Venicassa v. Consol Coal Co ( 1998 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1998 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    2-27-1998
    Venicassa v. Consol Coal Co
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 96-3736
    Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1998
    Recommended Citation
    "Venicassa v. Consol Coal Co" (1998). 1998 Decisions. Paper 36.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1998/36
    This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova
    University School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1998 Decisions by an authorized administrator of Villanova
    University School of Law Digital Repository. For more information, please contact Benjamin.Carlson@law.villanova.edu.
    Filed February 27, 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 96-3736
    ARMANDO VENICASSA,
    Petitioner
    v.
    CONSOLIDATION COAL COMPANY
    and
    DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
    PROGRAMS, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR,
    Respondents
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Benefits
    Review Board, United States Department of Labor
    BRB No. 95-1760
    Argued September 25, 1997
    Before: COWEN, ROTH and LEWIS, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed February 27, 1998)
    Robert L. Johnson, Esquire (Argued)
    Paul A. Tershel, Esquire
    Tershel & Associates
    55 South Main Street
    Washington, PA 15301
    Attorneys for Armando Venicassa
    J. Davitt McAteer,
    Acting Solicitor of Labor
    Donald S. Shire,
    Associate Solicitor
    Christian P. Barber, Esquire
    Jeffrey S. Goldberg, Esquire (Argued)
    United States Department of Labor
    200 Constitution Avenue, N.W.
    Suite N-2605
    Washington, D.C. 20210
    Attorneys for Director, Office of
    Workers' Compensation Programs,
    United States Department of Labor
    William S. Mattingly, Esquire
    (Argued)
    Jackson & Kelly
    600 Hampton Center, Suite B
    P.O. Box 619
    Morgantown, WV 26507
    Attorney for Consolidated Coal
    Company
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ROTH, Circuit Judge:
    Armando Venicassa has filed a Petition for Review from
    the decision of the Benefits Review Board ("Board"),
    affirming the denial by the Administrative Law Judge
    ("ALJ") of Venicassa's claim for black lung benefits under
    the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. S 901, et. seq. (the
    "Act"). In an earlier hearing, the ALJ had dismissed United
    States Steel Corporation, the responsible coal mine
    operator, designated by the Office of Worker's
    Compensation Programs ("OWCP"), and had awarded
    benefits to Venicassa, to be paid by the Black Lung
    Disability Trust Fund ("Trust Fund"). The Director of the
    OWCP appealed this decision to the Board. The Board then
    remanded Venicassa's claim to the OWCP to permit the
    OWCP to identify a second responsible operator to pay
    2
    benefits. We must decide whether, after the award on the
    merits to Venicassa, the Board could vacate that award so
    that the ALJ might designate a second responsible operator
    and begin the process all over again.
    For the reasons we discuss below, we conclude that the
    Board erred when it remanded this case for designation of
    a second responsible operator. We will, therefore, grant the
    petition for review, vacate the decision of the Board, and
    remand this case to the Board to reinstate the ALJ's ruling,
    granting Venicassa's claim for benefits and ordering the
    Trust Fund to pay them.1
    We have appellate jurisdiction in this matter pursuant to
    the Longshoreman's and Harbor Workers' Compensation
    Act, 33 U.S.C. S 902, made applicable to Black Lung
    Benefits cases by 30 U.S.C. S 932(a). The decision of the
    Benefits Review Board is a final order under Section 21(c)
    of the Longshoreman's and Harbor Workers' Compensation
    Act, 33 U.S.C. S 921(c) as incorporated by section 422(a) of
    the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. S 932(a).
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This case comes to us with a lengthy procedural history,
    due in large part to the long delay by the OWCP in
    processing Venicassa's claim and to the acknowledged error
    by the OWCP in designating the responsible coal mine
    operator.2
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. We are also asked to decide whether the ALJ's determination at a
    second hearing, denying benefits, was supported by substantial
    evidence. Venicassa submits that the denial of benefits by the ALJ on
    remand was irrational because the ALJ relied on the same medical
    evidence that he had relied on to make the initial award of benefits.
    Because of our decision on the second designation issue, we do not need
    to reach this question.
    2. Unfortunately, the OWCP's failure to designate the proper responsible
    operator at the outset has exacerbated a problem all too familiar to us.
    We have confronted a disturbing record of delay in processing claims for
    black lung benefits in prior cases. See Kowalchick v. Director, OWCP, 
    893 F.2d 615
    (3d Cir. 1990) (Benefits awarded 17 years after the initial claim
    was filed); Lango v. Director, OWCP, 
    104 F.3d 573
    (3d Cir. 1997) (noting
    long delay in processing claim for benefits).
    3
    The petitioner in this case, Armando Venicassa, worked
    in and around coal mining operations for 43 years before
    he retired in 1985. In 1986, he filed a claim with the OWCP
    for benefits under the Black Lung Benefits Act. Under the
    Act, benefits are awardable to persons who are totally
    disabled due to pneumoconiosis, a disease known as "black
    lung." The OWCP processed Venicassa's claim for benefits
    with the information he supplied. Venicassa indicated
    clearly on his claim form that his most recent employer was
    Consolidation Coal Company, for whom he worked from
    January 1984 until his retirement in August 1985.
