OAK GROVE RESOURCES, LLC, NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE/ AIG, Petitioners, versus DIRECTOR, OWCP, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, Respondents. U.S. STEEL MINING COMPANY, LLC, U.S. STEEL CORPORATION, Petitioners, versus CASSANDRA M. TERRY, O.B.O. and Widow of Luther Terry, DIRECTOR, OWCP, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, Respondents.
No. 17-14468
No. 17-15782
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
April 11, 2019
Before TJOFLAT and NEWSOM, Circuit Judges, and ANTOON, District Judge. NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:
[PUBLISH] Agency No. BRB 16-0570 BLA Agency No. 17-0105 Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
These consolidated
Now, for the more interesting issue, which exists in both appeals: The Act provides two means by which a deceased miner‘s survivors can claim benefits. First, the survivors can prove that the miner died due to a lung disease called pneumoconiosis. See
We hold that the survivors and the government have the better of the interpretive argument. Not only does their interpretation follow most naturally from
I
Before us are two consolidated cases—Oak Grove Resources, LLC, et al. v. Director, OWCP (”Oak Grove“), and U.S. Steel Mining Company, LLC, et al. v. Director, OWCP (”U.S. Steel“). We briefly review the facts of each case before turning to a preliminary question posed only in U.S. Steel.
A
Starting with Oak Grove: In July 2012, Lee Ferguson, a coal miner with more than three decades’ experience, sought benefits under the
The following November, the ALJ handling Lee‘s appeal overturned the District Director‘s decision and held that Lee‘s employer, Oak Grove, was liable for benefits from the date that Lee had initially filed his claim. Before us, Oak Grove does not contest Lee‘s own eligibility for benefits—only whether, under the Act, those benefits are properly payable to Carrie as Lee‘s surviving spouse.
In February 2016, the same District Director who had denied Lee‘s claim issued a decision in Carrie‘s favor. In so doing, the District Director relied on
Challenging the District Director‘s decision before an ALJ, Oak Grove argued that Carrie was not entitled to benefits under
B
Turning to U.S. Steel: Luther Terry applied unsuccessfully for benefits under the Act in 2006 and 2011. Luther succeeded in his third attempt in 2014, but he didn‘t survive to collect. A veteran miner and lifelong smoker, Luther died of cardiopulmonary arrest the year before, in 2013. Luther‘s widow, Cassandra Terry, filed a claim for benefits shortly after his death, and a District Director found that she was eligible, citing
But U.S. Steel is different from Oak Grove in one key respect. Unlike Oak Grove, U.S. Steel has not conceded that Luther was eligible for benefits in the first place. Accordingly, before turning to Cassandra‘s entitlement to survivor benefits under
II
The Act establishes a rebuttable presumption that a miner‘s death or disability is attributable to pneumoconiosis2—and thus compensable—if the miner can show, as relevant here, that he or she “was employed for fifteen years or more in one or more underground coal mines” and that the “evidence demonstrates the existence of a totally disabling respiratory or pulmonary impairment.”
U.S. Steel offers a litany of reasons why the ALJ erred in concluding that Luther was eligible for benefits. We needn‘t respond point-by-point; an assessment of U.S. Steel‘s principal contentions will suffice.
- U.S. Steel first assails the ALJ‘s decision to assign greater weight to credentialed radiologists’ interpretations of Luther‘s chest x-rays than to those offered by a “B-reader” pulmonologist.5 But the
ALJ‘s determination in that respect is supported by both law and logic. As for law, one of the governing regulations provides that “where two or more X-ray reports are in conflict, in evaluating such X-ray reports consideration must be given to the radiological qualifications of the physicians interpreting such X-rays.” 20 C.F.R. § 718.202(a)(1) (emphasis added). Another likewise requires that a chest x-ray used as medical evidence include “the name and qualifications of the physician who interpreted the X-ray“—and goes on to require a notation specifying “whether he or she was a Board-certified radiologist, a Board-eligible radiologist, or a Certified B-reader.” Seeid. § 718.102(e) (emphasis added). If the distinctions between credentialed radiologists and B-readers didn‘t matter, the regulations wouldn‘t draw them. Good old common sense reinforces the regulations’ line-drawing and further supports the ALJ‘s decision: reading x-rays, after all, is what radiologists do. See, e.g., Webster‘s Second New International Dictionary 2052 (1944) (defining “radiologist” as “[o]ne who practices or is versed in the use of X rays“). - U.S. Steel also asserts that the ALJ erred in discounting the findings of Dr. Michele Postma, who had been one of Luther‘s treating physicians—and whose testimony U.S. Steel introduced—on the ground that she stopped treating Luther four years before his death. As U.S. Steel puts it, the ALJ‘s “‘later is better’ analysis is not allowed under
20 C.F.R. § 718.202 .” The text of§ 718.202 says nothing of the sort, so U.S. Steel draws our attention to the Fourth Circuit‘s decision in Adkins v. Director, 958 F.2d 49 (4th Cir. 1992). But Adkins doesn‘t hold—or even suggest—that a “later [evidence] is better [evidence]” rationale is impermissible per se; rather, the Adkins court merely explained that later-is-better logic may fail in certain circumstances. In particular, the court observed that because pneumoconiosis is a progressive disease, privileging a later physician‘s opinion makes sense only where “the evidence, on its face, shows that the miner‘s condition has worsened.” Id. at 52. If, by contrast, the miner‘s condition has improved—as the evidence before the court in Adkins indicated—then later-is-better reasoning loses its force: “Either the earlier or the later result must be wrong, and it is just as likely that the later evidence is faulty as the earlier.” Id. What about the medical evidence before the ALJ here? On balance, that evidence—especially when weighted for physician expertise—indicated that Luther‘s condition probably had deteriorated over time. So, as it turns out, Adkins boomerangs back around on U.S. Steel to support the ALJ‘s decision to discount Dr. Postma‘s conclusions. - We‘ll take one more: U.S. Steel contends that the ALJ erred in holding that Dr. Postma‘s and Dr. Allan Goldstein‘s conclusions “c[ould not] be credited” because their negative findings as to the empirical method of rebuttal—i.e., that Luther didn‘t suffer from pneumoconiosis in the first place—undermined the basis for their conclusions as to the causal method—“that no part of [Luther‘s] respiratory or pulmonary total disability was caused by pneumoconiosis.”
