OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal concerns the denial of appellant’s motion for fees and other expenses under the Equal Access to Justice Act, Extension and Amendment (“EAJA”), Pub. L. 99-80, 99 Stat. 183, codified at 5 U.S.C. § 504 (Supp. IV 1986) and 28 U.S.C. § 2412 (1982 & Supp. Ill 1985). The district court first rejected the government’s position and granted appellant’s request for disability benefits. Another trial judge later summarily denied appellant’s EAJA fee motion in a one-page order. Taylor v. Bowen, No. 85-5601 (E.D.Pa. Dec. 29, 1986). This second district court found that the “defense of this action” by appellee the Seсretary of Health and Human Services (“the Secretary”) “was substantially justified.” Id. We conclude that the district court’s judgment on the EAJA fee motion was legally erroneous. Because the government has failed to demonstrate a solid and well-founded basis in truth for its underlying denial of appellant’s request for disability benefits, we will reverse the judgment of the district court and remand this matter *1038 for a calculation of appellant’s fees and other expenses under EAJA.
I.
In her request for Social Security disability benefits, appellаnt Catherine D. Taylor alleged that she was disabled by incessant lower back pain. Uncontradicted record evidence demonstrates that Taylor’s condition leaves her unable to perform even menial household tasks. The record also shows that Taylor’s formal education ceased at age sixteen when she completed the sixth grade, and that her most recent employment was in 1971, when she worked as a waitress.
Two treating physicians and one consulting physician examined Taylor and submitted the medical evidence contained in the administrative record. Dr. William Cassidy treated her as an outpatient and was her treating physician during three hospital visits. On July 14, 1983, Taylor was admitted to Philadelphia’s Northeastern Hospital by Dr. Cassidy. She complained of severe lower back pain. An x-ray of the lumbosacral spine revealed bilateral spondylolysis of L5. 1 It also revealed a slight narrowing of the L4, L5 disc space. Taylor was placed in traction and given physical therapy and medication. Aftеr nine days of hospitalization, she was discharged; Dr. Cassidy reported that Taylor’s condition at that time was “much improved.” Appendix (“App.”) at 104. On January 3,1984, however, Taylor was readmitted to Northeastern Hospital by Dr. Cassidy; she was then diagnosed as suffering from “severe low back pain [that] did not respond to outpatient treatment and rest at home.” Id. at 95. Dr. Cassidy’s examination revealed “extreme tenderness over the lumbosacral joint.” Id. After receiving treatment similar to that she had received during her first hospitalization, Taylor this time was released from the hospital after seven days. On August 15, 1984, she was admitted to Northeastern Hospital for the third time. An examination showed “tenderness ... present over the spine of L5 and SI.” Id. at 120. A CAT scan revealed that Taylor had “a herniated disc at the L4-5 level.” Id. Following the CAT scan, however, she “progressed very well” and was discharged ten days later. Id. In a September 26, 1984, report submitted to Pennsylvania’s Bureau of Disability Determination, 2 Dr. Cassidy indicated that any bending caused Taylor to experience pain that was relieved only by bed rest and medication. Id. at 124.
On July 16, 1984, Dr. Richard Paolino, also a treating physician, examined Taylor and diagnosed her condition as a “lumbar strain and sprain, lumbar myofascitis.” 3 App. at 115. In his report to the Bureau of Disability Determination, Dr. Paolino noted that, at the time he examined Taylor, she was “unable to walk, stand, [or] sit for long periods of time without experiencing some type of stiffness or pain. [Taylor is] restricted in reaching for objects on shelf.” Id. Dr. Paolino also noted that Taylor had а “marked impairment of movement to any degree of lateral bending and forward flex-ion or extension.” Id.
The third physician, Dr. Nicholas Frigni-to, conducted a consultative examination of Taylor on April 16, 1985. He concluded that, due to lower back pain, “there is no doubt that [Taylor] is limited in the amount of walking she can do, or the amount of lifting and bending she can do.” App. at 131. Dr. Frignito’s diagnosis was “Herniated Nucleus Pulposus at L4 and 5 ... with chronic lumbar pain.” Id.
On July 12, 1984, Taylor applied for Supplementary Security Income based on disability. Her application was denied both initially and upon reconsideration. Taylor *1039 requested a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (“AU”), and a hearing was held on April 9, 1985. App. at 23-26. At this hearing, which lasted a total of eight minutes, Taylor testified that she continuously suffers from lower back pain and that she takes large amounts of medication to alleviate her pain. Id. at 28-30. She stated that she can walk no farther than one block and that she can sit for no more than an hour at a time. Id. at 30.