    However, despite being supplied with accurate information,
    the OWCP erroneously designated United States Steel
    Corporation ("U.S. Steel") as the responsible operator.3
    Venicassa's claim was then referred to the Department of
    Labor's Office of Administrative Law Judges for a formal
    hearing. In February 1987, the Director of the OWCP
    moved to remand the case for identification of another
    responsible operator. This motion to remand came 13
    months after Venicassa had provided the OWCP with the
    information to identify the proper responsible operator. In
    August 1988, prior to the formal hearing on Venicassa's
    claim, the ALJ denied the motion to remand.4 Citing the
    Benefits Review Board decision in Crabtree v. Bethlehem
    Steel Corp.,7 BLR 1-354 (1984), the ALJ held that due
    process concerns dictated that the hearing go forward and
    that, if U.S. Steel was not the responsible operator, it would
    be dismissed and the Director of the OWCP substituted to
    defend the claim. At the hearing, Venicassa testified that
    U.S. Steel had been improperly designated as the
    responsible operator. The ALJ then dismissed U.S. Steel
    and substituted the Director.
    _________________________________________________________________
    3. Venicassa indicated on his claim form that he was employed by U.S.
    Steel from 1942 until January 1984. The regulations define "responsible
    operator" as "the operator or other employer with which the miner had
    the most recent periods of cumulative employment of not less than one
    (1) year..." 20 C.F.R. S 725.493 (a)(1).
    4. The record reflects that the ALJ, who ruled on the remand motion in
    August 1988, did not receive the case until May or June of that year
    even though the case was referred to the Office of Administrative Law
    Judges in September of the previous year. Appendix 56-57.
    4
    To succeed on a claim for black lung benefits, a claimant
    must establish that he suffers from pneumoconiosis and,
    as a result, is totally disabled. In addition, the claimant
    must establish that the pneumoconiosis is the result of coal
    mining. Under the Act, pneumoconiosis may be established
    by x-ray evidence or by a finding of a physician that the
    miner suffers from the disease. 30 U.S.C. S 902(f)(1) (1986);
    20 C.F.R. S 718.202.
    At the hearing, the ALJ concluded that Venicassa's chest
    x-rays did not establish pneumoconiosis. However, the ALJ
    also heard five medical experts, four of whom diagnosed
    some form of lung disease related to coal dust exposure.
    The one physician, who did not find lung disease related to
    coal exposure, did so without providing his reasoning. The
    ALJ, therefore, ascribed little weight to that opinion. The
    ALJ concluded that the weight of medical opinion
    established the finding of pneumoconiosis. Since Venicassa
    had at least 10 years of coal mining employment, the ALJ
    found that Venicassa was entitled to the statutory
    presumption that his pneumoconiosis arose as a result of
    coal mine employment. 30 U.S.C. S 921(c) (1986). The ALJ
    credited Venicassa with 43 years of coal mine employment
    and found evidence sufficient to establish the existence of
    pneumoconiosis due to that employment. As a result, on
    June 23, 1989, the ALJ awarded benefits to Venicassa.
    The Director appealed this decision to the Benefits
    Review Board. In its review of the ALJ's decision, the Board
    did not address the merits of the entitlement to benefits.
    Instead, it vacated the award and remanded the case to the
    deputy commissioner for determination of another
    responsible operator. The Board found it significant that
    the Director had filed the Motion to Remand before a formal
    hearing had been held. For this reason, the Board held that
    the due process concerns of relitigating the case were less
    compelling than those facing the Crabtree Court.
    On remand, the OWCP designated Consolidation Coal as
    the responsible operator. Venicassa's benefits were then
    stopped. In December 1994, a second hearing on
    Venicassa's eligibility for benefits was held before the same
    ALJ. Consolidation Coal submitted evidence in addition to
    that presented at the first hearing. Venicassa submitted
    5
    only the record of the medical evidence from thefirst
    hearing. In addition, Venicassa testified about the
    deterioration of his health during the more than five years
    since the initial award of benefits. The physicians, who had
    presented medical testimony at the first hearing regarding
    Venicassa's respiratory problems, did not testify in person
    at the second hearing.
    At the conclusion of the second hearing, the ALJ denied
    Venicassa's claim for benefits. Venicassa appealed to the
    Benefits Review Board on June 23, 1995. On October 22,
    1996, the Board issued a final decision, affirming the
    decision of the ALJ. Venicassa then timely filed his petition
    for review with this Court.
    ANALYSIS
    We review decisions of the Benefits Review Board and of
    the ALJ for errors of law. Lango v. Director, OWCP, 
    104 F.3d 573
    , 575 (3d Cir. 1997); Kowalchick v. Director, OWCP, 
    893 F.2d 615
    , 619 (3d Cir. 1990).
    The petitioner contends that the Board's reversal of the
    award of benefits and its decision to remand this case for
    the designation of a second responsible operator violated
    due process and subjected him to substantial prejudice. He
    argues that to make him relitigate a claim, on which he has
    already won an award of benefits on the merits, violates
    due process. He further contends that, under the rationale
    of the Benefits Review Board in Crabtree, the efficient
    administration of the Black Lung Benefits Act dictates that
    the case should not have been remanded and that the
    Trust Fund should be reinstated as payor.
    The Director argues that, although a mistake occurred in
    the designation of U.S. Steel as the responsible operator at
    the outset, the Director attempted to correct the mistake
    with the motion to remand for designation of another
    responsible operator. The Director further contends that the
    ALJ's denial of that motion was in error and that the Trust
    Fund is not the appropriate payor because ultimately
    Consolidation Coal was identified as the responsible
    operator.
