Callison v. Callahan

985 F. Supp. 1182, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19770, 1997 WL 757571
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedDecember 5, 1997
Docket4:96CV3392
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 985 F. Supp. 1182 (Callison v. Callahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callison v. Callahan, 985 F. Supp. 1182, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19770, 1997 WL 757571 (D. Neb. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KOPF, District Judge.

Mary E. Callison (Callison), a registered nurse, appeals from the decision of an administrative law judge (ALJ) denying her applications for supplemental security income based on disability and for disability insurance benefits. After careful review, I will reverse the decision appealed from and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

A.

By September 28, 1994, when Callison claimed that she could no longer work as a nurse, she had continually practiced her profession for fourteen years. Her last employer described her work this way: “Wonderful rapport with residents, but did not keep up with the demands.” (Tr. 206.)

During the previous fourteen years, Callison had risen from a licensed practical nurse to a registered nurse. She had served in various responsible positions from a floor nurse to director of nursing at a nursing home. However, by the time Callison was fifty-nine years old, she told her doctor that “she could not lift, bend, or stand on her legs for prolonged periods of time.” (Tr. 192.)

In addition, Callison, who is five feet two inches tall and weighs 212 pounds, testified that she suffered severe arthritic-like pain in all of the joints of her legs nearly every day of the week. (Tr. 41-48.) She further testified that she could not sit for more than thirty minutes and after that time she was required to stand and walk to relieve the hip pain. She also testified that she could walk up to three blocks but the pain then hurts down to her knees and she must sit. She can *1184 stand for about thirty minutes, but then she must walk or sit to ease the pain. Additionally, she testified that to relieve the pain during the day she normally rested in bed for an hour.

Callison worked until she was fifty-nine years of age. Six years before, she “had her right hip replaced in June of 1988 due to severe degenerative joint disease.” (Tr. 192) (Consulting physician’s medical report dictated March 15, 1995.) There is no dispute about the severity of the disease that caused this surgery.

Despite this hip replacement, Callison continued to work. She worked though her surgeon placed a 25-pound Lifting restriction on her activities. Such a restriction interferred with her ability to lift patients, and thus made it difficult to find and keep work.

The medical records reveal repeated efforts by Callison to continue her nursing work despite the hip replacement and lifting restrictions. (Id. at 169 (October 1988) and 170 (September 1988)). For example, when she had her hip replaced she scheduled the surgery during her vacation “so that she can miss as little work and as little schooling [she was. pursing her RN degree] as possible.” (Id. at 174.)

When they replaced her right hip, Callison “was advised at that time that her l[e]ft hip may also require eventual surgical replacement.” (Id. at 192.) This was apparently because Callison’s “severe degenerative joint disease” would somehow implicate the left hip. (Id.) Despite the severity of her disease, Callison successfully recovered from the replacement of her right hip.

By the time Callison ended work in 1994, the doctor’s earlier prediction of future problems had apparently come true. According to an examination of Callison by Dr. Larry Birch, a board certified internal medicine specialist, Callison suffered “[m]eehanical hip pain and muscle dearrangment due to prosthesis on the right side [and][p]re-existing degenerative joint disease in both knees.” (Id. at 193.) Birch, who described Callison as a “very pleasant lady,” noted that Callison had difficulty off the examining table, she favored her right hip and had an obvious right leg limp, and that her “squatting is very poor.” (Id. at 192.) The government apparently engaged Dr. Birch to do a “consultative examination” of Callison. Compare Tr. 149 (describing Birch’s examination as a “CE” type examination) with Tr. 192-93 (Birch’s report describing Callison as the “Claimant.”)

W.C. Barr, M.D., a treating physician, who saw Callison a number of times in 1994 and 1995, confirmed that Callison’s knees showed “deformation” (id. at 214) and at times her extremities showed an edema. (Id. at 199.) Callison had complained to him of left hip, knee and ankle pain. Although an x-ray of her left hip was normal, this treating physician agreed with Dr. Birch’s assessment that Callison had “DJD” or degenerative joint disease. (Id. at 214.) He prescribed medications as result. (Id.)

Another doctor, engaged by the government, reviewed the medical records, including the reports of Dr. Birch, Dr. Burr and certain x-rays. Because of the successful hip replacement surgery in 1988, a normal x-ray of the left lip, and the fact that x-rays revealed that the “right knee and left knee both showed [only] mild osteoarthritis with slight narrowing of the medial compartment and marginal spurring,” the doctor believed that Callison did not meet or equal any listing of impairments and she could perform light work. (Id. at 149.)

Callison stated, and the records support her testimony, that she was taking medication for the joint disease. (Id. at 119.) For example, she was prescribed and was at one point taking two 500 mg. tablets of “Naproxen” daily. (Id.) In addition, she testified that she was taking 600 mg. of prescription Lodine daily plus “at least five Tylenol [tablets] a day.” (Id. at 26-27.) This medicine upset her stomach, and she had to take other medications to relieve the stomach upset. (Id. at 50.) The medicine only “took the edge off’ the pain. (Id. at 45.)

Callison described performing only light house work. She had difficulty squatting and kneeling because of the pain and this made it difficult to clean. She had difficulty climbing stairs. Her son cleared the snow and mowed the lawn.

*1185 Callison lived with her aged mother, who was ambulatory. The claimant was able to prepare meals and wash clothes and the like. Callison was able to drive a car, and the two women would visit friends about once a month. Callison testified that she read a lot, and tried to crochet and do embroidery.

A vocational expert testified at the request of the ALJ. The ALJ asked the expert to “assume [Callison’s] testimony here today is true and accurate, what would be your opinion?” (Id. at 73.) The expert responded, “I don’t feel that she would be able to perform any substantial gainful activity.” (Id.)

Furthermore, the ALJ also asked the expert “with those limitations in September [19]94, were there jobs the claimant could perform which existed in her region or the several regions of the country?” (Id. at 70.) The expert did not understand what “those limitations” were. (Id.) The ALJ told the expert to review exhibit 8. (Id.) Exhibit 8 was Callison’s report of disability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
985 F. Supp. 1182, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19770, 1997 WL 757571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callison-v-callahan-ned-1997.