Poire v. Saul

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Poire v. Saul

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                

ELIZABETH JANE POIRE,                   No. 20-cv-00888 (KMM-ECW)        

               Plaintiff,                                                

v.                                          ORDER                        

MARTIN O’MALLEY,                                                         
Commissioner of Social Security                                          
Defendant,                                                               

               Defendant.                                                


    This matter is before the Court on the Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees.  ECF 
45.  The Plaintiff seeks an award of $21,383.00 pursuant to 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b)(1), upon 
the receipt of which Plaintiff’s counsel will refund $8,000 to Plaintiff, representing the sum 
already paid to counsel on Plaintiff’s behalf pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act 
(“EAJA”).  
Id.
                                                            
    The Commissioner does not oppose either the award of fees or the specific amount 
requested by counsel in this case but filed a response asking the Court to “decline to include 
language directing that the Commissioner ‘pay’ the award.”  ECF 49 at 2.  “Alternatively, 
the Commissioner requests that the Court specifically indicate that any amount it authorizes 
in § 406(b) fees is to be paid out of Plaintiff’s past-due benefits in accordance with agency 
policy.”  Id.  Plaintiff declined to file a reply, either directed to this specific request or any 
other aspect of Defendant’s response.  See ECF 50.  However, Plaintiff's proposed order 
for the fees motion includes language consistent with the Commissioner's request that the 
Court not order the Commissioner to “pay” awarded fees, but to “authorize” those fees to 
be paid out of amounts withheld from Plaintiff's past-due benefits.  See ECF 47.  For the 

reasons described below, the Court grants Plaintiff’s motion and will adopt the language 
in the Plaintiff’s proposed order.                                        
 I.   BACKGROUND                                                         
    Plaintiff filed claims for Social Security disability insurance benefits, disabled 
widow’s benefits, and supplemental security income benefits on June 15, 2016, alleging a 
disability onset date of December 18, 2008.  See ECF 29 (Pl’s Mot. for S.J.) at 1.  Her 

claims were denied initially and upon reconsideration. Id. at 2. Plaintiff requested further 
review, and an Administrative Law Judge denied Plaintiff’s application in April 2019.  
Plaintiff’s request for review by the Appeals Council was denied on February 22, 2020.  
Id. at 3. Plaintiff then sought judicial review of the ALJ’s decision from this Court.  See 
ECF 4 (Compl.).  Upon the filing of a subsequent motion for summary judgment by 

Plaintiff (ECF 29), the parties reached an agreement that the case should be remanded to 
the Social Security Administration (the “Agency”) for further proceedings.  ECF 32.  On 
February 11, 2021, the Court ordered remand.  ECF 35.  On April 5, 2021, the Court 
awarded Plaintiff $8,000.00 in fees under the EAJA by this Court.  ECF 43. 
    On remand, the ALJ issued a favorable decision to Plaintiff, and she was awarded 

approximately $83,000.00 in past-due benefits.  ECF 45 at 1.  Plaintiff now seeks attorneys’ 
fees pursuant to 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b)(1), based on that award.              
 II.  DISCUSSION                                                         
    Under 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b), the Court may award a “reasonable fee” to a successful 
claimant’s counsel for worked performed before the Court, in an amount not to exceed 

25% of the total past due benefits awarded to the claimant.  The 25-percent figure is merely 
an upper cap on fees established by Congress, and counsel for a successful claimant must 
still “show that the fee sought is reasonable for the services rendered.” Gisbrecht v. 
Barnhart, 
535 U.S. 789, 807
 (2002).  The Court has an independent obligation to determine 
whether an attorneys’ fee award in this amount is reasonable.  
Id. at 808
. 
    The Court must first determine whether the plaintiff was successful, because a 

requirement of § 406(b)(1)(A) is “a judgment favorable to the claimant.”  The Court finds 
the representation of Plaintiff was ultimately successful because it resulted in the award of 
$83,000.001 in past-due disability benefits. See, e.g., Smith v. Kijakazi, No. 19-cv-01571 
(SRN/HB), 
2023 WL 3580817
, at *2 (D. Minn. May 22, 2023) (awarding fees under 
§ 406(b)(1)(A) where the plaintiff’s counsel secured over $80,000 in past-due disability 

benefits). Counsel also notes that plaintiff’s potential lifetime benefit will amount to much 
more than $83,000. ECF 45 at 3.                                           
    Next, the Court must determine if the requested attorneys’ fees are reasonable.  
Plaintiff seeks $21,383.00 in attorneys’ fees, amounting to 25% of the past-due benefits 
awarded and the maximum permitted under § 406(b)(1).  The Court finds that the requested 



