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Goldberg v. Kelly – background

Goldberg v. Kelly – background. Facts: Ps received AFDC benefits. Challenged change in NY law that allowed termination of benefits under new procedures - claimed new law violated due process .

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Goldberg v. Kelly – background

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  1. Goldberg v. Kelly – background • Facts:Ps received AFDC benefits. Challenged change in NY law that allowed termination of benefits under new procedures - claimed new law violated due process. • Preliminaries:Proceedings in which benefits terminated involve adjudications. Termination involves deprivation by the government of personal property interest (assumed by SCT). • Process given to Goldberg Ps on termination of benefits: • Discussion of eligibility for benefits with caseworker • Notice of termination – w/ reasons at least 7 days prior to termination • Appeal to a superior agency officer via written statement • Written letter confirming the termination of benefits – benefits terminated • POST-termination fairness hearing (formalish hearing in nature) Why was this “process” inadequate under the 14thAmdt according to Ps?

  2. The process required in Goldberg to satisfy the 14th amendment • Majority identifies 2 requirements for a hearing to satisfy due process: • Timely/adequate notice of termination with reasons • 7 days is not per se inadequate but could be in particular situations • Effective opportunity to participate in hearing prior to termination • Hearing need not be “quasi-judicial” but it must be held in a “meaningful manner” • Hearing must be “tailored to the capacities and circumstances of those who are to be heard” • What process must agency provide to satisfy the second requirement? • Personal appearance/oral presentation of evidence • Cross examination of adverse evidence/witnesses • Right to consult w/counsel • Right to reasons for decision & evidence supporting • Impartial decision-maker

  3. Interest balancing in procedural due process cases • Does the agency/government have no countervailing interest in the current form of hearings here? • Why isn’t that interest enough? • Note the beginnings of a balancing framework to determine what kind of process is due (i.e. what procedures are required) when gov’t deprives a person of an property/liberty interest Balance gov’t interest v. individual interest • But how easy is it to apply this balancing test – how do we know when individual or gov’t interest is weightier?

  4. Board of Regents v. Roth – defining protected interests • Roth employed by WSU under a 1-year contract (9/1/68 to 6/30/69). • No tenure rights under the contract. Anyone employed four successive years under 1-year contracts acquired such rights & couldn’t be discharged except upon written charges pursuant to a hearing • Anyone employed under 1-year contract couldn’t be terminated during the term w/out review of the dismissal • Roth was notified that the contract would not be renewed. No reasons given; no hearing held. All of this was consistent w/ state law. • Roth sued claiming that decision not to rehire him violated his due process rights • Failure to give notice/reasons of non-retention & opportunity for hearing • SCT said Roth had no liberty/property interest that would trigger heightened procedural requirements under the Constitution.

  5. Defining protected interests, the importance of the interest at stake: • Goldberg used a balancing test to determine what process is due: State’s interest in minimal process vsP’s interest affected by deprivation • Should court also weigh the importance of P’s interest to determine if it arises to a protected liberty/property interest? • Answer : • Whether a protected liberty/property interest exists depends solely on the nature of the interest and not on its importance. • Importance of the interest is relevant only to the kinds of procedures that might be necessary once one gets to the question of the process due as in Goldberg

  6. Roth & liberty interests • Roth gives us some idea of what “liberty” is: • Defines broadly (p. 596) • Source = US Constitution: fundamental liberty interests – freedom from bodily restraint, right to marry, right to bring up children & garden variety – right to contract, occupations of life • Realistically: most of the liberties SCT lists are fundamental rights, which are the ones most likely to trigger “liberty” finding. Roth’s interest in being rehired at WSU is NOT a liberty interest because we don’t generally conceive of the right to work as a fundamental liberty interest. • Would Roth have a liberty interest if he had been defamed? • Generalized deprivations re “reputation” don’t amount to protected liberty interests. Paul v. Davis (p. 607 n.4) • If a specific change in legal status accompanies statements it may amount to a protected due process interest. • Ex: If employer fired Roth and stated at the time to potential employers he was being fired for dishonesty or incompetence

