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No. 10236649
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Nerio Mejia v. O'Malley
No. 10236649 · Decided November 4, 2024
No. 10236649·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
November 4, 2024
Citation
No. 10236649
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
CONSUELO GRISELDA NERIO No. 23-3162
MEJIA,
D.C. No. 2:21-cv-09115-
Plaintiff-Appellant, MAA
v.
OPINION
MARTIN J. O’MALLEY,
Commissioner of Social Security,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
Maria A. Audero, Magistrate Judge, Presiding
Submitted October 25, 2024 *
San Francisco, California
Filed November 4, 2024
Before: Sidney R. Thomas, John B. Owens, and Daniel P.
Collins, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Collins
*
The panel unanimously concludes that this case is suitable for decision
without oral argument. See FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
2 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
SUMMARY **
Equal Access to Justice Act
The panel reversed the district court’s order awarding
Consuelo Griselda Nerio Mejia a reduced amount of the
attorneys’ fees that she sought under the Equal Access to
Justice Act (“EAJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2412, after she prevailed
in her suit challenging the denial of disability benefits by the
Social Security Administration (“SSA”), and remanded with
instructions to award the full requested amount.
The district court found that the SSA’s position was not
“substantially justified” and that claimant was entitled to
EAJA fees. However, the district court concluded that,
under this court’s decision in Hardisty v. Astrue, 592 F.3d
1072 (9th Cir. 2010), claimant was categorically ineligible
to receive any fees attributable to work performed by her
attorney in connection with alternative arguments that
claimant had raised in her suit against the SSA and that the
district court had found unnecessary to reach in rendering
judgment for claimant.
The panel held that the district court erred in applying
Hardisty because Hardisty did not raise or decide the issue
raised by this case. The panel also held that the district
court’s holding that fees devoted to undecided issues were
not compensable under EAJA was contrary to the Supreme
Court’s decision in Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424
(1983), and this court’s en banc decision in Ibrahim v.
United States Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 912 F.3d 1147 (9th
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 3
Cir. 2019) (en banc). Because the district court already
found the fees requested to be otherwise reasonable, the
panel remanded for entry of an amended order awarding the
full fees requested.
COUNSEL
Dolly M. Trompeter, Law Office of Dolly M. Trompeter,
Fresno, California; Jonathan O. Peña, Peña & Bromberg
PLC, Fresno, California; for Plaintiff-Appellant
Timothy R. Bolin and Elizabeth Firer, Special Assistant
United States Attorneys; Social Security Administration,
Office of the General Counsel, San Francisco, California;
David M. Harris, Assistant United States Attorney, Chief,
Civil Division; E. Martin Estrada, United States Attorney;
United States Department of Justice, Office of the United
States Attorney, Los Angeles, California; for Defendant-
Appellee.
4 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
OPINION
COLLINS, Circuit Judge:
Consuelo Griselda Nerio Mejia appeals from the district
court’s order awarding her only a reduced amount of the
attorneys’ fees that she sought under the Equal Access to
Justice Act (“EAJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2412, after she prevailed
in her suit challenging the denial of disability benefits by the
Social Security Administration (“SSA”). Although the
district court agreed that the SSA’s position was not
“substantially justified” and that Nerio Mejia was therefore
entitled to fees under the EAJA, see 28 U.S.C.
§ 2412(d)(1)(A), the district court concluded that Nerio
Mejia was categorically ineligible to receive any fees
attributable to work performed by her attorney in connection
with alternative arguments that Nerio Mejia had raised in her
suit against the SSA and that the district court had found
unnecessary to reach in rendering judgment for Nerio Mejia.
Because the district court’s application of this categorical
rule was legally erroneous, we reverse the district court’s
order to the extent that it partially denied the fee application.
And because the district court already found the fees
requested to be otherwise reasonable, we remand for entry
of an amended order awarding the full amount of fees
requested.
I
After a hearing, an administrative law judge (“ALJ”)
denied Nerio Mejia’s application for disability insurance
benefits under Title II of the Social Security Act (“the Act”).
The ALJ concluded that, although Nerio Mejia had multiple
severe impairments and was unable to perform any of her
past work, her “residual functional capacity” at the time she
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 5
“last met the insured status requirements” of the Act would
nonetheless have permitted her to perform a number of
different jobs that “existed in significant numbers in the
national economy.”
Nerio Mejia then timely filed this civil suit under
§ 205(g) of the Act challenging the SSA’s denial of benefits.
