ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO REMAND FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
(Re: Docket Nos. 21, 28)
PAUL S. GREWAL, Magistrate Judge.
Plaintiff Valerie J. Marrs-Espinoza suffers from a combination of physical and mental impairments, namely back pain and resulting anxiety and depression.1 After Marrs-Espinoza applied for disability insurance benefits under Title II of the Social Security Act, the Commissioner of Social Security found that she had a disability beginning August 1, 1998.2 In 2002, the Commissioner conducted a Continuing Disability Review and found Marrs-Espinoza remained disabled.3 In 2011, the Commissioner again conducted a CDR but found that Marrs-Espinoza no longer suffered from a disability as of March 30, 2011.4 After a state agency disability hearing, the CDR decision was upheld. An Administrative Law Judge upheld this determination upon reconsideration.5 The ALJ also found that only Marrs-Espinoza's "disorders of the back, s/p back fusion" were medically determinable,6 and concluded that neither Marrs-Espinoza nor her treating physician, Dr. Maureen Miner, were credible.7 The ALJ found Marrs-Espinoza's condition had improved, though he was ambiguous as to whether she had the residual functional capacity to perform light work including past relevant work.8
The Commissioner agrees with Marrs-Espinoza that the ALJ made errors in his determination and requests remand for further administrative proceedings.9 Where the parties disagree is on what happens next. The Commissioner urges that Marrs-Espinoza should be permitted to present additional evidence, including third-party testimony and further medical records, to an ALJ.10 Marrs-Espinoza argues that the court should hold that the ALJ's record was incomplete, the analysis faulty in allocating weight and the findings ultimately improper, such that on remand the Commissioner must simply reinstate Marrs-Espinoza's disability benefits.11
Though there is no doubt that the ALJ significantly erred, because the record is incomplete the court must allow the ALJ the opportunity to evaluate Marrs-Espinoza's disability in light of a complete record. The court therefore DENIES Marrs-Espinoza's motion for summary judgment and for reinstatement of benefits and GRANTS the Commissioner's motion to remand the case for further proceedings.12
I.
Through its administrative law judges, the Commissioner of Social Security determines the continued disability status of claimants by following an eight-step evaluation process.13
At step one, the ALJ must determine if the claimant is engaged in substantial gainful activity. If so, the claimant is no longer considered to have a disability.14 If not, the ALJ continues to step two.
At step two, the ALJ must determine whether the claimant has an impairment or combination of impairments which meets or medically equals the criteria of an impairment listed in 20 C.F.R. § 404, Subpart P, Appendix 1.15 If so, her disability status continues.16 If not, the ALJ moves on to step three.
At step three, the ALJ must determine whether medical improvement has occurred.17 Medical improvement is any decrease in medical severity of the impairment(s) as established by improvement in symptoms, signs and/or laboratory findings.18 If medical improvement has occurred, the analysis proceeds to the fourth step. If not, the analysis proceeds to the fifth step.
At step four, the ALJ must determine whether medical improvement is related to the ability to work.19 Medical improvement is related to the ability to work if it results in an increase in the claimant's RFC to perform basic work activities.20 If medical improvement is not related to the claimant's ability to do work, the ALJ moves on to step five. If the medical improvement is related to the claimant's ability to do work, the ALJ proceeds to the sixth step.
At step five, the ALJ must determine if an exception applies to step three's "no medical improvement" or step four's "medical improvement not related to the claimant's ability to work."21 If none apply, the claimant's disability continues. If an exception applies under 20 C.F.R. § 404.1594(e), the claimant's disability ends—and these exceptions may be considered at any point in the process. If an exception applies under 20 C.F.R. § 404.1594(d), the analysis proceeds to step six.
At step six, the ALJ must determine whether all of the claimant's current impairments in combination are severe.22 If all current impairments in combination do not significantly limit the claimant's ability to do basic work activities, the claimant's disability ends. If the current impairments do significantly limit the claimant's ability to do basic work activities, the ALJ continues to step seven.
