the Secretary, his desig-nee, and anyone “directly affected” by the order. 20 C.F.R. § 801.2(a)(10). Under 20 C.F.R. § 802.410(a), by contrast, only persons “adversely affected or aggrieved” may petition for review in the court of appeals.
A finding that Donzi does not control the meaning of party in interest unfortunately does not end our inquiry. We cannot discuss the statutory and regulatory language relevant to this issue as briefly as we would like because Ingalls has drawn our attention to an apparent contradiction in the regulations that on its face seems to negate our interpretation of § 921(b)(3). Ingalls also demands that we invalidate 20 C.F.R. § 801.2(a)(10) as an unconstitutional extension of agency authority since it arguably goes beyond the “interest” requirement of § 921(b)(3) by conferring automatic standing on the Director. To resolve the issue of the Director’s administrative standing we must turn to these problems in regulatory construction.
First, we will address the superficial inconsistency in the regulations. In addition to defining “party in interest” and limiting the parties who may appeal to the courts of appeals, the Secretary also states “[a]ny party adversely affected by a decision or order issued pursuant to one of the Acts may appeal that decision or order to the Board by filing a notice of appeal.” 20 C.F.R. § 802.201 (emphasis supplied). In-galls insists that this regulation equates “party in interest” to persons “adversely affected or aggrieved” in § 921(c). We disagree. Obviously, Ingalls’ proposed construction of the regulation would be inconsistent with Congress’ intent to create two *286 separate standing tests. We prefer to construe the regulations in a manner that is in harmony with that intent. It is not unusual or extraordinary to find that similar phrases have more than one meaning in statutory and regulatory sections that embody separate purposes. This happens frequently in the sentences that constitute our laws, and it is indicative, not of bureaucratic confusion, but of the truth that we have a finite set of words to describe an infinite variety of situations. Reading § 802.-2(a)(10) and § 802.201 together, we find that “adversely affected” in the context of § 921(b)(3) does not contradict the phrase “directly affected.” As a practical matter, the Director will not petition the Board for review unless the administrative order has affected his interests in an adverse manner. The real question under the regulations, then, is not whether the effect is adverse, but whether the Director has an interest that has been affected directly by the order. We therefore, find that 20 C.F.R. § 802.201 adds no substantive meaning to the definition of “party in interest” in § 801.2(a)(10), and that the regulations interpreting § 921(b)(3) and § 921(e) do not impose the requirements of judicial standing on the parties who appear before the Board.
Now we must decide whether the definition of “party in interest” in § 801.-2(a)(10), which gives the Director an automatic right of review, is valid in view of the plain requirement in 33 U.S.C. § 921(b)(3) that a person demonstrate some “interest” before petitioning the Board for review. Unless clearly erroneous or unreasonable, the interpretation of a statute by a regulatory agency that is charged with administering it is given considerable deference by federal courts.
Florida v. Mathews,
The Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs is an office of administrative creation to which the Secretary of Labor has delegated the responsibility of administering the Act. 20 C.F.R. §§ 701.-201, 701.202(a). That Congress intended the Secretary to play an active role in implementing, administering and enforcing the LHWCA is manifest from a reading of the Act and from an examination of its legislative history. For example, the Director must furnish upon request information and assistance to claimants regarding their legal rights and medical and vocational rehabilitation services. 33 U.S.C. § 939(c). He must actively supervise the medical care rendered to injured employees. 33 U.S.C. § 907(b). He administers a special fund established by the Act for payment of certain benefits in enumerated circumstances. 33 U.S.C. § 944. And, as a preventive measure, the Act allows the Director to bring an action in federal court to restrain violations of his safety regulations. 33 U.S.C. § 941(e).
Ensuring the active involvement of the Secretary through his Director was one of the central purposes underlying the 1972 Amendments:
Section 39 of the Act [33 U.S.C. § 939] is amended to substantially increase the Secretary’s responsibility for administering this program so far as providing services to employees. ... It is intended that this assistance be all inclusive and *287 enable the employee to receive the maximum benefits due to him without having to rely on outside assistance other than that provided by the Secretary.
S.Rep.No. 92-1125, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. (1972); H.R.Rep.No. 92-1441, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1972 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 4698, 4710. In a later statement, the Committee on Human Resources, successor to the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, issued a report on the Black Lung Benefits Reform Act, which speaks directly to the standing of the Director within the review procedures established by the LHWCA:
In establishing the Longshore Act procedures it was the intent of this Committee to afford the Secretary the right to advance his views in the formal claims litigation context whether or not the Secretary had a direct financial interest in the outcome of the case. The Secretary’s interest as the officer charged with the responsibility of carrying forth the interest of Congress with respect to the Act should be deemed sufficient to confer standing on the Secretary or such desig-nee of the Secretary who has the responsibility for enforcement of the Act, to actively participate in the adjudication of claims before the Administrative Law Judge, Benefits Review Board, and appropriate United States Courts.
