Ledoux v. US Social Security Administration, Acting Commissioner
Filing
17
///ORDER granting 12 Motion to Reverse Decision of Commissioner; denying 14 Motion to Affirm Decision of Commissioner. The decision of the Acting Commissioner is reversed and the case is remanded pursuant to Section Four. So Ordered by Judge Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr.(gla)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
John A. Ledoux, Jr.
v.
Civil No. 13-cv-530-JD
Opinion No. 2016 DNH 112
Carolyn W. Colvin,
Acting Commissioner,
Social Security Administration
O R D E R
John A. Ledoux, Jr. seeks judicial review, pursuant to 42
U.S.C. § 405(g), of the decision of the Acting Commissioner of
the Social Security Administration, denying his applications for
social security disability benefits.
Ledoux contends that the
Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) erred in weighing the medical
opinions in the record, in failing to consider the limiting
effects of other impairments, in assessing a residual functional
capacity for full-time work, and in relying on the vocational
expert’s opinion based on an incomplete hypothetical question.
The Acting Commissioner moves to affirm the decision.
Standard of Review
In reviewing the final decision of the Acting Commissioner
in a social security case, the court “is limited to determining
whether the ALJ deployed the proper legal standards and found
facts upon the proper quantum of evidence.”
Nguyen v. Chater,
172 F.3d 31, 35 (1st Cir. 1999); accord Seavey v. Barnhart, 276
F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2001).
The court defers to the ALJ’s
factual findings as long as they are supported by substantial
evidence.
scintilla.
§ 405(g).
“Substantial evidence is more than a
It means such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind
might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”
Astralis
Condo. Ass’n v. Sec’y Dep’t of Housing & Urban Dev., 620 F.3d
62, 66 (1st Cir. 2010).
Background1
Ledoux applied for social security disability benefits and
supplemental security income in April of 2007, alleging a
disability since January 15, 2006.
His application was denied
and, after a video hearing, an ALJ issued a decision on April 6,
2010, finding that Ledoux was not disabled.
On judicial review,
the court reversed and remanded the decision on January 24,
2011.
The same ALJ held another video hearing and then issued a
decision on March 1, 2012, again finding that Ledoux was not
disabled.
When the administrative files were not available to
allow review, the court again reversed and remanded.
The background information is summarized from the parties’
joint statement of material facts. See LR 9.1(c).
1
2
A new ALJ held a third video hearing on April 2, 2015, and
issued a decision on April 24, 2015, finding that Ledoux was not
disabled from the alleged onset date through his last insured
date of March 31, 2011.
The ALJ found, however, that Ledoux was
disabled after October 24, 2012, because his age category
changed.2
When the Appeals Council informed Ledoux that the
ALJ’s decision was the final decision, he again sought judicial
review.
Ledoux was forty-three years old in 2006, when he alleges
his disability began.
He had worked as a tow truck driver, a
heavy equipment driver, and motorcycle repairer.
For purposes
of challenging the current decision, Ledoux is seeking social
security disability benefits and alleges disability caused by
physical impairments due to disc disease, headaches, and
coronary artery disease.
A.
Medical Records
In September of 2006, Ledoux reported during an initial
healthcare assessment that he had lower back pain that caused
him to double over at times and interrupted his sleep.
An x-ray
showed a collapsed disc at L4-L5 with advanced degenerative bone
changes and an “anterior and posterior marginal spur causing
The Social Security Administration found that Ledoux was
entitled to supplemental security benefits as of February 1,
2013.
2
3
some focal stenosis of the spinal canal.”
coordinated and smooth.
Ledoux’s gait was
The physician’s assistant prescribed
pain medication.
At appointments over the rest of 2006, Ledoux reported that
medication helped him sleep but that he still had back pain and
also had numbness in his leg and foot.
In December of 2006, an
MRI showed disc herniation at L5-S1 and L4-L5 along with
“collapse and loss of disc height as well as disc dessication”
at L3 to S1.
Despite worsening back pain, Ledoux continued to
be self-employed doing carpentry into 2007.
In April of 2007, Ledoux reported increased pain and right
leg weakness.
He was limping, and his range of motion was
limited by low back pain.
his right leg.
Straight leg testing was positive on
He also reported that he had not worked since
the winter.
By mid-2007, physicians agreed that nonoperative treatment
of Ledoux’s back pain had been unsuccessful.
On July 9, 2007,
Dr. Yogish Kamath operated on Ledoux, doing a lumbar laminectomy
with L3-L5 disc fusion.
