Powers v. Commissioner of Social Security

195 F. App'x 407
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 2006
Docket05-6466
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 F. App'x 407 (Powers v. Commissioner of Social Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers v. Commissioner of Social Security, 195 F. App'x 407 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinions

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Deborah Powers appeals the district court’s judgment that substantial evidence supports the decision rendered by an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) upholding defendant-appellee Commissioner of Social Security’s (“the Commissioner”) denial of Powers’s application for disability insurance benefits. Powers contends that the Commissioner’s decision was not supported by substantial evidence, and, as a result, this court should remand the case to award her benefits or, alternatively, for further proceedings pursuant to sentence four of 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

Deborah Powers was born on February 15, 1953, and was forty-nine at the time of her hearing before the ALJ. Powers completed high school and worked at a self-owned grocery store for twelve years before stopping work on March 28, 2001, as a result of significant pain in her neck, arms, back, and legs. To alleviate her pain, doctors performed surgery on Powers’s neck in July of 2001, which improved her condition but nonetheless required her to continue taking pain medication. Powers also suffers from diabetes, which she treats with two shots of insulin on a daily basis. Her feet likewise experience a “stinging, burning, [or] hurting” if she stands for too long. Powers is also a frequent smoker who smokes ten cigarettes every day.

Powers’s typical day starts between 6:30-7:00 a.m. after roughly five hours of interrupted sleep.1 Throughout the day, Powers, depending on her condition, sporadically performs various activities such as crocheting, grocery shopping for the household, cooking family meals, visiting with her sister-in-law, hanging laundry, attending church, and outdoor walking for roughly a mile and a half. To accomplish her daily tasks, however, Powers often requires the assistance of family or friends; for example, a friend often accompanied Powers to the grocery store to aid her in lifting heavy objects.2

In addition to her need for regular help to accomplish daily tasks, Powers’s leg pain prevents her from sitting continually for any longer than between ten to sixty minutes. Periodically, her pain requires her to take pain medication, which correspondingly requires her to lie down for about thirty minutes at a time “[a] couple times a day.” She can, however, stand for “about an hour” before needing to sit down.

[409]*409As a result of the foregoing, Powers applied for disability insurance benefits on May 1, 2001, pursuant to Title II and Part A of Title XVIII of the Social Security Act. Her claim was denied initially and on reconsideration. Powers therefore timely requested a hearing before an ALJ, which was held on November 20, 2002, in Knoxville, Tennessee. After Powers proffered her testimony, the ALJ heard testimony from Michael Galloway, a Vocational Expert (“VE”).

Galloway opined that, given her current condition, Powers would be unable to perform her past work at the grocery store because, in that position, she was required to lift bundles weighing upwards of fifty pounds. The ALJ and Galloway then engaged in the following colloquy, which is at the center of this dispute:

Q: Assume I were to find the Claimant was limited to a range of light work, and she would have limitations on the utilization of her neck and upper back to the degree that she would need a job that didn’t require frequent turning of the hand — of the head, I’m sorry, or frequent moving of her head up and down, or, in fact, full motion of her neck. She was talking about, you know, driving— being able to turn around behind and see where she’s driving. She would need a job that required— that would allow her to not sit or stand more than an hour at a time without being able to move her position at least briefly for comfort. That she would need work that didn’t require her to do more than occasional overhead reaching with either arm. And because of the breathing problems that she discussed, she would be precluded from work which would expose her to dust, fumes, smoke, chemicals or noxious gasses. And she would also need work that didn’t expose her to a concentrated amount of temperature extremes or high humidity. Given these restrictions, and taking into account the Claimant’s age, education, and prior relevant work experience, first of all, could she return to any of her past relevant work?
A: Well, Your Honor, based on the hypothetical given, I believe that she would be unable to perform her past work activity.
Q: Would there be any other kind of work that exists in the regional or national economy that she might be able to do?
A: Yes, Your Honor.
Q: Would you give us some example?
A: Yes. Within the region, which I’m defining as being the Knoxville metropolitan statistical area, identified at the light level for the position of a door greeter, 145 in the region; in the national economy, 52,200. Also identified for the position of a garment sorter. Within the region, 185; in the national economy, 80,-600. Also identified for the position of a ticket taker. Within the region, identified 100; for the national economy, 32,250. Also for the position of a packager. Within the region, 450; in the national economy 192,000. I believe these to be examples.
Q: Assume I were to add to the last hypothetical that the Claimant would not be able to sit or stand in total — any more than a total of four hours in a regular eight-hour workday. With that limitation, would there be any additional — any work — [INAUDIBLE] work in the [410]*410regional or national economy that she could do?
A: No, Your Honor. Specifically, at that point, she would be unable to perform a standard workday and 40-hour work week, and, in my opinion, she would be unable to perform gainful activity at that level.

Based on the foregoing, the ALJ rendered a decision on January 27, 2003, denying benefits to Powers at Step Five of the sequential evaluation process. In doing so, the ALJ stated, in pertinent part, as follows:

At the hearing, I presented the vocational expert, Michael Galloway, with a hypothetical question that included the following factors: a person with the same age, education, and vocational profile as Ms. Powers with the residual functional capacity for light work with the following limitations:[sic] no work requiring frequent turning of the head or full motion of the neck with the inability to sit or stand each more than a total of 4 hours in an 8-hour work day or longer than one hour at a time; no more than occasional overhead reaching with either arm; no work requiring exposure to dust, fumes, smoke, chemicals or noxious fumes, temperature extremes or high humidity. The vocational expert replied that such an individual could perform many jobs, including: door greeter, garment sorter, ticket taker and packager. He testified that there are approximately 800 such jobs in the region where the claimant lives and about 357,000 such jobs existing throughout the national economy.
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195 F. App'x 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-v-commissioner-of-social-security-ca6-2006.