Williams v. Jones

December 3, 1993  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-1054

                        JAMES D. WILLIAMS,

                       Plaintiff, Appellee,

                                v.

               JOHN JONES d/b/a NICOLE ENTERPRISES,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

                                           

                           ERRATA SHEET

     The opinion  of this  Court issued on  December 3,  1993, is
amended as follows:

     On page 24, the last sentence in the second paragraph "Costs
                                                                 
are  awarded to plaintiff-appellee"  should be corrected  to read
                                   
"Costs are awarded to defendant-appellant."
                                           

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-1054

                        JAMES D. WILLIAMS,

                       Plaintiff, Appellee,

                                v.

               JOHN JONES d/b/a NICOLE ENTERPRISES,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

           [Hon. Morton A. Brody, U.S. District Judge]
                                                     

                                           

                              Before

                     Torruella, Selya and Cyr,

                         Circuit Judges.
                                       

                                           

     Marshall  J. Tinkle, with  whom Thompson, McNaboe,  Ashley &
                                                                 
Bull was on brief for appellant.
    
     Douglas C. Baston, with whom  Howard & Bowie Law Offices was
                                                             
on brief for appellee.

                                           

                         December 3, 1993
                                           

          CYR, Circuit  Judge.  In 1978, plaintiff-appellee James
          CYR, Circuit  Judge
                             

Williams was injured  as a result  of a fall  from the boom  of a

fishing vessel  owned by  his employer,  defendant-appellant John

Jones,  d/b/a Nicole  Enterprises (Jones).    After Williams  was

diagnosed with a  herniated disc, he filed a  claim against Jones

for compensation benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers'

Compensation Act (LHWCA),  33 U.S.C.    901-50.1  In  March 1981,

a Department of Labor (DOL)  administrative law judge (ALJ) found

that Williams had a "temporary total disability," see id.    908-
                                                         

(b), and ordered Jones to commence immediate payments to Williams

in an  amount equal to  two-thirds of  Williams's average  weekly

                    

     1The  LHWCA is  a comprehensive  statutory scheme  governing
compensation for  covered employees (e.g.,  longshoremen) due  to
                                         
loss  of  earning  capacity caused  by  injuries  sustained while
engaged in "maritime employment" upon the navigable waters of the
United States, or  upon designated lands adjoining  those waters.
See  33  U.S.C.    902,  903.   Like state  workers' compensation
   
statutes, the LHWCA contemplates a relinquishment  of substantive
rights  by both parties; employers are liable for compensation to
the disabled  employee "irrespective of  [the employers'] fault,"
id.    904,  while  employees' LHWCA administrative  and judicial
   
remedies against their employer are exclusive, see id.   905; see
                                                                 
also  Potomac  Elec. Power  Co.  v. Director,  Office  of Workers
                                                                 
Compensation Programs, 449 U.S. 268, 281-82 (1980); Ceres Gulf v.
                                                              
Cooper, 957 F.2d 1199, 1205 (5th Cir. 1992).
      
     After sustaining  a work-related injury, a  covered employee
must provide written  notice to his employer within  30 days from
the date upon which he  should have discovered his disability, in
the  exercise  of reasonable  diligence.   See  33  U.S.C.   912.
                                              
Within  14 days  of such  notice,  or after  obtaining actual  or
constructive knowledge of the employee's disability, the employer
must either  (1) commence payments  to the employee in  an amount
equal to two-thirds of the employee's "average weekly wages," see
                                                                 
id.    906, 908, 910, or  (2) notify the United States Department
   
of Labor (DOL) that the  employee's right to compensation will be
contested, specifying  the grounds.   See id.    914(d).   If the
                                             
employer contests, the employee has one year from the date of his
injury,  or one year from  the employer's last voluntary payment,
to file a written claim with the DOL.  See id.   913; see also 20
                                                              
C.F.R.    702.201-702.286 (1993).

                                3

wage  of $250,  effective from  October 1978.2   See  id.    906,
                                                         

910.   Notwithstanding  two successful  appeals  to the  Benefits

Review Board (BRB)  by Jones, see  id.   921(b),3 ultimately  the
                                      

BRB  affirmed a  compensation award  in  favor of  Williams.   We

denied Jones's  petition for  judicial review in  1990.   See id.
                                                                 

  921(c).  Notwithstanding the finality of the compensation award

                    

     2Within  ten days after the employee files an administrative
claim, see  supra note 1, the DOL must  cause notice to be served
                 
on  all interested  parties,  including  the  employer,  see  id.
                                                                 
  919(b),  and  conduct  all  necessary  investigations  of   the
employee's claim, see id. 919(c);  see also 20 C.F.R.    702.331-
                                           
702.351 (1993).  At  least ten days' notice of the    919 eviden-
tiary  hearing must  be  provided to  all interested  parties, by
personal service or registered mail.  Id.  Section 919 evidentia-
                                         
ry hearings are  conducted pursuant to the  Administrative Proce-
dures Act, 5 U.S.C.   554,  by an ALJ.  Within 20 days  after the
hearing, the  ALJ  must either  reject the  employee's claim,  or
issue a  compensation order  designating  the extent  of the  em-
ployee's "disability"  (e.g., permanent  total, temporary  total,
                            
permanent partial) and  setting the amount of  biweekly compensa-
tion.  The ALJ's  compensation order becomes "effective"  as soon
as it is duly filed in  the appropriate DOL office and notice  of
the  filing  is mailed  to the  employee and  the employer.   Id.
                                                                 
   919(e), 921(a).  The employer's obligation to pay compensation
to  the employee  commences on  the date  the ALJ's  compensation
order becomes "effective."

