Cruz Gonzalez v. SHHS

23 F.3d 394
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1994
Docket93-2297
StatusUnpublished

This text of 23 F.3d 394 (Cruz Gonzalez v. SHHS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cruz Gonzalez v. SHHS, 23 F.3d 394 (1st Cir. 1994).

Opinion

23 F.3d 394

NOTICE: First Circuit Local Rule 36.2(b)6 states unpublished opinions may be cited only in related cases.
Felix CRUZ-GONZALEZ, Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendant, Appellee.

No. 93-2297

United States Court of Appeals,
First Circuit.

May 12, 1994.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico [Hon. Jose Antonio Fuste, U.S. District Judge ]

Paul Ramos Morales, on brief for appellant.

Guillermo Gil, United States Attorney, Maria Hortensia Rios, Assistant United States Attorney, and Amy S. Knopf, Assistant Regional Counsel, Department of Health and Human Services, on brief for appellee.

D. Puerto Rico.

AFFIRMED

Before Breyer, Chief Judge, Selya and Boudin, Circuit Judges.

Per Curiam.

Claimant, Felix Cruz-Gonzalez, appeals from a district court opinion affirming a decision by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (the "Secretary") denying benefits for part of the claimed period of disability. We affirm.

I.

Claimant filed his first application for disability insurance benefits on August 21, 1989, alleging an inability to work since December 13, 1987 on account of a nervous condition, asthma and headaches. The Secretary denied the application initially and, on March 29, 1990, on reconsideration. Claimant did not request a hearing. On December 18, 1990, claimant filed a second application for benefits, again alleging an inability to work since December 13, 1987 on account of a nervous condition, asthma, headaches and occasional back pain. The Secretary denied the application initially and on reconsideration. Claimant, with the assistance of counsel, requested a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge. The hearing was held on November 26, 1991.

At the time of the hearing, claimant was fifty-five years of age and had a fifth grade education. He had worked in a cigar factory and as a gas station attendant. Claimant testified that he sufferred from bronchial asthma, for which he received respiratory therapy. He further testified that he had a nervous condition which caused him to cry every night and for which he took medication and received treatment at the Mental Health Center in Cayey. Claimant alleged almost constant pain in his right arm and back, for which he took aspirin. Claimant testified that he could only sit for fifteen to twenty minutes at a time because of his back pain. He further stated that he could not push and pull with his arms, could not use his legs to operate any type of machinery and could "barely" squat or bend. Claimant reportedly spent most of his time sleeping or watching television.

The ALJ presented the Vocational Expert ("VE") with a hypothetical that described a person who could only work in clean, well-ventilated environments, free of strong odors, dust and gas. The hypothetical also noted the need to avoid extreme temperatures and places of high relative humidity. The ALJ described a person with "moderate" mental limitations, moderate limitations in his ability to perform daily activities and capable of performing only non-skilled work. The ALJ further described this hypothetical person's deficiency in concentrating as "quite frequent."

The VE testified that this hypothetical person could not perform the work that claimant had performed in the past as a gas station attendant, but that he could perform other jobs of a non-skilled nature. The ALJ asked the VE to further assume that the person could not push and pull with his right (skillful) hand, that he could lift only light weight (a maximum of ten pounds), and that he needed to alternate positions. The VE testified that, taking these additional limitations into account, there were jobs in the local economy that a person with the hypothesized limitations could perform. Examples were wire cutter, stamper and wire worker.

The ALJ referred to an independent psychiatric evaluation of claimant performed by Dr. Rafael Miguez Balseiro in February, 1991. Taking Dr. Miguez' diagnosis and description of claimant's limitations into account, the VE testified that claimant could perform the jobs he had identified. If claimant's own description of his condition and symptoms as expressed at the hearing were true, however, the VE testified that claimant would not be able to perform the identified jobs or any others in the national economy.

On December 17, 1991, the ALJ issued a decision which divided claimant's disability claim into three distinct time periods: 1) from the claimed onset date (12/13/87) until the date of the Secretary's denial upon reconsideration of claimant's initial application for benefits (3/29/90); 2) from the date of the denial of the first application until claimant's fifty-fifth birthday (11/21/91); and 3) from claimant's fifty-fifth birthday until December 31, 1991 (the date through which claimant was insured).

With respect to the first period, the ALJ interpreted claimant's present application for benefits (alleging the same onset date and similar disabilities as his first application) as "an implied request for revision and reopening of the March 29, 1990 determination." Finding that there was neither good cause nor any other basis under the relevant regulations for reopening the prior case, the ALJ held that the March, 1990 determination "remains final and binding." Therefore, he considered only evidence of claimant's condition in the period after March 29, 1990.

Focusing on the period after March, 1990, the ALJ determined that claimant had a combination of lung and mental conditions, but that he did not have "an impairment or combination of impairments listed in, or medically equal to the one listed in Appendix 1, Subpart P, Regulations No. 4." Although unable to perform his past relevant work, claimant was capable of light, clean, unskilled work. Considering claimant's age, education, work experience and exertional capacity as well as his nonexertional limitations, and using Rule 202.11 of the Medical-Vocational Guidelines, 20 C.F.R. Part 404, Subpt. P, App. 2, as a framework for decisionmaking, the ALJ found that "claimant was not disabled under the Social Security Act prior to November 21, 1991." Although the ALJ found claimant to be incapable of performing the full range of light work, he relied upon the VE's testimony that "light unskilled clean jobs that allow the claimant to alternate positions when needed" existed in significant numbers in the national economy.

On November 21, 1991, claimant turned fifty-five, and therefore was classified as of "advanced age" under the relevant Social Security regulations. Using Rule 202.02 of the Medical-Vocational Guidelines as a framework, the ALJ concluded that after claimant reached age 55, his functional limitations, together with other adverse vocational factors, "preclude[d] a vocational adjustment to other work that exists in significant numbers in the national economy." Therefore, the ALJ found claimant to be "disabled" under the Social Security Act since November 21, 1991.

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