LISA LEE MINES (Terrilynne Coal Company), Petitioner, v. DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION PROGRAMS, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR; Alva Rutter, Respondents.
No. 94-2523.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Decided June 19, 1996.
86 F.3d 1358
Argued Jan. 30, 1996.
In my view, certainly the first, and perhaps the second, of these essential limitations on Federal power has been exceeded in the IDEA provision, at least as it is interpreted by the court today. And with these excesses has come, as always, yet a further incremental, but no less significant, incursion into the sovereign authority of the several States. As counsel for the Federal Government responded, after reflecting for a moment on the court‘s question whether the Department of Education was not simply saying to the States that it knows better than they what is good for America‘s schoolchildren and then imposing that view on the States: “Well your honor, in a sense, that‘s what Congress is doing in this whole statute.” Unwilling to acquiesce in such a pretentious arrogation of state power, I dissent.
Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, and RUSSELL, WIDENER, HALL, MURNAGHAN, ERVIN, WILKINS, NIEMEYER, HAMILTON, LUTTIG, WILLIAMS, MICHAEL, and MOTZ, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge HALL wrote the majority opinion, in which Judges WIDENER, MURNAGHAN, ERVIN, NIEMEYER, MICHAEL, and MOTZ joined. Judge NIEMEYER wrote a concurring opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote a dissenting opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON and Judges RUSSELL, WILKINS, HAMILTON, and WILLIAMS joined.
OPINION
K.K. HALL, Circuit Judge:
Lisa Lee Mines petitioned for review of an order of the Department of Labor‘s Benefits Review Board (BRB) affirming the award of black lung benefits to Alva Rutter, a former coal miner. A panel of this court reversed and remanded. Lisa Lee Mines v. Director, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, 57 F.3d 402 (4th Cir. 1995). Rutter, who had proceeded pro se before the panel, obtained counsel and sought rehearing en banc. Having granted such rehearing, we now affirm.
I.
ARGUED: Ronald Eugene Gilbertson, Kilcullen, Wilson & Kilcullen, Chartered, Washington, D.C., for Petitioner. Christian P. Barber, Counsel for Appellate Litigation, Office of the Solicitor, United States Department of Labor, Washington, D.C., for Respondent Director; Robert F. Cohen, Jr., Cohen, Abate & Cohen, Fairmont, West Virginia, for Respondent Rutter. ON BRIEF: Thomas S. Williamson, Jr., Solicitor of Labor, Donald S. Shire, Associate Solicitor for Putting aside for a moment the question on which the parties disagree, we must first note that Alva Rutter‘s medical condition unquestionably qualifies him for black lung benefits. He is the very paradigm of the man Congress intended to compensate. According to x-rays taken in 1988 and 1989, he has profuse1 small opacities in all six lung zones, upon which has developed complicated pneumoconiosis, or, by its more dauntingly descriptive name, “progressive massive fibro-
II.
Procedure is the rub. In 1986, without the assistance of an attorney, Rutter applied for black lung benefits. He was still working at the time. An x-ray he submitted showed complicated pneumoconiosis; nonetheless, a Department of Labor claims examiner sent him a form denial. Rutter did not pursue the claim further.
In April 1989, he filed a new claim.3 Because of the denial of his earlier claim, this one was subject to the “duplicate claims” regulation at
If the earlier miner‘s claim has been finally denied, the later claim shall also be denied, on the grounds of the prior denial, unless the deputy commissioner determines that there has been a material change in conditions. . . .
This time a deputy commissioner4 in the Department awarded benefits. The responsible operator, petitioner Lisa Lee Mines, requested a hearing. Lisa Lee‘s challenge to the deputy commissioner‘s decision was limited to whether Rutter had made the threshold showing of a “material change in conditions.” The parties then agreed to submit the question on the existing record.
On October 11, 1991, an administrative law judge (ALJ) issued a decision and order awarding benefits. After canvassing the evidence, the ALJ concluded, “the medical evidence in 1989 shows a definite progression of the disease occurring over another interval of time resulting in the Claimant‘s reduced capacity to do his former coal mine work.”
