Camille Brooks v. Kilolo Kijakazi
Camille Brooks v. Kilolo Kijakazi
Opinion
USCA4 Appeal: 21-2048 Doc: 41 Filed: 02/22/2023 Pg: 1 of 18
PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 21-2048
CAMILLE M. BROOKS,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
v.
KILOLO KIJAKAZI, Acting Commissioner of Social Security,
Defendant - Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Norfolk. Mark S. Davis, Chief District Judge. (2:20-cv-00262-MSD-DEM)
Argued: October 26, 2022 Decided: February 22, 2023
Before KING and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges, and Sherri A. LYDON, United States District Judge for the District of South Carolina, sitting by designation.
Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge Heytens and Judge Lydon joined.
ARGUED: David Fallon Chermol, CHERMOL & FISHMAN, LLC, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellant. Joshua Marc Salzman, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C.; Garry Daniel Hartlieb, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jessica D. Aber, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee. USCA4 Appeal: 21-2048 Doc: 41 Filed: 02/22/2023 Pg: 2 of 18
KING, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff Camille Brooks appeals from the 2021 opinion of the district court in the
Eastern District of Virginia affirming the final decision of defendant Kijakazi, as the Acting
Commissioner of Social Security, which denied Brooks’s claim for disability benefits. See
Brooks v. Kijakazi, No. 2:20-cv-00262 (E.D. Va. Sept. 15, 2021), ECF No. 25 (the
“Opinion”). 1 As explained herein, we agree with Brooks’s appellate contention that,
pursuant to the Supreme Court’s 2018 decision in Lucia v. SEC,
138 S. Ct. 2044(2018),
the administrative law judge (“ALJ Bright”) who rendered the Commissioner’s final
decision did so in contravention of the Constitution’s Appointments Clause. 2 Accordingly,
without resolving the merits contentions that Brooks also pursues on appeal, we vacate the
judgment of the district court and direct a remand to the Commissioner for a new and
plenary hearing on Brooks’s disability benefits claim, to be conducted before a different
and properly appointed ALJ.
1 Hereinafter, we will refer to the defendant Acting Commissioner of Social Security simply as “the Commissioner.” 2 The Appointments Clause of the Constitution of the United States is found at Article II, Section 2, Clause 2, and provides, in haec verba, that the President
shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law: but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.
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I.
A.
Brooks applied for Social Security disability benefits in September 2015, alleging
that she had been disabled since June 2014 due to glaucoma, arthritis, dry eye disease,
migraines, degenerative disc disease, complications from spinal surgery, and a torn rotator
cuff. After her disability benefits claim was denied at the initial and reconsideration levels,
Brooks requested an administrative hearing before an ALJ of the Social Security
Administration (the “Agency”), and a hearing was convened and conducted by ALJ Bright
in January 2018. On March 15, 2018, ALJ Bright denied Brooks’s claim, ruling that,
although Brooks suffered from a series of medically severe impairments, she possessed
sufficiently transferable job skills to enable her to hold positions that were available “in
significant numbers in the national economy.” See A.R. 139 (the “2018 ALJ Decision”). 3
Brooks’s ability to work in those positions, ALJ Bright explained, barred a finding of
“disability” status under the Social Security Act. Brooks promptly appealed the 2018 ALJ
Decision to the Agency’s Appeals Council.
In June 2018, while Brooks’s administrative appeal was pending before the Appeals
Council, the Supreme Court decided Lucia v. SEC — the decision of the Court that
underpins our ruling today — which recognized that the ALJs of the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) are “inferior Officers” of the United States within the
3 Citations herein to “A.R. __” refer to the contents of the Administrative Record in this appeal.
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meaning of the Appointments Clause. See
138 S. Ct. 2044, 2051, 2055(2018) (citing U.S.
Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2). Because the Appointments Clause requires such “inferior
Officers” to be appointed by either the President, a court of law, or the head of an executive
department, the Lucia Court ruled that the SEC ALJ overseeing the administrative
proceedings at issue — who had been appointed by SEC staff members — “lacked
constitutional authority to do his job.” Id. at 2050. Accordingly, the Court remanded
Lucia’s case to the SEC for a new hearing before a different and properly appointed ALJ.
