97-667. Parisi By Cooney v. Chater; Reduction of Benefits Under the Family Maximum In Cases Involving Dual EntitlementTitle II of the Social Security Act  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 8 (Monday, January 13, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 1792-1794]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-667]
    
    
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    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
    [Social Security Acquiescence Ruling 97-1(1)]
    
    
    Parisi By Cooney v. Chater; Reduction of Benefits Under the 
    Family Maximum In Cases Involving Dual Entitlement--Title II of the 
    Social Security Act
    
    AGENCY: Social Security Administration.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Social Security Acquiescence Ruling.
    
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    SUMMARY: In accordance with 20 CFR 422.406(b)(2), the Commissioner of 
    Social Security gives notice of Social Security Acquiescence Ruling 97-
    1(1).
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: January 13, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Gary Sargent, Litigation Staff, Social Security Administration, 6401 
    Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21235, (410) 965-1695.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Although not required to do so pursuant to 5 
    U.S.C. 552(a)(1) and (a)(2), we are publishing this Social Security 
    Acquiescence Ruling in accordance with 20 CFR 422.406(b)(2).
        A Social Security Acquiescence Ruling explains how we will apply a 
    holding in a decision of a United States Court of Appeals that we 
    determine conflicts with our interpretation of a provision of the 
    Social Security Act (the Act) or regulations when the Government has 
    decided not to seek
    
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    further review of that decision or is unsuccessful on further review.
        We will apply the holding of the Court of Appeals decision as 
    explained in this Social Security Acquiescence Ruling to claims at all 
    levels of administrative adjudication within the First Circuit. This 
    Social Security Acquiescence Ruling will apply to all determinations 
    and decisions made on or after January 13, 1997. If we made a 
    determination or decision on your application for benefits between 
    November 8, 1995, the date of the Court of Appeals decision, and 
    January 13, 1997, the effective date of this Social Security 
    Acquiescence Ruling, you may request application of the Ruling to your 
    claim if you first demonstrate, pursuant to 20 CFR 404.985(b), that 
    application of the Ruling could change our prior determination or 
    decision.
        If this Social Security Acquiescence Ruling is later rescinded as 
    obsolete, we will publish a notice in the Federal Register to that 
    effect as provided for in 20 CFR 404.985(e). If we decide to relitigate 
    the issue covered by this Social Security Acquiescence Ruling as 
    provided for by 20 CFR 404.985(c), we will publish a notice in the 
    Federal Register stating that we will apply our interpretation of the 
    Act or regulations involved and explaining why we have decided to 
    relitigate the issue.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Programs Nos. 96.001 Social 
    Security - Disability Insurance; 96.002 Social Security - Retirement 
    Insurance; 96.004 Social Security - Survivors Insurance.)
    
        Dated: September 19, 1996.
    Shirley S. Chater,
    Commissioner of Social Security.
    
    Acquiescence Ruling 97-1(1)
    
