919 F.2d 763
287 U.S.App.D.C. 92
WASHINGTON SOCIETY FOR THE BLIND and Hartford Accident &
Indemnity Co., Petitioners,
v.
Anna L. ALLISON and Director, Office of Workers'
Compensation Programs, U.S. Department of Labor,
Respondents.
No. 88-1129.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Oct. 19, 1988.
Decided Nov. 27, 1990.
As Amended Feb. 15, 1991.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied Feb. 15, 1991.
Bonnie J. Brownell, with whom William P. Dale, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for petitioners.
Marianne Demetral Smith, Attorney, Dept. of Labor, with whom Randel K. Johnson, Acting Associate Sol., Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for respondent Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs. Janet Dunlop, Attorney, Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C., also entered an appearance for that respondent.
George E. Swegman, Washington, D.C., entered an appearance, for respondent Anna L. Allison.
Before STARR and BUCKLEY, Circuit Judges, and SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Senior Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III.
SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Senior Circuit Judge:
Washington Society for the Blind and its insurer, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, petition for review of an order of the Benefits Review Board refusing to shift to the special fund created by the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act the responsibility for continuing compensation payments due a disabled employee. Respondents are Anna L. Alli son,, the employee, and the Director of the Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, who is charged with administration of the fund. The Board held that petitioners had waived any right to resort to the fund by failing to assert it earlier. We disagree, and accordingly reverse.
* The Act imposes generally the requirement that employers compensate covered employees who become disabled by work-related injuries. If, however, an employer hires or retains an already disabled employee and a subsequent on-the-job injury materially increases the disability, some of the liability for appropriate compensation may be allocated to the special fund. This apportionment, effected by Section 8(f) of the Act, has undergone change over time. In 1963 and 1964, when the disability-enhancing injuries here involved occurred, the Act provided that if an employee sustained at work an injury which of itself would produce only permanent partial disability, but which in combination with a preexisting disability actually inflicted permanent total disability, the employer's liability was to be limited to compensation payments for the disability caused by the second injury, and the rest of the employee's compensation was to be supplied by the special fund. The Act was amended in 1972 to make Section 8(f) relief available when a subsequent job-related injury unites with a preexisting disability to produce either permanent total or permanent partial disability. The prime purpose of Section 8(f) is to encourage employers to hire and retain disabled yet capable employees by alleviating apprehension that extraordinary compensation costs might eventually be incurred thereby.
Anna Allison filed successive compensation claims after sustaining injuries in two separate falls during the course of her employment by Washington Society for the Blind. A deputy commissioner conducted a hearing and on February 8, 1966, awarded benefits for two periods of temporary total disability, and then for continuing temporary partial disability, on account of the condition of her back. On April 15, 1969, the deputy commissioner, at Allison's request, reclassified her disability to permanent partial. Petitioners were notified of the impending change but acquiesced therein, and no formal hearing was held.
In the late 1970's, Allison again asked for modification of the award, this time to reflect permanent total disability. Petitioners opposed modification and invoked Section 8(f). An administrative law judge convened an evidentiary hearing, at which the Director did not appear. The judge found that Allison had a history of back problems dating from 1960, and permanent partial disability resulting therefrom even prior to her falls in 1963 and 1964. The judge concluded, however, that Allison had not shown by substantial evidence that the condition of her back had changed between the time of the 1969 order and her request for modification, and on that ground denied modification. The judge, however, granted Section 8(f) relief to petitioners, holding that their application therefor was timely inasmuch as the current proceeding featured the first and only formal hearing at which permanence of Allison's disability was in issue. The Director, however, appealed to the Board, which reversed the administrative law judge with respect to his application of Section 8(f). The Board felt that permanence of Allison's disability was a question before the deputy commissioner in 1969, and that any right to special fund assistance had been waived by failure to press for it at that time. This ruling is now assailed in this court.