On July 16, 2018, recognizing that Agency ALJs were — like the SEC ALJs —
selected by the Agency staff, the Commissioner responded to the Supreme Court’s Lucia
decision by “ratif[ying] the appointments of [the Agency’s] ALJs” and “approv[ing] those
appointments as her own” — including, as relevant here, the appointment of ALJ Bright.
See
84 Fed. Reg. 9582, 9583 (Mar. 15, 2019). In early 2019, the Agency issued guidance
to its Appeals Council directing that, in response to timely raised Appointments Clause
challenges to pre-ratification ALJ decisions, the Council should “vacate the hearing
decision” and “remand the case to an ALJ other than the ALJ who issued the decision under
review.”
Id.Of great importance, the parties to this appeal do not dispute that, pursuant
to Lucia, the denial of Brooks’s disability benefits claim in the 2018 ALJ Decision was
invalid — owing to ALJ Bright’s then-unconstitutional appointment.
On October 24, 2018, after granting Brooks’s request for review, the Agency’s
Appeals Council vacated the 2018 ALJ Decision that denied Brooks’s disability benefits
claim and remanded her case for further proceedings. Brooks had not theretofore presented
the Appeals Council with an Appointments Clause challenge, however, and the Council
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did not address the Appointments Clause issue or the Supreme Court’s Lucia decision.
Rather, the Council identified potential flaws in the evidence provided by a vocational
expert regarding Brooks’s transferable job skills, and it consequently remanded Brooks’s
disability benefits claim to ALJ Bright on that basis.
With Brooks’s disability benefits claim having been returned from the Appeals
Council, ALJ Bright — with a post-Lucia appointment in hand and having been duly
ratified by the Commissioner — conducted another hearing on Brooks’s claim and received
evidence from a new vocational expert. On April 25, 2019, ALJ Bright once again ruled
that Brooks was not “disabled” and denied her disability claim, concluding that Brooks
possessed the residual functional capacity to perform “light work” and could perform her
“sedentary[] and light” past relevant work as an assistant museum director. See A.R. 20,
24 (the “2019 ALJ Decision”). On March 27, 2020, the Appeals Council denied review of
the 2019 ALJ Decision, making that Decision the “final decision of the Commissioner,”
and rendering it eligible for judicial review pursuant to
42 U.S.C. § 405(g).
B.
1.
Brooks initiated this civil action in the Eastern District of Virginia on May 21, 2020,
alleging that the 2019 ALJ Decision was not supported by substantial evidence and, in turn,
requesting an award of disability benefits or a remand to the Agency “for further
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development and analysis.” See J.A. 20. 4 By her complaint and ensuing motion for
summary judgment, Brooks maintained that (1) ALJ Bright had failed to resolve
contradictory evidence from the two vocational experts; (2) ALJ Bright had failed to
account for Brooks’s mild mental functional limitations in determining her residual
functional capacity; and also (3) that, under Lucia, the 2019 ALJ Decision was fatally
tainted by the undisputed Appointments Clause defect underlying the 2018 ALJ Decision.
2.
In a Report and Recommendation issued in July 2021 (the “R&R”), a magistrate
judge in the Eastern District of Virginia recommended that the district court grant the
Commissioner’s cross-motion for summary judgment and affirm the 2019 ALJ Decision.
