Scott v. Celebrezze

241 F. Supp. 733, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9378
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 4, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 241 F. Supp. 733 (Scott v. Celebrezze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Celebrezze, 241 F. Supp. 733, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9378 (S.D.N.Y. 1965).

Opinion

FEINBERG, District Judge.

The key issue on this motion is the validity of a 1956 transfer of a small retail business by plaintiff Joseph Scott to his wife, plaintiff Bunia -Scott. The transfer was first held invalid -in 1956 by a district office of the Social Security Administration (“SSA”). 1 Thereafter, in April 1958, an area office of SSA held that the first determination was incorrect and, as a result, social security benefits became payable to plaintiff Joseph Scott. 2 *735 Some six years later, SSA again reversed itself and decreed, among other things, that everything it had paid to Joseph Scott from January 1, 1958 to October 1961 should be recouped. 3 The facts as to this vacillating performance with its economic impact on the people involved are set forth in greater detail below.

The procedural posture of the case is that plaintiffs have brought an action under 49 Stat. 624, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) to review the final decision of the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare (“Secretary”). Plaintiffs have moved for judgment on the pleadings under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c). Defendant has requested the court to consider plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings as a motion for summary judgment under Rule 12(c) and it will be so considered.

Plaintiff Joseph Scott was the sole owner of a butcher shop in the Bronx since 1938, 4 and paid social security taxes for many years as a self-employed individual. The extent of the business is shown by Scott’s net profit of $2,815.79 5 in operating the store in the year 1955. He reached his sixty-fifth birthday on October 3, 1954, 6 the statutory minimum age for receiving full old-age benefits under social security. In early 1956, he allegedly transferred his business to his wife, Bunia Scott, without consideration. 7

in July 1956, Joseph Scott filed an application for old-age benefits. SSA first denied this application in September 1956. The basis of the denial was that “no valid transfer [in 1956] of your business to your wife was effected.” 8 After additional evidence was submitted, SSA reversed itself in April 1958. SSA awarded Scott a lump sum of $2,319.30 for benefits from January 1956 through March 1958 and monthly payments of $85.90 effective from April 1958. 9 The basis of the new award to Scott was “that you validly transferred your business to your wife on January 1, 1956 and therefore you did not have any self-employment income in 1956 or 1957 and are entitled to receive benefits for that period.” 10 As a recipient of old-age benefits, there was a limit on the yearly income Scott could earn without affecting his social security benefits, which limit would have been exceeded if the transfer were not held valid. In 1961, five years after the purported transfer, Joseph Scott reached the age of seventy-two thus becoming eligible to receive old-age benefits without regard to other income. In the same year, his wife, Bunia, reached the age of sixty-five and became eligible for full old-age benefits independently of her husband, based upon self-employment income derived after the store was transferred to her. 11 In January 1962, Bunia Scott filed an application for old-age benefits in which she frankly stated that she was transferring the business back to her husband, partly because he could now earn unlimited income without forfeiture of old-age benefits. 12 Another stated reason for the transfer was the advice of the doctor treating plaintiffs’ mentally ill daughter that it would be better for the daughter if Mrs. Scott spent more time with her. 13

As a result of Mrs. Scott’s application, SSA again reconsidered the 1956 transfer. In October 1962, it declared that Mr. Scott had owned the business all along and that the 1956 transfer approved by SSA in April 1958 was now deemed invalid. 14 SSA held that amounts credited to Mrs. Scott’s account were earned by Mr. Scott and must be recred *736 ited to him. 15 As a result, Mrs. Scott was held ineligible to collect old-age benefits on her own social security payments and benefits awarded to her were to be given only as the wife of Joseph Scott and upon his earnings record. This decision was said to be based upon “additional evidence.” 16 On appeal, a hearing examiner ruled that Joseph and Bunia Scott were partners and ordered appropriate adjustments. 17 The Appeals Council of SSA, on its own motion, reviewed the hearing examiner’s decision. In March 1964, it held that there was no partnership since none was intended, but affirmed the examiner’s nullification of the 1956 transfer. Since the original transfer was -invalid, the Secretary ruled that (1) Joseph Scott had wrongfully received benefits before he reached age seventy-two, because all of Mrs. Scott’s income, when reallocated to Mr. Scott, exceeded the limit on outside income and barred him from April 1958 through September 1961 from receiving old-age benefits; (2) the resulting overpayment could not be waived; and (3) plaintiff Bunia Scott, never having owned the business, did not qualify for old-age benefits independently of her husband, but was entitled to a wife’s insurance benefits. 18 The practical result of all this was that “overpayments” of $4,066.80 19 were to be recouped from Mr. Scott and consequently neither the then seventy-two year old Mr. Scott nor his then sixty-five year old wife received any social security benefits from March 1962 to May 1965. 20 It is this determination now under review here.

There is a preliminary legal problem which may be dealt with summarily. Plaintiffs argue in their brief that the Secretary is barred under an SSA regulation (20 C.F.R. 404.957) from questioning the validity of the 1956 transfer. This regulation restricts reopening of an initial or reconsidered determination for good cause to four years from the date of the ruling, with exceptions not here relevant. The Secretary has submitted an affidavit of Rose Glazer, a Reconsideration Reviewer with the New York Payment Center of SSA, asserting that the question of the validity of the transfer to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F. Supp. 733, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-celebrezze-nysd-1965.