Yousif v. Chater

901 F. Supp. 1377, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14910, 1995 WL 603515
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 10, 1995
Docket95 C 1152
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 901 F. Supp. 1377 (Yousif v. Chater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yousif v. Chater, 901 F. Supp. 1377, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14910, 1995 WL 603515 (N.D. Ill. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER.

SHADUR, Senior District Judge.

yirginia Yousif (‘Yousif’) appeals the final decision of Commissioner of Social Security Shirley Chater (“Commissioner”) to terminate Yousif s disability insurance benefits under the Social Security Act (“Act”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 416(i) and 423. 1 As is usual in these eases, - Yousif and Commissioner have filed cross-motions for summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. (“Rule”) 56, with Yousif alternatively requesting a remand for a new hearing. .For. the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, Yousifs motion for summary judgment is granted (thus mooting her alternative request), and Commissioner’s is of course denied.

*1380 Background

From 1979 through early 1992 Yousif performed unskilled light work as a bindery machine operator at Commerce Clearing House (R. 18). Her job entailed removing books from a machine and placing them on a skid or cage truck, and sometimes feeding unbound books into a machine (R. 100), all of those activities requiring the constant use of both hands (R. 55). Because of a job-sustained injury to her right elbow, Yousif claims that she became unable to work on January 14, 1992 (R. 38).

On December 23, 1992 Yousif filed a claim for disability benefits (R. 96-103). Her application was denied initially (R. 73-75) and on reconsideration (R. 80-82). Next Yousif sought a hearing, which took place before Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) Allyn Brooks on November 4, 1993 (R. 34). Both Yousif and Vocational Expert Frank Men-drick (“Mendrick”) testified at the hearing. Also before the ALJ were medical reports from several doctors who had treated Yousif (R. 114-26, 129-76). At the time of the hearing Yousif was 48 years old and had a high school education (R. 23).

At the time of the hearing Yousif testified that her condition was a little better than at the time she had to leave work in January 1992, when she not only suffered pain whenever she sought to use her right hand or arm — she could not then even hold a telephone or lift a spoon to eat (let alone lifting articles at work), she suffered muscle stiffness and swelling from the forearm to the wrist, she had a knifelike pain whenever she tried to use her finger — but she also had pain in the arm when she was not using it (R. 39-40). As of the hearing date she said she felt no pain when just sitting, but the pain continued whenever she used the arm or hand, even to dress or undress or to eat (R. 41). Indeed, her inability to use her right hand had led to pain in her left arm and shoulder from overuse (R. 41-42, 44).

In his March 25, 1994 written opinion the ALJ concluded from the “somewhat equivocal” medical records, in combination with Yousifs testimony about her pain, that she was under a disability from January 14,1992 through March 3, 1993 (R. 19). In part he pointed to reports by Yousifs chiropractor Dr. James Abele describing her “palpable swelling and tenderness of the right lateral epicondyle” and “hypoesthesia of the right C6 dermatome distal to the elbow” (R. 19). 2 ALJ Brooks also relied on reports from Dr. Leon Benson that Yousif experienced a “limited range of motion in the right elbow with tenderness and swelling,” that she complained that any movement of her right arm caused pain and that she had been given cortisone shots that provided only temporary relief from pain (R. 19).

ALJ Brooks also discussed other medical evidence that was “not as persuasive in supporting a finding of disability” (R. 19). He referred to EMG studies that showed no evidence of compression neuropathy and to Dr. Benson’s observations that Yousif had full range of motion in her right arm, that she could lift 40 pounds with her right hand by August 1992 and that there was no objective evidence of loss of strength and no visible problems on x-rays (R. 19). ALJ Brooks noted that Yousifs family doctor Dr. Adnan Barazi was the only doctor who said that Yousif could not work, but that it was also “unclear whether he was referring only to her past relevant work or to any work” (R. 19).

Nonetheless the ALJ explained why he gave Yousif the “benefit of the doubt” about her complaints from her claimed onset date through March 3, 1993, in material part because he found her complaints of pain credible (R. 19). Indeed, in that respect Yousifs subjective pain and its effect on her (causing an inability to perform work-related activities) seemed to be dispositive, as the ALJ concluded that Yousif was unable to perform even sedentary work and that she was therefore disabled beginning on January 14, 1992 (R. 19).

ALJ Brooks went on to find that as of March 4,1993 Yousif had experienced “medical improvement” such that she was able to perform a partial range of light work (R. 19-22), referring for that purpose to doctors’ *1381 statements that he said supported the conclusion that Yousif could perform limited work activity after that date (R. 20, 21). Specifically the ALJ pointed to a March 3, 1993 letter by Dr. John Ruder based on a March 1, 1993 physical examination (R. 20). ALJ Brooks relied on Dr. Ruder’s observations that Yousif had full range of motion in her right shoulder, wrist and fingers; that she had tenderness over the lateral epicondyle but no soft tissue swelling in that area; that she had intact sensation in the fingers of the right hand; that x-rays showed no degenerative changes associated with lateral epicon-dylitis; and that Yousif could lift up to 20 pounds with her right hand but could not use her right arm for frequent motions (R. 20). He also described Dr. Ruder’s letter as “indicating the claimant can perform limited work activity” (R. 20). In addition the ALJ relied on Dr. Abele’s July 1993 report (R. 21) finding that Yousif could work and that she could lift up to 10 pounds with her right arm, but that she could not climb, grasp, engage in repetitive handling, push or pull with that arm (R. 21).

ALJ Brooks admitted that “the medical evidence does show some objective problems” (R. 21). Nonetheless, because he found Yousifs complaints of disabling pain since March 4, 1993 lacking in credibility, he said that there was sufficient evidence to support a finding of medical improvement (R. 21).

ALJ went on to find — again giving Yousif “the full benefit of the doubt” — that she could not use her right arm to lift more than 10 pounds, or for frequent motions or grasping, repetitive handling, pushing or pulling, and that she could not climb (R. 21). Yousif was therefore restricted to a part of the full range of fight work (R. 21). Indeed, the ALJ found that those limitations prevented her from returning to her past light work as a bindery operator, thus shifting the burden to Commissioner to show that she could perform significant numbers of jobs existing in the national economy.

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Bluebook (online)
901 F. Supp. 1377, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14910, 1995 WL 603515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yousif-v-chater-ilnd-1995.