S.Rep.No. 95-209, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 22 (1977).
10
See also Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co.,
Despite persuasive evidence that Congress intended the Director to have standing as a party in interest under § 921(b)(3), Ingalls insists that the wide ranging supervisory responsibilities of the Director cannot justify the Director’s interference when the claimant and employer agree on a settlement. The restrictive manner in which the Act treats lump-sum settlements belies this proposition. The LHWCA specifically limits the circumstances under which an employee may resolve his claim under the act through an agreed settlement with his employer. 11 If the private parties have agreed on the future liability of the employer, § 908(i)(A) demands that they obtain the approval of a deputy commissioner. If the settlement involves medical benefits, then the parties must obtain the approval of the Secretary. 33 U.S.C. § 908(i)(B). The settlement will not receive the approval of the Secretary or the deputy commissioner unless it is “in the best interests” of the claimant. The Board, in finding that administrative law judges share the authority to approve settlements under section 8(i)(A), has established in addition to the statutory prerequisites a set of criteria that must be considered before a settlement can be deemed “in the best interests” of the claimant. Clefstad, supra, 9 BRBS at 222.
The Director’s interest as administrator within this procedural scheme for settlement approval appears obvious. First, he must make sure that the deputy commissioners and the administrative law judges are acting within their authority. Second, he must examine orders approving settlement to determine whether the approving authority considered the correct criteria. The Director’s participation in the case before us, more clearly than any example we might conjure, demonstrates the need for us to respect his “watchdog” role. We, therefore, do not regard the Director’s exercise of his right to initiate review of an order approving settlement as “officious in-termeddling.” To the contrary, it is simply part of his statutory obligation to ensure the fair and adequate compensation of injured employees.
*288 In light of the Director’s involvement in the administration and enforcement of the Act and Congress’ intent with respect to that role, 20 C.F.R. § 201.2(a) is a reasonable and valid construction of 33 U.S.C. § 921(b)(3). Accordingly, we hold that the Benefits Review Board properly granted the Director standing to petition for review of the ALJ’s order approving settlement.
IV. AUTHORITY OF ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGES TO APPROVE AGREED SETTLEMENTS UNDER THE LHWCA
Having determined that the Director is a proper party before this Court, we reach the question of whether an administrative law judge has the authority to approve a compromise settlement under 33 U.S.C. § 908(i)(A). That subsection provides:
Whenever the deputy commissioner determines that it is for the best interests of an injured employee entitled compensation, he may approve agreed settlements of the interested parties, discharging the liability of the employer for such compensation, notwithstanding the provisions of section 915(b) and section 916 of this title... .
Interpreting § 908(i)(A) in Clefstad v. Peri-ni North River Associates, 9 BRBS 217, 220, BRB No. 77-884 (1978), the Benefits Review Board found that “both deputy commissioners and administrative law judges, within their respective spheres of authority, are empowered by the Act to approve or disapprove agreed settlements by the parties according to the claimant’s best interests.” The Board relied primarily on legislative history accompanying the 1972 Amendments to § 908 and on the 1972 amendment of 33 U.S.C. § 919(d). The latter amendment transferred “all powers, duties, and responsibilities” with respect to administrative hearings under the Act from the deputy commissioner to administrative law judges. Looking to the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) to define the scope of an officer’s hearing functions, the Board determined that settlement approval lies within the adjudicative province of the ALJ once he “dons his judicial hat.” 9 BRBS at 222. It is for this Court to decide whether the Board’s reasoning in Clefstad as applied to this case is correct.
No circuit court has discussed and decided the precise issue before us. In
Marine Concrete v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
Whenever the Secretary determines that it is for the best interests of injured employee entitled to medical benefits, he may approve agreed settlements of the interested parties, discharging the liability of the employer for such medical benefits.
33 U.S.C. § 908(i)(B). We held that administrative law judges were not empowered by this section to approve settlements involving medical benefits: “ ‘It is not our province ... to write legislation that Congress either overlooked or designedly chose not to write.’ ”
Id.
at 487,
quoting from S. H. DuPuy v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
Section 919(d) of the Act provides:
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, any hearing held under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with the provisions of Section 554 of Title 5. Any such hearing shall be conducted by an administrative law judge qualified under 3105 of that Title. All powers, duties, and responsibilities vested by this Chapter, on October 27, 1972, in the deputy commissioners with respect to such hearings shall be vested in such administrative law judges.