See Brooks v. Kijakazi, No. 2:20-cv-00262 (E.D. Va. July 16, 2021), ECF No. 21. 5 After
resolving that ALJ Bright had properly relied on the vocational expert’s testimony in the
2019 hearing and that Brooks’s mental limitations were adequately evaluated in ALJ
Bright’s analysis, the R&R assessed Brooks’s Appointments Clause challenge. In that
regard, the R&R recognized that, although Brooks had failed to raise her Appointments
Clause contention in the administrative proceedings, the Supreme Court’s 2021 decision
in Carr v. Saul had concluded that Social Security claimants were not required to raise
Appointments Clause challenges before the Agency in order to preserve that constitutional
4 Citations herein to “J.A. __” refer to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed by the parties in this appeal. 5 The district court had referred Brooks’s claims to the magistrate judge pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B).
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issue for review in federal court. See
141 S. Ct. 1352, 1356(2021). Accordingly, pursuant
to Carr, Brooks had interposed a “timely challenge to the constitutional validity of the
appointment of [the] officer who adjudicate[d] [her] case,” in that she was pursuing her
Appointments Clause claim in her federal court proceedings. See Lucia,
138 S. Ct. at 2055.
Nevertheless, the R&R recommended to the district court that the 2019 ALJ
Decision was not fatally flawed by the Appointments Clause error. The R&R reasoned
that, although the 2018 adjudication of Brooks’s disability benefits claim was
constitutionally infirm, there was no need for a different ALJ to have adjudicated Brooks’s
claim on remand from the Appeals Council post-Lucia. According to the R&R, the Council
had vacated the 2018 ALJ Decision in view of “a specific evidentiary defect” — and not
because of the Appointments Clause defect. See R&R 24. The R&R recognized that the
Supreme Court had explained in Lucia that the remedy for an Appointments Clause
violation was chosen in part out of concern that an illegally appointed ALJ could not “be
expected to consider the matter as though he had not adjudicated it before.”
Id.(quoting
Lucia,
138 S. Ct. at 2055). Because the 2018 ALJ Decision was vacated on a merits-based
issue, however, the R&R resolved that “the concern animating the Supreme Court’s
remand order in Lucia is not present,” and thus that Lucia’s remedy of remand to a different
ALJ was inapplicable and inappropriate. Id. at 25.
3.
By its Opinion of September 15, 2021, the district court adopted the R&R in full,
granted the Commissioner’s motion for summary judgment, denied Brooks’s summary
judgment motion, and affirmed the Agency’s denial of Brooks’s disability benefits claim.
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The court rebuffed Brooks’s objections to the R&R, concluding that her merits-related
challenges to the 2019 ALJ Decision failed.
In assessing Brooks’s Appointments Clause challenge, the district court resolved
that the 2019 ALJ Decision was constitutionally sound because (1) ALJ Bright had —
before the 2019 ALJ Decision — been properly appointed within the mandate of the
Appointments Clause; (2) the Appeals Council’s vacatur of the constitutionally infirm 2018
ALJ Decision on a merits-related issue eliminated any requirement to apply Lucia’s
remedy of a remand to a different ALJ; and (3) in any event, the Supreme Court had
specified in Lucia that it “[did] not hold that a new officer is required for every
Appointments Clause violation.” See Opinion 8 (quoting Lucia,
138 S. Ct. at 2055n.5).
Following entry of the final judgment, Brooks timely noticed this appeal. We possess
jurisdiction pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
On appeal, Brooks presents the same contentions that she pressed in the district
court against the 2019 ALJ Decision. Specifically, she contends that ALJ Bright failed to
“explain the weight she gave to the conflicting testimony” provided by the competing
vocational experts; that ALJ Bright neglected to consider Brooks’s mental limitations in
assessing her residual functional capacity; and that, because the 2018 ALJ Decision
represented an unconstitutional rejection of Brooks’s disability benefits claim that was not
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cured as required by Lucia, the 2019 ALJ Decision contravened the Appointments Clause.
See Br. of Appellant 10. 6
In reviewing a Social Security disability determination, we afford no deference to a
district court’s decision and will instead uphold the ALJ’s underlying determination so long
as the ALJ applied the correct legal standards and the resulting conclusion is supported by
substantial evidence. See Bird v. Comm’r of Social Sec. Admin.,
699 F.3d 337, 440(4th
Cir. 2012) (citing
42 U.S.C. § 405(g)). In these circumstances, however, we need not
resolve the question of whether the 2019 ALJ Decision was supported by substantial
evidence. As explained herein, that Decision is constitutionally infirm under Lucia.
