Young v. Barnhart

284 F. Supp. 2d 343, 2003 WL 22231191
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 20, 2003
Docket1:02CV118
StatusPublished

This text of 284 F. Supp. 2d 343 (Young v. Barnhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Barnhart, 284 F. Supp. 2d 343, 2003 WL 22231191 (W.D.N.C. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

COGBURN, United States Magistrate Judge.

THIS MATTER is before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. Having carefully considered the parties’ memoranda of law, the pleadings, the evidence of record, and the applicable law, the Court will deny the parties’ motions, reverse the decision of the Commissioner, and remand the matter to the Commissioner for reconsideration.

FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

I. Administrative History

Plaintiff, Jennifer L. Young, filed her current application for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income payments on February 27, 1997, alleging an inability to work beginning June 7, 1990. (R. at 479-82). Plaintiff later changed her alleged onset date to January 1,1997. (R. at 525). Plaintiffs application was denied initially and upon reconsideration, and on May 26, 1998, an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) conducted a hearing on Plaintiffs applications, during which Plaintiff was represented by counsel and presented her testimony as well as that of her mother. (R. at 484, 491, 528-72). On August 20, 1998, the ALJ issued a decision affirming the denial of benefits to Plaintiff. (R. at 19-29). After requesting review by the Appeals Council, on March 2, 2001, Plaintiff submitted, through counsel, a memorandum of law in support of her request for review and additional evidence for consideration by the Appeals Counsel. On March 15, 2002, the Appeals Council denied Plaintiffs request for review making the ALJ’s decision the final decision of the Commissioner. Plaintiff filed this action challenging the Commissioner’s decision on May 10, 2002.

II. Factual Background

Plaintiff was born on August 22, 1972 and has a high school education and approximately two years of collegiate course work. (R. at 528). Evidence was presented at the hearing that Plaintiff fell off of a roof when she was fifteen-years-old and broke her back, requiring that she wear a brace for approximately three months. (R. at 552). Subsequently, on June 7, 1990, Plaintiff was in a serious automobile accident shortly after she graduated from high school and before she was scheduled to attend college on a music scholarship. (R. at 535). As a result of the accident, Plaintiff was in a coma for four days and hospitalized for approximately ten weeks. (R. at 535). Her injuries included broken jaw bones, crushed teeth, crushed hand, a broken femur, three broken vertebra, a broken hip, and the separation of her pelvis from her spine. (R. at 131, 536). After an extended rehabilitation, Plaintiff matriculated into a community college program, where she obtained a child care certificate. (R. at 537).

According to Plaintiff, following her accident, she worked two summers at Berkeley Mills, where her parents work, spend *345 ing one summer as a painter’s assistant and one as a secretarial assistant. (R. at 549). Plaintiff testified that after obtaining her child care certificate, she worked in one job as a child care worker but realized that she was unable to pay attention to numerous children at one time. (R. at 538). Plaintiff then returned to the community college where she obtained a certification in the certified nursing assistant (“CNA”) program. (R. at 539). Plaintiff testified at her hearing before the ALJ that her memory was not as good following the accident as it had been before the accident, but she managed to get her certificate and worked at approximately four or five rest homes as a CNA, each position lasting less than a month. (R. at 539, 548). According to Plaintiff, she could not maintain that employment because she could not stand on her feet during the long hours that work required, it hurt to sit down, her painful back prevented her from lifting patients and twisting and bending, and she could not remember the order of the duties she was to perform. (R. at 540). Plaintiff testified that she then attempted a series of fast food positions but had difficulty remembering orders and working with customers. (R. at 541).

With respect to her physical limitations, Plaintiff testified that she is not able to walk more than two blocks without sitting down, that her back hurts when she turns or twists, that she can stand on a flat surface for approximately five minutes before her back begins hurting and she has to change position, that she can walk for approximately ten minutes before sitting down or bending forward to reheve her back pain, that she can sit approximately fifteen to twenty minutes, and that she cannot type or grip objects because of her hand injury. (R. at 541-44, 550). Plaintiff also testified that she experiences a form of seizure that puts her in a trance-like state approximately four or five times per day. (R. at 544-46). According to Plaintiff, she has only rarely lost consciousness during these seizures, but she falls regularly. (R. at 545). Plaintiff testified that she takes medication for the seizures but still experiences them frequently. (R. at 545-46). Plaintiff testified that she can lift thirty pounds with difficulty a couple of times a day. (R. at 546-47).

Concerning her daily activities, Plaintiff testified that she is able to wash dishes, make her own bed, and fold and put away laundry, and that sometimes she cooks dinner and goes grocery shopping until she needs to sit in the car and rest. (R. at 551). Plaintiff testified that she is not able to sweep or vacuum. (R. at 551).

Plaintiff also presented her mother’s testimony at the hearing before the ALJ. According to Grace Ann Young, Plaintiffs mother, Plaintiff lives at home with her and always has. (R. at 554-55). Ms. Young testified that following her accident, Plaintiff attempted to work in many places but that she had difficulty maintaining these jobs because of her inattention to duties and to people around her, frustration, and her inability to remember details. (R. at 555). Ms. Young testified that Plaintiff also got angry with customers and that Plaintiff was asked to leave approximately eighty-five-percent of the jobs she attempted. (R. at 555-56). Ms. Young testified that while Plaintiff managed to gain back her ability to read and write and perform intellectually, following the accident, she was very different emotionally and was being treated by a neuropsychologist. (R. at 556). Specifically, Ms. Young testified that Plaintiff does not get along with anyone for long periods of time, that Plaintiffs mood swings are erratic, that she forgets things frequently, and that she gets highly agitated if there is more than one person in the room with her. (R. at 558). According to Ms. Young, Plaintiff had been to see numerous psychologists, *346 some of whom had wanted to treat her with “a lot of medication.” (R. at 557). Ms. Young also testified that Plaintiff was under the care of a neurologist. (R. at 558). In describing Plaintiffs seizures, or trances, Ms. Young testified that Plaintiff would lose focus as she was talking with Ms. Young, “like she’s off in outer space somewhere,” or that she would “just be walking along and fall.” (R. at 559). Ms. Young noted that Plaintiff had been in a car accident because of a more traditional type of seizure but that since beginning on the medication Tegretol, she had not gone into convulsions, instead losing focus and falling. (R. at 559-60). Ms.

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284 F. Supp. 2d 343, 2003 WL 22231191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-barnhart-ncwd-2003.