Edwards v. SHHS ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion










    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]



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    No. 94-1345





    FLORENCE A. EDWARDS,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

    Defendant, Appellee.

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    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

    [Hon. Paul J. Barbadoro, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ___________________

    Before

    Selya, Cyr and Boudin,
    Circuit Judges.
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    Raymond J. Kelly on brief for appellant.
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    Paul M. Gagnon, United States Attorney, Patrick M. Walsh,
    ________________ __________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, and Robert M. Peckrill,
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    Assistant Regional Counsel, Department of Health & Human
    Services, on brief for appellee.



    __________________
    September 2, 1994
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    Per Curiam. Claimant Florence Edwards appeals a
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    district court order affirming a decision of the Secretary of

    Health and Human Services that denies social security

    disability benefits. We affirm.

    The background facts are thoroughly detailed in the

    decisions below. Briefly, claimant alleges a disability due

    to injuries she sustained on February 28, 1988, when she

    jumped from a second story window to escape a fire. She

    suffered significant fractures to both feet and a fractured

    vertebrae. After a month in the hospital and physical

    therapy on an outpatient basis, she returned to her work at a

    shoe company in September, 1988. Adjustments were made in

    her work duties to accommodate her new mobility limitations,

    and she remained at her job until the plant closed in

    December, 1988. For a period thereafter she accepted

    unemployment benefits. In April, 1989 she underwent a

    subtalor fusion of the left foot. At the time the treating

    orthopedist noted that as a result of her fractures her feet

    were significantly deformed, with residual arthritis. In

    July, 1990, a similar subtalor fusion was performed on her

    right foot. It is not disputed that claimant relies on a

    cane, walks with difficulty, and apparently suffers permanent

    limitations on her ambulatory abilities. She also suffers

    from hypertension and obesity, and complains of chronic lower

    back pain.



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    There were two hearings before an Administrative

    Law Judge (ALJ) on claimant's application for disability

    benefits. Claimant was represented by the same counsel at

    both hearings. A decision denying benefits after the first

    hearing was vacated by the Appeals Council, and the matter

    remanded to the ALJ for the taking of additional evidence

    relating to claimant's post- operative condition. The second

    hearing also resulted in a decision to deny benefits, and the

    Appeals Council denied review. On cross-motions by the

    parties, the district court affirmed the Secretary's decision

    in a lengthy memorandum opinion.

    The ALJ's second decision found claimant not

    disabled at step five of the familiar sequential analytic

    process, in that claimant had a residual functional capacity

    to perform a limited range of unskilled sedentary jobs which

    exist in significant numbers in the national economy. 20

    C.F.R. 404.1520(f), 404.1561, 404.1566. Claimant renews

    in this court several of the multiple assignments of error

    she urged below, and attempts to add a new one for the first

    time on appeal. First claimant argues, as

    below, that the ALJ failed to develop an adequate record

    relating to her residual functional capacity, because he

    violated an "explicit order from the Appeals Council to have

    the examining physician [Dr. Shea] complete a specific form.

    . . " According to claimant, Dr. Shea should have filled out



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    the very same preprinted form that was used by claimant's

    treating doctor, Dr. Wachs.

    Claimant's reading of the Appeals Council's order

    is questionable,1 but we need not tarry over this detail

    because the record developed below is clearly adequate. The

    ALJ had before him a thorough residual functional assessment

    from Dr. Wachs, who was associated with claimant's treating

    orthopedist. In addition, there was a full consultative

    examination by Dr. Shea, who was also familiar with the

    claimant, having evaluated her in connection with previous

    applications. Dr. Shea's report contains detailed

    assessments of appellant's range of motion, reflexes,

    flexion, walking, sitting, and standing abilities. Both

    doctors reported substantial limitations on claimant's

    functional abilities, reducing the range of work which she

    might perform to less than the full range of sedentary jobs

    available.

    It is true that the two doctors' reports are in

    different formats, but we fail to see any prejudice in this



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    1. The Appeals Council instructed the ALJ to obtain, with
    the cooperation of claimant's attorney, medical evidence
    relating to claimant's post-operative condition,
    [F]rom the claimant's treating sources . . .
    a medical assessment of the claimant's ability to
    perform work-related activities (20 CFR 404.1513
    and 416.913). Further the [ALJ] will obtain an
    orthopedic consultative examination with a medical
    assessment in order to resolve the [severity of
    claimant's limitations].

