McFall v. SSA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 31, 2025
Docket7:24-cv-00017
StatusUnknown

This text of McFall v. SSA (McFall v. SSA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFall v. SSA, (E.D. Ky. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY SOUTHERN DIVISION PIKEVILLE

MELISSA MCFALL, ) ) Plaintiff, ) v. ) No. 7:24-CV-17-REW ) COMMISSIONER OF SSA ) OPINION & ORDER ) Defendant. ) )

*** *** *** *** Plaintiff Melissa McFall appeals the denial of her application for Disability Insurance Benefits (“DIB”). See DE 1. She moved for judgment following the Commissioner’s answer. See DE 10. The Commissioner responded in opposition to the motion, requesting affirmance of the underlying Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) decision, see DE 12, and McFall replied, see DE 13. The administrative record appears at DE 9 (“R.” Administrative Transcript) as part of the Commissioner’s answer. After reviewing the record, with particular emphasis on the limited portions McFall challenges, the Court finds the ALJ’s determination supported by substantial evidence and compliant with Agency rules and regulations. Accordingly, the Court DENIES McFall’s motion and affirms the ALJ’s denial. I. Relevant Background McFall protectively applied for DIB on July 13, 2021, alleging disability beginning on October 1, 2020. See R. at 166–67. She alleged a slew of disabling conditions, including arthritis, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, and mental conditions including depression and anxiety. See R. at 184. The agency denied her claim initially, see R. at 83–84, and again on reconsideration, see R. at 89–90, eventually leading to an administrative hearing before ALJ Davida Isaacs. See R. at 36–53. On March 27, 2023, in a 13-page opinion, Judge Isaacs concluded that McFall was not “disabled” within the meaning of the Social Security Act. See R. at 17–30. The Appeals Council upheld the decision, see R. at 1, and this appeal ensued. Judge Issacs’s opinion tracked the standard five-step evaluation sequence laid out in 20

C.F.R. § 404.1520. First, Judge Issacs concluded that McFall “has not engaged in substantial gainful activity since October 1, 2020.” See R. at 19. Second, she concluded that McFall’s degenerative disc disease, mild concentric left ventricular hypertrophy, chronic colitis, pulmonary disease, and obesity qualified as severe impairments under 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(c). See R. at 20. As part of the step two analysis, and as particularly relevant to McFall’s narrow appeal, Judge Issacs thoroughly assessed the effect of McFall’s medically determinable mental impairments. See id. at 20–21. She concluded, based on the medical evidence, examination materials, and McFall’s own statements, that McFall’s depression and anxiety caused only mild, nonsevere impairments as to each of the four “paragraph B” criteria.1 Addressing, without limitation, McFall’s particular complaint that she struggled with concentration and ability to

complete tasks, Judge Issacs concluded that mental status examinations were “generally stable longitudinally,” with McFall being oriented to person, place, and time, cooperative, exhibiting appropriate judgment and memory, along with normal thought processes, appropriate mood and affect. See id. at 20. Judge Issacs also found apparent contradictions between McFall’s complaints of mental functioning impairments and her own reports. Through hearing testimony, McFall reported the ability to attend to her personal care needs, drive a car, shop, prepare simple meals, do laundry, play guitar, and visit with family. See id. at 21. To Judge Issacs, this degree of reported

1 Paragraph B calls on reviewing officials to consider a claimant’s ability to (1) understand, remember or apply information, (2) interact with others, (3) concentrate, persist or maintain pace, and (4) adapt or manage oneself. 20 C.F.R. 404, Subpart P, Appendix I. activity “does not support a finding that [McFall] has more than mild limitations in her mental functioning.” See id. Judge Issacs supported the conclusion with reference to two psychological assessment opinions, found to be persuasive, opining that McFall’s mental impairments result in no more than mild limitations in her mental functioning. See id. at 21–22. Those reviewers

specifically opined that McFall’s mental impairments, “singly or combined, do not significantly interfere with Clmt’s ability to perform BWA’s.” See, e.g., R. at 70. Judge Issacs found the opinions persuasive, in part, because they were supported by citations to the record and consistent with subsequent evidence documenting normal mental status exam findings and generally stable mental status examination findings. See id. At the fourth step, Judge Issacs determined McFall’s Residual Function Capacity (“RFC”). See R. at 24–28. She found that, based on McFall’s impairments, she could perform “sedentary work,” except that, among other things, she “must avoid fast-paced tasks, such as those involving assembly lines, rush hours, and work involving production quotas that are hourly or more frequent.” See R. at 24. Importantly, Judge Isaacs specifically acknowledged her obligation to

follow SSR 96-8p, thus, to consider “all of the claimant’s impairments, including impairments that are not severe.” R. at 19. Further, she segregated the step two and step four analyses, id. at 21, noted the analytical distinction imposed in SSR 96-8p, see id., and specifically indicated the RFC came “[a]fter careful consideration of the entire record[.]” R. at 22. She further specifically stated that the RFC assessment “reflects the degree of limitation I have found in the ‘paragraph B’ mental function analysis.” Id. at 21. In reaching McFall’s RFC determination, Judge Issacs heavily considered record evidence of McFall’s physical ailments. She determined that despite reports of extensive and debilitating physical symptoms, including neck and back pain, shortness of breath, difficulty sitting and walking, among many others, that much of the medical evidence noted normal findings in many of these areas. See id. at 25 (noting that medical evidence often showed no distress, normal respiratory effort, normal motor strength, normal gait, and intact cranial nerves). To be sure, these complaints meant more than nothing to Judge Issacs. She noted that “objective studies

demonstrated some abnormal findings that support the claimant’s subjective reporting symptoms,” but the evidence fell short of the “degree of limitation as alleged by the claimant.” See id. at 25– 26. In reaching this conclusion, Judge Issacs considered voluminous exhibits and physical examinations from medical consultants and squared the medical evidence rationally with McFall’s subjective reports of her conditions. In all, Judge Issacs concluded that “while the objective evidence does indicate that the claimant has severe impairments for which she continues to have ongoing symptoms and limitations, it does not support a finding that the claimant is more severely limited.” See id. at 29. Critically to this narrow appeal, in articulating McFall’s RFC, Judge Issacs gave little mention to McFall’s reported anxiety and depression. Judge Issacs’s RFC determination did

reference McFall’s reports of difficulty concentrating, but it credited those challenges to physical ailments, rather than mental impairments. See R. at 24 (“The claimant also alleges difficulty with her concentration and her ability to complete tasks due to her pain symptoms.”). However, outside of that isolated reference, Judge Issacs’s RFC determination at step four did not feature detailed analysis concerning McFall’s RFC determination and her omission of the mental impairments highlighted at step two. That is the crux of this appeal.

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McFall v. SSA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfall-v-ssa-kyed-2025.