ORDER
Appellee’s motion to publish the order and judgment filed February 4, 2011, is granted. The published opinion, filed nunc pro tunc to its original filing date, is attached.
Citing back pain and respiratory problems, Suzan Madron alleged she was unable to work and applied for disability benefits. After her application was denied, she sought review, unsuccessfully, first before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”), and then before the district court. Ms. Madron fared better on appeal in this court, however; we agreed with her that the ALJ’s decision denying benefits was defective in two respects.
See Madron v. Astrue,
After prevailing in her underlying disability claim, Ms. Madron sought to recoup her attorneys’ fees and expenses under the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2412. The district court denied Ms. Madron’s EAJA application, however, holding that the United States had established that its position in the underlying litigation was “substantially justified.” See 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (instructing that the court shall award fees and expenses to the prevailing parties unless, among other things, “the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified”). Now before us again, Ms. Madron asks us to reverse the district court’s ruling that the government’s position was substantially justified.
We may do so only if we can say that the district court abused its discretion in reaching the determination it did— something that occurs “when the district court bases its ruling on an erroneous conclusion of law or relies on clearly erroneous fact findings.”
Hackett v. Barnhart,
This Ms. Madron says she can do/ In her view, the district court’s judgment— that the government’s litigation position was substantially justified — has to be an abuse of discretion. It has to be, Ms. Madron insists, because the government’s position was rejected by this court in her merits appeal. As she puts it, the “Law of the Case” precludes the government from arguing the reasonableness of its litigation efforts; it follows inexorably from this court’s conclusion that the ALJ’s decision lacked substantial evidence that the government’s efforts to defend the decision lacked substantial justification.
We reject this argument because it conflates two different questions. When we review the merits of a denial of benefits, as we did in Ms. Madron’s previous appeal, we review for the presence or absence of substantial evidence to support the administrative decision.
See, e.g., Frantz v. Astrue,
