I Missed My Social Security Disability Hearing
I Missed My Social Security Disability Hearing
I have been rehearsing Social Security Disability law for more than 35 years and I here and there run into this situation. A crippled individual has a meeting planned for the front of an authoritative law judge. The appointed authority will choose whether or not the individual is granted inability benefits. The individual misses the conference or appears for the meeting late. The appointed authority will typically "excuse" the individual's case. This can be the stopping point for the candidate except if the candidate had a valid justification for missing the consultation. Commonly, judges won't excuse the case until the individual is over 15 minutes late.
THE CASE OF JOHN DOE:
In an ongoing case, Mr. John Doe couldn't make it to the court in view of a blizzard. His case was excused. We claimed and the Appeals Council switched the appointed authority and found the blizzard was "acceptable reason" for his inability to show up.
THE CASE OF JANE DOE:
In a later case, Ms. Jane Doe went to an inappropriate structure and didn't appear until 30 minutes after the booked time for the consultation. At the point when Ms. Jane Doe got her excusal, she reached us and we claimed. The Appeals Council which hears the interests of judges chosen sends it back to the adjudicator for a conference with respect to whether she had "great reason" to miss the meeting.
THE CASE OF RICHARD ROE:
Richard had his case set for a consultation a half year early. Shockingly, Richard had a car crash the day preceding his hearing. This made him be hospitalized at a neighborhood medical clinic. he was delivered the day of the conference however he was in no shape to go to the meeting. he called the conference office however they neglected to enroll his call. His case was excused however when we claimed his case the Appeals Council administered his hospitalization was an "acceptable reason" for him to miss the consultation.
THE CASE OF JANE ROE:
Jane had a meeting booked three months before her imprisonment. At the hour of the conference, she was in prison and couldn't go to the meeting. At the point when she neglected to show, her incapacity case was excused. Her intrigue to the Appeals Council is pending.
In outline, despite the fact that you miss the meeting, that exclusion isn't deadly to your case as long as you can set up "great reason" for your inability to show up. For the most part, it ought to be a reason beyond your ability to do anything about it.
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