The ALJ then went on to hold that, if the evidence were inadequate to establish a material change in conditions, Rutter would still be entitled to benefits. According to the ALJ, the 1986 denial was erroneous on its face and “null and void ab initio.” Consequently, “it is believed that a determination whether or not the new evidence establishes a change of condition is immaterial.” The ALJ set the date of onset of disability as August 1, 1986.
On September 30, 1994, the BRB modified the award. It held that the ALJ‘s finding of an actual progression of Rutter‘s disease was sufficient to satisfy its Spese5 test for material change in condition. However, the BRB held that the ALJ had no power to reopen or review the denial of the 1986 claim, which became final upon Rutter‘s failure to appeal or move to modify it. The BRB therefore affirmed the award but changed the date from which benefits were payable to April 1, 1989. Lisa Lee then filed a timely petition for review in this court.
III.
Lisa Lee‘s argument is as easily stated as it is counterintuitive: Rutter must now lose because he clearly should have won in 1986. He likely should have; the ALJ here was so appalled by the 1986 denial that he deemed it “void ab initio.” Nonetheless, though we might share the ALJ‘s sentiment, we agree
The panel rejected the BRB and Director‘s standards for determining whether there was a material change in Rutter‘s condition. The panel criticized the BRB‘s Spese standard because it “impermissibly allows a claimant to present . . . evidence available at the time of the initial decision tending to show that the initial decision was in error.” 57 F.3d at 406. The Director‘s standard met similar criticism: “it permits reconsideration of critical determinations underlying a decision denying benefits.” Id. at 407. Instead, the panel adopted the Seventh Circuit‘s test, which, as applied, meant that the miner must show that his condition has changed on every element previously decided against him. See Sahara Coal Co. v. Director, OWCP, 946 F.2d 554 (7th Cir. 1991). Moreover, as in Sahara Coal, the panel required inquiry into the evidence behind the earlier decision, rather than merely accepting the factual predicate of the earlier decision as correct. Consequently, the panel remanded for an all-but-certain finding that Rutter had actually been eligible for benefits in 1986, so his current conceded eligibility could not evince a material change in condition. We disagree with this reasoning.
If the 1986 denial is “final” in a legal sense, we must accept the correctness of its legal conclusion—Rutter was not eligible for benefits at that time—and that determination is as off-limits to criticism by the respondent as by the claimant. Only by repudiating the 1986 judgment and its necessary factual underpinning can no change in Rutter‘s condi-6tion be found. We believe that such repudiation is improper.
Accepting the correctness of a final judgment is more than legalistic tunnel vision; it is a practical—perhaps the only practical—way to discern a concrete form in the mists of the past. The ease we might feel at second-guessing this final judgment ought not tempt us to overestimate our retrospective perspicacity; most black lung claims involve a mixed bag of test results and wildly divergent medical opinions. The final decision of the ALJ (or BRB or claims examiner) on the spot is the best evidence of the truth at the time.
In this regard, the panel opinion could be read to imply that the deputy commissioner made an express finding of fact in 1986 that Rutter had complicated pneumoconiosis. See 57 F.3d at 404 (“A Department of Labor deputy commissioner denied that claim, finding that although Rutter had presented evidence of complicated pneumoconiosis, he had not established that the disease was caused by coal mine work, or that he was totally disabled by the disease.“) (emphasis added). This implication is mistaken. The form denial neither states that Rutter has complicated pneumoconiosis nor acknowledges that he “had presented evidence” of it. It may have been obvious to all who could and would see, but a finding that should have been made is not a finding that was made.6
Not only does the denial of benefits itself necessarily imply the opposite finding, see
IV.
A.
Rutter‘s is just a single case, and our reasons for affirming the award could end here. However, the proper standard to determine whether a given claimant has proved a “material change in condition” has recently split the circuits, and we now take this opportunity to align ourselves with the Third and Sixth Circuits, rather than the Seventh.
In choosing the proper standard, we have three candidates: (1) the BRB‘s Spese formulation, which broadly looks to whether the newly submitted evidence favorable to the claim has a “reasonable possibility” of changing the prior result; (2) the Sahara Coal test, adopted by the Seventh Circuit and the panel here, which requires the miner to show that he “did not have black lung disease at the time of the first application but has since contracted it and become totally disabled by it, or that his disease has progressed to the point of becoming totally disabling although it was not at the time of the first application,” 946 F.2d at 556; and (3) the Director‘s “one-element” standard, which requires the claimant to prove, under all of the probative medical evidence of his condition after the prior denial, at least one of the elements previously adjudicated against him. The Director‘s standard, to which we owe deference,8 is easily the most reasonable and workable of the lot. To explain why, we should begin with background principles.