33 U.S.C. § 919(d). We do not think the addition of APA procedures or the delegation of responsibilities to administrative law judges in the Act contradicts the plain mandate of § 908(i)(A) that only deputy commissioners can approve agreed settlements.
The context in which § 919(d) was passed suggests that Congress did not intend to transfer the power to approve settlements to the administrative law judges. Prior to the 1972 Amendments, deputy commissioners could approve agreed settlements only with the approval of the Secretary.
See
S.Rep.No.92-1125, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 38 (1972). In 1972, Congress eliminated the necessity of obtaining the Secretary’s approval of settlements under § 908(i)(A), but inserted that prerequisite in new § 908(i)(B) for claims involving medical benefits.
See Marine Concrete, supra,
Furthermore, the APA does not confer the power to approve settlements on administrative law judges in LHWCA proceed
*290
ings. Ingalls and Bethlehem Steel as ami-cus rely heavily on the “[notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter” qualification in § 919(d). When we turn to the APA, however, we find similar qualifications. Section 556, 5 U.S.C., which sets out the powers and duties of hearing officers, specifically provides that those powers are “subject to the published rules of the agency.”
See also
5 U.S.C. § 554(c)(1).
14
The regulations promulgated under the LHWCA are perfectly consistent with the clear import of § 908(i)(A) for they clearly contemplate that only the deputy commissioner will approve agreed settlements under § 908(i)(A). 20 C.F.R. § 702.241. We, therefore, conclude once again that “[t]he general provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 551
et seq., . ..
do not alter the later-enacted and more specific provisions of the LHWCA.”
Marine Concrete, supra,
Even assuming that some ambiguity exists between the powers delegated in § 919(d) of the Act and the restrictions on settlement in § 908(i)(A), we find no support in the legislative history explaining § 908(i)(A) to justify an interpretation contrary to the plain meaning of the words used. 15 Too much ado has been made over a statement in the Senate and House Reports accompanying the 1972 Amendments, which, when read of context, suggests that Congress inadvertently said “deputy commissioner” when it meant “deputy commissioner, hearing officer, and court.” The Committee on Labor and Public Welfare in a section-by-section analysis of proposed bill S.2318, reported:
Subsection 8(i)(A) provides that the deputy commissioner, Board, or Court may approve a settlement discharging an employer from liability for compensation if he deems it to be in the best interests of the employer.
S.Rep.No.92-1125, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 26 (1972) (emphasis supplied). We noted this statement in
Marine Concrete
suggesting that it supported “the proposition that the ALJ has authority to approve settlements under Subsection A,”
Marine Concrete, supra,
We have discovered nothing apart from this one statement in the committee reports referring to an earlier version of the amendments to suggest that § 908(i)(A)
*291
does not mean exactly what it says. “Congress has put down its pen, and [the Court] can neither rewrite Congress’ words nor call it back ‘to cancel half a line.’ ”
Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs v. Rasmussen,
Though this result may impede “judicial efficiency, see Clefstad, supra, 9 BRBS at 222, to a slight extent, it is consistent with the policies underlying the LHWCA which overshadow the usual tendency of the courts to encourage the settlement of claims. When Congress first amended the LHWCA to afford interested parties the opportunity to reach a settlement agreement, it did so with caution: “Experience, however, warns against lump-sum payments merely as a convenience in disposing [of LHWCA claims]. Large payments of compensation are in most cases soon dissipated, or improvidently or foolishly invested, leaving the employee an early dependent upon charity.” S.Rep.No.1988, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. 6 (1938). See also A. Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation § 82.41 (1976). The speed with which settlements are brought about is, therefore, of less importance than assurance that the settlement is in the claimant’s best interest. Insofar as our ruling today imposes another check on the agreed resolution of claims, it furthers the Act’s conservative approach to settlement approval. 16
V. CONCLUSION
Asserting jurisdiction under the Gillespie exception to the final judgment rule, we decide today that the Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, is the appropriate party-respondent under Fed.R.App.P. 15(a), and therefore, that he has standing to respond to Ingalls’ petition for review in this Court under § 921(c). We also conclude that 20 C.F.R. § 801.2(a)(10) is a reasonable and valid construction of “party in interest” as it is used in § 921(b)(3), and thus we affirm the Board’s finding that the Director was entitled to petition for review of the order approving settlement. Finally, this Court holds that administrative law judges do not have the authority to approve lump-sum settlements under 33 U.S.C. § 908(i)(A). For this reason, we reverse and remand to the Benefits Review Board for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
. Similarly, a state supreme court decision remanding to a lower court is not a “final decision” under 28 U.S.C. § 1257.
