Tonev v. Sullivan ( 1992 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion




    October 15, 1992 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]






    ____________________


    No. 92-1059

    GEORGE TONEV,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    LOUIS W. SULLIVAN,
    SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

    Defendant, Appellee.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
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    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
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    and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
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    ____________________

    George Tonev on brief pro se.
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    Lincoln C. Almond, United States Attorney, Everett C. Sammartino,
    _________________ _____________________
    Senior Assistant United States Attorney, and Thomas D. Ramsey,
    __________________
    Assistant Regional Counsel, Department of Health and Human Services,
    on brief for appellee.


    ____________________


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    Per Curiam. The only issue in this pro se appeal from
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    the denial of disability insurance benefits is whether

    substantial evidence supports the Secretary of Health and

    Human Services conclusion that, because claimant's

    impairments, taken together, were nonsevere, his claim was

    properly disposed of at step two of the five-step sequential

    evaluation process. 20 C.F.R. 404.1520. Finding

    reasonable and adequate support for the Secretary's

    determination, we affirm.

    A year after his insured status expired on December 31,

    1986, claimant-appellant George Tonev filed this application

    for Social Security disability benefits. In it he alleged

    that he had been unable to work since January 1982 in either

    of the two businesses he owned and managed because he was

    disabled by memory loss, constant pain, headaches, backache,

    a spot on his left lung, breathing and vision problems, low

    blood pressure and a broken left knee. Tonev, a college

    graduate with two years of post-graduate work, was 61 years

    old at the time of his application. An electrical engineer

    by training, he testified, at a 1989 hearing before an

    administrative law judge (ALJ), that both of his companies

    ceased operation in the early 1980's when his health

    problems, specifically, memory lapses, back pain, headaches

    and exhaustion, curtailed his business traveling, rendering

    him unproductive.



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    The ALJ decided that Tonev suffered from hypotension, a

    vitamin B12 deficiency, and hypertrophic ossification of the

    left knee, but that he did not have any documented

    impairments which significantly affected his ability to

    perform basic work activities prior to December 31, 1986 when

    his insured status lapsed. The ALJ concluded that Tonev was

    not disabled because he did not, as of that date, have a

    severe impairment or combination of impairments as required

    by 404.1520(c). The ALJ made what we take to be a

    subsidiary finding that Tonev was able to perform his past

    relevant work as an electrical engineer and a business

    manager prior to the critical date. Tonev submitted

    additional materials to the Appeals Council, but it declined

    to review the ALJ's decision. On judicial review, a

    magistrate-judge found that there was substantial evidence to

    support the ALJ's ruling, and, after a hearing on claimant's

    objections to the magistrate's report, the district judge

    approved the magistrate's findings and affirmed the

    Secretary's determination.

    To begin, a disability is defined, in part relevant to

    the discussion here, as "the inability to do any substantial

    gainful activity by reason of any medically determinable

    physical or mental impairment." 404.1505(a). The

    regulations which implement the administration of disability

    determinations instruct a claimant:



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    Your impairment must result from anatomical,
    physiological, or psychological abnormalities which
    can be shown by medically acceptable clinical and
    laboratory diagnostic techniques. A physical or
    mental impairment must be established by medical
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    evidence consisting of signs, symptoms, and
    ________
    laboratory findings, not only by your statement of
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    symptoms.
    ________

    404.1508 (emphasis added). Claimant's own description of

    symptoms are evaluated in light of the extent to which

    medical findings confirm those symptoms.

    We will never find that you are disabled based on
    your symptoms, including pain, unless medical signs
    or findings show that there is a medical condition
    that could be reasonably expected to produce those
    symptoms.

    404.1529; see also 404.1529.
    ___ ____

    To prove disability, claimant must establish, at step

    two, the existence of "a medically severe impairment or

    combination of impairments." Bowen v. Yuckert, 482 U.S. 137,
    _____ _______

    146 n.5 (1987). This means making "a reasonable threshold

    showing that the impairment[s] ... could conceivably keep him

    ... from working." McDonald v. Secretary of Health & Human
    ________ ____________________________

    Services, 795 F.2d 1118, 1122 (1st Cir. 1986); Yuckert, 482
    ________ _______

    U.S. at 149 n.7 ("[B]elow a threshold level of medical

    severity, an individual is not prevented from engaging in

    gainful activity 'by reason of' the physical or mental

    impairment.") (citing 42 U.S.C. 423(d)(1)(A)). To survive

    step two, claimant must prove that his impairments would have

    more than minimal limiting effects on his ability to perform
    __________

    basic work activities. McDonald, 795 F.2d at 1125 (endorsing
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    de minimis interpretation of the "severity" threshold
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    requirement); 404.1520(c) (a severe impairment

    significantly limits claimant's physical or mental ability to

    perform basic work activities); 404.1521(b) (basic work

    activities, those abilities and aptitudes necessary to do

    most jobs, defined in detail).

