POMS Reference

DI 42586: Stieberger Case

Citations:

Stieberger v. Sullivan,

United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.

TN 47 (08-96)

A. Background

1. Issuance of court order

On June 18, 1992, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York issued an order approving a settlement in Stieberger v. Sullivan, which provides relief to individuals who were New York State residents at the time that their claims were denied or terminated under an SSA policy which allegedly did not require decisionmakers to apply Second Circuit case law. On July 29, 1992, the court modified the settlement.

2. Class counsel

David S. Udell

Legal Services for the Elderly

130 West 42nd Street 17th Flr.

New York, N.Y. 10036

Telephone: (212) 391-0120

 

Jill A. Boskey

MFY Legal Services

35 Avenue “A”

New York, N.Y. 10009

Telephone: (212) 475-8000

 

Brigitte LaForest and Donna Lee

The Legal Aid Society

Civil Appeals and Law Reform Unit

90 Church Street, 15th Floor

New York, N.Y. 10007

Attn: Stieberger

Telephone: (212) 577-3300

3. Second circuit case law

All medical decisionmakers (and reviewers) of disability claims of New York State residents shall apply Second Circuit case law in adjudicating disability claims.

4. Required issuances

The settlement requires that SSA distribute the following material to medical decisionmakers (and reviewers) of disability claims of New York State residents:

  • Stieberger settlement e:mail message (Exhibit 8, DI 42586.095).

  • Stieberger settlement agreement (one per office).

  • Manual of Second Circuit Disability Decisions.

  • Volume of Second Circuit disability decisions issued after June 18, 1992 (one per office).

  • Instructions about Second Circuit disability decisions issued after June 18, 1992, explaining each holding (optional for OHA decisionmakers and reviewers).

5. Class members

The Stieberger class consists of all individuals who were New York State residents at the time their claims for benefits were finally denied or terminated during the period October 1, 1981, through July 2, 1992 (the date of issuance of the Stieberger Teletype; see Exhibit 8, DI 42586.095), inclusive, based on a determination that they did not have a disability that prevented them from engaging in substantial gainful activity (SGA) and whose benefits have not been fully granted or restored through subsequent appeals.

6. Eligibility for reopening

A class member who properly responds to a Stieberger notice (see DI 42586.095, Exhibit 1) will have the opportunity to have his/her case reopened, if:

  1. He/she resided in New York State when his/her disability claim was denied or terminated for medical reasons:

    • at any level of administrative review from October 1, 1981, through October 17, 1985; or

    • at the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) or Appeals Council (AC) level from October 18, 1985, through July 2, 1992.

       

      - AND -

       

  2. The claim discussed in a., above, was not later:

    • decided by a DDS or ALJ outside of New York State, or

    • fully allowed on appeal or reopening, or

    • affirmed on the merits in court, or

    • followed by another claim, involving the same issues and time period, which either was decided after July 2, 1992, or outside of New York State.

7. Development and the development period

The following are some key points about development of Stieberger cases (also, see DI 12586.035 and DI 42586.060):

  • The settlement is intended to generally limit the DDS development to a basic period (the DEVELOPMENT PERIOD) starting 48 months before SSA's receipt of a class member's request for review and running to the present.

  • The 48 month period may be adjusted if certain exclusions apply (DI 12586.035).

  • If the individual is found not disabled during the DEVELOPMENT PERIOD and certain conditions are met, the DDS may have to develop back to the alleged onset of disability (AOD) in the earliest title II Stieberger claim, the date of filing of the earliest title XVI Stieberger claim, or to the month of cessation in cessation cases.

8. Payment and the payment period

The following criteria define the PAYMENT PERIOD for Stieberger cases (also, see DI 42586.065):

  • The settlement limits Stieberger payments for months prior to 12/1/91 to a period (the PAYMENT PERIOD) not to exceed 48 months.

  • The PAYMENT PERIOD will occur immediately before 12/1/91, if the individual was disabled then, unless certain payment exclusions (e.g., months class member already received benefits) require an earlier PAYMENT PERIOD.

