OPINION
In 1969, Day filed an application with the Department of Health, Education & Welfare (HEW) for determination of a disability and for disability insurance benefits under 42 U.S.C. §§ 416, 423. After a hearing, Day’s application was denied by a Hearing Examiner. The HEW Appeals Council affirmed the examiner’s decision, and the decision thereby became administratively final. Day then instituted suit in the District Court. After reviewing the administrative record, the court concluded, without discussion, 1 that the examiner’s decision was supported by substantial evidence. Summary judgment was thereupon entered against Day. For the reasons stated below, we reverse the District Court’s judgment and remand the cause to the Secretary for a new hearing. 42 U.S.C. § 405(g).
Day claimed that she was disabled because of severe back and neck pains and headaches that began shortly after she fell on a concrete sidewalk. At the hearing before the examiner, Day introduced into evidence reports from five physicians who had examined and treated her at her request. None of the physicians was able to pinpoint, through objective laboratory tests, the specific cause of Day’s alleged pain. The physicians generally agreed, however, that Day was indeed suffering from some form of prolonged muscular strain. There was no positive evidence, and could be none, that Day was not suffering as much pain as she claimed to suffer, and no witness, qualified expert or otherwise, expressed the opinion that Day was in any way malingering. Each of the physicians recommended that Day undergo some type of treatment. Furthermore, two of the physicians expressed rather positive opinions as to whether Day was disabled. Dr. Moore, who had examined and treated Day on several occasions, stated that he had placed her on “disability” and had extended her “disability” for a number of months. Dr. Mitchell, a specialist in rehabilitative medicine, specifically con- *1156 eluded, after examining Day, that Day was “unfit for remunerative employment.” The reports from Day’s three other doctors did not contradict the conclusions drawn by Doctors Moore and Mitchell, and the Secretary introduced no contradictory medical evidence of his own.
In his written report, the Hearing Examiner mentioned the opinions rendered by Doctors Moore and Mitchell. He did not, however, set forth any specific reasons for rejecting the two doctors’ uncontroverted conclusions. While such uncontradicted expert opinions on the ultimate issue are not binding on the examiner, 20 C.F.R. § 404.1526 (1974), the examiner must, if he rejects them, expressly state clear and convincing reasons for his doing so.
White Glove Building Maintenance, Inc. v. Brennan,
The first two factors upon which the examiner relied provide little, if any, support for his ultimate conclusion. Disability may be proved by medically-acceptable clinical diagnoses, as well as by objective laboratory findings. 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(3);
see Stark v. Weinberger,
The examiner could, of course, consider Day’s general appearance and her testimony at the hearing. He observed that she was young, well-dressed, poised, and generally pleasing in appearance. Further, he noted that her only response to a question about her ability to perform her duties of a receptionist was that she was not qualified to do the necessary bookkeeping, an answer obviously not related to physical disability.
The examiner’s decision as to whether a claimant is disabled must be upheld if it is based on substantial evidence. 42 U.S.C. § 405(g);
Richardson v. Perales,
In the light of the uncontradicted medical opinions of Doctors Moore and Mitchell and Day’s own testimony that she could not stand, sit, or move about for any length of time and that on many days she was totally bedridden, we sim
*1157
ply cannot hold that the examiner’s observations of Day, and Day’s answer to the question concerning bookkeeping capability as related to the work of a receptionist, constitute substantial evidence.
See Lund v. Weinberger,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Our court has previously noted that “[a] district court’s finding that there is substantial evidence with no elucidation is of no help to this court.”
White Glove Building Mainte
nance,
Inc. v. Brennan,
. It bears emphasis that on the record before the Hearing Examiner, the expert opinions of Doctors Moore and Mitchell stood uncontroverted. The record did not present the more common situation wherein an examiner must choose between conflicting medical opinions, as was the case, for example, in
Sorenson v. Weinberger,
. Noting that a final resolution of the present controversy has already been long delayed, we express to both parties our hope that the new hearing will be conducted at the earliest possible time.
