The Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Company v. Wayne N. McAngues and Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor

996 F.2d 130, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 13757, 1993 WL 199203
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1993
Docket92-3765
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 996 F.2d 130 (The Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Company v. Wayne N. McAngues and Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Company v. Wayne N. McAngues and Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor, 996 F.2d 130, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 13757, 1993 WL 199203 (6th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

The Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Company appeals from the decision awarding benefits to claimant Wayne McAngues under the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. §§ 901 et seq. Y & O contends that it rebutted the regulatory interim presumption of total coal-related pulmonary disability when it showed that McAngues suffered disabling non-respiratory injuries in an automobile accident. We affirm, however, because substantial evidence supports a finding of total coal-related pulmonary disability, and because we conclude that an employer’s demonstration of a separate, non-respiratory disabling condition is irrelevant to -a rebuttal of the presumption.

*132 I.

Wayne McAngues had worked as an underground coal miner for Y & 0 for eleven years when he was involved in an automobile accident on May 4, 1976, in which he sustained serious head injuries. After being comatose for two weeks, McAngues recuperated to the point where today, he retains some disturbance of his balance and equilibrium, as well as possible brain damage which causes hemiparesis, or muscular weakness, on the right side of his body. After the accident, McAngues never worked again as a coal miner.

McAngues first applied for black lung benefits in April 1978. He was twice awarded benefits by the ALJ only to have his case remanded by the Benefits Review Board. 1 In 1990, however, the ALJ issued a second supplemental decision and order on second remand, again awarding McAngues benefits, and this award was affirmed by the Board. It is from that decision that Y & 0 appeals.

In reaching his decision, the ALJ largely focused on evidence from two different doctors — one hired by the employer, and one hired by the claimant. The latter concluded that McAngues was disabled due to pneumo-coniosis resulting from his former employment as a coal miner, while the former believed that McAngues’s total disability was entirely attributable to his car accident.

Dr. George Kress was the employer’s expert witness. He examined McAngues in 1979, and made the following conclusions:

Ventilatory pulmonary function studies were done. His forced vital capacity was 4.17, 107% of predicted normal. FEV1 was 3.2, 110% of predicted and 77% of the actual vital capacity. Maximum voluntary ventilation, the best determination we could get, was 75.6 liters per minute or 60% of predicted. 2 It was my feeling in watching him perform this test that we did not get maximum effort and I believe in view of the normal vital capacity and FEV1 that this observation is confirmed. I would not, therefore, consider the maximum voluntary ventilation valid and it is my opinion that he has no ventilatory impairment.

(Footnote added.) Dr. Kress’s view was that McAngues

does demonstrate evidence of coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, occupationally acquired, but he does not present with any evidence to indicate any disability or impairment as a result of this pneumoconiosis and his former coal mine employment. I do believe he is disabled but this disability is due entirely to residuals from a severe head injury sustained in an auto accident.

Dr. Jon Tipton was the claimant’s expert witness, and he examined McAngues in January 1982. His report following that examination details McAngues’s history of working in the mines. Within a year of working, McAn-gues began to note shortness of breath, and began to cough excessively and expectorate gray and black mucus. Within five years, McAngues was short of breath on climbing one flight of stairs. And by eleven years, he was short of breath on climbing less than one flight. At the time of the 1982 examination, McAngues could walk no more than a block and a half.

Dr. Tipton made the following conclusions regarding McAngues’s lungs:

Ventilatory studies demonstrate a FEV1 of 1.61 liters with a maximum voluntary ventilation recorded at 36 liters. The forced vital capacity was 2.64 liters.... The PO2 is 74.8 with the PCO2 of 30.7. The PH is 7.445. This is at room air. Chest x-ray demonstrates evidence of fine nodular den *133 sities in both lungs, most probably on the basis of pneumoconiosis.
Thus, Mr. McAngues has developed simple coal workers pneumoconiosis in association with the severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Obviously, the coal workers pneumoconiosis is consequence of his prolonged coal mine exposure. Based on the studies and the history and the examination, it is my opinion that Mr. McAngues is disabled regarding gainful coal mine employment.

Dr. Kress reviewed Dr. Tipton’s findings, and disagreed with the results. He believed that McAngues’s deterioration between 1979 and 1982 “far exceeded] what is recognized as can be expected in the natural progression of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.” This led him to “suspect that [McAngues] must have had a respiratory infection at the time of Dr. Tipton’s examination.” McAn-gues testified, however, that he did not have a cold on the day he was examined by Dr. Tipton, and Dr. Tipton made no findings that would indicate McAngues had a cold or other acute, as opposed to chronic, respiratory infection.

The ALJ credited Dr. Tipton’s opinion over that of Dr. Kress, primarily because Dr. Tipton reached his very specific conclusions immediately after examining McAngues, while Dr. Kress’s more general 1982 conclusions were based largely on speculation. In addition, the ALJ noted that Dr. Tipton’s findings of disability were supported by the 1982 ventilatory test results. The ALJ thus concluded that Y & 0 had not rebutted the presumption that McAngues was totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis.

I accept Dr. Tipton’s conclusions over those of Dr. Kress and find that the Claimant has a totally disabling pulmonary impairment caused by his pneumoconio-sis_ As the Board stated in its decision, the Employer must prove that pneu-moconiosis played no part in causing the miner’s disability to establish (b)(3) rebuttal. So that even if the Employer had been able to establish that the Claimant’s pneumoconiosis was less than totally disabling, within the meaning of the Act, he could not establish rebuttal unless he proved that it made no contribution to his disability.

The ALJ also considered McAngues’s medical records from the period following his ear accident, and concluded that they did not support an inference that the accident caused any pulmonary impairment.

The Board affirmed this decision, finding that the ALJ’s findings of fact and conclusions of law were supported by substantial evidence, were rational, and were consistent with applicable law. It held that the ALJ properly accorded Dr. Tipton’s opinion greater weight, and it refused to substitute its own inference for the ALJ’s inference that Dr. Tipton’s opinion supported a finding that McAngues was totally disabled due to pneu-moconiosis.

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996 F.2d 130, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 13757, 1993 WL 199203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-youghiogheny-ohio-coal-company-v-wayne-n-mcangues-and-director-ca6-1993.