When he died of heart failure in 1991 at the age of 60, Elwood McCandless was afflicted with cancer and emphysema in addition to his cardiac and circulatory diseases. Elwood’s widow, Jane, contends that he also was disabled by coal workers’ pneumoconiosis as a result of more than 25 years’ exposure to dust in the mines. Many x-rays taken over the last decade of Elwood’s life revealed little evidence of black lung disease. But an autopsy is the best way to obtain information that will decide the question, see
Peabody Coal Co. v. Director, OWCP,
These divergent interpretations presented a problem for the administrative law judge. Lawyers are uncomfortable with scientific controversies' — -for good reason, because legal training does not supply the tools needed to resolve technical disputes. Nonetheless, many statutes (of which the Black Lung Benefits Act is an example) make entitlements turn on scientific knowledge, and the alj set about to deal with the conflicting conclusions of these physicians — but on legal rather than medical grounds. The alj wrote:
I place greater weight on Dr. Bockel-man’s opinion because he performed the actual autopsy ... and is a board-certified pathologist.... The opinions of Drs. Crouch, Kleinerman and Naeye also merit weight because they too are board-certified pathologists and appeared to provide well-reasoned explanations to discredit Dr. Bockelman’s conclusion. Dr. Tuteur is also a well-trained physician, although not a pathologist. Placing more weight on the opinion of the pathologist who performed the autopsy, as I have the leeway to do, I find that the Claimant has established pneumoconiosis pursuant to [20 C.F.R.] § 718.202(a)(2).
There was a little more to the alj’s conclusion: he relied on the fact that 2 out of 31 readings of the many x-rays had been positive for pneumoconiosis, and that other physicians who examined Bockel-man’s report (and perhaps some of the evidence) found no errors in his analysis. Later the Benefits Review Board deemed the alj’s reliance on the positive x-ray readings inappropriate, leaving only the conclusions based on evidence obtained during the autopsy. On that score, the BRB concluded, an alj is entitled to favor the findings of an autopsy prosector without getting into a scientific debate about the quality of the prosector’s reasoning.
*468
Although we understand why the alj and the brb wanted to avoid the medical controversy, their approach does not conduce to finding the truth. A scientific dispute must be resolved on scientific grounds, rather than by declaring that whoever examines the cadaver dictates the outcome. See
Wilder v. Chater,
The approach used by the alj and brb in this case appears to be a vestige of the “true doubt rule,” under which a conflict in the evidence was resolved in the miner’s favor.
Director, OWCP v. Greenwich Collieries,
Since
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
We are not authorized to resolve the medical dispute as an initial matter, so. the case must be remanded to the agency for reconsideration. Two other disputes lurk in this record, and we mention them briefly in an effort to head off further troubles. If Elwood had pneumoconiosis, the next question is whether that disease was disabling. Given his many other ailments, it is hard to see how it could have been, for the other problems appear to be sufficient to cause disability (implying that pneumoconiosis was not a necessary condition of disability). See
Freeman United Coal Mining Co. v. Foster,
The alj must have a medical reason for preferring one physician’s conclusion over another’s. In this case the alj recognized that the treating physician’s views may not be accepted unless there is a good reason to believe that they are *470 accurate. The alj thought that he had such a reason: Dr. Gelhausen was Elwood’s treating physician, and treating physicians are (by definition) familiar with patients’ medical condition during life. That’s just a restatement of the preference. Circular reasoning cannot avoid the rule. If there is a reason why Dr. Gelhau-sen’s observations have medical significance, that’s one thing; but the fact that Gelhausen examined Elwood McCandless before his death does not demonstrate that Elwood was disabled by pneumoconiosis. Dr. Gelhausen’s beliefs must be supported by medical reasons if they are to be given legal effect.
The other potentially recurring subject is attorneys’ fees. The alj calculated the fees of Jack N. VanStone, who represents Jane McCandless, at $200 per hour. The mine operator objected, observing that this hourly rate exceeds what VanStone charges his paying clients. (At oral argument VanStone conceded that the highest rate he has ever charged a paying client is $150 per hour.) Because the rate chargeable against the mine operator must be market-based, see
Gusman v. Unisys Corp.,
The Board’s order is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
