32 Soc.Sec.Rep.Ser. 136, Unempl.Ins.Rep. CCH 15842A
Edna JOHNSON and Jerome Montgomery, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Louis W. SULLIVAN, M.D., Secretary of Health and Human
Services, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 89-2676.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Nov. 3, 1989.
Reargued En Banc Nov. 27, 1990.
Issued Dec. 28, 1990.
Order on Denial of Rehearing and
Rehearing En Banc March 20, 1991.
John M. Bouman, Robert E. Lehrer, Theodora Rand, Legal Assistance Foundation of Chicago, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-appellee.
Anton R. Valukas, U.S. Atty., Linda A. Wawzenski, Asst. U.S. Atty., Office of the U.S. Atty., Chicago, Ill., Robert S. Greenspan, Frank A. Rosenfeld, Dept. of Justice, Civ. Div., Appellate Section, Washington, D.C., for defendant-appellant.
Before BAUER, Chief Judge, CUMMINGS, WOOD, Jr., CUDAHY, POSNER, COFFEY, EASTERBROOK, RIPPLE, MANION and KANNE, Circuit Judges.*
BAUER, Chief Judge.
This class action challenging various regulations and policies of the Secretary of Health and Human Services (the "Secretary") is now in its eighth year. In 1983, plaintiffs originally filed suit claiming that the Secretary's "severity regulation," the second step in a five-step disability screening analysis, violated the plain terms of the Social Security Act (the "Act"). Beyond this, the plaintiffs contended that the Secretary's policy of not considering the combined effects of non-severe impairments (the "no-combination" policy) also was contrary to the language and intent of the Act. In our first encounter with this case, we affirmed the district court's injunction against the use of either regulation. Johnson v. Heckler,
Title II of the Social Security Act provides for the payment of insurance benefits to persons who have contributed to the program and who suffer from a physical or mental disability. 42 U.S.C. Sec. 423(a)(1)(D). Title XVI of the Act provides for the payment of disability benefits to indigent persons under the Supplemental Security Income ("SSI") program. 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1382(a). Under either title, the Act defines "disability" as the "inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months...." 42 U.S.C. Secs. 423(d)(1)(A) & 1382(c)(3)(A). The Secretary of Health and Human Services has authority to promulgate various regulations in order to make such determinations. 42 U.S.C. Secs. 405(a) & 1383(d)(1). Since 1976, the Secretary has used a five-step sequential inquiry to determine whether a person is disabled and therefore entitled to benefits. 20 CFR Secs. 404.1520 & 416.920 (1983).1
Step two of the evaluation process examines whether a claimant's impairment is "severe." The regulation provides:
If you do not have any impairment or combination of impairments which significantly limits your physical or mental ability to do basic work activities, we will find that you do not have a severe impairment and are, therefore, not disabled. We will not consider your age, education, and work experience.
20 CFR Secs. 404.1520(c) & 416.920(c) (emphasis added). If the claimant is determined not to suffer from a severe impairment, then disability benefits are denied. If the impairment is severe, however, the evaluation continues through three additional levels of analysis.
On August 20, 1980, the Secretary issued a list of impairments that were automatically considered to be nonsevere. SSR-82-55. Examples of per se non-severe impairments in the list included: osteoarthritis, hypertension, history of chest pain, colostomy, peptic ulcer, chronic liver disease, chronic renal disease, diabetes mellitus, epilepsy, and IQ of 80 or greater. Id. The Secretary also amended the procedure under step two by stating that she would "consider the combined effects of unrelated impairments only if all were severe." 45 Fed.Reg. 55574 (1980) (codified at 20 CFR Sec. 404.1522 (1983)).
