Carson v. Berryhill
Carson v. Berryhill
Opinion of the Court
Pending before the court
I. Case Background
Plaintiff filed this action pursuant to
*821A. Medical History
Plaintiff was born on May 26, 1961, and was fifty-one years old on the alleged disability onset date of May 14, 2013.
1. Psychiatric Disorders
Plaintiff began treatment with Edward Fallick, D.O., ("Dr. Fallick") in 2000 for psychiatric disorders.
In March 2014, Plaintiff began receiving treatment through the Harris Health System for both medication management and psychotherapy.
*822affect.
Diagnosing Plaintiff with mood disorder, not otherwise specified, Dr. Aoshima-Kilroy stated, "I do not see enough evidence to agree with diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Borderline personality disorder appears to be better suited diagnosis and will continue to monitor for this."
Over the course of the subsequent seventeen months, Plaintiff attended eleven medication management appointments with Dr. Aoshima-Kilroy, who consistently recorded that the mental status examinations were within normals limits with changes in mood that ranged in description from depressed to anxious to "better" to "accepting" and affect that mostly remained dysthymic.
Dr. Aoshima-Kilroy variously rated Plaintiff's GAF score as fifty-five or sixty, both reflecting moderate symptoms, throughout treatment.
In addition to medication management, Plaintiff received psychotherapy for anxiety and depression prior to the alleged onset date.
*823On occasion at non-psychiatric medical appointments, the treatment provider addressed Plaintiff's mental health.
In October 2015, two months after issuance of the ALJ's decision, Brittany Grabois Schuman, Psy.D., ("Dr. Schuman"), conducted an outpatient psychology evaluation.
In the evaluation summary, Dr. Schuman opined that Plaintiff experienced "mild difficulty with delayed memory for auditory tasks" but was "fully oriented," possessed intact "abilities for naming, visuospatial/constructional tasks, attention, and abstraction," tested in the high average range for nonverbal intelligence, and suffered "minor difficulties with language and processing speed."
2. Diabetes
Plaintiff's diabetes diagnosis predated the alleged disability period but medication and disease management continued throughout the relevant time.
Although Plaintiff had abnormal results on diabetes-related laboratory tests on more than one occasion, Plaintiff showed no other physical manifestations of unmanaged diabetes.
*824
B. Application to SSA
On September 24, 2014, Plaintiff filed an application for disability insurance benefits,
In November 2013, Plaintiff underwent two consultative examinations.
At the medical examination, Plaintiff reported that she was experiencing numbness and tingling in her toes and hands and that she felt the sensation of burning in her left great toe.
On December 20, 2013, the SSA found Plaintiff not disabled at the initial level of review.
*825In October 2014, Dr. Fallick completed a mental residual functional capacity ("RFC") evaluation on Plaintiff's behalf.
Dr. Fallick's RFC assessment rated Plaintiff as "[u]nable to meet competitive standards" on nine mental abilities and aptitudes necessary for the performance of unskilled work: (1) "[m]aintain attention for two[-]hour segment;" (2) "[s]ustain an ordinary routine without special supervision;" (3) "[w]ork in coordination with or proximity to others without being unduly distracted;" (4) "[p]erform at a consistent pace without an unreasonable number and length of rest periods;" (5) "[r]espond appropriately to changes in a routine work setting;" (6) "[d]eal with normal work stress;" (7) "[u]nderstand and remember detailed instructions;" (8) "[c]arry out detailed instructions;" and (9) "[d]eal with stress of semiskilled and skilled work."
He opined that Plaintiff was seriously limited but not precluded on six mental abilities and aptitudes.
Plaintiff requested a hearing before an ALJ.
C. Hearing
At the hearing, Plaintiff, two medical experts, and a vocational expert testified.
Relevant to her condition since her termination, which coincides to the day with her alleged onset date, Plaintiff reported that she was unable to concentrate, heard voices saying her name, saw nonexistent people running in halls of her house, and compulsively hoarded
Plaintiff's attorney asked about diabetes, with which, Plaintiff testified, she had been diagnosed in 1998.
Ashok Khushalani, M.D., ("Dr. Khushalani"), a psychiatric expert, testified next and provided an overview of Plaintiff's mental-health treatment based on his review of Plaintiff's medical records.
