Kollar v. O'Malley

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Kollar v. O'Malley

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Christopher K.,                       Case No. 22-cv-3080 (WMW/TNL)      

                   Plaintiff,                                            

ORDER

     v.                                                                  

Martin J. O’Malley, Commissioner of                                      
Social Security Administration,                                          

                   Defendant.                                            


    This matter is before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. 
(Dkts. 9, 15.)  For the reasons discussed below, the Court denies Plaintiff’s motion and 
grants Defendant’s motion.                                                
                         BACKGROUND                                      
    Plaintiff Christopher K.1 filed applications for supplemental security income and 
disability insurance benefits on May 24, 2019.  Admin. Rec. (Dkt. 6) at 293-94, 300-03.  
Plaintiff alleged that he became disabled and unable to work as of September 20, 2017, as 
a result of multiple sclerosis (“MS”), back fusion, depression, anxiety, and insomnia.  Id. 
at 442.                                                                   
    For purposes of Social Security disability benefits, an individual is considered 
disabled if he is “unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any 

1    This District has adopted the policy of using only the first name and last initial of 
any nongovernmental parties in orders in Social Security matters.         
medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in 
death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 

twelve months.”  42 U.S.C. § 1382c(a)(3)(A).  In addition, an individual is disabled “only 
if his physical or mental impairment or impairments are of such severity that he is not only 
unable to do his previous work but cannot, considering his age, education, and work 
experience, engage in any other kind of substantial gainful work which exists in the 
national economy.”  Id. § 1382c(a)(3)(B).  “[A] physical or mental impairment is an 
impairment that results from anatomical, physiological, or psychological abnormalities 

which  are  demonstrable  by  medically  acceptable  clinical  and  laboratory  diagnostic 
techniques.”  Id. § 1382c(a)(3)(D).                                       
    The Commissioner has established a sequential, five-step evaluation process to 
determine whether an individual is disabled.  
20 C.F.R. § 416.920
(a)(4).  At step one, the 
claimant must establish that he is not engaged in any “substantial gainful activity.”  
Id.
 

§ 416.920(a)(4)(i).  If that requirement is satisfied, the claimant must then establish that he 
has a severe medically determinable impairment or combination of impairments at step 
two.  Id. § 416.920(a)(4)(ii).  At step three, the Commissioner must find that the claimant 
is disabled, if the claimant satisfies the first two steps and the claimant’s impairment meets 
or is medically equal to one of the listings in 20 C.F.R. Part 404, Subpart P, App’x 1.  Id. 

§ 416.920(a)(4)(iii).  If the claimant’s impairment does not meet or is not medically equal 
to one of the listings, the evaluation proceeds to step four.  At step four, the claimant bears 
the burden of establishing his residual functional capacity (“RFC”) and proving that he 
cannot perform any past relevant work.  Id. § 416.920(a)(4)(iv); Young v. Apfel, 
221 F.3d 1065
, 1069 n.5 (8th Cir. 2000).  If the claimant proves he is unable to perform any past 
relevant work, the burden shifts to the Commissioner to establish at step five that the 

claimant can perform other work existing in a significant number of jobs in the national 
economy.  Bowen v. Yuckert, 
482 U.S. 137
, 146 n.5 (1987).  If the claimant can perform 
such work, the Commissioner will find that the claimant is not disabled.  
20 C.F.R. § 416.920
(a)(4)(v).                                                       
    Plaintiff’s applications for benefits were denied initially and on reconsideration.  
Admin. Rec. at. 84, 85, 166, 167.  In November 2021, an Administrative Law Judge 

(“ALJ”) held a hearing on Plaintiff’s applications.  
Id. at 41-65
.  Plaintiff was represented 
by an attorney and testified at this hearing.  After the hearing, the ALJ determined that 
Plaintiff had two severe impairments: multiple sclerosis and degenerative disc disease, 
status post cervical fusion.  
Id. at 18
.  The ALJ found that neither impairment, either alone 
or in combination, met or medically equaled any listed impairments.  
Id. at 19
.  The ALJ 

determined that Plaintiff had the capacity for sedentary  work with multiple  physical 
restrictions.  
Id. at 19
.  Although this RFC meant that Plaintiff could not return to his 
previous employment as a saw operator or syrup maker, the ALJ found that there were jobs 
Plaintiff could perform in the national economy.  
Id. at 23-24
.  For this reason, the ALJ 
concluded that Plaintiff was not disabled.  
Id. at 25
.  The Appeals Council denied Plaintiff’s 