See 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). She ultimately raised three
objections to the ALJ’s decision, two of which related to
asserted deficiencies in the testimony of the vocational
expert who testified at the administrative hearing. In her
third objection, Nerio Mejia asserted that the ALJ had erred
in rejecting her “symptomology testimony.” Because the
ALJ had found that Nerio Mejia’s impairments “could
reasonably be expected to cause” her claimed symptoms,
and there was “no evidence of malingering,” the ALJ could
reject her “testimony about the severity of her symptoms
only by offering specific, clear and convincing reasons for
doing so.” Lingenfelter v. Astrue, 504 F.3d 1028, 1036 (9th
Cir. 2007) (citation omitted). Nerio Mejia argued that the
ALJ had failed to provide the requisite “clear and convincing
reasons,” supported by substantial evidence, and the district
court agreed. The district court therefore reversed the ALJ’s
denial of benefits and remanded the matter to the agency for
further proceedings. Because the district court concluded
that this one objection was sufficient to require a remand to
the agency, the court explicitly “decline[d] to address [Nerio
Mejia’s] remaining arguments” concerning the asserted
deficiencies in the vocational expert’s testimony. Based on
this ruling, the district court entered final judgment reversing
the ALJ’s decision and remanding the matter.
Nerio Mejia thereafter filed a timely motion for
attorneys’ fees under the EAJA. The district court held that,
because the ALJ’s rejection of Nerio Mejia’s symptomology
6 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
testimony was not “substantially justified,” an award of fees
was warranted under the EAJA. Although the district court
otherwise found Nerio Mejia’s attorney’s billing rate and
number of hours worked to be reasonable, the court held that
the time that counsel spent on the two additional issues that
the district court did not reach were not “compensable” as a
matter of law. Accordingly, in calculating the fee award, the
court excluded all of the time (24.05 hours) that counsel had
spent “in researching and drafting the two issues” that the
district court did not reach.
Nerio Mejia timely appealed the district court’s decision
declining to award her the full amount of fees requested. We
have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II
Before turning to Nerio Mejia’s challenge to the fee
award, we first summarize the applicable standards under the
EAJA.
The EAJA requires a court to award “reasonable attorney
fees” to “a prevailing party other than the United States” in
“any civil action (other than cases sounding in tort)” that are
“brought by or against the United States,” “including
proceedings for judicial review of agency action, . . . unless
the court finds that the position of the United States was
substantially justified or that special circumstances make an
award unjust.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A), (2)(A). Nerio
Mejia is obviously the “prevailing party” in her district court
action, because she secured reversal of the SSA’s denial of
her claim for benefits. See Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S.
424, 433 (1983) (stating that a plaintiff may be characterized
as a “prevailing party” if the plaintiff “succeed[s] on any
significant issue in litigation which achieves some of the
benefit the [plaintiff] sought in bringing suit” (citation
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 7
omitted)). The district court expressly found that the ALJ’s
grounds for rejecting Nerio Mejia’s “subjective symptom
testimony” “did not have a reasonable basis in both fact and
law” and that those grounds were therefore not “substantially
justified” within the meaning of the EAJA. 28 U.S.C.
§ 2412(d)(1)(A). Moreover, the SSA did not contend that
there were any “special circumstances” that would “make an
award unjust.” Id. Accordingly, Neria Mejia was entitled to
reasonable attorneys’ fees, provided that she submitted a
timely application in accordance with § 2412(d)(1)(B). See
Melkonyan v. Sullivan, 501 U.S. 89, 91, 102 (1991). She did
so.
Once a plaintiff has shown an entitlement to
“reasonable” attorneys’ fees under the EAJA or another
statute, it “remains for the district court to determine what
fee is ‘reasonable.’” Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433. Hensley
described the standards for determining “reasonable”
attorneys’ fees in the context of a fee request under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1988, but the Court explicitly stated that “[t]he standards
set forth in this opinion are generally applicable in all cases
in which Congress has authorized an award of fees to a
‘prevailing party.’” Id. at 433 n.7; see also Costa v.
Commissioner of Soc. Sec. Admin., 690 F.3d 1132, 1135 (9th
Cir. 2012) (holding that Hensley’s standards apply to fee
awards under the EAJA). Under Hensley, a court generally
determines a reasonable fee by calculating the “lodestar”
amount, Costa, 690 F.3d at 1135, which is “the number of
hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a
reasonable hourly rate,” Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433. The
lodestar amount is only a “starting point,” however, and
“[t]here remain other considerations that may lead the
district court to adjust the fee upward or downward,
including the important factor of the ‘results obtained.’” Id.