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    asymmetry. Each report formed the basis of a separate

    hypothetical question propounded to the vocational expert

    (VE). The VE identified approximately 67,500 jobs in the

    national economy which claimant might perform despite the

    functional limitations reported by Dr. Wachs, and 135,000

    jobs despite the limitations observed by Dr. Shea.2 Even

    the lower of these two estimates sufficed to satisfy the

    Secretary's burden of showing "significant numbers" of

    suitable jobs in the national economy. 20 C.F.R. 404.1566;

    see also Keating v. Secretary of HHS, 848 F.2d 271, 276 (1st
    _________ _______ ________________

    Cir. 1988) (to show that work exists in significant numbers,

    the Secretary must show significant, not isolated, numbers of

    jobs which a claimant can perform).3



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    2. The numbers in the text are the adjusted totals computed
    by the ALJ. The ALJ adjusted the VE's raw figures downward
    using percentage decreases which the VE had said would
    account for claimant's various limitations. Our own reading
    of the transcript suggests that the ALJ's adjusted figure may
    be lower than the VE intended, as we glimpse the possibility
    of a double deduction, but since any mistake is in claimant's
    favor, we need not explore the matter further.

    3. While claimant urges that the meaning of "significant
    numbers" varies with the facts of each case, she points to
    nothing that might diminish the significance of the very high
    numbers in her case. Her claim that her disability prevents
    her from driving is somewhat contradicted by her own
    testimony, and her alternate contention that there is little
    public transportation is irrelevant. See Lopez-Diaz v.
    ___ __________
    Secretary of HEW, 585 F.2d 1137, 1140-42 (1st Cir. 1978). We
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    also do not consider claimant's contentions relating to the
    "significance" of the smaller numbers given by the VE in
    response to hypotheticals which were based on the claimant's
    subjective complaints, because the VE found those complaints
    not credible.

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    Since the ALJ's conclusion finds substantial

    support in the treating doctor's, Dr. Wach's, assessment,

    claimant's fallback argument that the ALJ substituted his own

    opinion for that of Dr. Shea is irrelevant, and in any event,

    rests on a strained reading of the record. It is clear that

    claimant suffered no prejudice from the format of Dr. Shea's

    report.

    Second, claimant argues that the ALJ did not

    properly evaluate her subjective complaints of pain. On our

    own review, we agree with the district court that the ALJ

    gave full and careful consideration to claimant's pain

    complaints in conformity with the regulations and case law.

    See Avery v. Secretary of HHS, 797 F.2d 19, 21 (1st Cir.
    ___ _____ _________________

    1986). The record does not support the contention that the

    ALJ gave undue weight to claimant's use of non-prescription

    pain medications. We defer to the ALJ's assessment of

    claimant's credibility, especially as it was supported by

    specific findings. See Frustaglia v. Secretary of HHS, 829
    ___ __________ _________ ___

    F.2d 192, 195 (1st Cir. 1987).

    Third, claimant argues, for the first time on

    appeal, that there was insufficient evidence because the VE

    "mischaracterized," as exertionally sedentary, the various

    jobs he identified as available to a person with claimant's

    characteristics. The VE testified that "some" jobs in the

    following categories would be suitable: machine operation



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    jobs, such as grinding, buffing and polishing; manual

    assembler; inspector; and cashier/ticket seller.

    In her appellate brief, claimant assigns code

    numbers to these job titles based on information in the

    Dictionary of Occupational Titles (revised 4th ed. 1991)

    (DOT). All of the code numbers which claimant assigns

    correspond to jobs which the DOT classifies as requiring a

    greater than "sedentary"

    exertional capacity, and in one instance, a greater skill

    level than claimant possesses.4

    The VE, however, did not assign DOT code numbers in

    his testimony, only general job titles. While the code

    numbers affixed by claimant refer to similar job titles,

    there are numerous DOT listings with superficially similar

    titles, or work descriptions, some of which are classified as

    sedentary and unskilled.5 Claimant's point thus cannot be


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    4. The code numbers and corresponding titles assigned by
    claimant are: sanding machine buffer, D.O.T. 662.685-022;
    polisher, D.O.T. 705.684-058; polisher and buffer II, D.O.T.
    705.684-062; grinder, D.O.T. 555.685-026; grinder II, D.O.T.
    603.664-010; assembler, small products, D.O.T. 706-684-022;
    production assembler, D.O.T. 706-687-010; inspector of
    plastics and composites, D.O.T. 806.261-046; ticket seller,
    D.O.T. 211.467-030; cashier II, D.O.T. 211.462-010; cashier
    I, D.O.T. 211.362.010.

    5. For example, the DOT classifies the following jobs as
    exertionally sedentary, and requiring no more than 0-3 months
    of vocational preparation: check cashier, D.O.T. 211.462-026;
    cashier, tube room, 211.482.010; pricer, message and delivery
    service, 214.467-014; tax clerk, 219.487-010; scheduler,
    238.367-034; heel sorter, 788.584-010. Moreover, the
    Secretary's Medical-Vocational Guidelines, which takes

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    readily verified by simply comparing some DOT listings with

    the VE's testimony.

