The Railroad Retirement Board’s Bureau of Hearings and Appeals upheld the termination of Appellant Cleto Rivera’s disabled child’s annuity under the Railroad Retirement Act (the “Act”). The Railroad Retirement Board (the “Board”) dismissed Rivera’s subsequent appeal as untimely. We dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
I.
The government began providing Rivera with a disabled child’s annuity effective July 1, 1985. The Act provides an annuity to a surviving disabled child of a railroad
In October 1994, the Board’s Bureau of Disability and Medicare Operations Director (the “Director”) informed Rivera that, effective January 1, 1990, he no longer was eligiblе for an annuity because his job with the Oxnard School District constituted “substantial gainful activity.” 20 C.F.R. § 220.140 (2001) (“If the claimant is able to engage in substantial gainful activity, the Board will find that the claimant is not disabled for any regular employment under the ... Act.”). The Oxnard School District had hired Rivera as a part-time food service worker in 1984. Rivera asserts that he was given preferential treatment in the hiring process and is unable to perform many of his job’s tasks, such as lifting heavy objects and standing for long periods оf time.
After the Director rejected Rivera’s request for reconsideration, Rivera appealed to the Board’s Bureau of Hearings and Appeals. On May 15, 1997, a Bureau of Hearings and Appeals Hearings Officer (the “Hearings Officer”) held that although Oxnard partially subsidized Rivera’s job responsibilities, Rivera’s entitlement to an annuity ended on March 31, 1991. The Hearings Officer sent copies of her decision and the Board’s appellate procedures to Rivera and his аttorney, noting that Rivera had sixty days from May 15 to file his appeal with the Board.
On July 14, 1997, the deadline for filing his appeal, Rivera sent the Board a letter requesting additional time to -file his appeal. Rivera claimed that he needed more time because he: (1) had problems with his employment, including a sexual harassment claim; (2) was unable “to concentrate on the appeal process until very recently”; and (3) lived about thirty miles from his attorney’s office and was unable to get transportation to her office until July 14, 1997. The Board eventually received Rivera’s appeal on July 24, 1997. In his appeal, Rivera stated that he intended to file additional evidence with the Board concerning “[t]he true percentage of subsidization Mr. Rivera receives and his actual income.”
On October 3, 1997, the Secretary to the Board sent a letter to Rivera, advising him that the Board “will hold open the appeal for 60 days from the date of this letter for thе submission of evidence. In the absence of any such submission, the Board will proceed to issue a decision on the record before it.” The Secretary also quoted § 260.9(d) of the Board’s regulations, which relates to the submission of additional evidence, and informed Rivera that “admission of new evidence on appeal to the Board is discretionary with the Board, and you should explain why submission of such evidence was not possible at an earlier stage of adjudicаtion.” Rivera did not supply the Board with additional evidence.
On November 19, 1998, the Board dismissed Rivera’s appeal as untimely, with one member dissenting. The Board noted that its regulations require a claimant filing a late appeal to show that circumstances beyond his control caused the late filing, and concluded that “the reasons presented by Mr. Rivera for late filing do not constitute good cause.”
See
20 C.F.R. § 260.9(c) (“If in the judgment of the Board the reasons given establish that the appellant had good cause for not filing the final appeal form within the time prescribed, the Board will consider the appeal
[T]he Board’s agreement to hold the record open was an implicit waiver of the late filing. It does not make sense to make an offer to- accept additional evidence and then to dismiss the appeal for a procedural deficiency. Moreover, the decision of the majority seems- particularly unbalanced and unfair, since it refuses to consider the merits of Mr. Rivera’s appeal for missing the filing deadline by 10 days in an opinion issued more than 12 months after that filing.
In a December 8, 1998 letter, Rivera requested reconsideration of the Board’s decision, stating that his attorney was the cause of his untimely appeal. The Board rejected Rivera’s request, and this appeal ensued.
II.
The Board argues that we laсk jurisdiction to review its November 19, 1998 decision. The Supreme Court has- instructed lower courts to resolve jurisdictional issues before reaching the merits of a case.
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
Section 231g of the Act incorporates the judicial review provisions of the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act, which provides: “Any claimant ... may, only after all administrative remedies within the Board will have been availed of and exhausted, obtain a review of any final decision of the Board ... in the United States court of appeals for the circuit in which the claimant ... resides.... ” 45 U.S.C. § 355(f) (2000). Thus, to qualify for review in this court, Rivera must show that the Board’s dismissal of his claim constitutes a “final decision of the Board”. We hold that it does not, because it was not a “final decision of the Board” on the merits of Rivera’s claim.
