John F. Masterson, Jr. v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart, Commissioner of Social Security

309 F.3d 267, 2002 WL 31250588
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 2002
Docket01-51137
StatusPublished
Cited by263 cases

This text of 309 F.3d 267 (John F. Masterson, Jr. v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart, Commissioner of Social Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John F. Masterson, Jr. v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart, Commissioner of Social Security, 309 F.3d 267, 2002 WL 31250588 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

John Masterson appeals a judgment entered by the magistrate judge, sitting by consent of the parties (hereinafter the “district court” or the “court”), affirming the Social Security Commissioner’s decision to deny his application for disability benefits. Concluding that substantial evidence supports the administrative law judge’s (“ALJ’s”) denial of benefits, we affirm.

I.

Masterson, an accountant by training, applied for Social Security disability benefits in 1994, claiming he had suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”) since 1993 because of his combat service in Vietnam. Masterson contended that *269 PTSD contributed to an inability to work with others, fear of the future, and intrusive thoughts. Despite these alleged symptoms, he acknowledged that he still could perform everyday tasks and tend to his personal needs.

After Masterson’s application was denied initially and on reconsideration, he requested a de novo hearing before an ALJ, who considered Masterson’s medical history and potential evidence of PTSD. Medical records from the Veteran’s Administration (“VA”) indicate that Master-son had complained of depression and PTSD in 1991. The treating physician, however, ruled out PTSD and diagnosed dysthymia. Masterson then began psychotherapy. In December 1991, a VA physician reported that Masterson had some PTSD symptoms and prescribed anti-depressant medication.

Masterson was first diagnosed with PTSD in October 1992. The diagnosing psychotherapist also established a working diagnosis of alcohol dependence by history, and a probable personality disorder, not otherwise specified, with dependent, self-defeating features. In November 1992, the psychotherapist identified the working diagnoses as PTSD, dysthymia, and alcohol dependence in remission.

In April 1994, the VA provided a “Rating Decision” that Masterson was unemployable and entitled to individual unem-ployability benefits. The Rating Decision stated that Masterson was depressed and anxious, that the VA examiner found him moderately to severely impaired in his occupational functioning, and that he had service-connected disabilities for shell fragment wounds to the left chest and left arm. 1 VA medical records also indicate that Masterson had sleep apnea, which was well controlled with medication and a breathing apparatus.

In January 1995, Dr. George Robison performed a consultative medical examination at the request of the Texas Rehabilitation Commission. Masterson reported that he had back pain, but no radiation, and that he did not find the pain limiting. Robison reported Masterson’s past medical history of PTSD and noted that Master-son’s hearing, emotional affect, and gross mental status were normal.

Also in January 1995, Dr. Stuart Nemir, Jr., performed a consultative psychological examination requested by the Texas Rehabilitation Commission. Masterson reported to Nemir that he was active in Alcoholics Anonymous, that he had a good relationship with his four sons, and that his daily activities included preparing meals for himself and his son, driving his son to school, doing household chores, visiting with acquaintances on the phone, working with the computer, engaging in leisure activities, and keeping up with current events through television and the newspaper. Nemir observed that Master-son was alert and his affect was appropriate; he saw no signs of depression or thought disorder.

Nemir diagnosed personality disorder, not otherwise specified, and sleep disorder. Nemir concluded that if Masterson “has PTSD, it certainly is atypical” and that “[w]ith this man’s educational background and talent together with his intelligence, I think the prognosis for him is fair to good.”

In June 1995, Robert O’Brien, Ph.D., another VA psychotherapist, reported that Masterson continued to experience recurrent combat memories and nightmares and *270 demonstrated markedly diminished interest and participation in significant activities. O’Brien opined that Masterson had moderate problems in performing activities of daily living, moderate difficulty in maintaining social functioning, and frequent problems with concentration, persistence, and pace that resulted in a failure to complete tasks in a timely manner. O’Brien also indicated that Masterson often failed to start even simple tasks, such as returning phone calls. He assessed chronic PTSD secondary to combat service and wounding in Vietnam, dysthymia secondary to PTSD, guilt, and sense of failure.

The ALJ also heard testimony at the hearing in June 1996 from Masterson, a medical expert, and a vocational expert. Masterson testified that he was forty-seven years old with a masters degree in accounting. He said he had difficulty sleeping, headaches, high frequency hearing loss, skin problems, sleep apnea, polyps on his colon, and depression. He identified an inability to concentrate as the main reason he could not work. He stated that he occasionally experienced chest pain, which medication resolved within one minute.

Masterson also testified that at his last job, he had threatened to assault two persons who had said something about the men who died in Vietnam being losers. He stated that he had begun to hurt people years ago but had been able to stop and that he had not assaulted anyone since 1982. He said, however, that he recently had hit his twenty-one-year-old son in the side of his head but did not injure him.

Masterson stated that he did laundry once a month, went grocery shopping late, watched television, occasionally watched movies with his son, read, played solitaire on the computer, and attended Alcoholic Anonymous meetings, after which he often would join others for a meal. He attended therapy and lunched weekly with four friends, who were also combat veterans.

Dr. Joe Berry, a psychiatrist with forty-two years of experience, testified as a medical expert and noted that the medical records showed diagnoses of PTSD, alcohol dependency, dysthymia, and a personality disorder. Berry stated that Master-son’s testimony did not sustain a diagnosis of PTSD. He also testified that, based on the medical evidence, Masterson had slight restrictions on daily activities, slight to moderate difficulties in social functioning, and seldom to often-experienced deficiencies of concentration. On cross-examination, Berry testified that, based on Master-son’s testimony, Masterson would have moderate to marked restrictions of daily activities and moderate to marked difficulties in maintaining social functioning, and he often would experience deficiencies in concentration.

Dr. Robert Marion, Professor of Special Education and Rehabilitation at the University of Texas at Austin, testified as a vocational expert and opined that Master-son had skills transferrable to sedentary and light jobs, given his education and age. Marion also said that sedentary and light jobs not requiring much interaction with the public existed in significant numbers in the national economy.

Marion identified several sedentary jobs that Masterson could perform without exposure to stressful situations and with less public interaction than his previous accounting jobs required: assembly worker, order clerk, appointment clerk, and security officer.

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Bluebook (online)
309 F.3d 267, 2002 WL 31250588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-f-masterson-jr-v-jo-anne-b-barnhart-commissioner-of-social-ca5-2002.