     3See Williams  v. Nicole  Enters., Inc.,  15  Ben. Rev.  Bd.
                                            
Serv. 453 (1983); Williams v.  Nicole Enters., Inc., 19 Ben. Rev.
                                                   
Bd. Serv. 66 (1986).  "Effective" compensation orders remain non-
"final" pending appeal.  Once an ALJ's compensation order becomes
"effective,"  the nonprevailing party  has 30 days  to appeal the
order (or the ALJ's rejection of the  claim) to the BRB, a three-
member appellate panel  within the DOL.  See  33 U.S.C.   921(b).
                                            
The BRB must  accept all ALJ factual findings  supported by "sub-
stantial evidence."   Id.  If the BRB  affirms, the nonprevailing
                         
party may petition for  judicial review by the appropriate  court
of  appeals, which  will apply  the  same "substantial  evidence"
standard of review to  the ALJ's factual findings,  but otherwise
has jurisdiction  to affirm, modify,  set aside,  or enforce  the
                                                            
ALJ's compensation order.  Id.   921(c).  If no party appeals the
                              
ALJ's  order to  the BRB,  it becomes "final"  30 days  after the
parties are  notified that it  has been filed in  the appropriate
DOL office pursuant to   919(e).  Id.   921(a).
                                     

                                4

for LHWCA  purposes, see supra  note 3, Williams alleges  that he
                              

has received only $450 in benefit payments from Jones to date.

          On  August 7, 1992,  Williams brought  the present  en-

forcement action  in federal  district court,  pursuant to  LHWCA

subsections 921(d) and (e):

          (d) If any employer or his officers or agents
          fails  to comply  with  a compensation  order
          making an award,  that has become  final, any
          beneficiary of such award or  the deputy com-
          missioner making the order, may apply for the
          enforcement of the order to the  Federal dis-
          trict  court  for  the  judicial district  in
          which  the injury  occurred  . . . .   If the
                                                       
          court determines that the  order was made and
                          
          served  in accordance with law, and that such
                                             
          employer  or  his  officers  or  agents  have
          failed to  comply therewith, the  court shall
                                                       
          enforce obedience  to  the order  by writ  of
                                                       
          injunction or by other proper process, manda-
                       
          tory or otherwise, to enjoin upon such person
          and his officers  and agents compliance  with
          the order.

          (e)  Proceedings   for  suspending,   setting
          aside,  or  enforcing a  compensation  order,
          whether rejecting a claim or making an award,
          shall  not  be instituted  otherwise  than as
                                                       
          provided in this section . . . .
                  

33 U.S.C.   921(d), (e) (emphasis added).

          Jones  opposed  the  petition  for  enforcement on  the

grounds that  "newly discovered" evidence  revealed that Williams

secured the  award through  perjury and fraud,  and that  the en-

forcement  petition was not  served on  Jones in  compliance with

Fed.  R. Civ.  P. 4.   A  magistrate  judge recommended  that the

petition  for enforcement be granted because Jones was precluded,

as a  matter of law, from pleading  these defenses in an enforce-

ment  action brought pursuant  to LHWCA section 921(d).   Jones's

                                5

appeal  from the  district court  order  adopting the  magistrate

judge's  recommended decision  presents two  important issues  of

first impression relating to the LHWCA's enforcement provisions.

I. Insufficient Process and Service of Process.
                                              

          Jones  concedes  actual  notice of  the  filing  of the

section  921(d) enforcement petition with the district court, but

pleads insufficient process and insufficient  service of process,

see Fed. R.  Civ. P. 12(b)(4), (5), based  on Williams's admitted
   

failure to serve Jones pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 4.  See Durbin
                                                                 

Paper Stock Co. v.  Hossain, 97 F.R.D. 639, 639 (S.D.  Fla. 1982)
                           

("Service of  process is not  effectual on an attorney  solely by

reason of  his capacity  as an attorney,  [but] [t]he  party must

have  appointed his  attorney as  his agent  for service  of pro-

cess.") (collecting cases); cf. Fed. R. Civ. P. 5(b).4
                               

          The Federal Rules  of Civil Procedure apply  in section

921(d) enforcement proceedings "except to the extent that matters

of procedure  are provided for in [the LHWCA]."   Fed. R. Civ. P.

81(a)(6).   As  section 921(d)  is silent  on the  procedures for

filing, serving,  and answering  an enforcement  petition in  the

                    

     4Rule 12(b)(4) and (5) defenses  may be waived if not timely
asserted.   Marcial Ucin, S.A.  v. SS Galicia, 723  F.2d 994, 996
                                             
(1st Cir. 1983).   Jones's first  "response" to Williams's  peti-
tion,  filed  on  August 21, 1992,  did  not  contest  service of
process  pursuant to  Fed. R.  Civ.  P. 12(h)(1)(A).   Five  days
later,  however, Jones filed his answer and counterclaim, raising
the  insufficient  process  and service  of  process  defenses in
timely fashion.   See  Fed. R. Civ.  P. 12(h)(1)(B)  (defense not
                     
waived if  raised in "matter  of course" Rule 15(a)  amendment to
responsive  pleading within  20  days of  initial  answer).   See
                                                                 
Glater v. Eli Lilley & Co., 712 F.2d 735, 738 (1st Cir. 1983).
                          

                                6

district court,  Jones reasons  that service  of process  was re-

quired in accordance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 4 and 81(a)(6); without

it, he argues, the district  court did not obtain personal juris-

diction over him.

          The magistrate judge rejected Jones's argument,  citing

Jourdan v. Equitable Equip. Co., 889 F.2d 637 (5th Cir. 1989),  a
                               

case  involving companion LHWCA  section 918(a).   Section 918(a)

enforcement proceedings normally are used to enforce compensation

awards  which have  become "effective" but  are not  yet "final";

that  is, during the  pendency of an  appeal to the  BRB from the

ALJ's initial  award, or from  the BRB to  the court  of appeals.