The Board’s regulations, provide for a series of administrative steps a claimant may take to challenge an adverse decision by the Director. First, the claimant has sixty days after the date on which notice of the initial decision is mailed to him to request reconsideration. 20 C.F.R. § 260.3(a)-(b). Second, if the Director affirms his initial decision, then the claimant has sixty days to file an appeal with the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals. Id. at § 260.5(a)-(b). Finally, a claimant who wishes to challenge an adverse Bureau of Hearings and Appeals decision must file an appeal “with the Board within 60 days from the date upon which notice of the decision of the hearings officer is mailed to the appellant.” . Id. at § 260.9(b). If the claimant fails tо file a timely appeal at any stage of the process, the prior decision becomes final. See id. at § 261.1(b) (defining “final decision” to mean “any decision of the type listed in § 260.1 of this chapter where the time limits for review as set forth in part 260 of this chapter or in the Railroad Retirement Act have expired”).
In this case, the Hearings Officer issued her decision on May 15, 1997, giving Rivera until July 14 to file an appeal with the
We find support for our conclusion in case law analyzing the ability to appeal an administrative decision not to reopen a “final decision.” In this сase, Rivera’s late appeal requested an extension of time. Since the Hearings Officer’s decision had become final, Rivera’s request essentially asked the Board to reopen a “final decision.”
See Matlock v. Sullivan,
The Supreme Court, interpreting the Social Security Act, has held that courts do not have jurisdiction to review an agency decision not to reopen a “final decision.”
Califano v. Sanders,
The
Sanders
Court held that the district court did not have jurisdiction to review the ALJ’s 1973 decision under the Social Security Act, which provided: “ ‘Any individual, after any final decision of the Secretary ... may obtain a review of such deсision by a civil action commenced within sixty days....’” M at 108,
In
Matlock,
we applied
Sanders
in determining whether the district court had jurisdiction to review the Social Security Appeals Counсil’s (the “Appeals Council”) refusal to consider an untimely request for review.
Furthеrmore, the majority of circuits addressing the issue have held that they do not have jurisdiction to review a Board decision not to reopen a claimant’s application for benefits.
See Harris v. United States R.R. Ret. Bd.,
In this case, the Hearings Officer issued her decision on May 15, 1997. Rivera did not file his appeal with the Board until July 24, 1997, more than sixty days after the Hearings Officer’s decisiоn. Just as in
Matlock,
the Board’s dismissal of Rivera’s appeal as untimely is not a “final decision” under § 355(c) because it did not decide the case “on the merits.”
Rivera, however, contends that the Board implicitly waived its right to dismiss his appeal as untimely. In his appellate filing with the Board, Rivera stated that he intended to submit additional evidence concerning “[t]he true percentage of subsidization Mr. Rivera receives and his actual income.” On October 3, 1997, the Board advised Rivera that it “will hold open the appeal for 60 days from the date of this letter for the submission of evidence. In the absence of any such submission, the Board will proceed to issue a decision on the record before it.” Rivera argues that this letter constitutes an implicit waiver of the sixty-day limitations period.
In arguing that the Board’s Octоber 3 letter implicitly waived the sixty-day limitations period, Rivera relies on
Funderburk v. Califano,
The issue before the district court was whether the Appeals Council’s January 13 letter implicitly waived the sixty-day limitations period. The court held:
The Council’s January 13, 1977, letter demonstrates that the Council did reopen its September 14, 1976, decision when it states that the Council “carefully considered” the additional materials submitted, concluded that modification of the prior decision was not warranted, and held that the administrative law judge’s decision dated July 30, 1976, “stands as the final decision of the Secretary in this case” ... rather than simply stating that the Council refused to reopen its September 14, 1976, decision.
Id. at 658-59. Alternatively, the court held that even had the Appeals Council refused to reopen its September 14 decision, the plaintiff still would have been entitled to bring his suit in district court because
[t]he Secretary should not be entitled to assert the [limitations period] here where the Appeals Council invited plaintiff to submit additional evidence three days before the time limit for filing suit expired, forcing plaintiff to choose whether to pursue additional administrative channels or to institute a possibly needless civil action.
Id. at 659.
