Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge BERZON; Dissent by Judge O’SCANNLAIN.
OPINION
We consider whether a claimant under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA,” “Longshore Act,” or “Act”), 33 U.S.C. § 901 et seq., (1) is entitled to the maximum compensation rate from the fiscal year in which he becomes disabled or from the fiscal year in which he receives a formal compensation award; (2) receives interest on past due compensation at the rate defined in 28 U.S.C. § 1961 instead of the rate set forth in 26 U.S.C. § 6621;
I. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory Scheme
The Longshore Act is a “‘comprehensive scheme’ ” to provide compensation for the disability or death of employees resulting from injuries occurring upon the navigable waters of the United States. Roberts v. Sea-Land Servs., Inc., — U.S. -,
When seeking compensation under the Act, a worker must file a claim with a district director, a designee of the Director. 33 U.S.C. § 919(a); 20 C.F.R. §§ 701.301(a)(7), 702.105, 702.136. With respect to benefits, the LHWCA establishes a maximum limit on compensation for disability. 33 U.S.C. § 906(b)(1). Compensation is capped at twice the applicable national average weekly wage. Id. The Act requires that compensation “be paid periodically, promptly, and directly to the person entitled thereto, without an award, except where liability to pay compensation is controverted by the employer.” Id. § 914(a).
An employer controverting the right to compensation must file a formal notice with the district director. Id. § 914(d). Employers who do not do so become liable for an additional ten percent of “any installment of compensation payable without an award [that] is not paid within fourteen days after it becomes due.” Id. § 914(e). In addition to and separate from any penalty due under § 914, claimants are entitled under our case law to receive interest on past due payments, regardless of whether employers have controverted liability. See Matulic v. Dir., OWCP,
District directors are authorized by the Director to resolve disputes with respect to claims and generally do so through informal discussions. 20 C.F.R. §§ 702.311, 801.2. If parties are unable to reach a resolution through this informal process, a district director will transfer the case to an ALJ for formal adjudication. Id. § 702.316; see also 33 U.S.C. § 919(d). The ALJ will then issue a compensation order rejecting a claim or making an award. 33 U.S.C. § 919(e). Parties can appeal an ALJ’s order to the Benefits Review Board (“Board” or “BRB”), id. § 921(b)(3), and “[a]ny person 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,” id. § 921(c).
B. Factual and Procedural History
Arel Price was injured in 1991 while employed as a longshoreman by Stevedoring Services of America, Inc. After undergoing surgery for his injury, he returned to work and continued to work until 1998, when he stopped working upon his physician’s advice.
After informal negotiations preceding adjudication by an ALJ, Stevedoring provided Price with weekly workers’ compensation payments of $676.89 from his date of injury until January 1992. The maximum weekly compensation rate at the time of Price’s injury was $699.96 per week. Price also received a lump sum payment for the period from January to November 1992.
The parties disagreed, however, as to whether the amount Stevedoring paid Price in benefits was correct, or whether the proper rate was higher. As a result, the case was referred to an ALJ, who issued a formal compensation award in 2000. Upon eventual appeal, we remanded the case for reconsideration of the national
On remand, the ALJ revised the applicable national average weekly wage and awarded Price compensation at the 1991 fiscal year maximum, declining to apply the maximum compensation rate from fiscal year 2000, when Price received his formal compensation order. In addition, the ALJ awarded Price interest on past due payments at the rate set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1961; the ALJ rejected Price’s argument that interest should be awarded at the higher rate set forth in 26 U.S.C. § 6621(a). The ALJ also refused to award Price compound interest at the § 1961 rate, requiring only simple interest instead.
Price then petitioned this court for review of the Board’s decision, challenging the maximum rate of compensation, the rate of interest on his past due compensation, and the award of simple rather than compound interest. Price named the Director, who had not been involved in the adjudicatory proceedings before the Board, as one of the respondents. See generally Ingalls,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
1. Chevron deference
Two administrative entities have weighed in on the issues here: the Board, through its order, and the Director, through his litigating position before this court. Because the Board is not a policy-making entity, we accord no special deference to its interpretation of the Longshore Act. See Matson Terminals, Inc. v. Berg,
“[0]ur rule mandating deference to the Director’s reasonable litigating positions cannot be reconciled with Supreme Court precedent.” Price,
Mead held that tariff classification rulings by the U.S. Customs Service do not merit Chevron deference.