8 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
at 433–34. In particular, a court may consider reducing the
lodestar amount when a plaintiff has prevailed “on only
some of his claims for relief” or has achieved only “limited
success.” Ibrahim v. United States Dep’t of Homeland Sec.,
912 F.3d 1147, 1172 (9th Cir. 2019) (en banc) (citation
omitted).
A district court’s determination of a reasonable fee under
the EAJA, including whether to reduce the fee award, is
reviewed for abuse of discretion. See Su v. Bowers, 89 F.4th
1169, 1177 (9th Cir. 2024). We will affirm a reduced fee
award under that standard of review “unless the district court
applied the wrong legal standard or its findings were
illogical, implausible, or without support in the record.”
Edmo v. Corizon, Inc., 97 F.4th 1165, 1168 (9th Cir. 2024)
(citation omitted).
III
In evaluating the district court’s fee award under these
standards, we begin by summarizing the district court’s
ruling in more detail before explaining why we conclude that
the district court applied the wrong legal standards and
reached the wrong result.
A
Nerio Mejia’s fee application sought a total of
$13,426.42 in fees, representing 58 hours of work at a rate
of $231.49 per hour. The SSA did not dispute the
reasonableness of the hourly rate, which was within the
statutory limit, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(A), and the district
court rejected all of the arguments made by the SSA for
reducing, as unreasonable, the total number of hours
claimed. In particular, the court held that the amount of time
spent reviewing the administrative record (7.75 hours) was
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 9
reasonable, given the “5,900 pages of medical records” in
that record; that it was reasonable, “given the fundamental
importance of these tasks,” “to have spent 46.50 hours on
drafting the initial arguments and reply arguments” for the
three issues raised by Nerio Mejia; and that it was reasonable
“to have spent 3.75 hours drafting the motion for attorney’s
fees.”
Having rejected all of the SSA’s arguments for a
reduction of the fees sought, the district court nonetheless
sua sponte reduced the fee award on the ground that Nero
Mejia’s application sought fees “for tasks that are not
compensable under the EAJA” (emphasis added).
Specifically, the district court noted that “Plaintiff’s counsel
spent a total of 24.05 hours in researching and drafting the
two issues” that the district court “did not reach,” and the
court held that “the time that Plaintiff’s counsel spent on
these issues is not compensable” under our decision in
Hardisty v. Astrue, 592 F.3d 1072 (9th Cir. 2010).
According to the district court, Hardisty required that result
because it held that “the EAJA ‘provides no indication that
attorneys’ fees should be awarded with respect to positions
of the United States challenged by the claimant but
unaddressed by the reviewing court’” (quoting Hardisty, 592
F.3d at 1077). Consequently, the district court held that the
“requested fees should be reduced for the 24.05 hours spent
on unaddressed issues,” and, at the hourly rate of $231.49,
that meant a reduction of “$5,567.33.”
B
The district court committed legal error in concluding
that Hardisty required a reduction of the fee. And because
the district court otherwise held that Nerio Mejia’s fee
10 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
request was reasonable, the court should have awarded the
full amount of fees requested.
1
In Hardisty, as in this case, the district court reversed the
denial of benefits based on one of the grounds raised by the
claimant, and the court then declined to reach the claimant’s
remaining objections. Hardisty, 592 F.3d at 1075.
However, unlike in this case, the district court concluded that
the SSA’s position on the dispositive issue, while
unsuccessful, was “substantially justified.” Id.
Accordingly, the district court held that the claimant was
ineligible for fees under the EAJA. Id. The claimant asked
the district court to award fees based on the asserted lack of
substantial justification for the SSA’s position concerning
the claimant’s other objections that the district court had not
reached, but the district court declined to do so “in the
absence of . . . any authority, including circuit precedent,
requiring it to do so.” Id.
We affirmed the district court’s denial of fees. We noted
that the EAJA’s allowance of fee-shifting was “an exception
to the American rule,” under which “the prevailing litigant
is ordinarily not entitled to collect a reasonable attorneys’ fee
from the loser.” Hardisty, 592 F.3d at 1076 (quoting Alyeska
Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y, 421 U.S. 240, 247
(1975)). We further observed that, under the EAJA, the
availability of fees turned on whether “the position of the
United States was substantially justified” or whether
“special circumstances make an award unjust.” Id.
(emphasis omitted) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A)).