He was discharged from the hospital on
July 14, 2007.
In late July of 2007, Dr. Matt Masewic, a state agency
physician, reviewed Ledoux’s records and concluded that despite
Ledoux’s severe lumbar disc disease, he could work at the
sedentary exertional level and do all postural activities.
4
Another state agency physician reviewed Dr. Masewic’s opinion
and agreed.
Ledoux reported to a physician’s assistant in mid-August
that he was symptom free.
normal results.
His physical examination produced
Dr. Kamath cautioned that Ledoux was to avoid
bending, contact sports, and lifting weights over twenty-five to
thirty pounds.
Dr. Kamath also stated that Ledoux could not
return to his work in the construction industry.
Physical therapist Ernest Roy performed a functional
capacity assessment of Ledoux on August 21, 2007.
Because of
Ledoux’s recent surgery, Roy could not do some of the necessary
testing.
He found that Ledoux could occasionally do postural
activities, walk, stand, and drive and was not limited in hand
movements and manipulation.
Roy also found that Ledoux could
work at the light exertional level for eight hours daily.
A state agency consultant, Dr. Akbar N. Sadri, reviewed
Ledoux’s records and issued an opinion on March 21, 2008.
He
found that Ledoux could do work at the sedentary exertional
level with certain other limitations.
In October of 2008, Ledoux was hospitalized for chest pain
radiating down his arms.
He was diagnosed with a heart attack.
He had a surgical procedure to insert a stent in his left
circumflex coronary artery.
His post-operative checks reported
that he was doing well.
5
After he fell in January of 2009, Ledoux reported to a
physician’s assistant that he had an exacerbation of back pain.
He also noted chronic neuropathy of his right leg and foot since
the surgery.
An x-ray showed no acute fracture or displacement
of the surgical hardware.
The physician’s assistant prescribed
pain medication.
During a physical therapy consultation in March of 2009,
Ledoux reported that although surgery had improved his pain, he
still had chronic back pain.
The physical therapist issued a
TENS unit and recommended home exercise.
In May, Ledoux
reported chronic back pain with a recent increase in pain.
The
physical therapist noted that Ledoux was stiff when getting up
from a chair and that he walked with a limp.
She ordered a home
lumbar traction unit.
At a doctor’s appointment in July of 2009, Ledoux reported
back pain radiating into his left hip.
Dr. Alina Robert found
decreased sensation in his lower legs and positive results on
straight leg testing.
An MRI of Ledoux’s lumbar spine showed
degenerative disc disease, a renal cyst on the left side,
bilateral tightening of spinal cord nerves at L2-L3, a postoperative meningocele or pseudomeningocele (accumulation of
cerebrospinal fluid in the back causing pain and headaches), a
broad-based disc bulge at L2-L3 with other changes, and loss of
intervertebral disc space at L4-L5.
6
Dr. Gopalan Umashankar evaluated Ledoux in September of
2009 for back pain.
Although the examination was essentially
normal, Dr. Umshankar assessed failed low back syndrome.
He
stated that Ledoux should not lift weights heavier than twenty
pounds, should not bend forward or sideways, and would have
difficulty returning to his former work.
In October of 2009, Ledoux saw Dr. Rowland Hazard because
of back pain.
Dr. Hazard recommended a neurological review.
Dr. Nathan Simmons did a neurosurgical evaluation in November
and found that the pseudomeningocele was not causing headaches
or pain, and that there were no surgical issues.
In January of 2010, Dr. Hazard referred Ledoux to
Occupational Therapist Lynn Chauvette for a functional capacity
evaluation.
Chauvette found that Ledoux could safely do
sedentary work but that he could not sustain the work, even on a
part-time basis, because of his need to change positions
frequently.
During her examination, Chauvette noted signs of
Ledoux’s competitive effort and performance and his physical
discomfort.
Chauvette also noted that Ledoux had two of seven
anatomically unreasonable responses, or Waddell signs, during
the testing.
Overall, Chauvette found that Ledoux provided full
physical effort and that his reports of pain were reasonable and
reliable based on the test findings and clinical observations.
7
A physician’s assistant, who had treated Ledoux over the
past few years, wrote a letter in July of 2010 stating that a
recent study showed multilevel degenerative changes in Ledoux’s
cervical spine.
Dr. Hazard also noted degenerative changes in
Ledoux’s cervical spine.
An MRI showed mild to moderate
narrowing in the cervical spine.
In September, Dr. Hazard
reviewed Chauvette’s functional capacity report and found it
credible, noting that the evaluation system she used was well
known and authoritative.