The AU acknowledged аt the hearing that Taylor has a problem with her back that “seems to be getting worse.” App. at 32. Nonetheless, on June 11, 1985, the AU denied Taylor’s request for disability benefits. App. at 9-15. Her request for review was subsequently denied by the Appeals Council. App. at 4. The decision of the AU thus stood as the final decision of the Secretary. Id.
Taylor appealed to the district court for review of the Secretary’s final determination. Both Taylor and the Secretary filed motions for summary judgment. On May 14,1986, the district court, adopting a magistrate’s report, granted Taylor’s summary judgment motion. Taylor v. Bowen, No. 85-5601 (E.D.Pa. May 14, 1986). The government did not appeal from this judgment for Taylor. Approximately two months later, the trial judge died. Taylor’s case was then reassigned to another member of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Before this second trial judge, Taylor filed a motion for attorney’s fees under EAJA. The district court denied this motion without opinion. Taylor, No. 85-5601 (E.D.Pa. Dec. 29, 1986).
Our appellate jurisdiction to review the district court’s final order is conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1982), and our standard of reviеw is plenary.
4
E.g. Russell v. Heckler,
II.
EAJA entitles a prevailing party to receive reasonable fees and costs incurred in any non-tort civil action against the United States “unless the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (Supp. III 1985). We note that Taylor became a “prevailing party” when the district court held that she was entitled to disability benefits.
See Brown v. Secretary of Health & Human Servs.,
This question is not new to this Court. “[O]n numerous prior occasions,”
Edge v. Schweiker,
A.
Although EAJA identifies a singular entity — “the position of the United States”— as the focus of a court’s inquiry under this statutory exception, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (Supp. III 1985), it also makes clear that “the required [inquiry is] two-pronged.”
Lee v. Johnson,
B.
When a court reviews an EAJA fee petition, its scrutiny involves the process of determining whether the government’s positions — that is, the underlying agency or administrative action or inaction, and the government’s position in the lawsuit prompted thereby — are “substantially justified.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (Supp. III 1985). Interpreting this statutory phrase has caused considerable division in the Courts of Appeals. 6 While some courts have concluded that EAJA demands only that the government’s positions be reasonable, 7 others have required a higher quan- *1041 turn of proof. 8
In
Lee v. Johnson,
The burden of proving that each of its positions was substantially justified belongs to the government. We recently summarized the series of proofs it must make as follows:
In order to prevail, the government must show: 1) a [solid and well-founded] basis in truth for the facts alleged; 2) a [solid and well-founded] basis in law for the theory it prepounded; and 3) a [solid and well-founded] connection between the facts alleged and the legal theory advanced. Washington v. Heckler,756 F.2d 959 , 961 (3d Cir.1985) (citing Citizens Council of Delaware County v. Brinegar,741 F.2d 584 , 593 (3d Cir.1984)).
Garcia v. Schweiker,
III.
Applying the foregoing legal precepts to the government’s position in the underlying disability case, 14 we conclude *1043 that the government has not borne its burden of proving that its position was substantially justified.
A.
The government has failed to clear the first hurdle in this EAJA inquiry: demonstrating a solid and well-founded basis in truth for its denial of Taylor’s request for disability benefits. Three physicians submitted to the AU unopposed medical evidence that confirmed the existence and severity of Taylor’s medical condition. Taylor also offered her own testimony regarding her chronic back pain. In sum, the record evidence concerning Taylor’s disability was strong and detailed.
Cf. Rosado v. Bowen,
[Taylor] has the residual functional capacity to perform work-related function [sic] except for work revolving [sic] prolonged sitting, standing, walking, climbing, balancing, stooping, crouching and kneeling. She is capable of performing many functions but [sic?] alternating her work position. ... [Taylor] has the residual functional capacity to perform sedentary work [that] prоvides for alternate standing.
App. at 15. As United States Magistrate Richard A. Powers, III, concluded in a report that the first district court judge subsequently adopted as his own, “the AU did not give proper weight to the medical evidence [that] establishes beyond any scintilla of doubt that [Taylor] is disabled.”
Taylor v. Bowen,
No. 85-5601, Report-Recommendation at 3 (E.D.Pa. Apr. 23, 1986). Instead, contrary to all of the record evidence, the AU — i.e., the government — simply decided that Taylor could perform sedentary work and, therefore, that she was not disabled. Thе enormous gap between the AU’s position and the reality reflected in the record evidence refutes the Secretary’s claim that the AU’s factual position was solid and well-founded.
See Garcia,
Taylor urges us, however, to go further. She argues that, in a case where the government’s underlying position has failed to pass a court’s relatively deferential review under the “substantial evidence” standard, that position by definition also fails to be “substantially justified” under EAJA.