    6
    We begin our review with an examination of the
    regulations, under the Black Lung Benefits Act, which
    govern the designation of a responsible operator. These
    regulations provide:
    At any time during the processing of a claim under this
    part, after sufficient evidence has been made available
    to the deputy commissioner, the deputy commissioner
    may identify a coal mine operator...which may be liable
    for the payment of the claim .... Such identification
    shall be made as soon after the filing of the claim as
    the evidence obtained permits ....
    20 C.F.R. S 725.412(a). The responsible operator is defined
    as "the operator or other employer with which the
    individual had the most recent periods of cumulative
    employment of not less than one (1) year." 20 C.F.R.
    S 725.493(a)(1).
    It is uncontested that, as of January 1986 when
    Venicassa first filed his claim, the OWCP had all the
    evidence necessary to designate the proper responsible
    operator. However, the Director argues that, under the Act
    and the applicable regulations, a coal mine operator may be
    designated as responsible operator for the purposes of
    defending a claim for Black Lung Benefits "at any time"
    during the processing of the claim. The Director claims,
    therefore, that the ALJ improperly refused to remand the
    case for the designation of a second responsible operator.
    The regulations also state, however, that the
    identification of the responsible operator shall be made "as
    soon after the filing of the claim as the evidence obtained
    permits." For this reason, Venicassa argues that, since from
    the outset the Director had enough information to name the
    proper responsible operator, Venicassa should not be
    penalized for the Director's failure to do so. Venicassa
    contends that, because the OWCP did not make a prompt
    resolution of the responsible operator issue, the ALJ's
    decision to go forward with the hearing on the merits was
    appropriate; to proceed otherwise would have subjected
    Venicassa to further substantial delay in the processing of
    his claim.
    7
    When the ALJ considered the Director's motion to
    remand the case for designation of another responsible
    operator, he relied on the decision of the Benefits Review
    Board in Crabtree. In Crabtree, the Board dismissed
    Bethlehem Steel as the responsible operator. Instead,
    however, of remanding the case for identification of another
    responsible operator, the Board held that the Trust Fund
    would be liable for benefits because the delay involved in
    relitigating the claim would offend due process. In Crabtree,
    the Board concluded that "the Department of Labor is not
    entitled to a second opportunity to identify another putative
    responsible operator." 
    Id. at 1-356-357.
    Remand for reconsideration of the operator issue
    would be tantamount to relitigating the claim. If the
    Department identifies another responsible operator,
    then that operator is entitled to contest the claim,
    develop its own evidence, request a hearing, etc., until
    it has exhausted the full gamut of available procedures
    for adjudicating entitlement. The fact that claimant has
    established entitlement against employer does not bind
    any other operator(s) who were not a party to the
    proceedings. This piecemeal approach encourages two
    undesirable results. First, a claimant who has
    established entitlement in the first round of
    proceedings may lose his award in a later round
    against another operator. A first finding of entitlement,
    even though fully developed and litigated, can be
    defeated in subsequent proceedings by a different
    operator, and not always on the merits. Second,
    piecemeal litigation obviously is not compatible with
    the efficient administration of the Act and expeditious
    processing of claims.
    In view of the aforementioned considerations, the
    Department must resolve the operator issue in a
    preliminary proceeding, see 20 C.F.R. S725.412(d),
    and/or proceed against all putative responsible
    operators at every stage of the claims adjudication.
    Even a separate preliminary proceeding on the operator
    issue alone is more desirable than fully litigating the
    claim against each operator individually. ... The Trust
    Fund therefore must assume liability in the absence of
    any other potentially liable operator.
    8
    
    Id. at 1-357.
    The Director contends, however, that Crabtree should not
    have prevented the OWCP from identifying Consolidation
    Coal as the responsible operator even after the ALJ had
    awarded benefits payable by the Trust Fund. The Director
    urges that the critical distinction between Venicassa's case
    and the Crabtree decision is that here a motion to remand
    was filed before the hearing on the merits. Therefore,
    Crabtree does not apply. The Director contends that
    remand, at the time that the motion was filed, would have
    been appropriate under Crabtree because remand would
    have been prior to litigation of the claim; Crabtree held only
    that the Director could not wait until after the ALJ had
    awarded benefits against the Trust Fund before seeking to
    identify a second responsible operator. Because the motion
    to remand was filed 18 months before the hearing on the
    merits and was denied prior to the hearing, the Director
    claims he did not have an opportunity to ascertain the
    correct responsible operator.5
    _________________________________________________________________
    5. In making this argument, the Director also relies on Director, OWCP v.
    Trace Fork Coal Company, 
    67 F.3d 503
    (4th Cir. 1995). However, Trace
    Fork does not in fact support the Director's position. In Trace Fork, the
    ALJ dismissed the coal company as responsible operator, refusing to
    remand the case for the designation of another responsible operator, and
    then named the Trust Fund as payor. The ALJ awarded benefits and the
    Director appealed the ALJ's finding that the Trust Fund was liable. The
    Benefits Review Board affirmed the ALJ's ruling. The Fourth Circuit held
    that dismissal of Trace Fork as responsible operator was proper and
    affirmed the refusal to remand for the naming of another responsible
    operator. The Board and the Fourth Circuit based their decisions on
    Crabtree and on the holding in that case that the Director must resolve
    the responsible operator issue in a preliminary proceeding or else
    proceed against all potential operators at each stage of the adjudication
    in order to avoid piecemeal litigation and due process concerns. The
    Trace Fork court found that to remand the case would allow a second
    operator to challenge the claimant's entitlement to benefits. The court
    concluded, "We are unwilling to potentially upset the finding that
    [claimant] is entitled to benefits, a matter already fully litigated on
    the
    merits. The Director had full opportunity, and even a motion, to
    ascertain the responsible operator as a preliminary matter, but simply
    refused." Trace 
    Fork, 67 F.3d at 508
    .
