Today we decide a question of only narrow interest but of significance to some Social Security appeals: Whether, in reviewing the denial of supplemental security income (“SSI”) benefits, the courts should consider evidence that the claimant did not present to the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), but submitted for the first time to the Appeals Council, which accepted and considered the evidence but denied review of the ALJ decision. The Commissioner of Social Security argues that it should not be considered because it is not part of the Commissioner’s “final decision.”
Specifically, Charles D. Higginbotham, the claimant and appellant, argues, however, that the district court, in affirming the Commissioner’s denial of benefits, erred in failing to consider a statement made by his treating physician, which he presented for the first time before the Appeals Council. To answer this question, we must determine what constitutes the Social Security Commissioner’s “final decision.” This is a close and confusing question to resolve because neither the statute nor the regulations are clear. After our study of the relevant statutory provisions and regulations, however, we conclude that the Commissioner’s “final decision” includes the Appeals Council’s denial of Higginbotham’s request for review. We therefore remand to the district court for consideration of the entire record on appeal, including the new evidence submitted by Higginbotham for the first time to the Appeals Council.
I
Higginbotham applied for SSI benefits in 1999, claiming that he had most recently worked in 1994 and that mixed bipolar disorder rendered him totally disabled. In 2000, the Social Security Administration denied Higginbotham’s application. Higginbotham then requested, and was granted, a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”). The ALJ denied Higginbotham’s claim for benefits because Higginbotham could not sustain a claim of total disability. Specifically, the ALJ held that Higginbotham had no “exertional limitations,” but that he did have “non-exer-tional limitations” that restricted him to jobs requiring only short, simple instructions and limited interaction with other people.
Higginbotham timely filed a request for review by the Appeals Council. While his request was pending, Higginbotham, in accordance with applicable regulations, submitted a medical source statement completed by Chandrakant Patel, M.D. (“Dr. Patel”), his treating physician. That statement included Dr. Patel’s evaluation of Higginbotham’s “mental abilities critical for performing unskilled work.” Dr. Patel concluded that Higginbotham suffered from a complete loss of ability to perform regular employment activity. In a letter dated August 30, 2001, the Appeals Council denied Higginbotham’s request for review, noting that although it had considered Dr. Patel’s statement, the additional evidence did not provide a basis for reversing the AL J’s decision.
Next, Higginbotham filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, seeking review of the Commissioner’s denial of SSI benefits. Then, in October 2003, the magistrate judge recommended that the Commissioner’s decision be reversed. Judge McBryde, however, rejected the magis
II
Our review of the Commissioner’s denial of SSI benefits is limited to considering whether the decision is supported by substantial evidence in the record and whether the proper legal standards were applied.
1
See Villa v. Sullivan,
The precise issue raised by this appeal is whether the district court should have reviewed and considered the evidence that Higginbotham submitted to the Appeals Council but failed to present to the ALJ. The Social Security Act provides that courts may review the “final decision” of the Commissioner. 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). The Act does not expressly define the term “final decision”; instead, it leaves that question to be answered by regulations.
Sims v. Apfel,
Thus, in interpreting the Social Security Act and the applicable regulations, if we determine that the final decision encompasses the Appeals Council’s denial of review, then we must conclude that the district court erred in failing to consider the new evidence. If we determine that a final decision does not include the denial of the request for review, then we must hold that the district court did not err in declining to consider and address Dr. Patel’s statement.
Ill
The question whether the denial of review by the Appeals Council constitutes part of the Commissioner’s “final decision,” and consequently whether the new evidence should be considered by the district court on appeal, has split the circuits. Until today we had not decided this question.
See Masterson v. Barnhart,
On the other hand, Higginbotham urges us to adopt the position taken by the Second, Fourth, Eighth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits, all of which have held that evidence submitted for the first time before the Appeals Council should be considered by the district court because the Appeals Council’s denial of the request for review is part of the “final decision.” 3
These courts based their decisions on the following reasons. First, 20 C.F.R. § 404.970(b) permits, if not invites, the claimant to submit new evidence to the Appeals Council. Excluding such evidence on review might undermine the purpose of this regulation, which provides a claimant a final chance to demonstrate disability before the Commissioner’s decision is final.
O’Dell v. Shalala,
IV
When we weigh the competing arguments interpreting the applicable regulations, we are persuaded that the Commissioner’s final decision includes the Appeals Council’s denial of a request for review.
It is true that the courts generally agree that when the Appeals Council denies a request for review, the ALJ’s decision becomes the Commissioner’s final decision.
See Sims,
Furthermore, 20 C.F.R. § 416.1400 makes it clear that the Commissioner’s decision does not become final until after the Appeals Council makes its decision denying the claimant’s request for review. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1400(a)(5) advises claimants that “[w]hen you have completed the steps of the administrative review process ... we will have made our final decision. If you are dissatisfied with our final decision, you may request judicial review by filing an action in a Federal district court.” (Emphasis supplied.) The steps of the administrative review process include the initial determination, reconsideration, the hearing before an ALJ, and a request for revieiu by the Appeals Council. Id. at (a)(l)-(a)(4) (emphasis supplied). Thus, the regulations plainly, if implicitly, include the denial of review by the Appeals Council as part of the Commissioner’s final decision. Furthermore, the regulations require a claimant to request review by the Appeals Council before seeking judicial review in district court. This is another reason for including the Appeals Council’s denial of a request for review as a component of the Commissioner’s final decision. Therefore, we think that under the Commissioner’s own regulations, the Commissioner’s final decision necessarily includes an Appeals Council’s denial of a claimant’s request for review.
It follows that the record before the Appeals Council constitutes part of the record upon which the final decision is based. The statute itself speaks to this point: When a claimant seeks court review of the Commissioner’s decision, the Commissioner “shall file a certified copy of the transcript of the record including the evidence upon which the findings and decision complained of are based.” 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). Higginbotham complains of the Commissioner’s denial of benefits. That denial, as we have said above, includes the Appeals Council’s denial of his request for review and was based in part on the new evidence Higginbotham submitted to the Appeals Council. The regulations further clarify that the new evidence before the Appeals Council was such evidence upon which the denial of benefits was based by requiring the Appeals Council to “evaluate the entire record including the new and material evidence submitted!.]” 20 C.F.R. § 404.970(b). Still further, in this case, the Appeals Council noted in its letter denying Higginbotham’s request for review that it had considered Dr. Patel’s statement, in denying review of his claim.
V
In sum, the statute provides that a claimant may obtain review of “any final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security.” 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). Because the statute does not define “final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security”, we must look to the regulations. The regulations do not explicitly define the term. We extrapolate from the words of the regulation, however, that “final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security” includes the Appeals Council’s denial of a request for review because the regulations provide that the Commissioner’s decision does not become final until after the Appeals Council makes its decision denying the claimant’s request for review. We further conclude that the evidence submitted for the first time to the Appeals Council is part of the record on appeal because the statute itself provides that such record includes the “evidence upon which the findings and decision complained of are based.”
Id.
Because the Appeals Council considered and evaluated such evidence, that evidence constitutes “evidence upon which the decision complained of is based.”
Id.
Accord
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Higginbotham also argues that the Appeals Council failed to apply proper legal standards when it failed to explain its weighing of Dr. Patel's statement, pursuant to the factors set forth in 20 C.F.R. § 416.927(d)(2). It appears that the requirement of a detailed discussion of additional evidence was suspended by a memorandum from the Executive Director of Appellate Operations dated July 20, 1995.
.
See Matthews v. Apfel,
.
See Perez v. Chafer,
