30 Soc.Sec.Rep.Ser. 687, Unempl.Ins.Rep. CCH 15609A
Louie V. PITTMAN, Appellee,
v.
Louis W. SULLIVAN, M.D., Secretary of Health and Human
Services, Appellant.
Wayne E. ZIEGENHORN, Appellee,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Appellant.
Nos. 89-2180EA, 89-2552EA.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted April 12, 1990.
Decided Aug. 1, 1990.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied Sept. 19, 1990.
John S. Koppel, Washington, D.C., for appellants.
Anthony W. Bartels, Jonesboro, Ark., for appellees.
Before MAGILL, Circuit Judge, FLOYD R. GIBSON, Senior Circuit Judge, and BEAM, Circuit Judge.
MAGILL, Circuit Judge.
In these consolidated appeals, the Secretary of Health and Human Services seeks reversal of the district court's orders requiring him to make additional attorney's fee payments to Anthony Bartels, the attorney who represented claimants Wayne Ziegenhorn and Louie Pittman in administrative and judicial proceedings concerning the termination of their disability insurance benefits. When their cases were remanded for further administrative proceedings following enactment of the Social Security Disability Benefits Reform Act of 1984, both Ziegenhorn and Pittman elected to receive interim benefits under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 423(g), which permits claimants to continue receiving disability benefit payments pending administrative review of the termination decision. The Secretary ultimately reinstated both claimants' disability benefits. Bartels then petitioned the district court for attorney's fee awards in the two cases. Under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 406(b)(1), such awards are paid out of and may not exceed twenty-five percent of past-due benefits. In both cases, the Secretary did not include interim benefits as part of past-due benefits in calculating the amount to be withheld for payment of authorized attorney's fees.
This court subsequently held in Gowen v. Bowen,
I.
The Secretary reinstated Ziegenhorn's disability benefits in October 1986. Excluding interim benefits, Ziegenhorn's past-due benefits totaled $3,958.70. The Secretary withheld twenty-five percent of this amount, $989.67, for payment of authorized attorney's fees. In an April 1987 order, the district court awarded Bartels a fee of $1,015 or twenty-five percent of Ziegenhorn's past-due benefits, whichever was less, for his representation of Ziegenhorn at the district court level. Bartels did not appeal this order. In July 1987, the Secretary authorized Bartels to charge $1,618.17 in attorney's fees for his services at the administrative level. Shortly thereafter, the Secretary released to Bartels the $989.67 withheld from Ziegenhorn's past-due benefits. The Secretary advised Bartels that he would have to look to Ziegenhorn for the remainder of his fees.
In December 1988, almost four months after Gowen was decided, Bartels filed a motion in the district court to hold the Secretary in contempt for failure to comply with the court's April 1987 order awarding fees. Bartels claimed that the Secretary had disobeyed the order by not including interim benefits as part of past-due benefits. The motion also stated that Ziegenhorn had refused to pay the balance of the fees owed. Because its April 1987 order did not require the Secretary to include interim benefits as part of past-due benefits, the court denied the contempt motion. However, the court went on to find that Gowen applies retroactively. On that basis, the court ordered the Secretary to pay Bartels the administrative fee authorized by the Secretary plus the balance remaining on the court-ordered fee ($25.33), or twenty-five percent of Ziegenhorn's past-due benefits as defined by Gowen, whichever amount was less. The court stated that it was up to the Secretary to decide whether to seek recoupment from Ziegenhorn.
Pittman's disability benefits were reinstated in October 1986. In a June 1987 order, the district court awarded Bartels a fee of $1,782.16 or twenty-five percent of Pittman's past-due benefits, whichever was less, for representing Pittman at the district court level. The order expressly held that past-due benefits do not include interim benefits. In July 1987, the Secretary released $1,046.82 to Bartels. This amount represented twenty-five percent of Pittman's past-due benefits, not including interim benefits. Bartels then appealed the court's June 1987 order to this court. In Gowen,
Bartels responded by filing a motion in the district court to hold the Secretary in contempt. The motion stated that Pittman was unable and unwilling to pay the balance of the fees he owed. The court denied the contempt motion, but ordered the Secretary to pay Bartels the balance owing on the court-ordered fee ($735.34), as well as the administrative fee authorized by the Secretary. The court further directed the Secretary to pursue recoupment of these amounts from Pittman's future disability benefits.
