George Plessinger, II v. Nancy Berryhill

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2018
Docket18-1240
StatusPublished

This text of George Plessinger, II v. Nancy Berryhill (George Plessinger, II v. Nancy Berryhill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Plessinger, II v. Nancy Berryhill, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 18‐1240 GEORGE A. PLESSINGER, II, Plaintiff‐Appellant, v.

NANCY A. BERRYHILL, Acting Commissioner of Social Security, Defendant‐Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. No. 17‐CV‐71 — William C. Lee, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED JULY 6, 2018 — DECIDED AUGUST 20, 2018 ____________________

Before SYKES, HAMILTON, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. George Plessinger applied for disability insurance benefits under the Social Security Act based on his chronic back pain. An administrative law judge found that he was severely impaired by his lumbar degener‐ ative disc disease and stenosis, thoracic degenerative disc dis‐ ease, obesity, and systemic hypertension. Given the stringent standard for total disability under the Social Security Act, 2 No. 18‐1240

however, the ALJ found that these impairments were not dis‐ abling. The agency’s Appeals Council denied review, and the district court upheld the ALJ’s decision. We reverse and re‐ mand to the agency. In the face of the great weight of medical evidence supporting Plessinger’s claims of disabling impair‐ ments, the ALJ gave undue weight to the opinion of the testi‐ fying medical expert, who did not examine Plessinger and hedged his opinion in a critical way that was never resolved. The ALJ and the testifying medical expert each seemed to del‐ egate to the other the job of evaluating the credibility of Ples‐ singer’s complaints of pain. The ALJ’s decision to discount the credibility of those complaints was not supported by substan‐ tial evidence. I. Factual and Procedural Background Plessinger was born with congenital spinal stenosis. He began experiencing back pain in 2010, when he was just 23 years old. He worked as a diesel mechanic, electric lineman, fast food worker, welder, and truck driver. But in April 2012 he was in an accident that exacerbated a prior injury from fall‐ ing at work. He had epidural nerve block injections in August 2012, but they did not relieve his pain. An MRI scan revealed a disc rupture in his lumbar spine, so he had surgery in March 2013. In May and September 2013, in connection with Ples‐ singer’s application for Social Security disability benefits, non‐examining consultants for the agency assessed his resid‐ ual functional capacity, meaning his abilities to do various work‐related activities on a sustained basis. Dr. J.V. Cocoran determined that Plessinger had the residual functional capac‐ ity to perform light work, while Dr. J. Sands determined he could perform only sedentary work. Specifically, Dr. Cocoran No. 18‐1240 3

found that Plessinger could stand or walk for about six hours in an eight‐hour workday. Dr. Sands, on the other hand, found that Plessinger could stand or walk for a total of only two hours per day and noted that he had “objectively sup‐ ported back problems that are significant for someone his age.” Unfortunately, Plessinger’s 2013 surgery did not relieve his chronic pain. He was later diagnosed with failed back sur‐ gery syndrome, which is also called post‐laminectomy syn‐ drome. Plessinger’s neurosurgeon, Dr. Jeffrey Kachmann, re‐ ferred him to a pain management doctor, Dr. Neal Coleman, to see if more conservative treatment could forestall a second surgery. Dr. Coleman examined Plessinger in February 2015 and noted that he could walk only 50 yards before his legs began to tingle. Dr. Coleman’s notes indicate that Plessinger’s four different daily pain medications reduced his symptoms, but his pain was aggravated by daily activities, including “lifting, lying/rest, rolling over in bed, sitting, standing and walking.” Dr. Coleman also noted that Plessinger’s spinal ste‐ nosis was “symptomatic and function limiting” and did not respond to injection therapies or other conservative pain man‐ agement approaches. Dr. Coleman referred Plessinger to another neurosurgeon to assess whether a second surgery would be appropriate. Dr. Guatam Phookan examined him in March 2015. He noted disc herniation in several parts of Plessinger’s spine, and diag‐ nosed “referred/radicular pain” in both legs. Dr. Phookan noted that Plessinger was already living with failed back sur‐ gery syndrome and that his herniations were not in the same part of the spine where he was experiencing the most pain. 4 No. 18‐1240

Dr. Phookan determined that it would be best to explore other options for pain relief before attempting a second surgery. Plessinger was examined by the agency’s consulting ex‐ aminer, Dr. Xavier Laurente, in July 2014. Dr. Laurente deter‐ mined that Plessinger could walk only 20 to 30 feet and could stand for only five minutes at a time. He noted that Plessinger had limited strength in his legs and showed “some signs of nerve impingement (with positive straight leg raise test).” At his hearing before the ALJ in April 2015, Plessinger tes‐ tified about his physical limitations. He explained that he did his best to help his wife take care of their five young children, all under ten years old. He said that on a typical day, he would wake up at 6:00 a.m. to wake the children up for school, then lie back down for half an hour while they were getting ready, then get up again to make sure they were dressed and to get them on the school bus. After that he would lie down again before getting up again at 11:00 to make lunch for himself and his youngest children. He would then take care of the children until his wife got home from work. Plessinger also explained that he had difficulty walking because of the “shooting pain” he experienced when moving around. He testified that if he walked more than ten feet, his legs went numb, so most of the time he either lay down in bed to ease the pain or sat in his chair. He said the pain also inter‐ fered with his sleep, allowing him to sleep only two to three hours at a time, followed by tossing and turning because of the pain. As for daily activities, he said that it took him all day to wash a load of dishes because he had to take frequent breaks to allow his back to decompress and to “get the feeling back in [his] legs.” No. 18‐1240 5

Dr. John Pella, a physician certified in internal medicine and specializing in pulmonary disease, also testified at the hearing as a medical expert. He had reviewed Plessinger’s medical records but had not examined him. Dr. Pella began by briefly summarizing the results of Plessinger’s most recent MRI from August 2014, which revealed several areas of disc extrusion and root effacement. He also noted that Plessinger had a history of hypertension and was significantly obese, with a body‐mass index of 45. When Dr. Pella had finished describing Plessinger’s phys‐ ical conditions, the ALJ asked whether his impairments met or equaled any impairment listed in Social Security regula‐ tions that leads to a presumption of disability. Dr. Pella said no. The ALJ did not ask about any particular listing or set forth requirements for any. Dr. Pella did not explain which listings would be most relevant or explain why he did not be‐ lieve any listed impairment was met. Dr. Pella then concluded that Plessinger would be able to lift and carry 20 pounds occasionally and ten pounds fre‐ quently; to sit for two hours at a time for a total of six hours of an eight‐hour workday, with a sit/stand option; to stand for 30 minutes to one hour at a time, and to walk for 15 to 30 minutes at a time, for two to three hours total in a workday; and to reach, push, or pull overhead frequently, but could use his legs only occasionally. A vocational expert also testified regarding Plessinger’s work‐related capabilities.

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Bluebook (online)
George Plessinger, II v. Nancy Berryhill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-plessinger-ii-v-nancy-berryhill-ca7-2018.