Noting that the absence of any formal procedure did not categorically preclude extension of Chevron deference, the Court proceeded to examine whether there were “any other circumstances reasonably suggesting that Congress ever thought of classification rulings as deserving the deference claimed for them here.” Id. at 231,
The Director’s construction of the Long-shore Act advanced through his litigating position falls even further “beyond the Chevron pale,” id., and evinces even less of a “lawmaking pretense,” id. at 233,
In practice as well as theory, it is the BRB’s published decisions — and not the Director’s litigating positions — that are precedential and determine the rights of future parties. See, e.g., B.C. v. Stevedoring Servs. of Am., 41 BRBS 107, 112 (2007) (“[W]e decline to overturn our longstanding precedent that, under normal circumstances, pre-judgment interest awards under the Act should be calculated on a simple basis.”). Any claimants or employers who ignore a Board precedent and rely instead on the Director’s contrary litigating position — assuming there is one — do so at their own peril. Furthermore, the Director’s arguments during agency adjudication inform but do not constrain the BRB’s decisions in any way. In Grant v. Portland Stevedoring Co., for example, the BRB decided to adopt the 28 U.S.C. § 1961 rate for calculating interest on past due disability payments, despite the Director’s position before the Board that it should rely on the 26 U.S.C. § 6621 rate. 16 BRBS 267, 270-71 (1984).
In addition, the Director’s maintenance of some litigating positions that are consistent with the Board’s precedential orders and others that are at odds with those orders is inconsistent with the “fairness and deliberation that should underlie a pronouncement of [law].” Mead,
Withholding Chevron deference from the Director’s litigating positions is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in Martin,
“That an agency’s litigating position may be entitled to deference when the agency interprets its own regulations,” however, “says nothing about whether such a position may be entitled to deference when the agency interprets the statute itself.” Price,
The principle that agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations are entitled to deference, even when their interpretation of statutes is not, underlies Auer v. Robbins, in which the Court accorded Chevron deference to the interpretation of Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) regulations set forth in the Secretary of Labor’s amicus brief.
The rigors of rulemaking, Gonzales indicates, are relevant here. Gonzales explained that an agency does not acquire “special authority” to interpret its own regulations when it does not dedicate its “expertise and experience” to formulating those regulations and instead merely paraphrases statutory language. Id. In other words, an agency presumably undertakes careful deliberation about how best to effectuate statutory policies during the demanding process of promulgating regulations that go beyond simply restating a statute; through that process, it takes pains to understand and effectuate the congressional intent underlying the statute. See Chevron,
Where that thorough groundwork has already been completed, the agency’s later litigating positions can ordinarily be understood as resting on its earlier research and consideration.
Without a basis in agency regulations or other binding agency interpretations, there is usually no justification for attributing to an agency litigating position “the force of law,” Mead,
Furthermore, deferring to agencies’ litigating positions interpreting statutes they are charged with administering would create a danger that agencies would avoid promulgating regulations altogether, given the comparative ease of announcing a new statutory interpretation in a brief rather than through formal rulemaking. This result would severely undermine the notice and predictability to regulated parties that formal rulemaking is meant to promote. See Christopher,
Based on these considerations, we conclude that the Director’s litigating position interpreting the Longshore Act does not merit Chevron deference. In so holding, we join all other circuits that have addressed this issue.
Our holding finds support in the Supreme Court’s analysis of the relationship between the Director and the Board under the Longshore Act. The Court has observed that the Director’s “lack of control over the adjudicative process does not ... deprive [him] of the power to resolve legal ambiguities in the statute.” Newport News,
2. Skidmore Deference
Where Chevron is inapplicable, reasonable agency interpretations may still carry “at least some added persuasive force.” Metro. Stevedore Co., 521 U.S at 136,
i. The Director
The Director’s interpretations of the Longshore Act may merit Skidmore respect, but only to the extent that they exhibit certain characteristics. “The weight of [an agency’s interpretive decision] in a particular case will depend upon the thoroughness evident in its consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements, and all those factors which give it power to persuade, if lacking power to control.” Skidmore,
As will appear, we ultimately conclude that the Director is entitled to Skidmore respect as to the proper rate of interest, first because some of his arguments are persuasive and second because the agency’s manual and practice have for some time consistently advanced a reasonable position as to that rate. But the Director is not entitled to Skidmore respect as to whether the interest should be simple or compound, because his position on that issue is simply unpersuasive, notwithstanding its inclusion in the agency’s manual and the Director’s consistent application of simple interest for some time. In particular, the Director’s position as to compound interest is flawed because it selectively adopts the § 1961 statutory rate without adopting the accompanying provision that specifies compounding. See 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a), (b).