Without resolving the merits contentions, we are obliged to vacate the judgment and
remand for Brooks’s disability benefits claim to be returned to the Commissioner for a new
and plenary hearing before a different and properly appointed ALJ.
6 We observe that Brooks has cast her Appointments Clause appellate argument largely in terms of issue preservation and forfeiture, defending her ability to receive relief on the constitutional claim notwithstanding her failure to present it during the administrative proceedings. But as explained previously — and as the Commissioner concedes, see Br. of Appellee 20 — the Supreme Court has now ruled that Social Security claimants are not required to exhaust their Appointments Clause challenges before the Agency in order to pursue them in federal court. See Carr v. Saul,
141 S. Ct. 1352, 1356, 1360-61(2021). In any event, Brooks has correctly explained that the Appointments Clause entitles her to a remand and a new and plenary hearing on her disability benefits claim. See Br. of Appellant 39, 42. 9 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2048 Doc: 41 Filed: 02/22/2023 Pg: 10 of 18
III.
A.
The Appointments Clause of Article II of the Constitution specifies that the
President “shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall
appoint . . . Officers of the United States.” See U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2. Relevant here,
the Clause goes on to provide that “the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of
such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or
in the Heads of Departments.” Id. Because the Appointments Clause acts to “preserve[]
. . . the Constitution’s structural integrity by preventing the diffusion of the appointment
power,” see Ryder v. United States,
515 U.S. 177, 182(1995), “remedies with bite” should
be applied to appointments that run afoul of the Clause’s restrictions, see Cody v. Kijakazi,
48 F.4th 956, 960 (9th Cir. 2022).
In Lucia v. SEC, the Supreme Court held in June 2018 that the SEC’s ALJs are
“inferior Officers” under the Constitution, and that those ALJ positions are subject to the
requirements of the Appointments Clause. See
138 S. Ct. 2044, 2055(2018). That is so,
the Court ruled, because the SEC’s ALJs wield “extensive powers . . . comparable to that
of a federal district judge conducting a bench trial,” occupy “continuing office[s]
established by law,” and “exercis[e] significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United
States.”
Id. at 2049, 2051, 2053 (citing Freytag v. Comm’r,
501 U.S. 868(1991)).
Accordingly, the Lucia Court ruled that the SEC’s ALJs were required to be appointed by
“the President alone,” a “Court of Law,” or a “Head of Department,” and that a department
head can include “the Commission itself.” Id. at 2050. Although Lucia dealt specifically
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with SEC ALJs, the Court’s ruling on the Appointments Clause has been treated in
subsequent decisions to apply broadly to ALJs in other executive department federal
agencies. See, e.g., Carr v. Saul,
141 S. Ct. 1352, 1357(2021) (applying Lucia to judicial
review of Appointments Clause challenges to decisions rendered by Agency ALJs).
The SEC ALJ at issue in Lucia had been selected by the SEC staff. Because that
ALJ was not the sort of “non-officer employee” about whom “the Appointments Clause
cares not a whit,” the Lucia Court ruled that the ALJ’s decision regarding compliance with
the federal securities laws was in contravention of the Clause. See
138 S. Ct. at 2051. In
turn, the Court determined that the “relief [that] follows” from a timely and valid
Appointments Clause challenge is “a new hearing before a properly appointed official.”
Id.at 2055 (quoting Ryder,
515 U.S. at 182-83). Importantly, the Court specified that the
“new hearing” that Lucia referenced could not be conducted by the same ALJ that had
rendered the decision at issue — even if that ALJ “has by now received (or receives
sometime in the future) a constitutional appointment” — because the initial ALJ “cannot
be expected to consider the matter as though he ha[s] not adjudicated it before.”