request for review of the ALJ’s decision, and this lawsuit followed.  See 
42 U.S.C. § 405
(g) 
(providing for judicial review of final decisions of the Commissioner of the Social Security 
Administration).                                                          
                           ANALYSIS                                      
    The  Court’s  review  of  the  Commissioner’s  decision  is  limited  to  determining 

whether the decision is “supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.”  
McKinney v. Apfel, 
228 F.3d 860, 863
 (8th Cir. 2000).  “Substantial evidence . . . is more 
than a mere scintilla.”  Biestek v. Berryhill, 
139 S. Ct. 1148, 1154
 (2019) (quotation 
omitted).  It is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to 
support a conclusion.”  
Id.
 (quoting Consolidated Edison Co. v. NLRB, 
305 U.S. 197, 229
 
(1938)).  This “threshold . . . is not high.”  
Id.
  “If, after reviewing the record, the court 

finds it is possible to draw two inconsistent positions from the evidence and one of those 
positions represents the [ALJ’s] findings, the court must affirm the [ALJ’s] decision.”  
Perks v. Astrue, 
687 F.3d 1086, 1091
 (8th Cir. 2012) (quotation omitted). 
    Plaintiff challenges the ALJ’s decision on two grounds, arguing that the ALJ drew 
unwarranted inferences from the medical records when evaluating Plaintiff’s functioning 

and that the ALJ’s RFC assessment does not account for all of Plaintiff’s limitations.  
    I.   Evidence of Functioning                                         
    Plaintiff contends that the ALJ’s evaluation of the medical evidence was erroneous 
because the ALJ interpreted comments that Plaintiff was “doing well” as indicating that 
Plaintiff was able to work.  Plaintiff argues that the “doing well” comments by his medical 

providers meant only that Plaintiff was “doing well” for someone with multiple sclerosis.  
    The ALJ recognized that multiple sclerosis is a serious and incurable disease, 
finding Plaintiff’s MS2 to be a severe impairment despite record evidence that Plaintiff’s 

MS was stable and caused him few symptoms.  Admin. Rec. at 18, 20-22.  The ALJ also 
properly noted that Plaintiff’s medical records reflected little medical care for any of his 
alleged impairments after Plaintiff’s cervical spine surgery in November 2017.  Id. at 21.  
The ALJ found that the record as a whole did not support Plaintiff’s claim that he “would 
be working but for his allegedly disabling impairments and limitations.”  Id. at 20. 
    The ALJ did not draw improper inferences from treatment notes stating that Plaintiff 

was “doing well,” and the authority on which Plaintiff relies does not compel a different 
conclusion.  In Koch v. Kijakazi, for example, the claimant consistently rated her pain as 
eight out of ten after an accident injured her back.  
4 F.4th 656, 659, 664
 (8th Cir. 2021).  
The consultative examiner found that the claimant could not walk without a walker, had a 
severely restricted range of motion, and her prognosis even after back surgery was “very 

poor.”  
Id. at 660
.  Other examiners commented on her pain and inability to function.  
Id.
  
Despite this, the ALJ highlighted the opinions of a single physician that the claimant’s 
condition had improved since surgery and that the claimant was satisfied with her surgical 
outcome.  
Id. at 666
.  The physician did not comment on the claimant’s ability to work or 



2 Plaintiff suffers from a form of MS known as “relapsing-remitting” MS.  Relapsing-
remitting MS is characterized by periods of symptoms that improve either partially or 
completely and are followed by periods of disease remission, often lasting months or years.  
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/multiple-sclerosis/symptoms-causes/syc-
20350269 (last visited Dec. 12, 2023) [archived at  https://perma.cc/N48R-REME]. 
compare her pre-surgery and post-surgery pain, but merely stated that she had improved.  
Id.
                                                                       

