Costello v. Barnhart

458 F. Supp. 2d 594, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 79798, 2006 WL 3073044
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 25, 2006
Docket05C2952
StatusPublished

This text of 458 F. Supp. 2d 594 (Costello v. Barnhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Costello v. Barnhart, 458 F. Supp. 2d 594, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 79798, 2006 WL 3073044 (N.D. Ill. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

BUCKLO, District Judge.

Plaintiff Florine Costello (“Costello”) has filed a complaint against Jo Anne Barnhart (the “Commissioner”) seeking re *595 view of Administrative Law Judge Steven H. Templin’s (“ALJ”) decision that Costello owed the Social Security Administration (“SSA”) $23,180 and that misinformation by SSA personnel in January of 1994 did not cause her to not file an application for divorced spouse benefits at that time. Both she and the Commissioner have now moved for summary judgment. I deny Costello’s motion for summary judgment and grant the Commissioner’s motion.

I.

Costello married Gilbert Costello on April 28, 1952, and remained married to him until them divorce on March 12, 1982. She subsequently began living with Leonard Ramsey (“Ramsey”) and married him on March 30, 1987. While they were married, Costello and Ramsey applied for old-age benefits. Costello began receiving benefits in June of 1992, both on her own work record and through wife’s insurance benefits (“WIB”) from Ramsey’s account. At this time she used Ramsey’s last name. Costello and Ramsey divorced in July of 1993, but Costello continued to receive benefits, both from her work record and through WIB from Ramsey’s account. In March of 2002, Costello went to the SSA office in Joliet, Illinois (the “Joliet SSA office”) to inform the SSA that she had recently changed her name from Ramsey back to Costello. After several meetings with SSA personnel, Costello received a letter from the SSA on May 26, 2002, informing her that the SSA had overpaid her $23,180 in WIB to which she was not entitled because she had not been married to Ramsey for ten years. In June 2002, the SSA began recouping the overpayment by withholding her entire monthly benefit.

On June 29, 2002, Costello filed a Request for Reconsideration, but the SSA issued a Notice of Reconsideration on September 23, 2002, finding that its original overpayment determination was correct. Costello appealed this decision and received a hearing before the ALJ on January 15, 2004. At that hearing the SSA was not present, but did present written evidence and argument. Costello and her two adult daughters, Patricia Clower (“Clower”) and Karen Smith (“Smith”), did attend the hearing and testified. 1 Costello testified to the general circumstances of her marriages and divorces. She also testified that the first week of January of 1994, she and Smith went to the Joliet SSA office because she wanted to “see which [former husband’s benefits she] could get the most money from.” She brought with her the social security numbers of her former husbands and copies of her divorce decrees from both so that the SSA could “compare each one, see [from] which one [she] would get the most” benefits. 2 She testified that upon entering the office she was directed to the booth of an SSA employee. 3 The employee asked Costello how he could help her and she told him, “I want to find out from which of my ex- *596 husbands I can pull the most benefits.” She testified that she had both divorce decrees with her in a folder and placed the folder opened before the SSA employee. She then gave him the social security numbers she had brought with her. She testified that the employee “was working the keyboard” but that neither she nor Smith could see the screen. She said that she “asked him which one [and] he says I can’t understand why you are on Ramsey. Oh, I see he signed for you.” She said he further said to “stay with Ramsey. You can get the most from Ramsey.” Costello testified that this conversation lasted between five and ten minutes, and that the employee did not write anything down for her. She testified that she did not think about this incident again for the next few years because she “thought he knew what he was doing.” She said that in 2002 she decided to have her name changed and consequently went back to speak to the SSA, and that at this time the SSA raised the issue of the improper benefits with her.

Smith, Costello’s daughter, also testified during the hearing. She testified that she went with her mother to visit the Joliet SSA office. Upon entering the office, she and Costello were directed to a service counter. Smith testified that she remembered Costello “inquiring who of her ex’s, meaning her ex-husbands, would she be better off being under or receiving benefits.” Like Costello, Smith testified that Costello had the “divorce envelopes” and “a notation giving Social Security numbers” and that she “sat them on the service counter.” She testified that they spent five to seven minutes with the SSA employee, during which time he typed the Social Security numbers into his computer and asked “why are you with [Ramsey]” and then stated “something to the degree of oh, I see, he signed for you. I know nothing about it. It’s like okay, you should stay with Leonard.”

On September 8, 2004, the ALJ issued his opinion finding that the SSA had overpaid Costello and that it was entitled to a repayment of $23,180. In reaching this decision the ALJ also found that in January of 1994, SSA personnel “did not provide [Costello] with misinformation that caused her not to file an application for divorced spouse insurance benefits on the account of wage earner Gilbert P. Costello.” The ALJ’s decision explained that Costello was not truly contesting that there had been an overpayment, but instead was relying on federal regulations to argue that but for the misinformation from the SSA employee in 1994, she would have filed an application for benefits from her first husband that would have offset the overpayment. However, the ALJ stated that the federal regulations concerning misinformation only concern “active misinformation provided by [SSA] personnel when a person seeks to apply for specific benefits.” He concluded that these regulations do not cover Costello’s situation where she only provided the SSA employee “the opportunity to know that she was no longer entitled to [WIB] on her second husband’s account” and that the employee only omitted the opportunity to tell her that she was not entitled to these benefits. Further, the ALJ stated that Costello had not identified the employee who provided misinformation to her, and had “failed to establish by competent evidence that she was provided misinformation by [an SSA] employee” that would allow a finding of a “deemed application” for divorced spouse’s benefits through her first husband.

On March 18, 2005, the Appeals Council denied Costello’s Request for Review, stating that there was no satisfactory evidence that in January of 1994 Costello informed the SSA that she and Ramsey “were mar *597 ried in 1987, i.e. for a period of time less than ten years prior to [her] divorce, such as would be a terminating event.

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Bluebook (online)
458 F. Supp. 2d 594, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 79798, 2006 WL 3073044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/costello-v-barnhart-ilnd-2006.