16
In each such case, in other words, Taylor would have us hold the government liable for its opponent’s reasonable fees and costs unless “special circumstances make an award unjust.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (Supp. III 1985). In
Washington v. Heckler,
[B]ased on the bottom line dispositions of this court in Social Security cases, I advocate one single test by which a court may grant attorney’s fees to a Social Security claimant on thе ground that there was no substantial evidence on the record supporting the Secretary’s position. I would hold as a matter of law that, absent truly extraordinary circumstances, in each such case the position of the United States was not substantially justified.
Id. at 969 (Aldisert, C.J., concurring). Despite the obvious appeal of this position on *1044 grounds of policy, however, it was rejected by our Court. Id. at 961 n. 2; id. at 970-71 (Stern, J., concurring).
Although this position has become even more appealing since Washington, we still decline to recognize such a per se rule. In its report accompanying the permanent reenactment of EAJA, the House Committee on the Judiciary found
[especially puzzling ... statements by some courts that an аdministrative decision may be substantially justified under the Act even if it must be reversed because it was arbitrary and capricious or was not supported by substantial evidence. Agency action found to be arbitrary and capricious or unsupported by substantial evidence is virtually certain not to have been substantially justified under the Act. Only the most extraordinary special circumstances could permit such an action to be found to be substantially justified under the Act.
H.R.Rep. No. 120, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 10 (1985),
reprinted in
1985 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 138. Although this statement of legislative intent approaches the position advocated by Taylor, we believe that Congress has left the door open to the possibility that the government could demonstrate that a denial of disability benefits that flunked substantial evidence review was nonetheless substantially justified.
17
See
Note,
Institutionalizing An Experiment: The Extension of the Equal Access to Justice Act—Q
uestions
Resolved, Questions Remaining,
14 Fla.St.U.L.Rev. 925, 936 (1987) (“Although this [House Report] indicates a preference for a more rigorous standard for the government, the Committee expected that due to the variety of factual сontexts and legal issues involved in EAJA cases, the determination of what is ‘substantially justified’ will be decided on a case-by-case basis.”). We note that our interpretation, unlike Taylor’s preserves independent meaning for
each
of the exceptions (“substantially justified” and “special circumstances”) that Congress included in EAJA, and we conclude that our pattern of decisions conforms to the way that “the meaning of the term ‘substantially justified’ has been effectively resolved by Congress.”
Stokes II,
B.
Because the government has failed to clear the first hurdle, our EAJA inquiry is at an end. We need not determine whether the government had a solid and well-founded basis in law for its decision denying Taylor’s request for disability benefits (hurdle two), or whether there was a sufficient connection between the facts it alleged and the legal theory it propounded in the underlying action (hurdle three). We also need not examine whether the government’s litigation position before the first trial judge was “substantially justified” under EAJA (hurdles four, five and six). Because the AU’s factual position was neither solid nor well-founded, Taylor is entitled to reasonable fees and costs under EAJA.
*1045 IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the judgment of the district court and remand this matter to the district court for a calculation of Taylor’s fees and other expenses under EAJA.
Notes
. Spondylolysis is a defect in the vertebra, a condition marked by the loosening of the vertebral bodies. Stedman's Medical Dictionary 1322 (5th ed. 1982).
. As an agency empowered by Pennsylvania's Department of Labor and Industry, the Bureau of Disability Determination investigates individual claimants’ eligibility for disability benefits under the Social Security Act.
.Lumbar myofascitis is an inflammation of the loins, or the part of the back and sides between the ribs and the pelvis. Stedman’s Medical Dictionary 811, 922 (5th ed. 1982).
. There is a Circuit split on the proper standard for reviewing a district court’s application of EAJA's “substantially justified" exception. In
Underwood
v.
Pierce,
.
See, e.g., Coup v. Heckler,
.
See generally Rosado v. Bowen,
. See Griffon v. United States Dep’t of Health & Human Servs.,
.
See Trundle v. Bowen,
. H.R.Rep. No. 120, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 9-10 (1985), reprinted in 1985 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 132, 138, reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
Another problem [that] has developed in the implementation of the Act has been the fact that courts have been divided on the meaning of "substantial justification." Several courts have held correctly that "substantial justification” means more than reasonable. Because in 1980 Congress rejected a standard of "reasonably justified,” the test must be more than reasоnableness.
. For a comprehensive account of the sequence of legislative and executive acts that culminated in the permanent enactment of EAJA in 1985, see
Allen
v.
Bowen,
.
Lee
was not an unanimous decision. (Now Chief) Judge Gibbons, author of the Court's opinion, wrote that the standard articulated in
Lee,
quoted in the text above, "is consistent with th[e] language” of the House Report quoted in note 9.