    9
    In resolving the motion to remand in the instant case, the
    ALJ concluded that the "Director blew it" in failing to name
    the proper responsible operator. (Appendix 56). For this
    reason, the ALJ dismissed U.S. Steel and substituted the
    Trust Fund as the responsible party. The ALJ's decision
    places the incentives in the proper place -- the Director
    should have gotten it right the first time. That would not
    have been an onerous task because, from the outset, the
    OWCP had in its possession all the information necessary
    to name the proper responsible operator.
    The Director, however, argues that the plain language of
    the regulations allows for the designation of a responsible
    operator "at any time" during the processing of the claim.
    Therefore the OWCP should be allowed to rectify its
    mistake. The Director relies on the Sixth Circuit's decision
    in Director, O.W.C.P. v. Oglebay Norton Company, 
    877 F.2d 1300
    (6th Cir. 1989).
    Although we have not decided a case involving the failure
    of the OWCP to correctly name the responsible operator in
    the first instance, Oglebay addresses such a situation in a
    black lung, widow's benefits case. In Oglebay, the court
    considered the identification of a responsible operator
    nearly ten years after the claim was filed. The Director
    appealed a decision of the Benefits Review Board which had
    dismissed the company as responsible operator. The Sixth
    Circuit held that the identification of the company as
    "responsible operator" nearly ten years after the claim was
    filed was valid and that the transfer of liability to the Fund
    was improper. In reaching this conclusion, the Sixth Circuit
    interpreted the regulation, governing the identification of
    the responsible operator (20 C.F.R. S 725.412(a)). The Court
    noted that the regulation permits identification of the
    responsible operator at any time during the processing of
    the claim. In addition, the Sixth Circuit found the transfer
    of liability to the Trust Fund to be improper when there is
    an affirmative identification of a responsible operator.
    
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1304
    . The court reasoned that neither
    the applicable statutes nor regulations indicated that
    identification of the responsible operator should be
    disregarded merely because it was inefficiently reached; the
    operator would not be substantially prejudiced in defending
    the matter on its merits.
    10
    The Director asks us to disregard Crabtree and follow the
    Sixth Circuit's reasoning in Oglebay. We are not, however,
    bound by Oglebay. Moreover, the instant case is easily
    distinguishable from Oglebay. First, Oglebay involved a
    dispute between the OWCP and the responsible operator.
    The case before us involves a dispute between the claimant,
    the Director, and the putative responsible operator. Second,
    in Oglebay the ALJ decided to remand the case for
    determination of another responsible operator prior to
    holding a hearing on the merits. In the instant case, the
    decision to remand was made after a formal hearing on the
    merits and after the ALJ had awarded benefits. In other
    words, the Crabtree concerns about due process and
    piecemeal litigation -- relied on by the ALJ in denying the
    motion to remand -- are greater in the instant case than
    were those faced by the court in Oglebay.
    Moreover, there is another important distinction between
    this case and Oglebay. The Oglebay court reasoned that
    inefficient identification of the responsible operator does not
    invalidate that identification. In our case, however, the
    Director had before it all the relevant information necessary
    to designate the proper responsible operator -- but failed to
    do so. The OWCP's failure here is more than mere
    inefficiency. Indeed, this failure penalized Venicassa, who
    had already litigated the case on the merits and won. It also
    penalized Consolidation Coal, which had to litigate a 10
    year old claim.
    The Director contends, however, that, because the motion
    to remand was made prior to litigation of the claim on the
    merits, remand and designation of a responsible operator
    were appropriate and did not raise due process concerns.
    Consolidation Coal argues, on the other hand, that the
    critical issue here is not the timing of the motion to remand
    but the timing of the identification of the responsible
    operator. To resolve this dispute, we must go back to the
    language of the regulation.
    The regulation allows for the designation of a responsible
    operator "at any time." Thus, the Director asserts that,
    upon receiving the motion to remand, the ALJ should have
    allowed the designation of a second responsible operator.
    The Director argues that, while the OWCP clearly erred in
    11
    failing to identify Consolidation Coal as the responsible
    operator at the outset, the ALJ erred in denying the motion
    to remand the case in order to correct the problem. The
    Director contends that the Act gives the OWCP sole
    responsibility for identifying the responsible operator who
    may be liable for payment of benefits. 20 C.F.R.
    SS 725.410(b), 725.412. The Director relies on the
    regulatory language which provides for designation of a
    responsible operator "at any time during the processing of
    a claim" and contends that a claim is still being "processed"
    even after it is referred to the ALJ for a hearing.
    While the regulation clearly states that the designation of
    the responsible operator may be made "at any time," the
    language of the regulation triggers the process by providing
    that the designation be made "after sufficient evidence has
    been made available to the deputy commissioner." The
    regulation then further limits the process by providing that
    the designation "shall be made as soon after thefiling of
    the claim as evidence obtained permits." 20 C.F.R.
    S 725.412(a). The focus of the regulation is clearly on the
    swift and accurate designation of the responsible operator
    so that the claim may be resolved through the presentation
    of evidence to the fact finder by the appropriate parties.
