William Scott retired in 1976 from his job as a coal mine manager and applied for black lung benefits. Eight years passed before a hearing was held, and by then William was dead. Although an autopsy would have shown whether he suffered from pneumoconiosis, one was not performed (or, if it was, the results were not placed in the record). Ever since, William’s widow Brunette has been debating with Old Ben Coal Co., his former employer, about the significance of x-ray. films, which have been read in different ways by different physicians, different administrative law judges, and different members of the Benefits Review Board. The process has dragged out appallingly. There have been denials, reopenings, hearings, decisions, remands, more hearings, more remands, and still more hearings. But the fundamental problem has not been and cannot be solved: the only evidence that would answer the question whether William had coal miners’ pneumoconiosis is unavailable, and what we do have is inconclusive. The result of another hearing would be no more reliable than the decisions made so far. Under the circumstances, the administrative process must end.
. What makes this case unusual is that the administrative process
did
end—in 1988. An ALJ denied the claim after the 1984 hearing. Four years later the Benefits Review Board affirmed. Brunette did not file a petition for judicial review. One would have supposed that the process was over. Some months later, however, Brunette filed a motion to modify the decision, alleging that it had been based on a mistake of fact. Section 22 of the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. § 922, incorporated by reference into the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. § 932(a), gives a claimant one year from the. denial of benefits to seek modification “because of a mistake in a determination of fact” by the ALJ. See also
Metropolitan Stevedore Co. v. Rambo,
— U.S. -,
Because this claim was filed in 1976, and William worked in the mines for more than 10 years, the only issue that really matters is whether he had the disease. If he did, then a presumption that the disease caused his disability does the rest of the work. 20 C.F.R. § 727.203(a);
Mullins Coal Co. v. Director, OWCP,
One reply could have been that the statute is limited to errors in the record, rather than to errors in the conclusions drawn from the record. Mistakes with respect to evaluation, inference, and application of legal rules should be handled by motion for reconsideration and appeal to the BRB. Otherwise the requirements for claims based on new evidence or changed circumstances—see 20 C.F.R. § 725.309(e);
Peabody Coal Co. v. Spese,
What Old Ben asks us to hold is that the ALJ violated the APA because he did not use magic words, such as “I find that the criteria for modification have been satisfied.” Instead the ALJ reevaluated the evidence and made an award, as if this were the initial decision. Like the Benefits Review Board, we find Old Ben’s argument perplexing. It is perfectly clear that the ALJ—the same person who denied the claim in 1984—knew what was afoot. Between 1988 (when the motion for modification was filed) and the new final decision of 1995 there had been multiple hearings and an appeal to the BRB, followed by a remand.
Eifler v. OWCP,
By 1995 the administrative record contained 66 readings of 16 x-rays taken between 1975 and 1983. The ALJ gave the most weight to the 1983 films. Old Ben insists that this preference depends on a belief that pneumoconiosis is progressive, which it derides as “mythology”. We have held, however, that the etiology of this disease is a question of legislative fact,
Spese,
Readers were divided about interpretation of the films, and Old Ben insists that the negative readings came from better-qualified interpreters. Maybe; maybe not. Resolving such disputes is not oui- job. We ask only whether substantial evidence supports the administrative decision, as here it does. Two Board-certified “B-readers” interpreted some of the 1983 films as “2/2”—category 2 fibrosis, an advanced state of the disease. There was of course substantial contrary evidence. Had the record been one-sided, the ALJ would not have ruled against the claimant in 1984, and the ensuing proceedings would not have dragged on as they did. In cases of this kind someone must make a judgment call, and under the statute that someone is the ALJ. The administrative opinions reveal the path to decision, and no more is necessary. The award of benefits is
AFFIRMED.