In
Sipple,
a West Virginia district court addressed a similar issue, where the Appeals Council sent the claimant a January 3, 1977 letter upholding an ALJ’s denial of
Similar to
Funderburk,
the issue before the district court was whether the Appeals Council’s April 5 letter implicitly waived the sixty-day limitations period. The court stated: “As in the
Funderburk
case, the Appeals Council in this case invited the submission of additional documentation and informed plaintiff that the Council would ‘carefully consider any further evidence that you may wish to submit and will take such further action as may be warranted.’ ”
Id.
Quoting Funderburk’s statement that “ ‘the Secretary should not be entitled to assert the [limitations period] here where the Aрpeals Council invited plaintiff to submit additional evidence three days before the time limit for filing suit expired, forcing plaintiff to choose whether to pursue additional administrative channels or to institute a possibly needless civil action,’ ” the court held that “the Secretary may not ... now assert that the sixty day limitation period bars plaintiffs action.”
Id.
(quoting
Funderburk,
Several circuit courts have analyzed similar situations to those presented in
Funderburk
and
Sipple. See, e.g., Banta v. Sullivan,
Relying on Funderburk, the claimant argued that the Appeals Council’s May 5 letter constituted a reopening of her case and a “final decision” that renewed the sixty-day period for filing her district court action. Id. This court, however, stated that unlike Funderburk, the Appeals Council in Banta “neither invited submission of additional materials nor enticed her to forgo filing a complaint in district court.” Id. Relying on Triplett, Friddle, and Biron, we noted:
A rule allowing claimants to extend their time for filing in district court simply by submitting additional materials which the Appeals Council considers when determining whether to reopen a case would frustrate Congress’s intent “to limit judicial review to the original decision denying benefits [and thereby] forestall repetitive or belated litigation of stale eligibility claims.”
The factual scenario presented here is more similar to the scеnarios analyzed in Funderburk and Sipple than in Banta. Here, like Funderburk and Sipple, the Board sent a letter to Rivera discussing a claimant’s ability to submit additional evidence. In Banta, by contrast, the claimant submitted additional evidence without receiving any notice from the Appeals Council that it might examine the new evidence. Therefore, the Board, like the Appeals Council in Funderburk and Sip-ple, may have provided Rivera with a stronger expectation that it would analyze any newly submitted evidence and issue a decision on the merits than the claimant had in Banta.
Nevertheless, we hold that the Board did not implicitly waive its right to dismiss Rivera’s appeal as untimely. The Board’s October 3 letter informed Rivera that it would “hold open the appeal for 60 days from the date of this letter for the submission of evidence. In the absence of any such submission, the Board will proceed to issue a decision on the record before it.” Rivera never actually submitted additional evidence. Hence, the Board simply “proceeded] to issue a decision on the record before it.” As the record disclosed Rivera’s failure to appeal the Hearings Officer’s decision within sixty days, the Board’s ultimate decision dismissing the appeal as untimely is consistent with its October 3 letter. Thus, although the Board’s letter arguably agreed to waive the timeliness requirement if Rivera submitted additional evidence, Rivera’s failure' to do so permitted the Board to dismiss the appeal as untimely, without reaching the merits of his claim. Accordingly, this сase is distinguishable from Funderburk, where the claimant actually submitted additional evidence after receiving the Appeals Council’s letter informing him that it would consider new evidence. 4
It is true that in
Sipple
the claimant did not submit new evidence after the Appeals Council suggested that he could do so. But in
Sipple,
the Appeals Council informed the claimant that it would consider new evidence while allowing him only ten days to institute suit in district court. Thus, the
Sipple
court felt that the Appeals Council forced the claimant “ ‘tо choose whether to pursue additional administrative channels or to institute a possibly needless civil action.’.”
Accordingly, we do not have jurisdiction to examine Rivera’s arguments that the Board acted arbitrarily and capri
III.
We DISMISS Rivera’s appeal because we do not have jurisdiction to review the Board’s dismissal of Rivera’s application for benefits.
Notes
. It is "accepted practice" to use social security cases as precedent for cases arising under the Act.
Harris v. United States R.R. Ret. Bd.,
. Our sister circuits have expressed differing rationales for holding that they did not have jurisdiction to review a Board decision not to reopen a claimant's application. The Sixth Circuit assumed that the Board's refusal to allow the claimant to file an untimely appeal constituted a "final decision," instead resting its conclusion on the claimant’s failure to exhaust his administrative remedies.
See Gutierrez,
. In
Clifford v. United States Railroad Retirement Board,
. Because we find Funderburk and Sipple distinguishable, we need not express a view on the correctness of their holdings.