An initial disability determination is made by a state agency acting under the authority and supervision of the Secretary. 42 U.S.C. Secs. 421(a) & 1383b(a); 20 CFR Secs. 404.1503 & 416.903 (1986). If the state agency denies a claim for benefits, the claimant may pursue a three-stage administrative review process. See Bowen v. Yuckert,
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This opinion represents the tenth time a court has written on this case. The district court carefully retraced the path of this cyclone at
In 1982, Edna Johnson sought disability benefits under Title XVI of the Social Security Act, the SSI program. In a separate action, Jerome Montgomery pursued a claim under Title II, the Old-Age and Survivors Disability Insurance ("OASDI") program. That year, the Appeals Council of the Social Security Administration, applying the five-step process, rejected both claims. Neither claim survived the step two severity regulation. In 1983, Johnson and Montgomery filed suit in the Northern District of Illinois challenging several aspects of the Secretary's regulations concerning the determination of a disability. Their complaint subsequently was amended to maintain their suit as a class action pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23. On December 7, 1983, Judge Bua certified the proposed class, which included all persons in Illinois whose applications for benefits were denied or terminated due to the application of the step two severity regulation.
In an opinion issued September 19, 1984, Judge Bua granted plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment on their complaint. Johnson v. Heckler,
On June 8, 1987, while the Secretary's petition to the Supreme Court was pending, the Court issued its decision in Bowen v. Yuckert,
On remand, in its order of October 6, 1988, the district court noted that "the Supreme Court (has) clearly rejected the notion that the severity regulation had altered the burden of proof for disability claimants." Johnson v. Bowen,
Judge Bua refused, however, to reverse his determination that the Secretary's no-combination policy contravened the Social Security Act. He stated that he felt "no compulsion to alter [his] position ... particularly since Yuckert never even discussed the policy."
On remand, the Secretary again raised jurisdictional challenges to the size of the plaintiff class. The Secretary argued, as before, that the procedural requirements of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 405(g) demanded administrative exhaustion and strict application of the 60-day statute of limitations for a judicial appeal. The district court rejected these arguments as it had four years earlier.
Despite the apparent finality of this decision, both sides soon appeared again before Judge Bua after negotiations regarding the details of the relief order reached an impasse. The parties asked Judge Bua to consider the scope of the redetermination hearings and, yet again, the jurisdictional limits on the size of the plaintiff class. In response, in an opinion dated June 16, 1989, the district court held that the Secretary, pursuant to his own regulations, must redetermine all claims from the date of each plaintiff's original application for benefits up to the present time.
III. THE NO-COMBINATION POLICY
Although the Supreme Court in Yuckert held that the severity regulation was facially valid, thus undermining the first premise of the district court's ruling, the Court did not reach the Secretary's practice of refusing to consider non-severe impairments in combination. Reviewing this history, the district court stated, "Absent explicit Supreme Court approval of this dubious practice, this court sees no reasons to disturb its earlier invalidation of the [no-]combination policy[.]"
In Johnson I, we affirmed the district court's original invalidation of the no-combination policy.
Since 1967, the Social Security Act has required the Secretary to find a claimant disabled "if his physical or mental impairment or impairments are of such severity that he is not only unable to do his previous work, but cannot ... engage in any other kind of substantial work." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 423(d)(2)(A) (emphasis added). Moreover, the Act describes a physical or mental impairment as one that "results ... from abnormalities ... demonstrable by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic techniques." 42 U.S.C. Secs. 423(d)(3) & 1382c(a)(3)(C) (emphasis added). Thus, Congress, by explicitly discussing multiple "impairments" and "abnormalities," recognized that a combination of maladies may constitute a disability.
The Secretary's 1980 decision no longer to consider the combined effects of non-severe impairments rejected more than a decade of Social Security policy. As the First Circuit noted in McDonald v. Secretary of Health and Human Services,
The first set of regulations implementing this definition similarly spoke in terms multiple impairments, and recognized that an individual could be disabled by one impairment. See 20 C.F.R. Sec. 404.1501(a)(1) (1969); 20 C.F.R. Sec. 404.1502(a), (b) [ & ] (c) (1969). As the Supreme Court has observed, the "contemporaneous administrative construction of [a statute] is persuasive evidence of the original understanding[.] United States v. Sheffield Board of Commissioners,
Our determination of congressional intent on this issue is buttressed by the legislative history to the 1984 amendments to the Social Security Act. See The Social Security Disability Benefits Reform Act of 1984, Pub.L. 98-460, 98 Stat. 1794. These amendments expressly required the Secretary to consider the combined effects of non-severe impairments. The legislation, however, was expressly clarifying and did not represent a change in the law. As the House Committee Report stated, "[S]ections 101-103 of the bill are designed to clarify the criteria that must be used in evaluating whether new applicants of current beneficiaries are disabled. The criteria laid out in present law are few and brief." H.REP. NO. 98-618, 98th Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1984 U.S.CODE CONG. & AD.NEWS, 3038, 3043 (emphasis added). The Report goes on to state:
The committee emphasizes that the foregoing discussion does not constitute any change in the current definition of disability, but rather is a clarification of the intent of Congress that disability benefits should be granted to those who are unable to work because of a medically determinable impairment. Sections 101 and 103 of the bill provide statutory standards for determining disability.