U.S. Steel sends us back to the Fourth Circuit for support, arguing that the ALJ‘s
In Hobet Mining, LLC v. Epling, 783 F.3d 498 (4th Cir. 2015), the court found that “[l]ong-standing precedent establishes that a medical opinion premised on an erroneous finding” under the empirical method of rebuttal “that a claimant does not suffer from pneumoconiosis is not worthy of much, if any, weight, particularly with respect to whether,” under the causal method, “a claimant‘s disability was caused by that disease.” Id. at 504 (quotation marks and citation omitted). As the court explained, that‘s because the “credibility of a doctor‘s judgment as to whether pneumoconiosis is a cause of a miner‘s disability is necessarily influenced by the accuracy of his underlying diagnosis.” Id. Because the doctor is essentially engaging in a counterfactual exercise as to the causal method, the Hobet court concluded, “opinions that erroneously fail to diagnose pneumoconiosis may not be credited at all, unless an ALJ is able to identify specific and persuasive reasons for concluding that the doctor‘s judgment on the question of disability causation does not rest upon the predicate misdiagnosis.” Id. at 505 (quotation marks and citations omitted). That seems eminently sensible to us. And here, the ALJ didn‘t find any “specific or persuasive reasons” to think that Dr. Postma‘s and Dr. Goldstein‘s erroneous empirical-method conclusions hadn‘t infected their causal-method analysis—nor has U.S. Steel identified any such reasons.
Enough. We hold that the ALJ‘s determination that Luther was eligible for benefits under the Act was consistent with the law and supported by substantial evidence. We turn, then, to the question whether Luther‘s widow, Cassandra—and with her, Lee Terry‘s widow, Carrie—qualifies for survivor benefits under
III
If Part II of this opinion seemed sloggy, that‘s because it was. The eligibility-determining process that it chronicles is not just fact- and context-intensive but also fiscally and emotionally exhausting. The object of
As already noted—twice now, but the language is critical—
The companies, by contrast, assert that “at the time of his or her death” modifies the word “determined,” such that the formal determination of a miner‘s eligibility—and not just eligibility in the abstract—must have preceded his or her death. Accordingly, they say, because Lee and Luther weren‘t determined to be eligible until after they died, Carrie and Cassandra aren‘t entitled to benefits under
In our judgment, Carrie and Cassandra have the better of the interpretive argument. On balance—and particularly in light of the “last antecedent” canon—the phrase “at the time of his or her death” is most naturally read as modifying the word “eligible” rather than the word “determined.” If Congress had intended otherwise, it would (or should) have drafted the statute differently, and more precisely, to refer to a “a miner who was determined at the time of his or her death to receive benefits.” Moreover, as the Supreme Court has emphasized, “[w]e need not leave our common sense at the doorstep when we interpret a statute,” Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228 (1989), superseded by statute on other grounds,
As to the employers’ surplusage-based argument, we think it enough to say two things. First, linking “at the time of his or her death” to eligibility, rather than to a formal determination, doesn‘t render the phrase wholly meaningless—it just makes the provision a little clumsy (in a “duh!” kind of way). Second, there are instances in which a court may validly “prefer ordinary meaning to an unusual meaning that will avoid surplusage.” Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 176 (2012). This is just one such instance.
There is one final point: Because we find that
(i) Is determined to have died due to pneumoconiosis; or
(ii) Filed a claim for benefits on or after January 1, 1982, which results or resulted in a final award of benefits, and the surviving spouse . . . filed a claim for benefits after January 1, 2005 which was pending on or after March 23, 2010.
In sum, we hold that careful attention to
IV
For the foregoing reasons, the Board‘s decisions in both cases before us are
AFFIRMED.
We can make even quicker work of the parties’ protracted battle over
