Under the rules governing social security disability benefits, an applicant who can perform his “past relevant work” (defined as substantial gainful employment that he had performed, in the not too remote past, long enough to have learned how to do it, 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1560(b)(1), 404.1565(a)) is disentitled to benefits. §§ 404.1520(f), 404.1560(b)(3);
Wolfe v. Shalala,
The administrative law judge’s error, which requires us to remand the case to the Social Security Administration, lay in equating Smith’s past relevant work to sedentary work in general. He should have considered not whether she could perform some type of sedentary work but whether she could perform the duties of the specific jobs that she had held. E.g.,
Strittmatter v. Schweiker,
Suppose, to demonstrate the starkness of the administrative law judge’s error (which the district court repeated by failing to consider that Smith’s past work had required that she be able to type and write
*253
for most of the work day), that in Smith’s region there are no sedentary jobs that do not require more writing or typing than she is physically able to do. The logic of the judge’s ruling would be that she nevertheless is not disabled because she can perform some sedentary work, and this would be flatly contrary to the law, as the cases cited above make clear. The basic principle is stated not only in the cases we have cited, all of which involve sedentary work
(Lowe
and
Kirby
are factually similar to this case), but in other cases, involving light or medium work, as well.
Nolen v. Sullivan,
But a complication arises because, although a merely “similar” job, or the same “type of work,” will not do as the applicant’s past relevant work,
Evans v. Shalala,
Yet it might appear that a remand would be futile because Smith, if she can do sedentary work, albeit not her past relevant work, would not be disabled. But that is not correct. Because she was above the age of 60 at the onset of the alleged disability, the government will have to prove either that Smith has skills that she can transfer to a new job with little or no difficulty or that she has recently completed education that would facilitate her “direct entry into skilled sedentary work.” 20 C.F.R. 404 Subpart P, App. 2, §§ 201.00(d), (f), 201.06-09; 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1563(e), 404.1568(d)(4);
Tom v. Heckler,
Vacated And Remanded.