See supra notes  2 and 3.   Within one  year after an  employer's
         

default, the  employee may apply  to an ALJ for  a "supplementary

order" declaring the  amount in default.   The ALJ may  not issue

the  supplementary  order  except  "[a]fter investigation,  [and]

notice,  and hearing."   Even  then,  however, the  supplementary

order is not  self-executing.  Rather, the claimant,  or the ALJ,

must file  a certified copy  of the supplementary order  with the

appropriate federal district  court, which "shall upon  filing of
                                                              

the copy enter judgment for  the amount declared in default . . .

if such supplementary order is in accordance with law."5

                    

     5LHWCA   918(a) provides, in pertinent part:

     (a) In case  of default by the employer  in the payment
     of compensation due under any award of compensation for
     a  period of thirty days after  the compensation is due
     and  payable, the person  to whom such  compensation is
     payable may, within  one year after such  default, make
     application to the [ALJ] making the  compensation order
     for a supplementary  order declaring the amount  of the

                                7

          The  Jourdan court held that the obligatory language of
                      

section 918(a) evinced  a clear congressional intent  to dispense

with the  "service of process" requirements of  Fed. R. Civ. P. 4

in  a section 918(a)  enforcement proceeding brought  in the dis-

trict court.   The magistrate  judge in the present  case, analo-

gizing from Jourdan, reasoned that,
                   

          [l]ike Section 918(a), Section 921(d) utiliz-
          es imperative language; upon certain findings
          the court  "shall enforce."  The only differ-
          ence is the lack of specificity regarding the
                                         
          method  for  filing  the  "application."   In
          either case, the court must make  preliminary
          findings that  amount to nothing more  than a
          procedural review of  the underlying process.
                                                      
          Assuming there  were no procedural  errors at
                                                       
          the  administrative level,  the court  has no
                                                       
          choice  but to enforce the order.  Again, the
                
          court has no jurisdiction  over the merits of
          the action.   The aggrieved  party would have
                                                       
          no additional opportunity to be heard even if
                                                       
          notice were provided according to the  strict
                                                       
          requirements of Rule 4.   The logical conclu-
                                
          sion  is  that  Section 921(d)  is  a summary

                    

     default.  After investigation, notice, and hearing,  as
     provided  in  section  [919], the  [ALJ]  shall  make a
     supplementary  order, declaring  the amount of  the de-
     fault, which shall  be filed in the same  manner as the
     compensation order.   In case the payment in default is
     an  installment of  the award,  the [ALJ]  may, in  his
     discretion,  declare  the  whole of  the  award  as the
     amount in default.  The applicant may file  a certified
     copy  of such supplementary order with the clerk of the
     Federal district  court for  the  judicial district  in
     which  the employer has his principal place of business
     or maintains an office, or for the judicial district in
     which the  injury occurred.  ...    Such  supplementary
     order shall  be final,  and the  court  shall upon  the
     filing of  the copy enter  judgment for the  amount de-
     clared  in default by  the supplementary order  if such
     supplementary  order is in accordance with law.  Review
     of the judgment so entered may be had as in civil suits
     for damages at common law.

33 U.S.C.   918(a).

                                8

          proceeding, and that upon filing of appropri-
          ate documentation showing  that the order  is
          final, that it was  properly served, and that
          the employer has failed to comply, the  court
          should issue the order.

Williams v. Jones,  No. 92-0156-B, slip op. at 6 (D. Me. Oct. 27,
                 

1992) (recommended decision) (emphasis added).

          Assuming, arguendo, that Jourdan  is correctly decided,
                                          

section 921(d) is  insufficiently analogous to section  918(a) to

bear  the weight  given  it in  the  recommended decision  below.

Section  918(a)'s   bifurcated  enforcement   mechanism  requires
                                                                 

administrative notice to the employer,  as well as an opportunity
                     

to be heard, prior to  the entry of any supplementary enforcement
                  

order by  the ALJ.   See supra notes  2 and 5.   Long before  the
                              

employee  ever files the ALJ's certified supplementary order with

the district  court, therefore,  the  procedural requirements  of

section 918(a) itself have  assured that the employer  was placed

on  notice of the impending judicial enforcement proceeding.  The

district  court is  expressly  charged  with determining  whether

"such supplementary  order [was]  in  accordance with  law."   33

U.S.C.    918(a).   Thus, section  918(a) envisions  an ancillary

district court mechanism for enforcing supplementary  enforcement

orders entered by the ALJ.  Arguably,  at least, this is the sort

of administrative alternative  to service of process  which would

preempt the Rule 4 service of process requirement under Fed. Rule

Civ.  P. 81(a)(6).6    In  contrast, however,  no  notice to  the

                    

     6Analogous Rule 81(a)(5), governing the applicability of the
Civil Rules to NLRB proceedings, likewise illuminates the present
inquiry.  See Fed. R. Civ.  P. 81(a)(5) ("in respects not covered
             

                                9

employer  is required  prior  to the  commencement  of a  section

921(d) enforcement action in the district court.  See supra p. 4.
                                                           

          In addition,  we detect  no intimation,  either in  the

statutory  language  or legislative  history, that  Congress con-

templated a section 921(d)  proceeding quite so summary as  indi-

cated in  the recommended  decision.  Even  assuming that  a full

panoply of equitable defenses is  not available to an employer in

a  section 921(d)  enforcement action,  see infra  pt. II,  it is
                                                 

nonetheless clear that  the employer may contest  factual allega-

tions upon which  the section 921(d) enforcement  petition neces-

sarily  depends,7 including the  main issue whether  the employer
                                                                 

                    

by [29  U.S.C.    159, 160]  the practice in the  district courts
shall conform to these rules as far as applicable").  In contrast
to LHWCA   921(d), however, the NLRB sections referenced in  Rule
81(a)(5) contain  detailed provisions relating to the filing of a
petition to enforce an NLRB order.  See 29 U.S.C.   160(e) ("Upon
                                       
filing of such  a petition, the court shall  cause notice thereof
                                     
to be served upon such person, and thereupon shall have jurisdic-
                                                                 
tion  of the proceeding  and of the  question determined therein,
                       
and shall have power to  grant such temporary relief or restrain-
ing order as it deems just and proper . . . .") (emphasis added).