    Because the OWCP did not make a timely designation of
    the proper responsible operator, nor did it even make a
    timely attempt to correct its misdesignation or to add
    Consolidation Coal as a potential responsible operator, we
    conclude that the ALJ at the first hearing correctly
    designated the Trust Fund as the defending party. 6
    Moreover, this result is consistent with the purpose
    behind the establishment of the Trust Fund. The Trust
    Fund was established by the Black Lung Benefits Revenue
    Act of 1977 "to provide a more effective means of
    transferring the responsibility for the payment of benefits
    from the Federal government to the coal industry ...." 20
    C.F.R. S 725.490(a). The Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act
    of 1977, (Pub. Law 95-227) (92 Stat. 11) (1978
    _________________________________________________________________
    6. Contrary to the approach of the petitioner, and to the views expressed
    in the dissent, we do not ground our decision on due process
    considerations.
    12
    U.S.C.C.A.N.) (codified at 30 U.S.C. S 934a). The fund is
    financed by the coal industry through an excise tax on the
    sale of coal. 26 U.S.C. S 9501.
    The Director argues that the Trust Fund should not be
    liable in this instance because the Trust Fund was created
    to assume liability for benefits in the event that no
    responsible operator could be found. The statute provides
    that the Trust Fund is available for the payment of benefits
    in any case in which the Secretary determines that "there
    is no operator who is required to secure the payment of
    such benefits." 26 U.S.C. S 9501(d)(B).7
    In order to support its argument that the Trust Fund
    should be liable only in the absence of an identifiable
    responsible operator, the Director emphasizes a portion of
    the Act's legislative history which states that Congress
    intended to ensure that individual coal operators, rather
    than the Trust Fund, would be liable for claims.8 The Sixth
    Circuit relied on these statements in holding that, where a
    responsible operator has been identified, the transfer of
    _________________________________________________________________
    7. The provision reads that the Trust Fund shall be liable for the
    payment of benefits in any case in which the Secretary determines that:
    (a) the operator liable for the payment of such benefits --
    (i) has not commenced payment of such benefits within 30 days
    after the date of an initial determination of eligibility by the
    Secretary, or
    (ii) has not made a payment within 30 days after the payment is
    due,
    (b) there is no operator who is required to secure payment of such
    benefits, ...
    26 U.S.C. S 9501(d) (emphasis added).
    8. "It is further the intention of this section, with respect to claims
    related to which the miner worked on or after January 1, 1970, to
    ensure that individual coal operators rather than the trust fund bear the
    liability for claims arising out of such operator's mines, to the maximum
    extent feasible." S. Rep. 209, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 9 (1977), reprinted
    in
    House Comm. On Educ. And Labor, 96th Cong., Black Lung Benefits
    Reform Act and Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1977, 612 (Comm.
    Print 1979). See also Old Ben Coal Co. v. Luker, 
    826 F.2d 688
    , 693 (7th
    Cir. 1987).
    13
    liability to the Trust Fund is improper. 
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1304
    .
    However, investigation into the legislative history
    indicates that Congress did not contemplate the situation
    before us. Indeed, the Trust Fund's architects were
    motivated by a desire to curb the ability of coal mine
    operators to transfer assets in order to sidestep liability as
    responsible operators.
    At the time of the Trust Fund's creation, its drafters were
    cognizant of the structural changes in the coal industry
    which resulted in the consolidation of numerous coal
    companies and the disappearance of others. They were
    particularly conscious of the impact of these changes on
    future claimants and of their effect on the responsibility of
    successor and former operators.9
    During the last two decades, the coal industry has
    undergone major structural changes. Of the 50 largest
    coal companies, 29 have become captive of other
    industries ...In most instances, these acquisitions
    transferred intact the ownership of the mines and
    operations of existing coal producers to the larger and
    more diversified parent corporations. ... It was
    originally the intent of Congress that such entities
    should bear the liability for black lung diseases arising
    out of employment in their mines ... .
    S. Rep. 209, at 9.
    Thus, while the Act evidences an intent that individual
    coal mine operators, rather than the Trust Fund, assume
    liability for the payment of black lung benefits, the rationale
    behind this determination is the protection of claimants
    _________________________________________________________________
    9. "When the black lung benefits provisions of the Federal Coal Mine
    Health and Safety Act of 1969 were first enacted, it was the expectation
    of Congress that after the Federally financed portion of the program
    terminated, individual coal mine operators would assume the liability for
    benefits either under an approved state workers' compensation program
    or under Part C of the Federal Act. In order to facilitate assessment of
    liability against coal mine operators, Section 422(I) prohibited the
    avoidance of such liability by coal mine operators through the
    mechanism of a post enactment transfer of assets...." S. Rep. 209 at 8.
    14
    from the denial of benefits due to the disappearance of any
    responsible operator. Here, because of the failure of the
    OWCP to identify the responsible operator "as soon after
    the filing of the claim as the evidence obtained permits," it
    is the claimant who will suffer unless the Trust Fund
    assumes responsibility for payment of the benefits. This
    result will protect the claimant, which is the purpose of the
    Act.
