Maricelys S. v. Saul

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 2019
Docket1:18-cv-00479
StatusUnknown

This text of Maricelys S. v. Saul (Maricelys S. v. Saul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maricelys S. v. Saul, (D.R.I. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

MARICELYS S., : Plaintiff, : : v. : C.A. No. 18-479WES : ANDREW M. SAUL, : COMMISSIONER OF SOCIAL SECURITY, : Defendant. :

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN, United States Magistrate Judge. Plaintiff Maricelys S. brings this action on behalf of her daughter, R.M., to challenge a decision of the Commissioner of Social Security denying R.M.’s application for surviving child insurance benefits under the Social Security Act (the “Act”). The case turns on whether R.M. is the child of a deceased wage earner, Roger M. (“the Decedent”). R.M.’s claim was complicated by Plaintiff’s marriage to another man throughout the period in issue, although the administrative law judge (“ALJ”) was satisfied that Plaintiff’s husband was incarcerated, did not have conjugal rights and could not have been R.M.’s father, thereby rebutting the presumption of legitimacy. Nevertheless, finding that “it was not clearly established that [the Decedent] acknowledged in writing that the claimant was his child,” Tr. 14 n.3, the ALJ answered in the negative the question whether R.M. was the Decedent’s daughter. After that answer became the final decision of the Commissioner, Plaintiff brought her appeal to this Court. For the reasons that follow, I recommend that the matter be remanded for further proceedings. I. Background A. Facts On April 15, 2015, Plaintiff, acting on behalf of her minor child, R.M., applied for Social Security benefits (child insurance and lump sum death benefits) based on R.M.’s status as the child of the Decedent, a deceased wage earner who had died on March 9, 2015, shortly after he was released from incarceration at the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions (“ACI”). Tr. 26. Plaintiff’s older children (twins) were approved for benefits as the children of the Decedent

because he had claimed them as dependents on a 2011 tax return, which was procured and reviewed by a District Office representative of the Social Security Administration (“SSA”). Tr. 46. However, R.M. was not born at the time of the filing of the tax return. Tr. 188. To support R.M.’s claim that the Decedent was her father, Plaintiff presented many handwritten cards and letters, which she claimed the Decedent had mailed to her from the ACI, where he was incarcerated beginning sometime after R.M. was born. Tr. 45, 84-100, 129-85. These cards and letters include repeated references to the Decedent as the loving father of R.M. and to R.M. as the beloved child of the Decedent. E.g., Tr. 127 (listing references). Plaintiff also presented envelopes with postmarks and some with what purports to be an ACI stamp. E.g.,

Tr. 123-24, 142-43, 171-72, 185. She contends that these establish that the cards and letters were mailed to her from the ACI while the Decedent was confined there. It is not disputed that the handwriting on all the cards, letters and envelopes appears to be the same; all include the liberal and distinctive use of circles and hearts, particularly to dot the letter “i.” Plaintiff testified that this handwriting is not hers but is that of the Decedent. Tr. 202, 215. She also submitted an affidavit purporting to be from the Decedent’s mother averring that the handwriting on certain “attached papers” is that of her son.1 Tr. 120-20A. The evidence further establishes that the Decedent was in contemporaneous contact with his mother in that he returned to live with her

1 Based on what is in the record, it appears that the “attached papers” are two envelopes addressed to Plaintiff in handwriting that includes the distinctive circles and hearts. Tr. 121, 123-24. after his release from the ACI, permitting the inference that she was familiar with her son’s handwriting. Tr. 196. The Commissioner does not dispute that the references to R.M. in the cards and letters amount to an unambiguous acknowledgment that the Decedent was R.M.’s father. In addition to the cards and letters and the averments that they were written by the

Decedent, Plaintiff relies on other evidence. First, she proffered an affidavit purporting to be from the Decedent’s father averring that his son had three children, including R.M. Tr. 43. However, this affidavit states – incorrectly – that R.M. was born in Pennsylvania and that the Decedent died in Pennsylvania; in addition, it refers to the putative grandfather by a different first name from the name associated with his Social Security number. Tr. 43, 213. Plaintiff’s testimony at the ALJ hearing casts further doubt over the putative grandfather’s reliability – she said that the grandfather lives in Puerto Rico and has never seen R.M. Tr. 206-07. Additionally, Plaintiff herself could not explain the confusion over the putative grandfather’s name because she had such limited contact with him. Tr. 213-14. Second, Plaintiff submitted an email

purporting to be from the Decedent’s mother stating that R.M. is her grandchild; however, the email is unsigned and sent from an email address bearing no discernable relationship to its putative author. Tr. 55. Third, Plaintiff submitted an unofficial “certificate of birth.” Tr. 34-35. However, she acknowledged that she filled it in herself, Tr. 202, and does not dispute the ALJ’s failure to credit this document as evidence of the Decedent’s relationship with R.M. See Tr. 24 (discounting evidence of birth record because not completed by Decedent and not official birth certificate). Before this Court, Plaintiff’s focus is on the cards and letters that she claims were sent to her by the Decedent from the ACI. She argues that this evidence sustains her burden of establishing that, “in the case of a deceased individual[,] . . . such insured individual . . . had acknowledged in writing that the applicant is his or her son or daughter,” which is one of the methods set out in the Act to prove paternity. 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(3)(C)(i)(I). B. Procedural History During the administrative processing of the claim, a District Office SSA representative

identified only as “S. Roy” compared a letter proffered by Plaintiff (described as the “love letter”)2 to handwriting on “the religious cards from [the Decedent’s] funeral,”3 to an exemplar of the Decedent’s handwriting from his 2011 tax return, and to exemplars from various Social Security filings that the Decedent had made, including a pain questionnaire form and a “827S” form he had submitted. Tr. 44.4 Based on this comparison, S. Roy concluded that the handwriting on the “love letter,” particularly the letter “R” in the signature, is similar to that on the funeral cards, but is not similar to the handwriting on the Decedent’s 2011 tax return or on his Social Security forms. Id. Accordingly, S. Roy prepared a brief report and concluded that “the validity of the love letter is called into question.”5 Id. None of the exemplars that S. Roy

used to make this comparison are now in the record. While Plaintiff plainly once had access to the original love letter and to the funeral cards, it appears they had been misplaced by the time of

2 At the hearing, the parties advised the Court that the original of the love letter was submitted by Plaintiff and reviewed by the District Office. However, a copy of the original is missing from the record; only the typed English translation is included. Tr. 45.

3 Mystery cloaks what S. Roy meant by the reference to the “handwriting on . . . religious cards from [the Decedent’s] funeral.” Tr. 44. Like the love letter, the funeral cards presumably were submitted by Plaintiff but now are missing. Plaintiff confirms in her reply brief that the funeral cards seen by S. Roy are not in the record. ECF No. 21 at 2 n.1.

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