Id. at 3046 (emphasis added). Thus, given this clear directive that these amendments were intended to clarify the Act, rather than change earlier law, the congressional decision to require consideration of combined non-severe impairments can only be viewed as a repudiation of the Secretary's policy.3
The Secretary now argues that, despite the plain language of the Act and Congress' subsequent discussion in passing the 1984 clarifying amendments, the Supreme Court in Yuckert implicitly approved the no-combination policy. Specifically, the Secretary points to the Court's analysis of 42 U.S.C. Sec. 423(d)(2)(A), the provision of the Act which defines disability in terms of "impairment or impairments." In discussing this section, the Court stated, "The words of this provision limit the Secretary's authority to grant disability benefits, not to deny them." Yuckert,
As the Secretary acknowledges, the discussion of Sec. 423(d)(2)(A) in Yuckert concerned whether this section imposed an affirmative obligation on the Secretary to apply at step two the vocational criteria listed under that provision. The Court determined that such vocational criteria could be considered at a later step in the process.
Further, in Yuckert, the Court responded to the accusation that under its opinion, the Secretary was granted unlimited authority to deny meritorious claims. As the Court stated, "It hardly needs saying that our opinion carries no such implication."
IV. CHALLENGES TO THE CLASS CERTIFICATION
The Secretary again argues to this court that the size of the plaintiff class is overstated because it includes claimants over whom the district court had no jurisdiction. In particular, the Secretary challenges the inclusion of those individuals who failed to exhaust their administrative remedies and those who did not seek judicial review of their claims within 60 days of receiving a final administrative decision. We rejected these contentions in Johnson I,
Under Califano v. Yamasaki,
Any individual, after any final decision of the Secretary made after a hearing to which he was a party, irrespective of the amount in controversy, may obtain a review of such decision by a civil action commenced within sixty days after the mailing to him of notice of such decision or within such further time as the Secretary may allow.
As the Secretary contends, two cornerstones of this provision are the final decision requirement and the 60-day statute of limitations for commencement of actions. We must consider each of these elements individually.
A. The Final Decision Requirement
Under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 405(g), a plaintiff must receive a final decision from the Secretary before seeking judicial review of his claim. In order to obtain a final decision from the Secretary, a plaintiff must exhaust his administrative remedies by proceeding through all three stages of the administrative process, see supra at 348, and then seek judicial review of his claim. See Bowen v. City of New York,
Waiver of the exhaustion requirement is appropriate only where (1) the plaintiffs' suit involves a collateral attack rather than one on the merits, and (2) the plaintiffs' interest in prompt judicial review is so compelling that deference to the agency's determination is inappropriate. See City of New York,
application of the exhaustion doctrine is "intensely practical." ... The ultimate decision of whether to waive exhaustion should not be made by mechanical application of the Eldridge factors, but should also be guided by the policies underlying the exhaustion requirement.
In Johnson I, we held that the plaintiffs had all met the sine qua non requirement of having filed a claim, thus satisfying the only truly jurisdictional component of the finality test.
First, we must determine whether plaintiffs' claims are collateral attacks and not merely a challenge on the merits. Our decision invalidating the Secretary's no-combination policy will mean that some claimants will now receive the benefits they were once denied. For other claimants, the invalidation of the policy will make no difference. They will not be entitled to benefits under any standard. Thus, the plaintiffs' attack is essentially to the policy itself, not to its application to them, nor to the ultimate substantive determination of their benefits. Their challenge to the policy rises and falls on its own, separate from the merits of their claims for benefits.