  7. Roth& property interests • A propertyinterest is something to which a “person has a legitimate entitlement.” Not simply an abstract need or desire. • What is an entitlement? • State/P have a “mutual understanding” that P has a legitimate expectation of continued receipt based on objectively identified criteria. • Where do we look to determine when an individual has a “legitimate claim of entitlement”? • State law: statutes, regulations, common law (contract especially) • Custom/practice: is there an unwritten/informal “common law” used by the agency that rises to the level of an entitlement? • Perry v. Sindermann – similar contract/statutes as Roth. But other docs suggested “mutual understanding” that P had tenure if did certain things • Faculty Guide – college “had no tenure system” but “administration wishes the faculty member to feel that he has permanent tenure as long as his teaching services are satisfactory”

  8. When seeking to define a “protected interest” must plaintiffs “take the bitter w/ the sweet?” • Roth involved a statute creating 1 year contracts and also stating the process due – no hearing or reasons need be given • If the state has created a property right can it define the property right’s contours by the procedures it gives as part of the process due? • Note – SCT initially seems to say “yes” in Arnett v. Kennedy & Bishop v. Wood (pp. 601-04) • Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill (p. 605): • School Board argued that Loudermill’s protected job interest (dismissal for cause but with certain defined procedures) only amounted to the statutory protection giving him a right not be dismissed subject to those procedures as defined by statute. SCT rejected that notion. • Once a court finds that statutes create a protected property interest, the timing and nature of the required hearings are determined according to constitutional standards not state/federal law.

  9. Indirect beneficiaries – protectable interests? Gov’t certified TCNC as “skilled nursing facility” to receive state/fed funds to provide nursing care to the elderly. TCNC lost that certification; elderly patients were to be transferred to other facilities. TCNC was challenging loss of certification but patients had no right to participate in that hearing. Patients claimed statutory entitlement to continue residence in home of their choice and avoid transfer unless hearing was held. Do nursing home residents have a right to a hearing before the government revokes TCNC’s authority to provide them nursing care under Medicare statute? SCT: Direct beneficiaries of gov’t programs have a protected interest warranting procedural protection but indirect beneficiaries do not. • TCNC – direct beneficiary re “skilled nursing facility” status • Elderly patients – direct beneficiaries re receipt of Medicare benefits (but that is not what is at issue here). Patients are indirect beneficiaries re TCNC’s status as approved operator

  10. Procedural due process – back to what process is due • Goldberg’s 2 critical requirements of due process: • Notice • Pre-deprivation opportunity to be heard procedures determined by weighing state/P’s interests To what extent has SCT refined it’s approach since Goldberg?

  11. Mathews v. Eldridge • Eldridge received disability benefits under federal law (Social Security Act) during a period in which he was unable to work due to injury/illness. (1968-72) • After 4 years, SSA determined that Eldridge was no longer eligible for disability benefits and that his benefits were to be suspended. He was informed according to then-existing procedures. • Eldridge sued for due process violations. DCT/CTA agreed that he did not receive adequate process before disability benefits were terminated. They determined that he was entitled to an adversarial hearing under Goldberg v. Kelly. • Supreme Court reversed – existing procedures did not violate the Constitution.