At step seven, the ALJ must assess the claimant's RFC based on the current impairments and determine if she can perform past relevant work.23 If the claimant has the capacity to perform past relevant work, her disability has ended. If not, the ALJ continues to step eight.
At step eight, the ALJ must determine whether other work exists that the claimant can perform, given her RFC assessment and considering her age, education and past work experience.24 If the claimant can perform other work, she is no longer disabled. If the claimant cannot perform other work, her disability continues.
When, as here, a recipient of disability benefits challenges the cessation of benefits, the central issue is whether the recipient's medical impairments have improved to the point where she is able to perform substantial gainful activity.25 Whether an individual's entitlement to benefits continues depends on a two-part evaluation process: (1) whether "there has been any medical improvement in [the individual's] impairment(s)"26 and, if so, (2) "whether this medical improvement is related to [the individual's] ability to work."27 Under the first prong, the implementing regulations define "medical improvement" as "any decrease in the medical severity of [the individual's] impairment(s) which was present at the time of the most recent favorable medical decision that [the individual was] disabled or continued to be disabled."28 "A determination that there has been a decrease in medical severity must be based on changes (improvement) in the symptoms, signs and/or laboratory findings associated with [the individual's] impairment(s). ... If there has been a decrease in the severity of the impairments since the favorable decision, the medical improvement is related to the individual's ability to work only if there has been a corresponding `increase in [the claimant's] functional capacity to do basic work activities.'"29
The second part of the cessation analysis focuses on whether the individual has the ability to engage in substantial gainful activity.30 The implementing regulations for this part of the evaluation incorporate many of the standards set forth in the regulations that govern initial disability determinations.31 But in the cessation analysis, "the ultimate burden of proof lies with the Commissioner in termination proceedings."32 An increase in the claimant's functional capacity leads to a cessation of benefits only if, as a result of any increase, the claimant can perform past work or other work that exists in significant numbers in the national economy.33
Marrs-Espinoza received Title II disability benefits as of an onset of August 1, 1998. A favorable continuing disability review occurred on March 5, 2002 which now constitutes the "comparison point decision."34 The Commissioner determined Marrs-Espinoza no longer qualifies for disability benefits as of March 30, 2011.35 A state agency disability hearing officer upheld this determination upon reconsideration. After a video hearing, an ALJ affirmed.36
Marrs-Espinoza now requests that this court remand to reinstate benefits,37 and the Commissioner requests that this court remand for further proceedings.38
II.
The court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331. The parties further consented to the jurisdiction of the undersigned magistrate judge under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) and Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a).39 The court finds this motion suitable for disposition on the papers in light of this court's local rules and procedural order.40
Under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), a district court may review the Commissioner's decision to deny benefits. The court may set aside the Commissioner's decision when the ALJ's findings are based on legal error or are not supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole.41 "Substantial evidence" means "more than a mere scintilla, but less than a preponderance"42 and is "such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion."43 In determining whether substantial evidence supports an ALJ's subsidiary factual determinations, the court may not substitute its judgment for that of the ALJ, but must nonetheless weigh both evidence supporting and detracting from the ALJ's conclusion.44 Reasoning the ALJ did not assert cannot be relied upon to affirm his/her findings45—"only ... the grounds articulated by the agency" may be considered.46
Usually, "[i]f additional proceedings can remedy defects in the original administrative proceeding, a social security case should be remanded."47 The Ninth Circuit has devised a three-part credit-as-true standard, each part of which must be satisfied in order for a court to remand to an ALJ with instructions to calculate and award benefits: (1) the record has been fully developed and further administrative proceedings would serve no useful purpose; (2) the ALJ has failed to provide legally sufficient reasons for rejecting evidence, whether claimant testimony or medical opinion and (3) if the improperly discredited evidence were credited as true, the ALJ would be required to find the claimant disabled on remand.48 Because the record has not been fully developed here, the court may not remand for reinstatement of benefits.
III.
