Steele v. Berryhill

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-00102
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Steele v. Berryhill, (E.D. Mo. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI NORTHERN DIVISION MONICA STEELE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 2:18-CV-102 PLC ) KILOLO KIJAKAZI,1 ) Acting Commissioner Social Security, ) ) ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Plaintiff Monica Steele seeks review of the decision of Defendant Acting Social Security Commissioner Kilolo Kijakazi denying her applications for Disability Insurance Benefits (DIB) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). For the reasons set forth below, the Court affirms the Commissioner’s decision. I. Background and Procedural History Plaintiff, who was born April 1991, filed applications for DIB and SSI in September 2015 alleging that, as of August 26, 2015, she was disabled as a result of: depression, anxiety, pseudotumor cerebri, migraines, pacemaker, back pain, bipolar II disorder, and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. (Tr. 167, 258-59, 260-68) The Social Security Administration (SSA) denied Plaintiff’s claims in April 2016, and she filed a timely request for a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ). (Tr. 189-94, 197) In December 2017, an ALJ conducted a hearing at which Plaintiff and a vocational expert testified. (Tr. 91-146)

1 Kilolo Kijakazi became the Acting Commissioner of Social Security on July 9, 2021. Pursuant to Rule 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Kilolo Kijakazi should be substituted, therefore, for Andrew Saul as the defendant in this suit. No further action need be taken to continue this suit by reason of the last sentence of section 205(g) of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). In a decision dated May 14, 2018, the ALJ determined that Plaintiff “has not been under a disability, as defined in the Social Security Act, from August 26, 2014, through the date of this decision[.]” (Tr. 16-35) Plaintiff subsequently filed a request for review of the ALJ’s decision with the SSA Appeals Council, which denied review. (Tr. 1-7, 251-54) Plaintiff has exhausted all administrative remedies, and the ALJ’s decision stands as the Commissioner’s final decision.

Sims v. Apfel, 530 U.S. 103, 106-07 (2000). II. Evidence Before the ALJ A. Plaintiff’s testimony Plaintiff testified that she was twenty-six years old, five feet four inches tall, and 220 pounds, and she had a high school education and “a couple semesters of college.” (Tr. 91, 106) Plaintiff lived with her seventeen-month-old daughter. (Tr. 102) Plaintiff most recently worked as a “lab tech” in a dermatologist’s office, where she collected, processed, and recorded specimens. (Tr. 91-92) Plaintiff stated that her employment ended in August 2015 when she “went on medical leave” on the advice of her primary care

physician and therapist because “if not, I was going to have a mental breakdown.” (Tr. 106) Plaintiff also had previous experience working with “the mentally handicapped” at Specialized Support Services, as a CNA at Kirksville Manor, and a crew member at Burger King. (Tr. 92-94) Plaintiff testified that she suffered migraines with photosensitivity, “flashes of light,” and “tunnel vision” three to four times per week. (Tr. 107) Plaintiff’s migraines occurred randomly and lasted eight to ten hours. (Tr. 108) During a typical migraine, Plaintiff would lie down in the dark three or four times for twenty to forty minutes at a time. (Tr. 108-09) Plaintiff also experienced dizziness “[a]bout twice a week,” which lasted about five minutes and required her to lie down. (Tr. 110) Plaintiff testified that her dizziness was triggered by “[o]verextertion, if I do stuff too fast … like pick up after my child … or try to sweep.” (Tr. 111) Plaintiff recently “came close to passing out,” had not actually fainted since receiving her pacemaker in April 2017. (Tr. 111-12) Along with the migraines and dizziness, Plaintiff experienced “double vision, blurriness” twice a week for two to five minutes. (Tr. 116-17) Plaintiff stated that she had been experiencing TMJ for four years, and it caused her “sharp

pain … like somebody hit me in the side of the jaw” and “popping …like a piece of wood snapping.” (Tr. 112-13, 115) Plaintiff likened the pain to “when you get hit in the head with a toy or a hammer,” and she testified that the pain occurred eight times per day and lasted “about 2 minutes.” (Tr. 113-14) Plaintiff also complained of “ringing in her [her] ears,” that sounded like “locusts, ringing like a school bell … sometimes, like, my heart beat….” (Tr. 115) The problem was worse in her right ear and constant. (Tr. 115-16) Plaintiff testified that she had thoracic outlet syndrome that caused pain “[f]rom [her] neck down … shoulders, mid back, hip, and tailbone … below the hip.” (Tr. 117) The pain in her shoulders produced numbness and tingling in her arms and hands about three times per day lasting

an hour at a time. (Tr. 117-18) Plaintiff described a pins-and-needles sensation in her right hand, and a less painful numbness in her left forearm and hand. (Tr. 118) Her middle and lower back pain was “constant” and radiated to both hips “like, a wave, like shooting down… about daily” for “eight to ten hours of the day.” (Tr. 121-22) Plaintiff stated that hot baths, heating pads, and lying down helped her back pain. (Tr. 122) Plaintiff described pain from her pacemaker, explaining that when it “turn[s] on … it thumps … against my chest…. It’s sharp, and it tends to get sharp, and that’s all I pretty much focus on when it happens.” (Tr. 119) Plaintiff noted that this occurred “[e]very two weeks” and lasted for forty-five minutes. (Tr. 120) Plaintiff also experienced “sharp pains in the center of [her] chest” weekly, lasting about ten minutes. (Tr. 121) When asked about her mental health, Plaintiff stated that she been diagnosed with bipolar II, anxiety, depression, and PTSD. (Tr. 125) Plaintiff advised that her doctors believed she was depressed, but she expressed doubt stating, “I don’t want to kill myself.” (Tr. 126) Plaintiff

suffered panic attacks “two to three times a week,” during which she “can’t breathe, chest – it feels like somebody’s sitting on [her] chest, sometimes crying,” and they lasted five to fifteen minutes. (Tr. 127) After a panic attack, Plaintiff felt “drained, exhausted” and estimated that it took “a couple hours” for her to recover. (Tr. 127) Plaintiff experienced weekly flashbacks of her “abusive [childhood] home” and a workplace sexual assault. (Tr. 128) Plaintiff stated she had been seeing her psychiatrist Dr. Elder since May or June. Before starting treatment with Dr. Elder, Plaintiff saw Dr. Cummins and, prior to that, she worked with therapist Tracy Parks. (Tr. 124-25) At the time of her hearing, Plaintiff’s medications included venlafaxine, Buspar, clonidine, fentanyl, methylphenidate, and Nature-Throid. (Tr. 95)

The ALJ questioned Plaintiff about road trips she had taken in the previous two years to Freeport, Illinois and Oklahoma to visit family and friends. (Tr. 96) In Oklahoma, Plaintiff’s “friends rode … their RZRs and four-wheelers,” but Plaintiff “didn’t participate because it hurt.” (Id.) During the travel, Plaintiff rode in the passenger seat of her boyfriend’s four-door truck, and “would sit or lay or maneuver where [she] would get comfortable.” (Tr. 98-99) Plaintiff estimated that the drive to Oklahoma was five to six hours and they made six fifteen- to twenty-minute stops. (Tr. 99-100) In regard to her activities of daily living, Plaintiff stated she would lie down “[o]n the floor, in bed, the couch” for about four hours per day. (Tr. 122-23) When the ALJ asked whether she was able to hold her daughter, Plaintiff stated, “[N]ot really…. I do but I hurt or I sit down.” (Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
Steele v. Berryhill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-berryhill-moed-2022.