  • Benefits are continued (or begun) after 11/30/91, if the claimant meets SSA's disability entitlement and eligibility criteria.

9. Stieberger claims file(s)

The Stieberger claims file(s) will be obtained only if it is necessary to develop all the way back to the AOD (or date of cessation) in the earliest title II Stieberger claim, or to the date of filing of the earliest title XVI Stieberger claim (or date of cessation).

10. Presumptions related to disability and insured status

The following presumptions apply or do not apply to a claimant's disability and insured status as indicated:

  1. If the DDS finds the class member disabled back to the start of his/ her DEVELOPMENT PERIOD, his/her PAYMENT PERIOD ordinarily will start in 12/ 87 (see 8., above). The DDS is expected to establish an adjusted onset of disability by presuming that the individual was:

    • disabled as of 5 months before the first month of the PAYMENT PERIOD for title II cases involving waiting periods or, for title II non-waiting period cases and title XVI cases, the first month of the PAYMENT PERIOD.

    • insured for title II as of the presumed onset, if the individual was insured as of an earlier AOD in a Stieberger claim.

  2. In those cases where the DDS must obtain the prior file(s) and develop all the way back to the alleged onset of the earliest title II Stieberger claim, or the date the earliest title XVI claim was filed, the DDS will have the FO determine, rather than presume, insured status.

11. Work activity before 12/01/91

Work activity prior to 12/1/91 will be used in making determinations of initial disability but will not be used in assessing trial work months or in otherwise making determinations of SGA.

NOTE: This restriction does not apply to work activity performed after 11/30/91, or while the class member was on the rolls based on another claim and the work was already counted as trial work or SGA. (See DI 12586.001, item 11, and DI 42586.070A.9.).

12. When res judicata may not be used

Apart from the retroactive relief available to certain class members (see 6. above), the settlement agreement also bars SSA from using res judicata to deny a subsequent claim if:

  • the earlier claim was medically denied or terminated at any administrative level (NYDDS or the Office of Hearings and Appeals - OHA); and

  • the earlier denial or cessation took place between 10/1/81 and 7/2/92, inclusive; and

  • the claimant was a resident of New York State at the time of the earlier denial or cessation.

13. When res judicata may be used

Res judicata denials (DI 27516.001) may continue to be made when the final decision on the prior claim was issued after July 2, 1992, AND the basic agency rules for res judicata are met; AND, also, where:

  • the class member was not a resident of New York State at the time of the prior administrative determination/decision rendered between 10/1/81 and 7/2/92, inclusive; OR

  • an action for judicial review or administrative appeal of the prior determination/decision was filed or would be timely if filed after July 2, 1992; OR

  • the issue(s) is non-medical; e.g., assets, income, quarters of coverage, earnings of the claimant, fraud, or whether the claimant had engaged in SGA.

14. Level of readjudication

Stieberger cases are usually reopened at the reconsideration level. For a complete discussion of reopening jurisdiction, see DI 32586.020.

There are two types of Stieberger reopenings, pipeline cases and non-pipeline cases.

  1. A Stieberger claim is a “pipeline“ case if, as of the date of request for Stieberger review, either:

    • an administrative or judicial review had been requested on the Stieberger claim but no determination or decision had been issued on that request, or;

    • a request for such an administrative or judicial review would still have been timely if filed.

These cases will be processed per the guides in DI 12586.025B. Favorable decisions will be processed under all normal claims processing rules. The special Stieberger rules in this transmittal do not apply.

  1. All other denials/cessations meeting the Stieberger reopening criteria in DI 12586.001 are non-pipeline cases. The New York DDS will usually process Stieberger non-pipeline cases under the Stieberger criteria.

B. References

C. Representation

If the class member has a representative, development must be conducted through the representative. The FO is responsible for ensuring that the Stieberger file contains an SSA 1696-U4 (Appointment of Representative) if there is a representative.