A state agency consultant, Dr. Louis
Rosenthall, reviewed Ledoux’s records in November of 2010 and
found that he could do work at the sedentary level and had no
other limitations.
In March of 2011, Ledoux reported to the physician’s
assistant that he had worsening neck pain and sleep problems.
She increased his pain medication dosage.
Ledoux’s date last
insured for purposes of disability insurance benefits was March
31, 2011.
Thereafter, Ledoux continued to be treated for back and
neck pain, including injections and pain medication.
In August
of 2012, an MRI showed advanced degenerative changes at the L2L3 level and other changes noted in the cervical spine.
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B.
Administrative Hearing and Decision
A video hearing before an Administrative Law Judge was held
on April 2, 2015.
Ledoux testified that his three children
stayed with him every other week.
He said that he was limited
in his activities by back pain that ranged in severity from a
four to a ten and that he also suffered from headaches.
taking pain medication for his back.
He was
Despite the pain, he was
able to mow his small lawn, shop with his mother and his
daughter, and occasionally bike with his children.
A vocational expert testified at the hearing.
In response
to a question about an individual limited to light work with
occasional postural limitations and some other prohibited
activities, the vocational expert testified that the person
could not return to Ledoux’s former work but could do other
work.
When the exertional level was reduced to the sedentary
level, the vocational expert testified that the person could
work as an answering service operator, a telephone marketer
solicitor, and a surveillance system monitor.
If the person
could not sit, stand, or walk for more than four hours in a day,
no jobs would be available.
In response to questions from
Ledoux’s counsel, the vocational expert testified that a person
who had to get up and lean against a wall or support himself
with his hands for five minutes every hour could still do the
9
identified jobs but a need for those activities for ten minutes
or to lie down for an hour would preclude the identified jobs.
The ALJ found that Ledoux had the residual functional
capacity to do sedentary work that would allow him to change
positions between sitting and standing at will and with a
limitation to doing postural activities only occasionally.
Based on that assessment, the ALJ found, using the e MedicalVocational Guidelines and the vocational expert’s testimony,
that Ledoux was not disabled before October 24, 2012.
Because
of his age, the ALJ found that Ledoux was disabled after October
24, 2012.
When Ledoux did not send written exceptions to the
ALJ’s decision to the Appeals Council within the time allowed,
the ALJ’s decision became the final decision in the case.
Discussion
Ledoux moves to reverse the decision and remand the case
for further proceedings on the grounds that the ALJ erred in
giving Chauvette’s functional capacity evaluation little weight,
erred in weighing the medical opinion evidence, erred in failing
to consider Ledoux’s limitations in combination, and erred in
making the disability finding based on an incomplete
hypothetical to the vocational expert.
moves to affirm the decision.
10
The Acting Commissioner
In determining whether a claimant is disabled for purposes
of social security benefits, the ALJ follows a five-step
sequential analysis.
20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520.
The claimant bears
the burden through the first four steps of proving that her
impairments preclude her from working.
F.3d 606, 608 (1st Cir. 2001).
Freeman v. Barnhart, 274
At the fifth step, the Acting
Commissioner has the burden of showing that jobs exist which the
claimant can do.
Heggarty v. Sullivan, 947 F.2d 990, 995 (1st
Cir. 1991).
A.
Opinion Evidence
An ALJ is required to consider the medical opinions along
with all other relevant evidence in a claimant’s record.
C.F.R. § 404.1527(b).
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Medical opinions from all sources are
evaluated based on the nature of the medical source’s
relationship with the claimant, the consistency of the opinion
with the other record evidence, the medical source’s specialty,
and other factors that may be brought to the ALJ’s attention.
§ 404.1527(c); Titles II and XVI:
Considering Opinions and
Other Evidence from Sources Who Are Not ‘Acceptable Medical
Sources’ in Disability Claims, SSR 06-03p, August 9, 2006, 2006
WL 2329939, *4-*5.
The ALJ may rely on opinions of state agency consultant
physicians under the same analysis as that applied to opinions
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of treating or examining medical sources.
§ 404.1527(e); Ormon
v. Astrue, 497 F. App’x 81, 84 (1st Cir. 2012); Smallidge v.
Colvin, 2014 WL 799537, at *5 (D.N.H. Feb. 28, 2014); see also
Titles II and XVI:
Consideration of Administrative Findings of
Fact by State Agency Medical and Psychological Consultants and
Other Program Physicians, SSR 96-6p, 1996 WL 374180 (July 2,
1996).