Dr. Khushalani opined that Plaintiff did not meet or equal any of the mental disorders described in the listings of the regulations
Turning to Plaintiff's physical ailments, the ALJ questioned Albert Oguejiofor, M.D., ("Dr. Oguejiofor"), who identified diabetes as a medically determinable impairment.
The doctor explained that the usual side effects from the medical and psychotropic medications Plaintiff was taking would not prohibit light work unless she was experiencing severe side effects, which was not reflected in the record.
The vocational expert, Kassandra Humphress ("Humphress") took the stand to discuss Plaintiff's past work history and the capability of an individual with Plaintiff's RFC to perform that work or any other job.
The ALJ asked whether the following hypothetical individual would be able to perform that work:
Assume a hypothetical individual the claimant's age and educational background, ability to perform exertional demands of light work as defined in the commissioner's re[gu]lations. Assume the individual can occasionally lift and/or carry 20 pounds, frequently lift and/or carry 10 pounds; stand and walk about six hours out of an eight-hour workday with normal breaks, s[i]t for about six hours out of an eight-hour workday with normal breaks. The individual can understand, remember, and carry out short and simple instructions, maintain attention and concentration for extended periods on simple tasks. The individual is limited to simple, routine, repetitive tasks. The individual is limited to superficial interaction with the general public, *828occasional interaction with coworkers, and occasional interaction with supervisors.105
Humpress answered that the individual would not be able to work as a court reporter but that she could work as a shredder, a laundry sorter, or a garment sorter.
Plaintiff's attorney asked if the hypothetical individual could perform those jobs if she was limited to a climate-controlled environment, and Humphress said that the individual could.
D. Commissioner's Decision
On August 7, 2015, the ALJ issued an unfavorable decision.
The ALJ thoroughly discussed Plaintiff's medical treatment for her impairments, including Dr. Fallick's treatment notes, those concerning diabetes, and Plaintiff's own reports and testimony.
The claimant has a history of mental problems and diabetes. However, the objective evidence of record shows that the claimant's impairments are adequately controlled on medications and impose[ ] no more than mild to moderate limitations on her ability to perform work-related activities.118
*829The ALJ noted two inconsistencies in the record with regard to Plaintiff's psychiatric diagnoses: (1) Although Dr. Fallick indicated that Plaintiff carried a diagnosis of ADHD, his treatment notes did not include that diagnosis; and (2) Plaintiff represented that she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but one provider disagreed with the diagnosis and another listed it as a diagnosis based primarily on Plaintiff's subjective report.
Specifically with regard to Dr. Fallick's RFC assessment, the ALJ stated:
Dr. Fallick's treatment notes do not support the opinion that the claimant would be so limited as opined in the mental RFC. January 2014 treatment notes with Dr. Fallick indicated the claimant had only "mild" depression. She was given a GAF score of 60 during that January 2014 visit, which remained unchanged in the RFC [by Dr. Fallick]. A GAF score of 60 is not consistent with marked limitations, such that an individual would be unable to meet competitive standards maintaining attention for two[-]hour segments, sustaining an ordinary routine without special supervision, working in coordination with or proximity to others without being unduly distracted, performing at a consistent pace without an unreasonable number and length of rest periods, and responding appropriately to changes in a routine work setting.120
On other occasions, the ALJ noted, Dr. Fallick recorded that Plaintiff was doing "fairly well" and assessed Plaintiff a GAF score of sixty or higher, concluding that "Dr. Fallick's own treatment notes undermine his mental RFC, as they demonstrate a history of stability on medications and mental functioning that has been only mildly to moderately impaired."
The ALJ concluded that Dr. Fallick's opinion "regarding the nature and severity of the claimant's mental conditions" was entitled to little weight because it was "not well-supported by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic techniques and [was] inconsistent with the other substantial evidence in the case record."
The ALJ found Plaintiff capable of light work limited to "understanding, remembering, and carrying out short and simple instructions" and to performing simple, routine, and repetitive tasks.
On October 6, 2015, Plaintiff appealed the ALJ's decision.
II. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
The court's review of a final decision by the Commissioner denying disability benefits is limited to the determination of whether: 1) the ALJ applied proper legal standards in evaluating the record; and 2) substantial evidence in the record supports the decision. Waters v. Barnhart,
A. Legal Standard
In order to obtain disability benefits, a claimant bears the ultimate burden of proving she is disabled within the meaning of the Act. Wren v. Sullivan,
To determine whether a claimant is capable of performing any "substantial gainful activity," the regulations provide that disability claims should be evaluated according to the following sequential five-step process:
(1) a claimant who is working, engaging in a substantial gainful activity, will not be found to be disabled no matter what the medical findings are; (2) a claimant will not be found to be disabled unless [s]he has a "severe impairment;" (3) a claimant whose impairment meets or is equivalent to [a Listing] will be considered disabled without the need to consider vocational factors; (4) a claimant who is capable of performing work that [s]he has done in the past must be found "not disabled;" and (5) if the claimant is unable to perform h[er] previous work as a result of h[er] impairment, then factors such as h[er] age, education, past work experience, and [RFC] must be considered to determine whether [s]he can do other work.
Bowling v. Shalala,
*831B. Substantial Evidence
The widely accepted definition of "substantial evidence" is "that quantum of relevant evidence that a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion." Carey v. Apfel,
Only if no credible evidentiary choices of medical findings exist to support the Commissioner's decision should the court overturn it. See Johnson v. Bowen,
III. Analysis
Plaintiff requests judicial review of the ALJ's decision to deny disability benefits. Plaintiff asserts that the ALJ's decision contains the following errors: (1) failure to properly weigh the medical opinions; and (2) failure to properly assess limitations due to diabetes. Defendant argues that the ALJ's decision is legally sound and is supported by substantial evidence.
A. Failure to Properly Weigh Medical Opinions
The ALJ must evaluate every medical opinion in the record and decide what weight to give each. See
The ALJ is required to give good reasons for the weight given a treating source's opinion.
When the determination or decision ... is a denial[,] ... the notice of the determination or decision must contain specific reasons for the weight given to the treating source's medical opinion, supported by the evidence in the case record, and must be sufficiently specific to make clear to any subsequent reviewers the weight the adjudicator gave to the treating source's medical opinion and the reasons for that weight.
SSR 96-2p,
When the ALJ does not give a treating physician's opinion controlling weight, he must apply the following nonexclusive factors to determine the weight to give the *832opinion: (1) the "[l]ength of the treatment relationship and the frequency of examination;" (2) the "[n]ature and extent of the treatment relationship;" (3) the relevant medical evidence supporting the opinion; (4) the consistency of the opinion with the remainder of the medical record; and (5) the treating physician's area of specialization.
Plaintiff takes issue with the ALJ's assignment of more weight to the RFC opinion of Dr. Khushalani than that of Dr. Fallick, arguing that the ALJ "relied on the non-examining medical expert over ... the acknowledged treating physician."
Here, the ALJ discussed the medical opinions of both Drs. Khushalani and Fallick and explained the weight given to each. With regard to Dr. Khushalani, the ALJ determined that his opinion was entitled to substantial weight because he reviewed the entire record, observed Plaintiff, and offered opinions that were supported by a preponderance of record evidence. In contrast, the ALJ determined that Dr. Fallick's opinion regarding the nature and severity of Plaintiff's mental impairments was entitled to little weight because it was "not well-supported by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic techniques and [was] inconsistent with the other substantial evidence in the case record."
First, the ALJ noted that the diagnosis of ADHD listed in the RFC assessment was inconsistent with the treatment notes from the relevant time.
The court finds the reasons offered by ALJ for giving less weight to Dr. Fallick's RFC opinion to be well reasoned. It is indisputable that Plaintiff did not carry a diagnosis of ADHD during the relevant period. Moreover, Dr. Fallick's notes were brief and focused on the medication adjustments with very little information about Plaintiff's RFC or activities of daily living. Based solely on the treatment notes, it would be impossible to reach the conclusion, as did Dr. Fallick, that Plaintiff was unable to meet competitive standards with regard to the identified nine mental abilities and aptitudes or that Plaintiff was seriously limited with regard to six others. Although his statement that Plaintiff struggled with distractibility and motivation is supported by a few treatment notations, the degree of limitation in his RFC has absolutely no clinical support in his records. Additionally, two other physicians expressed concern that Plaintiff was over-medicated during treatment with Dr. Fallick, a basis not cited by the ALJ but arguably a relevant factor in deciding what weight to grant his opinion.