    The Court of Appeals reversed a partial denial of disability benefits, finding that the 
ALJ improperly inferred that the claimant’s satisfaction with her surgery “translated to a 
substantial decrease in pain [that enabled her] to resume work activity.”  
Id. at 667
.  But 
“[i]mproved symptoms do not necessarily equate to improved pain.”  
Id. at 665
 (emphases 
in original).  The appellate court found that the ALJ was required to formulate the RFC 
based on medical opinions about  whether  the claimant could work, and the medical 

evidence was overwhelming that she could not.  
Id. at 667
.                
    By contrast, only a single treatment note in this record hints that Plaintiff is unable 
to work.  In July 2019, Plaintiff’s treating nurse practitioner described one of Plaintiff’s 
symptoms as MS-caused fatigue and recommended that Plaintiff “[i]ncrease physical 
activity to at least 30 minutes of exercise daily.”  Id. at 594.  Plaintiff contends that this 

treatment note shows that he was unable to be physically active for even 30 minutes a day.  
But even if this interpretation of the nurse practitioner’s comment is correct, other evidence 
in the record shows that Plaintiff was not experiencing frequent disabling symptoms as a 
result of his MS.  For example, in July 2018, after noting that Plaintiff was “doing quite 
well,” Plaintiff’s provider explained that Plaintiff had “[a]bsolutely no relapsing symptoms 

whatsoever.  No numbness, no tingling, no vision changes.”  Id. at 595.  There was no 
indication that Plaintiff complained of fatigue at this exam.  Id.  A December 2017 
treatment note similarly stated that that Plaintiff had “[a]bsolutely no relapsing symptoms 
whatsoever” and was “doing quite well” as a result.  Id. at 605.  And in an examination 
before his October 2017 neck surgery, Plaintiff denied experiencing fatigue.  Id. at 611.  
The ALJ did not draw improper inferences from comments that Plaintiff was “doing well,” 

and substantial evidence in the record as a whole supports the ALJ’s determination that 
Plaintiff did not experience fatigue that would prevent him from performing work-related 
activities.                                                               
    II.  RFC Determination                                               
    Plaintiff also argues that the ALJ erred in formulating his RFC because the RFC 
does not consider Plaintiff’s ability to sustain work activities over time.  He asserts that, 

because his MS symptoms come and go, the RFC had to account for periods when Plaintiff 
experienced fatigue and other symptoms that would occasionally preclude his ability to 
function in a work setting.                                               
     Plaintiff’s  record  citations,  however,  do  not  provide  evidence  that  Plaintiff’s 
symptoms would frequently or even occasionally prevent him from working.  Plaintiff cites 

to three mental-health treatment notes, but two of these notes do not mention any physical 
symptoms, Admin. Rec. at 508, 518, and one states only that Plaintiff was experiencing 
unspecified “pain” but does not ascribe that pain to either his MS or his cervical disc 
disease, nor does the treatment note describe that pain as work-preclusive.  Id. at 513.  In 
another, a medical treatment note from August 2021, Plaintiff reported “an increase in 

muscle spasms at night” during hot and humid weather” and that he suffers from “[o]ther 
fatigue.”  Id. at 659.  This note similarly did not contain any further discussion of these 
symptoms or indicate their effect on Plaintiff’s functioning.  And in July 2020, Plaintiff 
reported  only  “occasionally”  experiencing  “a  weakness  sensation  in  both  legs,”  but 
admitted that, while physical therapy helped with his leg weakness, he had “not been doing 
those exercises at home as much as he should be.”  Id. at 665.            

    The only other evidence in the record that Plaintiff experienced disabling symptoms 
was Plaintiff’s testimony at the hearing.  Id. at 50, 51, 56-57.  But an “ALJ may disbelieve 
a claimant’s subjective complaints . . . based on inconsistencies in the evidence in the 
record as a whole.”  Fleshman v. Sullivan, 
933 F.2d 674, 675-76
 (8th Cir. 1991).  The 
record here does not support the extreme limitations to which Plaintiff testified.  The RFC 
also accounts for multiple physical restrictions.  Plaintiff’s argument that the RFC should 

have included additional restrictions “amounts to a disagreement over the weighing of 
evidence within the record, and it is not this Court’s role to reweigh that evidence.”  Austin 
v. Kijakazi, 
52 F.4th 723, 731
 (8th Cir. 2022) (quotation omitted).  Substantial evidence 
supports the RFC, and Plaintiff’s challenge to it fails.                  

ORDER

    Substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s determination that Plaintiff is not disabled. 

