O'DELL v. Astrue

736 F. Supp. 2d 378, 2010 DNH 159, 2010 N.H. 159, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95395, 2010 WL 3516453
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 8, 2010
Docket1:05-mj-00040
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 736 F. Supp. 2d 378 (O'DELL v. Astrue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'DELL v. Astrue, 736 F. Supp. 2d 378, 2010 DNH 159, 2010 N.H. 159, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95395, 2010 WL 3516453 (D.N.H. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

PAUL BARBADORO, District Judge.

George W. O’Dell moves to reverse the Commissioner of Social Security’s determination that he is not eligible for disability insurance benefits (“DIB”). O’Dell bases his claim on a back injury he suffered in 1990. He focuses his appeal on the Commissioner’s determination that he is not entitled to DIB because he was capable of performing sedentary work without restriction while he was still insured. For the reasons set forth below, I affirm the Commissioner’s decision.

I. BACKGROUND 1

O’Dell was born January 25, 1947, and grew up in Massachusetts. George O’Dell was forty-three years old when he allegedly became disabled. Following a brief stint in the military at the age of twenty-one, O’Dell returned to Massachusetts and worked as a store clerk, a restaurant worker, a cab driver, and a distributor for a lawn chemical company. (Tr. at 16.) In 1988, O’Dell became a car salesman and worked in that capacity for several years. (Tr. at 254.)

At the time of his injury, O’Dell was working as a salesman at Quirk Chevrolet in Braintree, MA. (Tr. at 157.) On March 23, 1990, O’Dell slipped on some sand and fell while at work. (Tr. at 157.) He alleges that this fall resulted in a disabling “disc problem” and a hairline fracture in his ankle. (Tr. at 29.)

A. Mental and Physical Impairments

Prior to his injury, O’Dell suffered from a number of health issues. In 1968 he began his working life by entering the Marine Corps. Approximately one month into basic training, he experienced a “schizophrenic reaction of a catatonic type.” (Tr. at 118-25.) He was then hospitalized and diagnosed with a preexisting personality disorder. Because of this disorder, O’Dell was discharged from the service. (Tr. at 118-25.)

Following his discharge, O’Dell’s personality disorder did not appear to affect him *381 for another twenty years. O’Dell worked various jobs and maintained relationships with his wife and children. However, in March 1986, O’Dell was hospitalized due to stress and ultimately diagnosed with a personality disorder with antisocial and borderline features. 2 (Tr. at 134.) O’Dell was also diagnosed with anxiety on two separate occasions in 1987 and 1988, both times following trips to the emergency room for chest pain. (Tr. at 137,141-42.)

O’Dell did not seek medical treatment of any kind again until his back injury in 1990. O’Dell sought immediate medical attention after his fall at work and was diagnosed as having a “lower back sprain/ strain and a question of a herniated disc” by medical professionals at the Harvard Community Health Plan. (Tr. at 157.) O’Dell neither sought nor received further medical treatment for this injury until he filed a Worker’s Compensation claim and was required to be evaluated in connection with that claim. (Tr. at 23.)