ii. The Board
We have previously indicated that the BRB may also be entitled to Skidmore respect despite its lack of policymaking authority. See, e.g., Stevedoring Servs. of Am. v. Dir., OWCP,
In Martin, the Court withheld Chevron deference from the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC) on the basis that “Congress intended to delegate to the Commission the type of nonpolicymaking adjudicatory powers typically exercised by a court in the agency-review context.”
Like OSHRC, the BRB possesses only “nonpolicymaking adjudicatory powers,” Le Frois,
Another way of approaching this problem is to return to the two-step test Mead set forth for determining whether an agency is entitled to Chevron deference. Chevron deference is due only when (1) “it appears that Congress delegated authority to the agency generally to make rules carrying the force of law” and (2) “the agency interpretation claiming deference was promulgated in the exercise of that authority.”
Nonetheless, we need not definitively resolve this conundrum concerning whether the BRB is entitled to Skidmore respect. As we indicate below, the Board’s explanations as to the contested issues here are not persuasive and would thus not be entitled to deference in any event.
B. Maximum Compensation Rate
The LHWCA caps disability benefits at twice the national average weekly wage for the fiscal year in which a worker is “newly awarded compensation.” 33 U.S.C. § 906(c). The parties’ disagreement over Price’s maximum rate of compensation arises from their diverging interpretations of the phrase “newly awarded compensation” with respect to when compensation is awarded.
C. Interest Rate
We have held that interest on disability awards is mandatory under the LHWCA as a “ ‘necessary and inherent component of ‘compensation’ because it ensures that the delay in payment of compensation does not diminish the amount of compensation to which the employee is entitled.’ ” Matulic,
While the parties agree that Price should receive interest on his past due benefits, they disagree as to the proper rate of interest. The LHWCA contains no express provision regarding interest on past due compensation, nor any standards for calculating the rate of interest to be awarded.
1. Section 6621 or Section 1961
Price first argues that the ALJ should have awarded him interest on past due compensation at the rate set forth in 26 U.S.C. § 6621. Section 6621 defines the interest rate that the IRS uses with respect to compensation for overpayment and underpayment of taxes. See 26 U.S.C. § 6621(a). This rate is the federal “short-term rate”
As an initial matter, we are unpersuaded by the BRB’s reasons for applying the § 1961 rate rather than the § 6621 rate. The BRB settled on the § 1961 rate in Grant v. Portland Stevedoring Co., 16 BRBS 267 (1984), and has since consistently used that rate. See B.C. v. Stevedoring, 41 BRBS at 111. In Grant, the Board held that interest on past-due compensation for injured workers should be awarded at the § 1961 rate rather than at a fixed rate of six-percent, 16 BRBS at 270, which was the rate that the IRS had used to calculate interest on tax overpayments and underpayments prior to amendments of the Internal Revenue Code in 1975. See S. Rep. 93-1357, at 7494-97 (1974), 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7478. It reasoned that the six-percent rate “does not take into account ... economic trends and is therefore no longer appropriate to further the purpose of making the claimant whole.” Grant, 16 BRBS at 270. In contrast, the BRB explained, the § 1961 “rate is periodically changed to reflect the yield on United States Treasury Bills, and thus more accurately reflects the actual loss to claimant due to the employer’s use of claimant’s past due benefits.” Id.
The same, however, could also be said of the current § 6621 rate. Because the § 6621 rate is now tied to the “federal short-term rate,” 26 U.S.C. § 6621(a), it also fluctuates in accordance with changing economic conditions. Indeed, Congress abandoned its previous application of a flat six-percent interest rate to tax overpayments and underpayments precisely because the fixed rate could not be “kept in line with [changing] money market rates.” S. Rep. 93-1357, at 7496. Thus, although the BRB’s reasoning justifies applying the § 1961 rate instead of a flat rate, it does nothing to establish the propriety of the § 1961 rate over the § 6621 rate.
