Bath Iron Works v. Director ( 1997 )


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    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 96-1956

    BATH IRON WORKS CORP., and LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.,

    Petitioners,
    v.

    DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION PROGRAMS, UNITED STATES
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR,
    Respondent.


    ____________________
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE BENEFITS REVIEW BOARD

    ____________________
    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________
    ____________________

    Kevin M. Gillis, with whom Troubh, Heisler & Piampiano was on ________________ ____________________________
    brief for petitioners.

    G. William Higbee, with whom McTeague, Higbee, MacAdam, Case, __________________ __________________________________
    Watson & Cohen was on brief, for claimant, Lawrence J. Shorette. ______________

    ____________________

    March 21, 1997
    ____________________


























    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Bath Iron Works Corporation LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ("BIW") and its insurer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company

    complain of a decision of the Benefits Review Board affirming

    the award of medical benefits to Lawrence J. Shorette, a BIW

    employee. The award was pursuant to the Longshore and Harbor

    Workers' Compensation Act ("LHWCA"), 33 U.S.C. 901 et seq., _______

    which creates a presumption that a claimant's medical

    condition is causally related to his employment. See 33 ___

    U.S.C. 920(a). The Board agreed with the administrative

    law judge that BIW had failed to rebut this presumption. BIW

    disagrees, arguing that it adduced substantial evidence

    tending to show that Shorette's lung disease was not caused

    by his employment at the Bath shipyard. Shorette1 counters

    that BIW presented no evidence casting doubt on the

    possibility that his work at BIW had, at a minimum,

    aggravated his health problems.

    I.

    Shorette began working as a cleaner at the BIW

    shipyard in Bath, Maine, in 1981. His responsibilities

    included collecting and bagging waste asbestos during

    "asbestos ripouts," and he was exposed to asbestos dust on a


    ____________________

    1. The named respondent is the Director of the Office of
    Workers' Compensation Programs of the United States
    Department of Labor, see Ingalls Shipbuilding, Inc. v. ___ ____________________________
    Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, 117 S. ____________________________________________________
    Ct. 796, 807 (1997), but Shorette is the real party in
    interest and is represented by counsel.

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    daily basis. Despite measures such as protective equipment

    and decontamination procedures, on several occasions in 1981

    Shorette may have inadvertently inhaled asbestos dust.

    Although cleaners were required to undergo a

    decontamination process after every asbestos ripout, the

    decontamination process itself caused unprotected asbestos

    exposure when fellow workers, covered with asbestos, entered

    the area. There were times while Shorette was working at the

    shipyard when he had come into contact with fine airborne

    dust of unknown origin that might have been asbestos. There

    were other incidents as well. On one occasion, Shorette's

    respirator hose was disconnected for about ten minutes and

    his mask filled with asbestos dust. On another occasion,

    Shorette was working without protective equipment in an area

    that supposedly contained no asbestos. It later turned out

    that there had been asbestos in the area.

    In late 1981, Shorette began periodic medical

    monitoring through BIW's asbestos surveillance program.

    Shorette's initial x-rays from late 1981 and early 1982

    revealed lung problems -- interstitial fibrotic changes which

    could have been caused by asbestos exposure. The program

    doctors recommended that Shorette no longer perform asbestos

    clean-ups, and from that time on his work has been limited to

    general cleaning. In 1989, x-rays showed further

    deterioration of Shorette's lung condition. BIW Industrial



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    Health Department records noted "interstitial fibrosis

    suggestive of asbestosis" in 1987, "probable asbestosis" in

    1989 and "probable asbestosis with an ILO rating of 3/3"2 in

    1991.

    In March 1990, Shorette asserted a LHWCA claim

    against BIW for medical benefits for asbestosis. A hearing

    was held before an ALJ in October 1992. To rebut the

    statutory presumption in favor of the employee, 33 U.S.C.

    920(a), BIW submitted evidence suggesting that Shorette might

    have been exposed to asbestos well before he began working at

    the Bath shipyard. Shorette had been in the Navy from 1955

    to 1959 and he agreed it was possible that he had been

    exposed to asbestos during that period. However, BIW was

    unable, upon questioning Shorette, to identify any specific

    instances of exposure. Shorette also might have been exposed

    to asbestos while working at Times Fibre Communications

    between 1966 and 1978, but again BIW's questioning could not

    identify any specific incidents.

    BIW also produced medical testimony from two

    experts indicating that it was unlikely that Shorette's

    exposure to asbestos in 1981 at BIW had caused the lung

    damage that was evident in x-rays from 1981 and 1982 because,


    ____________________

    2. This unfavorable rating is based on a well-accepted
    classification scheme for occupational lung disease, and
    reflects the size and extensiveness of the obstructions on
    the lung.