The ALJ's decision cited
Plaintiff also contends that, in addition to the limitations identified in Dr. Fallick's RFC opinion, Plaintiff's termination from her past relevant work "so strongly indicate[s]" that her mental impairments would prevent her from being able to sustain employment.
Moreover, this is not a case where the ALJ needed to articulate a specific finding that Plaintiff could maintain the cited jobs. See Perez v. Barnhart,
The court also finds the opinion that Plaintiff would miss more than four days of work per month unsupported. Plaintiff's appointments with Dr. Fallick were every few months, at which time he made minor adjustments to her medication. Plaintiff also attended psychotherapy approximately twice a month. These appointments did not require a full day off of work even if they could not be scheduled outside of work hours. Nothing in the record suggested that a more intensive treatment plan was necessary to treat Plaintiff's mental disorders or that they could cause Plaintiff to be absent from work once a week or more.
The ALJ complied with all SSA requirements and cited substantial evidence to support his conclusion that Dr. Fallick's opinion was entitled to little weight.
B. Failure to Properly Assess Limitations Due to Diabetes
A claimant's RFC is her utmost remaining ability to work despite all of her limitations resulting from her impairment. See Villa v. Sullivan,
The regulations provide that the ultimate responsibility for determining RFC lies with the ALJ.
Plaintiff argues that the ALJ failed to consider numbness in the toes and tingling in the hands in reaching his RFC determination and that, had he, he would have included additional walking and handling limitations in Plaintiff's RFC. She also contends that the ALJ improperly *835relied on Dr. Oguejiofor's hearing testimony that the record contained "no evidence of neuropathy or difficulty with ambulation."
Taking the second issue first, the ALJ interpreted Dr. Oguejiofor's testimony to mean that the record included no evidence of neuropathy or difficulty with ambulation. However, their colloquy was not so straight forward. Dr. Oguejiofor appeared to be saying that Plaintiff's diabetes did not meet Listings 11.14 and 11.04 because Plaintiff did not meet the requirements of "peripheral neuropathy with muscle atrophy, loss of power and positions resulting in an inability to ambulate effectively."
Regardless, the record contains substantial evidence to support the ALJ's exclusion of additional walking and handling limitations based on numbness and tingling. Plaintiff cites three pages in the administrative record as "multiple diagnosis [sic] of peripheral neuropathy."
The fact is that many treatment records from the relevant period routinely noted that Plaintiff had no numbness or tingling, no gait disturbance, no muscular weakness, and no impaired coordination/balance. The only exception was Plaintiff's disclosure that she was experiencing hand numbness, which she made to her psychiatrist in June 2015. At that meeting she also reported having fallen. That same month, Plaintiff testified at the administrative hearing that she recently had begun experiencing tingling in her hands and numbness in her toes. However, at a July 2015 podiatry appointment, Plaintiff reported no numbness, and the examination produced normal results. In August and September of 2015, Plaintiff reported walking for exercise four times a week.
The number of examinations during the relevant period that noted no neuropathy and no difficulty ambulating overwhelm the few occasions on which Plaintiff reported neuropathic symptoms and falls. More importantly, the record contains no evidence of functional limitations resulting from numbness and tingling, not even her own testimony. To the contrary, Plaintiff's ability to walk long distances undermines her assertion that the RFC should have included walking limitations. Even if Plaintiff suffered limitations as a result of periodic numbness and tingling, they were concentrated in November 2013 and June 2015, not ongoing limitations.
Even without Dr. Oguejiofor's testimony, substantial evidence supports the ALJ's decision not to include walking and handling limitations in the RFC determination. Because the hypothetical question presented to the vocational expert included all limitations reasonably supported by the *836record, the ALJ did not err by relying on the testimony that Plaintiff could perform the jobs of shredder, laundry sorter, and garment sorter.
IV. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, the court RECOMMENDS that Plaintiff's motion be DENIED and Defendant's motion be GRANTED .
The Clerk shall send copies of this Memorandum and Recommendation to the respective parties who have fourteen days from the receipt thereof to file written objections thereto pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(b) and General Order 2002-13. Failure to file written objections within the time period mentioned shall bar an aggrieved party from attacking the factual findings and legal conclusions on appeal.
