Harold Henninger v. Anthony J. Celebrezze, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare

349 F.2d 808, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4671
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1965
Docket15868_1
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 349 F.2d 808 (Harold Henninger v. Anthony J. Celebrezze, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare) 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
Harold Henninger v. Anthony J. Celebrezze, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, 349 F.2d 808, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4671 (6th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Senior Circuit Judge.

Appellant’s claim for disability benefits under the Social Security Act, Title 42 U.S.C.A., Section 405(g), was denied by the Hearing Examiner, and after consideration by the Appeals Council, the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare adopted the Hearing Examiner’s findings. The district court affirmed the decision of the Secretary, and appellant seeks review.

The facts are as follows: On June 19, 1960, appellant was injured in an automobile collision. At the time of the accident, he was forty-three years old, and had been working steadily for twelve years as a molder in a foundry in Saginaw, Michigan. He had been divorced from his wife, but had received the custody of their three children who were living with him at the time of his injury, and who are now living with him in the home of his father and mother. His father was eighty years old at the time of the hearing on June 20, 1962, and his mother was seventy-eight years old.

Appellant claims he is totally disabled from performing any substantial gainful employment. He was examined in several hospitals by a number of physicians.

Dr. Treadway, appellant’s family physician, diagnosed his condition as resulting from questionable cartilagenous injury to the anterior inferior chest wall; that he also had symptoms of chest, neck, and back pain which dated from the time of the automobile accident; and Dr. Treadway further diagnosed appellant’s condition as spondylolisthesis, L5 (fifth lumbar vertebra); a defect in the posterior appendage; a marked increase of the lumbo sacral joint angle; and the doctor’s opinion was that appellant’s condition was static. He prescribed painkilling drugs and restricted appellant from any lifting or straining.

Dr. Neal R. Moore, of Bay City, Michigan, treated appellant for approximately five months, between November 1960, and April 6, 1961, seeing him every two weeks during that period. In his report filed with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Dr. Moore described appellant’s subjective symptoms as “Pain in the low back and in the left buttocks and lateral aspect of the left thigh and painful limp on left.” Under the heading of “Objective Findings,” Dr. Moore stated: “All of the objective findings leading to a clinical diagnosis of a fixed protrusion.” His diagnosis was “Fixed protrusion intervertebral disc at the lum-bo-sacral joint level, centrally displaced and displaced to the left.” His treatment for appellant was described as “Hospitalized for traction treatment. Home physical therapy.” Dr. Moore concluded his report to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare by stating that appellant’s condition was one of “Total disability.”

Dr. Treadway, above mentioned, had noted in his report that Dr. James S. Campbell, of Bay City, Michigan, had seen appellant in orthopedic consultation and that he desired the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to consult Dr. Campbell on the nature of appellant’s limitations in detail. To this request, the Department apparently agreed; and a medical report was secured from Dr. Campbell in which it was stated that, at the request of Dr. Tread-way, he had examined appellant on February 10, 1961, and on May 2, 1961, because of persistent low back pain follow *810 ing the accident of June 19, 1960. Dr. Campbell, in his report stated:

“He was involved in an accident at the corner of John and Linn Streets and incurred multiple injuries including ‘a crushed left chest, torn cartilages and bruises of the left arm’ and noted at that time that he could not walk on his left foot. Since the accident he has noted persistent low back pain with numbness in the left arm with occasional right sciatic pain to the knee. His injuries caused him to be confined to the hospital for eleven days and since then he has noted constant low back pain gradually getting worse.
“Examination revealed good range of motion of the cervical spine without pain. Neurological examination of the upper extremities was negative. The low back area revealed increased lumbar lordosis and a slight right pelvic tilt secondary to some shortening of the right lower extremity. Straight leg raising was positive on the left at fifty degrees. Knee and ankle reflexes were active and equal and there was a left first sacral hy-poesthasia [numbness], but no motor weakness.
“X-rays of the lumbar spine, made October 19, 1960, at Samaritan Hospital, were reviewed revealing a Spondylolisthesis with forward displacement of the fifth lumbar body on the sacrum. There was no evidence of bony injury noted.
“I have seen Mr. Henninger on only this one occasion but feel that if he is still having trouble that a chair-back brace may possibly be helpful, and if this were not sufficient on Arthro-desis of the lower lumbar spine to the sacrum might be indicated. It would appear that he had incurred a sprain of the lumbo sacral area through an unstable joint, this instability, congenital in nature, causing symptoms of low back instability to persist.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The treatment above suggested by Dr. Campbell, was that, if the chair-back brace might not be helpful, an arthro-desis, or surgical fusion of the vertebrae, might be the proper remedy — and was the only other remedy suggested by Dr. Campbell.

In addition to the foregoing medical examinations and treatments, Dr. Donald C. Durman, an orthopedic surgeon, examined appellant at the request of the Social Security Administration. Ap-pellee Secretary attaches much importance to Dr. Durman’s report to the effect that some of the findings revealed by the doctor’s physical examination were incompatible or inconsistent with appellant’s complaints, giving as an instance, that if it were true that appellant had no sensation in the front left side of his leg to the height of the iliac crest, there should similarly be a lack of sensation on the left side of the back “up to about the lumbo dorsal level”- — and that “No such lack of sensation was detected by Dr. Durman.” Also, appellee points out that, while appellant was walking with a cane when he saw Dr. Durman, “As far as Dr. Durman was able to determine appellant could walk just as well without a cane as with it.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The foregoing observations of Dr. Dur-man, and the importance attached to them by the Secretary, completely evaporate, however, when Dr. Durman really gets down to the business of examining appellant by X-ray and actually determining what was the matter with him. First, Dr. Durman finds that the front and side views of the X-ray films disclosed defects of the fifth lumbar vertebra and a forward displacement of that vertebra on the first sacral body.

Dr.-Durman, in this regard, reported:

“X-ray examination of the lumbo sacral spine is made. The antero-posterior view shows a very low set fifth lumbar vertebra. There appear to be bilateral defects in the neural arch of the fifth lumbar vertebra and complete asymmetry of the facets between L-4 and L-5. The *811 lateral view reveals marked increase in the angulation of the sacrum.

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Bluebook (online)
349 F.2d 808, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-henninger-v-anthony-j-celebrezze-secretary-of-health-education-ca6-1965.