Heinitz v. Califano

428 F. Supp. 940, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17013
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 8, 1977
DocketCiv. A. 75CV544-W-4
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 428 F. Supp. 940 (Heinitz v. Califano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heinitz v. Califano, 428 F. Supp. 940, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17013 (W.D. Mo. 1977).

Opinion

ORDER REMANDING ACTION TO THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE FOR THE TAKING OF ADDITIONAL EVIDENCE AND THE MAKING OF ADDITIONAL NECESSARY FINDINGS OF FACT

ELMO B. HUNTER, District Judge.

This is a petition for review, under the provisions of § 405(g), Title 42, United States Code, of a decision of the defendant Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare denying disability benefits to the plaintiff. The function of this court is to review the record of the administrative proceedings, chiefly to determine whether the decision of the Secretary that plaintiff suffers no disability within the meaning of the Social Security Act 1 is supported by substantial evidence. 2

The transcript of the administrative proceedings which has been submitted by the Secretary shows the following: Plaintiff filed her application for disability benefits on October 23, 1973, alleging that she had become unable to work on March 3,1972, at the age of 48 years, because of “eye trouble.” Her application was denied by the Social Security Administration on initial *943 consideration and again on reconsideration. 3 She then requested a hearing on and determination of her claim by an administrative law judge. The following evidence was presented to the administrative law judge after that request was granted:

(1) In the hearing conducted by the administrative law judge on February 24, 1975, plaintiff appeared personally and without counsel and testified that in November 1963, her employer, Bendix Corporation, “put [her] on medical leave because [she] was allergic to teflon fumes” (Tr. 28); 4 that she has a “high school” education (Tr. 36); that, in her employment with Bendix Corporation, she performed the “welding of microparts” (Id.); that she has had no training in typing or shorthand since high school (Tr. 37); that she worked as a waitress while she was in high school (Id.), was an inspector at Lake City Arsenal from September 1951 to October 1952 (Tr. 38), was a grocery checker for Safeway from October 1953 to October 1956, was a “coil winder” and “solder operator” for Communication Accessories Corporation from October 1956 to December 30, 1957 (Tr. 39-41), and, for the Bendix Corporation, until March 3, 1972, worked in the capacity of a welder of microscopic parts and solderer (Tr. 39-43); that she terminated this employment to “see if staying away from the job and away from the close work [would cause] my eyes [to] improve” (Tr. 44); that “I can read something for a very short time [because] [m]y glasses do correct the words where it makes it clear where I can see it [b]ut after I’ve had them for a few minutes, my eyes start getting sore, I get a headache and I get sick to my stomach” (Tr. 44); that “[m]y eyes have bothered me ever since I got into the teflon in 1963” (Tr. 45); that much of the work which she was required to do throughout her employment with Bendix Corporation was “close work” requiring that she wear her glasses (Tr. 49); that, in her last three years of employment with Bendix, however, she worked in the machine shop, which still required some microscopic work (Tr. 50); that from March 13, 1973, to August 31, 1973, she worked as the “administrator” of her husband’s rest home in Paola, Kansas (Tr. 55); that, in that capacity, she “had to disperse the medicine, keep the medical charts, file the monthly.reports on all the patients and see that they had their haircuts, that their nails were trimmed, that the house was kept clean” (Id); that this would cause her eyes to “get sore” and “I’d get the violent headaches, sick in my stomach” (Tr. 55); and that “now I don’t even read.”

(2) Larry Cramer of the Social Security Administration in Kansas City contacted Frederick Wade, M.D., and filed a written report under the date of November 28, 1973, stating that “Dr. Wade said this claimant has 20/20 w/o glasses and 14/14 with her glasses”; that “sometimes we find individuals such as this that exhibit this condition, and there is no real explanation for it”; and that “Mrs. Heinitz has 5 pair of glasses at present and that she seems to keep buying glasses from optometrists.” (Tr. 86.)

(3) A Social Security interviewer who accepted and reviewed plaintiff’s “medical history and disability report” on March 25, 1974, noted that “she did not have any difficulty reviewing or signing the application or finding her way through the office.” (Tr. 95.)

(4) A “disability determination and transmittal,” dated January 22, 1974, and signed *944 by D. F. Cobrun, M.D., purports to contain a rationale for the denial of disability benefits to plaintiff. It states that its “medical sources” are “Frederick E. Wade, M.D., Board Certified Ophthalmologist, C/E report of 11/28/73” and “Richard M. Childs, M.D., Board Certified Psychiatrist, C/E report of 1/9/74.” This “determination” states as follows:

“This W/E shows no evidence of any severe psychiatric disorder. She is totally competent and should do well in work activity that does not require close work with her eyes, such as Feeder Multi-Purpose Machine (typewriter); Photographic-Machine Operator (clerical); or Collator Operator (clerical).
“Consequently, this claim is denied and referral is made to Vocational Rehabilitation.” (Tr. 98.)

The diagnosis assigned by Dr. Coburn to plaintiff’s condition is “psychophysiological eye disorder.” (Tr. 97.)

(5) As a basis for the denial of plaintiff’s request for reconsideration, Dr. Coburn relies upon the report of Larry L. Calkins, M.D. of April 5, 1974. As he analyzes it, “[t]he medical evidence presented by Dr. Calkins substantiates no serious eye impairments.” Again, plaintiff is diagnosed as having a “psychophysiological eye disorder.” (Tr. 99.)

(6) A report of William Q. Wu, M.D., dated April 12, 1974, reveals that plaintiff was under his care on April 11, 1961, when she “was hospitalized because of brain- hemorrhages and headaches” for which she received conservative treatment and was “dismissed, after she had improved”; that he “last saw Mrs. Heinitz on February 8, 1974,” when she “said that she had been having some problems with her eyes and that she had had some violent headaches [and] gets sick to her stomach whenever she looks at something close”; that the “neurological examination was essentially negative [and] [h]er B/P when she was at the office was markedly elevated 220/120”; and that “[a]s to this patient’s disability as far as her eyes are concerned as well as her headaches are related to her hypertension [although her headaches may also be a residual of her previous brain hemorrhage which was over ten years ago.” (Tr. 100.)

(7) Walter P. Jacob, M.D., rendered a written report dated April 15,1974, in which he documented plaintiff’s repeated headaches, hypertension, complaints of pain emanating from spinal arthritis, nausea, depression, menstrual difficulties, and injuries from an automobile accident in 1971. 5 Dr. Jacob concluded that:

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Bluebook (online)
428 F. Supp. 940, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinitz-v-califano-mowd-1977.