    The Secretary, in making a nonseverity determination at

    step two, must evaluate whether "the medical evidence

    establishes only a slight abnormality [or combination of

    slight abnormalities] which would have no more than a minimal

    effect on an individual's ability to work even if the

    individual's age, education, or work experience were

    specifically considered." Social Security Ruling (SSR) 85-

    28, quoted in Yuckert, 482 U.S. at 154 n.12; see also
    __________ _______ ___ ____

    Barrientos v. Secretary of Health & Human Services, 820 F.2d
    __________ ____________________________________

    1, 2 (1st Cir. 1987). The Secretary may use "medical factors

    alone to screen out applicants whose impairments are so

    minimal that, as a matter of common sense, they are clearly

    not disabled from gainful employment," McDonald, 795 F.2d at
    ________

    1122, i.e., prevented from working because of them. Id. at
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    1125. If the medical evidence does not "clearly" establish

    nonseverity, the adjudication process must continue. Id.
    ___

    quoting SSR 85-28. And, while step two focuses upon

    limitations on the ability to perform the basic work
    _____

    activities common to most jobs, a denial at this step is also



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    inappropriate when the evidence shows the claimant unable to

    perform his or her past work. Id. at 1125 & n.6.
    ___

    We conclude that the Secretary correctly applied the

    severity regulation in finding that the claimant had not

    shown a medical basis for his claim that his ability to

    engage in any substantial gainful work was seriously affected

    as of the date he was last insured. The medical evidence,

    which we have carefully reviewed and which is set out in

    detail by the magistrate-judge, see Report and Recommendation
    ___

    at 5-8, Rec. Doc. 15, reveals that Tonev made intermittent

    visits to the Mayo clinic in 1968 and 1970, twice in 1983 and

    once again in 1987. It is undisputed that the sole purpose

    of these brief visits was to undergo various diagnostic

    tests. Over this time span, of the dozens of tests

    performed, almost all were negative or within normal limits.

    The exceptions were four 1983 tests which revealed a

    calcified (and apparently benign) nodule in the lower lobe of

    the left lung, below normal vitamin B12 levels, hypertrophic

    ossification of the left knee due to a prior trauma, and some

    degenerative changes of the first metatarsophalangeal joint

    of the right foot suggestive of arthritis. Letters to the

    claimant from the internist who had interpreted these 1983

    test results recommended that claimant begin treatment with

    B12 injections, and repeatedly stated that further

    "suggestions" could not be made without a complete medical



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    examination. Four years later, in 1987, Tonev again

    underwent various tests at the Mayo Clinic. All were within

    normal limits, except the B12 assay. Again it was

    recommended that a regular physical examination be had.

    Finally, there are two letters from a treating physician

    regarding a November 1988 visit when claimant reported an 8-

    10 year history of hypotension, progressively worsening

    fatigue, cluster headaches, memory deficits, positional

    vertigo, fainting spells, and right shoulder and left knee

    injuries. The doctor found claimant's B12 levels and blood

    pressure "to be low," and stated that Tonev was in the

    process of completing a full diagnostic workup. Those

    results are not in the record.

    At the administrative hearing, claimant testified that

    he suffered from memory lapses, back pain, incapacitating

    headaches, and exhaustion, and had, in the early 1980's,

    sought help for these problems from two doctor friends in

    Chicago. He stated that he used an over-the-counter

    medication for his headaches, and self-treated the back pain

    and exhaustion by lying down and sleeping long hours. He

    also recounted how his memory lapses interfered with his

    ability to read, write, and concentrate. In both disability

    reports filed with his January 1988 application (apparently

    the original was thought lost and a duplicate was submitted

    by the claimant), Tonev indicated that 1) he currently had no



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    doctor, 2) other than taking aspirin-type medication and

    "sleeping tablets", he had not been treated for his ailments,

    and 3) no doctor had advised him to cut back on his

    activities in any way. Later, in his request to the Appeals

    Council for review of the ALJ's decision, when he was no

    longer represented by counsel, Tonev, pro se, lodged
    ___ __

    objections, reiterated in the district court and here,1 that

    his medical records as presented to the Secretary were

    inadequate and inaccurate. The Appeals Council, in declining

    review, reviewed these objections as well as representations

    that the medical records of other doctors would be provided,
    _____

    and found no basis for delaying resolution of the case for

    the protracted period that Tonev had requested.

    In light of the evidence, we cannot say that the

    Secretary acted unreasonably in deciding that Tonev's

    impairments, as of the critical date, were not severe. It is

    manifestly clear that the relatively sparse medical

    foundation laid by the claimant is devoid of any report of a

    complete medical examination or treatment prescribed. There

    are no recorded clinical observations, no diagnoses, no

    evaluation of functional limitations of any kind. "Gaps"

    such as these, particularly the apparent failure to undergo a


    ____________________

    1. Tonev has moved to submit additional materials in support
    of this appeal. Under the limitations on judicial review
    imposed by 42 U.S.C. 405(g), we may only examine the
    evidence in the administrative record before us. See also 20
    ___ ____
    C.F.R. 404.951(b).

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    medical examination or to seek care, provide substantial

    evidence for the permissible inference by the Secretary that

    claimant "would have secured more treatment had his

    [conditions] been as intense as alleged." Irlanda Ortiz v.
    _____________

    Secretary of Health & Human Services, 955 F.2d 765, 769 (1st
    _____________________________________

    Cir. 1991). The fact that the hypotension finding is

    supported only by claimant's historical account, and not by

    any objective data obtained within the critical period, also

    supports the ALJ's finding discounting the degree of

    incapacity alleged. Similarly, claimant's allegations of

    severe pain are inconsistent with the medical evidence, and

    provide an additional reason for the Secretary to doubt

    Tonev's credibility in that regard. See, e.g., Gonzalez
    ___ ____ ________

    Garcia v. Secretary of Health & Human Services, 835 F.2d 1, 3
    ______ ____________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1987); Barrientos, 820 F.2d at 3.
    __________

    In sum, substantial evidence supports the ALJ's

    conclusion that the claimant's impairments, as of December

    31, 1986, did not significantly limit his ability to perform

    either basic work activities, see Gonzalez-Ayala v. Secretary
    ___ ______________ _________

    of Health & Human Services, 807 F.2d 255, 256 (1st Cir.
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    1986), or any unique feature of his former work as an

    engineer and business manager. See Gonzalez Garcia, 835 F.2d
    ___ _______________

    at 3.

    Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is

    affirmed.
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    Appellant's motion for leave of court for submission of


    three (identical) folders of 93 pages each is denied.

















































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