Claude Weaver appeals a decision of the Benefits Review Board (“BRB”) affirming an award of attorney’s fees by the district director. We reverse and remand.
I.
On February 4, 1992, Weaver filed a claim for hearing loss under the Long-shore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA”) against his former employer, Ingalls Shipbuilding, Inc. (“In-galls”), which controverted the claim on February ll. 1 On February 12, Ingalls received formal notice of the claim from the district director. In September, In-galls initiated voluntary payments on the claim and offered to settle; Weaver rejected this offer, and the case proceeded to a hearing before an administrative law judge, who found in favor of Weaver but awarded him less than the settlement offer.
Weaver’s attorney then submitted an application for attorney’s fees. The district director denied the application because the recovery was less than the proffered settlement. The BRB reversed and remanded, finding Weaver was entitled to fees incurred before Ingalls commenced voluntary payments in September.
Before the director issued a revised fee award, Weaver’s attorney filed an amended application based on a recent change in the interpretation of the fee-shifting provision of the LHWCA. 2 Under the new interpretation, an attorney may recover, from the employer, fees incurred before formal notice of the claim.
The district director ruled on the amended fee application by awarding fees at $100 per hour and divided the fee between Ingalls and Weaver. The division held Weaver liable for $290 in fees based on work done by his attorney before March 12, 1992, thirty days after the receipt of formal notice by Ingalls. The remaining $150, representing work done after March 12, was assessed against In-galls. The BRB, sitting en banc, affirmed this decision but divided over the continued validity of Liggett to LHWCA cases. Weaver and the director appeal this decision.
II.
This case calls for an interpretation of the fee-shifting provision of the LHWCA, which reads in relevant part:
If the employer or carrier declines to pay any compensation on or before the thirtieth day after receiving written notice of a claim for compensation having been filed from the deputy commissioner, on the ground that there is no liability for compensation ... and the person seeking benefits thereafter have utilized the services of an attorney at law in the successful prosecution of his claim, there shall be awarded ... a reasonable attor *359 ney’s fee against the employer or carrier.
33 U.S.C. § 928(a). Our review of statutory interpretation by the BRB is
de novo. Equitable Equip. Co. v. Dir., OWCP,
Weaver and the director urge us to interpret the word “thereafter” merely to signify that the use of an attorney is a precondition to the assessment of fees against the employer. This interpretation would allow an attorney, assuming the other conditions are met, to recover fees from the employer regardless of when the attorney incurred the fees. Ingalls, on the other hand, reads “thereafter” to mean that an attorney could recover only those fees incurred after the thirtieth day following the receipt of formal notice from the commissioner.
Our resolution of this question is largely controlled by precedent. In
Watkins v. Ingalls Shipbuilding, Inc.,
Watkins
binds this panel.
Tigner v. Cockrell,
Watkins dictates that the BRB’s decision be affirmed insofar as it holds Weaver responsible for those fees his attorney incurred before February 12,1992 — the date Ingalls received formal notice. Thus, those fees accrued between February 4 and February 12, 1992, cannot be charged against Ingalls.
Watkins, though, answers only half of the question. There remains the issue of those fees accrued between February 12, 1992 — when Ingalls both had received formal notice and had controverted the claim — and March 12, 1992 — the thirtieth day following receipt of notice. The district director assessed the fees accrued during this period against Weaver. The three judges on the BRB who voted to affirm the award did so without specific mention of the fees for this thirty-day period.
This question is also a matter of statutory interpretation. The fee-shifting provision of the LHWCA contemplates four triggering events for assessing fees *360 against the employer: (1) formal notice, (2) employer controversion of the claim, (3) successful prosecution by the claimant, and (4) use of an attorney to prosecute the claim.
The wording of the controversion clause leaves little doubt an employer can be liable for fees incurred during the thirty-day window if the other conditions are met. The disjunctive “or” merely indicates that the employer’s act of declining to pay the claim may be triggered, either on the thirtieth day or at any time before that day, by a controversion of the claim.
Our court apparently has not addressed this precise question. This interpretation, though, has been endorsed by the BRB. Jones v. Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. Co., 11 Ben. Rev. Bd. Serv. 7 (1979). 4
We hereby adopt the position of the BRB and conclude that fees incurred within the thirty-day window may be assessed against the employer. If the employer controverts a claim within the thirty-day window, and the other triggers have been satisfied, the fees accrued thereafter properly may be assessed against the employer, even though they are incurred before the thirtieth day following receipt of notice.
The order of the BRB is REVERSED and REMANDED for recalculation of the fee award.
Notes
. Once an employer has notice of a claim, it has fourteen days in which either to pay or to controvert, to avoid a 10% penalty in addition to the award. 33 U.S.C. § 914(b),(d),(e).
.
See Liggett
v.
Crescent City Marine Ways & Dry Dock,
. Although this rule is framed to limit citations to unpublished opinions (“normally ... cited only when the doctrine of
res judicata,
collateral estoppel or law of the case is applicable”), it has been interpreted to render unpublished decisions before January 1, 1996, precedential. Of all the cases citing this rule, only one interprets the “normally” clause of the rule to limit citations of pre-January 1, 1996, unpublished opinions as precedent to the specifically enumerated exceptions to the rule.
Arnold v. United States Dep’t of Interior,
.
See also Liggett
(explaining the state of the rule before
Jackson v. Jewell Ridge Coal Co.,
21 Black Lung Rep. 1-27 (1997)). Employers also frequently behave as though this is the rule.
See, e.g., Kemp v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co.,