        Parisi By Cooney v. Chater, 69 F.3d 614 (1st Cir. 1995)--Reduction 
    of Benefits Under the Family Maximum In Cases Involving Dual 
    Entitlement--Title II of the Social Security Act.
        Issue: Whether, in determining the amount of benefit reduction 
    under the maximum family benefits provision in section 203(a) of the 
    Social Security Act (the Act) in cases where a beneficiary is entitled 
    to benefits on more than one earnings record, only those monthly 
    benefits payable on the worker's earnings record after application of 
    the simultaneous benefit provisions are included in calculating the 
    total monthly benefits payable on that record.
        Statute/Regulation/Ruling Citation: Sections 202(k)(3)(A), 202(r) 
    and 203(a) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 402(k)(3)(A), 402(r) 
    and 403(a)); 20 CFR 404.304(d), 404.403, 404.404, 404.407(a), 404.623; 
    Social Security Ruling 62-7.
        Circuit: First (Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, 
    Puerto Rico).
        Parisi By Cooney v. Chater, 69 F.3d 614 (1st Cir. 1995).
        Applicability of Ruling: This Ruling applies to determinations or 
    decisions at all administrative levels (i.e., initial, reconsideration, 
    Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hearing or Appeals Council).
        Description of Case: Anthony Parisi, the worker, became disabled in 
    February 1988. He and Anthony Parisi II, his dependent child and the 
    plaintiff in this case, began receiving Social Security benefits on 
    Anthony Parisi's earnings record. In 1991, Adriana Parisi, the worker's 
    spouse, became entitled to retirement benefits (old-age benefits) based 
    on her own earnings record. Under section 202(r) of the Act, Adriana 
    was deemed also to have applied for and become entitled to wife's 
    benefits based on the worker's earnings record. The Social Security 
    Administration (SSA) determined under section 202(k)(3)(A) of the Act 
    that because the monthly retirement benefits that Adriana was entitled 
    to receive on her own record exceeded the amount of her monthly wife's 
    benefits on Anthony Parisi's earnings record, she could only receive 
    payment for the retirement benefits payable on her own earnings record.
        SSA counted the wife's benefits to which Adriana was entitled, but 
    which were not actually paid to her, toward the monthly maximum amount 
    of benefits payable on Anthony Parisi's earnings record under section 
    203(a) of the Act (the family maximum). Because the total monthly 
    amount of Anthony's disability benefits, the plaintiff's child's 
    benefits, and Adriana's wife's benefits exceeded the monthly family 
    maximum limit, SSA reduced the amount of the plaintiff's and the wife's 
    monthly benefits.
        The plaintiff's request for reconsideration of the benefit 
    reduction was denied, and he requested a hearing before an ALJ. The ALJ 
    found that Adriana's wife's benefits should not be counted toward the 
    family maximum. However, the Appeals Council reversed the ALJ's 
    decision and the plaintiff appealed to the district court. The district 
    court found that the family maximum limit on monthly benefits was meant 
    to include only ``effective entitlements'' that result in actual 
    payment of benefits. Because Adriana's entitlement to wife's benefits 
    was only ``conditional'' upon her not being entitled to a greater 
    amount of monthly benefits on her own earnings record, the district 
    court concluded that Adriana's wife's benefits should not be counted 
    toward the family maximum. SSA appealed and the United States Court of 
    Appeals for the First Circuit, while offering somewhat different 
    reasoning, found that the district court correctly reversed the Appeals 
    Council's decision.
        Holding: After reviewing the statutory language in sections 203(a) 
    and 202(k)(3)(A) of the Act, the legislative history, SSA's regulations 
    and policy considerations, the Court of Appeals held that ``Adriana's 
    non-payable spousal benefits d[id] not count toward the section 
    [2]03(a) `family maximum' . . . [because] section [2]03(a) operates to 
    limit the total amount of benefits actually payable on a single 
    worker's record, not the amount of entitlements theoretically 
    available.'' The court further held that because Adriana's deemed 
    entitlement to wife's benefits resulted in ``zero payable benefits'' 
    under section 202(k)(3)(A) of the Act, none of her benefits should be 
    included in the family maximum computation required under section 
    203(a).
        Without reviewing SSA's definition of ``entitlement,'' the court 
    reasoned that, if SSA was correct in arguing that section 203(a) of the 
    Act places a limit on entitlements, it would be contradictory and 
    impossible to enforce compliance with the family maximum cap by 
    reducing payable benefits. The court held that section 203(a) of the 
    Act requires SSA to consider the actual amount of benefits payable 
    under the relevant benefits provisions (read as a whole), not purely 
    theoretical entitlements, in calculating the total monthly benefits 
    payable on the worker's earnings record. The court noted that its 
    conclusion did not undermine SSA's definition of ``entitlement'' and 
    that Adriana had entitlement, in an abstract way, to wife's benefits 
    under section 202(b)(1) of the Act.1
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        \1\ The First Circuit's reasoning differed from the district 
    court's analysis that distinguished between ``effective'' and 
    ``conditional'' entitlements. The court held that this distinction 
    had ``no roots in the statutory language.''
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        The court also held that the statutory language requires that 
    monthly benefits be reduced under the family maximum only as much ``as 
    necessary'' to enforce compliance and that, because the reduction in 
    Parisi's case depended on the calculation of Adriana's wife's benefits, 
    which amounted to zero due to her simultaneous entitlement to a higher 
    benefit on her own earnings record, a reduction was not necessary. 
    Accordingly, the court concluded that
    
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    the total amount of benefits payable on the worker's record did not 
    exceed the family maximum and that Anthony's child's benefits should 
    not be reduced.
    
    Statement As To How Parisi Differs From Social Security Policy
    
        Section 203(a) of the Act establishes a limit, derived from the 
    worker's primary insurance amount, on the total monthly benefits to 
    which dependents or survivors may be entitled on the basis of one 
    worker's earnings record (the family maximum). Under SSA's regulations 
    implementing section 203(a) of the Act (20 CFR 404.403 and 404.404), 
    the benefits of each claimant entitled on a worker's earnings record 
    are reduced proportionately so that the total benefits of those 
    entitled on the record in one month do not exceed the family maximum. 
    In calculating total monthly benefits, SSA includes all benefits of the 
    claimants who are entitled on the worker's record without considering 
    whether the benefits are actually due or payable.
        The Parisi court held that, when computing a reduction under the 
    family maximum pursuant to section 203(a) of the Act, SSA should not 
    include the monthly benefit that would otherwise be payable to the 
    spouse if payment of that spouse's benefit is precluded by section 
    202(k)(3)(A) of the Act due to the spouse's simultaneous entitlement to 
    a higher benefit on the spouse's own earnings record.
    
    Explanation of How SSA Will Apply The Parisi Decision Within The 
    Circuit
    
        This Ruling applies only to cases involving claimants whose 
    benefits are reduced because of the family maximum and who reside in 
    Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island or Puerto Rico at the 
    time of the determination or decision at any administrative level, 
    i.e., initial, reconsideration, ALJ hearing or Appeals Council.
        When the total benefits due or payable for any month on the 
    earnings record of a worker exceed the maximum amount under section 
    203(a) of the Act (the family maximum applies) and a person entitled on 
    the worker's earnings record is simultaneously entitled to benefits on 
    another earnings record, SSA will consider only the amount of monthly 
    dependent's or survivor's benefits actually due or payable to the 
    simultaneously-entitled person when determining the amount of the 
    benefit reduction because of the family maximum. Adjudicators will 
    continue to apply SSA's other policies for applying and calculating the 
    family maximum reduction.
    [FR Doc. 97-667 Filed 1-10-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4190-29-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/13/1997
Published:
01/13/1997
Department:
Social Security Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Social Security Acquiescence Ruling.
Document Number:
97-667
Dates:
January 13, 1997.
Pages:
1792-1794 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Social Security Acquiescence Ruling 97-1(1)
PDF File:
97-667.pdf