    CONCLUSION
    The Black Lung Benefits Act was enacted in order to
    ensure benefits for coal miners who have been totally
    disabled due to black lung disease as a result of their work
    in coal mines. Despite possessing accurate information
    regarding Venicassa's employment history, the Office of
    Worker's Compensation Programs failed to designate the
    proper responsible operator to defend the claim. As a result
    of this failure, the Benefits Review Board ruled that
    Venicassa had to relitigate his claim. We conclude,
    however, that the OWCP's failure to make a timely
    designation of the proper responsible operator should not
    have jeopardized the award of benefits which had been
    made to Venicassa. We will, therefore, grant the petition for
    review, vacate the decision of the Benefit's Review Board,
    and remand this case for reinstatement of the June 23,
    1989, order and award of the Administrative Law Judge.
    15
    COWEN, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Today the majority holds that a district director is not
    authorized, under any circumstances, to correct a mistaken
    responsible operator identification. Because this holding is
    contrary to, inter alia, the Director's reasonable
    interpretation of 20 C.F.R. S 725.412(a) and (c),
    congressional intent, and the Sixth Circuit's decisions in
    Caudill Construction Co. v. Abner, 
    878 F.2d 179
    (6th Cir.
    1989) and Director, OWCP v. Oglebay Norton Co., 
    877 F.2d 1300
    (6th Cir. 1989), I must respectfully dissent.
    I.
    The standards governing our review of an agency's
    interpretation of its own regulations are well known and not
    in dispute. We owe "substantial deference" to the agency's
    interpretation, which has " `controlling weight unless it is
    plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.' "
    Thomas Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala, 
    512 U.S. 504
    , 512, 
    114 S. Ct. 2381
    , 2386 (1994) (quoting Bowles v. Seminole Rock
    & Sand Co., 
    325 U.S. 410
    , 414, 
    65 S. Ct. 1215
    , 1217
    (1945)); see also Sekula v. FDIC, 
    39 F.3d 448
    , 453 (3d Cir.
    1994). Absent constitutional or statutory violations, the
    only circumstance in which we do not defer is where "an
    `alternative reading is compelled by the regulations's plain
    language or by other indications of the [agency's] intent at
    the time of the regulation's promulgation.' " Thomas
    Jefferson 
    Univ., 512 U.S. at 512
    , 114 S. Ct. at 2386-87
    (quoting Gardebring v. Jenkins, 
    485 U.S. 415
    , 430, 
    108 S. Ct. 1306
    , 1314 (1988)). "In addition, we give judicial
    deference to the Director, as policymaker, rather than to
    the Board, which is purely an adjudicator." Director, OWCP
    v. Eastern Coal Corp., 
    54 F.3d 141
    , 147 (3d Cir. 1995)
    (citations omitted). I believe that the majority fails to adhere
    to these fundamental principles. Indeed, the most striking
    aspect of the majority's opinion is its complete failure even
    to mention our duty, under most circumstances, to defer to
    an agency's interpretation of its own regulations.
    II.
    Section 725.412 provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
    16
    (a) At any time during the processing of a claim
    under this part, after sufficient evidence has been
    made available to the [district director], the[district
    director] may identify a coal miner [sic] operator (see
    S 725.491) which may be liable for payment of the
    claim. . . . Such identification shall be made as soon
    after the filing of the claim as the evidence obtained
    permits. . . .
    . . . .
    (c) If within one year after the final adjudication of a
    claim, the adjudication officer determines that an
    operator which may be liable for the payment of
    benefits has not been notified under this section, such
    adjudication officer shall give notice of possible liability
    and an opportunity to respond to such operator. The
    adjudication officer shall then take such further action
    on the claim as may be appropriate.
    20 C.F.R. S 725.412(a), (c).
    A. The Director's Interpretation
    According to the Director, section 725.412 provides that:
    (1) a district director1 is authorized to correct mistaken
    responsible operator identifications; (2) such corrections
    may occur "at any time" during the processing of a claim,
    and up to one year after final adjudication; and (3) a
    district director has no duty--beyond the "at any time"
    limitation above--to identify a responsible operator within a
    reasonable time after the information necessary to make an
    identification becomes available to him. Each of these
    contentions will be addressed in turn.
    1. Ability to Make Corrections
    The Director asserts that section 725.412 "clearly
    authorizes the correction of a mistaken responsible
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. A district director is a person authorized to develop and adjudicate
    claims for black lung benefits. For administrative purposes only,
    regulations substitute the term district director for the term deputy
    commissioner, which is found in the Longshore Act. See 20 C.F.R.
    S 725.101(a)(11).
    17
    operator identification . . . ." Respondent's Br. at 12. I
    agree. There is simply nothing in the regulation that is
    inconsistent with this interpretation. Nor does this
    interpretation conflict with any statutory or constitutional
    provisions. On the contrary, the Director's view effectuates
    clear congressional intent to limit Trust Fund liability to
    those instances in which no responsible operator can be
    identified. See 26 U.S.C. S 9501(d). Moreover, it is
    supported by two persuasive Sixth Circuit decisions. See
    
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1305
    (corrections permitted pursuant
    to section 725.412(a)); Caudill 
    Const., 878 F.2d at 181
    (corrections permitted pursuant to section 725.412(c)).
    Consequently, we must defer to the Director's reasonable
    interpretation.
    2. Timing of Corrections
    The Director next contends that section 725.412(a) and
    (c) authorize the district director or ALJ to correct a
    mistaken responsible operator identification "at any time"
    during the processing of a claim, and up to one year after
    a final adjudication. The Director also contends that the
    ability to make such corrections is not limited to cases--
    such as this one--where an attempt to correct a mistaken
    identification occurs prior to final adjudication of a claim.