1 Plaintiff states that she has yet to receive a “notice of award explicitly stating her past 
due benefits” and that the $83,000 is an approximation based on the best available 
information. See ECF 45 at 1 n.1. The Court accepts this figure as accurate for the 
purposes of considering the fees motion.                                  
fees are reasonable.  Plaintiff entered a contingency agreement with counsel and agreed to 
pay 25% of any past-due benefits awarded. Id. at 4. The fee agreement comports with the 

25% statutory cap imposed by § 406(b).  The Supreme Court has explained that contingent-
fee agreements for the statutory maximum 25% of past-due benefits “are the most common 
fee arrangement between attorneys and Social Security claimants.”  Gisbrecht, 
535 U.S. at 800
.  There is also no indication that Plaintiff’s counsel caused any delay in this matter or 
provided substandard representation which could warrant a reduction.  
Id. at 808
. 
    Nor would the full award here be so “large in comparison to the amount of time 

counsel spent on the case” as to warrant a reduction.  
Id.
  Her counsel spent a combined 
45.2 hours on this case. See ECF 46-3 (Itemized Time for Plaintiff’s Counsel attached as 
Exhibit  B  to  Plaintiff’s  fees  motion).  This  means  the  full  amount  requested  would 
compensate counsel at an effective rate of $473.08 per hour. This rate is below other 
approved rates in this district.  E.g., Smith, 
2023 WL 3580817
 at *2 (approving award with 

effective rate of $900 and collecting cases from this district approving awards amounting 
to greater effective rates).  Finally, the number of hours that counsel reported spending on 
this matter is not excessive in light of the complexity of the administrative and judicial 
record at issue in this case.                                             
    Considering the terms of the contingency fee agreement between Plaintiff and her 

counsel, the amount of effort expended on Plaintiff’s case, the length of the proceedings, 
the comparable rates awarded for Social Security cases in this District, and the statutory 
requirements  of  Section  406(b),  the  Court  finds  that  a  fee  award  of  $21,383.00  is 
reasonable.                                                               
    Attorneys may collect fee awards for the same work under both EAJA and 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b), but the attorney must “‘refund to the claimant the amount of the smaller fee.’”  

Gisbrecht, 
535 U.S. at 796
 (quoting Act of Aug. 5, 1985, 
Pub. L. No. 99-80, § 3
, 
99 Stat. 183
, 186) (brackets removed).  The fee awarded under EAJA here is smaller than that under 
§ 406(b), so Plaintiff’s counsel must refund to the Plaintiff the $8,000 in previously 
awarded EAJA fees.  “Unlike Section 406(b) fees, which are taken from the claimant’s 
recovery, EAJA fees are paid from agency funds as a penalty to the Commissioner.”  Drake 
v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., No. 14-12662, 
2016 WL 492704
, at *2 (E.D. Mich. Feb. 9, 2016). 

 III.  ORDER                                                             
    For the foregoing reasons, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:                     
    1.  Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees Pursuant to 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b) [ECF 45] 
      is GRANTED.                                                        
    2.  The Court authorizes a payment to Karl E. Osterhout, Esquire, counsel for 
      Plaintiff, in the amount of $21,383.00 in attorney’s fees being withheld from 

      Plaintiff’s past-due benefits for court related services.          
    3.  Upon receipt of this sum, counsel for Plaintiff shall remit $8,000.00 directly to 
      Plaintiff, representing the sum already paid to counsel on Plaintiff’s behalf 
      pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act, 
28 U.S.C. §2412
.      