Pursuant to 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1598, the ALJ conducted the eight-step evaluation process for determining whether an individual should maintain disability status.49 At step one, the ALJ found Marrs-Espinoza has not engaged in substantial gainful activity.50 At step two, the ALJ found Marrs-Espinoza does not have an impairment or combination of impairments which meets or equals a listing.51 At step three, the ALJ found medical improvement has occurred as of March 30, 2011.52 Though the ALJ's finding of "disorders of the back, s/p back fusion" was the same medically determinable impairment found at CPD, the ALJ found the severity had decreased based on: a change in range of movement,53 "minimal treatment," and the ALJ's finding that Marrs-Espinoza had the RFC to perform light work as defined in 20 C.F.R. § 404.1567(h).54
At step four, the ALJ found Marrs-Espinoza's medical improvement was related to her ability to do work because it resulted in a less restrictive RFC.55 Thus the ALJ did not make a determination at step five, but instead moved on to step six. At step six, the ALJ found that as of March 30, 2011, Marrs-Espinoza's impairment was severe and caused more than minimal limitation in her ability to perform work activities.56 At step seven, the ALJ stated both "the claimant is able to perform past relevant work" as well as "claimant was not able to perform past relevant work as of March 30, 2011."57 The ALJ moved on to step eight and relied on the medical vocational grid rules 202-13-15 to determine that Marrs-Espinoza can perform other work, thus affirming the termination of her benefits.58
IV.
Having reviewed the ALJ's reasoning, considering adverse as well as reinforcing evidence, the court finds substantial evidence and proper application of law do not support the ALJ's decision. Because additional proceedings may remedy defects in the original administrative proceedings, the case is remanded for further fact finding consistent with the following.59
First, the ALJ erred in developing the record. Consultative examiner Dr. Dale Van Kirk received no medical records for review, and non-examining agency physician Dr. B. Morgan at least failed to review treating physician Miner's April 18, 2012 statement.60 At the hearing, Marrs-Espinoza never signed an I-2-6-98 waiver of representation form, and thus her waiver failed to meet the Higbee requirements.61 The ALJ did not discuss the CPD, the Commissioner's initial findings that Marrs-Espinoza's condition had improved or the light work he thought she could perform. Further, either the record is incomplete, or Marrs-Espinoza never received notice of the reconsideration hearing which she failed to attend.62 The Commissioner's SSA-3441 form also was incomplete in the record.63 Finally, the ALJ should not have refused Marrs-Espinoza's husband's testimony at the hearing.64 On remand, the ALJ must ensure that the record is fully developed.
Second, the ALJ erred in weight allocation. An ALJ must accord some weight to a treating physician's opinion.65 If the ALJ rejects the treating physician's opinion, the ALJ must also provide specific and legitimate reasons for doing so.66 Finding Miner's report does not reflect objective findings,67 the ALJ gave Miner's opinion no weight, instead relying on ambiguous "agency assessments—to the extent they reflect light exertional activity."68 However, Marrs-Espinoza highlights Miner's uncontroverted objective findings:
• Miner diagnosed Marrs-Espinoza with myofascial pain syndrome, fibromyalgia, gastroresophageal reflux disease, opiate dependence, chronic pain syndrome, lumbar discogenic disease with tear, herniated nucleus polposis, radiculopathy, failed back syndrome, a history of lumbar fusion and pain with psychological features secondary to a medical condition.69
• Miner found Marrs-Espinoza has medically deteriorated since her date of maximum medical improvement with ongoing need for treatment as well as new treatment from current clinicians.70
• Miner explained that Marrs-Espinoza's disability led to frequent missed work days, rendering her uncompetitive and "totally disabled from this perspective."71
• The ALJ also found "the objective findings included `[metacarpophalangeal]' pain with range of motion."72
• The ALJ did not address Miner's medication regiment of Trazadone and Effexor or Cymbalta for Marrs-Espinoza's resulting depression and anxiety.
Marrs-Espinoza argues that under SSR 96-2p, the ALJ's errors of failing to weigh or consider objective findings require crediting Miner's opinions as true.73 The Commissioner does not counter Marrs-Espinoza in its brief, other than to generally request further proceedings.
