Taylor v. Cohen

297 F. Supp. 1281, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9160
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedMarch 14, 1969
DocketCiv. A. No. 2220
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 297 F. Supp. 1281 (Taylor v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Cohen, 297 F. Supp. 1281, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9160 (E.D. Tenn. 1969).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDERS

NEESE, District Judge.

This is an action for a judicial review of the decision of the defendant administrator, denying the plaintiff’s application for disability benefits under the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 416(i), 423. Both parties have moved for a summary judgment, Rule 56, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and agree that the basic question presented is whether the defendant’s finding that the plaintiff is able to engage in substantial gainful employment, which exists in the national economy, is supported by substantial evidence in the record.

The decision of a hearing examiner was adopted by the defendant’s appeals council as its decision. This examiner found that the plaintiff was suffering from a physical impairment of his back and stomach, as well as from the mental impairment of a chronic anxiety condition, but concluded that, nevertheless, the plaintiff retained sufficient residual capabilities to be able to perform some type of substantial gainful activity- “* * * in spite of the discomfort he might experience * * and that the plaintiff’s back condition, stomach problems, and chronic anxiety condition, were of insufficient severity, either singly or in combination, to prevent Mr. Taylor’s pursuing substantial gainful activity. The examiner found and concluded that Mr. Taylor was not able, because of his impairments, to perform heavy manual labor; but that he had never performed heavy labor and should be able to perform tasks similar to those he had performed in his most recent employment, as well as driving a schoolbus, driving a truck part-time in the maintenance department of a munitions manufacturing plant, working as a motor vehicle filling station attendant, and resuming “* * * the job as a painter in which he has had long experience. * * *” [Italics for emphasis.]

These findings do not comport completely with the testimony adduced on the hearing and other evidence in the record. There are also omissions in the findings of significant facts: i. e., (a) in addition to the physical and mental impairments mentioned by the examiner, the undisputed proof reflects that, with the exception of his little finger, all the fingers and the thumb on Mr. Taylor’s right hand were blown off down to the first joints in a childhood accident involving a dynamite cap; (b) it is undisputed that Mr. Taylor feels so badly many days that he never leaves the confines of his home; (c) his hands were trembling at the hearing before the examiner; and (d) he has sustained in the past three years a weight loss of 25 pounds, now weighing only 105 pounds, which he, himself, attributes to the pain he has suffered.

As the Court views this evidence, the plaintiff Mr. Taylor is 44 years of age and has a seventh-grade education. Obviously, he was rejected for service in the armed forces because of the impairment of his right hand. He obtained employment instead at a munitions plant' during World War II. His “light manual labor” on this job consisted of picking up and loading 50-pound boxes of explosives onto pallets, weighing them, and then removing them from the pallets with an “electric buggy”, so that the tops could be nailed on the boxes and they could be otherwise sealed. When [1283]*1283world tensions were eased temporarily, Mr. Taylor’s employment with the munitions plant was terminated. The same month of this layoff, he obtained employment driving a schoolbus, which he continued for 16 years, working for four of these years at a garage between runs to and from the schools he served. In this same period, he also painted residential interiors and the trims of exteriors * * when I could get something. * *

After returning to the ordnance plant when war clouds again gathered, Mr. Taylor worked as a painter in the maintenance department and occasionally drove a truck transporting personnel and supplies within the plant complex. He was injured in July, 1962, while he was lifting some metal shelves which his crew had subjected to sandblasting. He underwent a laminectomy for the surgical excision of a herniated spinal disc in February, 1964. He testified that this procedure brought him relief temporarily, and he resumed his employment at the ordnance plant. However, his former pain soon returned and became progressively worse, according to the plaintiff. His employer was unable to find any work Mr. Taylor could perform regularly without an excessive loss of time. Consequently, he was declared totally and permanently disabled in June, 1967 and has been the recipient of benefits for this reason since.

The medical evidence supports substantially the plaintiff’s claim that his impairments in combination were and are of such aggregated severity as to prevent his engaging in any substantial gainful activity on or prior to the date of the hearing examiner’s decision. A good summary of this appears in the statement of Dr. Horace B. Capp, Jr., a neurosurgeon, who found that Mr. Taylor had never gotten well following his surgery in 1964; that Mr. Taylor had been compelled to undergo multiple periods of hospitalization, had had multiple problems and continued pain in his lower abdominal back, as well as bilateral leg pain, nervousness, a stomach ulcer, etc.; that this pain was aggravated by even minor physical activity; and that Mr. Taylor sleeps on a special mattress and cannot wear the prescribed corset because it hurts his back.

Dr. Frank B. O’Connell, the neurosurgeon who operated on Mr. Taylor’s back over three years earlier, was of the opinion on August 31, 1967 that his patient was not capable of work involving any bending, lifting or prolonged standing (such as working as a painter or a filling station attendant both would involve), and as late as November 28, 1967, he was of the opinion that Mr. Taylor’s condition remained the same as of the previous year from a neurologic standpoint. The assistant medical director of the plaintiff’s most recent employer stated that no work that Mr. Taylor could perform regularly without excessive lost time could be found prior to his retirement in June, 1967.

After the rehospitalization and reexamination of Mr. Taylor in November, 1966, Dr. Eben Alexander, Jr., another neurosurgeon, found him to be moderately disabled with a permanent partial impairment of 15 to 20%. He advised that the plaintiff do no heavy lifting or strenuous work with prolonged standing. Dr. T. H. Roberson reported on June 27, 1967 that he had found Mr. Taylor totally disabled to do any work, with muscle spasm still persisting at that time. Dr. Warner G. Clark, plaintiff’s regular physician, considered the plaintiff totally and permanently disabled on January 24, 1968 for the type of work he was experienced in performing. On further consideration, Dr. Roberson expressed his opinion that Mr. Taylor’s condition was growing progressively worse and will disable and cause him more pain in the future. He proscribed the plaintiff from any lifting, bending, or added activity.

A psychiatrist, Dr. Zelma L. Herndon, was led to the conclusion that Mr. Taylor was exaggerating his back complaints. She found him to be a hostile and aggressive individual who was trying to maintain a rigid control over these [1284]*1284drives which, in turn, aggravated his headaches and any back problems he might have. Two lay witnesses testified from their experience in working with Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 F. Supp. 1281, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-cohen-tned-1969.