  12. Agency procedures during termination process in Eldridge: • Questionnaire to recipients – re status of disability • Agency obtains info from sources of medical treatment & others • Agency tentatively determines to terminate; informs beneficiary by letter • Beneficiary is given reasons, summary of the evidence, opportunity to review file/to respond in writing/submit additional evidence • Agency makes final determination which is reviewed by SSA examiner • SSA notifies beneficiary in writing of termination – gives reasons & informs beneficiary of right to seek de novo reconsideration by the state agency – benefits terminated at this point • After state agency reconsideration, beneficiary is notified if benefits remain terminated • Beneficiary then has a right to a non-adversarial evidentiary hearing without counsel before an SSA ALJ • If that hearing results in an adverse decision to the beneficiary, he may request discretionary review by the SSA Appeals council and, finally, judicial review

  13. Mathews v. Eldridge – SCT’s 3-factor balancing test for determining the process that is due • What is the private interest affected by the termination? • Continued disability benefits until final administrative decision • Not as significant as AFDC benefits but not insignificant – can always get subsistence benefits • Determine importance by magnitude & length of deprivation • What is the risk of erroneous deprivation if current procedures are used and what is the utility of additional safeguards? • Current procedures are pretty good safeguards against mistakes & appropriately tailored for THESE beneficiaries who aren’t in the same position as AFDC beneficiaries • Additional procedures (oral presentation . . . ) would add little • What is the government’s interest? • Conserving fiscal/admin resources (specifically increased cost of paying out undeserved benefits while others who need aren’t getting them weighed against cost of holding more hearings)

  14. Different models re hearing requirements • Goldberg relied on an “adjudicative” model requiring a formal hearing before deprivation could occur. While still true for subsistence benefits, the SCT has moved on. • Matthews moved away from that model: “The judicial model of an evidentiary hearing is neither a required, nor even the most effective, method of decision-making in all circumstances. . . . All that is necessary is that the procedures be tailored, in light of the decision to be made, to ‘the capacities and circumstances of those who are to be heard,” . . . to insure that they are given meaningful opportunity to present their case.” SCT now approves pre-deprivation “hearings” that allow only written appearances or even informal consultationsif such hearings fit “the capacities & circumstances of those who are to be heard” and if the overall balance of Eldridge factors warrants such procedures. See later slides for more detail on hearings

  15. The basic requirements of due process – a summary & some cleanup • The 2 critical requirements of due process are: • Notice • Pre-deprivation opportunity to be heard – with some exceptions Re Notice: • Notice must be adequate re timing – i.e., provides enough time for P to prepare opportunity to be heard – case-by-case determination re adequacy • Must be adequate re to whom directed – objective test • Is the method of notification “reasonably calculated under all the circumstances to provide actual notice to the person(s) whose rights are being adjudicated? • Ex: certified mail to last known address and publication

  16. Basic req’mts of due process – opportunity to be heard • Pre-deprivation opportunity to be heard: • Can take many forms – consultative meeting with officials, written appeal after access to evidence, oral hearing w/ informal testimony … • The form required depends on how the Eldridge factors balancein a particular case • Process required increases as the balance tips in favor of the private interest (Goldberg) • Nature of existing pre-deprivation procedures & post-deprivation procedures affects whether due process is satisfied (Eldridge) • Pre-deprivation opportunity to be heard – emergency exception • If hearing would endanger public health or is unrealistic due to some other emergency, then pre-deprivation hearing is unnecessary • Post-deprivation hearing still required • Note – if it’s possible to have even the most truncated pre-deprivation hearing, it’s better to do so as a pragmatic matter – especially if that’s what procedures contemplate anyway

  17. What is a deprivation of a protected interest? • Paul v. Davis/Ingraham v. Wright – common law remedies for gov’t wrong avoid need for hearing • Availability of libel/negligence lawsuit meant gov’t officials could act w/out holding hearing • BUT courts RARELY hold that P’s ability to sue for damages/injunction REALLY means that a prior hearing is unnecessary if gov’t actually deprives an individual of a property interest • Example – if gov’t cuts off your utility access without notice or informal hearing, the fact that you might have a common law action against them doesn’t mean that this wasn’t a deprivation requiring a hearing • What’s really at issue in cases like Paul & Ingraham: • Random, negligent acts, general defamatory comments or random failures to follow procedure simply don’t amount to a “deprivation” for purposes of due process analysis

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