Mayhue v. Gardner

294 F. Supp. 853, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8031
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedDecember 17, 1968
DocketCiv. A. W-3900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 294 F. Supp. 853 (Mayhue v. Gardner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayhue v. Gardner, 294 F. Supp. 853, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8031 (D. Kan. 1968).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

THEIS, District Judge.

This is an action brought under Title 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) to review a final decision of the Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare denying the establishment of a period of disability and disability benefits to the plaintiff.

The matter is before the Court on the motion of both parties for summary judgment. The single issue presented to the Court is whether the findings of fact, and the inferences drawn therefrom by the Secretary, are supported by substantial evidence. If so, under the statute, the Secretary must be affirmed; if not, he must be reversed.

The secretary determined that the plaintiff failed to prove that on or before September 30, 1961, the date of the last earnings quarter by the plaintiff, she was “disabled” within the meaning of Sections 416(i) (1) and 423(c) (2) of the Act, as amended in 1965. A brief statement of the facts may here be pertinent, although the whole evidence is contained in the transcript of the record before the Court.

Plaintiff’s application for benefits, filed March 29, 1966, states that she was born January 12, 1908, and she alleges that she became unable to work in January, 1957, at the age of 49, by reason of:

“1. Arthritis — back, .hands and possibly arches.
2. High blood pressure.
3. Shortness of breath and rapid heart beat.
4. Nervous condition.
5. Hard of hearing in L ear.”

Plaintiff testified that she has a high school education, plus a few summer courses after high school (Tr. 50-51). She said she has worked briefly as a' substitute school teacher (Tr. 51, 58), as a paper sorter for a waste paper company, as a farm hand picking and chopping cotton (Tr. 44), and as a poll worker (Tr. 50, 52, 100). Her most significant work experience (Tr. 43, 99,130-131) has been as a domestic (from 1946 to 1950) and as a driller and riveter in the sheet metal *855 assembly department of the Boeing Aircraft Company (from 1951 to 1956, and during parts of 1944-1945).

Plaintiff lives in a two-bedroom house with her husband and daughter. She said they help her with some of the housework. She does the evening cooking, but she said the meals are never elaborate. She testified that using a vacuum sweeper causes shortness of breath and stated that after two hours of housework she becomes tense and nervous (Tr. 45-47, 97).

At her hearing before the Examiner, and in various statements, plaintiff voiced a multiplicity of complaints, including headaches (Tr. 42), shortness of breath (Tr. 46), back pains (Tr. 70), swollen fingers (Tr. 72), knee trouble, trouble with right hip and right foot (Tr. 74), varicose veins in right leg (Tr. 75,), dizzy spells (Tr. 76), a nodule in an old abdominal incision (Tr. 77), tenseness and nervousness (Tr. 97), aching feet, high blood pressure (Tr. 97), goiter, and gallbladder distress (Tr. 98). The record contains medical reports from the Halstead Hospital at Halstead, Kansas, showing that plaintiff was a patient in that hospital for various periods on five occasions, beginning on July 22, 1950, again on August 5, 1952, again on January 2, 1957, on January 20, 1957, and finally, for a three-day period beginning June 9, 1959. The record contains reports from a number of physicians who treated plaintiff at various times from 1959 through part of 1966. To detail the record of the complaints of the patient to her physicians and the physicians’ diagnoses and treatment of the plaintiff would contribute little to this opinion, in light of the conclusion thé Court has reached, and the presence of the detailed facts in the transcript. Suffice it to say that there is very little of this medical evidence, and the opinion of the physicians based thereon, which would indicate that the physicians considered this plaintiff disabled from some gainful employment beyond a reasonable medical certainty.

The medical evidence, to say the least, is equivocal in many respects and varies from physician to physician, as is often the case. Dr. Welch, for instance, made it clear from his letter (Ex. 12) that he had no idea whether plaintiff was in any way disabled currently. A Dr. Lee stated that at the time plaintiff was being treated by him in February and August of 1961, that she could only engage in gainful employment on a part-time basis, possibly a maximum of three days a week. A Dr. Tocker made no conclusionary statement as to the disability of plaintiff, and a Dr. Russell, who treated the plaintiff intermittently since October 29,1969, concluded that she had been precluded from gainful employment since 1964, and “this is more from the combination of all the ailments mentioned than any one ailment.”

One of the noteworthy things that almost every physician that treated the plaintiff touched on was a bad gallbladder condition and exogenous obesity, for which all the physicians recommended the gallbladder operation and diet by the plaintiff to reduce her obesity. All during the period complained of the plaintiff refrained from having the gallbladder condition corrected by operative procedure, and her battle against “fat” did not bring into being enough will power except on cursory and periodic occasions which, of course, did not alleviate her condition.

It is noteworthy in examining the transcript of the evidence, the Examiner’s very meticulous examination of the evidence, and his discussion of the evidence, that he felt that the gallstones and gallbladder condition, and the self-induced obesity, were, in the opinion of most of the physicians, responsible for a great deal of the plaintiff’s ails and claims of disability. To support his conclusion from the facts, the Examiner very aptly quoted a statement from the Senate Finance Committee’s Report accompanying H. R. No. 6675, in respect to the purpose of the 1965 Amendment, substituting the requirement that a “disability” must have lasted, or be likely to *856 last, twelve months, in lieu of the pre1965 Amendment that it be “long lasting and indefinite,” as follows:

“An individual who willfully fails to follow such prescribed treatment could not, under such failure, qualify for such benefits.”

The Examiner likewise made the statement in his discretion, that:

“The cases are legion and establish that ‘an impairment which is presently capable of being classified as remedial cannot meet the requirement that it be of long, continued and indefinite duration.’ ”

See Bradey v. Ribieoff, 298 F.2d 855 (4 Cir. 1961). Thus, the Examiner believed the evidence of the plaintiff insufficient to establish disability within the statute prior- to 1965, and also under the less rigid standards set out in the 1965 Amendment.

What is this Court’s function in reviewing the Secretary’s findings, as set forth in the Examiner’s decision ? As indicated previously, the Secretary’s decision cannot be disturbed if there is substantial evidence to support his decision. “Substantial evidence has been defined as ‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’ ” See Gardner v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
294 F. Supp. 853, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayhue-v-gardner-ksd-1968.