Arthur S. Flemming, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare of the United States v. Helmer F. Lindgren

275 F.2d 596, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 5581
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 20, 1960
Docket16131_1
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 275 F.2d 596 (Arthur S. Flemming, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare of the United States v. Helmer F. Lindgren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur S. Flemming, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare of the United States v. Helmer F. Lindgren, 275 F.2d 596, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 5581 (9th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

CHAMBERS, Circuit Judge.

Lindgren is a small Oregon chicken farmer. He was self-employed through 1952. He wasn’t particularly prosperous and, like millions of other Americans, wanted to share in the beneficences of social security payments. As the law stood in 1952, in his agricultural self-employment he couldn’t obtain the benefits. 1 As of then, the objective was a salary of $300 per month for six quarters. 2 With that, and having attained the age of 65, he would then be eligible for the maximum amount of social security, provided he did not thereafter earn over $75 per month, 3 later raised to $100.

A lawyer found Lindgren an old unused corporation (cheaper than a new one), changed its name to Lindgren and Company, and issued the stock to Lindgren, his wife and a stepson. Immediately, Lindgren’s salary as president was fixed at $300 per month and the corporation then engaged in what had been Lindgren’s chicken business.

*597 By the fall of 1954, Lindgren was ready for his benefits. So his salary was reduced to $75. (Later when the law permitted earnings of $100 per month, up went the salary to that amount.)

We must start with the point that had Lindgren’s business been prosperous enough to justify a salary of $300 a month, the law is so written that Lindgren would be entitled to just the “pension” he says he was. But the secretary questioned Lindgren’s claim. After an appropriate hearing before an examiner, the secretary found that the net income of the corporation really was just a total of $744.84 for 1953 and 1954. This, it was said, would be deemed Lindgren’s wages for the period — because it was the amount honestly available to pay wages. So Lindgren would be allowed social security payments based upon this meager amount.

Lindgren then filed his action in the United States District Court 4 to overturn the secretary’s award. The district court, relying on MacPherson v. Ewing, D.C.N.D.Cal., 107 F.Supp. 666, overturned the secretary’s award as arbitrary and capricious and entered judgment that the benefits should be paid on the basis of the salary paid.

We are in full agreement with neither. Certainly the administrator of the plan must be permitted to look through form to substance. Surely it would not be permissible for relatives to set up a corporation for six months, pay a ne’er-do-well a salary of $300 a month for six quarters and have him do absolutely nothing (if provable) from beginning to end, then shift the burden of his support to the government. And where Lindgren, as the only real owner of Lindgren and Company, was using this rather shallow corporate device, the government was entitled to take not one, but several long looks at it.

We realize that in his recommendations to the secretary the examiner came up with a handy rule — limit the salary to the amount of the earnings of the company, such being the amount that the corporation with negligible capital could sensibly afford to pay. Unless the corporation is held a complete sham and is entirely vitiated, in which case Lindgren would be back in his agricultural self-employed category ineligible for the benefits, 5 we think that the secretary should have taken into account some other factors — because the test is, What is “wages” under the act? 6 He should reconstruct a reasonable wage under all of the circumstances. These might include past history of the same little business, wages of a laborer doing the same type of work as Lindgren, and perhaps a number of other factors will come to mind. Probably no one single factor should control.

It does appear that perhaps in the two years involved, economics were against Lindgren more than usually. The corporation did have a few assets. In the long run a corporation’s earning record limits the salaries it can pay, but some pay more than they can afford for a while and then go out of business, or often they survive to become profit-making organizations. And persons nonetheless have had help in getting social security — all as a byproduct of the overpayment.

We realize the scope of the review by the district court and by us is limited. 7 But we do hold that an arbitrary standard was applied when no factor other than the exact actual earnings of the corporation was applied. Our decision still leaves the administrator of the act broad latitude for the exercise of his discretion.

The secretary concedes that if we should reverse, a new hearing should be held in the district court because that *598 court did not consider Lindgren’s claims that the examiner did not adequately calculate the earnings of the company, the commissioner’s yardstick.

We are of the opinion that the district court should send the matter back to the secretary for a redetermination.

Reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

POPE, Circuit Judge.

I, too, would reverse with directions to remand to the Secretary for a redetermination, but I would do it for a different reason and for a different purpose.

I do not quite understand the referee’s reference to Gancher v. Hobby, D.C., 145 F.Supp. 461, for it is plain his decision was not based on any finding that the corporation was a sham. His findings indicate otherwise. He says, “It is unquestioned here that as an officer of Lindgren and Company, commencing in February, 1953, the claimant was in an employment relationship within the meaning of § 210 of the Social Security Act, and specifically § 210 (K) (1) [42 U.S.C.A. § 410].” 1 He “assumes good faith on the part of the claimant.”

He could not do otherwise upon the record he had before him. In Rhoads v. Folsom, 7 Cir., 252 F.2d 377, 380, the court stated the principle which must govern here: “It may be true that the arrangement by which Mr. and Mrs. Rhoads were each to be paid was for the purpose of bringing them within the coverage of the Social Security Act. Even so, we see no legal impropriety in their so doing if in fact they both rendered services for which they were paid in accordance with an agreement. It has often been held that a taxpayer may arrange his business affairs in any manner which the law permits in order to avoid the payment of a tax. Applying the same principle, we think Mr. and Mrs. Rhoads could properly enter into an agreement with the lumber companies by which they would each become employees and be paid for their services. The terms of that agreement were a matter for the parties and binding, providing, of course, it was made in good faith. There is no proof, not even the contention, that it was otherwise made.”

The court’s reference to a similar rule relating to taxpayers is an apt one. The taxpayer’s desire to reduce his taxes is irrelevant; his motive “is not the crucial factor”. Gilbert v.

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Bluebook (online)
275 F.2d 596, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 5581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-s-flemming-secretary-of-health-education-and-welfare-of-the-ca9-1960.