ROBERT L. MILLER, Jr., District Judge.
Luis Caban seeks judicial review of the latest decision of the Commissioner of Social Security denying his applications for disability insurance benefits and Supplemental Security Income under the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 423 and 1381 et seq. The court has jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(g) and 1383(c)(3). For the reasons that follow, the court reverses and remands this case to the Social Security Administration for further proceedings.
The extensive procedural history in this case is well-documented, and needn't be repeated here. Mr. Caban has applied for disability insurance benefits and SSI three times: (1) on March 30, 2006 asserting disability as of October 31, 2005; (2) on December 17, 2008 asserting disability as of November 15, 2008; and (3) on July 1, 2010. All three applications were denied. When this court vacated the ALJ's November 19, 2008 decision denying Mr. Caban's original applications (A.R. 21-35) and remanded for further proceedings in July 2010, see
The ALJ found that Mr. Caban had severe physical and mental impairments, but "only his obesity, his degenerative disc disease and his affective disorder caused ongoing limitations that lasted at least 12 months," and that his impairments alone and in combination didn't meet or equal the requirements of a listed impairment (specifically Listings 1.04 and 12.00 et seq.), or preclude him from performing his past relevant work as a general clerk, automobile sales representative, and industrial sales representative.
When the Appeals Council denied Mr. Caban's request for review, the ALJ's decision became the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security.
The issue before this court isn't whether Mr. Caban is disabled, but whether substantial evidence supports the ALJ's decision that he is not.
The ALJ didn't identify or address Mr. Caban's non-severe impairments and the effect they might have had on his ability to engage in work-related activity, steadfastly asserting that he wasn't required to do so or had previously decided that they weren't substantiated or didn't limit Mr. Caban's ability to engage in work-related activity. He is mistaken.
The regulations might not require an ALJ to specifically identify which impairments are severe and which are non-severe at the second step of the evaluation process, but he must consider all of the claimant's impairments — including impairments that are not severe — in determining the claimant's residual functional capacity at the fourth step. See
The ALJ rejected in whole, or in part, the opinions of virtually every treating, consulting, and examining medical source (Drs. Lazoff, Bretz, Dwyer, Sohail, Kamineni, Boen, Von Bargen), as well as the state agency's reviewing physicians, because they weren't sufficiently supported by objective findings and/or weren't consistent with a functional capacity evaluation that was completed by Gina Smith, a registered occupational therapist, on November 28, 2006 (finding that Mr. Caban retained the capacity to perform a restricted range of light work activity on a full-time basis (A.R. 257-310)) or with the ALJ's subjective belief that Mr. Caban was exaggerating his symptoms and was capable of working.
Dr. Lazoff and Dr. Bretz were treating physicians, and as such their opinions were entitled to "controlling weight" if they were "well supported by medical findings and not inconsistent with other substantial evidence in the record."
The ALJ's assessment of the consulting and examining physicians' opinions is similarly flawed. He found that they weren't supported by objective findings and were inconsistent with other evidence (Ms. Smith's 2006 functional capacity evaluation and the "credible portions" of Dr. Lazoff's 2007 opinions (those portions that were consistent with Ms. Smith's evaluation)). But "[a]n ALJ can reject an examining physician's opinion only for reasons supported by substantial evidence in the record; a contradictory opinion of a non-examining physician does not, by itself, suffice."
The ALJ speculated that Mr. Caban might have exaggerated his symptoms and limitations and that his treating and consulting physicians might have relied on his subjective complaints in assessing the severity of his impairments. Having found fault with virtually all of the treating and consulting physicians' opinions, the ALJ substituted his own medical judgment for theirs and concluded that Mr. Caban wasn't disabled, effectively making himself the doctor. His findings in that regard are inadequate.See
While a claimant bears the burden of proving disability, the ALJ in a Social Security hearing has a duty to develop a full and fair record. See
To the extent the ALJ's decision regarding the severity of Mr. Caban's impairments and his residual functional capacity was premised on his assessment of Mr. Caban's credibility, it too is insufficient. The regulations do not "require objective medical evidence to corroborate statements about the intensity, persistence, and functional effects of pain or other symptoms,"
The ALJ found that Mr. Caban's statements about the severity and limiting effects of his impairments weren't credible primarily because they weren't supported by objective medical evidence. But as the court has previously determined, the ALJ's assessment of the medical evidence was inadequate.
Whether Mr. Caban's statements are credible and whether he is capable of performing his past relevant work or other jobs are questions for the ALJ, not the court.
Neither substantial evidence or an adequate discussion of the issues support the ALJ's findings with respect to the severity and limiting effects of Mr. Caban's impairments. When, as here, the court can't see an "accurate and logical bridge between the evidence and the result," remand is required.
Accordingly, the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security is REVERSED and the matter REMANDED.
SO ORDERED.