Jerry Richmond appeals from the rejection by the district court of his challenge to the Social Security Administration’s denial of disability benefits. The only question that warrants consideration in a published opinion is whether we can reach the merits of Richmond’s appeal. We cannot if the district court lacked jurisdiction.
When Richmond’s application for disability benefits was first considered by the Social Security Administration back in 1986, the administrative law judge found that he was not disabled and the Appeals Council affirmed. Richmond sought judicial review in a federal district court in this circuit, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), which authorizes the disappointed claimant to seek judicial review by filing a “civil action” in the appropriate district court. The court held that the administrative law judge had erred by failing to determine whether Richmond had knowingly waived his right to counsel, and that the absence of a lawyer had prevented him from making the necessary factual record in support of his claim. The court ordered that the ease be sent back to the agency but did not purport to enter a final judgment; all the order accompanying the court’s opinion states is that the court “remands” the case to the agency.
*266 On remand, the waiver of counsel was rectified but Richmond was again found, by a different administrative law judge, not to be disabled. Rather than institute a new civil action in the district court to challenge this decision, which would have required filing a new complaint, Fed.R.Civ. P. 3, Richmond asked the district judge who had remanded the previous denial to reinstate his old case, which the judge did. Later, when Richmond’s lawyer sought fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d), for the services he had rendered in the judicial proceeding that had culminated in the order of remand, he asked the judge to convert that order into a final judgment. The parties refer to this as a “Rule 58 judgment.” Rule 58 of the civil rules requires, so far as bears on this case, that “every judgment shall be set forth on a separate document.” The rule’s reference to “judgment” is to final judgments, and the term “Rule 58 judgment” is shorthand for a judgment that is final and that is set forth on a document separate from the court’s opinion. The minute order remanding Richmond’s case was a document separate from the opinion, but used only the term “remand,” and a remand order, as we are about to see, is not necessarily final.
Richmond’s lawyer wanted the court to enter a document that would be unmistakably a Rule 58 judgment in order to make his fee petition unarguably timely. Such a petition must be filed within 30 days after the expiration of the 60-day period allowed for appealing from the final judgment in the action in which the fees are sought. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2412(d)(1)(B), (2)(G);
Shalala v. Schaefer,
The judge entered the formal final judgment as requested (that is, he converted his order of remand to a Rule 58 judgment) and at the same time granted the petition for fees. The Social Security Administration then pointed out that by entering a final judgment the judge had terminated the case in which the remand order had been issued, so that to invoke the court’s jurisdiction in order to challenge the decision on remand Richmond would have to file a new complaint. To avoid the necessity for this, both parties asked the district judge to vacate (under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)) both the final judgment and the award of fees, so that the
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case could be reinstated or reactivated in the district court. (Why the lawyer was willing to forgo an immediate receipt of attorney’s fees in order to avoid the $120 fee for filing a complaint is unclear.) The Social Security Administration improperly agreed not to contest the court’s jurisdiction over the reinstated or reactivated case. Jurisdiction cannot be stipulated,
Insurance Corp. of Ireland, Ltd. v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee,
If, after the decision on remand, Richmond had to file a new complaint in order to confer jurisdiction on the district court to review the Social Security Administration’s decision on remand, that court had no jurisdiction and we must vacate its decision affirming the Social Security Administration, because no new complaint was ever filed. Whether Richmond had to file a new complaint depends on whether the district court, when it remanded the case to the agency, nevertheless retained jurisdiction. For we assume that Richmond’s motion to reinstate the case could not be treated as a complaint. Although mislabeling is not fatal,
Schlesinger v. Councilman,
The proper office of motions to reinstate needs to be clarified. The only certain difference between dismissing a suit without prejudice and dismissing it with leave to reinstate it is that reinstatement does not require the payment of a filing fee, as filing a new complaint after the dismissal of one’s suit would.
Adams v. Lever Bros. Co.,
But did, or could, the judge retain jurisdiction over the case while remanding to the agency? The statute governing judicial review of social security disability claims, 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), allows the district court to remand in only two situations. The first, which is authorized by the fourth sentence of that section, is where the court is affirming, modifying, or reversing the agency’s decision and the remand is an incident to that action. For example, the court might reverse the agency’s denial of disability benefits because the agency had failed to articulate the basis for its decision, but allow the agency on remand to rectify the deficiency. The second situation in which a remand is authorized, this by the sixth sentence of section 405(g), is where the court wants to give the agency a chance to consider new evidence that had not been presented in the proceeding before the agency. When a “sentence four” remand is entered the case is over in the district court, but in the case of a “sentence six” remand the court can retain jurisdiction.
Shalala v. Schaefer, supra,
This distinction seems esoteric but actually corresponds to normal judicial practice. When an appellate court decides an appeal, the decision ends the case in that court even if the court orders further proceedings to be conducted in the district court. But when the appellate court is unable or unwilling to decide the appeal because of some loose end in the district court (or agency, if it is an administrative appeal), and remands the case to the lower court or the agency to have the loose end tied up, it often will retain jurisdiction so that the consideration of the appeal can resume as soon as the tidying up is completed.
Jason’s Foods, Inc. v. Peter Eckrich & Sons, Inc.,
Although it is usually clear whether a remand is of the sentence four or the sentence six variety, see, e.g.,
Kolman v. Shalala, supra,
Yet the court here
intended
to retain jurisdiction, as shown by its actions in relation to the Rule 58 judgment. We noted earlier that whether a decision is final depends on whether the district court is through with the case, rather than on the formality of a Rule 58 judgment. That the judge first thought it necessary to enter a Rule 58 judgment to terminate his jurisdiction and then vacated that judgment in order to retain jurisdiction is convincing evidence that he didn’t consider himself through with the case (except during the brief interval in which the Rule 58 judgment was in effect) and is some evidence that he was not, in fact, through with it. We said in
Kolman v. Shalala, supra,
Curtis v. Shalala,
Moreover, even if the remand order was a final judgment, terminating the ease in the district court and thus requiring Richmond to file a new complaint in order to challenge the decision by the Social Security Administration on remand, Richmond was not
required
to treat the remand as a final judgment until the entry of a Rule 58 judg
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ment. (The minute order was too ambiguous to count as such.) In
Kolman
we emphasized, and here we repeat, the useful principle that while a losing party can appeal as soon as it is clear that the judge is through with the case, he can always wait till the entry of the Rule 58 judgment to appeal.
So we have jurisdiction. As for the merits of Richmond’s appeal, the decision of the Social Security Administration to deny his claim for benefits was supported by substantial evidence, as explained in the unpublished order accompanying this opinion. The judgment of the district court is therefore
AFFIRMED.
