Timothy Ledford v. Commissioner of Social Security

311 F. App'x 746
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 2008
Docket07-4234
StatusUnpublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 311 F. App'x 746 (Timothy Ledford v. Commissioner of Social Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy Ledford v. Commissioner of Social Security, 311 F. App'x 746 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

*748 PER CURIAM.

The plaintiff, Timothy Ledford, appeals the decision of the Commissioner of Social Security that denied him disability benefits, alleging constitutional, administrative, and evidentiary errors. He claims that the administrative law judge’s failure to reopen a benefits-eessation decision violated his right to due process, that continued cessation of previously-awarded benefits was improper, and that his new application for benefits was improperly denied. We find no reason to disturb the district court’s determination that Ledford is able to perform “light work” jobs within the regional and national economy and, thus, we affirm the judgment denying Ledford Social Security disability benefits.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

At the time of the 2005 evidentiary hearing in this matter, Timothy Ledford was a 32-year-old high school graduate who had not been gainfully employed in the previous ten years and had not been employed at all since May 1, 1997. Prior to 1995, he had held a number of jobs, including employment stints as a packer at an automobile parts manufacturing plant, a farm worker, a detailer at an automobile dealer’s lot (referred to in the record as a “lot technician”), and a pizza deliverer. While working at his last job as a packer, however, he suffered a nervous breakdown and, as of May 11, 1995, qualified for Social Security disability benefits due to his mental and emotional conditions.

In 1999, the plaintiff was convicted of a felony sexual assault upon a minor and was sentenced to incarceration within the Ohio state correctional system. Ledford continued to receive his disability payments, however, until February 2001, at which time the benefits ceased because the Social Security Administration failed to receive evidence from the plaintiff documenting his continued disability. Following his release from confinement, Ledford filed a second application for disability benefits on January 30, 2002. In that application, the plaintiff asserted that he became unable to work on March 1, 2001, as a result of the following “illnesses, injuries or conditions”:

Learning disability — mental illness — depression — cannot read very much — right shoulder injury — difficulty getting along with other people — inappropriate behavior — difficulty following instructions— cannot read enough to understand.

In light of Ledford’s employment history, the Social Security Administration concluded that the plaintiff satisfied the insured status requirements of the governing federal legislation only through September 30, 2002, and that Ledford was thus required to prove that he was disabled on or before that date. After examining the documentary evidence provided by the plaintiff, the administrative agency denied the request for benefits, both initially and upon request for reconsideration. Ledford then sought an evi-dentiary hearing before an administrative law judge and such a proceeding was conducted on March 16, 2005.

At the hearing, the plaintiff testified that he lived with his parents and remained unemployed. He further said that he had been placed in special education classes throughout school and that, although he graduated from high school in 1992, he could read at approximately a first-grade level, had trouble writing, could do only basic math, subtraction, and simple multiplication. He also claimed that, prior to September 2002, he experienced problems with his right shoulder as a result of being attacked in prison in 1999 by 11 other inmates. During the relevant period of insurability, he also suffered from depression, “g[o]t agitated a lot,” and had difficulty sleeping. Ledford explained that his *749 emotional problems improved with the medication Zoloft but that he could not afford to pay for a steady supply of the drug. Because he had neither a job nor friends, he said, he would spend his days making different figures from broken toys, playing video games, running errands for his parents, seeing an occasional movie, helping with the cleaning of the family bathroom, and watching television. Led-ford also was able to dress himself, drive a car, cook simple meals, and assist with laundry, cleaning his room, and taking out the garbage. He further testified that the difficulties he then experienced with mood swings, low self-esteem, and concentration were “about the same” as they were in September 2002.

The plaintiffs father, Paul Ledford, also testified before the administrative law judge. He corroborated much of his son’s testimony and volunteered that Timothy “has a real short.fuse” that prevents his return to a job.

The final witness at the hearing was George Parsons, a vocational expert. After Parsons expressed his opinion that each job that the plaintiff had during his brief employment history could be classified as light work and unskilled work, the administrative law judge posed the following hypothetical question to the witness:

Dr. Parsons, if you assume, please, an individual the same age as Claimant as of September 2002 and the same education and work experience as of that date with the following limitations — and where the terms that I’m using are terms that are defined in the Dictionary of Occupational Titles, I’m using them to have the same meanings as in the DOT. The individual can lift, carry, push and pull without limit except as to the right upper extremity which is limited to no more than 30 pounds. The individual cannot climb ladders, ropes, or scaffolds. The individual can perform only simple, routine tasks; is able to understand, remember, and carry out only short and simple instructions; cannot interact with the general public or interact more than occasionally with co-workers or supervisors. The individual was able to make only simple work-related decisions. The job should not require reading or writing skills above a second-grade level or math skills above a fourth-grade level. Could such an individual perform any of the Claimant’s past-relevant work, either as he performed it or if different, as customarily performed in the national economy?

The witness responded:

Your Honor, it would be my professional opinion that he could continue to work in the same or similar type of work activity that he did in the past. Certainly the job as a packer and lot tech would certainly fit. I’m not sure about pizza delivery since [it] would put him in contact with the general public.

Additionally, Parsons testified that the hypothetical claimant could also perform other jobs in the economy consistent with the limitations imposed. Specifically, the vocational expert identified the occupations of “non-farm animal care taking, ground maintenance or lawn care, and work as a dishwasher.” Finally, although Parsons did not provide the administrative law judge with the number of lot technician and packing jobs available in the local and national economies, he did offer that the animal care, ground maintenance, and dishwasher occupations, limited to light work, constituted a total of 1,047 jobs locally and 180,000 jobs nationally.

The administrative law judge considered the testimony offered by each of the three witnesses at the hearing, as well as the documentary medical evidence submitted by the parties. 1

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311 F. App'x 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-ledford-v-commissioner-of-social-security-ca6-2008.