On June 10, 1991, over a year after his initial injury, the insurance company processing O’Dell’s Worker’s Compensation claim sent him to Dr. Arnold Miller. (Tr. at 7, 153.) Dr. Miller, an orthopedic surgeon at the Laconia Clinic in Laconia, NH, diagnosed O’Dell with “lower back strain.” (Tr. at 153.) Dr. Miller went on to note, however, that he found no “hard objective evidence of nerve root impingement to suggest that there’s a problem.” (Tr. at 153.) Dr. Miller opined that O’Dell could not “do any kind of heavy work” and suggested some kind of work-hardening program to improve O’Dell’s ability to sit so that he could do “light duty work at a sitting position.” (Tr. at 153.) Dr. Miller suggested that O’Dell might be able to perform a sitting job for a maximum of three or four hours per day, and only if he were allowed to change positions frequently. (Tr. at 154.) Dr. Miller declared O’Dell “partially disabled,” but concluded that he “certainly [did] not feel an end result ha[d] been achieved at th[e] time nor ha[d] [O’Dell] reached maximum medical improvement.” (Tr. at 154.) Specifically, Dr. Miller noted that O’Dell had been unable to undergo further diagnostic testing because his claustrophobia prevented him from getting a CT scan, and O’Dell had refused a myelogram. 3 (Tr. at 153.) Dr. Miller made no mention of O’Dell’s obesity or underlying mental health issues as they pertained to O’Dell’s ability to return to work. (Tr. at 153.) Six months *382 after his evaluation by Dr. Miller, O’Dell settled his Worker’s Compensation claim for $45,000. (Tr. at 157.) At the time, O’Dell stated that he had resolved his claim so that he could “pursue another business opportunity.” (Tr. at 157.)

Over eight years passed before O’Dell again sought medical treatment. There is no other evidence from the period in question regarding O’Dell’s functional limitations. When given the opportunity to testify, O’Dell offered no information about the persistence of his back problems throughout the 1990s, nor did he explain how his physical limitations prevented him from working. (Tr. at 28-40.) In testimony dated November 2, 2006, O’Dell stated that he had spent the last three months (roughly August 2006 — October 2006) in bed due to severe pain but made no mention of such limitations during the relevant period. (Tr. at 37.) O’Dell did state when asked, however, that there had been no period of time since 1991 that he had been healthy enough to go back to work. (Tr. at 37-38.)

On October 1, 1999, O’Dell saw Dr. Shadan Mansoor of Ammonoosue Community Health Services in Littleton, NH. Dr. Mansoor documented that O’Dell had had a “popped disc since 1990,” and later prescribed fifty Darvocet pills to O’Dell for “chronic back pain,” with the expectation that O’Dell would make the pills last for four months. 4 (Tr. at 183-84, 193.) In June 2001, Dr. Mansoor noted that O’Dell had been swimming two hours every day and mowing his lawn. (Tr. at 201.)

Several months later, O’Dell suffered an episode of depression. In September 2001, O’Dell told Dr. Mansoor that he planned to leave his wife because he felt that he was a burden to her. (Tr. at 213.) O’Dell complained that he was depressed and could not sleep. (Tr. at 213.) He reported feeling tired and foggy, and said that he was having difficulty concentrating and felt too negative to talk to a counselor. (Tr. at 213.) Dr. Mansoor formally diagnosed O’Dell’s depression and prescribed Remeron. 5 (Tr. at 213.)

In a one-paragraph doctor’s note dated March 2002, Dr. Genevieve Kelley of the White River Junction Veteran’s Clinic stated that O’Dell was “completely disabled” and unable to do work of any kind due to his multiple medical problems, including morbid obesity. (Tr. at 155.) The note did not explain how or why O’Dell’s medical problems prevented him from working. (Tr. at 155.)

In September 2003, O’Dell sought the help of mental health counselor Kevin Cole of the White River Junction veterans’ clinic. Notes from this visit indicate that O’Dell thought his long history of depression was a direct result of his guilt and disappointment over not having served in Vietnam. (Tr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

DeCepeda v. Berryhill
D. Massachusetts, 2018
Desilets v. SSA
2016 DNH 070 (D. New Hampshire, 2016)
Angelia M. Newell v. SSA
2014 DNH 026 (D. New Hampshire, 2014)
McGrath v. SSA
2012 DNH 060 (D. New Hampshire, 2012)
Delafontaine v SSA
2011 DNH 005 (D. New Hampshire, 2011)
O’Dell v. SSA
2010 DNH 159 (D. New Hampshire, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
736 F. Supp. 2d 378, 2010 DNH 159, 2010 N.H. 159, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95395, 2010 WL 3516453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odell-v-astrue-nhd-2010.