Peabody Coal Company v. OWCP ( 2001 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Nos. 95-3291, 00-1449 & 00-2788
    Peabody Coal Company and
    Old Republic Insurance Company,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    Jane W. McCandless and Director, Office
    of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
    Respondents.
    Petitions to Review Orders of the
    Benefits Review Board, Department of Labor.
    Argued November 30, 2000--Decided June 29, 2001
    Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Easterbrook
    and Rovner, Circuit Judges.
    Easterbrook, Circuit Judge. When he died
    of heart failure in 1991 at the age of
    60, Elwood McCandless was afflicted with
    cancer and emphysema in addition to his
    cardiac and circulatory diseases.
    Elwood’s widow, Jane, contends that he
    also was disabled by coal workers’
    pneumoconiosis as a result of more than
    25 years’ exposure to dust in the mines.
    Many x-rays taken over the last decade of
    Elwood’s life revealed little evidence of
    black lung disease. But an autopsy is the
    best way to obtain information that will
    decide the question, see Peabody Coal Co.
    v. Director, OWCP, 
    972 F.2d 178
    , 182 (7th
    Cir. 1992) (Railey), and pathologist
    Henry W. Bockelman performed one on
    Elwood’s body. Dr. Bockelman attributed
    Elwood’s death to vascular disease,
    myocardial fibrosis, and adenocarcinoma,
    adding that Elwood also exhibited
    "prominent anthracotic pigment deposition
    with reactive fibrosis and polarizable
    debris, suggestive of silica and
    interstitial fibrosis fitting under Type
    III lesion", which he believed
    demonstrated pneumoconiosis. Five other
    physicians, all board-certified in their
    specialties, examined the tissue slides
    that Bockelman had created and concluded
    that they show no evidence of
    pneumoconiosis. One of these (Jerome
    Kleinerman, a pathologist) added that
    Bockelman’s analysis depended on views
    expressed in a 1981 article that had been
    discredited in the medical literature,
    and that as a result Bockelman’s
    conclusion is worthless.
    These divergent interpretations
    presented a problem for the
    administrative law judge. Lawyers are
    uncomfortable with scientific
    controversies--for good reason, because
    legal training does not supply the tools
    needed to resolve technical disputes.
    Nonetheless, many statutes (of which the
    Black Lung Benefits Act is an example)
    make entitlements turn on scientific
    knowledge, and the alj set about to deal
    with the conflicting conclusions of these
    physicians--but on legal rather than
    medical grounds. The alj wrote:
    I place greater weight on Dr.
    Bockelman’s opinion because he
    performed the actual autopsy . . .
    and is a board-certified
    pathologist. . . . The opinions of
    Drs. Crouch, Kleinerman and Naeye
    also merit weight because they too
    are board-certified pathologists and
    appeared to provide well-reasoned
    explanations to discredit Dr.
    Bockelman’s conclusion. Dr. Tuteur
    is also a well-trained physician,
    although not a pathologist. Placing
    more weight on the opinion of the
    pathologist who performed the
    autopsy, as I have the leeway to
    do, I find that the Claimant has
    established pneumoconiosis pursuant
    to [20 C.F.R.] sec.718.202(a)(2).
    There was a little more to the alj’s
    conclusion: he relied on the fact that 2
    out of 31 readings of the many x-rays had
    been positive for pneumoconiosis, and
    that other physicians who examined
    Bockelman’s report (and perhaps some of
    the evidence) found no errors in his
    analysis. Later the Benefits Review Board
    deemed the alj’s reliance on the positive
    x-ray readings inappropriate, leaving
    only the conclusions based on evidence
    obtained during the autopsy. On that
    score, the brb concluded, an alj is
    entitled to favor the findings of an
    autopsy prosector without getting into a
    scientific debate about the quality of
    the prosector’s reasoning.
    Although we understand why the alj and
    the brb wanted to avoid the medical
    controversy, their approach does not
    conduce to finding the truth. A
    scientific dispute must be resolved on
    scientific grounds, rather than by
    declaring that whoever examines the
    cadaver dictates the outcome. See Wilder
    v. Chater, 
    64 F.3d 335
     (7th Cir. 1995);
    Sahara Coal Co. v. Fitts, 
    39 F.3d 781
    (7th Cir. 1994). If there were a medical
    reason to believe that visual scrutiny of
    gross attributes is more reliable than
    microscopic examination of tissue samples
    as a way to diagnose pneumoconiosis, then
    relying on the conclusions of the
    prosector would be sensible. But neither
    the alj nor the brb made such a finding.
    The mine operator contends--and on this
    record we have no reason to doubt--that
    examining tissue samples under a
    microscope, and testing them for silica,
    is the best way to diagnose black lung
    disease. What we have, therefore, is a
    conflict among physicians based on their
    analysis of the tissue samples.
    Bockelman’s visual examination of the
    whole lung played little or no role. The
    alj and brb preferred the results of
    Bockelman’s analysis of the slides just
    because that analysis was done by the
    prosector. This is not a rational ground
    of decision. It is no more sensible than
    saying that the results of the
    plaintiffs’ expert in Kumho Tire Co. v.
    Carmichael, 
    526 U.S. 137
     (1999), had to
    be accepted just because he examined the
    supposedly defective tire. Yet the Court
    held in Kumho that junk science cannot be
    rescued by some principle such as a
    doctrine that courts must receive the
    views of any expert who does hands-on
    work. Bad science is bad science, even if
    offered by the first expert to express a
    view. In Kumho the Court held that the
    views of the plaintiffs’ tire-failure
    analyst were too unreliable to be
    admissible in evidence. Under the
    approach of the alj and the brb in this
    case, however, those same views not only
    would be admissible but also would trump
    the conclusions of five other experts who
    supplied scientifically sound analyses
    but did not manipulate the tire.
    The approach used by the alj and brb in
    this case appears to be a vestige of the
    "true doubt rule," under which a conflict
    in the evidence was resolved in the
    miner’s favor. Director, OWCP v.
    Greenwich Collieries, 
    512 U.S. 267
    (1994), holds the true-doubt rule invalid
    under the Administrative Procedure Act,
    because it relieves the claimant of his
    burden of persuasion. See also Allentown
    Mack Sales & Service, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    522 U.S. 359
     (1998). The preference for the
    conclusions of the autopsy prosector has
    all of the true-doubt rule’s vices
    without its redeeming virtue (for the
    true-doubt rule at least required true
    doubt, an equipoise in the evidence,
    while the preference for the prosector’s
    views can overcome all of the
    scientifically valid evidence in the
    record). Preferring the prosector’s
    conclusion, for no better reason than
    that the prosector wields the scalpel, is
    about as sensible as preferring in an
    antitrust case the conclusions of
    whatever expert devoted the most time to
    preparing his report. Cf. In re Brand
    Name Prescription Drugs Antitrust
    Litigation, 
    186 F.3d 781
    , 786 (7th Cir.
    1999) (failure to conduct an in-depth
    study of an industry, and completion of
    an analysis quickly, are not valid
    grounds for excluding expert testimony).
    Since Daubert v. Merrell Dow
    Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993), courts have understood the
    importance of ensuring that supposedly
    scientific testimony meets minimum
    scientific standards of accuracy. See
    also Weisgram v. Marley Co., 
    528 U.S. 440
    , 445 (2000); General Electric Co. v.
    Joiner, 
    522 U.S. 136
     (1997). Our dispute
    does not entail a contest of
    admissibility. But it makes little sense
    to use scientific standards in performing
    the gatekeeping function and then permit
    the dispute on the merits to be resolved
    by arbitrary considerations, such as who
    wore the latex gloves and or had superior
    credentials. Daubert does not apply
    directly in black lung cases, because it
    is based on Fed. R. Evid. 702, which
    agencies need not follow. Agencies relax
    the rules of evidence because they
    believe that they have the skill needed
    to handle evidence that might mislead a
    jury. See Richardson v. Perales, 
    402 U.S. 389
     (1971). They have a corresponding
    obligation to use that skill when
    evaluating technical evidence. Neither
    the alj nor the brb did this, however;
    both avoided the medical dispute by
    adopting a non-medical rule that
    physicians who work in white smocks are
    more reliable than physicians who do
    their work in the laboratory. As that
    preference has no apparent medical basis-
    -and as it contradicts many decisions
    requiring agencies to resolve scientific
    controversies on the merits rather than
    through legal legerdemain--the result
    cannot stand. See, e.g., Railey, 
    972 F.2d at 182
    ; Stephens v. Heckler, 
    766 F.2d 284
    (7th Cir. 1985). An agency must act like
    an expert if it expects the judiciary to
    treat it as one. See Chicago Board of
    Trade v. SEC, 
    187 F.3d 713
     (7th Cir.
    1999); Bechtel v. FCC, 
    10 F.3d 875
     (D.C.
    Cir. 1993). Railey is directly on point;
    it holds that the alj may not
    automatically credit the conclusions of
    an autopsy prosector but must supply a
    valid rationale for adopting them. Here
    the only rationale was--that Bockelman
    was the prosector. That’s just a
    restatement of the rule that Railey
    disapproved.
    We are not authorized to resolve the
    medical dispute as an initial matter, so
    the case must be remanded to the agency
    for reconsideration. Two other disputes
    lurk in this record, and we mention them
    briefly in an effort to head off further
    troubles. If Elwood had pneumoconiosis,
    the next question is whether that disease
    was disabling. Given his many other
    ailments, it is hard to see how it could
    have been, for the other problems appear
    to be sufficient to cause disability
    (implying that pneumoconiosis was not a
    necessary condition of disability). See
    Freeman United Coal Mining Co. v. Foster,
    