The opinions of state agency consultant physicians,
however, may constitute substantial evidence to support an ALJ’s
findings only if the opinions are supported by the record.
96-69, at *2.
SSR
If the state agency consultant reviewed only part
of the record, the opinion cannot provide substantial evidence
to support the ALJ’s residual functional capacity assessment if
later evidence supports the claimant’s limitations.
See McGowen
v. Colvin, 2016 WL 1029480, at *6 (D.N.H. Mar. 15, 2016) (citing
cases).
Acceptable medical sources are licensed physicians,
licensed or certified psychologists, licensed optometrists,
licensed podiatrists, qualified speech language pathologists who
may provide evidence to establish an impairment.
404.1513(a).
20 C.F.R. §
Other sources, such as physical and occupational
therapists, may provide evidence of the severity of an
impairment and how it affects the claimant’s work.
§ 404.1513(d).
Functional capacity testing by a physical
therapist or an occupational therapist is “evidence from other
12
sources” that may be considered to determine the severity of an
impairment and its functional effect.
1.
§ 404.1513(d).
Functional Capacity Evaluations
Ledoux argues that the ALJ erred in giving little weight to
the functional capacity evaluation done by Occupational
Therapist Lynn Chauvette.
He contends that because Dr. Hazard
referred Ledoux to Chauvette for the evaluation and then
reviewed the evaluation and found that it seemed credible the
evaluation should have been given greater weight.
He also
faults the ALJ for giving Physical Therapist Ernest Roy’s
evaluation great weight while discounting Chauvette’s opinion as
not being from an acceptable source.
As Ledoux points out, the ALJ’s analysis of Roy’s opinion
and Chauvette’s opinion is inconsistent.
Both are therapists,
and therefore, neither are acceptable medical sources.3
As such,
both opinions may be considered for purposes of determining the
severity of a claimant’s diagnosed impairments and their effect
on his ability to work.
To the extent the ALJ discounted
Chauvette’s opinion, which provided a functional capacity
The Acting Secretary mistakenly identified Roy as “Dr.” in
her memorandum in support of her motion to affirm, which may
explain, in part, the confusion about Roy’s status.
3
13
assessment, because it was not from an acceptable medical
source, that was error.4
In addition, Ledoux correctly contends that the ALJ erred
in discounting Chauvette’s opinion as unreliable based on her
finding that Ledoux’s testing showed two out of seven Waddell
signs.
“Waddell signs are behavioral responses to physical
examination that indicate the presence of nonorganic—e.g.
psychological, social or behavioral—involvement in lower back
pain, and such signs are not on their own a test of credibility
or faking.”
Ormon v. Astrue, 497 F. App’x 81, 86 (1st Cir.
2012) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Because Waddell signs
occur in patients with organic back pain, “isolated signs should
not be considered clinically significant.”
Id.; see also
Doucette v. Astrue, 972 F. Supp. 2d 154, 157 n.18 (D. Mass.
2013) (“Normally, at least three Waddell signs must be present
to consider the signs relevant to credibility.”
Citing Bazile
v. Apfel, 113 F. Supp. 2d 181, 187 n.2 (D. Mass. 2000)).
Despite the two positive Waddell signs, Chauvette
documented during the three and half hours of testing that
Ledoux showed objective signs of pain.
She also found that
Ledoux demonstrated full physical effort and that his reports of
On the other hand, Ledoux’s reliance on Dr. Hazard’s
referral to Chauvette to bolster her opinion is misplaced. See
Scott v. Colvin, 2014 WL 3895238, at *2 (D.N.H. Aug. 8, 2014).
4
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pain and disability were reliable and reasonable based on her
test findings.
Therefore, the ALJ erred in discounting
Chauvette’s opinion based on a perceived lack of reliability.
The inconsistencies in Ledoux’s reported work record cited
by the Acting Commissioner to show a lack of credibility in
Ledoux’s claims do not undermine Chauvette’s evaluation.
There
is no suggestion that Chauvette was influenced by the date when
Ledoux stopped working, which in any case was years before
Chauvette tested Ledoux.
Also, Chauvette based her evaluation
on her own testing and observations, not on Ledoux’s subjective
complaints, so that Ledoux’s credibility does not significantly
affect the value of Chauvette’s evaluation.
Roy evaluated Ledoux in August of 2007, only a month after
Ledoux’s surgery.
Due to the recent surgery, Roy was not able
to conduct all of the tests for the evaluation.