    Once again, the Director's interpretation is not
    inconsistent with the regulation. Moreover, it is not
    inconsistent with due process. Due process is simply not
    implicated when--as here--an attempt to correct a
    misidentification is made prior to final adjudication of the
    claim.2 Cf. Caudill 
    Const., 878 F.2d at 181
    (district director
    authorized to correct misidentification of responsible carrier
    "even where a final compensation order has been issued
    against the operator"). While it might seem unfair to require
    a claimant who has already proven entitlement once to
    have to prove it again, relitigation of a finally-decided claim
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. Because a motion to remand was made prior tofinal adjudication of
    the merits in this case, we need not consider the Director's position that
    due process would not bar a district director's attempt to correct a
    mistaken responsible operator identification when that attempt is not
    made until after final adjudication.
    18
    is not unprecedented in the black lung program. The
    statutorily prescribed modification procedure, for example,
    allows a fact finder, upon any party's motion, to review
    previously-considered facts and find a "mistake in a
    determination of fact." 20 C.F.R. S 725.310. Indeed, the
    Supreme Court has observed that
    the "plain import of [the modification statute] was to
    vest a [district director] with broad discretion to correct
    mistakes of fact, whether demonstrated by wholly new
    evidence, cumulative evidence, or merely further
    reflection on the evidence initially submitted.
    O'Keeffe v. Aerojet-General Shipyards, Inc., 
    404 U.S. 254
    ,
    256, 
    92 S. Ct. 405
    , 407 (1971) (per curiam). Thus, "the
    statute and regulations give the [district director] the
    authority, for one year after the final order on the claim, to
    simply rethink a prior finding of fact." Jessee v. Director,
    OWCP, 
    5 F.3d 723
    , 724-25 (4th Cir. 1993).
    In addition, Venicassa had no expectation of finality in
    the ALJ's 1989 award of benefits. See 
    id. ("[T]he principle
    of
    finality" just does not apply to Longshore Act and black
    lung claims as it does in ordinary lawsuits."). The Director
    appealed that decision to the Board, arguing not only that
    the ALJ had erroneously denied the remand motion, but
    that he had erred in awarding benefits.3 Venicassa had no
    reason, therefore, to believe that the ALJ's award settled the
    issue of his entitlement to benefits. His entitlement
    remained at issue regardless of the identity of the liable
    party. We must defer to the Director's interpretation of this
    regulation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    3. By filing a motion to remand, and then renewing it at the hearing, the
    Director did everything within his control to correct the mistaken
    responsible operator identification before the ALJ awarded benefits
    payable by the Trust Fund. The Director could not order the ALJ to
    grant the motion, see Director, OWCP v. Newport News Shipbuilding and
    Dry Dock Co., 
    514 U.S. 122
    , 134, 
    115 S. Ct. 1278
    , 1287 (1995); Old Ben
    Coal Co. v. Luker, 
    826 F.2d 688
    , 696 n.4 (7th Cir. 1987), and an appeal
    to the Board at that point would have been interlocutory.
    19
    3. Duty to Identify as Soon as Evidence Permits
    Finally, the Director asserts that it is inappropriate to
    mandate identification of a responsible operator within a
    reasonable time after the information necessary to make an
    identification becomes available to the district director.
    Such a reading, according to the Director, "essentially reads
    a time limitation into the regulation that `would inject a
    degree of uncertainty into future responsible operator
    identifications.' " Respondent's Br. at 30 (quoting 
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1303
    ).
    The Director's interpretation of this language is
    inconsistent with the regulation. While section 725.412(a)
    includes the phrase "at any time during the processing of
    the claim," it also includes the phrase "[s]uch identification
    shall be made as soon after the filing of the claim as the
    evidence obtained permits." Thus, the Director
    impermissibly reads the second phrase completely out of
    the regulation for all practical purposes. See 
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1306-07
    (Wellford, J., dissenting). Because meaning
    must be given to every word "so that no part will be
    inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant," 
    Sekula, 39 F.3d at 454-55
    n.16, this aspect of the Director's
    interpretation is entitled to no deference.
    4. Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, I conclude that a district director
    is authorized to correct a mistaken responsible operator
    identification at any time prior to final adjudication of a
    claim. However, such corrections must be made within a
    reasonable time after the information necessary to make
    such a correction becomes available to him. Because the
    Director sought to correct the mistaken identification in
    this case approximately eighteen months before final
    adjudication of the claim, he acted within a reasonable
    time, and the ALJ should have granted his motion to
    remand. I would therefore affirm the Board's decision to
    vacate Venicassa's award so that the ALJ could designate
    the proper responsible operator.
    B. The Majority's Interpretation
    According to the majority, section 725.412(a) must be
    interpreted as follows:
    20
    While the regulation clearly states that the
    designation of the responsible operator may be made
    "at any time," the language of the regulation triggers
    the process by providing that the designation be made
    "after sufficient evidence has been made available to
    the deputy commissioner." The regulation then further
    limits the process by providing that the designation
    "shall be made as soon after the filing of the claim as
    evidence obtained permits." 20 C.F.R. S 725.412(a). The
    focus of the regulation is clearly on the swift and
    accurate designation of the responsible operator so
    that the claim may be resolved through the
    presentation of evidence to the fact finder by the
    appropriate parties.
    Maj. Op. at 12.