    In other circumstances, the uncertainty generated

    by claimant's observations might cause concern. While not

    the only reliable source of job information, the Secretary

    takes administrative notice of the accuracy of the DOT's

    generalized job descriptions. See 20 C.F.R. 404.1566(d),
    ___

    Subpart P, app. 2, 200.00(b). The Secretary bears the

    burden of proving the existence of jobs in the economy that

    the claimant can perform. See Goodermote v. Secretary of
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    HHS, 690 F.2d 5, 7 (1st Cir. 1982). A clear dichotomy
    ___

    between the DOT and the VE's testimony on this point may call

    into question the sufficiency of the Secretary's evidence.

    Courts have vacated the Secretary's decisions where

    the VE's testimony is contradicted in its entirety by the DOT

    and the only reasonable explanation seems to be that the VE

    made a mistake. See, e.g., Young v. Secretary of HHS, 957
    _________ _____ ________________

    F.2d 386, 392 (7th Cir. 1992) (VE's testimony as to

    characteristics of claimant's former jobs inconsistent with

    DOT description); Ellison v. Sullivan, 921 F.2d 816, 821-22
    _______ ________


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    administrative notice of the numbers of jobs generally
    available in the economy, reports the existence of a
    significant range of sedentary work available to a person of
    claimant's age (36) and skills (unskilled). 20 C.F.R.,
    Subpart P, app. 2, Table No. 1, Rule 201.24. The ALJ
    properly used the guidelines only as a "frame of reference"
    here because the claimant cannot perform a full range of
    sedentary activity. 20 C.F.R., Subpart P, app. 2,
    200.00(d); 20 C.F.R. 404.1569.

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    (8th Cir. 1990) (claimant limited to sedentary work, all jobs

    listed by VE rated as light to heavy); Tom v. Heckler, 779
    ___ _______

    F.2d 1250, 1255-56, 1257 n.12 (7th Cir. 1985) (claimant

    limited to sedentary work; all jobs listed by VE rated as

    light); Mimms v. Heckler, 750 F.2d 180, 186 (2d Cir. 1984)
    _____ _______

    (same). In at least one of the cases, Tom, the court treated
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    an irreconcilable conflict as the equivalent of plain error,

    remanding despite the failure of the claimant to object

    below.

    Here, however, not only is the alleged DOT

    contradiction uncertain, but the circumstances surrounding

    claimant's failure to object at the hearing suggest that this

    uncertainty is better explained by hindsight interpretation

    than by actual error. Claimant was represented at the

    hearing by an experienced attorney, who evinced no surprise

    or confusion at the VE's testimony. On the contrary, he

    complimented the VE on the thoroughness of his presentation.

    The attorney was keenly aware that a discrepancy between the

    VE's articulation and the DOT might be used to claimant's

    advantage, as shown by a specific objection he made minutes

    before to another VE's opinion in the same case. A copy of

    the DOT was apparently available in the hearing room, for the

    transcript shows that the VE directly consulted the DOT at

    an earlier point in his testimony. Nevertheless, claimant's

    attorney did not request specific DOT code numbers, nor seek



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    any other information that might shed light on the VE's

    sources. The first allusion to this allegedly striking VE

    error appears in a one-sentence paragraph inserted into

    claimant's motion for reconsideration of the district court's

    decision.

    "We have long recognized that social security cases

    are not strictly adversarial." Evangelista v. Secretary of
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    HHS, 826 F.2d 136, 142 (1st Cir. 1987). Here, however, we
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    see no good excuse for the failure to raise this matter

    sooner, and claimant offers none. In these circumstances,

    there is no unfairness in applying the "ordinary rule that

    appellate courts will not consider issues not raised below."

    Gonzalez-Ayala v. Secretary of HHS, 807 F.2d 255, 256 (1st
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    Cir. 1986) (citations omitted); see also Torres v. Secretary
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    of HHS, 870 F.2d 742 (1st Cir. 1989) (claimant's argument
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    that ALJ's hypothetical omitted a crucial fact will not be

    entertained for first time on appeal where issues were

    simple, it was not likely that VE failed to consider the

    omitted fact, and claimant could have posed his own

    hypothetical); cf. Evangelista, 826 F.2d at 142-43 (where
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    claimant was able to fairly present his case and the ALJ's

    decision was based on substantial evidence, appeals court

    will not remand for presentation by claimant of arguably "new

    and material evidence" in absence of "good cause" adequate to

    excuse the failure to offer the evidence sooner).



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    Accordingly, the judgment below is affirmed.
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