Susan Davis-Grimplin v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration

556 F. App'x 858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 2014
Docket13-12472
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 556 F. App'x 858 (Susan Davis-Grimplin v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan Davis-Grimplin v. Commissioner, Social Security Administration, 556 F. App'x 858 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Susan Davis-Grimplin (“Davis”) appeals the District Court’s judgment affirming the Social Security Administration’s (“SSA”) denial of her applications for disability insurance benefits (“DIB”), 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), and supplemental security income (“SSI”), 42 U.S.C. § 1383(c)(3).

Davis, now at age sixty, seeks DIB and SSI for the period of November 30, 1994, to March 19, 2003. She has at least a high school education and engaged in the following past relevant work: cashier, sales clerk, receiving clerk, hostess, waitress, and prep cook. The ALJ found that Davis had several severe impairments — among them a bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome 1 —during that November 30, 1994, to March 19, 2003, period, but nevertheless denied relief. The Appeals Council denied *860 review, and Davis brought this action in the District Court. 2

In the District Court, Davis argued that the ALJ erred in a number of ways, by:

(1) failing to follow the Court’s Remand Order 3 ; (2) posing an improper hypothetical [to the Vocational Expert (VE) ], especially when the proper hypothetical posed, a finding of disability is mandated; (3) failing to find Plaintiff disabled under Social Security Ruling (SSR) 83-14; (4) improperly analyzing Plaintiffs obesity; (5) failing to recognize all of Plaintiffs impairments; (6) failing to afford proper weight to Plaintiffs treating physicians; (7) failing to properly consider Plaintiffs fibromyalgia; and (8) failing to properly apply Eleventh Circuit’s pain standard.

Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation (R & R) at 7-8 (footnotes omitted).

The Magistrate Judge considered these points and, in his R & R to the District Court, concluded that the ALJ had applied the correct legal standards and that the ALJ’s decision denying Davis’s applications was supported by substantial evidence. Id.

Davis objected to the Magistrate’s Judge’s R & R on three grounds:

(1) “[T]he ALJ failed to identify the functional limitations resulting from Plaintiffs bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome, and consequently the ALJ failed to incorporate any findings as to Plaintiffs bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome into a hypothetical posed to the vocational expert (“VE”). [Referring to the *861 Remand Order, 4 ] Plaintiff argues that the ALJ failed to explain why he did not afford the worker’s compensation disability determination great weight. (2) [T]here should be an immediate finding that Plaintiff lacked bilateral manual dexterity, and such a finding in combination with Plaintiffs other impairments would warrant the conclusion that Plaintiff is disabled as a matter of law.” (3) [T]he Magistrate Judge did not properly address the ALJ’s failure to properly apply the Eleventh Circuit’s pain standard .... [T]he Magistrate Judge improperly reasoned that there must be an objective basis for headaches, ... that headaches are a non-exertional impairment and objective evidence is not required to establish them as a basis for disabling pain. In addition, ... the Magistrate Judge erred by using daily activities as a method of refuting Plaintiffs pain testimony. Her testimony regarding her pain has not been properly refuted and, as such, must be accepted as true. Thus, ... she has satisfied the Eleventh Circuit’s pain standard such that her level of pain in combination with all impairments proven and not refuted should result in a finding that she is disabled.

District Court Order at 4. The District Court rejected Davis’s first ground, concluding that the Magistrate Judge did not err in concluding that the ALJ complied with the Remand Order; the ALJ did as ordered and identified the functional limitations resulting from Davis’s bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. He found that the syndrome “significantly limited [Davis’s] ability to perform basic work activities such as lifting, pushing, reaching, carrying, or handling.” Id. at 5. “The ALJ limited Davis to a reduced range of sedentary work, with lifting up to ten pounds only and no repetitive overhead reaching.” Id. at 5-6. Addressing the worker’s compensation issue, the Magistrate Judge properly found satisfactory the ALJ’s explanation for affording the worker’s compensation determination practically no weight. The evidence of the worker’s compensation determination consisted of a “single page conclusory document that was void of any substantive analysis or explanation of the basis for that determination.” Id. at 7. As for the hypothetical posed to the VE, the District Court concluded that the Magistrate Judge had not erred in determining that Davis “did not demonstrate functional limitations related to her bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome beyond those identified in the residual functional capacity (“RFC”); and thus, the ALJ did not need to include any further limitations with respect to manipulation or handling in his hypothetical to the VE.” Id. at 6.

The District Court rejected Davis’s second ground, concluding that the Magistrate Judge did not err in finding the ALJ’s treatment of the issue well-founded. The record supported the ALJ’s declination to find that Davis “lacked the good use of both her hands.” Id. Her “medical history indicated that [she] consistently demonstrated good range of motion and good grip strength of her wrists and normal fine and gross manipulation.” Id.

As for Davis’s third ground, the District Court found no error in the Magistrate Judge’s conclusion that the ALJ properly applied this circuit’s pain standard in considering Davis’s subjective pain testimony regarding her headaches and her other impairments. “[Substantial evidence supported the ALJ’s finding that [Davis’s] *862 impairments did not correlate with [her] subjective complaints.” Id. at 8.

In prosecuting this appeal, Davis argues that “the hypothetical [question] used as a basis for [the ALJ’s] decision was incomplete since no limitation from an impairment which was deemed to be severe, that of bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome, was given in [the] hypothetical [question] to the VE.” Appellant’s Br. at 8. According to Davis, the ALJ should have included a functional limitation of her hands in the hypothetical question — because he had already been determined that the syndrome was a severe impairment — and that had he done so, he would have granted her DIB and SSA applications. Davis also says that the ALJ would have granted the applications had she supported her argument that the hypothetical question was incomplete with a statement that the ALJ should have given “great weight” to the state worker’s compensation determination.

We review the Commissioner’s legal conclusions de novo and determine whether his final decision is supported by substantial evidence. Moore v. Barnhart,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
556 F. App'x 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-davis-grimplin-v-commissioner-social-security-administration-ca11-2014.