Bartlett v. Secretary of the Department of Health, Education & Welfare

330 F. Supp. 1273, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12190
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedAugust 2, 1971
Docket1540
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 330 F. Supp. 1273 (Bartlett v. Secretary of the Department of Health, Education & Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlett v. Secretary of the Department of Health, Education & Welfare, 330 F. Supp. 1273, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12190 (E.D. Ky. 1971).

Opinion

.MEMORANDUM

SWINFORD, District Judge.

The plaintiff, Aelrid J. Bartlett, brings this action under the provisions of 42 U.S.C. 405(g). On March 21, 1969, he filed an application for disability benefits alleging that he became unable to work on December 5, 1967, (later changed to December 1, 1967, at the request of the plaintiff (Tr-103)) because of “back ailment”. The application was denied initially and upon review. The decision of the Secretary became final on August 11, 1970, and this action was timely filed on October 9, 1970. The record is now before the court on the motion of the defendant for summary judgment. Briefs on the motion have been filed by the parties and a transcript of the proceedings heretofore had in connection with the plaintiff’s claims was filed as a part of the defendant’s answer.

On April 10, 1968, the plaintiff filed another application for disability benefits in which he stated that his disability was “results of operation for pinched nerves causing partial loss of use of the right leg”. (Tr-146). His disability was alleged to have commenced on December 1, 1967. This claim was also denied initially and upon review and the decision of the Secretary became final on February 24, 1969. Mr. Bartlett was notified by a letter from the Appeals Council that if he desired a review of the decision that a civil action should be commenced in the district court of the United States in the judicial district in which he resided within sixty days from February 24, 1969. (Tr-205). No civil action was filed on the decision, but approximately one month later the application for benefits, which is the subject of this civil action, was filed.

The record discloses that the plaintiff is now 60 years old. He has an eighth grade education and has worked as a *1275 bakery helper and as a delivery truck driver. He testified that as a baker’s helper he had done all the work in a bakery, from light to heavy, such as frying doughnuts, operating a bread wrapping machine, bread molders, mixers and slicers. In his own words, “I did everything in the bakery.” (Tr-40). For twenty two and one half years prior to December of 1967 he worked as a salesman and route delivery man for the Ziegler Towel Supply Company.

He testified that his impairments first started in 1953 when he was hit from the rear by a vehicle. This injured his back and leg and the condition was aggravated when he was hit again in 1956 in a similar accident. (Tr-41-43). His chief complaint at that time was pain in his upper back and a stiff neck. Treatment by doctors improved his neck but the pain started to go down and become worse and ten years later, at the suggestion of Dr. Albert Vesper, he went to the Mayo Clinic for examination. A diagnostic nerve block relieved his pain for about a month. Then “one of them pains hit me in the side” and caused him to hit another vehicle, so he decided to go back to Mayo’s for an operation. (Tr-55). In December of 1967, he had a rhizotomy in an attempt to relieve him of his groin and flank pain. This operation was described by Dr. Alfred Uihlein of the Mayo Clinic as follows:

“On December 5, 1967, under x-ray control, the sensory component of the 1st lumbar nerve root on the right side was divided between silver clips.” (Tr-173).

At the hearing in December of 1968, the plaintiff contended that the operation did not stop the pain; that “I still got the pains right now yet what I went up there for to get rid of, and before my operation I could walk. I had no trouble at all except when the pains would hit me. I could walk, hop up and down off that truck, walk up and down off steps and everything else, but after the operation I can’t.” (Tr-56-57).

At the subsequent hearing on September 10, 1969, Mr. Bartlett testified that he had gained thirty pounds in the last year because of his lack of exercise. “I can’t bend, I cannot lift. I actually can walk maybe a square without stopping, a square and a half and I’ll stop at least two or three times.” (Tr-108). He still complained of pain in his low back which radiates down through the groin and right leg. He said activity brings on pain in his neck and upper spine. (Tr-114). He is treated twice a week by Dr. Robert Burkart, a chiropractor, but takes no medicine for his pain. Once a month, if the pain gets “too bad” he takes a pain pill given him by the doctors at the Mayo Clinic, and he also takes two aspirin every night because they seem to “relax” him. (Tr-124). He drives his car and works a little in his garden but has done no work since the first of December in 1967. He receives a pension of $200 per month from a union retirement fund, but this is based on his employment record and not for any disability. (Tr-134).

After the hearing on September 10, 1969, the hearing examiner made his decision that the plaintiff was not entitled to benefits and made a finding that his prior decision of February 3, 1969, was “res judicata and binding on the issues of disability through the effective date of the application therein under consideration and the evidence submitted subsequent to such decision does not warrant reopening or revision thereof.” (Tr-22).

The plaintiff filed a request for review and stated his reasons for disagreement with the hearing examiner’s action:

“I don’t think the HE (hearing examiner) realizes how bad off I am. My leg gives out. I can’t go to work and my stomach is filing up with water.” (Tr-15).

On December 9, 1969, the Appeals Council advised Mr. Bartlett that his request had been granted. The letter in part is as follows:

“We wish to obtain additional medical evidence in your case and have requested the State agency to arrange to have you examined at no expense to you. *1276 The State agency will communicate with you in the near future so that arrangements for such examination may be made.” (Tr-14).

The letter also advised him that he could submit any further evidence to the Appeals Council by mail within 20 days and that he and/or his representative could appear before the Appeals Council in Arlington, Virginia.

Thereafter, the plaintiff was examined by Dr. Thomas J. Radley, an orthopedic surgeon of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Dr. Paul Harry Klingenberg, a general surgeon of Covington, Kentucky.

The medical evidence has been carefully reviewed by the court and the record discloses that it was fully summarized by the hearing examiner after the two hearings requested by the plaintiff and again by the Appeals Council on review. (Tr — 198-201, Tr-19-20, Tr-7-10).

Dr. Burkart, a chiropractor, testified that he treated the plaintiff for about a year in 1956. This treatment was for the cervical and upper thoracic injury he sustained from the truck wreck. (Tr-57). In March of 1968, Dr. Burkart began treating him again for the pain in his back. He stated that he found adequate physical findings to justify the pain which the plaintiff claimed to have. (Tr-65). It was his opinion that any work which would require the plaintiff to stand or sit for any length of time would “be out of the question”. (Tr-68). This testimony was given at the hearing in 1968 and he has continued to treat Mr. Bartlett since that time.

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Related

Hertz v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare
428 F. Supp. 56 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1977)
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427 F. Supp. 458 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
330 F. Supp. 1273, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-secretary-of-the-department-of-health-education-welfare-kyed-1971.