     7Although  clearly treated by  the parties and  the district
court as a    921(d) action, Williams's petition  for enforcement
is an odd hybrid.  Initially, Williams presented his petition for
enforcement to  the DOL.  In a  June 30, 1992 letter to Williams,
the District Director of the DOL determined that the compensation
order was "final,"  that it was made and  administratively served
"in  accordance with  law,"  and  that Jones  was  in default  on
payments.   Under   921(d),  these administrative  determinations
were  supererogatory.   Unlike   918(a),    921(d)  expressly re-
serves such matters for resolution by the district court.  See 33
                                                              
U.S.C.   921(d) ("If the court determines that the order was made
                                         
and served  in accordance  with law  . . . .") (emphasis  added).
          
Although the district  court correctly noted  that Jones did  not
contest these matters (e.g., the  giving of notice as required in
                           
the administrative proceedings under   919), the applicability of
                  
the  Rule 4 service of process requirement is not made to depend,
see Fed. R. Civ. P. 81(a)(6), upon whether the defendant-employer
   
received  notice in  the administrative  proceeding, but  whether
        

                                10

is in default.   Moreover, arguably at least,  the employer might
             

be  entitled to  raise  factual challenges  relating  to (1)  the

amount  in default,8 (2) whether  new evidence indicates that the

initial compensation order was procedurally  defective, or other-

wise not "in  accordance with law," or (3)  employee conduct that

might  tilt  the  fundamental balance  of  equities  in favor  of

judicial restraint.   See  infra note 18.   Moreover,  unlike the
                                

bifurcated  process involved  in  a  section  918(a)  enforcement
          

proceeding,  which presumes  prior  notice  and  hearing  at  the

administrative  level, section  921(d)  constitutes the  district

court  the employer's first and only  forum for a full hearing of
                                    

such  factual disputes  prior to  the issuance  of  an injunctive

                    

"matters of procedure are provided for in" the LHWCA, id. (empha-
                                                         
sis added).  Since there  is no LHWCA provision governing service
of process  upon the  defendant employer  in a    921(d) judicial
enforcement proceeding, the district  court erred in  determining
that service of  process in accordance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 4 and
81(a)(6) was not necessary. 
     Moreover, although  the DOL  letter of  June 1992  contained
findings  analogous to those  required under LHWCA    918(a), see
                                                                 
supra  note 5,  it could  not qualify  as a    918 "supplementary
     
order," since (1) there is  no record evidence that Jones contem-
poraneously received the letter, or any notice of it, (2) the DOL
did not conduct a   919 hearing prior to  issuance of the letter,
(3)  the copy  of the DOL  letter filed  with the  district court
enforcement  petition was  not  "certified," and  (4)  Williams's
district  court  petition  specifically  invokes  subject  matter
jurisdiction under section 921(d) only.

     8Williams conceded  that Jones  was making  payments at  the
time of the district court  order, but insisted that the enforce-
ment petition sought to compel payment of the "arrearages" dating
                                                         
from October 1978.  The  magistrate judge concluded that   921(d)
differed from   918(a),  in that  it permits  the enforcement  of
prospective compensation orders only, compelling future  payments
to  be made  as they  come  due but  not recoveries  of  past due
payments.   Williams,  slip  op.  at 3  (citing  Henry v.  Gentry
                                                                 
Plumbing &  Heating Co.,  704 F.2d 863  (5th Cir. 1983)).   Since
                       
Williams has not cross-appealed, we do not address this question.

                                11

enforcement  order,  with  its  attendant  exposure  to  coercive

contempt proceedings.

          The recommended  decision observes that even  without a

formal Rule 4 service of  process requirement the district  court

could notify  an employer  informally in  those  cases where  the
                                     

court  believed  that  an  employee's  petition  for  enforcement

involved controverted  factual matters.   But of  course such  an

approach could  afford adequate  safeguards only  if the  factual

conflicts were apparent  on the face  of the employee's  petition
                                                                 

for enforcement.  Otherwise, there could be no assurance that the

respondent-employer would have  either notice  or opportunity  to

assert a challenge.  Thus, to construe Rule 81(a)(6) as excepting

section  921(d) enforcement actions  from the service  of process

requirements  of Rule  4,  merely because  the  employer did  not

interpose opposition  to the  enforcement petition, could  expose

employers to ex parte enforcement orders.
                     

          Finally, Williams  suggests that  requiring service  of

process  in a section 921(d) enforcement proceeding could subvert

the  LHWCA goal of  ensuring prompt compliance  with compensation

orders.  Granting the premise of Williams's LHWCA policy argument

in  principle, whatever  slight  delay  might  be  occasioned  by

requiring proper service of process  in order to enable the court

to  obtain in personam  jurisdiction over employers  hardly seems

                                12

inappropriate,  especially  in  light of  the  simplicity  of the

procedure.9

          Sections  918(a) and 921(d) serve distinct roles in the

LHWCA remedial scheme.  Section 918(a) designedly affords injured

employees a  convenient, inexpensive,  and expeditious  mechanism

for facilitating enforcement  of "effective" compensation  awards

even before they  have become "final".  Congress  anticipated the
                                    

severe  financial hardships that could beset injured employees as

a result of lengthy appeals.  It therefore settled on the section

918(a)  enforcement action  as a  simple means  to compel  prompt

employer  compliance with  an enforcement  award  even though  it

might later  be set aside on review.  See, e.g., Tidelands Marine
                                                                 

Serv. v. Patterson,  719 F.2d 126, 129 (5th  Cir. 1983) (  918(a)
                  

implements "a theme central  to the spirit, intent, and  purposes

of the LHWCA");  Henry, 704 F.2d at  865.10  For some  reason not
                      

disclosed  in the appellate  record, however, Williams  failed to

                    

     9Other  types of minor procedural delays have not foreclosed
agency recognition of the applicability of the Civil Rules to the
LHWCA  by virtue of  the gap-filling mandate  in Fed.  R. Civ. P.
81(a)(6).  For  instance, Civil  Rule 6(e),  which permits  addi-
tional time  (3 days) for  compliance after service by  mail, has
been  held applicable  in LHWCA  enforcement  proceedings.   See,
                                                                
e.g., Johnson v. Diamond  M Co., 14 Ben. Rev. Bd.  Serv. 694, 696
                               
(1982) ("There is no provision  in the Act excepting the applica-
                                                    
tion  of [Civil] Rule  6(e) . . . .") (emphasis  added); see also
                                                                 
Great Am. Indem.  Co. v Belair, 160  F. Supp. 784, 785  (D. Conn.
                              
