Mary J. Dorsey v. Margaret M. Heckler, Secretary of Health and Human Services

702 F.2d 597, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 28929, 1 Soc. Serv. Rev. 299
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1983
Docket82-4196
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 702 F.2d 597 (Mary J. Dorsey v. Margaret M. Heckler, Secretary of Health and Human Services) 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
Mary J. Dorsey v. Margaret M. Heckler, Secretary of Health and Human Services, 702 F.2d 597, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 28929, 1 Soc. Serv. Rev. 299 (5th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

THORNBERRY, Circuit Judge:

Mary Dorsey, a fifty-two year old woman who claims various physical and psychological ailments have disabled her from pursuing gainful employment, appeals from a district court affirmance of the Secretary of Health and Human Services’ (the Secretary’s) denial of her disability 1 and supplemental security income 2 claims under the Social Security Act (the “Act”), and the denial of her Motion to Remand for consideration of new medical evidence regarding mental ailments. 3 The decision below is in part affirmed, but will be remanded for consideration by the Secretary of new medical evidence pertaining to Dorsey’s mental condition. Finding substantial evidence to support the Secretary’s determination with respect to Dorsey’s claims arising out of, or related to, her 1975 left leg injury, we affirm those portions of the administrative determination below which are not inconsistent with reconsideration of Dorsey’s claims in light of previously unpresented medical evidence of serious mental ailments. We conclude that the magistrate erred in failing to remand Dorsey’s case for further consideration by the Secretary since the evidence submitted to the district court was (i) new, (ii) material, and (iii) could not have been incorporated into the record in a prior proceeding. Since a reasonable possibility existed that such evidence would have changed the outcome of the Secretary’s determination, we remand.

I. Facts.

Mary Dorsey has a tenth grade education, and worked for approximately eighteen years, until 1971, as a sewing machine operator. She has since been employed as a hospital dietician’s assistant and as manager of a bakery. 4

In October 1975, Dorsey broke her left leg, which she contends healed badly, leaving her in constant disabling pain in the leg itself, as well as in her hip and back. She also ascribes a “nervous” condition, originally diagnosed as “chronic anxiety” and “depression” by her primary treating physician, Dr. John Lee, at least in part to the injury and its aftermath.

For present purposes, it will suffice to say that Dorsey’s claims of physical ailments related to her 1975 leg injury have been subjected to extensive- medical and administrative evaluation since the accident. Dorsey initially sought Title II and SSI benefits shortly after the accident, but the applications were denied. On hearing before an administrative law judge (AU), she was granted a closed period of disability from October 1975 until June 1977. Dorsey was also awarded SSI benefits from March 18, 1976 through June 1977. This decision was not contested beyond the administrative review level, and is not now before us on appeal. [The Appeals Council denied her request for review on March 5, 1979 and an appeal to federal district court was not taken.] Dorsey again filed applications for Title. II benefits and SSI on January 26, 1978. On January 30, 1979, an administrative law judge issued a decision finding that since June 21, 1977, claimant had not been disabled and was not entitled to Title II benefits or SSI. This decision became a final decision on January 30,1979, after the Appeals Council denied review and claimant did not pursue a court review. Thus, the *601 previous decisions, granting claimant a closed period of benefits and denying benefits from June 21,1977 to January 30,1979, became final. Since the previous decisions were not reopened, these decisions are final and are not now before us on appeal.

The present proceeding was commenced November 9, 1979, when Dorsey filed new applications for disability insurance and supplemental security income benefits. These applications were denied February 15,1980, and Dorsey sought and obtained de novo review and a hearing before an ALJ on May 2,1980. On July 9, 1980, following a consultative examination of Dorsey by an orthopedic surgeon performed at the ALJ’s request, a decision was entered denying Dorsey’s claims. Upon consideration of conflicting medical evidence from Dr. John Lee (a family practice specialist and the plaintiff’s primary treating physician), Dr. James Hughs (Chief of Orthopedic Surgery at Mississippi Medical Center, also named by Dorsey as her doctor), Dr. W. Lamar Wilkerson (a chiropractor, not in the 1979 American Medical Directory), and Dr. John Gassaway (the orthopedic surgeon retained at the ALJ’s request), as well as testimony by Dorsey herself, and the record from pri- or proceedings, the ALJ determined that she was not under a “disability” within the meaning of the Social Security Act since “there were no objective findings presented that would prevent her from returning to the type of work that she performed as a dietician’s assistant.” 5

With respect to Dorsey’s claim of mental disability, the ALJ observed the paucity of evidence in the record before him providing support for this claim:

In re claimant’s “nervous” condition, Dr. Lee gives her a diagnosis of chronic anxiety. However, there is no other mention of mental disorder or nervous problem in the entire record. Further, apparently, claimant has not had a severe condition inasmuch as there is no mention that she has tried to obtain the services of a psychiatrist or psychologist.

Dorsey requested a review of the ALJ’s decision on July 16, 1980. This was denied by the Appeals Council on August 11, 1980, either immediately before or immediately after her release from St. Dominic Hospital in Jackson, Mississippi, where she had been admitted on July 30, 1980, complaining of hallucinations, anxiety, and depression. 6

On August 29, 1980 (two and a half weeks after the Appeals Council decision, and at most, twenty days after Dorsey’s release from her hospitalization), an action was brought in federal district court appealing the Appeals Council determination. In a letter dated September 3, 1980, and addressed to the Mississippi State Disability Determination Services in Jackson, Dorsey’s treating physician, Dr. Lee, outlined the August hospitalization and stated that Dorsey was now at home under his care, and totally disabled. On the basis of Dr. Lee’s diagnosis, and the August hospitalization, Dorsey’s counsel moved in November 1980 to have the entire case remanded to the Secretary for consideration of the new medical evidence concerning Dorsey’s psychological condition. Hospital records and Dr. Lee’s letter were appended to the mo *602 tion. No answer was ever filed by the Secretary, and the motion was never scheduled for hearing.

The record contains no explanation of the lengthy delay before the magistrate ruled upon Dorsey’s appeal filed in district court on August 29, 1980 and her motion to remand filed on November 17, 1980. More than a year and a half passed before the motion to remand was considered at all, and then only in the context of the magistrate’s opinion and order. The government first filed an answer in December 1980, and moved in March 1981 for a summary af-firmance of the Secretary’s decision. Dorsey renewed her motion to remand on April 23, 1981, appending an additional letter from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
702 F.2d 597, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 28929, 1 Soc. Serv. Rev. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-j-dorsey-v-margaret-m-heckler-secretary-of-health-and-human-ca5-1983.