Given the
limitations on Roy’s testing and the changes in Ledoux’s
condition over the next few years, after Roy provided his
residual functional capacity assessment, the ALJ’s decision to
give Roy’s opinion great weight was not well supported.
Therefore, the ALJ erred in giving Roy’s opinion more
weight than Chauvette’s opinion.
The ALJ also gave weight to
medical opinions in the record that supported a residual
functional capacity assessment for the ability to do sedentary
work.
Those are reviewed below.
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2.
Medical Opinions
Ledoux challenges the ALJ’s assessment of the medical
opinions provided by Dr. Sadri, Dr. Masewic, and Dr. Umashankar.
She also asserts that the ALJ erred by ignoring Dr. Hazard’s
opinion.
As the Acting Commissioner explains, Dr. Hazard’s
referral to Chauvette and his comment that Chauvette’s
evaluation seemed credible are not medical opinions.
See Scott
v. Colvin, 2014 WL 3895238, at *2 (D.N.H. Aug. 8, 2014).
Therefore, Ledoux does not point to a medical opinion by Dr.
Hazard that should have been considered by the ALJ.
Dr. Masewic’s opinion is from July of 2007, just days after
Ledoux had back surgery.
It is based on Dr. Masewic’s review of
medical records from before the surgery, which did not account
for changes that occurred thereafter.
Ledoux’s medical record
documents substantial changes in his medical condition after
that time.
Because Dr. Masewic did not review the years of
medical records after July of 2007 and did not have Chauvette’s
opinion, his evaluation does not provide substantial evidence to
support the ALJ’s residual functional capacity assessment.
Dr. Sadri reviewed the medical evidence in March of 2008
and provided his opinion that Ledoux could work on a full-time
basis at the light exertional level.
Dr. Sadri found no medical
cause for Ledoux’s recent complaints of hand numbness, which Dr.
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Hazard later found to be caused by disc pathology in Ledoux’s
cervical spine.
Again, the medical record continues on for two
years after Dr. Sadri provided his evaluation.
Dr. Umashankar did not provide a separate opinion about
Ledoux’s residual functional capacity.
Instead, as part of his
treatment records, Dr. Umashankar stated some weight limitations
and bending restrictions on Ledoux’s functional capacity but
provided no opinion about Ledoux’s ability to work on a fulltime basis.
The ALJ properly gave great weight to the lifting
and bending limitations found by Dr. Umashankar.
B.
Finding of Not Disabled
The ALJ found that Ledoux was able to work full time at the
sedentary exertional level with the ability to change positions
at will and some postural and climbing limitations.
Occupa-
tional Therapist Chauvette found in January of 2010 that the
level of pain Ledoux was experiencing during her testing
precluded him from full-time work.
No opinion considered by the
ALJ, which could provide substantial evidence, found that Ledoux
was capable of full time work by that time.
The Acting Commissioner points to the opinion provided in
November of 2010 by Dr. Rosenthall that Ledoux was capable of
working at the sedentary level to show substantial evidence to
support the ALJ’s assessment.
The ALJ did not address Dr.
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Rosenthall’s opinion, however.
The Acting Commissioner argues,
relying on Ward v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 211 F.3d 652, 656 (1st
Cir. 2000), that omission is harmless because remand would be an
empty exercise.
In general, the court cannot affirm the Acting
Commissioner’s decision based on a rationale or analysis that
the ALJ did not consider.
See High v. Astrue, 2011 WL 941572,
at *6 (D.N.H. Mar. 17, 2011); accord Jenness v. Colvin, 2015 WL
9688392, at *7 (D.N.H. Aug. 27, 2015).
The Acting Commissioner
has not shown that the general rule should not apply here.
Further, Ledoux disputes Dr. Rosenthall’s opinion, pointing to
mistakes and omissions in his evaluation of the record.
Therefore, Dr. Rosenthall’s opinion cannot provide substantial
evidence to support the ALJ’s finding that Ledoux was capable of
full-time work at the sedentary exertional level.
In the absence of substantial evidence, the Acting
Commissioner’s decision must be reversed and remanded.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the claimant’s motion to reverse
and remand (document no. 12) is granted.
The Acting Commissioner’s motion to affirm (document no.
14) is denied.
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The decision of the Acting Commissioner is reversed and the
case is remanded pursuant to Sentence Four.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________
Joseph DiClerico, Jr.
United States District Judge
July 6, 2016
cc:
Ruth Dorothea Heintz, Esq.
Robert J. Rabuck, Esq.
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