Of course, if we had determined that the no-combination policy was not invalid, these plaintiffs would never have had an opportunity to present their claims for a second time. Through such a prism, the claims may appear to be bound up with the merits. This is mere sophistry. Any attack which, if accepted by the court, would allow an individual a second determination will require the Secretary to review the merits of the plaintiffs' claims another time. This was precisely what the plaintiffs in Eldridge,
The second consideration of the Eldridge waiver inquiry is whether the plaintiffs' interest in prompt judicial review is so great that deference to the agency's judgment is inappropriate.
The facts of the instant case, however, differ in two respects from those of City of New York. The first, and lesser, difference is that City of New York involved a policy affecting claimants with mental disabilities, not physical ones. The Supreme Court's concern in City of New York for those suffering from mental disabilities does not, however, mark the boundary for any consideration of the potential hardships suffered by Social Security claimants. Indeed, it goes without saying that those with physical disabilities of such severity that they cannot work suffer every bit as much as those with similarly disabling mental impairments from needless and futile exhaustion of administrative requirements. See
The second, and more germane, difference is that in City of New York the Secretary had promulgated an unpublished, clandestine policy about which the claimants there could not have known. This feature of City of New York was highlighted in Pittston Coal Group v. Sebben,
We do not believe that Bowen v. City of New York,
Sebben,
Although Sebben did not involve a suit pursuant to Sec. 405(g) but rather a suit for mandamus under 30 U.S.C. Sec. 932(a), and the Supreme Court observed in Sebben, "[t]he extraordinary remedy of mandamus will ... issue only to compel the performance of 'a clear nondiscretionary duty,' "
In so holding, we agree with the Third Circuit's analysis in Bailey v. Sullivan,
Further, the distinction drawn by Sebben, Bailey and this court today makes good sense. When an agency acts in accordance with a secret regulation, an applicant or claimant cannot as a practical matter use the administrative process to challenge the regulation, and so exhaustion is excused as futile. That was City of New York. When, as in Sebben, Bailey and this case, an agency acts in accordance with "a regulation that was published for all to see," Sebben,
Applying these principles to this case, the composition of the plaintiff class must be modified as follows: claimants who allowed the time for challenging within the administrative scheme the denial of their benefits on the basis of the no-combination regulation to lapse before the class action suit was filed are barred from participating in the action. To this extent and for this reason the decision of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded. The district court is instructed to reconfigure the plaintiff class to exclude only those claimants with such lapsed claims. Those claimants who exhausted their remedies, as well as those claimants who still had an opportunity to do so at the time the class action was filed, remain in the plaintiff class.
B. The 60-Day Limitation on Actions
Along with the requirement of exhaustion, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 405(g) mandates that claimants seek judicial review of their claims within 60 days of receiving a final agency determination. As we stated in Johnson I, this 60-day limitation is not jurisdictional but "is waivable by the parties."
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure apply to actions under Sec. 405(g). See Yamasaki,
V. THE PROPER SCOPE OF REDETERMINATION HEARINGS
Finally, the Secretary challenges the district court's order to redetermine each individual plaintiff's eligibility for benefits from the date of denial up through the present date. See
Because the district court's construction of the applicable regulations is a decision of law, we will review this matter de novo. See Airline Pilots Ass'n v. UAL Corp.,
Under 20 C.F.R. Secs. 404.620 & 416.330, the class claimants' initial applications for benefits under Title II or Title XVI of the Social Security Act remained in effect until they received a final administrative determination or, if there was a hearing on the claim, until the hearing decision was issued. Way back in 1984, Judge Bua entered summary judgment invalidating the no-combination policy and remanding class plaintiff's claims to the pre-hearing (and non-final) level for redetermination. See
The Secretary contends that such a strict reading of the regulations is unfair given the extraordinary circumstances of this class action and the breadth of the redeterminations required. These regulations, he argues, were designed for plaintiffs who had exhausted their administrative remedies, not those whose exhaustion requirement was judicially waived. The Secretary, however, offers no authority for this proposition, which is neither compelling (ALJ's frequently make comprehensive redeterminations of large groups of plaintiffs' claims following a remand from a district court), nor relevant any longer, given that the plaintiff class now includes no claimants whose exhaustion requirement has been judicially waived.
