Clifford v. RRRB ( 1993 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-1146

    PETER R. CLIFFORD,

    Petitioner,

    v.

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD,

    Respondent.

    ____________________

    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF DECISION OF

    THE RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Selya and Boudin,

    Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    _____________________

    James B. Smith, with whom Smith & O'Toole, was on brief for
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    petitioner.
    Stanley Jay Shuman, General Attorney, with whom Catherine C.
    __________________ ____________
    Cook, General Counsel, Steven A. Bartholow, Deputy General
    ____ _____________________
    Counsel, and Thomas W. Sadler, Assistant General Counsel,
    __________________
    Railroad Retirement Board, were on brief for respondent.



    ____________________

    September 9, 1993
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    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. Appellant Peter Clifford
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    seeks annuities allegedly due his mother, Dorothy Clifford, under

    the Railroad Retirement Act ("Act"). The Railroad Retirement

    Board ("Board") awarded Mrs. Clifford annuities in 1977, but,

    according to appellant, mistakenly failed to credit several years

    of eligibility. Appellant petitioned the Board in 1990 to reopen

    the case, but the Board refused. We affirm the Board's decision

    not to reopen the case and thus do not address the merits of his

    claim to enhanced benefits.

    Under the railroad retirement system, a retired

    railroad employee with more than ten years of service, who files

    a proper application, qualifies for an annuity.1 45 U.S.C.

    231a(a)(1). The annuity may be retroactive for up to one year.

    Id. 231d(a) (ii)(B). That is, a retired employee may receive
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    annuity payments on a monthly basis upon filing an application,

    plus up to twelve payments to cover the year prior to

    application, if the employee was eligible for benefits during

    that year.

    Mrs. Clifford was a railroad employee with more than

    ten years of service who filed an application for benefits

    directly with the Board in April, 1977. The Board granted her

    benefits beginning that month, with retroactive payments for one

    year. The Board sent Mrs. Clifford a notice to this effect, and

    informed her that she could contest the award in an

    ____________________

    1 A railroad annuity is "a monthly sum which is payable on the
    first day of each calendar month for the accrual during the
    preceding calendar month." 45 U.S.C. 231(p).

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    administrative procedure at any time within the year. Mrs.

    Clifford did not appeal or otherwise contest the award.

    Although the present appeal concerns the award of

    benefits in 1977, the root of the appeal extends back to 1969,

    when Mrs. Clifford filed a claim for Social Security benefits.

    As retirees are not allowed to collect social security benefits

    based on railroad employment, the Social Security Administration

    ("Administration") requested information on her railroad

    employment from the Board. The Board duly notified the

    Administration of Mrs. Clifford's railroad employment history,

    and the Administration granted the appropriate benefits for her

    non-railroad employment.

    After receiving the award of annuities in 1977,

    Mrs. Clifford contacted the Administration by letter to request

    that it take some action to use her 1969 filing as a protective

    filing for railroad benefits. In response, the Administration

    instructed her to contact the Board "as soon as possible."

    Mrs. Clifford did not do so, however, and she received the

    annuity established in April 1977 without complaint until she

    passed away some ten years later.

    Appellant claims, not without some force, that the 1969

    social security filing served as a de facto application for

    railroad benefits, binding on the Board in its consideration of

    an annuities award. In making this claim, appellant relies on a

    1969 Board regulation providing, in part, that "a claim or

    application filed with the Social Security Administration . . .


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    shall be considered an application for an annuity duly filed with

    the Board." Appellant learned the substance of this regulation

    when, in the course of his employment at the Administration, he

    reviewed a social security manual. Appellant alleges that Mrs.

    Clifford was due an annuity retroactively back to 1969. As such,

    appellant petitioned the Board to reopen his mother's file,

    because he was due a lump sum payment of annuities covering the

    years of 1969 to 1976.2 The Board refused because the failure

    to appeal was not justified by good cause, and in any event the

    amount of the award was correct. This appeal followed.

    The reopening procedure stems solely from the Board's

    own regulations, not from the Act. See 20 C.F.R. 260.3(d)
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    (outlining standard for reopening a case).3 As such, some

    ____________________

    2 The Railroad Retirement Act provides that survivors of
    deceased railroad employee may receive, as a lump sum, any
    benefits unpaid at death. 45 U.S.C. 231e(a)(1).

    3 The regulation reads:

    In determining whether the claimant has
    good cause for failure to file a timely
    request for reconsideration the bureau
    director shall consider the circumstances
    which kept the claimant from filing the
    request on time and if any action by the
    Board misled the claimant. Examples of
    circumstances where good cause may exist
    include, but are not limited to:

    (1) A serious illness which prevented the
    claimant from contacting the Board in person,
    in writing, or through a friend, relative or
    other person;

    (2) A death or serious illness in the
    claimant's immediate family which prevented
    him or her from filing;


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    courts have held that they do not possess jurisdiction to review

    a Board decision not to reopen a case. See Guti rrez v. Railroad
    ___ _________ ________

    Retirement Board, 918 F.2d 567, 569 (6th Cir. 1990) (no
    _________________

    jurisdiction to review an appeal filed with the Board late);