B.
A new black lung claim is not barred, as a matter of ordinary res judicata, by an earlier denial, because the claims are not the same. The health of a human being is not susceptible to once-in-a-lifetime adjudication.
It is almost too obvious for comment that res judicata does not apply if the issue is claimant‘s physical condition or degree of disability at two entirely different times, particularly in the case of occupational diseases. 3 A. Larson, The Law of Workmen‘s Compensation, § 79.72(f) (1989). The issue in 1986 was Rutter‘s condition in 1986, and his future condition was not and could not have been litigated then.
Thus, nothing bars or should bar claimants from filing claims seriatim, and the regulations recognize that many will. See, e.g.,
Here we meet up with something of a dilemma. We must have an anchor in the past with which to compare current conditions, but alternative holdings are not necessarily conclusive.
The Director‘s approach strikes a reasonable balance. Each of the alternative holdings is presumed to have been correct when made and to continue to be correct through time. Because of their tenuous nature, however, disproof of the continuing validity of just one of the alternative holdings is enough to establish a material change in condition. We defer to the Director‘s reasonable interpretation of the duplicate claims regulation. In doing so, we join the Third and Sixth Circuits. Labelle Processing Co. v. Swarrow, 72 F.3d 308 (3rd Cir.1995); Sharondale Corp. v. Ross, 42 F.3d 993 (6th Cir.1994).11
C.
In comparison to the Director‘s approach, Spese and Sahara Coal come up short. The Spese test is too vague to be applied consistently, contains illogical evidentiary rules (it permits resort to evidence available before the prior denial and forbids consideration of contrary probative evidence), and arguably sets too low a threshold (“reasonable possibility“) to discern “material” changes in condition.
Sahara Coal has two flaws. First, it founders on issue-preclusion principles where there are alternative holdings in the first claim, as discussed above. Second, and more importantly, it is the only one of the standards that permits—in fact demands—a plenary review of the evidence behind the first claim. For example, it is not enough for the miner to rely on an ALJ‘s final determination that he did not have pneumoconiosis or was not disabled by it. The miner must affirmatively prove that these adverse determinations were correct.12 To use that court‘s own
V.
We are not unmindful of the possibility that the Director‘s standard might encourage abuse of the administrative process by wily claimants and their wily lawyers. After today‘s decision, an unsuccessful claimant will doubtless schedule a morning appointment with a compliant physician for a year and a day after the denial of his claim. Armed with evidence contrary to an element previously found against him, the claimant will file a new claim that afternoon, and so on, ad infinitum.
This scenario belongs to that genre of horribles that seems impressive in academic debate but has little relevance to real life. Any claimant who wants to be a perpetual litigator can already be a perpetual litigator, and in a much easier fashion. The day before his hypothetical doctor‘s appointment, the miner may file a request for “modification” of the earlier denial. For the claimant, modification is a far more attractive option than a new claim, because, in addition to a change in conditions, it can be based on a “mistake in a determination of fact” in the original denial.
Moreover, a miner who wanted to file duplicate claims ad infinitum would have to live ad infinitum. The black lung claims process is extraordinarily slow; today, in 1996, we still routinely hear cases involving the
The risk of sporadic abuse of the duplicate claims process is far outweighed by the necessity that there be some such process and by the utility of the Director‘s approach to it. As we emphasized above, pneumoconiosis—especially in the advanced form from which this claimant suffers—is a progressive disease, and no rational system of law or of medicine could stand on the proposition that it can or must be measured only once.14 A rational system would simultaneously account for the progressiveness of the disease, discourage useless appeals of alternative holdings, and require, at the threshold, a palpable basis to believe that conditions have changed over time. The Director‘s “one-
VI.