Date: June 17, 2024                                                       
                                    s/Katherine Menendez                 
                                  Katherine Menendez                     
                                  United States District Judge           

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                

ELIZABETH JANE POIRE,                   No. 20-cv-00888 (KMM-ECW)        

               Plaintiff,                                                

v.                                          ORDER                        

MARTIN O’MALLEY,                                                         
Commissioner of Social Security                                          
Defendant,                                                               

               Defendant.                                                


    This matter is before the Court on the Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees.  ECF 
45.  The Plaintiff seeks an award of $21,383.00 pursuant to 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b)(1), upon 
the receipt of which Plaintiff’s counsel will refund $8,000 to Plaintiff, representing the sum 
already paid to counsel on Plaintiff’s behalf pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act 
(“EAJA”).  
Id.
                                                            
    The Commissioner does not oppose either the award of fees or the specific amount 
requested by counsel in this case but filed a response asking the Court to “decline to include 
language directing that the Commissioner ‘pay’ the award.”  ECF 49 at 2.  “Alternatively, 
the Commissioner requests that the Court specifically indicate that any amount it authorizes 
in § 406(b) fees is to be paid out of Plaintiff’s past-due benefits in accordance with agency 
policy.”  Id.  Plaintiff declined to file a reply, either directed to this specific request or any 
other aspect of Defendant’s response.  See ECF 50.  However, Plaintiff's proposed order 
for the fees motion includes language consistent with the Commissioner's request that the 
Court not order the Commissioner to “pay” awarded fees, but to “authorize” those fees to 
be paid out of amounts withheld from Plaintiff's past-due benefits.  See ECF 47.  For the 

reasons described below, the Court grants Plaintiff’s motion and will adopt the language 
in the Plaintiff’s proposed order.                                        
 I.   BACKGROUND                                                         
    Plaintiff filed claims for Social Security disability insurance benefits, disabled 
widow’s benefits, and supplemental security income benefits on June 15, 2016, alleging a 
disability onset date of December 18, 2008.  See ECF 29 (Pl’s Mot. for S.J.) at 1.  Her 

claims were denied initially and upon reconsideration. Id. at 2. Plaintiff requested further 
review, and an Administrative Law Judge denied Plaintiff’s application in April 2019.  
Plaintiff’s request for review by the Appeals Council was denied on February 22, 2020.  
Id. at 3. Plaintiff then sought judicial review of the ALJ’s decision from this Court.  See 
ECF 4 (Compl.).  Upon the filing of a subsequent motion for summary judgment by 

Plaintiff (ECF 29), the parties reached an agreement that the case should be remanded to 
the Social Security Administration (the “Agency”) for further proceedings.  ECF 32.  On 
February 11, 2021, the Court ordered remand.  ECF 35.  On April 5, 2021, the Court 
awarded Plaintiff $8,000.00 in fees under the EAJA by this Court.  ECF 43. 
    On remand, the ALJ issued a favorable decision to Plaintiff, and she was awarded 

approximately $83,000.00 in past-due benefits.  ECF 45 at 1.  Plaintiff now seeks attorneys’ 
fees pursuant to 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b)(1), based on that award.              
 II.  DISCUSSION                                                         
    Under 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b), the Court may award a “reasonable fee” to a successful 
claimant’s counsel for worked performed before the Court, in an amount not to exceed 

25% of the total past due benefits awarded to the claimant.  The 25-percent figure is merely 
an upper cap on fees established by Congress, and counsel for a successful claimant must 
still “show that the fee sought is reasonable for the services rendered.” Gisbrecht v. 
Barnhart, 
535 U.S. 789, 807
 (2002).  The Court has an independent obligation to determine 
whether an attorneys’ fee award in this amount is reasonable.  
Id. at 808
. 
    The Court must first determine whether the plaintiff was successful, because a 

requirement of § 406(b)(1)(A) is “a judgment favorable to the claimant.”  The Court finds 
the representation of Plaintiff was ultimately successful because it resulted in the award of 
$83,000.001 in past-due disability benefits. See, e.g., Smith v. Kijakazi, No. 19-cv-01571 
(SRN/HB), 
2023 WL 3580817
, at *2 (D. Minn. May 22, 2023) (awarding fees under 
§ 406(b)(1)(A) where the plaintiff’s counsel secured over $80,000 in past-due disability 

benefits). Counsel also notes that plaintiff’s potential lifetime benefit will amount to much 
more than $83,000. ECF 45 at 3.                                           
    Next, the Court must determine if the requested attorneys’ fees are reasonable.  
Plaintiff seeks $21,383.00 in attorneys’ fees, amounting to 25% of the past-due benefits 
awarded and the maximum permitted under § 406(b)(1).  The Court finds that the requested 



