Cleon E. Pitchard v. Richard Schweiker, Secretary of Health and Human Services

692 F.2d 198, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 24291
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1982
Docket82-1391
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 692 F.2d 198 (Cleon E. Pitchard v. Richard Schweiker, Secretary of Health and Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleon E. Pitchard v. Richard Schweiker, Secretary of Health and Human Services, 692 F.2d 198, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 24291 (1st Cir. 1982).

Opinion

BOWNES, Circuit Judge.

In this social security case the district court held that the administrative law judge’s (ALJ) denial of disability insurance benefits was based on substantial evidence. Claimant, Cleon Pitchard, appeals on the grounds that the ALJ’s decision was contrary to the weight of the evidence and not supported by necessary findings of fact.

Claimant is a fifty-four-year old married veteran living in Franeestown, New Hampshire. He has a high school diploma and two years of college in art and advertising. He worked for four years in advertising and production of a trade magazine at a Los Angeles publishing firm and then for three years in his own firm advertising the products of small industrial accounts. In 1972, claimant quit this advertising work and moved from Los Angeles to New Hampshire. There, using the experience he had in civil engineering and carpentry, he began to build a home.

In 1974, with 30% of the house built, claimant had to stop further work on it. He was afflicted with sharp, shooting pains on the upper right side of his face. His condition was diagnosed as trigeminal neuralgia. The pains persisted. After three years of various unsuccessful types of treatment, claimant underwent surgery which relieved the shooting pains. Sometime after the operation, however, claimant began to experience a burning pain and a tremendous pressure in his head. The pain and pressure caused fatigue, dizziness, and occasional bleeding in his ear. It is this condition that claimant alleges permanently disabled him. Claimant also suffers from pain' in his left shoulder. This was first noticed in 1977 and has become worse since then. Claimant testified that his overall condition is worse today than it was in 1976, the year he alleges as the onset of disability.

Claimant first filed for disability insurance benefits in November of 1977, alleging an inability to work since 1973. This claim was denied initially and not pursued fur *199 ther. Claimant applied a second time in December 1979, alleging an inability to work since his operation in September 1976. This application was denied on March 3, 1980. A hearing was requested and granted. At the hearing, claimant was represented by counsel.

Claimant was the only witness at the hearing. He described his medical condition since the operation as a tremendous, constant pressure in his head that adversely affects his vision and everything he does. In response to the ALJ’s question if the pressure was “aching or painful or just plain pressure,” claimant testified:

It’s difficult to describe. It seems more like a pressure, but it affects everything I do. If I work over an hour, say, I get physically tired and sometimes even have to doze off in a chair, and I get dizzy if I bend over, I get very dizzy and then if it’s real bad, that’s when I do bleed from the ear.

The bleeding is not profuse, but “cakes up” in claimant’s right ear. He testified that any type of lifting, even driving or mowing the lawn can cause the bleeding. It occurs on the average of once every three weeks. Claimant said his shoulder was subject to flare-ups, when the pain became so intense it was difficult to lift his arm or sleep at night. Claimant testified that he does small chores around the house. These include mowing the lawn on a riding mower (this takes two hours, but claimant does not do it all at once), going to the market (but not lifting full grocery bags), doing small painting or papering jobs in the house and driving an average of one hundred miles each week. He spends a lot of time just relaxing, depending on how he feels. He made one recent attempt to play golf, playing nine holes, but said this caused too much pain. Claimant testified he can go for short walks. He testified that he drove twenty miles to the hearing but in his request for reconsideration noted that this drive caused him extreme pain.

Claimant testified that he did not think that in 1977 he could have returned to his former work in advertising and that he would not have been able to hold a steady job since 1974 because of his physical condition. He further stated that were it not for his physical afflictions he would have returned to work in advertising after he completed building his house. He did not give any details about the physical and mental requirements of his advertising work.

The medical evidence can be summarized as follows. Reports by Dr. Miner and Dr. Sylman before claimant had surgery note intense shooting pains in the upper right side of the face and concur in the diagnosis of trigeminal neuralgia. Various treatments, including alcohol blocks, a root canal, and prescriptions of Dilantin and Tegretol, were used during the three years pri- or to the operation. In 1976 the treatments were no longer providing adequate relief and in September claimant underwent exploratory surgery. Dr. Indorf’s report describes the surgery and notes some relief. Dr. Rozario’s March 11, 1977 report describes the claimant as doing extremely well in remission of his symptoms of trigeminal neuralgia. Claimant’s only complaint at this time was numbness in the perioral region (mouth) on the right side. Dr. Rozario states claimant’s “trigeminal neuralgia is not in existence at this point and he represents a good operative result.”

Dr. Selland’s report of July 1,1977, is the first to describe a “burning type pain in the R post auricular region, extending to his forehead and R eye; usually occurs under stress.” The doctor’s diagnosis was greater occipital neuralgia.

Dr. Gollomp, in his October 7,1977 report, also diagnosed greater occipital neuralgia and found the condition was probably secondary to the earlier surgery. He expected the neuralgia would be a chronic problem. Dr. Gollomp also found claimant’s “left shoulder pain is probably secondary to DJD of the shoulder joint and also bursitis.”

The first medical report describing claimant’s shoulder problem is dated June 1977. It indicates pain and limitation of motion in the left shoulder, but further states that internal and external rotation shows no bone or joint pathology, and no periarticu *200 lar calcification. Claimant was next seen after slipping on the ice and falling on his left side. The reports from this incident indicate no substantial shoulder injury. Dr. Paulino’s June 1979 X-ray report notes “no evidence of fracture or dislocation, . .. slight sclerosis and irregularity of the surface of greater tuberosity of the humerus, ... calcific density of 8mm in adjacent soft tissue consistent with calcification of the supraspinatus tendon.” The doctor diagnosed the condition as peritendonitis calcárea. Claimant had physical therapy for his shoulder condition. The initial report for this therapy notes claimant had a painful left shoulder for eight months — with limitation of motion. His medical certificate and history indicates that he had pain in his left shoulder for a fairly long duration which became acute and lasted a few days; the diagnosis was acute bursitis.

The Veterans Administration found claimant to be 50% disabled. Its report stated:

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Bluebook (online)
692 F.2d 198, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 24291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleon-e-pitchard-v-richard-schweiker-secretary-of-health-and-human-ca1-1982.