Therefore, based on the foregoing analysis and all the files, records and proceedings herein, 
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:                                                     
    1.   Defendant Martin J. O’Malley’s motion for summary judgment, (Dkt. 15), is 
GRANTED.                                                                  
    2.   Plaintiff  Christopher  K.’s  motion  for  summary  judgment,  (Dkt.  9),  is 
DENIED.                                                                   

    3.   This matter is DISMISSED with prejudice.                        
    LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                                 

Dated:  January 25, 2024                 s/ Wilhelmina M. Wright                                     
                                       Wilhelmina M. Wright              
                                       United States District Judge      

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Christopher K.,                       Case No. 22-cv-3080 (WMW/TNL)      

                   Plaintiff,                                            

ORDER

     v.                                                                  

Martin J. O’Malley, Commissioner of                                      
Social Security Administration,                                          

                   Defendant.                                            


    This matter is before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. 
(Dkts. 9, 15.)  For the reasons discussed below, the Court denies Plaintiff’s motion and 
grants Defendant’s motion.                                                
                         BACKGROUND                                      
    Plaintiff Christopher K.1 filed applications for supplemental security income and 
disability insurance benefits on May 24, 2019.  Admin. Rec. (Dkt. 6) at 293-94, 300-03.  
Plaintiff alleged that he became disabled and unable to work as of September 20, 2017, as 
a result of multiple sclerosis (“MS”), back fusion, depression, anxiety, and insomnia.  Id. 
at 442.                                                                   
    For purposes of Social Security disability benefits, an individual is considered 
disabled if he is “unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any 

1    This District has adopted the policy of using only the first name and last initial of 
any nongovernmental parties in orders in Social Security matters.         
medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in 
death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 

twelve months.”  42 U.S.C. § 1382c(a)(3)(A).  In addition, an individual is disabled “only 
if his physical or mental impairment or impairments are of such severity that he is not only 
unable to do his previous work but cannot, considering his age, education, and work 
experience, engage in any other kind of substantial gainful work which exists in the 
national economy.”  Id. § 1382c(a)(3)(B).  “[A] physical or mental impairment is an 
impairment that results from anatomical, physiological, or psychological abnormalities 

which  are  demonstrable  by  medically  acceptable  clinical  and  laboratory  diagnostic 
techniques.”  Id. § 1382c(a)(3)(D).                                       
    The Commissioner has established a sequential, five-step evaluation process to 
determine whether an individual is disabled.  
20 C.F.R. § 416.920
(a)(4).  At step one, the 
claimant must establish that he is not engaged in any “substantial gainful activity.”  
Id.
 

§ 416.920(a)(4)(i).  If that requirement is satisfied, the claimant must then establish that he 
has a severe medically determinable impairment or combination of impairments at step 
two.  Id. § 416.920(a)(4)(ii).  At step three, the Commissioner must find that the claimant 
is disabled, if the claimant satisfies the first two steps and the claimant’s impairment meets 
or is medically equal to one of the listings in 20 C.F.R. Part 404, Subpart P, App’x 1.  Id. 

§ 416.920(a)(4)(iii).  If the claimant’s impairment does not meet or is not medically equal 
to one of the listings, the evaluation proceeds to step four.  At step four, the claimant bears 
the burden of establishing his residual functional capacity (“RFC”) and proving that he 
cannot perform any past relevant work.  Id. § 416.920(a)(4)(iv); Young v. Apfel, 
221 F.3d 1065
, 1069 n.5 (8th Cir. 2000).  If the claimant proves he is unable to perform any past 
relevant work, the burden shifts to the Commissioner to establish at step five that the 

claimant can perform other work existing in a significant number of jobs in the national 
economy.  Bowen v. Yuckert, 
482 U.S. 137
, 146 n.5 (1987).  If the claimant can perform 
such work, the Commissioner will find that the claimant is not disabled.  
20 C.F.R. § 416.920
(a)(4)(v).                                                       
    Plaintiff’s applications for benefits were denied initially and on reconsideration.  
Admin. Rec. at. 84, 85, 166, 167.  In November 2021, an Administrative Law Judge 

(“ALJ”) held a hearing on Plaintiff’s applications.  
Id. at 41-65
.  Plaintiff was represented 
by an attorney and testified at this hearing.  After the hearing, the ALJ determined that 
Plaintiff had two severe impairments: multiple sclerosis and degenerative disc disease, 
status post cervical fusion.  
Id. at 18
.  The ALJ found that neither impairment, either alone 
or in combination, met or medically equaled any listed impairments.  
Id. at 19
.  The ALJ 

determined that Plaintiff had the capacity for sedentary  work with multiple  physical 
restrictions.  
Id. at 19
.  Although this RFC meant that Plaintiff could not return to his 
previous employment as a saw operator or syrup maker, the ALJ found that there were jobs 
Plaintiff could perform in the national economy.  
Id. at 23-24
.  For this reason, the ALJ 
concluded that Plaintiff was not disabled.  
Id. at 25
.  The Appeals Council denied Plaintiff’s 

