Hernandez v. Colvin

567 F. App'x 576
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 2014
Docket13-1325
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 567 F. App'x 576 (Hernandez v. Colvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hernandez v. Colvin, 567 F. App'x 576 (10th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

Ruben Jesse Hernandez filed an application for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income in which he alleged that he was disabled due to back, neck, and wrist pain, numbness in his hands, high blood pressure, heart problems, and difficulty hearing. On remand from the Appeals Council, the administrative law judge (ALJ) conducted a second hearing and issued a written decision in which he denied the claim. The Appeals Council denied Mr. Hernandez’s request for review and the ALJ’s decision became final. The district court affirmed the ALJ’s decision. This appeal followed. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), we affirm.

I.

Mr. Hernandez was forty-six years old in November 2006 — the onset date of his alleged disability. He was a high-school graduate who had worked as a forklift operator from 1982 to 2003, and as a laborer from May to November 2006, when he was laid off from that seasonal job.

As part of the application process, Velma Campbell, M.D., an occupational specialist, examined Mr. Hernandez in September 2007. Dr. Campbell diagnosed him with: (1) a heart irregularity; (2) shortness of breath; (3) high blood pressure; (4) chronic low back and right hip pain; (5) pain and cracking in the shoulders and knees suggestive of osteoarthritis; and (6) some hearing loss. As to his lower extremities, Dr. Campbell opined that Mr. Hernandez could: (1) bend, stoop, and squat up to two hours per day; (2) stand and walk less than four hours per day; and (3) sit throughout the day so long as he could change position frequently. As to his upper extremities, Dr. Campbell found that Mr. Hernandez could use his arms overhead less than two hours per day. She also noted “evidence of cognitive dysfunction [and] a history of learning disorder that could affect development of new occupations.” R. at 285.

In July 2008, Mr. Hernandez first saw his treating physician, Vui Mai, M.D. His visit was apparently prompted by his need to be certified for a state program that provided benefits for persons who were temporarily totally disabled. He complained about pain in his hands, wrists, left shoulder, and neck. Dr. Mai found that he had a full range of motion in all joints and *579 some cracking in his left shoulder. Because there was a suggestion of carpal tunnel syndrome, Dr. Mai recommended that Mr. Hernandez undergo a neurological test to determine whether, in fact, he had carpal tunnel, but Mr. Hernandez lacked the funds for the test. Mr. Hernandez also declined, for cost reasons, prescription medicines to ease his symptoms.

Mr. Hernandez returned to Dr. Mai in September 2008, complaining again of pain in his wrists and back. He told Dr. Mai that he was not taking any prescription medications because he could not afford them. Dr. Mai opined that Mr. Hernandez was temporarily totally disabled due to his chronic lower back pain and possible carpal tunnel, but that medical treatment could alleviate his symptoms. Dr. Mai told Mr. Hernandez that if he did not comply with her medical recommendations, she would not re-certify him for state benefits.

In January 2009, Mr. Hernandez told Dr. Mai that his pain was adequately controlled with over-the-counter medications. Nonetheless, Dr. Mai recommended an MRI and continued to press for the carpal tunnel test. A few days later, Dr. Mai completed a physical residual functional capacity assessment. She said that she was not qualified to assess any restrictions regarding lifting, carrying, sitting, standing, and walking, and deferred to Dr. Campbell’s September 2007 evaluation. As to the use of the upper extremities, Dr. Mai stated that she was “unable to evaluate” whether Mr. Hernandez was restricted in any way. Id. at 357. Nonetheless, Dr. Mai completed the form by stating that if any restrictions existed, Mr. Hernandez was limited to “[r]are” reaching. Id.

In February 2009, Mr. Hernandez had his first hearing before the ALJ. He testified that he was laid off from his most recent job, which included “patching holes, street sanitation, and some concrete [work],” because it was a seasonal job. Id. at 31. He also testified he injured his back in 2003, and returned to work in 2006 because he ran out of money. Regarding his physical problems, he testified that numbness in his hands caused him to drop things, he could not sit or stand for extended periods of time, and he needed to walk around regularly. He said nothing about any psychological problems or a learning disability.

In March 2009, Dr. Mai discussed the results of an MRI, which showed mild degenerative disc disease but no acute abnormalities. She again noted Mr. Hernandez’s refusal to take the prescribed medications or have the test for carpal tunnel. Dr. Mai wrote that if Mr. Hernandez followed the medical recommendations, “his symptoms could be under control [and] he could go back to his job.” Id. at 349.

At appointments in July and August 2009, Mr. Hernandez said that he was using over-the-counter medications and did not report any pain in his neck, shoulders, or elbow. He denied being depressed. Dr. Mai observed normal ranges of motion in all joints, equal strength in all extremities, and a bright and pleasant affect. Still, because Mr. Hernandez had some pain, Dr. Mai authorized further state benefits. At another appointment in November 2009, Mr. Hernandez reported to Dr. Mai that his back pain was helped “quite a bit” by over-the-counter medications. Id. at 341. Once again, Dr. Mai observed normal ranges of motion in all joints and equal strength in all extremities.

Just one week prior to his November 2009 appointment with Dr. Mai, Mr. Hernandez saw Jose Vega, Ph.D., a psychologist, for a mental-health examination. Mr. Hernandez was referred to Dr. Vega by his lawyer. Dr. Vega diagnosed Mr. Her *580 nandez with depression and a possible learning disorder. He also noted his suspicion that Mr. Hernandez “functions within the borderline range of intelligence.” Id. at 326. Dr. Vega concluded that Mr. Hernandez had “difficulty in recall and maintaining and sustaining attention and concentration for extended periods of time which would affect his ability to be employed, particularly in the competitive job market, particularly on those tasks that require those abilities.” Id. He could not say whether Mr. Hernandez’s alleged pain had a psychological or medical origin.

Despite Mr. Hernandez’s record of employment, including more than twenty years operating a forklift, Dr. Vega opined in the mental residual functional capacity assessment that there were twelve categories in which Mr. Hernandez had “Marked” through “Extreme” limitations, with “Marked” defined as “Serious limitations ... ability to function ... severely limited but not precluded” and “Extreme” defined as “Severe limitations ... [n]o useful ability to function.” Id. at 327. In the eight remaining categories, Dr. Vega found that Mr.

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567 F. App'x 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-v-colvin-ca10-2014.