Frizzo v. Commissioner of Social Security

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMay 1, 2020
Docket6:19-cv-00468
StatusUnknown

This text of Frizzo v. Commissioner of Social Security (Frizzo v. Commissioner of Social Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frizzo v. Commissioner of Social Security, (M.D. Fla. 2020).

Opinion

MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA ORLANDO DIVISION

AMY JOE FRIZZO,

Plaintiff,

v. CASE NO. 6:19-CV-468-ORL-MAP

COMMISSIONER OF SOCIAL SECURITY,

Defendant. ______________________________________/

ORDER

This is an appeal of the administrative denial of disability insurance benefits (DIB) and period of disability benefits.1 See 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(g), 1383(c)(3). Plaintiff argues the administrative law judge (ALJ) erred by failing to comply with this Court’s remand order and the Appeals Council’s remand order with respect to evaluating the opinions of James Levasseur, Ph.D., a state agency non-examining psychologist, and by failing to comply with the Appeals Council’s remand order with respect to evaluating the opinions of Ronald Chase, M.D., a state agency non-examining physician. After considering the parties’ joint memorandum of law (doc. 30) and the administrative record, I find the Commissioner complied with the remand orders and that her decision is supported by substantial evidence. I affirm. A. Background Plaintiff Amy Jo Frizzo, born on February 20, 1974, was thirty-five years old on her alleged onset date, June 30, 2009. She attended school through the eleventh grade, earned a GED, and worked as a waitress and dry cleaner attendant. Unfortunately, she has a history of alcohol and substance abuse, and stopped working when her mental issues “became too much to handle” (R.

1 The parties have consented to my jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). Anonymous program (R. 796). She lives with her husband who is a maintenance man at a church

(R. 789). She testified she suffers from depression and hears voices, and explained that she has trouble concentrating, focusing, and “keeping a clear head” (R. 792). In addition to mental issues, she also suffers from herniated and ruptured discs in her low back (R. 792). Since her alleged disability onset date, she has worked part-time for $5.00 an hour as a seasonal pool supervisor at her neighborhood swimming pool from Memorial Day to Labor Day (R. 769-770; 2647). This case has a long procedural history. In a nutshell, Plaintiff has appeared four times before ALJs for administrative hearings, and this is the fourth time her disability claims are the subject of an appeal to district court. Most recently, on February 2, 2018, the district court granted the Commissioner’s motion to remand centered around the previous ALJ’s failure to follow the

Appeals Council’s prior remand order which directed the ALJ give further consideration to medical opinions of James Levasseur, Ph.D., a non-examining state agency psychologist who completed a Physical Review Technique (PRT) and Mental Residual Functional Capacity Assessment (MRFC) on June 17, 2010 (R. 2806-2815).2 See case no. 6:17-cv-621-Orl-GJK, doc. 24 (Magistrate Judge Kelly’s report and recommendation granting Commissioner’s motion for remand pursuant to sentence four of section 205(g) of the SSA) and doc. 25 (District Judge Dalton’s order adopting Report and Recommendation). Thereafter, the Appeals Council entered

2 Specifically, the district court found that the previous ALJ failed to consider or weigh Levasseur’s PRT when considering Plaintiff’s RFC if she were not dependent on substances (the Post- dependency RFC). See Order, R. 2810. The district court also found that the ALJ failed to discuss or weigh Levasseur’s MRFC in any portion of his decision. The district court noted that Levasseur found Plaintiff “has some reduction in social interaction and stress tolerance that would limit her to work environments of low social demand.” The district court further noted that the ALJ “did not include any social limitations in the Post-Dependency RFC or explain why these limitations from the PRT and the [MRFC] were excluded from the Post-Dependency RFC.” See case no. 6:17-cv-621-Orl-GJK, doc. 24; R. 2810. following issue:

This case has been previously remanded. In the court remand order, the court found reversible error in giving ‘great weight’ to the PRT form of non-examining physician Dr. Levasseur (Exhibit 18F). The PRT form stated claimant had moderate limitations in social functioning, but the residual functional capacity (RFC) included no social limitations, and the decision gave the opinion ‘great weight’ without any qualification (Exhibit 18A, p. 8-12). The Court also found error in not weighing Dr. Levasseur’s MRFC form at Exhibit 18F, which contained additional explanation of the claimant’s social limitations (Exhibit 18A, p.10). The Appeals Council vacated the decision and ordered additional proceedings consistent with the court’s order (Exhibit 19A). It does not appear this error was fixed on remand. Instead, the decision uses the same language that the court previously found problematic (January 12, 2017 ALJ decision, p. 11, Exhibit 11A, p.12). The court has already determined that the underlying error is not harmless (Exhibit 18A, p. 12). Furthermore, the decision does not state the weight given to state agency physician Ronald Chase, who applied the psychiatric review technique and found moderate limitations in social functioning (Exhibit 7A, p.6) and opined that the claimant had “moderate tolerance to criticism from others and authority figures” (Exhibit 7A, p. 11). This appears to contain greater limitations than the decision lists for the claimant when there is no drug or alcohol abuse (ALJ decision, p. 21-23). On remand, the ALJ will reconsider both opinions, consistent with the pertinent regulations.

(R. 2821). Following the remand order, a new ALJ held a hearing on October 5, 2018, then entered a forty-seven-page decision. The ALJ found that from June 30, 2009, through her last date of insured, September 30, 2014, Plaintiff had the following severe impairments: disorders of the spine; obesity; carpal tunnel syndrome, right greater than left; trauma and stressor-related disorders; an affective disorder; personality disorder; alcohol abuse/dependence disorder; marijuana abuse; polysubstance abuse; and an alcohol-induced depressive disorder (R. 2634). The ALJ concluded that from June 30, 2009, through June 30, 2011, “based on all of the impairments, including the substance use disorders, the claimant has the residual functional capacity to perform [a limited range of] light work as defined in 20 CFR 404.1567(b) …” Specifically, the ALJ limited Plaintiff to “simple, routine and repetitive tasks performed in a work environment free of fast- paced production requirements involving only simple work-related decisions and routine workplace changes; no interaction with the public; occasional interaction with co-workers and reaching this RFC for the time period from June 30, 2009, through June 30, 2011, the ALJ noted

that “the United States District Court did not disturb the prior administrative law judge’s finding that claimant was disabled when considering the claimant’s substance use disorder.” (R. 2637).3 The ALJ formulated a different RFC for June 30, 2009, through June 30, 2011, if the claimant stopped the substance abuse, and for the period in which she stopped her substance use, July 1, 2011, through her date last insured of June 30, 2014.

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Frizzo v. Commissioner of Social Security, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frizzo-v-commissioner-of-social-security-flmd-2020.