Veeney ex rel. Strother v. Sullivan

973 F.2d 326, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 19274, 1992 WL 198935
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 1992
DocketNo. 92-1000
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 973 F.2d 326 (Veeney ex rel. Strother v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veeney ex rel. Strother v. Sullivan, 973 F.2d 326, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 19274, 1992 WL 198935 (4th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

ERVIN, Chief Judge:

Debra Veeney applied to the Social Security Administration (SSA) for survivor benefits on behalf of her two sons after their father, Stanley Edward Moore, died. SSA awarded benefits to Cornell, Veeney’s older son, but denied them to Rafeal, her younger son. Veeney then appeared at a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who held that Veeney had not presented sufficient evidence that Moore was Raf-eal’s father. On appeal, the magistrate judge affirmed. Finding numerous errors in the AU’s opinion, no substantial evi[328]*328dence in support of the ALJ’s decision, and overwhelming evidence that Moore was Rafeal’s father, we reverse and remand to the district court with instructions to award benefits to Rafeal.

I

This case requires us to determine whether the AU erred in deciding that Debra Veeney had not presented sufficient evidence that Stanley Moore was the father of Veeney’s son, Rafeal Strother. We first set out the facts and decisions below.

Debra Veeney gave birth to Rafeal Strother in May 1983. Veeney had given birth to Rafeal’s brother, Cornell Strother, in October 1981.1 Veeney, who was unmarried when her sons were born, did not list the father on either birth certificate. Stanley Moore listed Cornell as a dependent on his 1982 tax return, which led the Commonwealth of Virginia to order Moore to begin paying child support payments in December 1988.2 In 1984, Moore stopped paying child support when he was imprisoned. Moore died in April 1988.

While Moore never acknowledged that he was Rafeal’s father on any official forms, the record contains other evidence that he was Rafeal’s father. Veeney testified that she was certain that Moore was Rafeal’s father because she had not slept with any other men at the time of Rafeal’s conception. Veeney and her mother also testified that Moore had acknowledged paternity in a letter he sent Veeney from prison, but that the letter was lost in a house fire that destroyed her parents’ home, where Vee-ney was living at the time. The record also contains affidavits of seven people stating that Moore said he was Rafeal’s father; visited Veeney in the hospital when Rafeal was born; visited Rafeal and Cornell three or four times a month; brought Rafeal presents during those visits, on Rafeal’s birthday, and at Christmas; and was the “spitting image” of Rafeal. One affiant even stated that it was common knowledge that Moore was Rafeal’s father. In addition to the affidavits, Veeney had blood group testing done on Rafeal, Cornell, and Ronnie Moore, Stanley Moore's brother. The blood tests showed that Rafeal and Cornell “probably” had the same biological father; that Ronnie Moore was “likely” the biological uncle of Rafeal and Cornell, by odds of 783,229 to 1; and that Ronnie Moore could not be the boys’ father. The tester concluded that the boys’ father was likely a member of the Moore family.

In May 1988, Veeney applied for the SSA survivor benefits at issue here on behalf of Cornell and Rafeal. The SSA awarded benefits to Cornell, but denied them to Rafeal. Veeney then presented the evidence described above at a hearing before an AU in January 1990. In his opinion, the AU noted the affidavits and blood testing, but then erroneously stated that Veeney had first disclosed the letter lost in the house fire at the hearing and that “[i]t is the undersigned’s consideration that the [state] Court has already ruled that Stanley is not the father and is not required to pay child support [to Rafeal].” Tr. at 19. Then, without discussing the affidavits, the AU held that “the blood testing standing alone is insufficient to establish that Stanley is the father for purposes of Social Security benefits.” Id.

Veeney then requested the SSA Appeals Council to review the AU’s decision. The Appeals Council acknowledged that the AU erred in stating that a state court had “already ruled” that Moore was not Raf-eal’s father, but determined that the error did “not form a basis to revise the Administrative Law Judge’s decision.” Tr. at 5.

On appeal to the district court, the magistrate judge stated that the AU would not have been in error if he had not considered the blood tests at all, based on the intestacy statute in effect in Virginia at Moore’s [329]*329death.3 The magistrate judge also stated that it was the ALJ’s responsibility to weigh “conflicting” evidence. As a result, the magistrate judge affirmed the SSA’s denial of survivor benefits to Rafeal.

II

In determining whether Moore was Rafeal’s father for purposes of the Social Security Act, “the Secretary shall apply such law as would be applied in determining the devolution of intestate personal property by the courts of the State in which ... [Moore] was domiciled at the time of his death.” 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(2)(A). The Act thus requires us to look to the devolution of intestate personal property in Virginia, Moore’s domicile at the time of his death, which we do in Part II A below. In Part II B, we address the AU’s opinion.

A

Section 64.1-5.2 of the Virginia Code governs the devolution of intestate personal property. At the time of Moore’s death, the statute (hereinafter, “former section 64.1-5.2”) required clear and convincing evidence that the deceased was the claimant’s father and stated that evidence “shall be limited to” the following six items:

1. That he cohabited openly with the mother during all of the ten months immediately prior to the time the child was born;
2. That he gave consent to a physician or other person, not including the mother, charged with the responsibility of securing information for the preparation of a birth record that his name be used as the father of the child upon the birth records of the child;
3. That he allowed by a general course of conduct the common use of his surname by the child;
4. That he claimed the child as his child on any statement, tax return or other document filed and signed by him with any local, State or federal government or any agency thereof;
5. That he admitted before any court having jurisdiction to try and dispose of the same that he is the father of the child; or
6. That he voluntarily admitted paternity in writing, under oath.

None of the six types of evidence applied here, because Moore never took any of the specified actions. The government argues that it is clear that Rafeal could not have inherited from Moore, and that the Secretary therefore rightly denied benefits. Under the government’s theory, which the magistrate judge appeared to approve, the ALJ should not even have considered the blood test evidence. Although the government stresses the plain meaning of the statute, (evidence “shall” be limited), the Social Security Act states that the Secretary shall apply the law that the courts of the state where the father lived would apply. 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(2)(A). Thus, the Act requires us to consider more than the plain meaning of this state statute.

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Related

Veeney v. Sullivan
973 F.2d 326 (Fourth Circuit, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
973 F.2d 326, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 19274, 1992 WL 198935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veeney-ex-rel-strother-v-sullivan-ca4-1992.