II
Petitioners contend that waiver is not a viable issue in this case because the Director did not appear at the 1983 hearing before the administrative law judge and did not suggest waiver until he later appealed to the Board. Petitioners point out that the 1983 proceeding was the first in which there actually was a hearing at which permanence of Allison's disability was addressed. And, on the predicate that no waiver occurred, petitioners argue that the 1969 compensation order may now be further modified to provide for Section 8(f) relief.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
919 F.2d 763
287 U.S.App.D.C. 92
WASHINGTON SOCIETY FOR THE BLIND and Hartford Accident &
Indemnity Co., Petitioners,
v.
Anna L. ALLISON and Director, Office of Workers'
Compensation Programs, U.S. Department of Labor,
Respondents.
No. 88-1129.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Oct. 19, 1988.
Decided Nov. 27, 1990.
As Amended Feb. 15, 1991.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied Feb. 15, 1991.
Bonnie J. Brownell, with whom William P. Dale, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for petitioners.
Marianne Demetral Smith, Attorney, Dept. of Labor, with whom Randel K. Johnson, Acting Associate Sol., Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for respondent Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs. Janet Dunlop, Attorney, Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C., also entered an appearance for that respondent.
George E. Swegman, Washington, D.C., entered an appearance, for respondent Anna L. Allison.
Before STARR and BUCKLEY, Circuit Judges, and SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Senior Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III.
SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Senior Circuit Judge:
Washington Society for the Blind and its insurer, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, petition for review of an order of the Benefits Review Board refusing to shift to the special fund created by the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act the responsibility for continuing compensation payments due a disabled employee. Respondents are Anna L. Alli son,, the employee, and the Director of the Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, who is charged with administration of the fund. The Board held that petitioners had waived any right to resort to the fund by failing to assert it earlier. We disagree, and accordingly reverse.
* The Act imposes generally the requirement that employers compensate covered employees who become disabled by work-related injuries. If, however, an employer hires or retains an already disabled employee and a subsequent on-the-job injury materially increases the disability, some of the liability for appropriate compensation may be allocated to the special fund. This apportionment, effected by Section 8(f) of the Act, has undergone change over time. In 1963 and 1964, when the disability-enhancing injuries here involved occurred, the Act provided that if an employee sustained at work an injury which of itself would produce only permanent partial disability, but which in combination with a preexisting disability actually inflicted permanent total disability, the employer's liability was to be limited to compensation payments for the disability caused by the second injury, and the rest of the employee's compensation was to be supplied by the special fund. The Act was amended in 1972 to make Section 8(f) relief available when a subsequent job-related injury unites with a preexisting disability to produce either permanent total or permanent partial disability. The prime purpose of Section 8(f) is to encourage employers to hire and retain disabled yet capable employees by alleviating apprehension that extraordinary compensation costs might eventually be incurred thereby.
Anna Allison filed successive compensation claims after sustaining injuries in two separate falls during the course of her employment by Washington Society for the Blind. A deputy commissioner conducted a hearing and on February 8, 1966, awarded benefits for two periods of temporary total disability, and then for continuing temporary partial disability, on account of the condition of her back. On April 15, 1969, the deputy commissioner, at Allison's request, reclassified her disability to permanent partial. Petitioners were notified of the impending change but acquiesced therein, and no formal hearing was held.
In the late 1970's, Allison again asked for modification of the award, this time to reflect permanent total disability. Petitioners opposed modification and invoked Section 8(f). An administrative law judge convened an evidentiary hearing, at which the Director did not appear. The judge found that Allison had a history of back problems dating from 1960, and permanent partial disability resulting therefrom even prior to her falls in 1963 and 1964. The judge concluded, however, that Allison had not shown by substantial evidence that the condition of her back had changed between the time of the 1969 order and her request for modification, and on that ground denied modification. The judge, however, granted Section 8(f) relief to petitioners, holding that their application therefor was timely inasmuch as the current proceeding featured the first and only formal hearing at which permanence of Allison's disability was in issue. The Director, however, appealed to the Board, which reversed the administrative law judge with respect to his application of Section 8(f). The Board felt that permanence of Allison's disability was a question before the deputy commissioner in 1969, and that any right to special fund assistance had been waived by failure to press for it at that time. This ruling is now assailed in this court.
