Maloney v. Celebrezze

236 F. Supp. 222, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8664
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 30, 1964
DocketCiv. A. No. C 63-889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 F. Supp. 222 (Maloney v. Celebrezze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maloney v. Celebrezze, 236 F. Supp. 222, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8664 (N.D. Ohio 1964).

Opinion

GREEN, District Judge:

This is an action under § 205(g) of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 405(g) to review a “final decision” of the defendant Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. Both parties have moved for summary judgment.

The question before the Court is whether plaintiff has met the special earnings requirements of the Social Security Act for purposes of establishing a period of disability or for disability insurance benefits. In order to meet such requirements a claimant must have twenty quarters of coverage in the 40-quarter period ending with the quarter in which disability is alleged to have begun, 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 416(i) and 423.

It is agreed by both parties that if plaintiff’s earnings during the year 1956 are included in the period of coverage plaintiff is entitled to consideration for disability benefits, as he had 19 quarters of coverage in the relevant 40 quarters, without the inclusion of 1956. If the year 1956 is excluded, plaintiff does not meet the 20/40 minimum of the Act, and is not entitled to participate in the Social Security program.

Plaintiff’s initial application to establish a period of disability was denied upon the administrative level. Plaintiff requested a hearing in the matter, and on February 28, 1963 the hearing examiner rendered a decision finding plaintiff qualified for disability insured status. The Appeals Council, on its own motion, decided to review the hearing examiner’s decision. On September 24, 1963 the Appeals Council issued a decision wherein it reversed the decision of the hearing examiner. The Appeals Council adopted the hearing exam[223]*223iner’s' findings of fact, but reversed on a question of law involving statutory interpretation.

The Court has determined not to restate the relevant facts of this action nor to embody in full text the relevant law. It is the Court’s belief that the comprehensive opinion of the hearing examiner is more than an adequate source for these materials, and portions thereof are set forth hereinafter.

The key issue is whether the form 1040-A tax return for the year 1956 filed by plaintiff in 1957, followed by the filing of an amended 1956 return in February, 1962, is a “tax return” within the meaning and intent of 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 405(c) (4) (C) and 405(e) (5) (F).

There is no dispute that the 1956 return was made on a wage-earner’s card form and that the amended return filed in 1962 was a properly executed tax return for 1956 as a self-employed person.

In this regard, however, the following findings of the hearing examiner must be borne in mind:

“In early April 1957 his brother, Tom, took the Claimant to the Internal Revenue Bureau office. The Claimant regards himself as totally blind and it is difficult for him to travel around by himself. (He claims to be totally blind in both eyes since 1953 when he was in an automobile accident. In 1957, as now, he was too blind to read print.) The Claimant took with him his statement of earnings from Westmoreland, a subsidiary of the Aluminum Company for 1956. He showed his statement of earnings to a clerk at the office of Internal Revenue. He explained the type of job he had and that he was self-employed. He then asked the clerk if he would give him the appropriate forms.
“On the statement of earnings he showed the clerk, he recalls, it showed the amount he earned and, he believes, the type of employment. (In any event he stated the type of employment : namely, commission salesman.) The Claimant positively recalls saying he was self-employed and showing the clerk the statement of earnings. He asked the clerk to help him fill out the form; but the clerk declined to do so; and instead handed him a form saying in effect ‘There’s nothing to it. Just have some one fill' it out at home.’ That is his recollection of what happened there at that time. He took it for granted it was a self-employed tax form. There is no doubt in his mind he was self-employed; nor was there any doubt then. He intended to fill out a self-employment return. (The form he was given — as he now realizes — was Form 1040A for wage income (Exhibit 19). (He had worked for this company only for the year 1956, having started in late 1955. Before then he had never been self-employed.' He believes he had never seen a self-employment tax form.)
“He took the form home; his father filled it out for him shortly thereafter; and it was sent in by mail. (He testified that he had had to sign a lot of papers in the Hospital, etc. and ‘half of the time’ he never had papers read back to him; he had to depend on others because of his blindness; he would just sign the papers and ‘that’s it’.)
“His father filled it out about a week later. He recalls that it was in the late evening. He brought the form in an envelope to his dad; and he asked his dad to fill it out for him. He does not recall exactly who mailed it. He told his father that this was the form they gave him. He gave his father the statement of earnings. His father filled out the form; he signed it; and it was mailed. (Previously all he had ever been was an ‘employee’. He had no ‘business’ experience.)
Mr. Maloney, Sr., the Claimant’s father, testified that his son’s account was substantially correct; that he, the father, did fill out the [224]*224form, taking the information from the slip his son gave him, (he does not know what happened to it); that he, himself, the father, is an employee and has no familiarity with self-employment tax forms; that he just copied what his son gave him; and that he knows little about tax law but he did not think it strange that no tax was due (even though he knew his son was self-employed) because he knew in a vague way that blind persons get special exemptions. (The after-hearing note from the brother, Tom, is also duly noted, being Exhibit 32, and reads as follows: T, Thomas A. Maloney took my brother Bill to the Internal Revenue Office in 1957. I don’t remember what my brother said nor do I remember what the clerk said, as it was a long time ago and I was quite young at the time. Sincerely yours, Thomas D. Maloney.’)
“He filed a return within the time limitation. He meant to file a SE return, but he unwittingly filled out a ‘wages’ form. There never was any doubt in his mind that he was self-employed nor is there any doubt that he intended to file a self-employment return. He was in fact self-employed. The return which he filed shows the correct amount and the correct employer; and the amount is far in excess of $400. Subsequently he did file a proper self-employment tax return, but this proper one was not within the time limitation (as the prior one was). There were various, quite special, extenuating circumstances; his blindness, his having been misled, as I believe him credibly to have testified, by the clerk at Internal Revenue (regardless of whose fault it may have been) and his having to rely on a third person, his father, for filling out the return.”

Section 405(c) (4) (C) of the Social Security Act provides that the absence of an entry in the Secretary’s records as to self-employment income shall be conclusive evidence that no such income was derived unless it is shown that the claimant filed “a tax return of his self-employment income for such year” within three years, three months, and fifteen days following such year, in which case the income is to be included.

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Related

Ellis v. Gardner
304 F. Supp. 765 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1969)
Young v. Gardner
259 F. Supp. 528 (S.D. New York, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 F. Supp. 222, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloney-v-celebrezze-ohnd-1964.