Under a sentence six court remand, the ALJ may not dismiss
the RH, even when it appears a claimant has abandoned the RH or
the claimant expressly states that he or she wants to withdraw the
RH. In all circumstances in which a dismissal would normally be
the appropriate action, the ALJ must issue a decision, specifically
addressing the particular issue that would normally be the basis
for a dismissal action.
For example, when a claimant fails to appear for the hearing
and does not establish good cause for such failure to appear, or
when the claimant asks to withdraw the RH, the ALJ must document
the facts of the abandonment or withdrawal and the effect the claimant's
action has on the proceedings. Under these circumstances, the ALJ's
decision will specifically include the following:
•
A statement of the
procedural history on remand from the court;
•
A discussion of the facts surrounding the conclusion
that the claimant has either abandoned or withdrawn the RH (see
HALLEX HA 01240.025 or HA 01240.020);
•
A discussion of the supporting documents entered
in the record (i.e., notices sent to the claimant, attempts to contact
the claimant or the representative, and the claimant's statements,
if any);
•
An explanation that the claimant's action renders
the controversy moot, thereby making additional administrative proceedings
unnecessary; and
•
A statement adopting the prior final decision of
the Commissioner, as modified.
For a sample decision when the claimant abandons or requests
withdrawal after a sentence six court remand, see HALLEX HA 01280.097.