1 Plaintiff states that she has yet to receive a “notice of award explicitly stating her past 
due benefits” and that the $83,000 is an approximation based on the best available 
information. See ECF 45 at 1 n.1. The Court accepts this figure as accurate for the 
purposes of considering the fees motion.                                  
fees are reasonable.  Plaintiff entered a contingency agreement with counsel and agreed to 
pay 25% of any past-due benefits awarded. Id. at 4. The fee agreement comports with the 

25% statutory cap imposed by § 406(b).  The Supreme Court has explained that contingent-
fee agreements for the statutory maximum 25% of past-due benefits “are the most common 
fee arrangement between attorneys and Social Security claimants.”  Gisbrecht, 
535 U.S. at 800
.  There is also no indication that Plaintiff’s counsel caused any delay in this matter or 
provided substandard representation which could warrant a reduction.  
Id. at 808
. 
    Nor would the full award here be so “large in comparison to the amount of time 

counsel spent on the case” as to warrant a reduction.  
Id.
  Her counsel spent a combined 
45.2 hours on this case. See ECF 46-3 (Itemized Time for Plaintiff’s Counsel attached as 
Exhibit  B  to  Plaintiff’s  fees  motion).  This  means  the  full  amount  requested  would 
compensate counsel at an effective rate of $473.08 per hour. This rate is below other 
approved rates in this district.  E.g., Smith, 
2023 WL 3580817
 at *2 (approving award with 

effective rate of $900 and collecting cases from this district approving awards amounting 
to greater effective rates).  Finally, the number of hours that counsel reported spending on 
this matter is not excessive in light of the complexity of the administrative and judicial 
record at issue in this case.                                             
    Considering the terms of the contingency fee agreement between Plaintiff and her 

counsel, the amount of effort expended on Plaintiff’s case, the length of the proceedings, 
the comparable rates awarded for Social Security cases in this District, and the statutory 
requirements  of  Section  406(b),  the  Court  finds  that  a  fee  award  of  $21,383.00  is 
reasonable.                                                               
    Attorneys may collect fee awards for the same work under both EAJA and 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b), but the attorney must “‘refund to the claimant the amount of the smaller fee.’”  

Gisbrecht, 
535 U.S. at 796
 (quoting Act of Aug. 5, 1985, 
Pub. L. No. 99-80, § 3
, 
99 Stat. 183
, 186) (brackets removed).  The fee awarded under EAJA here is smaller than that under 
§ 406(b), so Plaintiff’s counsel must refund to the Plaintiff the $8,000 in previously 
awarded EAJA fees.  “Unlike Section 406(b) fees, which are taken from the claimant’s 
recovery, EAJA fees are paid from agency funds as a penalty to the Commissioner.”  Drake 
v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., No. 14-12662, 
2016 WL 492704
, at *2 (E.D. Mich. Feb. 9, 2016). 

 III.  ORDER                                                             
    For the foregoing reasons, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:                     
    1.  Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees Pursuant to 
42 U.S.C. § 406
(b) [ECF 45] 
      is GRANTED.                                                        
    2.  The Court authorizes a payment to Karl E. Osterhout, Esquire, counsel for 
      Plaintiff, in the amount of $21,383.00 in attorney’s fees being withheld from 

      Plaintiff’s past-due benefits for court related services.          
    3.  Upon receipt of this sum, counsel for Plaintiff shall remit $8,000.00 directly to 
      Plaintiff, representing the sum already paid to counsel on Plaintiff’s behalf 
      pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act, 
28 U.S.C. §2412
.      

Date: June 17, 2024                                                       
                                    s/Katherine Menendez                 
                                  Katherine Menendez                     
                                  United States District Judge           

Reference

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