Id.Explaining its remedy, the Court in Lucia emphasized that “providing a successful
litigant with a hearing before a new judge” not only serves the Appointments Clause’s
structural purposes, but also “create[s] incentives to raise Appointments Clause
challenges,” given that “the old judge would have no reason to think he did anything wrong
on the merits . . . and so could be expected to reach all the same judgments,” if the matter
in dispute were returned to him. See
138 S. Ct. at 2055n.5. At bottom, the Court made
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plain that, “[t]o cure the constitutional error, another ALJ . . . must hold the new hearing to
which [the claimant] is entitled.”
Id. at 2055.
B.
1.
a.
In this appeal, there is no dispute that the 2018 ALJ Decision denying Brooks’s
disability benefits claim was not constitutionally sound. That is, ALJ Bright was
improperly appointed to her post as an ALJ by the Agency staff. But Brooks and the
Commissioner have parted ways on the constitutional validity of the 2019 ALJ Decision,
also rendered by ALJ Bright. Brooks insists that, because she has not received the remedy
prescribed by Lucia for the Appointments Clause violation that infected the 2018 ALJ
Decision, the 2019 ALJ Decision was fatally “tainted” by its 2018 predecessor and is also
a nullity. In the circumstances, we are constrained to agree with Brooks.
The Commissioner, for her part, primarily counters by adopting the district court’s
conclusion that, because “[t]he only decision under review by this Court is the ALJ’s April
2019 merits-based decision, which was made after the ALJ’s appointment was ratified by
the Acting Commissioner . . . [Brooks’s] Appointments Clause objection fails.” See
Opinion 8-9. More specifically, the Commissioner argues that, because ALJ Bright’s
“appointment was ratified . . . before she issued the decision at issue in this appeal,” there
is no reversible constitutional error for us to correct. See Br. of Appellee 20. The
Commissioner also asserts that the Appointments Clause infirmity of the 2018 ALJ
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Decision is “of no moment,” because it was later vacated by the Appeals Council. Id. at
21.
It is true that, when ALJ Bright filed her second denial of Brooks’s disability
benefits claim in April 2019, she had been properly appointed to her ALJ position by virtue
of the Commissioner’s 2018 ratification. And the 2019 ALJ Decision is the ruling now
being challenged. But the Commissioner overlooks at least three important facts: (1) ALJ
Bright denied Brooks’s disability benefits claim in 2018 in contravention of the
Appointments Clause; (2) the Supreme Court thereafter decided in Lucia that, “[t]o cure
[that] constitutional error, another ALJ . . . must hold [a] new hearing,” see
138 S. Ct. at 2055; and (3) Brooks has never been afforded the remedy specified by the Lucia Court.
Although Brooks was accorded another hearing, the very same ALJ — ALJ Bright —
presided and again denied Brooks’s claim by way of the 2019 ALJ Decision.
In that regard, this appeal bears striking similarities to the Ninth Circuit’s recent
decision in Cody v. Kijakazi,
48 F.4th 956(9th Cir. 2022). There, an Agency ALJ denied
Cody’s claim for Social Security benefits in September 2017 — well before the
Commissioner’s 2018 ratification and in violation of the Appointments Clause. In
September 2018, following the Lucia decision and the Commissioner’s ratification, Cody
sought review of the ALJ’s ruling in federal court, but did not raise an Appointments Clause
challenge. The district court granted relief to Cody, vacating the ALJ’s ruling on an
evidentiary issue. On remand, the Appeals Council returned Cody’s benefits claim to the
same ALJ — who in 2019 again denied Cody’s claim. Cody then returned to the district
court, raising both merits and Appointments Clause challenges to the ALJ’s 2019 decision.
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The district court nevertheless affirmed, denying Cody’s Appointments Clause claim
“because the 2017 decision had been vacated and [the ALJ] was properly appointed when
she issued the 2019 decision.” Id. at 960. In other words, the district court in Cody’s case
applied the same erroneous reasoning as the district court in this case.