    While the majority properly concludes that section
    725.412(a) requires the designation of a responsible
    operator as soon as the evidence reasonably permits, see
    
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1306-07
    (Wellford, J., dissenting), it
    fails to provide any mechanism for the correction of a
    mistaken responsible operator identification, regardless of
    how quickly and reasonably the attempted correction is
    made. See Maj. Op. at 10 ("The ALJ's decision [to deny the
    Director's motion to remand] places the incentives in the
    proper place--the Director should have gotten it right the
    first time. That would not have been an onerous task,
    because, from the outset, the OWCP had in its possession
    all the information necessary to name the proper
    responsible operator.") (emphasis added). This view is
    incorrect for several reasons.
    First, the majority's interpretation is inconsistent with,
    and completely ignores, our obligation to defer to an
    agency's interpretation of its own regulations unless it is
    plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.4 Here,
    _________________________________________________________________
    4. The majority expressly disavows reaching its conclusion on due
    process grounds. See Maj. Op. at 12 n.6. It does not, however, offer any
    reason why the Director's interpretation is not owed"substantial
    deference." Indeed, rather than defer to the Director's interpretation of
    its own agency guidelines, the majority defers to the Benefit Review
    21
    the Director reads section 725.412 to permit the correction
    of mistaken responsible operator identifications. Because
    this view is not "plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the
    regulation," see Caudill Const. 
    Co., 878 F.2d at 181
    ;
    
    Oglebay, 877 F.2d at 1305
    , it is entitled to substantial
    deference.
    Second, the majority's conclusion that a district director
    is never authorized to correct a mistaken responsible
    operator identification fails to give any effect whatsoever to
    section 725.412(c). Such a reading violates our duty "to give
    each word of the [regulation] operative effect[,]" Smith v.
    Magras, 
    124 F.3d 457
    , 462 (3d Cir. 1997), and renders this
    provision "inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant."
    
    Sekula, 39 F.3d at 454-55
    n.16 (quotation marks omitted).
    Third, the majority view is at odds with clear
    congressional intent, expressed over a period of years, to
    limit Trust Fund liability to instances in which no
    responsible operator can be identified. See 26 U.S.C.
    S 9501(d). In creating the Trust Fund, Congress intended to
    "ensure that individual coal operators rather than the trust
    fund bear the liability for claims arising out of such
    operator's mines to the maximum extent feasible." S. Rep.
    No. 95-209, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 9 (1977), reprinted in
    House Comm. on Educ. and Labor, 96th Cong., Black Lung
    Benefits Reform Act and Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act
    of 1977, 612 (Comm. Print 1979); see also Old Ben 
    Coal, 826 F.2d at 693
    .
    _________________________________________________________________
    Board's interpretation of section 725.412 in Crabtree v. Bethlehem Steel
    Corp., 7 BLR 1-354 (1984). See 
    id. at 11
    ("In other words, the Crabtree
    concerns about due process and piecemeal litigation . . . are greater in
    the instant case than were those faced by the court in Oglebay."). Such
    deference, however, is improper for two reasons. First, "we give judicial
    deference to the Director, as policymaker, rather than to the Board,
    which is purely an adjudicator." Eastern Assoc. Coal 
    Corp., 54 F.3d at 147
    (citations omitted). Second, Crabtree was wrongly decided because it
    fails to provide for the correction of mistaken responsible operator
    identifications and improperly injects a requirement into the regulation
    that the responsible operator must be identified at a preliminary
    proceeding. Crabtree; 7 BLR at 1-357; see also Director, OWCP v. Trace
    Fork Coal Co., 
    67 F.3d 503
    , 508 (4th Cir. 1995) (requiring identification
    of a responsible operator at a preliminary proceeding).
    22
    Finally, the majority's interpretation also conflicts with
    the Sixth Circuit's decision in Oglebay, where at least two
    judges (and possibly a third5) concluded that section
    725.412(a) authorizes the correction of a mistaken
    responsible operator identification.6 It is also at odds with
    Caudill Construction, where the Sixth Circuit observed that
    subsection (c) "permits notification of a new operator where
    investigation reveals that prior identification was 
    mistaken." 878 F.2d at 181
    . Contrary to the majority's interpretation of
    the regulation, it is clear that section 725.412(a) and (c)
    both authorize the correction of mistaken responsible
    operator identifications.
    I respectfully dissent.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    _________________________________________________________________
    5. Although Judge Wellford expressed concern in his Oglebay dissent
    with "giving the [district director] unfettered discretion to name a
    responsible operator at any time, virtually without 
    limitation[,]" 877 F.2d at 1306
    (Wellford, J., dissenting), and with "encourag[ing] sloppy and
    unreasonable administration of the Act[,]" 
    id. at 1307
    (Wellford, J.,
    dissenting), he did not consider whether section 725.412 authorized the
    correction of mistaken responsible operator identifications. It is
    interesting to note, however, that Judge Wellford joined the majority
    opinion in Caudill Construction, a case decided just seven days before
    Oglebay, which observed that section 725.412(c) "permits notification of
    a new operator where investigation reveals that prior identification was
    mistaken . . . 
    ." 878 F.2d at 181
    .
    6. The majority correctly observes that Oglebay is somewhat
    distinguishable from the instant case because correction of the mistaken
    responsible operator identification was made prior to final adjudication
    of the claim. However, this distinction is immaterial because, as noted
    above, relitigation of a finally-decided claim is: (1) consistent with the
    regulation; (2) consistent with congressional intent; (3) not uncommon in
    the black lung program; and (4) does not violate due process.
    23