Finally, we return to Mr. Alva Rutter. In clinical terms, the change in his condition has been very real, even if we reexamine the 1986 evidence. The ALJ found that, in 1986, Rutter had small opacities of 2/2 profusion in four of six lung zones, with large opacities of category A (greater than one but less than five centimeters in diameter). By 1989, small opacities clogged all six lung zones, in greater profusion (2/3 to 3/2), and large opacities had progressed to Category B (greater than five centimeters). In 1986, notwithstanding his advanced disease, Rutter could work and support his family. Now he cannot. From Rutter‘s viewpoint, the change in his condition could scarcely be more “material.”
The award of benefits is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I join in Judge Hall‘s opinion for the court but write separately to explain that my vote does not rest on the assumptions that the dissent attributes to the majority opinion.
The effect of the majority opinion is to award benefits to a person who indisputably falls within the class of persons that Congress intended to benefit. While a review of the record from the claimant‘s first application for benefits may call the original denial of benefits into question, established and desirable principles of finality bind us to accept that conclusion. On the claimant‘s reapplication for benefits some years later, the objective medical facts demonstrate that his condition worsened, to the point that the Department of Labor concluded, without difficulty, that the claimant was disabled. The change, defined by the later finding of disability when previously such a finding was not made combined with the finding of a worsened condition, is material. And it is that material change that demands my vote in favor of affirming the Department‘s award of benefits, but only from the date of the second benefits application.
I depart from the dissenting opinion where it draws the conclusion, contrary to the law of the case, that the claimant was “unquestionably disabled” at the time of his first application. To reach that conclusion, the dissent engages in an improper review of the first decision denying benefits, a decision the majority has left at rest.
Contrary to the dissent‘s suggestion, sympathy—other than for what the law prescribes—played no role in our disposition of this case.
LUTTIG, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
The majority today is tempted, and ultimately persuaded, by the sympathies of this case, as is evident from the fact that it begins its analysis by “[p]utting aside” the legal question before us, and instead, dwelling on the uncontroverted fact that the claimant today has complicated pneumoconiosis caused by coal mine work. Whether or not, in our judgment, Rutter has complicated pneumoconiosis, or whether he is someone to whom we would award benefits were it our responsibility, are not the questions before us, however. Rather, we have before us a question of law, whether this claimant has proven a “material change in conditions” that would warrant reconsideration of whether he is entitled to black lung benefits. See
The Department of Labor promulgated section
In order to conclude that this claimant is entitled to benefits under the duplicate claims provision, the majority entirely relieves claimants of their burden of proving a material change in conditions, holding that any miner who is currently entitled to benefits shall receive them, a standard that invites claimants to file claim after claim until they find a pliant ALJ. As the majority unabashedly explains:
[N]othing bars or should bar claimants from filing claims seriatim . . . . After today‘s decision, an unsuccessful claimant will doubtless schedule a morning appointment with a compliant physician for a year and a day after the denial of his claim. Armed with evidence contrary to an element previously found against him, the claimant will file a new claim that afternoon, and so on, ad infinitum.
Ante at 1362, 1364. This is, of course, precisely the result intended to be avoided under the regulation. Like the now repudiated Spese standard, this standard fails even to examine or consider the claimant‘s original conditions, much less to require a determination of whether there has been a “material change” (or for that matter, even an immaterial change) in those conditions—as the Director himself concedes. See Director‘s Answer in Support of Respondent‘s Petition for Rehearing En Banc at 9 (acknowledging that the “one-element” test “allows an inference of change” in conditions to support reexamination of a duplicate claim (emphasis added)). Indeed, in its haste to award benefits in this case, the majority does not so much as bother to differentiate between a change and a “material change,” effectively holding that all changes are material.
That the majority‘s standard allows recovery of benefits merely upon a showing that the claimant is today eligible for benefits, without any evidence whatever of a change in his condition, is confirmed by the fact that the majority expressly rejects the requirement, from the Sixth Circuit‘s decision it purports to adopt, that the ALJ make certain that the evidence presented with the duplicate claim “differ[s] qualitatively” from the evidence available at the time of the initial denial. See ante at 1363 n. 11 (quoting Sharondale Corp. v. Ross, 42 F.3d 993, 999 (6th Cir. 1994)). The majority, thus, adopts for this circuit the very rule that even the Sixth Circuit recognized was manifestly untenable under the regulation—that the claimant may recover benefits if “the ALJ merely disagree[s] with the previous characterization of the strength of the evidence.” Sharondale, 42 F.3d at 999.