    Steebe v. United States Railroad Retirement Board, 708 F.2d 250,
    ______ _______________________________________

    255 (7th Cir. 1983) ("this court lacks jurisdiction to review the

    Board's decision not to reopen"). These courts reason that the

    Act permits judicial review over certain Board actions defined in

    the Act, including final board decisions and those made after

    exhausting all administrative channels.4 As denial of a

    petition to reopen a case is not a final Board determination on

    the merits of a claim as contemplated by the Act or the result of

    an exhausted administrative process defined in the Act, these

    courts conclude that the decision is unreviewable. Guti rrez,
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    918 F.2d at 570 (finding no exhaustion and expressing doubt over

    ____________________

    (3) The destruction of important and
    relevant records;

    (4) A failure to be notified of a
    decision; or

    (5) An unusual or unavoidable circumstance
    existed which demonstrates that the claimant
    would not have known of the need to file
    timely or which prevented the claimant from
    filing in a timely manner.

    4 See 45 U.S.C. 231g (judicial review of annuities
    ___
    determinations governed by judicial review provisions of Railroad
    Unemployment Insurance Act, which requires administrative
    exhaustion, 45 U.S.C. 355(f)); see also Steebe 708 F.2d at 254;
    ________ ______
    Szostak v. Railroad Retirement Board, 370 F.2d 253, 254 (2d Cir.
    _______ _________________________
    1966); cf. Frock v. United States Railroad Retirement Board, 685
    ___ _____ ________________________________________
    F.2d 1041, 1044-45 (7th Cir. 1982) (allowing appeal when
    exhaustion would have been a "futile gesture" and "purposes of
    exhaustion would not be served").

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    finality of determination); Steebe 708 F.2d at 254-55 (no
    ______

    finality).

    Other courts have held that a Board decision not to

    reopen a case is reviewable under an abuse of discretion

    standard. See Sones v. United States Railroad Retirement Board,
    ___ _____ ________________________________________

    933 F.2d 636, 638 (8th Cir. 1991); Szostak v. Railroad Retirement
    _______ ___________________

    Board, 370 F.2d 253, 254-55 (2d Cir. 1966). The court in Szostak
    _____ _______

    did not decide whether the Act authorized such review, but

    concluded such review would be "governed by the common law rather

    than the statute" in any event. 370 F.2d at 255. Sones relies
    _____

    solely on Szostak to find jurisdiction.
    _______

    We need not decide which approach to follow. Even

    assuming that we have jurisdiction over the Board's refusal to

    reopen the case, which is not at all clear, we can find no abuse

    of discretion in the Board's action.5 The Board will only

    reopen a case upon a showing of good cause to do so, see supra
    _____

    note 3, and appellant has made no such showing. A good cause

    showing entails some demonstration of why a timely administrative

    appeal was not pursued. We take it from the list of available

    excuses that a dissatisfied recipient of benefits must show that

    some hardship or unusual circumstance prevented him from

    complying with the constraints of the ordinary course of review.

    ____________________

    5 It is settled that an appellate court, confronted by a
    difficult jurisdictional question may forgo its resolution if the
    merits of the appeal are, as here, straightforward and easily
    resolved in favor of the party to whose benefit the objection to
    jurisdiction would redound. See Norton v. Mathews, 427 U.S. 524,
    ___ ______ _______
    532 (1976); Secretary of the Navy v. Avrech, 418 U.S. 676, 677-78
    _____________________ ______
    (1974); Lambert v. Kysar, 983 F.2d 1110, 1119 (1st Cir. 1993).
    _______ _____

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    In essence, the regulation allows the Board to reopen a case when

    the employee, through no fault of his own and in an extraordinary

    circumstance, was prevented from filing a timely appeal.

    This case does not raise any such concern. To the

    contrary, the record reveals a complete failure by Mrs. Clifford

    and her son to exercise due diligence in pursuing this claim.

    Mrs. Clifford, when presented a notice apprising her of her right

    to appeal with the Board, did nothing. Although appellant

    asserts that his mother spoke with a Board employee, who told her

    that the 1969 social security filing did not qualify as a filing

    for railroad benefits, no record of a conversation with the

    unnamed employee exists. We are hesitant to accord this rather

    flimsy excuse sufficient weight to qualify as good cause for a

    thirteen-year delay.

    Our conclusion holds true even with the added weight of

    Mrs. Clifford's request that the Administration take some action

    to use her 1969 filing as a protective filing for railroad

    benefits. In effect, she was informed by the Administration for

    a second time that redress lay with the Board. Mrs. Clifford

    never acted on the Administration's instruction to contact the

    Board "as soon as possible," however. She merely accepted the

    annuity award granted by the Board at that point. Had she

    pressed her claim, chances are good that she would have learned

    of the regulation concerning the use of social security filings

    as railroad retirement benefits filings.

    In short, we decline to overturn the Board's decision


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    not to reopen the case when the exercise of due diligence would

    have revealed the grounds for a timely appeal. Appellant has not

    advanced a good cause to overcome this failure.

    Affirmed.
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