Peabody Coal challenges the award of black lung benefits in a typically protracted case that began when Ronald Durbin applied for benefits in 1975 (shortly after he had retired following a heart attack) and that has outlived him. We can skip over the intermediate proceedings and come directly to the administrative law judge’s opinion of June 1994, awarding the benefits to Durbin’s widow. The administrative law judge invoked the invalid “true doubt” rule, Director v. Greenwich Collieries,
At this point the burden shifted to the coal company to prove if it could that Durbin did not have, or was not totally disabled by, pneumoconiosis. § 727.203(b); R & H Steel Buildings, Inc. v. Director,
Where he stumbled badly, however, was in the answer he gave (“yes”), which depended, to an extent impossible to determine from the record, on his discrediting the evidence of a Dr. Fino, conceded to be the best-qualified medical expert in this case, that pneumoconiosis could not have been responsible for Durbin’s inability to continue working as a coal miner. In reaching this conclusion Fino had relied heavily on a review by a Dr. Naeye of the report of Durbin’s autopsy by the pathologist who had conducted it. The report showed that Durbin had been ravaged by heart disease, and both Naeye and Fino believed that Durbin had been disabled by a combination of that disease with emphysema due to cigarette smoking, rather than by his pneumoconiosis, which, they inferred from the report of the autopsy, was too mild to be totally disabling. The only ground that the administrative law judge gave for finding that Fino’s opinion about the cause of Durbin’s disability “cannot count for much” (so far as we can determine, the administrative law judge counted it for nothing) is that Naeye’s review, on which Fino had relied, was not in evidence, the coal company having inadvertently failed to submit it by the deadline for introducing evidence.
The administrative law judge thus believed that an expert cannot base an opinion even in part on materials that are not part of the record. That is nonsense. Rule 703 of the Federal Rules of Evidence is explicit that the materials on which an expert witness bases an opinion need not be admissible, let alone admitted, in evidence, provided that they are the sort of thing on which a responsible expert draws in formulating a professional opinion. United States v. Vest,
The claimant points out that administrative agencies in general, and administrative law judges in black lung cases in particular, are not bound by the rules of evidence. FTC v. Cement Institute,
Maybe there are areas of administrative law in which the normal rules of evidence ought to be tightened rather than loosened, though we cannot think of any. There is no suggestion that black lung cases are one of those areas. Neither Congress nor the Department of Labor thinks so. Nothing in the statutes or regulations applicable to such cases supports the decision of the administrative law judge to impose tighter limits on expert witnesses in black lung cases than the Federal Rules of Evidence impose in ordinary civil and criminal trials.
Given Dr. Fino’s superior credentials and emphatic and reasoned conclusion that Durbin was not disabled by black lung disease, the administrative law judge’s error in discrediting his evidence cannot be dismissed as harmless. Though reluctant to protract this 23-year-old ease further, we have no alternative to vacating the decision of the Benefits Review Board upholding the award of benefits to Mrs. Durbin, and remanding the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Vacated and Remanded.