Grant advanced a second rationale for adopting the § 1961 rate instead of the amended § 6621 rate, on which the Director relies: The § 1961 rate comports with past procedures for administering the LHWCA. See 16 BRBS at 271. Specifically, Grant noted that before Congress amended the Act in 1972, deputy commissioners had the authority to adjudicate compensation claims, and their decisions were appealed to the federal district courts. Id. Following the 1972 amendments, ALJs took over the adjudicatory functions of the deputy commissioners. Id. ALJ decisions are now appealed to the BRB, and the Board’s decisions, in turn, are reviewed by the federal circuit courts. Id. Based on this history, the Board concluded that it had assumed the role formerly exercised by district courts in adjudicating claims under the Act, and that its orders have the “force and effect” of federal judgments. Id. It therefore endorsed the § 1961 rate, which is used to calculate interest payments on district court judgments. Id.
The BRB’s reasoning, however, is now undermined by the Supreme Court’s decision in Roberts and by the Board’s own position on the issue decided in that case. See
We are likewise unconvinced by the Director’s argument in his briefs before us that § 914, which requires additional compensation for overdue payments, ensures that claimants will not be under-compensated and thus renders the higher § 6621 rate unnecessary. Section 914(e) imposes a ten percent penalty on late payments that are due without a compensation order. See 33 U.S.C. § 914(e). But this provision applies only when an employer fails to timely file a notice of controversion. See id. § 914(d), (e). The Director concedes that Price is not entitled to any additional compensation pursuant to § 914, because Stevedoring Services filed a timely notice of controversion. Section 914 is nevertheless relevant, the Director insists, because it impels employers quickly to notify the OWCP of their intention not to pay compensation voluntarily for alleged injuries. Once an employer has done so, the Director maintains, “[t]he claimant can then promptly invoke the Longshore Act’s dispute resolution procedures — procedures designed to resolve disputes quickly and informally.” According to the Director, the likelihood that parties will quickly resolve disputes over compensation obviates the need for the higher interest rates advocated by Price.
But this case — like others in which the rate of interest is likely to matter — was resolved neither quickly nor informally. Although Stevedoring Services filed a notice of controversion in 1992, Price did not receive a formal compensation order until 2000. The existence of § 914 thus does little to bolster the Director’s position that Price, and others in his position, should be awarded interest at the lower § 1961 rate.
Nonetheless, we conclude that applying the § 1961 rate is most appropriate here. To begin, our precedents support the reasonableness of that rate. We have concluded, in the maritime context, “that the measure of interest rates prescribed for post-judgment interest in 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a) is also appropriate for fixing the rate for pre-judgment interest.” W. Pac. Fisheries, Inc. v. SS President Grant,
We have also applied the § 1961 rate to prejudgment interest on awards under ERISA. See Blanton v. Anzalone,
For similar reasons, we have acquiesced to the application of the § 1961 rate with respect to pre-judgment interest in Title VII back pay cases. See, e.g., Estate of Reynolds v. Martin,
Pointing to another remedial scheme, Price contends that use of the § 6621 rate under the Black Lung Benefits Act (“Black Lung Act”) compels application of the same rate under the Longshore Act. The Black Lung Act is also administered by the Director, 30 U.S.C. § 936(a); 20 C.F.R. § 726.6, and provides benefits for the death or disability of coal miners resulting from the “black lung disease,” see 30 U.S.C. § 901. One attribute of the Black Lung Act is of particular importance in weakening the analogy to the Long-shore Act for purposes of determining the appropriate rate of interest: Although “[significant portions of the Longshore Act have been incorporated unchanged in the Black Lung Benefits Act,” Nealon v. Cal. Stevedore & Ballast Co.,
Furthermore, there are reasons for applying § 6621 that are unique to the Black Lung Act. The Director notes that “like unpaid taxes under section 6621, the [Black Lung Act] is concerned with interest on debts to the United States government.” (emphasis added). Specifically, payments under the Black Lung Act are sometimes made from the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund (“Trust Fund”). See 26 U.S.C. § 9501; 20 C.F.R. § 725.1. When those payments are later determined to be the liability of a mine operator, see 20 C.F.R. § 725.602, the operator is required to repay the Trust Fund with interest at the § 6621 rate. See 30 U.S.C. § 934(b)(1), (5)(B). Significantly, the Trust Fund was created as part of the Internal Revenue Code and is funded through tax receipts. 26 U.S.C. § 9501(b)(1). Operators’ repayments to the Trust Fund are thus considered obligations to the United States, 30 U.S.C. § 934(b)(1), and liens that automatically arise when the Trust Fund pays claimants on behalf of an operator “shall be treated in the same manner as a lien for taxes due and owing to the United States” in any
As these statutory provisions make clear, Congress explicitly recognized the similarity between the obligations of mine operators to the Trust Fund and that of taxpayers to the United States. In contrast, although the Longshore Act also establishes a “special fund,” 33 U.S.C. § 918, the money in the fund “shall not be money or property of the United States,” id. § 944(a).
