Myers v. Berryhill

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedApril 24, 2020
Docket2:18-cv-00107
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Myers v. Berryhill, (E.D. Mo. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI NORTHERN DIVISION

THERESA L. MYERS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 2:18CV107 PLC ) ANDREW SAUL, ) Commissioner of Social Security, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Plaintiff Theresa Myers seeks review of the decision by the Commissioner of Social Security Andrew Saul1, denying her application for Disability Insurance Benefits (DIB) under the Social Security Act (Act). Because the Court finds that substantial evidence supports the decision to deny benefits, the Court affirms the denial of Plaintiff’s application. I. Background & Procedural History In February 2015, Plaintiff, then sixty years old, filed an application for Disability Insurance Benefits alleging that she was disabled as of September 20, 2014 due to: “compression fractures C-1 through T-1, degenerative bone disease, thyroid, high cholesterol, depression, anxiety attacks.” (Tr. 104) The Social Security Administration (SSA) denied Plaintiff’s claims, and she filed a timely request for a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ). (Tr. 134-38, 141-42) After the ALJ issued a decision in October 2016 finding Plaintiff not disabled, Plaintiff appealed to the SSA Appeals Council, which remanded the case to the ALJ for “further evaluation” of the opinion of Plaintiff’s treating physician, Dr. Sparks. (Tr. 129-33)

1 At the time this case was filed Nancy A. Berryhill was the Deputy Commissioner of Social Security. The ALJ conducted a second hearing in February 2018. (Tr. 32-70) On remand, the ALJ applied the five-step evaluation set forth in 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a) and issued a decision dated May 4, 2018, concluding that Plaintiff “has not been under a disability within the meaning of the Act from September 20, 2014, through the date of this decision.” (Tr. 16) Plaintiff filed a request for review of the ALJ’s decision with the SSA Appeals Council, which denied the request. (Tr. 1–

6) Plaintiff has exhausted all administrative remedies, and the ALJ’s decision stands as the Commissioner’s final decision. Sims v. Apfel, 530 U.S. 103, 106–07 (2000). II. Evidence before the ALJ A. Testimony Plaintiff testified that she was sixty-three years old and had previously worked as the executive director of Rural Advocates for Independent Living. (Tr. 37) In that position, she supervised up to twenty-seven staff members, wrote grants, reviewed “consumers’ files,” attended board meeting, and communicated with other agencies. (Id.) Plaintiff stated that she stopped working in May 2014 because she was terminated for “[l]arge amounts of absenteeism … I would

say two to three days a week sometimes, or I would call in late because the pain was too severe to be able to function.” (Tr. 38) Plaintiff testified that she had compression fractures in her spine from C3 to T1. (Tr. 39) Plaintiff explained that the pain “starts at the base of my neck and runs down to the middle of my shoulder blades, and a lot of times … my arms will burn from the inside out. I have no feeling in my hands.” (Tr. 39) Plaintiff explained that the “mobility issues” in her arms had been “going on for a great number of years, but it’s been getting progressively worse[.]” (Id.) Plaintiff affirmed that, in 2011, she underwent a “hemilaminectomy and deconstruction by thermal ablation on the right” at C4-5. (Tr. 51) Plaintiff testified that the surgery did not alleviate any of her symptoms. (Tr. 52) Plaintiff had seen several specialists to discuss further surgical options, but “they wanted [ ] to put a steel rod in [her] neck that runs from C3 to T1,” to “fuse all of those vertebra[e]…with no guarantee that it will stop the pain or that [she] would regain any of the numbness or mobility.” (Tr. 42) Plaintiff was hesitant to proceed with such a surgery because “the steel rods will continue to apply pressure to the rest of the spine, leading [the] degeneration

to expand” and she feared losing more mobility. (Id.) Plaintiff managed her pain by alternating hot and cold presses and taking hydrocodone. (Tr. 53) She denied side effects from her medications. (Id.) Plaintiff did not shower unless her husband was home and did not wash her hair more than once a week because “it hurts to raise my hands up over my head.” (Tr. 45) In regard to household chores, Plaintiff stated “[we] use a lot of paper plates because my ability to do dishes has decreased” and “I drop things all the time.” (Tr. 43) Plaintiff elaborated that “[c]ooking has always been one of my loves, but I find that with my [limited] mobility and the pain, I no longer get to enjoy that.” (Id.) Plaintiff stated that her daughter helped her with vacuuming, dusting,

laundry, and shopping. (Id.) She avoided driving because “you’re supposed to have both … hands on the wheel. I cannot do that. They go numb and the pain becomes excruciating.” (Tr. 49) Plaintiff could no longer open bottles, type, or “hold a pen for any long period of time.” (Tr. 57- 58) Plaintiff attributed her depression to her “disability because I’m not the person I used to be. I can’t do the things I used to do….” (Tr. 46) Plaintiff explained that the depression “is uncontrollable, wanting to just cry, and I feel worthless.” (Tr. 47) Plaintiff cried “at least once a day” due to pain and frustration. (Tr. 56) In regard to her anxiety, Plaintiff testified that she often experienced anxiety attacks “in the middle of the night where I feel like the world is caving in on me. I can’t breath. I can’t sleep …. I have heart palpitations, cold sweats, or chills.” (Tr. 47) Plaintiff had difficulty sleeping because she awoke “about every hour in pain.” (Tr. 56) A vocational expert also testified at the hearing. (Tr. 60) The ALJ asked the vocational expert to consider a hypothetical individual with Plaintiff’s age, education, past work experience, and the ability to perform sedentary work with the following limitations:

They could frequently reach overhead and in all directions with both the right and left arm. They could frequently handle and finger with the left and right hand. They should never climb ladders, ropes, or scaffolds. They could less-than occasionally crawl. They should never work at unprotected heights or around moving mechanical parts. They should never work in vibration.

(Tr. 64) The vocational expert stated that such person could perform Plaintiff’s past work as a social welfare administrator. (Id.) When the ALJ modified the hypothetical such that the individual could only “occasionally reach,…both overhead and in all directions, with both left and right arms; and only occasionally hand[le] and finger[] with the left and right hand; and never […] crawl,” the vocational expert stated that the individual would still be able to perform Plaintiff’s past work. (Tr. 64) However, if the hypothetical further limited the individual to simple, routine tasks and simple work-related decisions, the hypothetical individual would not be able to perform Plaintiff’s past work. (Tr. 64- 65) The vocational expert also opined that a limitation to less than occasional bilateral handling or fingering would preclude employment because “[a]ny job I can think of in the sedentary job base would require a good bilateral use of the upper extremities.” (Tr. 67-68) B. Medical Records The earliest medical record from Plaintiff’s primary care physician Dr. Sparks was dated May 2011. (Tr. 468) Dr. Sparks noted he was treating Plaintiff for hypothyroidism, hyperlipidemia, chronic pain, anxiety, and major depressive disorder, and he prescribed Lasix, Mevacor, Prozac, Synthroid, Vicodin, and Xanax. (Tr. 468, 470) The record reflects that Dr. Sparks saw Plaintiff eleven times in 2011. (Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
Myers v. Berryhill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-berryhill-moed-2020.