The Ninth Circuit vacated the district court’s Cody decision in 2022, however, and
it remanded Cody’s claim to the Agency, directing that “[t]he Commissioner should . . .
assign a different, validly appointed ALJ to rehear and adjudicate Cody’s case de novo.”
See 48 F.4th at 963 (emphasis in original). The court of appeals decision emphasized that
an Appointments Clause violation is “no mere technicality or quaint formality — it
weakens our constitutional design.” Id. at 960. After assessing the rationale and
requirements of the Supreme Court’s Lucia decision, the Ninth Circuit ruled that the
Agency ALJ’s “2017 decision tainted the post-ratification 2019 decision.” Id. at 962.
Although its decision recognized that the Agency ALJ in Cody had been properly appointed
when she denied Cody’s claim in 2019, the court of appeals explained explicitly that,
“because the same ALJ issued both decisions, Cody did not receive what Lucia requires:
an adjudication untainted by an Appointments Clause violation.” Id.
Put simply, the Cody decision is practically on all-fours, and there is no reason for
us to reach a different conclusion and thus create a circuit split. Given that ALJ Bright
“lacked constitutional authority to do [her] job” with respect to Brooks’s disability benefits
claim in 2018, see Lucia,
138 S. Ct. at 2050— and because Brooks never received the
requisite remedy — the constitutional error committed in 2018 was a continuing violation
that infected ALJ Bright’s 2019 adjudication of the same claim. And the Lucia decision
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explains that claimants (like Brooks) are entitled to relief from any “adjudication tainted
with an appointments violation.” See
138 S. Ct. at 2055. The district court, for its part,
concluded that there was no such blight on the 2019 ALJ Decision because “[t]he ALJ was
properly appointed during the entire administrative adjudication that this Court is
reviewing.” See Opinion 9. But the “entire administrative adjudication” necessarily
included the flawed 2018 ALJ Decision and, pursuant to Lucia, ALJ Bright could not
thereafter properly rule on Brooks’s disability benefits claim.
b.
Seeking to bolster the argument that ALJ Bright could properly review and again
resolve Brooks’s case in 2019, the Commissioner also explains that, because Brooks did
not raise an Appointments Clause challenge in her administrative appeal, the Appeals
Council was under no obligation to send the case to a new ALJ when it vacated the 2018
ALJ Decision. We take no issue with that proposition. And, to be clear, we do not rule
that the Appeals Council had a sua sponte obligation to raise the Appointments Clause
issue on Brooks’s behalf.
What we reject, however, is the Commissioner’s representation that “there is no
reason that Brooks is entitled to the special remedy of a hearing before a new ALJ, which
is reserved as an incentive for those who flag uncorrected defects in the agency
proceeding.” See Br. of Appellee 23. As we see it, Brooks did properly flag the
Appointments Clause defect — raising the issue in the district court — and the Supreme
Court settled that very question in her favor in the Carr decision. See
141 S. Ct. at 1356;
see also supra note 6. Pursuant to Carr, Brooks “ma[de] a timely challenge to the
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constitutional validity of the appointment of [the] officer who adjudicate[d] [her] case,”
and she is therefore “entitled to [the] relief” established by Lucia. See
138 S. Ct. at 2055.
2.
The Commissioner separately maintains — again adhering to the reasoning of the
district court — that Lucia’s remedy of a new hearing before a different ALJ is unnecessary
and irrelevant in these circumstances, in that the Appeals Council actually vacated the 2018
ALJ Decision on a merits-based issue. As the Opinion explained, the Supreme Court
fashioned the Lucia remedy in part “to create incentives to raise Appointments Clause
challenges,” recognizing that if a constitutionally infirm ALJ decision were returned to the
same adjudicator, “the old judge would have no reason to think he did anything wrong on
the merits, and so could be expected to reach all the same judgments.” See
138 S. Ct. at 2055n.5. That being so, the Commissioner maintains that the Appeals Council rendered
Lucia’s remedy inapplicable by affirmatively advising ALJ Bright “that something was
substantively wrong in her prior decision” (regarding the first vocational expert’s testimony
as to Brooks’s transferable job skills). See Br. of Appellee 21.