When all is said and done, therefore, the majority holds that a claimant is entitled to benefits if he comes forward with any additional evidence of his condition “after” the denial of the original claim and shows that he is now entitled to benefits, ante at 1362, whether or not the claimant proves a material change (or a change at all) in his conditions from what they were at the time he was earlier denied benefits. A claimant, for example, who is denied benefits and then files a duplicate claim accompanied by an additional “probative” x-ray taken after the initial denial that is identical to the x-rays presented with the initial claim (that is, that show identical opacities) would receive black lung benefits on his duplicate claim, notwithstanding that his condition has not changed at all. For, he has, according to the majority, “prove[d], under all of the probative medical evidence of his condition after the prior denial, at least one of the elements previously adjudicated against him.” Ante at 1362. Not only is such a holding irreconcilable with the plain language of section
Because the standard articulated by the Seventh Circuit in Sahara Coal Co. v. OWCP, 946 F.2d 554, 556 (7th Cir. 1991), is the only standard which both requires a “material change in conditions” and respects the finality of the initial judgment, I would adopt that test as the law of this circuit. The Sahara standard provides that,
[a] material change in conditions means either that the miner did not have black lung disease at the time of the first application but has since contracted it and become totally disabled by it, or that his disease has progressed to the point of becoming totally disabling although it was not at the time of the first application.
Id. Of the various tests for determining eligibility for duplicate claim benefits, only the Sahara standard focuses upon the miner‘s conditions and requires that those conditions change in a way that is material. The majority‘s characterization notwithstanding, the Sahara standard does not require that the claimant show a material change “on every element previously decided against him,” ante at 1361, 1363. Rather, it requires only that the claimant show, through a comparison of the evidence existing at the time of his original denial of benefits and the evidence currently available, that he was not then, but is now, eligible for benefits. In other words, the focus of the Sahara standard is not on the conclusions reached as to the conditions, but rather on the underlying conditions themselves, which is exactly what section
The majority is critical of the Sahara standard because it believes that any examination of the evidence underlying the prior denial of benefits (that is, examination of the evidence as to the miner‘s prior condition) would offend principles of res judicata. A standard that requires denial of a duplicate claim because the claimant‘s underlying conditions have not materially changed (for example, because the claimant was disabled then and is disabled now), however, does not undermine the original decision to deny benefits; rather, such a standard fully respects that decision, in stark contrast to the standard adopted by the majority, which continuously allows reopening of that original decision based upon evidence reflecting no change at all in the claimant‘s conditions. Instead of “foundering” on principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel, as the majority contends, the Sahara standard actually represents too strict an application of those principles for the majority, because that standard, unlike the majority‘s standard, does require faithful adherence to the initial denial, irrespective of whether that denial was correct or incorrect.
The court‘s tortured interpretation of the duplicate claims regulation comes about as a result of this one claimant‘s refusal either to appeal or to seek modification of an arguably erroneous decision and the court‘s unwillingness to accept the result that he may, as a consequence of his insouciance, find himself without remedy. As a court of law, however, we should recognize that this circumstance is an extraordinarily unusual one, not likely to frequently, if ever, repeat itself, and resist the temptation to yield to our collective sense as to what would be “fair” in this most peculiar of circumstances. Doing so, and simply applying the plain language of the regulation, I would vacate and remand to the ALJ for reconsideration of whether Rutter, under the standard adopted by the Seventh Circuit in Sahara, has shown a “material change in conditions.”
Chief Judge WILKINSON and Judges RUSSELL, WILKINS, HAMILTON and WILLIAMS join in this opinion.
Notes
Dear Claimant:
We have carefully reviewed the evidence in your claim under the Black Lung Benefits Act. . . .
This elaborate ploy could happen; all sorts of odd things happen. But it simply does not describe typical human behavior. Our lottery winner, for all the skill of his gambit, would quickly find himself faced with a controversion of the claim from the responsible operator, and he would then get a much belated chance at his decade of litigation. Out-of-work coal miners, disabled or not, generally need money badly enough to forgo such pointless intrigue in favor of honestly and earnestly prosecuting their claims.
