149 F.2d 270 | 2d Cir. | 1945
Plaintiff, the widow of a tugboat captain, sues under § 205(g) of the Social Security Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C.A. § 405(g), to review a final decision of the Social Security Board which had determined her widow’s benefits under the Act to be less than as she had contended. She also seeks recovery of an additional sum of $40.50 as immediately due her under her interpretation of the law. The District Court denied the Board’s motion for summary judgment in an opinion sustaining plaintiff’s contention, 52 F.Supp. 424, and thereafter rendered judgment reversing the Board’s order and directing the Board to recompute the payment due accordingly. The case involves the interpretation of §§ 209(a, b, e, f) of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 409 (a, b, e, f), and of Regulation No. 3, 20 CFR, 1940 Supp., 403.-302; and the Board’s appeal challenges the interpretation made below.
The deceased wage earner was born on April 27, 1871, and had been employed for many years in the New York Harbor area until his death July 23, 1942. But when the Social Security Act of 1935 became effective on January 1, 1937, he was not within the coverage of the Act because of his age (in excess of 65 years) and his occupation. Social Security Act of 1935, §§ 210(b) (4) and (c) (3), 49 Stat. 625; Regulation No. 3, 20 CFR, 1940 Supp., 403.802. Hence no social security taxes were paid on account of his earnings until January 1, 1940, when the Amendments of 1939 covering his employment became effective.
After Mr. Erickson’s death, plaintiff filed an application under the amended Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 402(g), for a lump-sum death payment. This lump-sum death payment is a sum equalling six times the so-called “primary insurance benefit.” The “primary insurance benefit,” in turn, requires a computation of the deceased’s “average monthly wage”;
Even though this may be the correct method for calculating a “true” áverage wage, the District Court erred in
The District Court, however, relied on Regulation No. 3, as defining “total wages” in more general terms. But that Regulation, while perhaps not too happily expressed, seems clearly intended not to include the special case of employees not covered under the employment provisions of the Act until after December 31, 1939.
Reversed for judgment for defendant.
§ 409(e). The term “primary insurance benefit” means an amount equal to the sum of the following—
(1) (A) 40 per centum of the amount of an individual’s average monthly wage if such average monthly wage does not exceed $50, or (B) if such average monthly wage exceeds $50, 40 per centum of $50, plus 10 per centum of the amount by which such average monthly wage exceeds $50 and does not exceed $250, and
(2) an amount equal to 1 per centum of the amount computed under paragraph (1) multiplied by the number of years in which $200 or more of wages were paid to such individual. Where the primary insurance benefit thus computed is less than $10, such benefit shall be $10.
§ 409(f). The term “average monthly wage” means the quotient obtained by dividing the total wages paid an individual before the quarter in which he died or became entitled to receive primary insurance benefits, whichever first occurred, by three times the number of quarters elapsing after 1936 and before such quarter in which he died or became so entitled, excluding any quarter prior to the quarter in which he attained the age of twenty-two during which he was paid less than $50 of wages and any quarter, after the quarter in which he attained age sixty-five, occurring prior to 1939.
“§ 403.302. Average monthly wage. An individual’s ‘average monthly wage’ is computed by dividing Ms total wages by three times the number of his expired quarters. * * *
“ ‘Total wages’ means all the wages paid to the individual before the quarter in which be died or became entitled to primary insurance benefits, whichever first occurred. (All wages paid for services performed before such individual attained the age of 22 are included in this total, but remuneration for services performed by such individual after he attained the age of 65, and prior to January 1, 1939, is excluded, since such remuneration is not wages under section 209(a) of the Act (see §§ 403.802 and 403:827).)”
That this regulation deals only with the general eases of § 209(a), 42 U.S.C.A. § 409(a), is shown by the latter regulations to which it makes specific reference; § 403.802 in particular defines wages in employments not covered by the Act until 1940 and shows that Captain Erickson’s occupation was not employment until that time.
As Chairman Altmeyer stated to the House Ways and Means Committee, “The effect of taking the whole period of time as a divisor is to reduce the average wage of those who come late in the system.” Hearings relative to Social Security Act Amendments of 1939, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., vol. 3, p. 2216.