This alternative contention falls flat for at least two sound reasons. First, the
Appeals Council’s merits-based vacatur simply is not relevant to Brooks’s Appointments
Clause challenge. To be sure, the Lucia decision identified the aforementioned
“incentivization” rationale as the general basis for its chosen remedy, but it did not carve
out any exception to the remedy’s necessity for the situation where a constitutionally infirm
ALJ decision has been vacated on a merits-related issue. To the contrary, the Court ruled
— in no uncertain terms — that “[t]o cure the constitutional error, another ALJ . . . must
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hold the new hearing to which [the claimant] is entitled.” See
138 S. Ct. at 2055. Put
differently, where an improperly appointed ALJ decides a claim in contravention of the
Appointments Clause, the structural constitutional error will remain in place unless and
until a different, properly appointed ALJ assesses and resolves the claim. And, as Brooks
persuasively argues, it would border on absurd to ignore a patent constitutional violation
(and the remedy developed therefor) because of evidentiary defects in the constitutionally
flawed proceedings. As the Ninth Circuit aptly put it, an Appointments Clause violation
is “no mere technicality or quaint formality” that can so easily be overlooked, in that such
a violation “weakens our constitutional design.” See Cody, 48 F.4th at 960.
The Commissioner’s position also fails because the Appeals Council’s merits-
related vacatur of the 2018 ALJ Decision does not fully eliminate the problem identified
by the Lucia Court that, on remand, the same ALJ would be hard pressed to “consider the
matter as though [she] had not adjudicated it before.” See
138 S. Ct. at 2055. Because
ALJ Bright had already heard and decided the merits of Brooks’s disability benefits claim,
a strong possibility remained that she would resolve the issue identified by the Appeals
Council and, in the end, simply make the same ruling. And that is precisely what happened
here. ALJ Bright received new vocational evidence in the 2019 hearing, opted not to rest
her decision on the issue of Brooks’s transferable job skills (instead resolving that Brooks
could perform her past relevant work), and again denied Brooks’s disability benefits claim.
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The nature of the Appeals Council’s vacatur in this case, in other words, does little to
undermine the “incentivizing” purpose of Lucia’s remedy. 7
***
At bottom, the Lucia decision controls our resolution of this appeal. The Supreme
Court made clear that if an ALJ makes a ruling absent a proper constitutional appointment,
and if the claimant interposes a timely Appointments Clause challenge, the appropriate
remedy is for the claim to be reheard before a new decisionmaker. Brooks did not receive
that remedy. The Appointments Clause violation as to Brooks was thus not cured, and the
2019 ALJ Decision was likewise rendered in contravention of that Clause. Faithful to the
Supreme Court’s Lucia’s mandate, we are obliged to vacate and remand.
IV.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand
for the return of Brooks’s disability benefits claim to the Commissioner for a new and
plenary hearing before a different and properly appointed ALJ.
VACATED AND REMANDED
7 Although the Commissioner does not argue the point, the district court explained that Lucia’s new hearing and new ALJ assignment was not necessary in Brooks’s case because the Supreme Court had not framed the remedy as “a bright-line rule.” See Opinion 8. The court deemed it significant that “[t]he Lucia Court explicitly acknowledged that it ‘do[es] not hold that a new officer is required for every Appointments Clause violation.’”
Id.But the Supreme Court in Lucia explained that it could “give [the] remedy here because other ALJs (and the [SEC]) are available to hear this case on remand” and that the remedy would be unavailable only if “there is no substitute decisionmaker.” See
138 S. Ct. at 2055n.5. Nothing in this record indicates that “no substitute decisionmaker” is available to rehear Brooks’s disability benefits claim. Accordingly, we recognize that this point has properly been abandoned by the Commissioner. 18
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