Brewer v. Chater

910 F. Supp. 1335, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19625, 1995 WL 775152
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 22, 1995
Docket94 C 7625
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 910 F. Supp. 1335 (Brewer v. Chater) 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
Brewer v. Chater, 910 F. Supp. 1335, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19625, 1995 WL 775152 (N.D. Ill. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

BUCKLO, District Judge.

Plaintiff, Constance Brewer, applied for a period of disability and Disability Insurance Benefits on February 12, 1992. Her claim was denied initially and upon reconsideration by state agency personnel. After a hearing, Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) Donald C. Niersbach ruled that Ms. Brewer had a residual functional capacity for light work enabling her to perform her past work and other work existing in the economy. The Appeals Council denied Ms. Brewer’s request for review. On December 22, 1994, Ms. Brewer brought the present action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) seeking judicial review of the final decision of the Commissioner of Health and Human Services (“Commissioner”). Both parties have filed motions for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the Commissioner’s motion is granted, and Ms. Brewer’s motion is denied.

Facts

At the time of the hearing before the ALJ, Ms. Brewer was sixty years old and lived with her daughter. Tr. 172, 209. Also living in the same household was another daughter and her two children. Tr. 199. Ms. Brewer completed high school as well as training with H & R Block to be a tax preparer. Tr. 172. Ms. Brewer opened a clothes cleaning business in 1965. Tr. 177. She managed the business, did the dry cleaning, handled the press machine, kept the books, operated the cash register and delegated certain tasks to a seamstress and her children. Tr. 176-78, 232. At the hearing, Ms. Brewer asserted that working at her dry cleaners required her to stand constantly and to lift 20-30 pounds. Tr. 179-80. 2 Ms. Brewer testified that she closed her business in April, 1992 because operating it became too strenuous for her. Tr. 173-74, 181, 215.

Ms. Brewer testified that she was employed by H & R Block as a tax preparer three months a year from 1974 through 1979, for which she was paid $50 per week. Tr. 182, 213. From 1980 to the present, she has operated her own tax preparation business during tax season, completing short forms for customers and grossing $1000 annually. Tr. 182-84. Since April, 1992 when she shut down her laundry business, Ms. Brewer has not applied for any job or received any type of pension or unemployment compensation, and her daughter has paid her living expenses. Tr. 174-75, 202-03.

Ms. Brewer is five feet tall and weighs two hundred pounds. Tr. 173. She testified that she first noticed pain in her chest approximately two years prior to the hearing date and felt a throbbing-like chest pain during the hearing. Tr. 185-86, 194, 202. Ms. Brewer does not experience chest pain while lying in bed, can sit without any problem and stand five to ten minutes at a time. Tr. 195. At one point in the hearing she said that she can walk about one and one-half blocks before becoming short of breath, and at another point she stated that she is able to walk about one-half block before wheezing. Tr. 185, 195.

Ms. Brewer has full use of her hands most of the time but is not capable of lifting anything heavier than a gallon of milk. Tr. 196, *1337 198. She has full use of her feet and can bend at the waist, climb about six steps at a time and reach over her head. Tr. 200-01. Ms. Brewer testified that she is diabetic and tests her blood sugar every morning. Tr. 203. Ms. Brewer’s medications include nitroglycerine pads, Vaseretie 10/25, Nitrostat, DiaBeta, Theophylline and aspirin. Tr. 190-93, 196-97. 3 About five seconds after Ms. Brewer takes a Nitrostat tablet, her chest pain is relieved. Tr. 193-94. Ms. Brewer testified that she was hospitalized for two days in March 1993 at Holy Cross Hospital after falling while walking. Tr. 188.

Ms. Brewer testified that she goes to bed around 10:00 p.m. and during the night occasionally wakes up and sometimes gets out of bed to use the bathroom. Tr. 203-04. Ms. Brewer does a little housecleaning each day, including dusting and making her bed, and prepares and eats three meals a day. Tr. 205-07. Ms. Brewer does not vacuum, sweep, mop or do outside work on her house. Tr. 207-08. She sometimes listens to the radio, seldom watches television and never reads. Tr. 205-06. Ms. Brewer drives without limitation, although she has disabled plates on her car, and shops for groceries. Tr. 196, 208. She attends church twice a week and acts as a missionary with some of the women in the congregation, which involves visiting ill people once a week. Tr. 207-08. Ms. Brewer’s hobby is crocheting; and she does not do any regular exercise, smoke or drink alcohol. Tr. 209-10. Ms. Brewer’s nephew drove her to the hearing, and she planned on taking the bus home. Tr. 210-11.

In the Disability Report Ms. Brewer completed in February, 1992, she stated that she suffered from high blood pressure and a heart condition. Tr. 48-49. She wrote that she was unable to work seven hour days in her cleaners because her heart and pulse would beat quickly, she became tired and dizzy, she walked into things and lost her balance. Tr. 48. Operating the dry cleaners required Ms. Brewer to carry about two to three pounds of clothes at a time thirteen feet from the presser to the counter. Tr. 53. Moreover, the heaviest weight she lifted was ten pounds, and she frequently lifted ten pounds. Tr. 53. During a typical day, she engaged in constant reaching and frequent bending, sat for four hours, stood for six hours and walked for one hour. Tr. 53. Ms. Brewer noted that since June, 1982, Dr. Pranau Vaidya, an internal medicine specialist whose practice consists of direct patient care, has been her treating physician whom she visits one time each month. Tr. 49, 67. In August, 1992, Ms. Brewer supplemented her Disability Report, stating that she had become a diabetic for which she was taking Micronase, and that she was often drowsy and slept á lot.

The medical records produced at the hearing indicate that Lee Behnke, a Disability Claims Examiner, had a telephone conference with Dr. Vaidya on March 25, 1992, a few days after Dr. Vaidya saw Ms. Brewer. Dr. Vaidya described Ms. Brewer as “somewhat obese” at five feet two inches tall and two hundred and eight pounds and diagnosed Ms. Brewer as having mild to moderate hypertension, angina and arthritis. Tr. 64-65. The arthritis mostly affected Ms. Brewer’s lower back, but she had not lost any motion in this area. Ms. Brewer did not suffer from any end-organ damage, reflex abnormalities, sensory deficits or motor loss. Tr. 64. The angina caused Ms. Brewer to experience about once every two weeks retrosternal pain radiating to her left arm, which she characterized as a feeling of pressure. Tr. 64. This symptom was associated with exertion. Tr. 64. Ms. Brewer did not have a history of a myocardial infarction. Tr. 64. Dr. Vaidya stated that he had never performed a treadmill exercise test and did not have an EKG on her. Tr. 64. He informed Mr. Behnke that at the last visit Ms. Brewer’s blood pressure reading was 140/96, and her previous two blood pressure readings were in the mild to moderate range. Tr. 64.

Mr. Behnke requested a resting ECG, which was completed May 13, 1992. Tr. 68-69. Hilton Gordon, M.D., interpreted the ECG as showing normal sinus rhythm with a rate of 80, normal PR and QRS intervals, *1338

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910 F. Supp. 1335, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19625, 1995 WL 775152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-chater-ilnd-1995.