    30 F.3d 834
     (7th Cir. 1994); Freeman
    United Coal Mining Co. v. Stone, 
    957 F.2d 360
     (7th Cir. 1992). The record contains
    many medical assessments attributing
    Elwood’s health problems to heart
    disease, cancer, and emphysema. The alj
    found all of these opinions wanting
    because they were not shared by the
    physician who treated Elwood during his
    final three years. Yet we have
    disapproved any mechanical rule that the
    views of a treating physician prevail.
    See Consolidation Coal Co. v. OWCP, 
    54 F.3d 434
    , 438 (7th Cir. 1995). "[I]t is
    irrational to prefer the opinion of the
    treating physician, who is often not a
    specialist, over the opinion of a
    nontreating specialist solely because one
    physician is the treating physician."
    Railey, 
    972 F.2d at 180
     (emphasis in
    original). Treating physicians often
    succumb to the temptation to accommodate
    their patients (and their survivors) at
    the expense of third parties such as
    insurers, which implies attaching a
    discount rather than a preference to
    their views.
    The alj must have a medical reason for
    preferring one physician’s conclusion
    over another’s. In this case the alj
    recognized that the treating physician’s
    views may not be accepted unless there is
    a good reason to believe that they are
    accurate. The alj thought that he had such
    a reason: Dr. Gelhausen was Elwood’s
    treating physician, and treating
    physicians are (by definition) familiar
    with patients’ medical condition during
    life. That’s just a restatement of the
    preference. Circular reasoning cannot
    avoid the rule. If there is a reason why
    Dr. Gelhausen’s observations have medical
    significance, that’s one thing; but the
    fact that Gelhausen examined Elwood
    McCandless before his death does not
    demonstrate that Elwood was disabled by
    pneumoconiosis. Dr. Gelhausen’s beliefs
    must be supported by medical reasons if
    they are to be given legal effect.
    The other potentially recurring subject
    is attorneys’ fees. The alj calculated the
    fees of Jack N. VanStone, who represents
    Jane McCandless, at $200 per hour. The
    mine operator objected, observing that
    this hourly rate exceeds what VanStone
    charges his paying clients. (At oral
    argument VanStone conceded that the
    highest rate he has ever charged a paying
    client is $150 per hour.) Because the
    rate chargeable against the mine operator
    must be market-based, see Gusman v.
    Unisys Corp., 
    986 F.2d 1146
    , 1150 (7th
    Cir. 1993), without a premium for the
    contingent nature of the compensation,
    see Burlington v. Dague, 
    505 U.S. 557
    (1992), the mine operator asked that
    VanStone’s rate be reduced. See also Cole
    v. Wodziak, 
    169 F.3d 486
    , 488-89 (7th
    Cir. 1999); Eirhart v. LibbyOwensFFr
    Co., 
    996 F.2d 846
     (7th Cir. 1993). The brb
    described the mine operator’s position,
    added "Employer’s objection is noted",
    and then immediately stated that "the
    hourly rate of $200.00 [is] reasonable in
    light of the services performed." The
    Board never addressed the operator’s
    contention that no rate exceeding the
    attorney’s normal market price can be
    deemed "reasonable." For that matter,
    neither the alj nor the brb gave any
    reason for deeming $200 a "reasonable"
    rate. It is a number plucked from a hat.
    Like the other critical issues resolved
    by the agency in this case, this must be
    reexamined.
    The Board’s order is vacated, and the
    case is remanded for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-3291