The legislative history ... persuades me.that Congress intended that an evaluation of "substantial justification" under [EAJA] requires more than a marginal standard of reasonableness. ... I conclude that the Government now must show not merely that its position was marginally reasonable; its position must be clearly reasonable, well founded in law and fact, solid though not necessarily correct.
Id. at 40-41 (Rosenn, J., concurring). Judge Becker, who dissented on an unrelated issue, offered no interpretation of the statutory phrase "substantiаlly justified.” See id. at 41-45 (Becker, J., dissenting).
Careful examination of the Lee opinions and our subsequent decisions convinces us that a consistent interpretation of "substantially justified” has been set forth and followed by this Court. Although the idea has been expressed in a variety of ways, our holdings since the reenactment of EAJA have, consistent with the House Report, required more than mere reasonableness. The government must demonstrate that its factual and legal positions in the underlying agency action and in the subsequent litigation have been solid and well-founded if it is to fall within this EAJA exceptiоn. Indeed, counsel for the Secretary seemed to concede this point at oral argument:
MS. LUNDELIUS: There’s no question that the Third Circuit has always considered substantial justification to be more than a "merely reasonable" test.
THE COURT: Now what is wrong with that? Are you suggesting that that’s not a proper statement of the law?
MS. LUNDELIUS: No, I’m not suggesting that at all.
Cassette Record of Oral Argument.
. Honorable Max Rosenn, United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, sitting by designation. See supra note 11.
. In
Garcia
and again in
Coup,
we admittedly and repeatedly used the adjective “reasonable” to describe the government’s burden of proof аt each stage in the process of showing that its positions were substantially justified.
See also Baeder v. Heckler,
For a discussion of whether the government can ever satisfy this burden in a disability benefits case where its original position — denying such benefits — was not based on substantial record evidence, see infra at 1043-44.
.In this case, the Secretary adopted in total, and defended in the district court, the ALJ's evaluation of Taylor’s disability claim. The ALJ’s determination that Taylor was not disabled thus became the government’s underlying position, one of the two positions of the United States that must be substantially justified if this appeal is to fall within EAJA’s exception. Cf. Baeder v. Heckler, 768 F.2d 547, 549, 552 (3d Cir.1985) ("Baeder I") (with Appeals Council approval, ALJ’s ruling became the final decision of the Secretary; Court of Appeals examined what "the AU and the Secretary found”).
Although the government’s two positions here are virtually identical, the district court apparently did not consider whether the underlying position of the government was substantially justified. Instead, the district court’s brief order denied the fee motion "on the grounds that the Defendant’s
defense of this action
[, i.e., the government’s position in the civil litigation that resulted from the Secretary’s underlying position,] was substantially justified.”
Taylor,
No. 85-5601 (E.D.Pa. Dec. 29, 1986) (emphasis added). This failure even "to address whether the Secretary had made the tripartite showing of proof [for one of the government’s two positions,] required by" EAJA and our prior decisions, is a clear error of law.
Tressler v. Heckler,
. After Taylor was duly sworn, for example, the ALJ’s first question was: "You were able to stand and raise your right hand very comfortably, I didn’t notice any problem, was that painful for you at all?” App. at 25.
. For a generally illuminating discussion of this conceptual problem, written before the permanent reenactment of EAJA, see Cromwell, A Substantial Paradox: Attorney's Fees Under the Equal Access to Justice Act in Social Security Appeals, 7 U.Ark. Little Rock L.J. 355, 383-85 (1984).
. The Secretary has called our attention to President Reagan's
understanding in signing [the permanent EAJA] that the Congress recognized the important distinction between the substantial justification standard in the fee proceeding and a court’s finding on the merits that an agency action was arbitrary and capricious or not supported by substantial evidence. The substantial justification standard is a different standard, and an easier one to meet, than either the arbitrary and capricious or substantiаl evidence standard. A separate inquiry is [therefore] required....
Statement on Signing H.R. 2378 Into Law, 21 Weekly Comp.Pres.Doc. 967 (Aug. 5, 1985) (P.L. 99-80). This statement of executive intent is, we believe, largely inconsistent with the legislative history that our Court has relied upon in the course of defining when a government position is "substantially justified” under EAJA. Because we are bound by our previous decisions that rely exclusively upon the statements of legislative intent in the 1985 House Report, we do not determine what weight, if any, a presidential signing statement deserves in the process of statutory interpretation. See generally Garber & Wimmer, Presidential Signing Statements As Interpretations of Legislative Intent: An Executive Aggrandizement of Power, 24 Harv. J. on Legis. 363 (1987); Toobin, The Last Word, New Republic, Nov. 3, 1986, at 13; Gar-ber & Wimmer, President’s Statements At Signings No Help to U.S. Judges, Nat'l L.J., Sept. 8, 1986, at 15.