1957) (same).

     10Under the LHWCA, employers may recoup overpayments only as
credits against  compensation payments  due the  employee in  the
       
future.   See 33  U.S.C.    908(j), 914(j),  922; see  also Ceres
                                                                 
Gulf, 957 F.2d at 1201.  Thus, if a compensation order is vacated
    
in its  entirety, payments  previously made  are essentially  un-
recoverable.  Id.
                 

                                13

invoke  the  convenient,   prompt,  and  inexpensive  enforcement

mechanism established  under section  918(a) throughout  the ten-

year  period spanned  by Jones's  numerous appeals.    Cf., e.g.,
                                                                

Cassell v. Taylor,  243 F.2d 259, 260 (D.C.  Cir. 1957) (one-year
                 

statute of limitations under   918(a) bars recovery on supplemen-

tal order filed sixteen years after default on compensation award

payments); supra note 5.   Moreover, Williams chose not to cross-
                

appeal from the district court's ruling that section 921(d) could

not be used to recover past-due payments.  See supra note 8.  The
                                                    

avoidable  and unexplained delay in Williams's efforts to recover

these  past-due  compensation payments  from  Jones,  however ill

advised or unfortunate,  does not permit disregard of the service

of process requirements applicable to section 921(d)  enforcement

proceedings,  particularly since  compliance will entail  no sig-

nificant further delay.11  But cf. infra pt. II.B.
                                        

          Furthermore,  proper service  of  process  is no  empty

procedural exercise where an employee  seeks to obtain a district

court enforcement order  under section 921(d)  which may lead  to

contempt proceedings against the employer for noncompliance.  See
                                                                 

Omni Capital Int'l,  Ltd. v. Rudolf Wolff & Co., 484 U.S. 97, 103
                                               

(1987) ("Before a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a

defendant,  the procedural requirement of service of summons must
                                                                 

                    

     11LHWCA   914(f) already provides a substantial disincentive
to frivolous employer challenges  to compensation awards designed
to postpone payments to an  injured employee.  Before a compensa-
tion order enters, payments more than 14 days overdue trigger 10%
interest  assessments.   See  33  U.S.C.   914(e).    Defaults in
                            
payments  following entry  of a  compensation  order trigger  20%
interest assessments.  See id.   914(f).
                              

                                14

be satisfied.   '[S]ervice of summons is the procedure by which a
            

court having venue and jurisdiction  of the subject matter of the

suit asserts jurisdiction over the person of the party served.'")

(citing Mississippi  Publishing Co.  v. Murphree,  326 U.S.  438,
                                                

444-45  (1946)) (emphasis added);  Precision Etchings & Findings,
                                                                 

Inc. v. LGP Gem, Ltd., 953 F.2d  21, 23-24 (1st Cir. 1992) (hold-
                     

ing that actual  notice of lawsuit is no  substitute for substan-

tial compliance with FRCP 4(d)(1) [requiring service on person of

defendant,  on suitable resident  at defendant's dwelling,  or on

defendant's "agent"];  "a []  judgment entered  by a  court which

lacks jurisdiction over the person  of the defendant is void, and
                                                            

may be set aside at any time  pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.  60(b)-
                            

(4).    Personal  jurisdiction is  established  either  by proper

service of process or by the defendant's waiver of any  defect in

the service of process.") (emphasis added); Jardines Bacata, Ltd.
                                                                 

v. Diaz-Marquez, 878  F.2d 1555, 1559 (1st Cir.  1989) ("[I]n the
               

ordinary  course, the district court acquires jurisdiction over a

defendant  only by service of process . . . .") (emphasis added).
                                     

Accordingly,  as we  cannot  find that  Jones  waived service  of

process, see supra note 4,  we vacate the district court enforce-
                  

ment order, and remand for service of process pursuant to Fed. R.

Civ. P. 4.

II.  Equitable Defenses and the State-law Counterclaim.
                                                      

          Jones asserted two affirmative defenses and a state-law

counterclaim based on allegations that Williams committed perjury

before the ALJ in March 1980,  and that, as a direct consequence,

                                15

the ALJ  found, incorrectly,  that "no  laborious work"  had been

performed by  Williams after October  1978.   At the  October 23,

1992 hearing before  the magistrate judge, Jones  proffered three

affidavits  from  individuals  who  had accompanied  Williams  on

numerous clamming and lobstering expeditions between October 1978

and March 1981.  These affidavits attest that Williams engaged in

the very types  of heavy labor and lifting  explicitly disclaimed

in his testimony before the ALJ in 1980.  Jones contends that the

identity of  the affiants could not have  been discovered earlier

in the exercise of reasonable diligence, since Jones only learned

of  their existence through a "chance  conversation" in August or

September of 1992.

          With  respect to  the  affirmative defenses,  Jones re-

quested alternative forms of equitable relief:  (1) denial of the

enforcement  order on  the  ground  that a  party  who obtains  a

compensation  award through fraud is not entitled to its enforce-

ment by injunction, or (2) a temporary stay of the section 921(d)

enforcement action pending  administrative relief  from the  DOL.

With respect  to the state-law  counterclaim, see Me.  Rev. Stat.
                                                 

Ann. tit.  14,   870  (1992) (damages action for  perjury), Jones

requested compensatory and punitive damages.

