Suzadail v. Kijakazi

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 2025
Docket3:23-cv-00292
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Suzadail v. Kijakazi, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

JASON SUZADAIL, : Civil No. 3:23-CV-00292 : Plaintiff, : : v. : : LELAND DUDEK,1 : Acting Commissioner of Social Security : (Magistrate Judge Carlson) : Defendant. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction In this case we write the latest chapter in a longstanding legal saga. This saga began in 2010 when the plaintiff, Jason Suzadail, suffered what an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) later described as “a serious motor vehicle accident, suffering multi-traumatic and severe impairments, including fractured ribs, a pneumothorax with liver laceration, a fracture of his cervical spine and, most significantly, a fractured right proximal humerus, that required him to undergo open reduction and

1Leland Dudek became the Acting Commissioner of Social Security on February 16, 2025. Pursuant to Rule 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Leland Dudek should be substituted for the previously named 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).

1 internal fixation surgery of his humerus . . . .” (Tr. 108). In the immediate wake of this accident, Suzadail was found to have experienced a closed period of disability

and was awarded disability benefits through May of 2012. Suzadail then applied for renewed benefits alleging that he had suffered a renewed onset of disability in October of 2013, as a result of the ongoing effects of

these severe impairments. With respect to this disability claim, every medical source who either treated or examined Suzadail during the relevant time frame from 2013 through 2017 opined that his impairments were severely disabling. Despite this treating and examining source medical consensus, in a series of ALJ decisions

spanning the past decade, culminating in this third decision, the consensus view of these sources with hands-on experience addressing Suzadail’s medical limitations have been rejected in favor of a non-treating non-examining state agency expert

opinion. Moreover, this latest ALJ decision accepts this outlier non-examining source opinion over the existing medical consensus without considering material medical developments relating to Suzadail’s care and condition which took place after that state agency opinion was issued in November of 2014.

As discussed below, this was error. Therefore, on the unique and uniquely compelling facts of this case we are compelled to, once again, remand this case for further consideration by the Commissioner.

2 II. Statement of Facts and of the Case

A. Background and Procedural History

This case has a protracted procedural history which spans some fifteen years and entails four separate ALJ determinations. On June 3, 2011, Jason Suzadail filed for disability insurance benefits alleging an onset of disability beginning July 3, 2010. (Tr. 103). At his initial administrative hearing on March 14, 2013, Suzadail through his counsel modified his claim to assert a closed period of disability spanning from July 2010 to May 2012. (Id.) As amended, this closed period claim was approved by an ALJ on April 2, 2013. (Tr. 103-111).

Fourteen months later, on July 3, 2014, Suzadail filed a second application for disability benefits pursuant to Title II of the Social Security Act alleging a renewed onset in October of 2013, some eighteen months after the expiration of his closed

period of disability. (Tr. 639). This claim was denied by the ALJ on April 27, 2017. (Tr. 639-50). Suzadail appealed this decision. On September 8, 2018, this Court remanded Suzadail’s case to the Commissioner for further evaluation of the treating source opinion and a more detailed articulation of the plaintiff’s residual functional

capacity. Suzadail v. Berryhill, No. 3:18-CV-0535, 2018 WL 4211737, at *10 (M.D. Pa. Sept. 4, 2018).

3 Following this remand, the ALJ conducted an additional hearing and issued a second decision on June 19, 2019. (Tr. 898-913). In this second decision, the ALJ

once again found that Suzadail had not met the exacting legal standard for disability and denied his claim. (Id.) Suzadail appealed this second denial decision to the district court and on November 18, 2020, the Commissioner requested that the case

be remanded for further consideration of the evidence, a request which was granted by the Court, thus setting the stage for this third administrative hearing and decision. (Tr. 925-27). B. Suzadail’s Claims and the Clinical Record2

Additional administrative proceedings were then conducted in Suzadail’s case before a newly appointed ALJ in March of 2022. (Tr. 821-90). By the time of this second remand, and the third set of administrative proceedings in Suzadail’s case,

the plaintiff’s claim for disability and disability insurance benefits pursuant to Title II of the Social Security Act had been pending for nearly eight years. Moreover, that claim alleged an onset of disability beginning in October of 2013, nearly nine years

2 While Suzadail’s disability application cited an array of allegedly disabling emotional and physical impairments, this appeal focusses on the treatment of the medical evidence and treating source opinions concerning his physical condition. Therefore, our analysis and factual narrative will focus of these physical impairments.

4 prior to these proceedings. Further, it was undisputed that, for purposes of this Title II claim, Suzadail’s date last insured was September 30, 2017. Therefore, the ALJ

faced a challenging legal and factual analysis and was tasked with attempting to determine whether impairments experienced by Suzadail many years prior to these proceedings had been wholly disabling.

On this score, the ALJ’s task was further complicated by the wide array of admittedly severe impairments experienced by Suzadail. This list of severe impairments included: status post internal fixation for cervical spine fracture at C2 level, cervical degenerative disc and facet disease, cervical post-laminectomy

syndrome, status post open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) for right humerus fracture, post-traumatic arthritis of the right shoulder, asthma, depressive disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), impulse control disorder, adjustment

disorder, alcohol abuse, and substance abuse disorder. (Tr. 827). Finally, the ALJ’s task required this decision maker to navigate a complex medical opinion and clinical record which spanned a number of years and included numerous significant entries which were made after state agency experts first opined regarding the nature and

severity of Suzadail’s impairments in November of 2014. At the time of these proceedings, several other vocational factors defined the ALJ’s task. Suzadail was born on November of 1971 and was 45 years old on his

5 date last insured, which is defined as a younger individual under the Commissioner’s regulations. (Tr. 840). He had a high school education and prior employment in a

number of heavy and medium semi-skilled avocations. (Id.) The medical evidence as it related to Suzadail’s case revealed that this claim of disability was directly related to an earlier, severe automobile accident

experienced by the plaintiff.

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