For purposes of this provision, we explained, the “position
of the United States” was statutorily defined to generally
include both “the position taken by the United States in the
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 11
civil action” and “the action or failure to act by the agency
upon which the civil action is based.” Id. at 1076–77
(quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(D)). We then stated that
nothing in the language of these statutory provisions
“extends fee-shifting to issues not adjudicated.” Id. at 1077.
That is, the statutory text “provides no indication that
attorneys’ fees should be awarded with respect to positions
of the United States challenged by the claimant but
unaddressed by the reviewing court.” Id. (emphasis added).
“In the absence of clear statutory text authorizing fee-
shifting, we decline[d] to become a ‘roving authority’
awarding attorneys’ fees.” Id. (emphasis added) (citation
omitted).
We held that this conclusion was further supported by
the fact that, as a “partial waiver of sovereign immunity,” the
EAJA’s authorization of fee-shifting should be “strictly
construed in favor of the United States” and “not enlarged
beyond what the language requires.” Hardisty, 592 F.3d at
1077 (simplified). We also noted that our narrow reading of
the EAJA’s authorization of fee-shifting was consistent with
one of the important policies underlying fee-shifting
statutes, which is to avoid “extensive collateral litigation”
over fees. Id. at 1078. Were district courts required to
consider whether the SSA’s position on unresolved issues
was “substantially justified,” the fee litigation would
threaten to become more complex than the underlying suit
itself. See id. We therefore concluded that, in the
circumstances of Hardisty’s case, the relevant “position of
the United States” for purposes of determining eligibility for
fees under the EAJA was “the government’s position on the
particular issue on which the claimant earned remand.” Id.
As to that issue, we held that the district court did not abuse
12 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
its discretion in concluding that the SSA’s position was
substantially justified. Id. at 1079–80.
Our decision in Hardisty thus made quite clear that we
were addressing the significance of undecided, additional
objections raised by a claimant only in the context of
determining whether the claimant satisfied the statutory
requirement for eligibility to obtain any attorneys’ fees. As
relevant in Hardisty, the statute made Hardisty’s eligibility
for fees turn on whether the “position of the United States
was substantially justified” and, under the facts of Hardisty’s
case, that required considering whether the SSA’s position
on the issue that had led to the remand was substantially
justified. Because the answer to that question was yes,
Hardisty was not eligible to receive fees, and we had no
occasion to address what amount of fees might have been
“reasonable” had he been eligible for a fee award. Hardisty
thus did not raise or decide the quite different issue that
confronts us here—viz., whether, if a claimant has
established her eligibility for fees under the EAJA, a
“reasonable” fee award may include fees for work relating
to issues that the district court found unnecessary to decide.
The district court therefore committed legal error in
concluding that, under Hardisty, work relating to undecided
issues is categorically “not compensable under the EAJA.”
2
In addition to being unsupported by Hardisty, the district
court’s holding that fees devoted to undecided issues are not
“compensable” under the EAJA is contrary to the Supreme
Court’s decision in Hensley and our en banc decision in
Ibrahim. Those cases establish the relevant standards for
assessing the reasonableness of a fee in a case such as this
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 13
one, and they reject the rule that the district court adopted
here.
In Hensley, the Court acknowledged that plaintiffs may
often raise a variety of different claims and theories and may
achieve success based on only a subset of them, and the
Court set down certain general guidelines governing such
situations. See 461 U.S. at 434–35. In some cases, which
the Court said may be “unlikely to arise with great
frequency,” the “plaintiff may present in one lawsuit
distinctly different claims for relief that are based on
different facts and legal theories” and that should, for fee-
shifting purposes, “be treated as if they had been raised in
separate lawsuits.” Id. In such a case, if the plaintiff
succeeds on one such claim and fails on an “unrelated
claim[],” the Court stated that, as a general matter, “no fee
may be awarded for services on the unsuccessful claim.” Id.
at 435. By contrast, in a case in which “the plaintiff’s claims
for relief . . . involve a common core of facts or [are] based
on related legal theories,” the lawsuit cannot fairly “be
viewed as a series of discrete claims,” and in such cases “the
district court should focus on the significance of the overall
relief obtained by the plaintiff in relation to the hours
reasonably expended on the litigation.” Id. “Where a
plaintiff has obtained excellent results,” the Court explained,
the “attorney should recover a fully compensatory fee,”
which will normally “encompass all hours reasonably
expended on the litigation.” Id. The Court underscored that,
in such cases, “the fee award should not be reduced simply
because the plaintiff failed to prevail on every contention
raised in the lawsuit.” Id. “Litigants in good faith may raise
alternative legal grounds for a desired outcome, and the
court’s rejection of or failure to reach certain grounds is not
a sufficient reason for reducing a fee.” Id.
