Woodland v. Kijakazi

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 14, 2025
DocketCivil Action No. 2023-2489
StatusPublished

This text of Woodland v. Kijakazi (Woodland v. Kijakazi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodland v. Kijakazi, (D.D.C. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

GREGORY W.,1

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 1:23-cv-2489-MJS

FRANK BISIGNANO, Commissioner of Social Security,2

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiff Gregory W. (“Mr. W”) seeks a ruling that would require the Commissioner of the

Social Security Administration (“SSA”) to reinstate his widower’s benefits. An Administrative

Law Judge (“ALJ”) determined that Mr. W was not entitled to those benefits because he failed to

establish a valid common-law marriage between himself and the decedent, Peggye L. (“Ms. L”).

Mr. W’s case for reversal rests on a single argument. He contends that the ALJ was bound to follow

an order from the D.C. Superior Court’s Probate Division that characterized him as Ms. L’s

“surviving spouse” for estate purposes. The ALJ’s failure to do so, Mr. W insists, was clear and

reversible error. After careful consideration of the record, the parties’ arguments, and the governing

law, the Court disagrees. So the Court DENIES Mr. W’s motion for judgment of reversal (ECF

No. 7) and GRANTS the Commissioner’s cross-motion for judgment of affirmance (ECF No. 8).

1 Plaintiff’s name has been partially redacted in keeping with the recommendation of the Committee on Court Administration and Case Management of the Judicial Conference of the United States. See Memorandum, PRIVACY CONCERN REGARDING SOCIAL SECURITY AND IMMIGRATION OPINIONS 3 (May 1, 2018), available at https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/18-ap-c-suggestion_cacm_0.pdf (encouraging the use of “only the first name and last initial” in Social Security cases). 2 Effective May 7, 2025, Frank Bisignano became the Commissioner of the Social Security Administration, so he is automatically substituted as the defendant under Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d). BACKGROUND

Mr. W and Ms. L began their relationship in the early 1990s. From that time until Ms. L’s

death, they lived together continuously—first in Atlanta, Georgia, then in Suitland, Maryland, and

ultimately in Washington, D.C., where they signed an apartment lease together in December 2013.

(ECF No. 5, Administrative Record (“AR”) at 242–325.)3 Mr. W and Ms. L never officially

married, but they reportedly held themselves out as common-law spouses to family and friends.

Ms. L passed away in June 2015 in the District of Columbia. (AR at 78.) She was survived

by Mr. W, as well as several siblings. (Id. at 141–44.) Ms. L did not leave a will, and neither did

she designate a beneficiary for her life insurance policy. Following her death, Mr. W submitted a

claim for Ms. L’s life insurance benefits as her “[c]ommon law husband” (AR at 157), and the

insurance company ultimately determined that Ms. L’s “siblings [were] not the appropriate payees”

and issued a check to Mr. W in October 2015 for the proceeds of the policy (id. at 152, 282).

A few months later, Mr. W initiated probate proceedings in D.C. Superior Court. He

petitioned for his appointment as the personal representative for Ms. L’s estate, indicating that as

the “spouse of the decedent,” he had priority to serve as the personal representative and there were

“no other parties in higher priority.” (AR at 362–65.) The petition made no mention that Mr. W’s

spousal status was premised on common-law marriage. (See id.) The probate court originally

denied the petition without prejudice, reasoning that although “the petitioning spouse ha[d] priority

to serve … he [was] ineligible to do so” under D.C. Code § 20-303(b)(4) due to a prior criminal

conviction. (Id. at 369–71.) Instead, the probate court suggested that one of Ms. L’s brothers had

priority to serve. (Id. at 371.)

3 Page citations to the AR refer to the running pagination at the upper right margin. Page citations to the parties’ briefing, by contrast, refer to the ones assigned by the Court’s electronic filing system.

2 Mr. W then filed an amended petition in April 2017 accompanied by a criminal-history

report that seems to have been intended to assuage the probate court’s original concerns. (AR at

373–78.) Mr. W again identified himself as the “surviving spouse of the decedent,” but again

without any reference to common-law marriage. Moreover, although the petition listed one of Ms.

L’s siblings as an “interested person” and “brother,” when asked to indicate the decedent’s

survivors earlier in the same form, Mr. W only checked the box for “Spouse/Domestic Partner”

and not for “Brothers and/or Sisters.” (Id. at 375.)

In July 2017, the probate court issued its final order, wherein it appointed Mr. W as the

personal representative of the estate and directed that Mr. W would inherit Ms. L’s property as “the

surviving spouse of the decedent, in accordance with law.” (AR at 396–97.) The full contents of

order spanned barely a page, and the order did not include any reference to Mr. W’s claim of

common-law marriage or a single sentence of reasoning to support the statement that Mr. W was

the “surviving spouse,” whether by common-law marriage or otherwise. (Id.) It is this probate

order that Mr. W argues was binding on the ALJ for purposes of his claim to widower’s benefits.

About a year before her passing, Ms. L had applied for—and was granted—retirement

insurance benefits from the SSA. (AR at 70.) The Social Security Act allows for surviving spouses

to essentially inherit those benefits upon a showing that the claimant is the decedent’s legal partner

under state law and that the relationship lasted longer than nine months at the time of the decedent’s

passing. 42 U.S.C. §§ 402(f), 416(g)(1)(E), 416(h)(1)(A); see 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.335, 404.345. So,

while Mr. W was going through the probate process, he applied for widower’s benefits on the

attestation that he and Ms. L were in a common-law marriage.

On May 16, 2017, the SSA originally granted his application, finding Mr. W eligible for

widower’s benefits starting on April 2017. (AR at 65.) But because Mr. W had applied for benefits

3 in December 2016, he submitted a request for reconsideration asking for that earlier date as the

starting clock for his benefits entitlement. (Id. at 67.) Mr. W’s submission apparently prompted a

closer review of the original application, and the SSA reassessed its determination. (Id. at 68–78.)

In May 2018, the SSA sent Mr. W a notice of change in benefits that explained his “widower claim

has been reopened to a denial” because “there [was] not enough evidence to support a finding of

common-law marriage.” (Id. at 81–84.) Given that new determination, the notice further advised

Mr. W that he owed about $8,500 back to the SSA as overpayment fees on those benefits. (Id.)

From there, represented and supported by legal counsel, Mr. W unsuccessfully sought

reconsideration. (AR at 98–99; id. at 104.) The matter proceeded to an administrative hearing

before an ALJ in September 2021. (Id. at 32–64.) At the hearing, and in response to arguments

from Mr. W’s counsel, the ALJ acknowledged that the SSA “didn’t consider” the probate court’s

order originally. (Id.

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Woodland v. Kijakazi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodland-v-kijakazi-dcd-2025.