II
Petitioners contend that waiver is not a viable issue in this case because the Director did not appear at the 1983 hearing before the administrative law judge and did not suggest waiver until he later appealed to the Board. Petitioners point out that the 1983 proceeding was the first in which there actually was a hearing at which permanence of Allison's disability was addressed. And, on the predicate that no waiver occurred, petitioners argue that the 1969 compensation order may now be further modified to provide for Section 8(f) relief.
We may easily dispose of petitioners' contention that the Director blundered fatally when he passed up the opportunity to oppose their Section 8(f) bid during the 1983 hearing before the administrative law judge. Petitioners mistakenly rely upon our decision in Director, OWCP v. Edward Minte Co., Inc., wherein the Director urged unsuccessfully a similar waiver. We refused to entertain the Director's waiver objection simply because it was advanced for the first time in this court, and " 'a federal appellate court does not consider an issue not passed upon below.' " In the case at bar, the waiver issue was presented to and decided by the Board, and now is properly before us. We thus proceed to determine, on undisputed facts, whether petitioners waived their right to seek an apportionment of compensation liability by failing to do so in 1969.
As a matter of procedural policy, the Board has insisted upon litigation of Section 8(f) demands by employers along with compensation claims by employees. The courts, and lately even Congress, have endorsed this practice as promotive of the objectives of the Act. In rejecting petitioners' Section 8(f) claim, the Board stated:
In the instant case, the administrative law judge found that the hearing he held in 1983 was the first at which Section 8(f) was a viable issue. We disagree. Although the deputy commissioner modified claimant's benefits in 1969 without a hearing, employer did receive notice of the impending change of claimant's benefits to permanent partial status prior to the deputy commissioner's action. Employer was therefore aware that permanent disability was at issue before the deputy commissioner in 1969, and employer should have raised the applicability of Section 8(f) at that time.
We say that the Board's rationale exposes a glaring error.
As we observed in Minte, "by its terms, section 8(f) in its pre-amendment form only provided for special fund payments when an employee with a previous disability suffered an injury that would ordinarily have resulted in permanent partial disability, but which, because of the previous disability, resulted in permanent total disability." The only question presented to and resolved by the deputy commissioner in 1969 was whether Allison's injuries had visited permanent partial disability, not permanent total disability. Since only a change in Allison's status to permanent total disability would then have provided an occasion for Section 8(f) relief, it is evident that petitioners did not waive any Section 8(f) right by failing to assert it in 1969.
The Director argues strenuously, however, that Section 22 of the Act bars any effort to modify the 1969 compensation order by addition of a provision allowing resort to the special fund. Section 22 provides that the deputy commissioner, now the administrative law judge, may modify a compensation order upon his own initiative or upon the application of any party in interest "on the ground of a change in conditions or because of a mistake in a determination of fact." The Director argues that the administrative law judge in the present case had no basis for modifying the 1969 order because there was no change in conditions and no mistake in a determination of fact.
Petitioners contend that there was a mistake of fact supporting the judge's modification. In 1969, the deputy commissioner found that Allison did not have a permanent partial disability until 1968, well after she had suffered a second work-related injury. But in 1983, based on new evidence, the administrative law judge found the record clear "that [Allison] had a preexisting permanent partial disability at the time of her injuries in 1963 and 1964," a finding that has not been challenged. The alleged mistake of fact in 1969 became material to petitioners' later claim for special fund relief because, under Section 8(f) as amended in 1972, an employer is entitled to relief where an employee with an existing permanent partial disability suffers a second injury.
We are unable to judge the significance of petitioners' factual contention, however, because the administrative law judge in the first instance did not address the applicability of Section 22. We will therefore remand to give the judge an opportunity to determine, in his discretion, whether a modification is appropriate under Section 22.
We decline to adopt the Director's position that a modification on the basis of a mistake of fact is only available where the mistake was made in the determination of a previous claim for special fund relief. Such a restrictive reading is inconsistent with previous cases establishing that Section 22 vests the administrative law judge with broad discretion to correct any mistake of fact in order to render justice under the Act.
The order of the Benefits Review Board is accordingly reversed, and the case is remanded to the Board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.