Tyler Jaxson v. Andrew Saul

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 2020
Docket19-3125
StatusPublished

This text of Tyler Jaxson v. Andrew Saul (Tyler Jaxson v. Andrew Saul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler Jaxson v. Andrew Saul, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________

Nos. 19-3011 & 19-3125 TYLER N. JAXSON, Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant, v.

ANDREW SAUL, COMMISSIONER OF SOCIAL SECURITY, Defendant-Appellant, Cross-Appellee. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Western Division. No. 17 CV 50090 — Lisa A. Jensen, Magistrate Judge. ____________________

ARGUED JUNE 5, 2020 — DECIDED JUNE 26, 2020 ____________________

Before EASTERBROOK, HAMILTON, and SCUDDER, Circuit Judges. EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. David Daugherty, an admin- istrative law judge hearing disability-benefits applications for the Social Security Administration, supplemented his salary by taking bribes. Eric Conn, who represented many claimants, paid Daugherty $400 per favorable decision; Conn himself received $5,000 or more per case out of the benefits 2 Nos. 19-3011 & 19-3125

that Daugherty awarded to Conn’s clients. Four physicians, including Frederic Huffnagle, submided evaluations to sup- port Daugherty’s decisions. Daugherty told Conn what kind of evidence he wanted to see. Conn wrote the reports, which one of the physicians would sign without change even if the applicant for benefits failed to appear for examination. Huff- nagle’s “medical suite” was in Conn’s office. After the scheme came to light, Conn and Daugherty pleaded guilty to several federal felonies. Bradley Adkins, one of the physicians, was convicted by a jury. Huffnagle died before he could be prosecuted. The total cost to the United States of benefits granted by Daugherty exceeds $500 million, and Conn reaped more than $5 million in legal fees. Many details of this scam are recounted in U.S. Senate Commidee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Staff Report, How Some Legal, Medical, and Judicial Professionals Abused Social Security Disability Programs for the Country’s Most Vulnerable: A Case Study of the Conn Law Firm (Oct. 7, 2013). The agency’s Inspector General formally notified it in 2015 of “reason to believe that fraud was involved in th[e] applications for Social Security benefits” of 1,787 named per- sons from January 2007 through May 2011. That notice, giv- en under 42 U.S.C. §1320a–8(l), set in motion a process for redetermination of the benefits awarded to those persons. Two statutes, one covering disability payments and the other covering supplemental-security income, say that redetermi- nation is mandatory if there is reason to believe that fraud played a role, and they add that in conducting this redeter- mination the agency “shall disregard any evidence if there is reason to believe that fraud or similar fault was involved in Nos. 19-3011 & 19-3125 3

the providing of such evidence.” We put the full text of these statutes in an appendix. Tyler Jaxson is among the people named by the Inspector General. He applied for both disability and supplemental- security-income benefits in 2009, and the agency deemed his evidence insufficient. He failed to appear for any of the three examinations by specialists retained by the agency. Conn presented Jaxson’s request for reconsideration, supported by a report that Huffnagle signed, and asked for a hearing. ALJ Daugherty awarded benefits less than three weeks later, on June 1, 2010. He did not hold a hearing and wrote only a cursory evaluation. A week after receiving the Inspector General’s report, the agency sent Jaxson a leder telling him that it would redeter- mine his eligibility for benefits. The leder said that the agen- cy “must disregard any evidence from one of the medical providers above [including Huffnagle] when the information was submided by representative Eric C. Conn or other rep- resentatives associated with Mr. Conn’s law office.” The leder also stated that the agency believes that Jaxson’s claim lacks support, after disregarding Huffnagle’s report. So the agency told Jaxson that his claim would be sent to an ALJ and that he could submit any new evidence that concerned his medical status on or before June 1, 2010. A hearing was held on April 4, 2016. Jaxson appeared with counsel, testi- fied, and submided other evidence, but the ALJ rejected his claim for benefits. After the Appeals Council denied his re- quest for review, he filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(g), 1383(c)(3). With the parties’ consent, the case was assigned to a magistrate judge. 28 U.S.C. §636(c). 4 Nos. 19-3011 & 19-3125

Most suits about Social Security disability benefits con- test the ALJ’s findings or reasoning. Jaxson’s does not. He concedes that the ALJ was right, given the evidence he con- sidered. But he asserts that the ALJ should have considered Huffnagle’s report too, and that the ALJ declined to do so only because an internal claims-processing manual and rul- ing say that an ALJ cannot accept evidence that the Inspector General found is likely a product of fraud. See Hearings, Ap- peals, and Litigation Law Manual (HALLEX) §I-1-3-25 (2016); Social Security Ruling (SSR) 16-1p, 81 Fed. Reg. 13,436 (Mar. 14, 2016). Relying on a divided decision of the Sixth Circuit, see Hicks v. Commissioner, 909 F.3d 786 (6th Cir. 2018), the district court held that the summary exclusion of Huff- nagle’s report violated the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132766 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 7, 2019). The court remanded to the agency for further pro- ceedings, and the agency appealed. Jaxson filed a cross- appeal that we discuss at the end of this opinion. It was inappropriate for the district court to start with a constitutional issue. Constitutional adjudication is supposed to be a last resort, after all other grounds have been ex- plored. See, e.g., New York City Transit Authority v. Beazer, 440 U.S. 568 (1979). If a statute, or a regulation with the force of law, required the exclusion of this evidence, then a court would need to determine the law’s validity. Yet no one con- tends that any law makes the Inspector General’s view con- clusive. The statutes in the appendix require the agency to redetermine every case that it finds may have been touched by fraud. But they do not say that this step also requires the exclusion of evidence. They say, instead, that evidence is in- admissible “if there is reason to believe that fraud or similar Nos. 19-3011 & 19-3125 5

fault was involved in the providing of such evidence.” Who makes that decision, and how, the statutes leave open. The leder that Jaxson received told him flatly that the agency “must disregard any evidence from one of the medi- cal providers above [including Huffnagle] when the infor- mation was submided by representative Eric C. Conn or oth- er representatives associated with Mr. Conn’s law office” (emphasis added). It did not say why. True, the Manual and Ruling 16-1p say this, but neither document carries legal force. They tell people how the agency plans to carry out its duties, but they do not affect the legal rights of private par- ties such as Jaxson. That’s why they did not need to be adopted through rulemaking. See 5 U.S.C. §553(b)(A) (ex- cluding “interpretative rules, general statements of policy, or rules of agency organization, procedure, or practice” from rulemaking requirements). At oral argument, the Commis- sioner’s lawyer acknowledged that the Manual and Ruling 16-1p lack the force of law.

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