          The district court  held that it had  no "jurisdiction"

    hence no discretion  under LHWCA section 921(d)     to refuse

to  enforce  the compensation  order, except  on the  two grounds

enumerated in the LHWCA, neither of which was contested by Jones;

namely, that  Jones was not  in default or that  the compensation

                                16

order  was not  made and served  "in accordance with  law."12  On

related grounds, the  district court refused to  exercise pendent

jurisdiction  over Jones's  state-law counterclaim.   See  United
                                                                 

Mine Workers v. Gibbs, 383 U.S. 715, 726 (1966).  The recommended
                     

decision did not address the request for  a temporary stay of the

section 921(d) enforcement proceedings.

          On appeal,  Jones  contends  that  the  district  court

viewed  its equitable powers  under section 921(d)  too narrowly.

See  Restatement (Second)  of Judgments    70,  cmt. a  (1982) (a
   

court of equity  will not enforce a judgment  obtained by fraud).

Although the  district court  may have painted  with too  broad a

brush, see,  e.g., infra  notes  14 and  18,  we think  its  core
                        

conclusions were nonetheless sound.

                    

     12The magistrate  judge  principally relied  on Thompson  v.
                                                             
Potashnick Constr.  Co., 812 F.2d  574 (9th Cir. 1987),  and Mar-
                                                                 
shall v. Barnes &  Tucker Co., 432 F. Supp. 935  (W.D. Pa. 1977).
                             
In Thompson,  the Ninth  Circuit broadly  stated that  a district
           
court's role in a   921(d) proceeding is limited to screening for
procedural defects in the DOL proceedings and that "the  district
court  has no  jurisdiction over  the merits of  the litigation."
                                            
Thompson, 812 F.2d  at 576 (emphasis added).   The Thompson court
                                                           
was not asked  to consider the sufficiency of  service of process
in the district court proceeding.
     In support  of its  position, the Ninth  Circuit cited  Mar-
                                                                 
shall, which looked  to recent legislative history  for guidance.
     
Prior to 1972, the district court had served both as an appellate
court, reviewing the ALJ's compensation orders, and  as the forum
                                                   
in which the employee could seek enforcement of a final compensa-
tion order.  In 1972, Congress established the BRB, which assumed
the  appellate role previously  performed by the  district court.
See H.R. Rep.  1441, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 12  (1972), reprinted in
                                                                 
1972  U.S.C.C.A.N. 4709.    The  Marshall  court  concluded  that
                                         
Congress intended, by  its LHWCA amendments in 1972,  to withdraw
district court jurisdiction to consider any issue relating to the
underlying merits of compensation orders.  Marshall, 432 F. Supp.
                                                   
at 937.

                                17

     A.   Equitable Power to Refuse Injunctive Enforcement.
                                                          

          An  enforcement order  under LHWCA  section 921(d)  may

take the  form of a  writ of injunction, a  traditional equitable

remedy  which  may  expose  the enjoined  party  to  the district

court's  coercive contempt powers.   Accordingly, fraud  and "un-

clean hands" historically  have been regarded as  valid equitable

defenses  to injunctive  relief, Loglan  Inst.,  Inc. v.  Logical
                                                                 

Language Group, Inc.,  962 F.2d 1038, 1042 (Fed.  Cir. 1992), and
                    

absent  a  controlling statute  a  federal court  is  presumed to

possess the broad discretion and equitable power to configure its

remedy to  suit the needs  of the case.   Even in  the context of

congressionally created  injunctive remedies,  the Supreme  Court

has said  that "[u]nless  a statute  in so  many words,  or by  a
                                                                 

necessary  and  inescapable  inference,  restricts  the   court's
                                      

jurisdiction in equity, the full scope of that jurisdiction is to
                                      

be recognized  and applied."   Porter v. Warner Holding  Co., 328
                                                            

U.S. 395, 398 (1946) (emphasis added).  See Weinberger v. Romero-
                                                                 

Barcelo, 456  U.S. 305, 313  (1982) ("[W]e do not  lightly assume
       

that  Congress has intended  to depart from  established [equity]

principles.").13

                    

     13See also  Hecht Co.  v. Bowles, 321  U.S. 321,  329 (1944)
                                     
("The essence  of equity jurisdiction  has been the power  of the
Chancellor to do equity and to mould each decree to the  necessi-
ties of  the particular case.   Flexibility rather  than rigidity
has distinguished it."); NLRB v. P*I*E Nationwide, Inc., 894 F.2d
                                                       
887, 892 (7th Cir. 1990) (contrasting FTC orders, which are self-
executing,  with NLRB orders as to  which Congress has interposed
the  district court as an independent enforcement arbiter, recog-
nizing that  the "potential  severities of  contempt" counsel  "a
complementary power of equitable restraint and forbearance"); cf.
                                                                 
Pyrodyne  Corp. v. Pyrotronics  Corp., 847  F.2d 1398,  1402 (9th
                                     

                                18

          Under  this rubric, the  first question we  confront is

whether the LHWCA deprives the district court of  its traditional

discretionary powers  to withhold  equitable relief  for the  en-

forcement  of a compensation award obtained through an employee's

fraud.14   Since section  921(d) contains  no explicit  delimita-

                    

Cir.) (noting  that owner of incontestable mark  under Lanham Act
"generally entitled  to  injunctive  relief,"  but  if  equitable
defenses are interposed, "the grant of injunctive relief is not a
ministerial act flowing  as a matter  of course"), cert.  denied,
                                                                
488 U.S. 968 (1988).

     14Marshall, 432 F. Supp. 935, relied on below, as well as by
               
the Ninth  Circuit in  Thompson, see supra  note 12,  offers only
                                          
limited guidance.  In Marshall,  the employer attempted to  liti-
                              
gate  core factual  issues (e.g., LHWCA  coverage and  statute of
                                
limitations) for  the first time in a   921(d) proceeding, having
                                
failed to raise them before  the ALJ, or to appeal the  compensa-
tion order to the BRB.  Id. at 937.  The Marshall court correctly
                                                 
relied on the  fact that, by its amendments to the LHWCA in 1972,
Congress  unequivocally divested the district court of all appel-
late functions relating to ALJ compensation orders.  But Marshall
                                                                 
did  not  involve the  more  difficult  problems posed  by  newly
discovered evidence  of fraud.   Arguably,  at least,  successful
invocation of an equitable defense to enforcement would not  work
                                                 
an  appellate affirmance, modification, or vacation of the under-
             
lying  compensation order,  but merely  a refusal  to deploy  the
equitable powers of  the court in aid of  a judgment fraudulently
obtained.   Thus, Marshall's admonition that the district court's
                          
function  is reduced to "screening compensation orders for proce-
dural  defects"  does not  purport  to preclude  exercise  of the
court's traditional  discretionary  power to  grant  or  withhold
equitable relief.  See infra note 18.
                            

