A Federal court will remand under sentence six of section 205(g) of the Act in two
situations:
•
The Commissioner requests a remand before answering the
complaint in a motion that shows good cause for the remand (usually
due to procedural issues such as a lost claim(s) file, a missing
hearing recording, or a hearing recording that cannot be transcribed);
or
•
At any time when there is new and material evidence and
there is good cause for failing to incorporate the evidence into the
record earlier.
A sentence six remand is issued without a substantive ruling as to
the correctness of the Commissioner's decision. For more information, see
section 205(g) of the
Act. See also Schaefer v. Shalala, 509 U.S. 292, 297 n.2 (1993).
Under sentence six, the court retains jurisdiction of a remanded
case and does not enter judgment until after post-remand agency
proceedings are completed. Because a sentence six remand is considered an
interlocutory (i.e., temporary or interim) order, the action is generally
not appealable.
When the administrative action is complete after remand, the
claimant is not required to file a new civil action to obtain judicial
review. Rather, either the claimant or the Office of the General Counsel
(OGC) will advise the court that the remand proceedings are finished
and will file a motion to reopen or re-docket the case.