O’Dell v. Espinoza,
— U.S. -,
. In
United Fruit Co.,
we dismissed the appeal as premature because the appellant had petitioned from an order of the Board remanding the case to the ALJ for a finding on the extent of the claimant’s liability.
. For recent decisions discussing
Gillespie, see Weil v. Investment Indicators Research & Management,
. The Supreme Court has expressly declined to rule on this issue: “Petitioners named the Director rather than the BRB as a respondent in the Court of Appeals and neither party has raised any question in this Court concerning the identity of the federal respondent. This question is therefore not before us.”
Northeast Marine Terminal Co., Inc. v. Caputo,
. The issue has been raised in this Circuit, but no panel has provided a rationale by which to decide the question. In
Jacksonville Shipyards, Inc. v. Perdue,
In
Offshore Food Service, supra,
. The Fourth Circuit recently applied its analysis in
I.T.O.
to allow the Director to respond under § 921(c). In
Director, OWCP v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co.,
. Rule 15(a) provides in entirety:
(a) Petition for Review of Order; Joint Petition. Review of an order of an administrative agency, board, commission or officer (hereinafter, the term “agency” shall include agency, board, commission or officer) shall be obtained by filing with the clerk of a court of appeals which is authorized to review such order, within the time prescribed by law, a petition to enjoin, set aside, suspend, modify or otherwise review, or a notice of appeal, whichever form is indicated by the applicable statute (hereinafter, the term “petition for review” shall include a petition to enjoin, set aside, suspend, modify or otherwise review, or a notice of appeal). The petition shall specify the parties seeking review and shall designate the respondent and the order or part thereof to be reviewed. Form 3 in the Appendix of Forms is a suggested form of a petition for review. In each case the agency shall be named respondent. The United States shall also be deemed a respondent if so required by statute, even though not so designated in the petition. If two or more persons are entitled to petition the same *284 court for review of the same order and their interests are such as to make joinder practicable, they may file a joint petition for review and may thereafter proceed as a single petitioner.
. Prior to 1972, there was no subsection c to § 921. The “§ 921(b)” referred to in Krolick set out the procedure for appeal prior to 1972 which was replaced in 1972 by 33 U.S.C. § 921(c).
. Congress has charged the Secretary with the duty to administer the Act, 33 U.S.C. § 939, but the Secretary has delegated that duty to the Director, 20 C.F.R. § 701.201.
. Although this 1977 report does not have the authoritative value of legislative history made contemporaneously with the passage of the 1972 amendments, it nevertheless is persuasive extrinsic evidence of congressional intent, particularly in view of Congress’ silence on the standing question when it passed the 1972 Amendments to the LHWCA.
See Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs v. Boughman,
. In a similar manner, Congress has prohibited waiver, 33 U.S.C. § 915(b), and assignment, 33 U.S.C. § 916, of LHWCA claims, except as permitted by other sections of the Act.
. In
DuPuy
the Seventh Circuit held that neither deputy commissioners nor administrative law judges are authorized to approve settlements of death claims under the LHWCA. A death claim is not lodged under § 908 but under 33 U.S.C. § 909, which is silent on whether settlements of death claims are permitted. The court did not decide whether an ALJ has the power to approve a settlement agreement in the case of an injured employee.
.
Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. v. Joyner,
. Section 554(c)(1) provides that the agency shall give interested parties opportunity for:
(1) the submission and consideration of facts, arguments, offers of settlement, or proposals of adjustment when time, the nature of the proceedings, and the public interest permit.
5 U.S.C. § 554(c)(1) (emphasis supplied). The italicized clause allows for the special situation presented here: where the particular agency statute provides for a limited, clearly defined procedure of settlement approval, the general provision of the APA will not supplant it.
. Turning at last to the legislative history underlying § 908(i)(A), we are mindful of the common sense rule “the plainer the language [of the statute], the more convincing contrary legislative history must be.”
United States v. United States Steel Corp.,
. Because we find that administrative law judges lack the authority to approve lump sum settlements, we do not reach the question of whether the ALJ below considered the proposed settlement in accordance with the criteria set out by the Board in Clefstad, supra, 9 BRBS at 222.