It is true that the Black Lung Act’s implementing regulations also apply the § 6621 rate to interest on late payments made directly to miners. See 20 C.F.R. § 725.608(d)(3). However, we find convincing the Director’s argument that this arrangement “is reasonable because it makes all interest calculations under the Black Lung Benefits Act consistent and therefore easier to administer.” Accordingly, that employers pay interest on late payments to claimants at the § 6621 rate under the Black Lung Act does not militate in favor of applying that rate under the Longshore Act, despite the many other similarities between the two statutory schemes.
We acknowledge that there are also significant reasons favoring the § 6621 rate. Ensuring “certain, prompt recovery for employees” is a “central” purpose of the Longshore Act. Roberts,
The 1975 amendments to the tax underpayment rate, abandoning the flat six-percent rate in favor of the predecessor to the current rate of three percentage points plus the short-term rate, were largely motivated by a “trend in taxpayer postponement of tax payments.” S. Rep. 93-1357, at 7496. Due to changing economic conditions, the six-percent underpayment rate in effect at the time had fallen below the money market interest rate. See id. at 7495. The underpayment rate thus “no longer serve[d] the purposes for which it was originally intended” insofar as “[a]n increasing number of taxpayers [were] finding it more profitable to ‘borrow
At the same time, both § 1961 and § 6621 only approximate how much prompt payments would be worth to the respective “creditors” under those provisions (i.e., winners of district court money judgments in the § 1961 context; the government in the § 6621 underpayment context; and individuals who have overpaid their taxes in the § 6621 overpayment context). In the Longshore Act context, it is impossible to ascertain how much prompt payments would be worth to claimants,
Because Congress has not expressed an intent on the matter and the considerations favoring adoption of one statutory rate versus the other are in near equipoise, whether the § 1961 or § 6621 rate better approximates the value of prompt payments to claimants is in large part a policy determination best left to the agency. Here, the agency has expressed a preference for the § 1961 rate, as reflected in the Director’s assertion in his brief that he has consistently applied that rate for at least twenty years, following the BRB’s decision in Grant, 16 BRBS 267. The Director’s assertion is substantiated by incorporation of the § 1961 rate into the Longshore Manual. See Longshore Manual ch. 8-201. Ultimately, “[t]he agency’s interpretive position ... provides a reasonable alternative that is consistent with the statutory framework. No clearer alternatives are within our authority or expertise to adopt; and so deference to the agency is appropriate under Skidmore.” Fed. Express Corp. v. Holowecki,
In light of the forgoing, we hold that § 1961, not § 6621, is to be used to calculate interest on past due payments under the Longshore Act.
2. Simple or compound interest
Price next argues that he should be awarded compound interest on past due compensation, especially if this court upholds application of the § 1961 rate. We agree.
A “central” purpose of the Longshore Act is to ensure “certain, prompt recovery for employees.” Roberts,
We conclude that simple interest at the § 1961 rate is insufficient to effectuate the purpose of awarding interest under the Longshore Act. Section § 1961(a) uses the interest rate applied to Treasury bonds. “[Bjecause Treasury bonds have very little risk,” they have “a correspondingly low rate of return.” Fry v. Exelon Corp. Cash Balance Pension Plan,
It is true, as the Director argues, that § 1961 requires compounding only of post-judgment interest. But that is a distinction that carries no significance here. The Supreme Court has indicated that formal judgments are not what determine a claimant’s entitlement to compensation under the Longshore Act. See Roberts,
The BRB’s published decisions provide three reasons for not compounding interest on past-due payments awarded at the § 1961(a) rate, none of which we find persuasive.
