Hall v. Commissioner of Social Security

148 F. App'x 456
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 2, 2005
Docket04-5572
StatusUnpublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 148 F. App'x 456 (Hall v. Commissioner of Social Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Commissioner of Social Security, 148 F. App'x 456 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

BOGGS, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from a district court decision affirming the denial of his application for Social Security disability benefits. Under our holding in Wilson v. Commissioner of Social Security, 378 F.3d 541 (6th Cir.2004), the Administrative Law Judge did not adequately explain his decision to reject an opinion of Hall’s treating physician. We therefore reverse and remand.

I

Jeffory Hall has been seeking disability benefits for over a decade. This pursuit has spawned three administrative decisions, three district court opinions, and one administrative remand. This appeal concerns only the district court’s decision affirming the most recent administrative action, an Administrative Law Judge’s (“ALJ”) opinion denying benefits filed on December 30, 2002 (“2002 decision”). J.A. 288-96.

Hall first applied for benefits in 1993, claiming an onset date of February 19, 1992. Following a hearing, his application was denied in an opinion issued in 1995 (“1995 decision”). J.A. 366-81. In that opinion, Hall was assigned a residual functional capacity (“RFC”) of being able to lift a maximum of 20 pounds, and 10 pounds frequently, and being able to stand and walk for up to four hours in an eight-hour workday. The district court affirmed that decision in 1997. J.A. 387-405.

Our case begins when Hall filed another application for benefits on May 15, 1996, alleging an onset date of February 20, 1992. A different ALJ was assigned to this application, and he has handled Hall’s claim since that time. The ALJ correctly determined that Hall’s request for benefits was barred by res judicata for the period covered by the previous denial of benefits, 1992 to September 15, 1995. Following another hearing, the ALJ denied Hall benefits for the remaining period in a decision *458 dated April 20, 1998 (“1998 decision”). J.A. 18-29. After the Appeals Council affirmed the ALJ’s determination, Hall sought review in the district court. While the case was pending, however, the Commissioner filed a motion for remand, which the district court granted. J.A. 409. The Appeals Council sent the case back to the ALJ. J.A. 415-16. Hall returned to work in August 1999. 1 Therefore, on remand, Hall requested benefits for a closed period running from September 16, 1995 to August 1,1999.

Hall was 36 at the time he filed the current application in 1996. He has an eleventh-grade education and vocational training, and had been employed as a heavy equipment operator and a manual laborer in the strip-mining industry. Hall claimed disability due to a variety of ailments. He complained of back and leg pain due to herniated discs and a back injury in 1992, knee pain due to an injury, pneumoconiosis (“black lung disease”) brought about from his work, and anxiety and depression resulting from his injuries.

Dr. Caudill is Hall’s treating physician, and has treated Hall since 1982. J.A. 157. His notes, while difficult to decipher, indicate that he treated Hall for back pain approximately twenty-five times between July 1995 and August 1997 and prescribed medication to ease Hall’s pain. J.A. 126-43; 206-21. On October 3, 1997, Dr. Caudill wrote a letter summarizing Hall’s ailments. J.A. 216. Dr. Caudill explained in greater detail Hall’s various ailments: severe low back pain due to multiple-level degenerative lumbar disease, two herniated discs, and surgery; severe pain due to a torn anterior cruciate ligament in the left knee; marked depression and anxiety due to chronic pain and physical debilitation; hearing loss; and black lung disease. Ibid. Dr. Caudill concluded that these conditions “disable[d] Mr. Hall from all gainful employment since September 1, 1996, up to the present and for the foreseeable future.” Ibid. In April 1998, he wrote an addendum to this letter, stating that his conclusions were based on personal examination and medical testing of Hall. J.A. 222-24. According to the doctor, testing and observation revealed that the claimant has sensory loss, atrophy, diminished reflexes, decreased muscle strength and spasm, all of which had steadily worsened over the past six years.

Dr. Caudill also submitted two medical reports. He attached one to the October 3rd letter, J.A. 225-28, and he had filled out another report on February 14, 1997, J.A. 157-60. The two reports are nearly identical, with the marked advantage that the October report is typed. Compare ibid. with J.A. 225-28. In these reports, he opined that Hall could lift a maximum of zero to five pounds occasionally or frequently; could sit for two to three hours in an eight-hour day, and without interruption for one to two hours; and could stand two to three hours in an eight-hour day, and without interruption for an hour or less. J.A. 158, 226. For ease of reference, we refer to this recommendation as the “hfting/sitting/standing restriction.” Dr. Caudill also stated that Hall should never climb, stoop, crouch, kneel, or crawl; but that he could occasionally balance. J.A. 159, 227. According to the doctor, Hall’s impairments limited his ability to reach, push, pull, or hear. Ibid. Finally, Dr. Caudill determined that Hall should be restricted from heights, moving machinery, temperature extremes, chemicals, dust, *459 noise, fumes, humidity, and vibration. Ibid.

Other doctors evaluated Hall and submitted reports. In 1989, Dr. Phillip Tibbs performed back surgery on Hall following a work-related accident. J.A. 115. In November 1995, Hall returned to Dr. Tibbs complaining of back and leg pain. Dr. Tibbs noted that Hall had poor range of motion in his lower back, that Hall’s deep tendon reflexes were diminished in his lower extremities, and that Hall had extremely tight hamstrings causing increased pain in the lower extremities. Dr. Tibbs also noted that while an MRI showed no new evidence of disc herniation, Hall had multiple levels of disc disease. Dr. Tibbs determined that Hall would not benefit from surgery at that time, but that conservative treatment should be continued.

In 1993, Dr. James Templin reviewed Hall in connection with a workers’ compensation claim. J.A. 171-82. He believed Hall could lift up to thirty pounds but would be unable to return to his previous work. He further recommended that Hall enter a pain management program, but was concerned about Hall’s ability to complete such a course.

In February 1996, Hall went to the hospital for a knee injury after a fall. J.A. 154. In March 1996, Hall underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee, which was performed by Dr. Sam Labib. Dr. Labib diagnosed Hall with a left knee lateral meniscus tear along with a complete ACL rupture. J.A. 118-19. The surgery successfully repaired the damage to Hall’s knee.

In August 1996, Dr. Robert Strickmeyer, a state-agency physician, examined Hall and found that Hall had arthritis involving his back and his left knee. J.A. 120-23. The doctor noted that claimant’s posture and gait were distorted, due to back pain. He also found, however, that Hall had no evidence of active arthritis, pain, heat swelling, tenderness, or limited range of motion in any of his joints.

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