Furthermore, the scope of the district court's redetermination order will not provide a windfall to the remaining members of the plaintiff class, as the Secretary suggests. Once this class action began, each member of the plaintiff class who had not abandoned his claim had a reasonable expectation that his claim would be satisfied by this litigation. See MacDonald v. Secretary of Health and Human Services,
The individual members of the reconfigured plaintiff class reasonably could have relied on the plain language of the Secretary's regulations and the pendency of the class action suit. Thus, their applications are still awaiting final action for purposes of Secs. 404.620 & 416.330. The district court properly held that the redetermination hearings must consider any subsequent disability and award retroactive benefits accordingly.
VI. CONCLUSION
The Secretary's policy of refusing to consider the combined effects of non-severe impairments contradicted the plain language of the Social Security Act. The district court, therefore, properly invalidated the use of the no-combination regulation, and certain of the plaintiffs in this action are each entitled to a redetermination of their claims for benefits with consideration of the combined effects of their impairments. The class of claimants who are entitled to redetermination includes all claimants who exhausted their remedies within the Social Security scheme, as well as all claimants for whom the time to pursue such remedies had not lapsed before the class action suit was filed. The 60-day statute of limitations shall not apply. Moreover, because these qualified claimants' applications for benefits have not yet received final agency determinations, the scope of the redetermination hearings shall include consideration of any after-occurring disability, and retroactive benefits should be awarded where appropriate, whether or not the individual plaintiff has filed a subsequent application.
We agree with the district court that "many of the plaintiffs have waited several years to receive a fair hearing on their disability claims. They should not have to wait any longer."
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART, WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
ORDER
March 20, 1991.
Counsel for Defendant-Appellant Sullivan filed a petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing en banc in the above-entitled case on February 11, 1991. The petition argues that, in our en banc opinion of December 28, 1990, we failed to decide whether persons who still had timely administrative claims pending before the Secretary at the time that the class-action complaint was filed are eligible for inclusion in the class action. In fact, we decided this issue in favor of those claimants: "Those claimants who exhausted their remedies, as well as those claimants who still had an opportunity to do so at the time the class action was filed, remain in the plaintiff class." Op. at 355 (emphasis added). See also id. at 357: "The individual members of the reconfigured plaintiff class reasonably could have relied on the plain language of the Secretary's regulations and the pendency of the class action suit. Thus, their applications are still awaiting final action...."
All of the judges on the en banc panel have voted to deny the petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing en banc. Accordingly, it is hereby ordered that the aforementioned petition and suggestion be, and the same hereby is, DENIED.
Notes
Judge Flaum of this court sat at oral argument before the initial panel in this case on November 3, 1989. Since that time, Judge Flaum recused himself from any involvement in the case. Judge Flaum took no part in the decision to consider this case en banc, nor in this court's subsequent en banc consideration and disposition
For a complete description of this five-step process, see Johnson v. Heckler,
Both plaintiffs and the Secretary have raised a number of "law of the case" arguments challenging the scope of our remand and the limits of our opinion today. We hold that because we remanded the case in its entirety following the Supreme Court's decision in Yuckert, the entire matter is open to review. Therefore, our consideration of the matter today is not limited by our holding in Johnson I. We note, however, that our analysis in that opinion remains as cogent and persuasive as ever
The Secretary nevertheless contends that because Congress did not include a clause making these new amendments retroactively applicable, Congress did not intend to allow claimants to pursue claims such as these. This logic, however, was rejected by the Supreme Court in Bowen v. City of New York,
State of New York v. Sullivan,
The Secretary cites to the discussion of equitable tolling of the statute in City of New York and Sebben and the narrow reach of such an equitable remedy. We do not dispute the validity of such a reading of these cases. In this case, however, we are concerned with waiver of the statute of limitations, not equitable tolling. Thus, the cases and passages cited for the narrow reach of equitable tolling are inapposite