Next, the Board has relied on the proposition that it is the “general American rule” to award simple rather than compound interest. Santos, BRBS at 228 (citing Stovall v. Ill. Cent. Gulf R.R. Co.,
The growing recognition that compound interest can be necessary to compensate plaintiffs fully is justified by changing economic realities. The Eighth Circuit has explained:
[The] common law presumption against compound interest stemmed from a historical view that interest upon interest was “iniquitous and against public policy.” Whitcomb v. Harris,90 Me. 206 ,38 A. 138 , 140 (1897). Courts did not wish to “hasten[] the accumulation of debt,” Abramowitz v. Washington Cemetery Ass’n,139 N.J. Eq. 293 ,51 A.2d 461 , 463 (N.J.Ch.1947), and “sought to prevent an accumulation of compound interest in favor of negligent creditors who did not collect their interest when it became due.” State ex rel. Nw. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Bland,354 Mo. 391 ,189 S.W.2d 542 , 548 (1945).
Am. Milling Co. v. Brennan Marine, Inc.,
As the circumstances of Longshore Act claimants illustrate, the concern about “negligent creditors” has considerably less application in many of the situations in which compounding pre-judgment interest now arises. Although the Director argues that simple interest “reflects an amount a
Consistent with these observations, the movement in the case law away from the “American rule” against compounding prejudgment interest reflects a growing consensus that the attitudes underlying the common law presumption are being displaced by the modern recognition that compound interest fosters fairness and efficiency. Modern commentators recognize that
[wjith simple interest, the plaintiff is not fully compensated and the defendant does not fully pay for the harm caused. As a result, simple interest underdeters the defendant and overdeters the plaintiff from engaging in the activity that produced the harm. In addition, simple interest encourages the defendant to drag on legal proceedings.
Michael S. Knoll, A Primer on Prejudgment Interest, 75 Tex. L.Rev. 293, 308 (1996).
Oliver Wendell Holmes once observed
It is revolting to have no better reason for a rule of law than that so it was laid down in the time of Henry IV. It is still more revolting if the grounds upon which it was laid down have vanished long since, and the rule simply persists from blind imitation of the past.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L.Rev. 457, 469 (1897). That it is the “longstanding precedent,” B.C. v. Stevedoring, 41 BRBS at 112, of the BRB to apply simple interest is not, without more, an adequate reason to sustain that practice.
Finally, in B.C. v. Stevedoring, the Board asserted that claimants should receive simple interest on pre-judgment interest awards “under normal circumstances,” 41 BRBS at 112, suggesting that there are circumstances in which compound interest is available. Although the BRB has never explained in a published order what it means by “normal circumstances,” there is one unpublished order in which the Board alludes to circumstances meriting compound interest. See Harris v. Machinists, Inc. and Travelers Ins. Co., BRB No. 99-0305,
This essentially punitive standard for awarding compound interest is inconsistent with the general justification for compounding pre-judgment interest in the first place. As discussed, interest is awarded on past due payments to ensure that claimants receive the compensation to which they are entitled; waiting for money is costly to the injured worker. In other words, “prejudgment interest is not awarded as a penalty; it is merely an element of just compensation.” City of Milwaukee v. Cement Div., Nat’l Gypsum Co.,
For similar reasons, we are also unpersuaded by the Director’s argument that “full compensation is ensured by simple interest and the additional compensation available under section 14.” Section 914 provides for a “delinquency penalty,” Roberts,
Keeping in mind “the humanitarian purposes of the LHWCA” and “our mandate to construe broadly its provisions so as to favor claimants in the resolution of benefits cases,” Matulic,
❖ * Hi
We affirm the Board’s order as to Price’s maximum compensation rate, reverse as to the interest rate on his past due payments, and remand for the agency to calculate the proper award of interest at a rate no lower than the compound § 1961 rate.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Section 1961 delineates the interest payable on federal district court judgments. See 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a). In contrast, § 6621 specifies the interest rate the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") uses with respect to the overpayment and underpayment of taxes. 26 U.S.C. § 6621(a).
. Compound interest means "[¡Interest paid on both the principal and the previously accumulated interest." Black’s Law Dictionary 887 (9th ed.2009). In contrast, simple interest is "[¡Interest paid on the principal only and not on accumulated interest.” Id.
