Bari E. Martz v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration

649 F. App'x 948
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 19, 2016
Docket14-15027
StatusUnpublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 649 F. App'x 948 (Bari E. Martz v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bari E. Martz v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration, 649 F. App'x 948 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judge:

Claimant Bari Martz appeals the district court’s order affirming the decision of the Social Security Commissioner (“Commissioner”) to award disability insurance benefits to her for a closed period of disability from January 26, 2007, until September 10, 2010. The Commissioner declined to award disability benefits beyond September 10, 2010, based on a finding of the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) that Martz had experienced significant medical improvement as of September 11, 2010, *950 sufficient to allow her to perform a full range of light work. This being the case, the Commissioner determined that Martz could perform her past relevant work as an art teacher, and therefore was not disabled as of this later date. Martz challenges the Commissioner’s decision, arguing that she remains unable to work on a continued and sustained basis due to chronic fatigue and other symptoms stemming from her scleroderma disease.

On appeal, Martz challenges the ALJ’s determination on three grounds. First, she asserts that the ALJ assigned too low a weight to the opinions of her treating physician, Dr. Joseph Shanahan, and too high a weight to the non-examining medical expert, Dr. John Griscom. She further contends that the ALJ erred by discrediting her subjective complaints of impairment. Finally, she argues that the ALJ violated her due process rights by denying her request to cross-examine Dr. Griscom. After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we reverse the district court’s order affirming the Commissioner’s denial of benefits and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Disability Application

In 1995, Martz developed Raynaud’s phenomenon, a disorder that causes the blood cells in the fingers and toes to constrict when an individual is cold or stressed. Approximately ten years later, Martz noticed increased symptoms related to her Raynaud’s condition, and she also began experiencing a dry cough, gastroe-sophageal'reflux, swelling in her hands, and tightening of the skin over her hands, forearms, face, and lower extremities. In October 2006, she was diagnosed with cutaneous scleroderma, an autoimmune disease that causes the body to over-produce collagen, which in turn affects the skin, joints, and internal organs. Martz’s condition declined rapidly. By November 2006, she had decreased pulmonary function and was later diagnosed with interstitial lung disease, secondary to the scleroderma. In an effort to slow the progression of the disease, Martz participated in a clinical trial at Duke University in February 2007, undergoing myeloablative therapy (high dose chemotherapy and radiation), followed by a stem cell transplant.

Martz applied for disability insurance benefits in November 2007. 1 Alleging a disability onset date of January 26, 2007, she asserted that she was disabled and unable to work due to the scleroderma. The Commissioner concluded that Martz met the medical requirements for disability, but only for the one-year period following her stem cell, transplant: that is, from January 26, 2007, until February 26, 2008. Martz then requested a hearing before an ALJ.

B. Administrative Hearing

At the first hearing in September 2010, the parties agreed to extend the period of time for which Martz should be found to be disabled by one year, through February 27, 2009. A second hearing was held in March 2011, at which the ALJ agreed to send a second set of interrogatories to the medical expert selected by the Commissioner. A third and final hearing was held on September 22, 2011, at which Martz testified as the only witness in support of her disability application. Prior to that hearing, Martz was permitted to send a *951 third set of interrogatories to the expert, which the expert returned prior to the hearing.

1. Martz’s Testimony

Martz testified that she was 52 years old and held a master’s degree in business administration. She had previously worked as a retail manager, and then an art teacher, but was forced to stop working in January 2007 after being diagnosed with “life threatening systemic, scleroderma.” At that time, she had only 40 percent lung capacity and less than six months to live. After undergoing a stem cell transplant, however, her lung function and quality of life improved. She did not return to normal functionality, however.

Martz testified that fatigue, which was the result of hemolytic anemia, prevented her from returning to work full-time. She had obtained a part-time job in August 2010, training new docents at the Boca Raton Art Museum, and she could handle these job duties because the job only involved working two days a week, during which she remained seated most of the time except for some walking during the trainees’ practice tours. Martz initially worked eight hours per day, earning $15.45 per hour. She found, however, that working eight hours on a given day tired her too much and therefore she had to reduce her schedule to seven hours per day during each of the two days each week she worked. Martz explained that she was able to perform this part-time job only because it was so flexible. That is, she could stay seated as long as her fatigue required her to do so, and could get up and move around if she was no longer comfortable remaining seated. Further, her employer permitted her to go home early whenever she became too tired to continue working.

With respect to her daily activities, Martz cooks light meals and drives her car no more than five to ten miles away from home, but her husband performs the more strenuous household tasks, such as vacuuming and cleaning. She testified that there had not been one day during the operative period of time when she has not felt fatigued, and there have been some days when she had been unable even to get off of the couch.

2. Medical Record

In addition to Martz’s testimony, the evidence before the ALJ also included Martz’s medical record, opinions from her treating physicians (Dr. Shanahan and Dr. Keith Sullivan), and three sets of interrogatories completed by the medical expert, Dr. Griscom. According to Martz’s medical records between 2007 and 2010, her condition stabilized after the stem cell transplant in 2007 and her symptoms gradually improved. In February 2010, she required arthroscopic surgery on her right knee but by March 2010, she was able to walk with a cane.

Dr. Shanahan — a board-certified rheu-matologist and former clinical director of the Duke Scleroderma Research Center Clinic to which Martz traveled for treatment — provided sworn testimony on February 18, 2011, in which he described Martz’s impairments• and limitations. He' stated that he began treating Martz in 2006, and he had seen her approximately every three months thereafter. He explained that' since February 2008, Martz had reported persistent and profound fatigue that he believed was most likely caused by hemolytic anemia. Martz had also exhibited numerous other symptoms, including stiffness, pain, loss of dexterity, joint swelling, visible Raynaud’s phenomena, low red blood cell counts, and persistent but stable shortness of breath. Dr. *952

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649 F. App'x 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bari-e-martz-v-commissioner-social-security-administration-ca11-2016.