request for review of the ALJ’s decision, and this lawsuit followed.  See 
42 U.S.C. § 405
(g) 
(providing for judicial review of final decisions of the Commissioner of the Social Security 
Administration).                                                          
                           ANALYSIS                                      
    The  Court’s  review  of  the  Commissioner’s  decision  is  limited  to  determining 

whether the decision is “supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.”  
McKinney v. Apfel, 
228 F.3d 860, 863
 (8th Cir. 2000).  “Substantial evidence . . . is more 
than a mere scintilla.”  Biestek v. Berryhill, 
139 S. Ct. 1148, 1154
 (2019) (quotation 
omitted).  It is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to 
support a conclusion.”  
Id.
 (quoting Consolidated Edison Co. v. NLRB, 
305 U.S. 197, 229
 
(1938)).  This “threshold . . . is not high.”  
Id.
  “If, after reviewing the record, the court 

finds it is possible to draw two inconsistent positions from the evidence and one of those 
positions represents the [ALJ’s] findings, the court must affirm the [ALJ’s] decision.”  
Perks v. Astrue, 
687 F.3d 1086, 1091
 (8th Cir. 2012) (quotation omitted). 
    Plaintiff challenges the ALJ’s decision on two grounds, arguing that the ALJ drew 
unwarranted inferences from the medical records when evaluating Plaintiff’s functioning 

and that the ALJ’s RFC assessment does not account for all of Plaintiff’s limitations.  
    I.   Evidence of Functioning                                         
    Plaintiff contends that the ALJ’s evaluation of the medical evidence was erroneous 
because the ALJ interpreted comments that Plaintiff was “doing well” as indicating that 
Plaintiff was able to work.  Plaintiff argues that the “doing well” comments by his medical 

providers meant only that Plaintiff was “doing well” for someone with multiple sclerosis.  
    The ALJ recognized that multiple sclerosis is a serious and incurable disease, 
finding Plaintiff’s MS2 to be a severe impairment despite record evidence that Plaintiff’s 

MS was stable and caused him few symptoms.  Admin. Rec. at 18, 20-22.  The ALJ also 
properly noted that Plaintiff’s medical records reflected little medical care for any of his 
alleged impairments after Plaintiff’s cervical spine surgery in November 2017.  Id. at 21.  
The ALJ found that the record as a whole did not support Plaintiff’s claim that he “would 
be working but for his allegedly disabling impairments and limitations.”  Id. at 20. 
    The ALJ did not draw improper inferences from treatment notes stating that Plaintiff 

was “doing well,” and the authority on which Plaintiff relies does not compel a different 
conclusion.  In Koch v. Kijakazi, for example, the claimant consistently rated her pain as 
eight out of ten after an accident injured her back.  
4 F.4th 656, 659, 664
 (8th Cir. 2021).  
The consultative examiner found that the claimant could not walk without a walker, had a 
severely restricted range of motion, and her prognosis even after back surgery was “very 

poor.”  
Id. at 660
.  Other examiners commented on her pain and inability to function.  
Id.
  
Despite this, the ALJ highlighted the opinions of a single physician that the claimant’s 
condition had improved since surgery and that the claimant was satisfied with her surgical 
outcome.  
Id. at 666
.  The physician did not comment on the claimant’s ability to work or 



2 Plaintiff suffers from a form of MS known as “relapsing-remitting” MS.  Relapsing-
remitting MS is characterized by periods of symptoms that improve either partially or 
completely and are followed by periods of disease remission, often lasting months or years.  
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/multiple-sclerosis/symptoms-causes/syc-
20350269 (last visited Dec. 12, 2023) [archived at  https://perma.cc/N48R-REME]. 
compare her pre-surgery and post-surgery pain, but merely stated that she had improved.  
Id.
                                                                       

    The Court of Appeals reversed a partial denial of disability benefits, finding that the 
ALJ improperly inferred that the claimant’s satisfaction with her surgery “translated to a 
substantial decrease in pain [that enabled her] to resume work activity.”  
Id. at 667
.  But 
“[i]mproved symptoms do not necessarily equate to improved pain.”  
Id. at 665
 (emphases 
in original).  The appellate court found that the ALJ was required to formulate the RFC 
based on medical opinions about  whether  the claimant could work, and the medical 

