Armstrong v. Saul

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 16, 2021
Docket3:19-cv-50316
StatusUnknown

This text of Armstrong v. Saul (Armstrong v. Saul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Saul, (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS WESTERN DIVISION

Judith A., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 19 CV 50316 ) Magistrate Judge Lisa A. Jensen Andrew Marshall Saul, ) Commissioner of Social Security, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Plaintiff is seeking disability benefits based on post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder. Now 52 years old, she worked steadily for about 20 years, but eventually stopped because of her psychological problems. In September 2016, she filed her Social Security disability applications. Two months earlier, she had started treatment with Dr. Mardjan Foroutan, a psychiatrist. In May 2018, just a few months before the administrative hearing, Dr. Foroutan completed an RFC questionnaire that, if fully credited, would compel a finding that Plaintiff was disabled. But the administrative law judge (“ALJ”) gave this opinion little weight and also found Plaintiff’s testimony not credible and therefore denied her benefits. Plaintiff raises three main arguments for remand. Her first and most developed argument is that the ALJ provided an insufficient explanation for rejecting Dr. Foroutan’s opinion. This Court agrees. The Court will begin with, and mostly focus, on this argument. The ALJ first summarized Dr Foroutan’s opinion and then gave four reasons for giving it only “slight weight.” R. 27. As a preliminary point, the ALJ’s summary of Dr. Foroutan’s opinion is somewhat slanted, arguably creating a strawman opinion. The ALJ’s summary suggests that Dr. Foroutan opined that Plaintiff’s limitations were all “extreme” or “marked.” Although Dr. Foroutan certainly did assess some of Plaintiff’s abilities as falling into these two categories, Dr. Foroutan also found that other abilities were only mildly limited. For example, Dr. Foroutan opined that Plaintiff was only “mildly limited” (the lowest possible category) in the ability to “understand and remember very short and simple instructions.” R. 555. But the ALJ’s summary states that Dr. Foroutan opined that Plaintiff had “marked limitations with even very

short and simple instructions.” R. 27 (emphasis added). This seems to be a misstatement. To be fair to the ALJ, Dr. Foroutan did indicate that Plaintiff was “markedly limited” in her ability to carry out very short and simple instructions, as opposed to being able to understand and remember those instructions. In any event, the larger point is that Dr. Foroutan made distinctions among Plaintiff’s abilities in different areas. Dr. Foroutan did not take a knee-jerk approach by checking the most extreme category across the board, as the ALJ implied. The Court will now consider the four rationales. The first rationale—that Dr. Foroutan’s opinion was inconsistent with the objective evidence—is the strongest one. Before discussing it, the Court will consider the second, third, and fourth rationales, which are much weaker.

Rationale #2—The Sympathetic Doctor and the Pushy Patient. The ALJ described this rationale as follows: The possibility always exists that a doctor may express an opinion in an effort to assist a patient with whom he or she sympathizes for one reason or another. Another reality, which should be mentioned, is that patients can be quite insistent and demanding in seeking supportive notes or reports from their physicians, who might provide such a note in order to satisfy their patient’s requests and avoid unnecessary doctor/patient tension. While it is difficult to confirm the presence of such motives, they are more likely in situations where the opinion in question departs substantially from the rest of the evidence of record, as in the current case.

R. 27. The ALJ did not provide any concrete evidentiary basis for concluding that Dr. Foroutan was exaggerating or making false statements when completing the RFC questionnaire or that Plaintiff exerted undue influence. Instead, the ALJ was apparently relying on the general notion that all treating physicians tend to exaggerate, perhaps unconsciously, to help their patients get government benefits. This Court is not persuaded that this vague rationale is a sufficient reason, even in a minor supporting role, to discount a medical opinion. The Court agrees with the analysis in Sihocky v. Berryhill, 17-CV 50001, 2018 WL 1726427 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 10, 2018), where a similar argument was rejected:

These facts suggest that Dr. Mardjetko, rather than being either a trigger-happy surgeon or a passive agent of plaintiff’s desires, as the ALJ suggested, was proceeding in measured steps. Despite the absence of concrete evidence supporting the theory, it is still possible that Dr. Mardjetko was motivated by financial considerations, but this general suspicion could be directed at almost any doctor. For this reason, several district courts have rejected this type of reasoning. See Baizer v. Berryhill, 2017 WL 1208440, *6 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 3, 2017) (“[T]he ALJ offers no support for his contention that the opinion of Dr. Kim may have been biased because it was given during Plaintiff’s worker’s compensation claim. Indeed, an ALJ’s mere conjecture of a sympathetic response is not an acceptable basis for ignoring a treating physician’s opinion.”); Beason v. Astrue, 2009 WL 1064911, *5 (C. D. Ill. Apr. 17, 2009) (“[A]ny doctor will gain financially if a patient pays his bills. To reject a physician’s opinions on the basis that he or she may gain financially if the claimant succeeds in obtaining social security benefits and therefore might be better able to pay their medical bills would effectively eliminate a claimant’s ability to establish his case. In the absence of other evidence that Dr. Maurer had an ulterior motive for her opinions, the Court concludes that this suggestion does not constitute a basis for rejecting Dr. Maurer’s opinions.”).

Id. at *2-3. The Court agrees with this reasoning and finds that no weight should be given to this rationale.1 Rationale #3—Cocaine. The ALJ described this rationale as follows: “It is also notable that the claimant indicated she never informed her doctor of her active cocaine use, a fact of which she admitted at the hearing it would be important for her doctor to be aware (Hearing Testimony).” R. 27. The factual foundation and medical assumptions underlying this rationale are not adequately developed.

1 The ALJ’s final sentence attempts to bolster this second rationale by tying it back to the first rationale (lack of objective evidence), but this is basically an attempt to double-count the first rationale. As for the facts, the ALJ aggressively construed Plaintiff’s hearing testimony. The ALJ referred to Plaintiff’s “active cocaine use” and claimed she agreed it was an “important” fact she should have disclosed to Dr. Foroutan. But the hearing testimony upon which the ALJ relied is less clear. Here is the relevant exchange:2 Q [by the ALJ] So, ma’am, have you used cocaine?

A On occasion. Q Okay, and when was the last— A Not on a daily basis. Q —time you used it? A Probably six months ago/seven months ago. Q And you did not tell your psychiatrist that you used cocaine? A No. Q Do you think that’s something— A Because it was only a one-night thing.

Q —that the psychiatrist should know? A Yeah. R. 55-56. As this exchange indicates, Plaintiff initially answered that she did not think it was an important fact to disclose because it was only a “one-night thing,” but she then relented after the ALJ pressed her with a leading question. Even if Plaintiff did think it was important, she was not the expert rendering the opinion. The ALJ assumed this fact would have been material in assessing Plaintiff’s particular constellation of impairments and that Dr. Foroutan not only would

2 Earlier in her testimony, Plaintiff denied using cocaine at all.

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Bluebook (online)
Armstrong v. Saul, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-saul-ilnd-2021.