Wednesday, July 9, 2014

A Legal Representative’s Duty to Submit Evidence




 
Does a Social Security Disability claimants’ representative have a duty to submit medical records pertaining to his or her client’s intra vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment during the alleged period of disability? This question recently came up in a listserv discussion involving Social Security Disability/SSI attorneys who practice in Connecticut. Following a lengthy exchange it was determined that under Social Security Ruling (SSR) 00-2p, which addresses fraud and “similar fault,” submission is required. 
 If a Social Security Disability claimant is denied benefits under Title II of the Act or eligibility for disability or blindness payments under Title XVI of the Act, he or she can eventually request a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). This is often considered the most important stage of the adjudicatory process. At a formal hearing, the claimant is given the opportunity to testify, present witnesses under oath, and cross-examine expert witnesses.[1]
            Prior to hearing, it is imperative that a claimant’s representative submit any and all evidence showing the claimant’s medical disability and resultant inability to work on a regular and continued basis (i.e. eight hours a day, five days weekly, in an “ordinary” work setting, without excessive absenteeism).[2] All evidence must be submitted at least five days before hearing, although most ALJ’s are willing to keep the record open for a reasonable period of time if, for example, an unusual or exceptional circumstance kept counsel from knowing about or receiving missing evidence.[3]
            The efficient and thorough collection of evidence by a claimant’s representative is perhaps the most important part of the job, as the ALJ conducts hearings de novo under a preponderance of the evidence standard.[4]  If the claimant is denied at hearing, it is only the administrative record presented at hearing that the Appeals Council will evaluate, with a limited exception regarding new and material evidence that relates to the period on or before the date of the ALJ decision.[5]
            Social Security Disability hearings are considered non-adversarial and “protective of the claimant.”[6] Strict rules of evidence are not applied “so as to bar the admission of evidence otherwise pertinent.”[7] Obtaining all medical records, including those adverse to the claimant’s case, during the relevant time period of disability is part of a representative’s duty of full disclosure under 20 CFR 404.1740(a)(2); 416.1540(a)(2) (2006). Specifically, a claimant’s representative must bring to the agency’s attention everything that shows that the claimant is blind or disabled.
“This means that you must furnish medical and other evidence that we can use to reach conclusions about your medical impairment(s) and, if material to the determination of whether you are disabled, its effect on your ability to work on a sustained basis.”[8]
What exactly is material to a finding of disability? Social Security defines material as follows:
“… a statement of information or an omission from a statement or information, that could influence SSA in determining entitlement to monthly benefits under Title II or eligibility for monthly benefits under Title XVI of the Act.”[9]
No doubt, the ambiguity of that definition contributed to my colleague’s listserv inquiry about IVF records. In reference to SSA’s definition of material, Attorney Charles Pirro wrote:
“I cannot conceive of a broader definition. The weather, for example, ‘could’ influence SSA… The ruling is broad, so that ‘source’ could be the individual health care provider, or ‘source’ could be the claimant’s attorney.”[10]
            Arguably, the medical procedure of artificial insemination, in and of itself, has nothing to do with whether or not an individual can maintain work activity on a regular and sustained basis. Moreover, a woman’s decision to pursue IVF seems highly personal in nature. This stance is buttressed by Connecticut’s version of ABA Model Rule 1.6, prohibiting a lawyer from disclosing privileged or confidential client information without the client’s consent.[11] Nevertheless, for any version of MR 1.6 to apply in this situation, the immateriality of medical records relating to IVF treatment must be a foregone conclusion. After all, Federal law preempts state law under the Supremacy Clause, and the rules of the federal tribunal preempt a state’s licensing requirements.[12]
             Conversely, MR 3.3(d) could be argued as applying to counsel’s duty to submit IVF records (and that rule would also be discredited under the Supremacy Clause.) MR 3.3 states:
“In an ex parte proceeding, a lawyer shall inform the tribunal of all material facts known to the lawyer that will enable the tribunal to make an informed decision, whether or not the facts are adverse.”[13]
Regardless of the Supremacy obstacle, various state bar opinions have concluded that Social Security proceedings, while non-adversarial in nature, are not ex parte within the meaning of that rule.[14]
            According to Attorney Pirro, SSR 00-2p could be interpreted tightly, but it is more likely to be interpreted quite broadly given the current climate of conservative decision-making at ODARs across the nation.[15]  He therefore advises claimants’ representatives to submit any and all records even remotely related to a claimant’s healthcare during the period of alleged disability.[16] This broad approach is consistent with a representative’s obligation to assist the claimant in providing, upon SSA’s request, evidence about “any other factors showing how the claimant’s impairment(s) affects his or her ability to work” under CFR 404.1740(b)(2); 416.1540(b)(2).
            It is not difficult to conceive of instances where IVF records could be material to a case. If a claimant with lupus becomes pregnant after IVF treatment, flare ups of that disease could occur with greater frequency necessitating maternal immunosuppressive intervention.[17] On the other hand, some medical conditions, including psoriasis, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis, can improve during pregnancy.[18] In most cases, such issues cannot be discovered until after the evidence is turned in to the tribunal.
            Under SSR 00-2p, an attorney risks being involved in “fraud or similar fault” if IVF records are not submitted. Fraud usually applies to financial deceit.[19] “Similar fault” is defined as follows:
(i)                 an incorrect or incomplete statement that is material to the determination is knowingly made; or
(ii)               information that is material to the determination is knowingly concealed[20]