. See, e.g., Talk Am., Inc. v. Mich. Bell Tel. Co., - U.S. -,
. At times, however, “there is reason to suspect that the agency’s interpretation 'does not reflect the agency’s fair and considered judgment on the matter in question.’ ” Christopher,
. Consistent with Mead and Barnhart, we have determined that some agency interpretations advanced through means other than formal rule-making or adjudication are entitled to Chevron deference. See, e.g., Davis v. EPA,
. See Wheeler v. Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co.,
. This case does not directly involve the question whether courts must accord Chevron deference to agency litigating positions advanced during agency rather than appellate adjudication. In Martin, the Supreme Court explained that because agency litigating positions furnished at the appellate level "occur after agency proceedings have terminated, they do not constitute an exercise of the agency’s delegated lawmaking powers” and are thus not entitled to Chevron deference.
The distinction in Martin between administrative and court adjudication did not survive Mead, Auer, and Auer's progeny, although the deference accorded the Secretary’s litigating position in Martin is fully consistent with those cases. Notably, Martin involved interpretation of regulations, not a statute. Under Auer and its progeny, the line Martin drew between agency interpretations advanced during administrative versus court adjudications no longer obtains when interpretation of regulations is at issue. And, as Martin involved interpretation of regulations, it comports with our analysis concerning the difference between the Chevron deference due litigating positions interpreting statutes as opposed to regulations.
Our precedents that have relied on Martin to hold "that the Director’s interpretation of the LHWCA is entitled to deference if it is contained ... in the Director’s litigation position within an agency adjudication, so long as the interpretation is reasonable,” Gilliland,
. Of course, "the ‘weight’ assigned to any advocate’s position is presumably dependent upon the 'thoroughness evident in its consideration' and the 'validity of its reasoning.’ ... The argument's pedigree adds nothing to the persuasive force inherent in its reasoning." Colin S. Diver, Statutory Interpretation in the Administrative State, 133 U. Pa. L.Rev. 549, 565 (1985) (quoting Skidmore,
. Nonetheless, all the parties have treated the interest rate issues in this case as questions of statutory interpretation. We therefore do so as well.
. The federal short-term rate is “the rate determined by the [IRS] Secretary based on the average market yield ... on outstanding marketable obligations of the United States with remaining periods to maturity of 3 years or less.” 26 U.S.C. § 1274(d)(l)(C)(i).
. See 30 U.S.C. § 932(a) (adopting parts of the Longshore Act "except as otherwise provided ... by regulations of the Secretary [of Labor]”).
. Should the Director consider altering his position, however, our holding does not preclude him from adopting the § 6621 rate through the formal rulemaking process or other appropriate means.
. Price points out that the § 6621 rate is higher tfian the § 1961 rate even when the latter is compounded.
. Because the BRB's reasoning is not persuasive, we need not and thus do not address whether the BRB is entitled to Skidmore deference.
. See, e.g., Am. Nat’l Fire Ins. Co. v. Yellow Freight Sys., Inc.,
. Even more pernicious than “negligent creditors,” in the eyes of the common law, were those who intentionally reaped the gains of interest upon interest. See Charles Dickens, Bleak House 332-33 (Penguin Books 1996) (1853) (describing the great-grandfather of a greedy moneylender as a "horny-skinned, two-legged, money-getting species of spider who spun webs to catch unwary flies and retired into holes until they were entrapped” and asserting that ”[t]he name of this old pagan's god was Compound Interest”).
. See also David S. Reid, Dissenters' Rights: An Analysis Exposing the Judicial Myth of Awarding Only Simple Interest, 36 Ariz. L.Rev. 515, 523 (1994) ("If the use of interest is not paid for by the borrower, the borrower will effectively receive a "free loan" of that interest.... The lender can only be compensated for this cost by computing interest on the interest already owed, and this is accomplished through the use of compound interest.”).
. In reading the majority’s opinion, one might think that the Director is an adversary of claimants who seek to receive their full entitlement. To the contrary, the Director often intervenes in lawsuits seeking interpretations or compensation more favorable to the employee than what the employee received from the Board. See, e.g., Ingalls Shipbldg., Inc. v. Dir., OWCP,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in part:
I agree with the majority that the Director’s litigating position before this court is not entitled to Chevron deference and that the proper rate of interest on past-due compensation awards under the Long-shore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA) is the rate set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a). That said, I cannot join the majority’s discussion of these issues because, in my view, it treats several matters that are unnecessary to the outcome of this case and thus should be left for another day. See, e.g., Op. at 831-32 n. 7 (discussing whether litigating positions taken in agency adjudications are entitled to Chevron deference); Op. at 832-33 (discussing whether the position of the Benefits Review Board is entitled to deference).
