Zambrana-Domenech v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare

370 F. Supp. 399, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11608
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 13, 1974
DocketCiv. 562-74
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 370 F. Supp. 399 (Zambrana-Domenech v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zambrana-Domenech v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare, 370 F. Supp. 399, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11608 (prd 1974).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

CANCIO, Chief Judge.

This action is brought under Section 205(g) of the Social Security Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), seeking review of the Secretary’s final determination denying plaintiff’s application for a period of disability and disability insurance benefits. The Secretary’s decision was based upon Section 216(i) and 223(d) of the Act, as amended, Sections 416 (i) and 423(d), which held that the claimant’s impairments were not established to be of sufficient severity as to preclude him from engaging in any type of substantial gainful activity.

Claimant was last regularly employed as a carpenter’s aid in construction work, at the time of the accident that precipitated the plaintiff’s request for disability insurance benefits. At the time of the second and last hearing, claimant was 43 years old, he had completed three elementary grades of education and he could read and write.

The claimant has a long work history. He began working at the early age of fifteen. For fifteen years he worked in agriculture, weeding coffee with a “machete” and taking out charcoal. For the next ten years claimant worked as a painter’s helper and was thus employed at the date of his incapacitating fall on March 23, 1966. The claimant has not worked since then but has demonstrated and has attempted to secure work of a related nature and has been rejected due to his back condition (Tr. 34). Once such attempt was with a housing project in November 1971 (Tr. 33). He has a current application with the Water Re *401 sources Authority to mix cement but has asserted that he “cannot do it.” (Tr. 33). Vocational Rehabilitation has offered him a cart with which to sell hot dogs but the claimant asserts that he cannot push the cart or do the necessary bending required to reach the stored hot dogs (Tr. 47).

Claimant complains of both physical and mental discomforts which seem to this Court to have the sufficient objective evidence attached to them to merit additional evaluation and consideration by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. Claimant not only suffers from the usual and difficult to detect discomforts of the back, associated with back surgery, but also suffers from other mental and physical ailments developed since his back surgery. Claimant complains of “his mind”, of his left leg being numb. He claims that he has also fallen and hurt his right arm, but has never sought medical attention for this fall. He is run down, complains of dizzy spells, of headaches every half hour, relieved with Cortal (Tr. 34-35). He suffers from high blood pressure and a nervous condition. At times he has stabbing pains in his heart for which he takes prescribed drops (Tr. 36). He has difficulty bending (Tr. 38). The longest he can sit is % hours or one hour. He cannot do alternating sitting and standing work because he must also lie down.

Plaintiff filed an application for a period of disability and for disability insurance benefits on December 6, 1967 (Tr. 104-107); he was found “disabled” beginning March 23, 1966; on June 14, 1968 a disability determination (Tr. 108-109 was made wherein it was determined that plaintiff’s disability ceased on March 13, 1968 and his entitlement to a disability period and to disability insurance benefits ended on May 30, 1968. It was held that plaintiff was under a disability from March 23, 1966 to March 13, 1968, the diagnosis being that a herniated nucleous pulposis at L-4-L-5 had been operated and that there had been recovery. It was determined that the medical evidence revealed that plaintiff became disabled on March 23, 1966 and continued so until March 13, 1968; that plaintiff had improved medically, and that he could realistically be expected to resume substantial gainful activity at the later date and that, therefore, the period of disability ended on May 30, 1968.

On July 24, 1969, on reconsideration, a hearing examiner before whom plaintiff appeared, found plaintiff was no longer disabled (Tr. 94-101); request for review was dismissed by the Appeals Council on March 30, 1970 because the filing for review was beyond limit (Tr. 153). This decision became the final decision of the Secretary when the plaintiff failed to pursue the rights of appeal available to him under the Act and Regulations. Plaintiff again filed application on June 1, 1970 (Tr. 154-157) which was denied initially, and on reconsideration. Plaintiff requested a hearing which was held on November 11, 1971 (Tr. 26). The case was considered de novo and on February 16, 1972 found that the plaintiff was not under a disability starting on or before September 30, 1971 when he had the necessary disability insurance status (Tr. 8-19). This decision became final when approved by the Appeals Council on May 25, 1972 (Tr. 5).

The only issue before this Court is whether the Secretary’s finding that plaintiff was not under a disability is supported .by substantial evidence. We think that a fresh reconsideration of the evidence in the record as well as any available evidence would be necessary to adequately sustain the Secretary’s finding and therefore remand the case for further proceedings at the administrative level.

We have before us a forty-six year old man, who has known nothing else in life but work from the tender age of fifteen, living in ignorance, hard physical manual work and near poverty. The claimant before us has experienced an actual *402 fall, a fall which led to spinal surgery and a subsequently proven period of disability. What is actually before us is whether this man deserves to be believed when he subjectively asserts that the period of disability initially warrants him an extension because of his still being under that disability.

The Secretary’s finding is that the claimant has failed to establish that he was unable to engage in substantial gainful activity. The Secretary’s decision seems to erroneously conclude that the claimant must establish his inability to engage in gainful activity with objective evidence obtained by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory techniques to the exclusion of claimant’s own subjective assertions of inability because of pain, discomfort and limitation in movement. The Secretary admits that the evidence of record does indicate that plaintiff had a condition best described as a back weakness; but that this evience was clearly not persuasive that the condition was so severe as to have precluded him from engaging in substantial and gainful employment.

The persuasiveness or lack of persuasiveness that the Secretary admits seems to have been measured and weighed in terms of the lack of objective data to fully substantiate this inability. This Court disapproved a similar approach in Santiago v. Gardner, D.C., 288 F.Supp. 156.

It is well known that disability benefits will not be granted exclusively on the subjective complaints and assertions of the individual, but if there is medical evidence on record, this can be used to support and corroborate the subjective symptoms. Santiago v. Gardner, su pra.

The record is replete of both objective evidence and the subjective evidence that Santiago v. Gardner gives support to.

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Related

Flam v. Califano
469 F. Supp. 793 (E.D. New York, 1979)
Flores v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare
440 F. Supp. 312 (D. Puerto Rico, 1977)
Medina v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare
440 F. Supp. 292 (D. Puerto Rico, 1977)
Diaz v. Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare
440 F. Supp. 727 (D. Puerto Rico, 1977)
Teal v. Mathews
425 F. Supp. 474 (D. Maryland, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
370 F. Supp. 399, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zambrana-domenech-v-secretary-of-health-education-welfare-prd-1974.