evidence was overwhelming that she could not.  
Id. at 667
.                
    By contrast, only a single treatment note in this record hints that Plaintiff is unable 
to work.  In July 2019, Plaintiff’s treating nurse practitioner described one of Plaintiff’s 
symptoms as MS-caused fatigue and recommended that Plaintiff “[i]ncrease physical 
activity to at least 30 minutes of exercise daily.”  Id. at 594.  Plaintiff contends that this 

treatment note shows that he was unable to be physically active for even 30 minutes a day.  
But even if this interpretation of the nurse practitioner’s comment is correct, other evidence 
in the record shows that Plaintiff was not experiencing frequent disabling symptoms as a 
result of his MS.  For example, in July 2018, after noting that Plaintiff was “doing quite 
well,” Plaintiff’s provider explained that Plaintiff had “[a]bsolutely no relapsing symptoms 

whatsoever.  No numbness, no tingling, no vision changes.”  Id. at 595.  There was no 
indication that Plaintiff complained of fatigue at this exam.  Id.  A December 2017 
treatment note similarly stated that that Plaintiff had “[a]bsolutely no relapsing symptoms 
whatsoever” and was “doing quite well” as a result.  Id. at 605.  And in an examination 
before his October 2017 neck surgery, Plaintiff denied experiencing fatigue.  Id. at 611.  
The ALJ did not draw improper inferences from comments that Plaintiff was “doing well,” 

and substantial evidence in the record as a whole supports the ALJ’s determination that 
Plaintiff did not experience fatigue that would prevent him from performing work-related 
activities.                                                               
    II.  RFC Determination                                               
    Plaintiff also argues that the ALJ erred in formulating his RFC because the RFC 
does not consider Plaintiff’s ability to sustain work activities over time.  He asserts that, 

because his MS symptoms come and go, the RFC had to account for periods when Plaintiff 
experienced fatigue and other symptoms that would occasionally preclude his ability to 
function in a work setting.                                               
     Plaintiff’s  record  citations,  however,  do  not  provide  evidence  that  Plaintiff’s 
symptoms would frequently or even occasionally prevent him from working.  Plaintiff cites 

to three mental-health treatment notes, but two of these notes do not mention any physical 
symptoms, Admin. Rec. at 508, 518, and one states only that Plaintiff was experiencing 
unspecified “pain” but does not ascribe that pain to either his MS or his cervical disc 
disease, nor does the treatment note describe that pain as work-preclusive.  Id. at 513.  In 
another, a medical treatment note from August 2021, Plaintiff reported “an increase in 

muscle spasms at night” during hot and humid weather” and that he suffers from “[o]ther 
fatigue.”  Id. at 659.  This note similarly did not contain any further discussion of these 
symptoms or indicate their effect on Plaintiff’s functioning.  And in July 2020, Plaintiff 
reported  only  “occasionally”  experiencing  “a  weakness  sensation  in  both  legs,”  but 
admitted that, while physical therapy helped with his leg weakness, he had “not been doing 
those exercises at home as much as he should be.”  Id. at 665.            

    The only other evidence in the record that Plaintiff experienced disabling symptoms 
was Plaintiff’s testimony at the hearing.  Id. at 50, 51, 56-57.  But an “ALJ may disbelieve 
a claimant’s subjective complaints . . . based on inconsistencies in the evidence in the 
record as a whole.”  Fleshman v. Sullivan, 
933 F.2d 674, 675-76
 (8th Cir. 1991).  The 
record here does not support the extreme limitations to which Plaintiff testified.  The RFC 
also accounts for multiple physical restrictions.  Plaintiff’s argument that the RFC should 

have included additional restrictions “amounts to a disagreement over the weighing of 
evidence within the record, and it is not this Court’s role to reweigh that evidence.”  Austin 
v. Kijakazi, 
52 F.4th 723, 731
 (8th Cir. 2022) (quotation omitted).  Substantial evidence 
supports the RFC, and Plaintiff’s challenge to it fails.                  

ORDER

    Substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s determination that Plaintiff is not disabled. 

Therefore, based on the foregoing analysis and all the files, records and proceedings herein, 
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:                                                     
    1.   Defendant Martin J. O’Malley’s motion for summary judgment, (Dkt. 15), is 
GRANTED.                                                                  
    2.   Plaintiff  Christopher  K.’s  motion  for  summary  judgment,  (Dkt.  9),  is 
DENIED.                                                                   

    3.   This matter is DISMISSED with prejudice.                        
    LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                                 

Dated:  January 25, 2024                 s/ Wilhelmina M. Wright                                     
                                       Wilhelmina M. Wright              
                                       United States District Judge      

Reference

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