Joe Pickney v. Shirley S. Chater

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1996
Docket95-3595
StatusPublished

This text of Joe Pickney v. Shirley S. Chater (Joe Pickney v. Shirley S. Chater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joe Pickney v. Shirley S. Chater, (8th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

___________

No. 95-3595 ___________

Joe Pickney, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the Eastern * District of Arkansas. Shirley S. Chater, * Commissioner, Social Security * Administration, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: April 11, 1996

Filed: September 17, 1996 ___________

Before BEAM and MURPHY, Circuit Judges, and NANGLE,* District Judge. ___________

BEAM, Circuit Judge.

Joe Pickney appeals the denial of Social Security benefits. Because the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) failed to include Pickney's mental impairments in the hypothetical question posed to the vocational expert, we reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

Pickney is forty-eight years old. He has a tenth grade education and was previously employed as a truck driver, a carpenter's helper and a machinery driver at a rock quarry. He filed this application for Social Security benefits on March 11, 1991, alleging a disability onset date of August 10, 1988. On that date, Pickney was involved in a truck accident and suffered

*The Honorable JOHN F. NANGLE, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, sitting by designation. multiple injuries, including a scalp laceration and underlying skull fracture of the frontal bone, a frontobasilar skull fracture, splenic rupture, meningitis due to a cerebrospinal fluid leak and a fibular fracture. As a result, he suffers from vision and knee problems. He is also sensitive to exposure to the sun and has memory problems.

After his application for benefits was denied initially and on reconsideration, Pickney appealed and a hearing was held before an ALJ. At the hearing, Pickney testified that he has very little peripheral vision, memory problems and pain in his knee. Pickney's wife corroborated his testimony. A vocational expert then testified that Pickney could not return to his former work. In response to a hypothetical question posed 1 by the ALJ, the vocational expert stated that there are unskilled jobs in the national economy that a man with Pickney's experience and limitations (lack of peripheral vision and sun sensitivity) could perform. At the close of the hearing, the ALJ kept the record open for submission of additional evidence. Pickney submitted reports of examinations by a psychologist and an internist.

In his report, the psychologist, Dr. Russell Dixon, noted that Pickney has a full scale I.Q. on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale- Revised (WAIS-R) of 78, a verbal I.Q. of 82 and a performance I.Q. of 76, which puts him in the range of "Borderline Intellectual

1 The hypothetical question was:

Let me ask you this--assuming that I find that he doesn't actually experience any mental limitations other than-- well, the hypothetical didn't include any so let me ask you to assume that I would find that he didn't experience any mental limitations and that the only restrictions he would have would be those related to his age and education. What period of vocational adjustment, if any, would be necessary then?

Administrative Transcript at 65.

-2- Functioning." Administrative Transcript at 275. Dr. Dixon also found "[n]europsychological test performance compatible with the residuals of a closed head injury--level of impairment--moderate--adaptive abilities are significantly compromised." Id. at 277. He further found "simple problem solving was mildly impaired," "two-step problem solving was severely impaired," "slowing of right hand motor speed," "abstract reasoning . . . in the impaired range," "spatial problem solving . . . in the impaired range," and "moderate generalized neuropsychological dysfunction in an individual with probable premorbid Borderline Intellectual Functioning." Id. at 275-77.

Dr. John Ashley, an internist, noted that Pickney's primary problem is "the loss of useable vision bilaterally, which is not due to injury to the eyeballs themselves, but is due to brain damage secondary to the fracture and possibly to the meningitis and small brain abscess, which developed following the injury." Id. at 280. He also noted that Pickney experiences "considerable difficulty in thinking and in acting as a result of his brain injury." Id. Dr. Ashley's diagnosis included "mild dementia, secondary to brain damage, with memory loss, confusion, difficulty with speech . . . [and] incoordination in anything involving balance." Id. at 281.

The ALJ considered these reports but found "[t]he claimant's borderline functioning has resulted in only a slight restriction of activities of daily living, slight difficulties in maintaining social functioning with often deficiencies of concentration and never any episodes of deterioration or decompensation in work or work-like settings."2 Id.

2 The special procedures for mental impairment claims also require either the ALJ or a psychiatrist to complete a Psychiatric Review Technique Form (PRTF). Pratt v. Sullivan, 956 F.2d 830, 834 (8th Cir. 1992). Here, the ALJ completed the PRTF and found evidence of Organic Mental Disorder and Mental Retardation and Autism. On making these findings the ALJ was required to complete a functional limitation checklist, or "B" criteria of the listings, for each of those mental disorders. See generally Pratt, 956 F.2d at 834 n.7. His findings correspond with those "B" criteria. The ALJ essentially found that although Pickney has evidence of the disorders, his limitations were not of listing-level severity.

-3- at 18. He noted:

This is a different inquiry than whether the mental limitations should have been posed to the vocational expert.

-4- [w]hile the undersigned recognizes that the hypothec [sic] directed to the vocational expert did not specifically include limitations in detailed/complex work (which is based on the claimant's borderline IQ), the undersigned recognizes the vocational expert testified the jobs identified were unskilled, based on an assumption of a head injury. Thus, it appears these additional limitations were assumed by the vocational expert.

Id. at 19. Accordingly, the ALJ found that Pickney retains the residual functional capacity to perform jobs that exist in significant numbers in the national economy.

Pickney appealed to the district court and the district court affirmed, noting "substantial evidence in the record as a whole supports the ALJ's conclusion that plaintiff did not meet or equal listing 12.02 (organic mental disorder) or 12.05 (mental retardation or autism)." Pickney v. Chater, No. J-C-93-423, Memorandum and Order at 7 (E.D. Mo. Sept. 28, 1995). Additionally, the district court found that "the hypothetical question posed to the vocational expert properly included all impairments that were supported by substantial evidence, and excluded plaintiff's other alleged impairments." Id. at 9. On appeal, Pickney asserts error in the failure of the ALJ to pose a hypothetical to the vocational expert that included Pickney's mental impairments.

II. DISCUSSION

We must affirm the decision of the ALJ if it is supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole. Smith v. Shalala,

-5- 31 F.3d 715, 717 (8th Cir. 1994). Substantial evidence is less than a preponderance, but enough so that a reasonable mind might find it adequate to support the conclusion. Oberst v. Shalala, 2 F.3d 249, 250 (8th Cir. 1993).

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Joe Pickney v. Shirley S. Chater, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-pickney-v-shirley-s-chater-ca8-1996.