14 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
In Ibrahim, we construed this discussion in Hensley as
establishing a “two-pronged approach for determining the
amount of fees to be awarded when a plaintiff prevails on
only some of his claims for relief or achieves ‘limited
success.’” Ibrahim, 912 F.3d at 1172 (citation omitted).
First, the court must consider whether the plaintiff “fail[ed]
to prevail on claims that were unrelated to the claims on
which he succeeded.” Id. (quoting Hensley, 461 U.S. at
434). In deciding whether two sets of claims are “unrelated”
at this first step, the “inquiry rests on whether the . . . claims
involve a common core of facts or are based on related legal
theories, with the focus on whether the claims arose out of a
common course of conduct.” Id. (simplified). Second, the
court must consider “whether the plaintiff achieved a level
of success that makes the hours reasonably expended a
satisfactory basis for making a fee award.” Id. (simplified).
“If the court concludes the prevailing party achieved
‘excellent results,’ it may permit a full fee award—that is,
the entirety of those hours reasonably expended on both the
prevailing and unsuccessful but related claims.” Id. (citation
omitted).
Under these standards, the district court’s analysis was
legally flawed. In particular, the court’s holding that the
work spent by Nerio Mejia’s counsel on the undecided issues
was not compensable is directly contrary to Hensley’s
instruction that, when a litigant has “in good faith . . .
raise[d] alternative legal grounds for a desired outcome, . . .
the court’s rejection of or failure to reach certain grounds is
not a sufficient reason for reducing a fee.” 461 U.S. at 435
(emphasis added). The district court should instead have
analyzed the issue under the two-step test set forth in
Ibrahim. Had the district court done so, it would have
recognized that—in light of the findings the district court
NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY 15
made elsewhere in its order—no reduction in the fee award
was warranted here.
Under Ibrahim’s first step, Nerio Mejia did not raise
multiple “unrelated” claims; rather, she raised a single claim
for relief that was supported by a variety of alternative
theories. The relief she sought was a reversal and remand of
the SSA’s denial of her claim for disability benefits, and she
asserted a variety of objections in pursuit of that one result.
Her civil action under § 205(g) challenging that single
administrative decision thus presented “one claim for relief,”
and her “assertion of several distinct grounds does not create
multiple claims.” Ibrahim, 912 F.3d at 1174 n.24 (quoting
SecurityPoint Holdings, Inc. v. TSA, 836 F.3d 32, 41 (D.C.
Cir. 2016)).
Under step two of Ibrahim, Nerio Mejia achieved “a
level of success” justifying an award reflecting “the entirety”
of the hours her counsel “reasonably expended” in litigating
her claim. Ibrahim, 912 F.3d at 1172. Nerio Mejia obtained
all the relief she sought except for an outright award of
benefits, and her failure to obtain that “rare” form of relief,
Treichler v. Commissioner of Soc. Sec. Admin., 775 F.3d
1090, 1100 (9th Cir. 2014) (citation omitted), does not
materially detract from her success in achieving her overall
litigation goal of reversing the SSA’s denial of benefits. Of
course, under Ibrahim, the hours devoted to the litigation,
including the alternative issues not reached, must still have
been “reasonably expended.” Ibrahim, 912 F.3d at 1172.
But the district court here expressly held that they were
reasonable, and it rejected the SSA’s arguments that the
hours that Nerio Mejia’s counsel devoted to the district court
briefing, including with respect to the two additional issues
that were ultimately never decided, were excessive.
16 NERIO MEJIA V. O’MALLEY
Accordingly, in light of the findings already made by the
district court, it is clear that, under Ibrahim’s standards, the
district court should have awarded the full amount of fees
requested.
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s
order to the extent that it partially denied Nerio Mejia’s fee
application, and we remand with instructions to award, for
the work covered by that application, the full requested
amount of $13,426.42.
REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT CONSUELO GRISELDA NERIO No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT CONSUELO GRISELDA NERIO No.
02O’MALLEY, Commissioner of Social Security, Defendant-Appellee.
03Audero, Magistrate Judge, Presiding Submitted October 25, 2024 * San Francisco, California Filed November 4, 2024 Before: Sidney R.
04Opinion by Judge Collins * The panel unanimously concludes that this case is suitable for decision without oral argument.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT CONSUELO GRISELDA NERIO No.
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