Garland Lee Piper v. Secretary of Health and Human Services

875 F.2d 866, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 6504, 1989 WL 48380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 1989
Docket88-5823
StatusUnpublished

This text of 875 F.2d 866 (Garland Lee Piper v. Secretary of Health and Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garland Lee Piper v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 875 F.2d 866, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 6504, 1989 WL 48380 (6th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

875 F.2d 866

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
Garland Lee PIPER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 88-5823.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

May 11, 1989.

Before NATHANIEL R. JONES, WELLFORD and RALPH B. GUY, Jr., Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, Garland Lee Piper, forty-four, suffers from back and knee difficulties, as well as from high blood pressure problems. He is illiterate and has a low IQ. His claim for social security payments has been denied at all levels, both administrative and judicial.

Piper filed a claim for benefits in October 1983, alleging a period of disability commencing on April 7, 1982. The administrative law judge (ALJ) determined that Piper was entitled to a period of disability as a result of a back injury. It was further concluded, however, that the claimant's disability ceased in August 1983, when he returned to work, and that his entitlement to benefits accordingly ended in October 1983. After the claimant returned to work, he sustained a knee injury, not related to the back injury for which he was originally found to be disabled. There was no evidence precluding his return to work at his past job in the coal mines if he had not injured his knee. The claimant progressed satisfactorily after knee surgery in October 1983.

Piper then filed this current application for a period of disability and disability insurance benefits, alleging that he became disabled in April 1982 due to his knee injury.

Piper was born in 1945, and has a limited education. Testing indicates that he reads and writes on a low first grade level, and he is functionally illiterate. His work experience includes being a sawmill laborer and a scoop operator and shuttle car operator in the coal mines. He is currently receiving worker's compensation.1

At the hearing, claimant's attorney stated that claimant had not worked in 1984, and noted that the claimant was determined to have an 80% occupational disability for purposes of state workmen's compensation. He also claimed that the claimant had no transferable skills for sedentary work due to his physical and mental limitations.

Piper had back surgery in 1982 and knee surgery in 1983. He returned to work, but submitted to physical therapy on several occasions. Piper stated that he left his job in 1983 because he was laid off, but he was later called back. He also indicated that his doctor told him he could not return to work in the mines because he could only lift a maximum of fifty pounds, and could not lift that amount repeatedly. He testified that he currently cannot lift fifty pounds, and that bending and stooping cause him to have muscle spasms, and that movements of his hips are painful. Piper stated that he had these same problems in 1983, but they had worsened since then because he is basically inactive. He suffers low back pain and pain in his knee and has numbness in both of his hands and the lower parts of his legs. He further testified that he has headaches that may last for two or three days, and that he has bouts of depression. In addition, Piper suffers from high blood pressure.

Piper and his wife testified that he cannot do household chores and that she must help him dress and bathe. Piper does drive on occasion, but not for long distances. He maintains that he generally has to lie down, either on the floor or in the bed, for approximately three to six hours each day, and that he has trouble sleeping and gets no more than two or three hours rest per night.

Records from the Muhlenberg Community Hospital reveal that the claimant was also involved in a 1968 automobile accident and suffered a fracture of the proximal left patella. As a consequence, he had corrective surgery. A 1981 x-ray revealed some arthritic spurring of the knee joint laterally.

Dr. G.H. Rodman, a general practitioner and general surgeon, diagnosed the claimant in August 1981 as having pain and tenderness of the right knee, but no fractures and no likely disability. He permitted the claimant to return to work the following month. Dr. Rodman stated that he had not seen Piper since August 31, 1981.

In a report dated June 26, 1984, Dr. William E. Pearson, a neurological surgeon, stated that in August 1982 the claimant underwent surgery consisting of the removal of a ruptured disc at L-4 centrally and L-5 on the left side. Piper returned to work in early August and injured his knee in a work-related injury in a matter of weeks. Dr. Pearson indicated that the plaintiff suffered from an approximate 15% impairment to the body as a whole as a consequence, in part, due to arthritis of the lumbar spine and degenerative disc disease.

Dr. Pearson stated that he last saw the claimant on November 17, 1986. At the November examination, the claimant stood on his toes and heels well without difficulty. He had some tenderness over the sacroiliac joint on the right side, and straight leg raising caused pain mostly in the hip and knee area to approximately sixty degrees. Piper experienced minimal muscle spasms of the lumbar spine.

Dr. David W. Gaw, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon, in October of 1986, stated that x-rays of Piper's lower back revealed some mild degenerative changes, but otherwise were not remarkable. The diagnoses were degenerative lumbar disc disease and post-operative lumbar laminectomy. Dr. Gaw recommended that Piper work in a position where he would not have to do heavy lifting, continuous twisting or bending, or position himself awkwardly. Dr. Gaw thought Piper would be capable of performing lighter work, estimating only a 12% permanent physical impairment to his body as a whole, due primarily to his back injury.

In a report dated November 13, 1986, Dr. Robert L. Smith (Ph.D.), a clinical psychologist, stated that testing revealed that the claimant had a verbal IQ of 79, a performance IQ of 76, and a full-scale IQ of 77. He noted that for all practical purposes, Piper was totally illiterate. Dr. Smith found an absence of any psychopathology in these clinical evaluations, and the claimant's diagnosis was borderline intellectual functioning, along with his physical problems.2 Dr. Smith stated that, based on the results of his evaluation, the claimant was primarily capable of performing unskilled physical labor, and that Piper would be capable of light labor of a sedentary nature. Because of claimant's intellectual and educational limitations, Piper, in his view, was precluded from employment. It should be noted that Dr. Smith is not trained as a vocational counselor.

Dr. M. Anwarul Quader reported in March 1987 that x-rays of Piper's lumbar spine showed evidence of moderate degenerative changes at the L4-5 and the L5-S1, with a laminectomy at both levels. Dr.

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875 F.2d 866, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 6504, 1989 WL 48380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garland-lee-piper-v-secretary-of-health-and-human-services-ca6-1989.