Stille v. Weinberger
Decision Date | 25 June 1974 |
Docket Number | No. 73-2134.,73-2134. |
Citation | 499 F.2d 244 |
Parties | William STILLE, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Caspar W. WEINBERGER, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Defendant-Appellant. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Sixth Circuit |
William Kanter, Dept. of Justice, for defendant-appellant; Irving Jaffe, Acting Asst. Atty. Gen., John P. Milanowski, U.S. Atty., Washington, D.C., on brief.
Don R. Craft, Reamon, Williams, Klukowski & Craft, Grand Rapids, Mich., for plaintiff-appellee.
Before PECK and McCREE, Circuit Judges, and CECIL, Senior Circuit Judge.
On this appeal we review the proceedings in the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan to determine whether the district judge erred in finding that the decision of the Appeals Council of the Social Security Administration, for the Secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, was not supported by substantial evidence.
William Stille, appellee herein, filed a disability application in July, 1970. He alleged that he had become unable to work in December 1967, at age 31, due to a blood clot in his left leg. His claim was initially and upon reconsideration denied by the Social Security Administration. Upon request of the appellee, a hearing was held before a Hearing Examiner of the Bureau of Hearings and Appeals.
In a comprehensive written decision the Hearing Examiner denied the appellee's claim for a Period of Disability and Disability Insurance Benefits. In his decision he made the following Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law.
The Appeals Council sustained the decision of the Hearing Examiner and it therefore became the final decision of the Secretary. Thereupon the appellee commenced an action in the District Court pursuant to the provision of the Social Security Act (Sec. 405(g), Title 42, U.S.C.) for review of the final decision of the Secretary in denying his claim for disability benefits.
In December 1967, the appellee suffered injury to his knee and ankle by jumping off a scaffold. He was hospitalized when his leg became swollen and it was discovered that he had blood clots in his left leg. He was in the hospital for fourteen days and was discharged on December 27, 1967, after the pain and swelling in his leg had subsided. After he was discharged from the hospital he remained at home under his doctor's order and treated his leg by elevation and heat baths. In July of 1968 the doctor informed him that he could return to work.
The appellee then went to work for Bay Castings Company as a filer. This was primarily a sitting job and he was paid $3.20 an hour. He worked on this job for about six months until he quit in February 1969. He quit Bay Castings in order to go back to construction work. The doctor had given him a rubber stocking and he thought he would be able to do construction work. He worked only three days on a construction job and found he could not make it because of the swelling in his leg. Following this, he went back to his old construction job (Walkers) and worked for three and a half days. This company discharged him when it found he had made a claim for workman's compensation. (He received $3,500.00 as a lump sum settlement for his injury.) The appellee also worked at Trenway (sp.) for about three months until January 1970. This involved spot welding and while it was not heavy work it required standing. The appellee was paid $2.75 per hour for this work.
Section 405(g), supra, provides for judicial review by the District Court and limits that review to a consideration of the administrative record. It is further provided that the findings of the Secretary as to any fact, if supported by substantial evidence, is conclusive. Lane v. Gardner, 374 F.2d 612 (C.A.6), Ross v. Richardson, 440 F.2d 690 (C.A.6).
To be entitled to a period of disability and disability benefits a claimant must bring himself within the provisions of the various sections of the Social Security Act which define those terms.
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