Davis v. Berryhill

249 F. Supp. 3d 802
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 2017
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 16-0463
StatusPublished

This text of 249 F. Supp. 3d 802 (Davis v. Berryhill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Berryhill, 249 F. Supp. 3d 802 (E.D. Pa. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER

CYNTHIA M.RUFE,J.

Plaintiff Douglas Davis objects to a Report and Recommendation (“R&R”)1 that this Court affirm the decision of Administrative Law Judge George C. Yatron (“ALJ Yatron”) that Plaintiff is not disabled within the meaning of the Social Security Act. For the reasons that follow, the R&R will be approved and adopted, and Plaintiff’s Request for Review will be denied.

I. Procedural History

Plaintiff' has sought disability benefits for many years, and this history is recounted in detail in the R&R.2 The' critical points in that process are summarized below. In Plaintiffs first application for disability insurance benefits (“DIB”) filed on March 13, 2006, he alleged1 his. disability began on February 27, 2004.3 After an initial denial, a hearing was held with Administrative Law Judge Paula Garrety (“ALJ Garrety”) on November 15, 2007.4 ALJ Garrety denied his application, but her decision was vacated by the Appeals Council on September 22, 2009,5 ALJ Gar-rety- held .a second. hearing on Plaintiffs claim on January 14,.2010, and again issued an unfavorable decision.6 Plaintiffs appeal of ALJ Garrety^ second decision reached this Court, which issued an Order remanding the case to the Commissioner on August 13, 2Q14.7 On remand, Plaintiffs third hearing was held on December 18, 2014, this time before ALJ Yatron.8,ALJ Yatron issued an unfavorable, decision on May 15, 2015,9 and the Appeals Council declined to assume jurisdiction over the case.10 Plaintiffs appeal to this Court followed.

II. Plaintiffs Objection to the “Import and Effect” of the Previous Order

A central disagreement between the parties is the scope of review required by this Court’s 2014 remand order (“Order”),11 and whether ALJ Yatron complied [804]*804with the Order’s directives.12 On remand, the ALJ was directed to comply with SSR 96-8p13 and meaningfully assess limitations caused by Plaintiffs trigeminal neuralgia and bipolar disorder.14 The Order stated that “if the ALJ had considered Plaintiffs bipolar disorder and neuralgia, the ALJ may have concluded that Plaintiffs cumulative impairments were consistent with his testimony about his level of functioning.”15 The Order also found that: (1) ALJ Garrety’s determinations as to the Plaintiffs physical limitations were supported by substantial evidence; and (2) ALJ Garrety’s assessments of the weight allocated to the treating physicians’ opinion evidence were also supported by substantial evidence.16

Plaintiff argues that the Order required the ALJ on remand to consider Plaintiffs trigeminal neuralgia and bipolar disorder “in combination with his other impairments, and to reach a conclusion regarding the consistency of the effects of the combined impairments on the Plaintiffs description of his functioning.”17 In essence, Plaintiff reads the Court’s Order to require ALJ Yatron to reconsider all of Plaintiffs impairments. That is incorrect.

Consistent with SSR 96-8p and the Order’s acceptance of ALJ Garrety’s credibility finding regarding Plaintiffs physical limitations, on remand the ALJ was primarily to reconsider the non-exertional limitations caused by Plaintiffs trigeminal neuralgia and bipolar disorder, and to incorporate them—along with the limitations caused by his other conditions—into the residual functional capacity (“RFC”) determination.18 That is, ALJ Yatron was required to reconsider the two conditions specified in the Court’s Order, but not ALJ Garrety’s findings as to Plaintiffs other impairments, which the Court had already found were supported by substantial evidence.19

In light of the scope of the Court’s remand Order, Plaintiffs argument that ALJ Yatron should have made a new holistic credibility determination based on the entire record for all conditions is incorrect. Instead, the Court required the ALJ to take into account the effects of his trigemi-nal neuralgia and bipolar disorder from onset to his date last insured—February 27, 2004 to December 31, 2009.20

[805]*805III. Limitations Caused by Trigeminal Neuralgia and Mental Disorders

In reviewing ALJ Yatron’s decision, the full record, and the R&R, the Court agrees that ALJ Yatron followed the Court’s earlier directives and the RPC assessment took into account limitations caused by Plaintiffs trigeminal neuralgia and his mental health conditions.

First, with respect to Plaintiffs trigeminal neuralgia, the Order pointed to interrupted sleep and unpredictable pain as potentially causing additional limitations and remanded for an assessment.21 ALJ Yatron reviewed the medical evidence of record and determined that Plaintiffs trigeminal neuralgia is well-controlled, and limits Plaintiff to not lifting or carrying more than twenty pounds and not working around heights or hazards.22 The R&R’s determination that this is supported by substantial evidence is correct.23 Plaintiff argues strenuously that his episodes of unpredictable pain interfere with his ability to maintain “consistent work and regular attendance,” but according to the evidence, the attacks do not occur frequently enough to support Plaintiffs contention.24

Second, regarding Plaintiffs bipolar disorder, the Order specified that Plaintiffs limitations based on decreased concentration, persistence, and pace should be examined.25 Plaintiff states that ALJ Yatron’s failure to do anything other than limit him to unskilled work means that he did not comply with the Order.26 As discussed in the R&R, this argument is misplaced.27 ALJ Yatron completed the appropriate inquiries related to Plaintiffs mental health and took care to address Plaintiff’s limitations with respect to concentration, persistence, and pace.28 Based on the available evidence related to Plaintiffs mental health, including evidence related to limitations caused by his bipolar disorder in combination with Plaintiffs other conditions, ALJ Yatron determined that Plaintiff would be unable to understand, remember, and carry out detailed instructions.29 However, ALJ Yatron, with the help of the vocational expert, found unskilled jobs which exist in substantial numbers in the national economy, including office helper, cashier, and accounts investigator positions, that Plaintiff is capable of performing.30This finding is supported by substantial evidence.31

[806]*806Therefore, this 10th day of April 2017, after careful review and independent consideration of Plaintiffs request for review, Defendant’s response, the Report and Recommendation of United States Magistrate Judge Marilyn Heffley, and the Plaintiffs Objections thereto, it is hereby ORDERED that:

1.

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Bluebook (online)
249 F. Supp. 3d 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-berryhill-paed-2017.