SANDRA S. BECKWITH, Senior District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Magistrate Judge Litkovitz's Report and Recommendation of January 26, 2016 (Doc. No. 22) and the Commissioner of Social Security's objections to the Report and Recommendation. Doc. No. 23. In her Report and Recommendation, Judge Litkovitz concluded that the Administrative Law Judge's ("ALJ") determination that Plaintiff is not disabled under the Social Security regulations was not supported by substantial evidence because the ALJ failed to state the weight she gave to the opinion of a consultative examining psychologist, Dr. Gronek. Judge Litkovitz further concluded that this error was not harmless because Dr. Gronek's opinion was inconsistent with the mental residual functional capacity adopted by the ALJ. Judge Litkovitz, therefore, recommended that the ALJ's decision be reversed and that the case be remanded to the ALJ pursuant to Sentence Four of 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) for further proceedings, including evaluating and weighing Dr. Gronek's opinion. In her objections, the Commissioner argues that the ALJ did evaluate Dr. Gronek's opinion and any error she made in not specifically stating the weight she gave to that opinion was harmless because the reasons for her decision are discernible from the record.
For the reasons that follow, the Court concludes that any error the ALJ made evaluating Dr. Gronek's opinion was harmless. Accordingly, the Commissioner's objections to Magistrate Judge Litkovitz's Report and Recommendation are well-taken and are
Plaintiff Wesley L. Snell filed applications for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income based on impairments of spinal stenosis, arthritis, and depression. The ALJ determined that Plaintiff has severe impairments of status post lumbar laminectomy and depression. Tr. 16. However, the only issue presented by the Commissioner's objections is the ALJ's assessment of the state agency examining psychologist and state agency reviewing psychologist's opinions concerning the effect of Plaintiff's mental impairment on his attention, concentration, persistence, and pace. The Court, therefore, will limit its discussion of the medical evidence to that issue.
In May 2012, Dr. Taylor Gronek performed a consultative psychological examination of Plaintiff. Dr. Gronek concluded that Plaintiff has no limitations in following simple instructions, responding appropriately to supervisors and co-workers, and responding appropriately to work pressures in a work setting. Tr. 521. Dr. Gronek concluded, however, that "[i]t is likely that the claimant will work at a slower pace as a result of concentration difficulties secondary to pain. He may show work pace slower than other work peers."
Reviewing psychologist Dr. Aracelis Rivera indicated that Dr. Gronek's opinion is entitled to "great weight." Tr. 80. Dr. Rivera then opined that Plaintiff's ability to maintain concentration and pace for extended periods is moderately limited. Tr. 83. In the section explaining this limitation on concentration and persistence, Dr. Rivera wrote, "Clmt is capable of performing tasks which are relatively static in nature. Limited d/t difficulty focusing/concentrating caused by pain symptoms [sic]."
During the evidentiary hearing, the ALJ asked the vocational expert to assume a hypothetical person who,
In her written decision, the ALJ determined that Plaintiff has the mental residual functional capacity to perform jobs involving only routine tasks in which instructions can be repeated as necessary, and involve only routine tasks which are static in nature, and in which changes are infrequent and can be explained. In reaching this conclusion, the ALJ credited Dr. Rivera's opinion. Tr. 21. Specifically, the ALJ wrote:
Tr. 21 (internal citations omitted).
The ALJ also discussed but did not assign any particular weight to Dr. Gronek's opinion:
Tr. 20.
As stated above, the ALJ relied on Dr. Rivera's opinion and the vocational expert's testimony to conclude that Plaintiff has the mental RFC to perform several jobs that exist in significant numbers in the national economy and therefore is not disabled under the Social Security regulations. The Appeals Council denied Plaintiff's request to review the ALJ's decision; thus the ALJ's decision became the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security.
Plaintiff filed a timely complaint for judicial review of the ALJ's decision. As is relevant here, in his Statement of Specific Errors, Plaintiff alleged that the ALJ erred by not explaining the weight she gave to Dr. Gronek's opinion. The Commissioner responded that any error was harmless since the ALJ's reasoning can be discerned from her opinion. Magistrate Judge Litkovitz disagreed, however, because she found that Dr. Gronek's opinion is inconsistent with the mental RFC adopted by the ALJ. Thus, Judge Litkovitz recommended reversing the ALJ's decision and remanding the case for further proceedings. The Commissioner then filed timely objections to Judge Litkovitz's report.
The relevant statute provides the standard of review to be applied by this Court in reviewing decisions by the ALJ.
The Court finds that the ALJ's decision was supported by substantial evidence. In contrast to Magistrate Judge Litkovitz, the Court concludes that the mental RFC adopted by the ALJ is fully consistent with Dr. Gronek's opinion and implicitly incorporates the mental functional limitations indicated in her report. Consequently, any error that the ALJ made in not stating the specific weight she assigned to Dr. Gronek's opinion was a harmless error.
Dr. Gronek was an examining psychologist and not Plaintiff's treating psychologist. But the ALJ's failure to explain the weight given to the opinion of even a treating physician will be a harmless error if the RFC she adopts incorporates the limitations indicated in the treating physician's opinion.
In summary, the Court concludes that the mental RFC adopted by the ALJ was consistent with Dr. Gronek's opinion and further that the RFC adequately accounts for the mental functional limitations suggested by Dr. Gronek's report. Accordingly, the ALJ's failure to state the specific weight she gave to Dr. Gronek's report and the reasons for that decision was a harmless error.
Accordingly, the Commissioner's objections to Magistrate Judge Litkovitz's Report and Recommendation are well-taken and are