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    among other reasons, not enough time had passed. In May

    1982, Shorette had visited Dr. John Kanwit, a family

    practitioner, who diagnosed him as having an acute lung

    infection (probably bronchitis) and chronic asbestosis. Dr.

    Kanwit testified that, due to the long latency period between

    exposure and the development of interstitial lung changes,

    "it would be less than likely that asbestos exposure a year

    or less before the patient presented with his symptoms would

    have been the cause of his problem." He further stated, "I'm

    sure [the exposure] didn't help the situation, but I would be

    very surprised if he could develop asbestosis quite that

    quickly."

    There was also evidence from Dr. Harder, a

    pulmonary disease specialist, who saw Shorette on two

    different occasions during the summer of 1991. Dr. Harder

    took a medical history of the 1981 exposures and of the

    abnormal x-ray findings from 1981 and 1982. Dr. Harder

    diagnosed Shorette with obstructive lung disease caused by

    cigarette smoking and interstitial lung disease of unknown

    cause. He testified that interstitial changes have an eight

    to twenty year latency period, and so he did not think the

    changes shown on the 1981 and 1982 x-rays could have been

    caused by exposure in 1981. He also noted that the absence

    of pleural plaques on the x-rays was counterindicative of

    asbestosis, because with asbestos related lung disease,



    -5- 5













    pleural plaques tend to (but do not always) develop before

    the interstitial lung changes become apparent. Dr. Harder

    indicated that exposure to asbestos was one possible cause of

    Shorette'slungdisease butthathe couldnotrule outother causes.

    The ALJ found that BIW had not rebutted the

    statutory presumption of a causal relationship between a

    claimant's employment and his medical condition. He reasoned

    that "no basis has been presented for concluding that the

    progression of the disease noted on the 1989 x-ray film . . .

    was not related to the 1981 or 1982 exposures." Relying on

    Brown v. Jacksonville Shipyards, Inc., 893 F.2d 294, 297 _____ ______________________________

    (11th Cir. 1990), the ALJ found that the medical evidence

    offered by the employer did not completely rule out the

    possibility that the claimant's condition was causally

    related to the employment. The ALJ therefore ordered that

    the employer and the insurance carrier that bore the risk at

    the time of the asbestos exposure in 1981 pay for Shorette's

    related medical expenses. The Benefits Review Board

    affirmed, stating that BIW had not submitted evidence

    "sufficient to rebut the presumed causal link between the

    progression of the claimant's lung disease as noted on his

    1989 x-ray and his exposures to asbestos while working for

    employer in 1981 and 1982." This appeal ensued.

    II.





    -6- 6













    Our review of legal conclusions by the Board is

    plenary; our review of its factual findings is deferential.

    "In reviewing for substantial evidence it is immaterial that

    the facts permit diverse inferences as long as those drawn by

    the ALJ are supported by evidence." Sprague v. Director, _______ _________

    Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, 688 F.2d 862, 866 _________________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1982).

    There is no question that Shorette established a

    prima facie case and thus is entitled to the statutory

    presumption that his injury or harm arose out of and in the

    course of his employment. See 33 U.S.C. 920(a). The ___

    burden was thus on the employer to rebut the presumption with

    substantial evidence that the condition was not caused or

    aggravated by his employment. BIW argues that it submitted

    substantial evidence showing to a reasonable medical

    probability that Shorette's condition was not related to his

    employment, and therefore that it rebutted the statutory

    presumption. It argues that the ALJ and Board imposed too

    high a burden on the employer to rebut the statutory

    presumption.

    BIW argues that the Board erroneously applied our

    decision in Sprague. It contends that it did present _______

    evidence sufficient to rebut the presumption that the

    condition shown in the 1981 and 1982 x-rays was caused by

    1981 exposures. If that were what the Board had decided in



    -7- 7













    this case, we would agree with the insurer. The employer

    need not rule out any possible causal relationship between

    the claimant's employment and his condition. This would go

    far beyond the substantial evidence standard set forth in the

    statute.

    But both the Board and the ALJ based their

    decisions at least in part on the ground that the 1989 x-rays

    showed an aggravation of the earlier condition, which

    aggravation was presumptively caused by Shorette's employment

    at BIW. The expert opinions proffered by the employer did

    not address and did not present substantial evidence that the

    condition shown in the 1989 x-rays was not related to

    Shorette's 1981 exposures. BIW did not present substantial

    evidence -- indeed it did not present any evidence -- that

    the 1989 condition was not at least aggravated by the 1981

    exposure at BIW. The employer is liable if the exposure

    either caused the disease or caused an aggravation of the

    disease. The employer having failed to meet its evidentiary

    burden, the decision of the Board is affirmed. ________















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Document Info

Docket Number: 96-1956

Filed Date: 3/21/1997

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015