II. ZIEGENHORN
The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Bartels' motion to hold the Secretary in contempt for failure to comply with the court's April 1987 order awarding attorney's fees. It is clear that "the Secretary fully complied with the express terms and intent of the order." Davis v. Bowen,
The district court erred, however, when it went on to grant Bartels the relief he sought on the ground that Gowen applies retroactively. Bartels' effort to obtain retroactive application of Gowen through a contempt proceeding constituted an impermissible collateral attack on the court's April 1987 order, which had long since become final and unappealable. It is well settled that " 'a contempt proceeding does not open to reconsideration the legal or factual basis of the order alleged to have been disobeyed.' " United States v. Rylander,
This result is consistent with our decisions in Davis and Russell v. Sullivan,
III. PITTMAN
The district court properly declined to hold the Secretary in contempt in the Pittman case. Bartels does not contend otherwise. Because the matter was on remand from this court, see Gowen,
The matter of attorney's fees for services performed at the administrative level is committed by Sec. 406(b)(1) to the responsibility of the Secretary exclusively, and such fees may not be awarded by the courts. Id. at 618 (citing Fenix v. Finch,
We must also conclude that the court had no authority to order the Secretary to pay Bartels the balance remaining on its fee award out of general social security funds. "The United States is not liable for such a payment absent a specific waiver of sovereign immunity." Id. at 172 (citing Ruckelshaus v. Sierra Club,
We agree with the district court's determination that under our decision in Gowen, the Secretary erroneously paid Pittman benefits that should have been withheld for payment of attorney's fees to Bartels. This resulted in an overpayment to Pittman. 42 U.S.C. Sec. 404(a)(1)(A) states that the Secretary "shall" recoup overpayments made to a claimant. This language "mandates" recoupment of overpayments. Sullivan v. Everhart, --- U.S. ----,
Section 404(b) provides that the Secretary must waive recoupment if (1) the claimant is without fault, and (2) recoupment would either defeat the purpose of the Social Security Act or be against equity and good conscience. See also 20 C.F.R. Sec. 404.506. Benefit recipients are entitled to a prerecoupment oral hearing if they request waiver under Sec. 404(b). Califano v. Yamasaki,
The Secretary does not dispute that he is obligated to seek recoupment in cases of overpayment. Rather, he argues that there was no overpayment in the Pittman case because Gowen's holding that past-due benefits include interim benefits applies only to the calculation of allowable attorney's fees under Sec. 406, not to the payment of those fees. The Secretary emphasizes his contention that the withholding of twenty-five percent of interim benefits for payment of possible fee awards would result in hardship to claimants.4 We agree with the Second Circuit that
claimants would actually suffer much greater hardship if they were not able to secure competent counsel to represent them in their appeals because of the extremely low fees to which their attorneys would be consigned under the Secretary's position, rather than if they received seventy-five percent of the benefits during the appeal process instead of one hundred percent.
Condon v. Bowen,
IV.
For the reasons stated above, the district court's order in the Ziegenhorn case is reversed. We affirm the court's order in the Pittman case only insofar as it directs the Secretary to pursue recoupment of the balance remaining on its fee award. Unless waiver of recoupment is required, the Secretary must attempt to recoup this amount to the extent the award does not exceed twenty-five percent of Pittman's past-due benefits as defined by Gowen. The funds recouped must be paid over to Bartels.
Notes
In deciding this and the following issue, we do not consider whether a different result might be required if Bartels had raised a constitutional claim
Two district court decisions have ordered the Secretary to make additional fee payments to an attorney because the Secretary failed to withhold benefits that should have gone to the attorney as payment for fees. Kovar v. Heckler,
Bartels himself may not attempt to intercept Pittman's future disability benefits because they are not "subject to execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 407(a)
The Secretary also argues that there is no statutory basis for such withholding because the language of Sec. 406 permits the withholding of past-due benefits only if the Secretary has made a determination favorable to the claimant or a district court has entered judgment for the claimant. By definition, interim benefits are paid prior to any such determination or judgment. See Sec. 423(g)(1). We view the Secretary's interpretation of Sec. 406 as overly mechanical, and no different in substance than the one rejected in Gowen,
Indeed, attorneys could be placed in the conflict-ridden position of advising clients not to apply for sorely needed interim benefits. See Condon,