The ALJ also failed to weigh the opinions of consultative psychologist examiner Dr. Pauline Bonilla and non-examining psychologist Dr. Heather Barrons or consider their impact on her disability status when he found Marrs-Espinoza's mental impairment as "non-severe." Marrs-Espinoza's mental issues were treated during her CPD, and she alleged mental impairment in this proceeding.74 Upon rehearing, the ALJ must properly weigh the physician's opinions and consider Marrs-Espinoza's mental impairment.
Third, the ALJ erred in his analysis at step two, three, seven and eight.
At step two, the ALJ must consider the extent to which a mental impairment interferes with an "ability to function independently, appropriately, effectively, and on a sustained basis" including "such factors as the quality and level of [ ] overall functional performance, any episodic limitations [and] the amount of supervision or assistance [ ] require[d]."75 The ALJ must consider activities of daily living; social functioning; concentration, persistence or pace; and episodes of decomposition, and categorize the claimant's limitations as none, mild, moderate, marked or extreme.76 Section 404.1520a (e)(2) mandates that the ALJ's decision show "the significant history, including examination and laboratory findings, and the functional limitations that were considered in reaching a conclusion about the severity of the mental impairment(s). The decision must include a specific finding as to the degree of limitation in each of the functional areas described in paragraph (c) of this section."77
Marrs-Espinoza claims mental impairment due to long-term use of medications, which she says affects her memory, concentration, stress and anxiety.78 Bonilla only partially analyzed Marrs-Espinoza's mental impairment,79 and the ALJ did not go through the required steps in considering Marrs-Espinoza's metal impairment claims.80
Also at step two, after finding Marrs-Espinoza was not gainfully employed, the ALJ did not determined whether Marrs-Espinoza had an impairment or combination of impairments which meets or equals a listing.81 Consideration of Miner's findings might have led the ALJ to determine the aggregate of Marrs-Espinoza's impairments were equivalent to listing 12.04 affective disorders. However, the ALJ did little more than mention Miner's diagnoses.
Further, in his analysis of Marrs-Espinoza's subjective pain, the ALJ failed to apply the Cotton two-step test.82 If (1) the claimant produces objective medical evidence of an impairment or combination of impairments which (2) could reasonably be expected to produce pain or other symptoms, and there is no testimony showing malingering, then the ALJ must either accept the claimant's testimony on the severity of her symptoms or provide specific findings or state clear and convincing reasons to reject it.83 The claimant need only show that his or her impairment could reasonably have caused some degree of the symptom.84 The ALJ then must consider all of the factors enumerated in SSR 96-7p and 20 C.F.R. § 416.929(c)(3)(i)-(vii).85
The ALJ did not do so—such as failing to account for Marrs-Espinoza's experience of side effects from long-term medication use. He found her testimony of the intensity, persistence and limiting effects of her medically determinable impairments (back pain) incredible "on the issue of the degree to which pain interferes with her work activities."86 This finding primarily was due to sporadic treatment or missed appointments and the elderly care Marrs-Espinoza performed ten hours weekly.87 In determining credibility, an ALJ may normally rely upon a claimant's noncompliance with treatment to provide clear and convincing evidence for an adverse credibility finding.88 Here, however, the ALJ failed specifically to "identify what testimony is not credible and what evidence undermines the claimant's complaints"89—especially when compliance relies on memory which Marrs-Espinoza claims to have lost. The ALJ's reasons for rejecting Marrs-Espinoza's credibility do not appear to be based on substantial evidence, and the ALJ has not provided "specific, clear and convincing reasons" as required.90
Upon remand, the ALJ must provide the significant history, including examination and laboratory findings, and the functional limitations considered in reaching a conclusion about the severity of mental impairment or impairments under Section 404.152a. The ALJ must follow the necessary steps in analyzing the diagnoses of Miner and the subjective pain and credibility of Marrs-Espinoza.