                                19

tion of  the district  court's equitable  powers,15 we  must look

to the LHWCA's remedial framework as a whole.

          The LHWCA affords Jones an adequate remedy for redress-

ing any  fraud  alleged in  the affirmative  defense.   Eschewing

conventional  res  judicata  principles,  section  922 allows  an
                           

employer to  request the ALJ  to reconsider the case  where there

has been a "change of conditions" or "mistake of fact" warranting

modification  or suspension  in compensation  payments.   See  33
                                                             

U.S.C.   922; see also 20 C.F.R.   702.373; Hudson v.  Southwest-
                                                                 

ern Barge  Fleet Servs., Inc.,  16 Ben.  Rev. Bd. Serv.  367, 369
                             

(1984) (holding that   922  was "intended by Congress to displace

traditional  notions of res  judicata") (citing Banks  v. Chicago
                                                                 

Grain  Trimmers Ass'n, 390  U.S. 459 (1968)).16   "[F]acts relat-
                     

ing to the nature and extent of a claimant's disability typically

                    

     15The magistrate  judge's reliance  on the  "imperative lan-
guage" of   921(d) could not fully resolve the issue.   See supra
                                                                 
pp. 7-8.   Section 921(d)'s  language    "shall enforce"     does
not call for a blanket  preemption of the district court's tradi-
tional  equitable powers.   See,  e.g.,  Hecht, 321  U.S. at  329
                                              
(holding that the phrase  "'shall be granted' [in the  injunctive
enforcement provision of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942]
is less mandatory  than a literal  reading might suggest";  "[w]e
cannot but  think that if  Congress had intended  to make such  a
drastic  departure from  the traditions  of  equity practice,  an
unequivocal statement of its purpose would have been made").

     16Section 922 may be invoked before or  after a compensation
award is entered.   See, e.g., Craig v.  United Church of Christ,
                                                                
13  Ben. Rev.  Bd. Serv. 567,  568-69 (1981).   Although   922 is
subject to a  one-year limitations period, a  defaulting employer
may restart  the tolling period  at any  time by making  a single
compensation  payment.  See  33 U.S.C.   922  (modification award
                           
can  be filed "at any time  prior to one year  after date of last
payment of compensation").  Thus, recourse to   922  would appear
to afford more  flexibility for setting aside  a fraudulent award
than is provided under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(3).

                                20

are  the subject  of  modification  proceedings."    Williams  v.
                                                             

Geosource, Inc.,  13 Ben. Rev. Bd.  Serv. 643, 645 (1981).   "The
               

factfinder  [ALJ] has  broad discretion  to  correct mistakes  of

fact,  whether they be  demonstrated by new  evidence, cumulative
                                                     

evidence,  or  further  reflection  upon  the evidence  initially

submitted."  Id. (emphasis added).  The overarching criterion for
                

reopening a compensation award under the LHWCA is whether reexam-

ination  would  serve  the "interests  of  justice."  O'Keeffe v.
                                                              

Aerojet-General  Shipyards, Inc.,  404 U.S.  254, 255-56  (1971).
                                

Perjured  testimony resulting  in an  erroneous  finding of  fact

concerning the nature or extent of an employee's disability would

seem to come squarely within the realm of a "mistake of fact."

          On  October 14,  1992,   days  before  the  recommended

decision issued in this case,  Jones filed a petition for modifi-

cation pursuant to  LHWCA section 922.17   In these  circumstanc-

es, and against this legislative framework, we think there are at

least two sound reasons for  not inferring a congressional inten-

tion  to dedicate  two forums  to the  task of  assessing alleged

"mistakes of fact" relating to an employee's testimony before the

ALJ.  First, where newly discovered evidence of  fraud implicates

the evidentiary basis  for an employee's compensation  claim, the

                    

     17Section 922 is  not the only antidote for  fraud under the
LHWCA,  which  likewise  authorizes  the  imposition  of criminal
penalties  (fine  and  imprisonment) against  "[a]ny  person  who
willfully  makes any false or misleading statement or representa-
tion for  the purpose of  obtaining any benefit or  payment under
this Act."  33  U.S.C.   931.  In addition, costs  may be awarded
to the opposing party in  proceedings brought on claims or orders
"without reasonable ground."  Id.   926.
                                 

                                21

LHWCA discloses a decided preference  for utilizing the DOL's in-

house expertise in resolving the  dispute.  See, e.g., Crowell v.
                                                              

Benson, 285  U.S. 22,  46 (1932) (the  LHWCA provides  "a prompt,
      

continuous,  expert and  inexpensive method  for  dealing with  a

class of questions of fact  which are peculiarly suited to exami-
                                                       

nation and  determination by an  administrative agency  specially

assigned to that task") (emphasis added); cf. Youghiogheny & Ohio
                                                                 

Coal  Co. v. Vahalik,  970 F.2d  161, 162  (6th Cir.  1992) ("the
                    

benefits of agency  expertise become irrelevant" under  the LHWCA

only after "claim determination" is complete).18
          

          Under  either  section 921(d)  or  922,  the factfinder

would  be required  to  decide:   (1)  whether  Jones could  have

discovered  the putative fraud  earlier, in  the exercise  of due

diligence; (2) whether the affidavits proffered by Jones, togeth-

er with the  record evidence in the case before the DOL, credibly

suggest that Williams misrepresented  his physical capacities and

activities  during the  relevant  period;  and  (3)  whether  the

putative perjury was sufficiently material to undermine the ALJ's

finding  of temporary  total disability.    See General  Dynamics
                                                                 

Corp.  v. Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, 673
                                                            

F.2d 23, 25 (1st Cir. 1982) (in reopening case, ALJ "must balance

the  need to  render justice  against  the need  for finality  in

                    

     18On the  other hand, while  we have  no occasion to  take a
position in  this case,  some equitable  defenses (e.g.,  laches,
                                                       
estoppel),  to the extent premised on employee conduct postdating
                                                                 
the  compensation order,  might  require  resolution  of  factual
issues not peculiarly suited to agency expertise.  Cf. supra note
                                                            
14.

