Sutherland v. Flemming
This text of 189 F. Supp. 712 (Sutherland v. Flemming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Suing under Title 42, U.S.C.A., Section 405(g), plaintiff is here seeking to review the Secretary’s decision that the military service of plaintiff’s deceased husband could not be used pursuant to 42 U.S.C.A. § 417 (a) and (e)1 to establish that he [713]*713was either a fully or currently insured individual at the time of his death.
The deceased spent his entire working career in the United States Navy. He was honorably discharged on October 31, 1955, and became entitled to retirement benefits. On November 16, 1955, prior to his receipt of any payments, he was killed in an automobile accident.
Fortuitously, the deceased had made an election under the Uniformed Services Contingency Option Act, 10 U.S.C.A. § 1431 et seq., whereby his retirement pay was actuarily reduced in order to provide his widow an annuity in the event she survived him. As a result of such election, she is now drawing an annuity of $73.12 per month from the Navy Department.
A referee of the Social Security Administration held that plaintiff was not within the coverage granted by the above-mentioned statutes both because (1) the deceased was entitled to a retirement payment from the Navy Department based in part upon his naval service during World War II and (2) the monthly annuity currently drawn by claimant is a “benefit” within the purview of those statutes.
Upon review the Appeals Council revised the holding of the referee, stating that it is not material in this ease whether the claimant’s annuity is based on the veteran’s service during the specified periods, and grounded its decision solely on the fact that “the Navy Department has determined a retirement benefit to be payable to the deceased” based on his service during such periods.
It is conceded that the Secretary has correctly applied the regulations to the undisputed facts but plaintiff insists that the governing regulation 2 is invalid and without legal authority under the statute. Plaintiff’s second contention is that her annuity is purely and simply an insurance arrangement which the deceased purchased, just as he might have purchased from an insurance company, actuarily computed so that the over-all payments under the Contingency Option Act would be at no additional cost to the government.3
Careful analysis of the statute leads me inescapably to the conclusion that the regulation is in accord with the statute and that resolution of the second contention is immaterial to á decision of this case. The statute provides that a veteran shall be deemed to have been paid wages unless “a benefit * * * is determined by any agency * * * of the United States (other than the Veterans’ Administration) to be payable by it * * The fact that a determination was made that the veteran was entitled to the benefit of retirement pay on account of his military service precludes the presumption that he was paid wages during such service. Any ambiguity which is injected into the statuté by Section 417(e) (2) 4 is dispelled by a search of the legislative history 5 indicating the policy of Congress to withhold the credit provided in this section where, credit is given under a military retirement system.
In a much closer case, the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit declined to do violence to the clear language [714]*714of the statute. Moncrief v. Folsom, 233 F.2d 471. While a court may adopt a liberal approach to the problem of construing a statute, it ought to resist the temptation to legislate. The decision of the Secretary is affirmed.
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189 F. Supp. 712, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutherland-v-flemming-alnd-1960.