Roberson v. SSA

2014 DNH 010
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 22, 2014
Docket13-cv-265-JD
StatusPublished

This text of 2014 DNH 010 (Roberson v. SSA) 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
Roberson v. SSA, 2014 DNH 010 (D.N.H. 2014).

Opinion

Roberson v. SSA 13-cv-265-JD 1/22/14 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Sheila M. Roberson

v. Crvrl No. 13-CV-265-JD Opinion No. 2014 DNH 010 Carolyn W. Colvin, Acting Commissioner, Social Security Administration

O R D E R

Sheila M. Roberson seeks judicial review, pursuant to 42

U.S.C. § 405(g), of the decision of the Commissioner of the

Social Security Administration, denying her application for

disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income.

In support, Roberson contends that the Appeals Council erred in

denying her request for review and asks that the case be remanded

for additional administrative proceedings. The Acting

Commissioner moves to affirm the decision.

Background

Roberson applied for disability insurance benefits and

supplemental security income on April 1, 2010. Roberson was

forty-eight years old at the time of her application. She had

previously worked as a waitress, bartender, and a deli worker.

She alleged disability caused by atrial fibrillation, depression,

and anxiety.

In March of 2010, Roberson was admitted to Franklin Regional

Hospital due to shortness of breath and was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, cardiomyopathy, questionable thyroid disorder,

congestive heart failure, and moderate chronic obstructive

pulmonary disease ("COPD"). After that episode, Roberson

scheduled an examination with Colleen Krug, PA-C. Krug found

irregular heart beat but normal respiration rhythm and depth,

normal heart sounds, and normal psychiatric appearance.

Roberson was evaluated in July of 2010 by Dr. Michael Evans.

Based on a series of tests. Dr. Evans found that Roberson was

capable of understanding and remembering instructions,

interacting appropriately, communicating effectively, sustaining

attention and completing tasks, tolerating work stress, making

simple decisions, maintaining attendance, and following

schedules. Dr. Evans concluded that Roberson's psychiatric

prognosis was good.

State agency reviewing psychologist, Michael Schneider,

Psy.D. reviewed Roberson's records on July 16, 2010. He

concluded that Roberson's mental impairments were nonsevere. He

found Roberson had mild restrictions in activities of daily life;

mild difficulties in social functioning; mild difficulties in

maintaining concentration, persistence, and pace; and no repeated

episodes of extended decompensation.

In August of 2010, Roberson had thyroid level testing that

showed good results. During the remainder of 2010 and into the

spring of 2011, Krug checked Roberson's breathing depth and

rhythm and prescribed medications for anxiety and depression.

2 Because Krug did not feel comfortable continuing some of

Roberson's medications due to her medical issues and history of

alcoholism, Roberson met with Dr. Peter Moran in early May of

2011 to follow up on her medications. Dr. Moran described

Roberson's cognitive functioning and psychiatric appearance as

normal and assessed generalized anxiety disorder and a sleep

disturbance.

On May 11, 2011, Roberson was evaluated by Elizabeth Hess,

Ph.D. Dr. Hess described Roberson as depressed, irritable,

distractible, ruminating, hypersensitive, excessively worried,

and with poor concentration. In testing. Dr. Hess found that

Roberson's speech was circumstantial and vague and that Roberson

was cooperative but tense and pressured. Dr. Hess found that

Roberson had marked functional loss in activities of daily life,

moderate functional loss in social interaction, marked functional

loss in work-related performance, and marked functional loss in

reactions to stress. Dr. Hess diagnosed cognitive disorder

secondary to alcohol abuse and/or cardiac condition, bipolar II

disorder, alcohol abuse in remission, and personality disorder.

At a follow-up appointment on July 13, 2011, Roberson told

Dr. Moran that the medications were working. Dr. Moran noted

that Roberson's cognitive functioning and psychiatric appearance

were both normal. On August 4, 2011, Roberson returned to Dr.

Moran due to anxiety. Dr. Moran noted normal cognitive

functioning and psychiatric appearance and no behavioral

3 abnormalities. He found an anxious mood and tearful affect and

increased Roberson's dose of Wellbutrin.

Dr. Hess evaluated Roberson again on August 1, 2011. Dr.

Hess found that Roberson was more depressed than she had been in

May. Based on test results. Dr. Hess found impaired executive

functioning, receptive and expressive language deficits,

disrupted attention, and an inability to review responses for

errors or omissions. Dr. Hess stated that Roberson's overall IQ

was sufficient for work but her inability to function

consistently and to spot mistakes would be disruptive in

employment. Dr. Hess reiterated her previous functional

findings.

Roberson saw Dr. Moran on September 6, 2011, after returning

from a visit to South Carolina. Roberson reported that she felt

refreshed. Dr. Moran noted that changes in Roberson's

medications had calmed her down, that Roberson was less anxious

and sleeping better, and that her cognitive functioning was

normal.

A hearing was held on January 12, 2012, before an

Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ"). Roberson testified that she

was unable to work because of her heart problems and COPD, which

made her tire easily. She also stated that she became depressed

at times. Roberson testified that she could walk for fifty yards

before needing rest, that she had difficulty staying focused, and

had problems with anxiety, including panic attacks at times. She

4 said that on a typical day she has coffee after waking and cleans

the bathroom if she feels like doing something. She stated that

she was able to do chores but not all in one day, could cook her

meals, grocery shop, and did some pleasure reading. She also

said she lost her driver's license due to a DWI and smoked about

five cigarettes each day.

James Scorzelli testified as a vocational expert. Scorzelli

described Roberson's past work as a waitress as light semiskilled

work, work as a bartender as light and semiskilled, and as a deli

worker in a supermarket as light and unskilled. The ALJ

presented a hypothetical of a person who was forty-eight to fifty

years old, with a GED, and having Roberson's past work

experience. The person in the hypothetical was able to sit for

six hours and to stand and walk for six hours with rest and

change of position after two hours and had the ability to lift up

to fifty pounds occasionally and ten pounds freguently. The ALJ

also added restrictions to avoid environmental exposure, to avoid

hazards, and to be limited to uncomplicated tasks. Based on that

hypothetical, Scorzelli said that the worker could do Roberson's

past work at the deli in a supermarket although the restrictions

for sitting and standing could erode the number of jobs

available. Scorzelli stated that the hypothetical would allow

work as a surveillance monitor, a credit card checker, and a

parking garage cashier with all of the restrictions.

5 In the second hypothetical, the ALJ added a need for

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