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 6/29/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/24/2015

Authorities (18)

Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , 113 S. Ct. 2786 ( 1993 )

Sherry Eirhart and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ... , 996 F.2d 846 ( 1993 )

Wendell L. Stephens, Sr. v. Margaret Heckler, Secretary of ... , 766 F.2d 284 ( 1985 )

peabody-coal-company-and-old-republic-insurance-company-v-director-office , 972 F.2d 178 ( 1992 )

City of Burlington v. Dague , 112 S. Ct. 2638 ( 1992 )

General Electric Co. v. Joiner , 118 S. Ct. 512 ( 1997 )

Freeman United Coal Mining Co. v. William E. Foster , 30 F.3d 834 ( 1994 )

freeman-united-coal-mining-company-v-betty-stone-widow-of-huie-stone-and , 957 F.2d 360 ( 1992 )

Louise Cole and Densey Cole v. Andrew Wodziak , 169 F.3d 486 ( 1999 )

Sahara Coal Company v. John B. Fitts and Director, Office ... , 39 F.3d 781 ( 1994 )

Consolidation Coal Company v. Office of Workers' ... , 54 F.3d 434 ( 1995 )

In Re Brand Name Prescription Drugs Antitrust Litigation , 186 F.3d 781 ( 1999 )

Allentown MacK Sales & Service, Inc. v. National Labor ... , 118 S. Ct. 818 ( 1998 )

Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs v. ... , 114 S. Ct. 2251 ( 1994 )

Rosie WILDER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Shirley S. CHATER, ... , 64 F.3d 335 ( 1995 )

Susan M. Bechtel v. Federal Communications Commission, ... , 10 F.3d 875 ( 1993 )

Richardson v. Perales , 91 S. Ct. 1420 ( 1971 )

Weisgram v. Marley Co. , 120 S. Ct. 1011 ( 2000 )

View All Authorities »