RICH v. BERRYHILL

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 23, 2019
Docket2:18-cv-03744
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
RICH v. BERRYHILL, (E.D. Pa. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA ELIZABETH RICH : CIVIL ACTION v. NO. 18-3744 COMMISSIONER OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. September 23, 2019 We today face the procedural issues addressed in our September 11, 2019 Order and Memorandum in Cortese v. Commissioner of Social Security:' what happens when an administrative law judge for the Social Security Administration not properly appointed by the President under the Appointments Clause correctly evaluates the medical records and fully describes substantial evidence warranting denial of a disability claim? In April 2019, we first analyzed the constitutional challenge in Culclasure v. Commissioner of Social Security and remanded to the Commissioner for a hearing before a properly appointed Administrative Law Judge. The Commissioner appealed our decision in Culclasure as well as others. Our Court of Appeals is now considering consolidated appeals focusing on the Appointments Clause issues. Consistent with Culclasure, we today remand based on the lack of a properly appointed Administrative Law Judge. Unlike Culclasure but like Cortese, today’s case also challenges the administrative law judge’s findings leading to a denial of disability benefits. After careful study of the extensive record and the administrative law judge’s detailed findings, the claimant today did not show the challenged decision lacks substantial evidence or should be reversed with an award of benefits. So while we remand consistent with Culclasure, we will stay the remand until our Court of Appeals resolves the consolidated appeals on the Appointments Clause issues.

I. Background from the administrative record Elizabeth Rich sought disability insurance benefits alleging, as of a disability onset date of February 18, 2015,? she suffers from fibromyalgia, anxiety and panic attacks, depression, interstitial cystitis, pelvic floor dysfunction, migraines, irritable bowel syndrome, chronic fatigue syndrome, sinusitis, and acid reflux.? The Social Security Administration denied her claim on July 22, 2015.4 At Ms. Rich’s request, Social Security Administrative Law Judge Jay Marku held a hearing on April 12, 2017 with Ms. Rich, her counsel, and a vocational expert. By April 12, 2017, the Commissioner had not ratified the appointments of the Social Security Administration’s administrative law judges, including Administrative Law Judge Jay Marku.® But Ms. Rich did not challenge Administrative Law Judge Marku’s fitness to adjudicate her claim or to hold a hearing. At the April 12, 2017 hearing, Ms. Rich swore to “pain from [her] head to [her] toes.”” She swore she stopped working in February 2015 because of physical pain from sitting’ and confusion.’ She swore she can sit or stand for about “ten or 15 minutes.”!? She swore her problems with her hand cause her to “lose [her] grip and [she has] trouble typing and holding a pencil or a pen, lifting.”!! She swore she can’t button her shirts. She swore she can only lift “probably four to five pounds.”'? She swore her neck pain prevents her from frequently driving because “from the middle of [her] head down [her] back is the worst and... is 24/7.”!4 She swore she suffers from panic attacks a “couple of times a week.”!> She swore she was “nonfunctional” for two weeks after her brother passed away and she “couldn’t get up” because her back hurt.'® Ms. Rich swore she drives a couple times a week,!” can walk less than half a mile,'® cooks simple meals,!” cleans the house,”° and does laundry.”! She also swore she helps her 84-year-old father who has lived

with her since he got in a car accident.” Ms. Rich also submitted reports from two doctors”? and over 700 pages of medical records.”* On July 18, 2017, Administrative Law Judge Marku denied Ms. Rich’s application for disability insurance benefits.2> Administrative Law Judge Marku found Ms. Rich had several “severe impairments,” including cervical degenerative disease and radiculopathy, fibromyalgia, interstitial cystitis, pelvic floor dysfunction, depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, panic attack disorder, and social phobia.*® He also found Ms. Rich unable to perform her past relevant work, following the testimony of a vocational expert.?”? But Administrative Law Judge Marku found Ms. Rich had the residual functional capacity to perform light work and denied her claim.”8 Administrative Law Judge Marku made specific findings as to each claimed medical condition after review of Ms. Rich’s extensive medical records. He did not find Ms. Rich’s stated symptoms “entirely consistent” with the medical record evidence.” Administrative Law Judge Marku found various examinations did not support Ms. Rich’s complaints of numbness and tingling in the hands.*° He found fibromyalgia, degenerative disc disease, and evidence of scoliosis caused Ms. Rich’s neck and back pain.?! But Administrative Law Judge Marku cited Ms. Rich’s July 2015 physical exam where she “displayed full range of motion” and demonstrated zero out of eighteen trigger points.” For the pelvic and bladder issues, Administrative Law Judge Marku found despite “a long history of interstitial cystitis and pelvic floor dysfunction dating back to approximately 2000,” Ms. Rich does not experience pain or burning with urination and has “nothing more than tenderness to palpation of the bladder.’”24 Administrative Law Judge Marku recounted the record evidence of Ms. Rich’s mental health issues, but found “progress notes do not contain detailed mental status examination findings.”*> He noted the psychologist’s finding

of “self-harm recurrent thoughts of death,” and also noted Ms. Rich’s case notes do not include this observation.*° Administrative Law Judge Marku found Ms. Rich has “only mild difficulty” with short-term memory recall and exhibited “relatively intact attention and concentration,” despite “a depressed and anxious affect” and “some restless motor behavior.”>” Administrative Law Judge Marku “afforded little weight” to the findings in the medical report prepared by Michael Fischer, D.0.*8 He reasoned the minimal objective clinical findings, lack of contemporaneous treatment records, and inconsistency with the record as a whole did not support the severity described in Dr. Fischer’s recommendations, including findings such as Ms. Rich’s requirement of “time off-task of 25% or more of a workday.*”” As to the residual functional capacity assessment by psychologist Joan Feinstein, Ph.D., Administrative Law Judge Marku “afforded little weight” to her finding of Ms. Rich’s lack of useful ability to function and inability to meet competitive standards because Dr. Feinstein’s “own treatment records do not contain significant objective findings to support such severe restrictions.”*° He also found Dr. Feinstein’s findings inconsistent with the record as a whole. Contradictory evidence included consulting physician Dr. Russell Amundson’s report finding Ms. Rich “appeared oriented in all spheres” and “denied suicidal and homicidal ideations,’*' concluding Ms. Rich could perform activities like shopping, cooking, and handling papers and files.‘ Administrative Law Judge Marku also “afforded little weight” to the opinion of the Commissioner’s evaluating psychologist, Joseph Primavera, Ph.D., finding Dr. Primavera’s assessment of Ms. Rich’s moderate to marked limitation in areas of mental functioning “relied heavily on [Ms. Rich’s] subjective statements.” Administrative Law Judge Marku found residual functional capacity to find Ms. Rich could perform three jobs existing in significant numbers relying upon a vocational expert's testimony.

Ms.

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RICH v. BERRYHILL, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rich-v-berryhill-paed-2019.