            Social Security lawyers have a very low rate of disciplinary action and I have personally never heard of an attorney facing civil monetary penalty due to the omission of evidence.[21] That said, when your license and your reputation with the tribunal are at stake, it pays to err on the side of caution. Under SSR 00-2p, all health-related evidence pertaining to the time period in question, however trivial, and even if adverse to the claimant, should be obtained by counsel and turned over to the court. 



[1] http://www.ssa.gov/appeals
[2] Social Security Regulations (SSR) 96-8p (2006)
[3] 20 CFR 405.331(2006)
[4] 20 CFR 404.929
[5] 20 CFR 404.970; A Federal court can also subsequently review the administrative record established at hearing under the “substantial evidence” standard. See Consolidated Edison Co. of NY v. NLRB, 305 US 197 (1938)
[6] Heckler v. Day, 467 US 104 (1984)
[7] Richardson v. Perales, 402 US 389, at 400 (1971)
[8] 20 CFR 404.1512 (a)
[9] HALLEX (Hearings, Appeals & Litigation Law Manual), I-1-3-15, last updated May 13, 2014.  Visit http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/hallex/1-01/1-1-3-15.html
[10] Charles Pirro, Attorney at Law (personal communication, May 23, 2014) Attorney Pirro previously prepared a presentation on SSR 00-2p for a NOSSCR conference in DC.
[11] Model Rules of Prof’L Conduct, R 1.6(a) (2006); for Connecticut’s version, visit: http://www.jud.ct.gov/publications/PracticeBook/PB.pdf (2014).
[12] Rains, Robert E. “Professional Responsibility and Social Security Representation: The Myth of the State-Bar Bar to Compliance with Federal Rules on Production of Adverse Evidence.” Cornell Law Review, Vol. 92:363 at 394.
[13] MR 3.3 (d)
[14] See Rains, “Professional Responsibility” Vol. 92, 363(2006) at 383, citing Ala. State Bar Ass’n Disciplinary Comm’n, Op. RO-93-06 (1993); and N.C. State Bar, 98 Formal Ethics Op. 1 (1999), reprinted in The North Carolina State Bar Lawyer’s Handbook 229 (2000).
[15] Pirro, May 23, 14; On the issue of ODARs nationwide becoming increasingly “conservative” with respect to decision-making, see  http://www.northjersey.com, “Four Social Security Judges Accused of Rubber Stamping Claims for Disability Benefits”, AP (June 10, 2014) stating that, overall, grant rates are the lowest in years. In 2013, 56% of cases at all levels of SSA were granted, down from 72% in 2005.
[16] Id.
[17] http://www.emedicine.medscape.com/ “Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Pregnancy” Khurana, Ritu, MD (April 29, 2014).
[18] http://www.babycenter.com, “Strange but True: Pregnancy Can Improve Chronic Health Conditions” Lack, Evonne, MD.
[19] Rains, at 376, 377
[20] 42 USC section 1383 €(7)(B)(2000)
[21] Swank, Drew A, “Non-Attorney SSD Representatives and the Unauthorized Practice of Law” Southern Illinois Law Journal, Vol. 36, at 151 (2012), referencing SSA’s list of sanctioned representatives (April 11, 2011) available at http://odar.ba.ssa.gov/odarweb/oac/scsrep.cfm. According to Swank, since 1980, when records began, a total of 178 representatives have been suspended or disqualified from representing claimants before SSA. Of the 178, 101 have been non-attorney representatives.

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