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Hoskins V Social Security Administration

                                                              □ Southern District of Texas 
                                                                 ENTERED 
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT               July 22, 2025 
                 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS              Nathan Ochsner, Clerk 
                       HOUSTON DIVISION 

HLEVICTOR A. HOSKINS, JR.,                 § 
                                     § 
  Plaintiff,                         § 
                                     § 
VS.                                        §   CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:24-CV-02645 
                                     § 
SOCIAL SECURITY                            § 
ADMINISTRATION,    al,                     § 
                                     § 
  Defendants.                        § 
                             ORDER 
Before the Court are United States Magistrate Judge Yvonne Y. Ho’s Memorandum and 
Recommendation filed on February 6, 2025 (Doc. #13), pro se Plaintiff Hlevictor A. Hoskins, Jr.’s 
(“Plaintiff”)  Objections  (Doc.  Nos.  14,  15,  17),  Defendant  Social  Security  Administration’s 
(“Defendant”) Response (Doc. #16), and Plaintiff's Reply (Doc. #19).  The Magistrate Judge’s 
findings and conclusions are reviewed de novo.  FED. R. Civ. P. 72(b); 28 U.S.C.§ 636(b)(1); 
United States vy.  Wilson,  864 F.2d  1219,  1221  (Sth Cir.  1989),  Having reviewed the parties’ 
arguments  and  the  applicable  legal  authority,  the  Court  adopts  the  Memorandum  and 
Recommendation as its Order, 
Plaintiff filed this action on July  16, 2024, alleging that Defendant failed to act on his 
request for a new Social Security number.  Doc. #1.  Plaintiff seeks $150,000 in damages.  fd.  In 
her Memorandum and Recommendation, Judge Ho recommends the Court dismiss this case for 
lack of subject-matter jurisdiction,  Doc, #13 at 8,  Judge Ho first concludes that Plaintiff's claims 
do not fall within the limited waiver of sovereign immunity provided by 42 U.S.C.§ 405(g), which 
permits judicial review only of final decisions made by the Commissioner of Social Security.  Jd, 

at 4—5.  Because Plaintiff has failed to plausibly allege that he received a final agency decision on 
his request, jurisdiction under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) is plainly lacking.  Judge Ho also considered 
whether Plaintiffs claims could be construed to assert a claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act 
(“FTCA”),  Id. at 5-6.  Judge Ho concluded that even if so construed, jurisdiction is still lacking 
because Plaintiff has failed to exhaust his administrative remedies,  a mandatory prerequisite under 
28 ULS.C. § 2675(a).  Id.  Finally, Judge Ho considered whether Plaintiff may have intended to 
bring a Bivens claim.  id. at 7.  However, Judge Ho correctly determined that jurisdiction is still 
lacking because Bivens claims may not be asserted against a federal agency.  /d.  After liberally 
construing pro se Plaintiff's Complaint to raise all of these legal  claims,  Judge Ho properly 
determined that dismissal is warranted for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.  Jd, at 8. 
In his objections, Plaintiff argues that Defendant’s two-year inaction on his request for a 
new  Social  Security  number  satisfies  the  FTCA’s  exhaustion requirement.   Doc.  #14  at  2. 
However, the FTCA instructs that a tort claim cannot be entertained in federal court unless it is 
“first presented... to the appropriate Federal agency” and the administrative claim has “been 
finally denied by the agency in writing,” or unless six months have passed since the plaintiff made 
his administrative demand,  28 U.S.C. § 2675(a).  Plaintiff has not plausibly alleged that he filed 
an administrative tort claim with the Social Security Administration.  Plaintiffs general allegation 
that he requested a new Social  Security number, without more, does not satisfy the FTCA’s 
exhaustion requirement.  Because Plaintiff has failed to allege that he exhausted his administrative 
remedies under the FTCA, his objections must be overruled,  See Nguyen v.  United States Postal 
Serv.,  of United States Gov't, No. 23-30547, 2024 WL 655578, at *1  (Sth Cir. Feb.  16, 2024) 
(noting the Fifth Circuit has “long held that administrative exhaustion is a jurisdictional requisite 
to filing an FTCA action”).

Second, even if Plaintiff had properly exhausted his administrative remedies under the 
FTCA, dismissal would still be warranted because he has named the wrong defendant, “The United 
States, and not the agency itself, is the proper defendant in an FTCA action,”  Famer vy. La. Elec. 
& Fin, Crimes Task Force, 553 F. App’x 386, 388-89 (Sth Cir. 2014),  Because the Social Security 
Administration lacks the capacity to be sued under the FTCA, the Court lacks subject matter 
jurisdiction over Plaintiff's FTCA claim on that basis as well.  See Galvin v. Occupational Safety 
& Health Admin., 860 F.2d 181, 183 (Sth Cir. 1988) (holding that an  FTCA claim against a federai 
agency as opposed to the United States must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction).  Finally, to the 
extent Plaintiff's objections raise new legal theories or causes of action not previously asserted in 
his Complaint or in briefing before Judge Ho, those arguments are not properly before the Court 
and will not be considered. See Freeman v.  Cnty.  of Bexar,  142 F.3d 848, 851  (Sth Cir.  1998) 
(noting that “a party who objects to the magistrate judge’s report waives legal arguments not made 
in the first instance before the magistrate judge”). 
In conclusion, the Court adopts the Memorandum and Recommendation (Doe. #13) as its 
Order.  As such, Defendant Social Security Administration’s Motion to Dismiss (Doc,  #8) is 
hereby GRANTED, and Plaintiff's claims are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE for lack of 
subject-matter jurisdiction,  It is further ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motions for Discovery (Doc. 
Nos.  9,  10)  are  hereby  DENIED.   Finally,  Plaintiff's  Motion  for  Ruling  on  Objections  to 
Magistrate’s Memorandum and Recommendation is DENIED as MOOT.  Doc. #24, 
It is so ORDERED, 

 JUL  18  2025                       |   |  L 
Date                                 The Honorable   Alfred H. Bennett 
                              United States District Judge