Kirkes v. United States

281 F. Supp. 831, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8322
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedMarch 20, 1968
DocketCiv. A. No. 1099
StatusPublished

This text of 281 F. Supp. 831 (Kirkes v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirkes v. United States, 281 F. Supp. 831, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8322 (W.D. Ark. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN E. MILLER, Senior District Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the defendant Secretary denying plaintiff’s application for disability insurance benefits. On March 17, 1966, the plaintiff, Floyd B. Kirkes, a resident of Hot Springs, Arkansas, filed his application for disability insurance benefits as provided for in 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 416 and 423, alleging that he became unable to engage in substantial gainful activity on February 15,1965, because of osteomyelitis and psoriasis. This application was denied both initially and on reconsideration. Plaintiff was granted a hearing which was held on October 18, 1966. The hearing resulted in a hearing examiner’s decision denying the claim. Pursuant to plaintiff’s request, his claim was considered by the Appeals Council which, in a decision on September 28, 1967, also denied plaintiff’s claim. Having exhausted his administrative remedies, plaintiff filed his complaint in this court on October 10, 1967, in which he prayed that the “Court make and enter its order finding that the plaintiff is unable to engage in any substantial gainful occupation and that he is entitled to the foregoing benefits as provided by the pertinent sections of the Social Security Act as herein quoted, and for all other just relief.” The defendant has answered, both parties have filed motions for summary judgment and briefs have been submitted.

The plaintiff, 62 years old, has an extensive vocational history, which begins in 1917 when he quit school after the fifth grade and went to work as an office boy for a petroleum company. He remained at this job for ten years. In 1923 and 1924 he worked for his father at a railroad construction camp. From 1925 to 1928 he served as a seaman for several shipping firms. In 1928 and 1929 he farmed as a sharecropper. From 1930 until 1941 he was a laborer and supply clerk for the Lone Star Gas Company. During the period from 1941 until 1944 the plaintiff was employed in a defense plant as a timekeeper and a material man. In 1945 the plaintiff went into business for himself, operating a liquor store in Joplin, Missouri. At one time he owned three stores and employed as many as ten people. In 1957 he sold the stores and moved to northern Minnesota where he purchased a fishing camp. During the busy season — May 15 to October 15 — he employed about ten persons. The operation of the camp consisted of renting cottages and boats, selling bait and other fishing equipment, and operating a cafe. He handled the managerial duties and served beer while his wife cooked for the cafe. All of the heavy work was done by the employees. The fishing camp operation lasted until 1965 when the plaintiff sold out and moved to [833]*833his present home on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas. The plaintiff is presently unemployed.

The plaintiff’s medical history, according to his testimony, is as follows: In 1961 the plaintiff entered Worrall Methodist Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota, for treatment of psoriasis. He received treatment and the condition improved to the extent that he was able to return to the fishing camp, but his ability to work was substantially and seriously limited. He returned to the hospital in January 1964 for more treatment. In 1965, on the advice of his dermatologist, the plaintiff sold his camp and moved to a warmer climate, to-wit: Hot Springs, Arkansas. Since that time the plaintiff has suffered from the disease, having periods of exacerbation followed by periods of remission. No physician had been able to cure the disease, but the plaintiff does receive some relief from medication which includes application of salves several times daily, a daily thirty-minute soak in a tar bath, and wrapping the affected areas with Saran wrap at night. He also receives weekly ultraviolet treatments and occasional sun baths. The periods of exacerbation and remission follow no set patterns, but come and go irregularly. The condition does worsen, however, when the plaintiff is active or under stress or tension. During these periods most of his body is affected, including his arms, hands, and most of the area from the waist down, with these areas becoming red, scaly, and producing an itching sensation.1

The transcript contains several medical exhibits with the essential information contained therein being as follows: Dr. D. B. Stough, III, of Hot Springs, submitted a report (TR 86) dated March 23, 1966. Under the heading “History” it is stated: “Psoriasis Vulgaris over elbows and knees. Therapy — Balnatar for bathes, Cordran ointment, steroid injections — Response—excellent.” In a later report (TR 90) dated June 13,1966, Dr. Stough ' repeated the diagnosis of psoriasis vulgaris and stated that the plaintiff responded “very adequately to treatment but this can be aggravated by nerves and tension.” The report also stated that sunshine and rest were recommended.

In a letter dated June 24,1966 (TR 94), Dr. R. K. Winkelmann of Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, indicated that he had treated the patient for psoriasis, and stated that he “would not consider his psoriasis to be disabling.”

A letter of October 17, 1966 (TR 98), again from Dr. Stough states that the “patient has been advised to limit his activity and avoid alcohol and episodes of tension.

After the decision of the hearing examiner and prior to the submission of the case to the Appeals Council, three more medical reports were submitted.

Dr. G. Thomas Jansen, a skin specialist in Little Rock, Arkansas, in a letter dated March 2, 1967 (TR 100), offered the following:

“Mr. Kirkes was seen by me on one visit on January 19, 1967. At that time, he gave a history of having had a psoriatic eruption for many years. He had received treatment consisting of crude coal tar and sun light or ultra violet light at the Mayo Clinic in 1961 and again in 1964. Since that time, he had been seeing Dr. D. B. Stough, a dermatologist in Hot Springs, for continuing control of his problem. In addition to his skin complaints, he also has had a problem with a recurring arthritic condition since 1950. It would appear that this is considered to [834]*834be a rheumatoid arthritis rather than a psoriatic arthropathia. A deforming type of osteoarthritis has also been present, involving his right arm, which has caused a deformity of this arm and a fixation of the right elbow, reducing greatly its activity.
******
“The patient’s sedementation rate corrected was 49 mm. His RA test was positive 1:20 and the roentgen examination of his hands was reported by Drs. Gray, Bohnen and Springer of Hot Springs as, ‘Arthritic changes as described are present and would appear to fit more that of rheumatoid arthritis. There are none of the- diagnostic criteria of psoriatic arthritis.’
‘It is my impression, then, that this patient has persisting psoriasis vulgaris and he would seem to have intermittent recurring bouts of arthritis that are rheumatoid in character, and it is my considered opinion that arthritis of this type, as well as psoriatic arthropathia, occurs in greater incidence than by chance alone with psoriasis vulgaris. It would appear that the severe osteoarthritic change in his right arm, the rheumatoid arthritis, and the psoriasis vulgaris combined have made gainful employment impossible”

Dr. T. S. Arrington, a dermatologist in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, stated in his report (TR 102) that he felt that any disability would depend on the degree of the involvement of the joints and to a lesser extent’the nail involvement.

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Bluebook (online)
281 F. Supp. 831, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkes-v-united-states-arwd-1968.