McLeod v. Astrue

640 F.3d 881, 2011 WL 1886355
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2010
Docket09-35190
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 640 F.3d 881 (McLeod v. Astrue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLeod v. Astrue, 640 F.3d 881, 2011 WL 1886355 (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER

Appellee’s petition for rehearing is granted in part and denied in part.

The opinion filed on December 16, 2010 and amended February 4, 2011 is amended as follows:

At 2207-8 of the amended slip opinion, strike the following two sentences:

The district court reviewing a Social Security determination “may at any time order additional evidence to be taken before the Commissioner of Social Security, but only upon a showing that there is new evidence which is material and that there is good cause for the failure to incorporate such evidence into the record in a prior proceeding.”, The ALJ’s failure to help McLeod develop the record by putting his VA disability determination into the record is “good cause” under Tonapetyan, and the disability determination is “material” under McCartey, so the district court should remand for this purpose.
Replace them with:
We remand under sentence four of 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), concluding that “the agency erred in some respect in reaching a decision to deny benefits.” 32 The ALJ’s failure to help McLeod develop the record by putting his VA disability determination into the record was an error under Tonapetyan and McCartey, so the district court should remand.

The amended opinion is filed concurrently with this Order. No further petitions for rehearing or petitions for rehearing en banc will be entertained.

OPINION

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

We address harmless error in the context of Social Security disability.

I. Facts

Gene R. McLeod applied at age 51 for supplemental security income based on disability. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found that he had three severe impairments — degenerative changes of the lumbar spine, history of coronary artery disease, and sleep apnea — but none so severe as to rise to the level of “listed” impairments. He lacked significant protrusion or herniation of the discs or compression of the nerve root where there was narrowing at L4-5, and catheterization had restored him to asymptomatic condition regarding his heart. The ALJ found that McLeod’s medically determinable impairments could be expected to produce his symptoms, but his “statements concerning intensity, duration and limiting effects of these symptoms are not entirely credible.” One of McLeod’s treating physicians said that he was “very debilitated” and another said he was “unemployable.” But the ALJ rejected these opinions insofar as they addressed employability, because they gave a conclusory opinion on employability, the Commissioner’s bailiwick, and “are not function-by-function analyses of the claimant’s residual functional capacity.” The ALJ found that McLeod could not perform his past work as a bartender, breakfast cook, groundskeeper, or golf pro shop clerk, but had sufficient functional capacity to perform such work as gambling cashier, telephone solicitor, and order clerk, all sedentary jobs with minimal lifting and *884 bending, allowing for sitting and standing within McLeod’s limitations. The district court denied McLeod’s petition for review.

The medical record, consisting mostly of information from McLeod’s treating physicians and physicians to whom his treating physicians referred him for consultation at Department of Veterans Affairs facilities, was mixed as to the severity of McLeod’s condition. A neurosurgeon to whom McLeod was referred said that McLeod had “no muscle weakness” and recommended against surgery because of the unlikelihood of improvement “particularly with unsettled litigation and his pain behavior on examination.” The VA Neurosurgery Chief wrote that McLeod’s spinal canal was “open throughout his lumbosacral region” (which means no compression on account of narrowing) and that “he has some evidence of degenerated discs but there is not any evidence of nerve root compression from these discs.” One treating physician at the VA said that because McLeod had “back pain with minimal activity,” and “any work he has done exacerbates the problem,” he was “unemployable.” But another treating VA physician said McLeod should be restricted to “light manual sedentary” work, rather than no work at all.

McLeod’s appeal focuses on the ALJ’s failure to develop the record further regarding his veteran’s disability and medical condition. McLeod testified that he received a $296 non-service-connected pension, based on unemployability, from the VA. When the ALJ asked him if he had a VA disability rating, he answered, “I have no idea, Your Honor.” The record does not reveal whether the VA found McLeod partially or entirely disabled. No evidence of his disability rating was submitted to the Social Security Administration at any stage of the proceedings, or to the district court. Based on McLeod’s testimony about his “pension,” there is a fair chance he has a disability rating, but the record shows neither that he has one nor what it is.

Though McLeod had only a lay representative before the VA, he was represented by an attorney in district court and is represented, by different counsel, here.

II. Analysis

McLeod argues under Tonapetyan v. Halter 1 that the ALJ erred by failing to develop the record adequately. According to McLeod, the ALJ should have requested more explanation from two of his treating physicians at the VA, Dr. Dietz and Dr. Rossetto, about his ability to work. McLeod also argues that the ALJ should have obtained whatever VA disability rating McLeod might have.

The ALJ had no duty to request more information from the two physicians. It appears from the record that substantially all of their medical records throughout the time they treated McLeod were before the ALJ. There was nothing unclear or ambiguous about what they said. They both thought McLeod had a bad lower back condition, based on his symptom reports, their examinations, and objective medical tests. Dr. Dietz thought McLeod could do sedentary work, and Dr. Rossetto thought McLeod could not work at all. As for the ALJ rejecting Dr. Rossetto’s opinion on whether McLeod could work at any job, he was correct that this determination is for the Social Security Administration to make, not a physician. “Although a treating physician’s opinion is generally afforded the greatest weight in disability cases, it is not binding on an ALJ with respect to the existence of an *885 impairment or the ultimate determination of disability.” 2 McLeod argues that Dr. Rossetto’s opinion could be read as an evaluation of his “functional exertional capacity” rather than a conclusion on his ability to work, but we do not agree. The words are clear and unambiguous: an “ALJ’s duty to develop the record further is triggered only when there is ambiguous evidence or when the record is inadequate to allow for proper evaluation of the evidence.” 3

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640 F.3d 881, 2011 WL 1886355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-astrue-ca9-2010.