                                22

decisionmaking,"  and justice is not necessarily served where the

employer "could have presented his side  of the case at the first

hearing . . . .");  see also  McCord v. Cephas,  4 Ben.  Rev. Bd.
                                              

Serv. 224, 225 (1976) (employer  not entitled to modification  if

it exhibits a bad faith  effort to relitigate issues ad nauseam).
                                                               

We think the  DOL is better positioned to  address such issues in

these circumstances.

          Second, section 922 modification rulings are appealable

to the BRB and to the court  of appeals.  See 33 U.S.C.   921(b),
                                             

(c); O'Loughlin  v. Parker, 163  F.2d 1011, 1013 (4th  Cir. 1947)
                          

(ALJ's decision to reopen under section 922 is reviewed for abuse

of  discretion).   Similarly,  an  employer would  be  allowed an

appeal  from a  district  court  decision  which  discounted  the

employer's equitable  defenses  and  directed  enforcement  of  a

compensation award.   To  allow the section  922 and  the section

921(d)  proceedings  to  go forward simultaneously  would open up

the possibility of inconsistent rulings on the fraud claim, which

ultimately  would have to be resolved by  the court of appeals in

either event.

          As we can  discern no good purpose for  such a needless

duplication  of administrative  and judicial effort,  we conclude

that LHWCA section 921(d), viewed in broad context, gives rise to

the "inescapable  inference," see Porter,  328 U.S. at  398, that
                                        

Congress did not intend the  type of fraud defense here presented

by Jones to be adjudicated by the district court but by the DOL.

                                23

     B.   Stay of Enforcement.
                             

          The remaining question  is somewhat narrower:   may the

district  court in a section 921(d) proceeding temporarily enjoin

enforcement  of  a   compensation  order  pending  administrative

resolution  of  an  employer's  petition  for modification  under

section 922?19  Jones contends that he will be harmed irreparably

absent  a  stay  of the  section  921(d)  enforcement proceeding,

because the compensation  payments he is compelled  to make prior

to any  section 922 modification order would  not be recoverable.

See supra note 10.
         

          Only  two  LHWCA provisions  explicitly allow  stays of

"effective" compensation orders.   See 33 U.S.C.     921(b) (stay
                                      

pending appeal to  BRB), 921(c) (stay pending appeal  from BRB to

court  of appeals),  thus underscoring  the  strong LHWCA  policy

favoring prompt  compensation payments even though the employee's

entitlement to  disability benefits  remains in  genuine dispute.

Stays pending  administrative and  judicial review  are available

only  on a showing of "irreparable injury."   See Henry, 704 F.2d
                                                       

at  865.  It  is not  enough that  the employer  demonstrate that

interim  payments would be unrecoverable absent  a stay, nor that

the employer  is  experiencing  financial  difficulty  in  making

payments.   Edwards v. Director, Office of Workers' Compensation,
                                                                

                    

     19We address this issue in  the interests of judicial econo-
my.   It is possible,  even likely,  that Jones's    922 petition
will have been acted upon by the DOL before Jones has been served
with process  pursuant to  Civil Rule 4  following remand  to the
district court.  If  not, it seems quite likely  that Jones would
renew his request for a stay of the   921(d) enforcement proceed-
ing.

                                24

932 F.2d 1325, 1329 (9th Cir. 1991). "Irreparable injury" will be

found only in extraordinary circumstances.  Id.
                                               

          Unlike  the  minimal  time delays  required  to  effect

proper service  of process,  see supra pt.  I, a stay  of section
                                      

921(d)  enforcement  proceedings  while  an  employer  pursues  a

modification ruling from the DOL (and, perhaps, pending appellate

review)  threatens  a  lengthy delay  in  the  previously ordered

compensation  payments to  the employee.    Therefore, under  the

"inescapable inference" standard established  in Porter, 328 U.S.
                                                       

at  398, we  must conclude  that the  LHWCA divests  the district

court of  the equitable power  to defer  its entry  of a  section

921(d) enforcement  order pending  the outcome  of a section  922

modification  proceeding unless  the  employer first  establishes

"irreparable injury."   As we have noted, Jones's  answer did not

allege facts sufficient to establish irreparable injury, nor does

the record suggest a basis for such a showing.  Thus,  the magis-

trate judge did not  err in failing to  act on the request  for a

temporary stay.

III. Conclusion.
               

          The district  court order directing enforcement  of the

compensation  order  pursuant  to LHWCA  section  921(d)  must be

vacated due  to lack  of compliance with  the service  of process

requirements imposed by Fed. R. Civ. P. 4 and 81(a)(6).  The case

must be remanded to permit  Williams to effect service of process

upon  Jones.   At such  time as service  of process  is effected,

Jones should be permitted to submit for  district court consider-

                                25

ation any  order obtained in  the LHWCA section  922 modification

proceeding,  failing which the  district court may  reinstate the

section 921(d) enforcement order previously entered.

          The  enforcement order  is  vacated  and  the  case  is
                                                                 

remanded to permit service of process and for further proceedings
                                                                 

in  accordance herewith.   Costs are awarded  to defendant-appel-
                                                                 

lant.
     

                                26