At step three, "medical improvement" is defined as "any decrease in the medical severity of [the individual's] impairment(s) which was present at the time of the most recent favorable medical decision that [the individual was] disabled or continued to be disabled."91 "A determination that there has been a decrease in medical severity must be based on changes (improvement) in the symptoms, signs and/or laboratory findings associated with [the individual's] impairment(s)" of the CDP.92 The Commissioner bears the burden of establishing that a claimant has experienced medical improvement that would allow her to engage in substantial gainful activity.93
Here, the ALJ did not discuss Marrs-Espinoza's depression and affective mental disorders at the time of the CPD,94 and nor did he compare Van Kirk's findings to symptoms at the time of the CPD.95 As a result, there is no indication of improvement or reasonably objective finding that, for example, Marrs-Espinoza's range of motion improved. The ALJ found Marrs-Espinoza's movements were pain-free, when indeed Van Kirk noted "[t]he low back pain radiates down both legs. Coughing or sneezing does increase the pain. Also, the pain increases if she has to lift heavy objects, bend, twist, stoop, crouch, climb, kneel, push, crawl, or pull. She can stand and walk for about one hour. Sitting is limited to about one hour."96 "She has a 14 centimeter longitudinal scar over the mid to lower lumbar spine area. This is where her main pain is. She also has a 12 centimeter longitudinal scar over the lower abdomen from her anterior interbody fusion. The pain in the lower back does radiate into the waist area posteriorly."97 Further, Marrs-Espinoza's pain medications have objectively increased, and Marrs-Espinoza's testimonials of pain are nearly constant.98 The ALJ did not meet his burden of establishing Marrs-Espinoza experienced a medical improvement that would allow her to engage in substantial gainful activity.99 The ALJ must correct these errors on remand.
At step seven, "a failure to first make a function-by-function assessment of the individual's limitations or restrictions could result in the adjudicator overlooking some of an individual's limitations or restrictions," which "could lead to an incorrect use of an exertional category to find that the individual is able to do past relevant work" and "an erroneous finding that the individual is not disabled."100 Here, the ALJ did not call a vocational expert, did not detail the past relevant work Marrs-Espinoza engaged in and did not perform a function-by-function assessment of Marrs-Espinoza's past relevant work. The ALJ instead gave an ambiguous finding and nonetheless moved on to step eight. On remand, the ALJ must make a clear function-by-function assessment and determination.
At step eight, despite Van Kirk's finding that Marrs-Espinoza had non-exertional limitations of bending, stooping, crouching, climbing, kneeling, balancing, crawling, pushing or pulling due to radiating pain, the ALJ relied on grid rules 202.13-202.15 to find jobs Marrs-Espinoza could do. An ALJ may only substitute the grids for vocational expert testimony when they "completely and accurately represent a claimant's limitations."101 Because "the grids are predicated on a claimant suffering from an impairment which manifests itself by limitations in meeting the strength requirements of jobs (`exertional limitations'), they may not be fully applicable" to a claimant's non-exertional limitations.102 But the mere allegation of a non-exertional limitation does not preclude the use of the grids—for the grids to be inadequate, the non-exertional limitation must be "`sufficiently severe so as to significantly limit the range of work permitted by the claimant's exertional limitations.'"103 When "a claimant's [non-exertional] limitations are in themselves enough to limit his range of work, the grids do not apply, and the testimony of a vocational expert is required to identify specific jobs within the claimant's abilities."104
Here, the ALJ made no determination that the additional non-exertional limitations described by Van Kirk did not erode the occupational base.105 The ALJ's RFC determination that Marrs-Espinoza could do light work is not based on substantial evidence because he did not consider Miner's findings of Marrs-Espinoza's limitations, determine at step two whether Marrs-Espinoza qualifies under a listing and determine at step three whether her impairments improved medically. Further, the ALJ did not send Marrs-Espinoza for another consultative psychological exam, such as Wechsler and Trails testing, to determine the level of her memory and concentration limitations not addressed by the consultative psychological examiner. The testimony of a vocational expert is required where non-exertional limitations significantly limit the range of work a claimant can perform.106 These were additional errors the ALJ must correct in further proceedings on remand.
SO ORDERED.