More specifically, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Pro
I
In applying the LHWCA, the Director has long taken the position that interest on past-due compensation awards should be computed on a simple basis. That position accords with the general rule of awarding only simple interest when a statute does not expressly require otherwise; it aligns with the consistent position taken by the Benefits Review Board since 1989, see Santos v. General Dynamics Corp., 22 BRBS 226 (1989); and it is consistent with the LHWCA, which is silent on the rate and computation of interest. Nor is the Director’s position a novel litigating position; it has been embodied in the Long-shore Procedure Manual, used by district directors nationwide, since at least 1989. See Div. of Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation, Dep’t of Labor, Long-shore Procedure Manual, ch. 8-201, available at http://www.dol.gov/owcp/dlhwc/ lspm/pmtoc.htm.
Given these features, in my view the Director’s position, though informal, is persuasive enough to merit our respect. See Skidmore v. Swift & Co.,
A
To reach the contrary conclusion, the majority emphasizes the LHWCA’s remedial purpose and a growing trend toward the use of compound interest. With respect, the majority’s analysis is unpersuasive.
The majority first contends that simple interest does not fulfill the LHWCA’s purpose of fully compensating claimants. But fully compensating employees is not the Act’s only purpose. See Roberts v. Sear-Land Servs., Inc., — U.S. -,
We must therefore consider the Director’s position in light of the bargain the Act represents, rather than treating the Act’s remedial purpose as an unbeatable trump. In this vein, the Supreme Court has cautioned against “add[ing] features that will achieve statutory ‘purposes’ more
B
The majority contends next that compound interest is warranted based on “changing economic realities” and a “growing recognition” that compound interest might more fully compensate plaintiffs. Op. at 841. This too is not reason enough to reject the Director’s position. The Supreme Court has cautioned that a growing trend — even one that is “sound as a matter of policy” and is now a dominant view — is an insufficient basis for abandoning a settled rule. Potomac Electric,
Whatever the “growing consensus,” op. at 842, the Director, as administrator of the Act, is best positioned to evaluate changing circumstances and to determine whether simple interest continues to provide adequate compensation to claimants.
C
The majority also faults the Director for adopting the rate set forth in section 1961(a) while not adopting section 1961(b)’s compound interest component. Again, the Director’s decision is reasonable. The Director has concluded that section 1961 provides useful guidance; that conclusion should not force the Director to swallow section 1961 whole. And by declining to adopt the section 1961(b) formulation, the Director has honored the general rule that simple interest applies unless a statute expressly authorizes compound interest. See, e.g., Cherokee Nation v. United States,
D
The majority’s failure to defer under Skidmore to the Director’s long-standing position is made all the more perplexing by its determination that the Director’s selection of the proper interest rate is entitled to Skidmore deference. The majority acknowledges that, because the LHWCA is silent on interest, the selection of interest rate is “in large part a policy determination best left to the agency.” Op. at 839. The majority concludes that the Director’s selection of the section 1961 rate is “consistent with the statutory framework” and that there are “[n]o clearer alternatives ... within our authority or expertise to adopt.” Op. at 839. But the rate of interest and the method of computing it have each been consistently applied by the Director and the Board for over 20 years and have been contained within the Director’s manual for nearly as long. It is hardly reasonable to accept the one and to reject the other when the same reasoning supports both.
II
Proper application of Skidmore requires us to defer to the Director’s long-standing, consistent practice of awarding simple interest, recognizing that the Director is in the best position to determine whether, as a policy matter, the method of computing interest should be changed better to align with modern circumstances.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. The majority also suggests that we can tell that simple interest is unreasonable because the Board has indicated that compound interest might be warranted in exceptional circumstances. Op. at 842-43. But compounding interest in exceptional circumstances, such as when a party engages in willful misbehavior, accords with the genéral rule giving trial judges discretion to select an interest award within a range of reasonable options. See W. Pac. Fisheries, Inc. v. SS President Grant,