The original of any written objections shall be filed with the United States District Clerk electronically. Copies of such objections shall be mailed to opposing parties and to the chambers of the undersigned, 515 Rusk, Suite 7019, Houston, Texas 77002.
This case was referred to the undersigned magistrate judge pursuant to
See Tr. of the Admin. Proceedings ("Tr.") 237, 352, 357, 388, 411.
See Tr. 384, 393.
See Tr. 21-29, 37-202, 449-592, 597-612, 629-964, 971-1013, 1021-1176. The court has reviewed the entire medical record but limits its discussion to the pertinent records concerning mental health and diabetes, the evidence on which Plaintiff bases her challenges to the Commissioner's determination.
See Tr. 395, 420, 672-761.
Abilify is an antipsychotic drug used to treat mood disorders, as well as schizophrenia, Tourette's disorder, and autism. See Abilify, WebMD (July 2017), www.webmd.com/drugs/2/drug-64439/abilify-oral/details.
Tr. 679.
See Tr. 602-03, 670, 673, 972.
Tr. 972.
Diagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 34 (Am. Psychiatric Ass'n 4th ed. 2000) (replaced in 2013 by the fifth edition, which dropped GAF in favor of the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0).
See Tr. 602-03, 670, 673, 972.
See
See
See
See Tr. 955-64.
See Tr. 959-64.
See Tr. 961.
See
See Tr. 961.
See Tr. 929.
See Tr. 104-11, 814-21, 868-74, 886-92, 899-904, 927-33, 1037-38, 1054, 1059-68, 1074-75, 1161-62, 1168-76.
See Tr. 901, 929, 816, 868, 871, 888, 1162.
See Tr. 10 6.
See Tr. 106, 816, 870, 888, 901, 929, 961, 1162, 1171.
See Tr. 104, 868, 899, 927, 1168.
See Tr. 1162.
See Tr. 398.
See Tr. 808-13, 822-40, 850-67, 875-78, 893-98, 905-926, 934-58, 992-98, 1009-13, 1035-36, 1038, 1047, 1050, 1056-57, 1063-66, 1116-19, 1124-27, 1148-51, 1153-59.
See Tr. 810-11, 824-25, 830-31, 837-38, 852-53, 858, 864-65, 877-78, 895-96, 907-08, 912-13, 918-19, 925, 936-37, 942, 946-47, 951-52, 956, 994-95, 1009-10, 1117, 1125-26, 1149, 1154, 1156.
See, e.g., Tr. 785, 1120.
Tr. 1120.
See Tr. 1122.
Tr. 22-29, 38-46. The evaluation was misdated as October 7, 2014. Compare Tr. 22, 39 with Tr. 50.
Tr. 22-29, 38-46, 50.
Tr. 50.
Tr. 27-28, 44.
Tr. 28, 44.
Tr. 28, 44-45.
See, e.g., Tr. 38, 629-47, 791-98, 805, 1108-16, 1119-24, 1127-33, 1144-48.
See, e.g., Tr. 784, 791, 1111, 1130.
See, e.g., 784, 1111, 1130.
See, e.g., Tr. 630, 632-34, 636-37, 785, 791, 800, 842-43, 1111, 1113, 1120, 1122, 1129, 1132, 1144-48.
See, e.g., Tr. 630, 637, 785, 842-43, 1111, 1120, 1145.
See Tr. 1169.
See Tr. 1146.
See Tr. 1111, 1129.
The record also contains an application for supplemental security income under Title XVI of the Act, but Plaintiff and the ALJ only mention the Title II application. See Tr. 206, 352-56; Doc. 10, Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. & Resp. to Def.'s Brief p. 3.
See Tr. 357-63, 392, 1111.
See Tr. 413.
See Tr. 614-19, 621-28.
See Tr. 624.
See
See Tr. 625.
See
See Tr. 614, 616. This report is not completely legible. See Tr. 614-19.
See Tr. 615.
See Tr. 616, 617.
Tr. 618.
See Tr. 275-85, 300-04.
See Tr. 287-99, 307-11.
See Tr. 966-70.
See Tr. 966.
