Oberoi v. Saul

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-05822
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Oberoi v. Saul, (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT “A.R.” 66.) After her DIB claim was denied initially and upon reconsideration, (id. NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION at 72, 81), Sabita was granted a hearing before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”).

SABITA O., 1 ) Because Sabita’s insured status expired on March 31, 2011, five years before she ) 19 CV 5822 Plaintiff, ) filed her application, the ALJ was tasked with determining whether she established ) v. ) Magistrate Judge Young B. Kim that she was disabled in the period between her June 2006 alleged onset date and ) ANDREW M. SAUL, Commissioner of ) March 2011. The ALJ issued a decision concluding that she did not. (Id. at 15-23.) Social Security, ) ) April 29, 2021 The Appeals Council denied Sabita’s request for review, (id. at 1-3), making the Defendant. ) ALJ’s decision the final decision of the Commissioner, see Prater v. Saul, 947 F.3d MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER 479, 481 (7th Cir. 2020). Sabita then filed this lawsuit seeking judicial review of the This case illustrates the evidentiary challenges a claimant faces when she Commissioner’s decision, and the parties consented to this court’s jurisdiction. applies for social security disability benefits years after her date last insured has (R. 11); see 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). passed. Sabita O. seeks disability insurance benefits (“DIB”) based on her claim Facts that she is disabled by rheumatoid arthritis and its resulting symptoms. She filed Sabita relies on her documentary evidence and hearing testimony to support her DIB application five years after her date last insured, and the Commissioner of her claim for DIB. Social Security denied her claim. Sabita now seeks judicial review of that decision. A. Medical Evidence See 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). Before the court are the parties’ cross-motions for summary The bulk of documentary evidence Sabita submitted in support of her DIB judgment. For the following reasons, Sabita’s motion is denied and the claim post-dates her date last insured by several years. Documents from 2013 Commissioner’s is granted: through 2018 show that Sabita received regular treatment from Dr. Monika Background Starosta, a rheumatologist. During that period Dr. Starosta reported varying Sabita filed her DIB application in September 2016, claiming that she degrees of success in treating Sabita’s rheumatoid arthritis-related pain and became disabled in June 2006, when she was 49 years old. (Administrative Record stiffness with steroids and other medications. Under her care Sabita at times

1 Pursuant to Internal Operating Procedure 22, the court uses only the claimant’s reported improvement and only mild or minimal pain in her hands, neck, and feet. first name and last initial throughout this opinion to protect her privacy to the extent possible. 2 (See, e.g., A.R. 724-25, 833, 837, 882, 896.) But at other times in this period Sabita wrist and ankle pain had been present “for years, getting worse,” (id. at 305). The reported daily, generalized pain without relief, (id. at 757, 811), and Dr. Starosta bone scan results were consistent with polyarthritis. (Id. at 305.) consistently wrote that Sabita had abnormalities in her fingers and wrists with In January 2010 Sabita’s long-time physician, Dr. I. Singh, prescribed reduced flexion, (id. at 721, 737, 749, 826, 831, 835, 839, 843). prednisone, a steroid used to treat arthritis. (Id. at 786.) A week later Sabita In April 2018 Dr. Starosta submitted a residual functional capacity (“RFC”) reported that she was feeling better on prednisone. (Id.) In January 2011―just two questionnaire on behalf of Sabita’s DIB application and opined that she has months before her date last insured―Sabita had a consultation with Dr. Stacy Ban, significant functional limitations, including standing for only five minutes, sitting who noted that without medications Sabita had significant pain tied to rheumatoid for ten minutes, walking for one block, and lifting and carrying less than five arthritis, but after starting prednisone she was “currently without symptoms.” (Id. pounds. She also wrote that Sabita has trouble with fine manipulation and at 257.) In June 2011―three months after her date last insured―Sabita told her grasping because of hand pain and stiffness. (Id. at 994.) However, Dr. Starosta doctor she was doing well. (Id. at 254.) In May 2012 Sabita was again hospitalized was not able to say whether those limitations existed before Sabita’s March 2011 for pneumonia, but a musculoskeletal exam at that time showed no swelling, no date last insured. In fact, she wrote that she had no access to records or ability to tenderness, normal range of motion, and normal strength. (Id. at 511.) address Sabita’s limitations before March 2011. (Id. at 995-96.) In 2017 two consulting physicians reviewed Sabita’s medical records and Although her treatment for rheumatoid arthritis is well documented starting concluded that there was insufficient evidence on which they could evaluate her in 2013, records reflecting Sabita’s symptoms during the relevant period―from June claim of disability prior to her date last insured. (Id. at 69, 78.) In May 2018 2006 through March 2011―are comparatively meager. Sabita’s alleged disability Dr. Singh submitted an RFC questionnaire on Sabita’s behalf, noting that their onset date closely followed a 2006 hospitalization for pneumonia, and in 2008 she treatment relationship extended back to 1995. (Id. at 997.) Dr. Singh opined that had her first consultation with rheumatologist Dr. Robert Hozman. Her chief Sabita has significant limitations in all domains. He wrote that she is unable to complaint at that consultation was foot pain, but she also complained of achy hands stand for more than five minutes or sit for more than ten to fifteen minutes and and wrists. (Id. at 372.) Dr. Hozman noted that Sabita “would benefit from that she must lie down at least every three hours. He further opined that Sabita physical therapy,” (id.), and ordered a bone scan because Sabita reported that her can walk only one block and lift and carry less than five pounds. Dr. Singh also wrote that Sabita has trouble with fine manipulation and grasping, noting that she 3 4 has joint disease in her hands and wrists. (Id. at 998.) Unlike Dr. Starosta, polyarthropathy during that period. (A.R. 17.) At step three the ALJ determined Dr. Singh did opine on Sabita’s condition prior to her date last insured and wrote that Sabita’s impairment was not of listings-level severity. (Id. at 18.) that the limitations in his RFC assessment applied since before March 31, 2011, Before turning to step four, the ALJ determined that during the relevant and that they have “been slowly more disabling.” (Id. at 999-1000.) period Sabita retained the RFC for light work, but that she was limited to frequent B. Hearing Testimony grasping. (Id.) In explaining that determination, the ALJ wrote that the medical At her June 2018 hearing before the ALJ, Sabita testified that she stopped evidence documenting her condition before her date last insured is minimal—even working after her 2006 hospitalization and a subsequent dental surgery because she though she had health insurance during that period—and does not support Sabita’s had to be home for three months and was laid off. (A.R. 37-38.) She testified that contention that she was so limited prior to March 2011 that she could sit or stand she tried looking for a new job after her layoff but that she was not able to work for no longer than ten minutes. (Id. at 19-20.) The ALJ pointed to Sabita’s 2006 eight-hour days. (Id.

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Oberoi v. Saul, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oberoi-v-saul-ilnd-2021.