Social security disability benefits are designed for disabled workers, but low-income parents (or, as in this case, a guardian) may obtain them on behalf of their disabled children as well. 42 U.S.C. § 1382c(a)(3)(C); see
Sullivan v. Zebley,
After the administrative law judge to whom the application for disability benefits on behalf of Napoleon Keys, then 14 years old, had been referred held that he was not disabled within the meaning of the applicable regulations, which were merely interim regulations, the Social Security Administration adopted final regulations in implementation of changes in the definition of childhood disability made by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, Public Law 104-193, §§ 211-212. These are different from the interim regulations and the initial question presented by the appeal is whether Keys’s case is governed by the old (interim) or the new (final) regulations. No appellate ease has attempted to resolve the issue.
The statement accompanying the issuance of the new regulations says that the regulations applicable to a particular case are those that were “in effect at the time of the final decision.” 65 Fed.Reg. 54751 (Sept. 11, 2000). When the new regulations took effect at the beginning of 2001, Keys’s appeal from the administrative law judge’s adverse decision was pending before the Appeals Council of the Social Security Administration. The Council has discretion whether to hear an appeal from an administrative law judge’s decision.
Perkins v. Chater,
The government argues that the “final decision” was that of the administrative law judge, and hence the old regulations apply since the new ones had not taken effect until after his decision. We understand everything but “hence.” The Appeals Council considered the new regulations — it had to, since obviously the administrative law judge’s decision had not become final while the case was still before the Appeals Council. When the Council decided not to review the case, the administrative law judge’s decision became final, but it became final then, not earlier, just as a decision becomes final when the Supreme Court denies certiorari.
Clay v. United States,
The government argues that, if so, the Social Security Administration “would be reluctant to amend and approve on its own regulations if, every time it did so, it would be required to re-adjudicate cases that were properly decided under valid regulations.” But it was the agency itself that decided that the applicable regulations would be those in effect when the final decision was rendered; it could if it wanted have limited the applicability of the new regulations to applications for benefits filed, or cases decided by administrative law judges, after the new regulations took effect. Giving administrative regulations prospective effect only is more common than otherwise, but the agency declined to limit the effect of its new regulations in this way.
The government’s interpretation of the scope of our review is not saved by
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Probably there is little left of
Auer.
The theory of
Chevron
is that Congress delegates to agencies the power to make law to fill gaps in statutes. See, e.g.,
United States v. Mead Corp., supra,
We conclude that the new regulations govern our review. They designate six “domains” of functioning: acquiring and using information; attending to and completing tasks; interacting with and relating to other people; moving about and manipulating objects; caring for oneself; and health and physical well-being. 20 C.F.R. § 416.926a(b)(1). A claimant is to be found disabled if he has an “extreme” limitation in at least one of the domains, or “marked” limitations in at least two. 20 C.F.R. § 416.926a(d). “Marked” and “extreme” limitations in a given domain can be established by standardized test scores that are two or three standard deviations, respectively, below the mean — that is, either in the lowest 2.5 percent of the distribution or the lowest one-half of 1 percent — provided, however, that the scores are representative of day-to-day functioning. 20 C.F.R. §§ 416.926a(e)(2)(iii), 416.926a(e)(3)(iii). Test scores are not conclusive, therefore, and the bulk of 20 C.F.R. § 416.926a is devoted to “general descriptions of each domain” against which a claimant’s functioning may be compared; and so when the dust settles, the agency retains substantial discretion, which we cannot say was abused here.
Although Napoleon Keys had a turbulent childhood (his parents, with whom he no longer lives, were drug addicts), has a low-average IQ, has done quite poorly in some of his classes, has a limited social life, and has definite problems with concentration, he functions poorly rather than being as it were off the chart. In the six domains of functioning, he is extremely deficient in none and markedly deficient only in one (“attending to and completing tasks,” formerly “concentration, persistence, and pace”). In fact, he is able to function more or less adequately in school, so that if he were deemed disabled so would millions of other children be. The denial of benefits was therefore reasonable and must stand.
We are mindful that some cases, most recently
Booker-Shelton v. Barnhart,
More important, although technically judicial review is of the administrative law judge’s decision when the Appeals Council denies review, realistically it is of the Appeals Council’s denial when it gives a reason for its action that relates to the soundness of the denial of the application for benefits. Had the Council just said we’re denying review because we’re too busy, then the only decision for the courts to review would be that of the administrative law judge. But that was not the character of the Council’s reason for denying review; its reason was that the new regulations would make no difference to the outcome. That was a reasonable substantive judgment to which we would defer even if we did not independently believe that the changes brought about by the new regulations do not help Keys.
Affirmed.