Topamax is an anticonvulsant drug used to treat migraine headaches as well as epilepsy. See Topamax, WebMD (July 2017), www.webmd.com/drugs/2/drug-14494-6019/topamax-oral/topiramate-oral/details.
See Tr. 966.
Tr. 968-69.
See
See
See Tr. 970.
See Tr. 317-18.
See Tr. 319-22.
See Tr. 232-74.
See Tr. 237-38.
See Tr. 238-40.
See Tr. 238-39.
See Tr. 239-40.
See Tr. 239.
See Tr. 241-44.
See Tr. 245.
At the hearing, the psychiatric expert explained that a hoarding disorder "is sort of a subcomponent of an obsessive-compulsive disorder, but it falls under the anxiety disorder." Tr. 260. In response to a question from the ALJ, the expert stated that a hoarding disorder generally "is not reflected in the working environment." Tr. 261.
See Tr. 244-51.
See Tr. 248.
Tr. 252.
Tr. 239, 253.
See Tr. 255-56.
See Tr. 256.
See Tr. 246, 251-52, 254.
See Tr. 258-59.
See Tr. 258.
See Tr. 259.
See Tr. 262.
20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, App. 1.
Tr. 259; see also Tr. 160.
See Tr. 260.
Tr. 263.
Tr. 263-64. According to Dr. Oguejiofor, the diagnosis of skin sarcoidosis, which is autoimmune in nature, resulted in a nonsevere impairment because Plaintiff's pulmonary function tests were normal. See Tr. 264.
See
See Tr. 265.
Tr. 266.
See Tr. 266-68.
See Tr. 269-72.
See Tr. 269.
See Tr. 270.
See Tr. 270-71.
See Tr. 271.
See Tr. 271-73.
See
See Tr. 206-20.
See Tr. 208.
See
See
See Tr. 209-10.
See Tr. 211-18.
See Tr. 212-18.
See Tr. 211.
See Tr. 216.
Tr. 216-17.
Tr. 216. The ALJ also cited legal authority stating that the disability decision was reserved to the Commissioner rather than any medical source. See
See Tr. 217.
Tr. 218.
Tr. 210.
See Tr. 218-19.
See Tr. 219.
See Tr. 35-36.
See Tr. 1-4.
See Tr. 3; Doc. 1, Pl.'s Orig. Compl.
Doc. 10, Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. & Resp. to Def.'s Brief p. 6.
Tr. 216.
The ALJ also pointed out that decisions on such issues as whether the claimant is disabled or unable to work are reserved to the Commissioner. See Tr. 216. The ALJ was not required to give any weight to Dr. Fallick's opinion on these issues. See Frank v. Barnhart,
Although Plaintiff saw Dr. Fallick every few months for many years concluding in January 2015, she only had four appointments between the alleged onset date of May 14, 2013, and the date of the RFC assessment on October 6, 2014, and only one more before changing providers. See Tr. 602-03, 670, 673, 972.
Plaintiff argues that the ALJ's inclusion of ADHD as a severe impairment undermines his list of inconsistencies between Dr. Fallick's RFC opinion and the rest of the record. Albeit an interesting argument, the court disagrees. The question raised by Plaintiff really is whether substantial evidence supports the ALJ's decision to include ADHD and bipolar disorder as severe impairments. That looks to be a rather close call.
See Tr. 211.
The court finds it prudent to address one other argument by footnote. Plaintiff argues that her hospitalization in 2005 serves as evidence of decompensation and that the diagnoses she carried at that time explain Dr. Fallick's inclusion of ADHD in his RFC assessment. This is nonsense. Plaintiff's condition eight years prior to her alleged onset date, while she was still working, has no bearing on the disability analysis for the period May 14, 2013, to August 7, 2015. Obviously, Dr. Fallick's RFC assessment is pertinent only if he was addressing Plaintiff's condition in October 2014 when he completed it.
Doc. 10, Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. & Resp. to Def.'s Brief p. 8.
Doc. 10, Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. & Resp. to Def.'s Brief p. 11 (quoting Tr. 217).
Tr. 263.
Doc. 10, Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. & Resp. to Def.'s Brief p. 11 (citing Tr. 541, 571, 614).
Tr. 541, 571.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mary Beth CARSON v. Nancy A. BERRYHILL, Acting Commissioner of The Social Security Administration
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published