Bobby Massey, Jr. v. Commissioner of Social Security

409 F. App'x 917
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 2011
Docket09-6527
StatusUnpublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 409 F. App'x 917 (Bobby Massey, Jr. v. Commissioner of Social Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobby Massey, Jr. v. Commissioner of Social Security, 409 F. App'x 917 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

Bobby Massey, Jr., (“Massey”) filed an application for disability benefits in 2004, claiming disability since September 22, 2003, when he injured his back. The administrative law judge (“ALJ”) awarded Massey a closed period of disability benefits, concluding that after February 1, 2005, Massey was no longer disabled. The appeals council and the district court affirmed the decision to award only a closed period of disability. For the reasons stated below, we AFFIRM.

I.

Massey worked as a production control worker in a factory for fourteen years. The ALJ concluded Massey suffered from “status post lumbar fusion on 9/21/04, preceded by two earlier discectomies; and depression.”

Dr. Thad Jackson, a neurologist, performed several procedures on Massey. First, in October 2003, he performed a “right L5-S1 lumbar microdiskectomy.” Second, in December 2003, he performed another microdiskectomy and a laminectomy. Finally, in September 2004, he performed a “posterior lumbar interbody fusion with right-sided carbon fiber cage.” By June 2005, Dr. Jackson concluded Massey had good strength in his legs and had a negative straight-leg raise test. 1 He reported in September 2005 that an MRI showed no evidence of nerve root compression and that there was fusion across the surgical site.

In March 2005, Dr. Jackson stated that Massey could frequently carry 5-10 pounds and occasionally carry 15 pounds. He also found that Massey could stand or walk only two hours in an eight-hour work day, in 15-20 minute intervals, while he could sit 2-4 hours in an eight-hour day, 30 minutes-1 hour without interruption. He concluded Massey could occasionally climb, balance, stoop, crouch, kneel, crawl, and push/pull, but Massey was restricted from being around moving machinery and vibration.

Dr. Richard Arnold is Massey’s family doctor. Massey sought treatment over a period of several years from Dr. Arnold for back and related pain. In June 2004, Dr. Arnold stated that Massey could not lift more than ten pounds occasionally and five pounds frequently, and restricted Massey to 1-2 hours a day of standing or walking, in only 15-minute intervals. He also restricted Massey to sitting only four hours a day, one hour at a time. Massey was totally restricted from climbing, balancing, stooping, crouching, kneeling, and crawling, as well as reaching, pushing/pulling, heights, moving machinery, and vibration. Dr. Arnold concluded, “Massey appears to be totally and permanently disabled.”

In August 2006, Dr. Arnold stated that Massey could lift a maximum of fifteen pounds occasionally and only 5-10 pounds frequently. He also stated that Massey could stand or walk a maximum of two hours a day, only 15-20 minutes at a time. Massey was restricted to 2-4 hours a day of sitting, only 30 minutes-1 hour at a time. Dr. Arnold noted that Massey could occasionally climb, balance, stoop, crouch, kneel, and crawl. He was restricted from pushing/pulling, as well as from working around moving machinery and vibration.

Two Department of Disability Services (“DDS”) assessments were prepared for Massey in 2004. They state that Massey *920 occasionally can lift 50 pounds, frequently lift 25 pounds, stand about six hours in an eight-hour day, sit about six hours in an eight-hour day, and push/pull unlimitedly.

The ALJ conducted an evidentiary hearing in July 2006. Massey testified he continued to have problems with his back even after his fusion operation. He stated he had “low back pain, hip pain, also leg pain and it even, it goes to my foot to my toes actually.” Massey explained that activity of any kind, including just standing, brought on his pain. He testified that he was almost entirely inactive due to his condition — he could not sit for more than about thirty minutes, nor could he stand for more than about fifteen.

In September 2006, a second evidentiary hearing was held. At the hearing, Dr. Charles Hancock, the ALJ’s medical expert, and Carroll Tarvin, a vocational expert (“VE”), testified.

Dr. Hancock is a retired orthopedic surgeon, and he now serves as a medical expert for the DDS. The ALJ sought to have Hancock reconcile the opinions of Drs. Jackson and Arnold with those of the non-examining DDS medical experts. Dr. Hancock noted that any individual who had three spinal operations would have difficulties but that Massey’s problems were not as severe as the treating physicians suggested they were. Rather, after Dr. Jackson’s February 2005 diagnosis of status post lumbar fusion, neurologically stable, Massey had a healed spinal fusion and no evidence of nerve root compression, making the surgery a success. Dr. Hancock therefore concluded that after February 2005, the time required for Massey to recover from the spinal surgery, there was no indication of a listing level impairment.

Regax’ding Massey’s residual functional capacity (“RFC”), Dr. Hancock stated that he would have him stooping and crouching occasionally, but would not have him on ropes, ladders or scaffolds or around hazardous machinery, heights, and vibration. He would allow Massey to crawl and kneel, as well as lift ten pounds frequently and twenty pounds occasionally. He saw no reason Massey could not stand and walk for six horn's or sit for six hours and found no particular limitations on push/pulling. This translates to a light RFC.

Tarvin then testified, stating Massey’s production work was medium, skilled labor and that it would transfer to light factory jobs. The ALJ, adopting the opinion of Dr. Hancock, asked her if a thirty-seven year old who graduated high school, with some college, who could lift

20 pounds on occasion, 10 pounds more frequently, stand and walk six out of eight, sit six out of eight, no limits on pushing and pulling, avoid climbing, ropes scaffolds, and ladders; occasionally climb ramps and stairs; frequently balance, kneel, crawl, but occasionally stoop and crouch; avoid whole body, and unprotected heights and dangerous machinery,

would be capable of performing “light transferable skill factory jobs?” Tarvin stated that he would be able to and that jobs of this type, as well as other jobs Massey was capable of performing, exist in significant numbers in the national economy.

The ALJ concluded that Massey was disabled from September 22, 2003 through February 1, 2005, but that “[mjedical improvement occurred as of February 2, 2005, the date the claimant’s disability ended.” In so concluding, the ALJ gave the testimony of Dr. Hancock “great weight,” and the “evaluations of Doctors[ ] Jackson and Arnold [wex’e] rejected.”

II.

We uphold the Commissioner’s decision “absent a determination that the Commissioner has failed to apply the correct legal *921 standards or has made findings of fact unsupported by substantial evidence in the record.” Warner v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 375 F.3d 387, 390 (6th Cir.2004) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

Massey first contends the ALJ violated the treating physician rule by accepting the opinions of Drs.

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