Bonnie Dudley v. Nancy Berryhill ( 2019 )


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  •                         NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Argued April 24, 2019
    Decided May 16, 2019
    Before
    MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge
    DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge
    AMY J. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge
    No. 18-1629
    BONNIE DUDLEY,                                  Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                        Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
    v.                                        No. 16-CV-1721-WCG
    NANCY A. BERRYHILL,                             William C. Griesbach,
    Acting Commissioner of Social Security,         Chief Judge.
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ORDER
    Bonnie Dudley, a 53-year-old former housekeeper and cook who suffers from a
    host of physical and mental health conditions, challenged the denial of her application
    for Social Security disability benefits. An Administrative Law Judge denied her
    application for disability insurance benefits after finding that although she suffers from
    several mental impairments (depression, anxiety disorder, and attention deficit
    disorder) and physical infirmities (pain in her back, hips, and legs), she could perform a
    limited range of light work. Because the ALJ’s decision was supported by substantial
    evidence, we affirm.
    No. 18-1629                                                                       Page 2
    I
    Bonnie Dudley, then 48-years-old, applied for supplemental security income and
    disability insurance benefits in 2013. Before her symptoms became overwhelming,
    Dudley worked as a housekeeper and cook at a nursing home. In 2012, she quit because
    of the pain from her physical infirmities and because of her “really bad” anxiety.
    Four months after Dudley applied for disability benefits, her primary-care
    physician referred her to the behavioral-care department at a local health facility to
    receive treatment for depression, anxiety, attention deficit disorder, and agoraphobia
    with panic disorder. The primary-care physician recorded Dudley’s comment that she
    had dealt with anxiety and depression for more than 25 years.
    Dudley was then referred by the Disability Determination Bureau to a
    consultative psychologist, Dr. Sandra King. After an examination, Dr. King diagnosed
    Dudley with major depression, generalized anxiety, post-traumatic stress, and
    attention-deficit/hyperactivity. She characterized Dudley’s prognosis as “guarded,
    given the chronicity of her psychiatric disorders.” In a “statement of work capacity,” Dr.
    King opined that she did not expect Dudley to have difficulties understanding
    directions, but her “lack of concentration/distractibility” could affect her ability to
    remember and carry out directions. Dr. King added that Dudley’s ability to concentrate
    was “mildly impaired,” and that Dudley likely would have “moderate to severe
    difficulties withstanding routine work stress and adapting to change.”
    Also in connection with Dudley’s application, state-agency psychiatrist Chang-
    Wuk Kang reviewed Dudley’s medical records and opined that she had moderate
    limitations in a number of areas related to concentration, persistence, and pace. The
    doctor explained that Dudley might have some difficulty focusing on detailed tasks, but
    that she could perform simple repetitive tasks. As for her “adaptation limitations,” Dr.
    Kang opined that Dudley might have some difficulty dealing with workplace stresses,
    but that she could adjust to work settings requiring simple, repetitive tasks.
    When the Social Security Administration reconsidered Dudley’s application for
    benefits in 2014, another state-agency psychologist, Dr. David Biscardi, reviewed her
    medical records and identified her most serious limitations as attention-deficit
    hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression, and anxiety. Dr. Biscardi concluded that
    Dudley was “moderately limited” in many tasks related to her ability to work: her
    ability to maintain attention and concentration for extended periods; to complete a
    normal workday and workweek without interruptions from psychologically based
    No. 18-1629                                                                         Page 3
    symptoms, to perform at a consistent pace without an unreasonable number and length
    of rest periods, to accept instructions and respond appropriately to criticism from
    supervisors; to get along with coworkers or peers without distracting them or
    exhibiting behavioral extremes. He concluded that she could understand, remember,
    and sustain performance of one- to three-step tasks, so long as the tasks were not
    complicated and her interactions with coworkers and supervisors were brief.
    At her hearing before the ALJ in 2015, Dudley testified that her pain and “really
    bad” anxiety prevented her from working. She felt pain “all over”—“constant pain” in
    her legs and hips, pain in her back at all times, even when taking her medications. She
    also testified that she had problems concentrating; she had to re-read words several
    times to follow along. “Everything” caused her anxiety—“just leaving the house, just
    driving, people.” She required her husband’s assistance to go grocery shopping and
    attend her medical appointments, and she had stopped driving three years prior. She
    had not left the house alone in over a year. Her anxiety triggered panic attacks at least
    twice a week; during these attacks, she was unable to think about or do anything else.
    The ALJ asked a vocational expert to consider the work that would be available
    to a person of Dudley’s age, education, and work experience with her physical and
    mental limitations. This hypothetical person could do some light work but would also
    be “limited to simple routine tasks, jobs that have no more than simple decision-
    making.” She should not be exposed to “more than occasional and minor changes in the
    work setting in terms of workplace and work processes.” The ALJ noted that this
    person could work at an “average production rate,” but not at a “significantly above
    average or highly variable production rate work.” That work, he added, should not be
    presented to her “at an excessively fast or highly variable pace.” The ALJ further
    specified that this person could briefly and superficially interact with other people,
    without doing “direct public service work,” teamwork, or work “in crowded or hectic
    environments.”
    The VE opined that such a person could work in light, unskilled positions such
    as “office helper” or “mailing clerk.” The ALJ later added a restriction to sedentary
    work, to which the VE replied that appropriate positions would include address clerks,
    account clerks, and sorting positions.
    The ALJ denied Dudley’s application for disability benefits. Applying the five-
    step analysis found in 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4), the ALJ determined the following: at
    Step 1, Dudley had met the insured status requirements and had not engaged in
    substantial gainful activity since her alleged onset date; at Step 2, Dudley had the severe
    No. 18-1629                                                                         Page 4
    impairments of anxiety disorder, depression, ADHD, degenerative disc disease, and
    degenerative joint disease; at Step 3, neither Dudley’s physical nor mental impairments
    equaled a listed impairment; at Step 4, Dudley had the residual functional capacity
    (RFC) to perform a range of light work with some limitations (simple, routine, and
    repetitive tasks; work involving no more than simple decision-making or the exercise of
    simple judgment; a work setting with no more than occasional and minor changes; and
    no jobs that required work at a variable pace or above an average pace, in direct public
    service, in crowded or hectic environments, or involving tandem tasks); at Step 5,
    Dudley could not perform her past relevant work but could still perform jobs that
    existed in significant numbers.
    The Appeals Council denied review, and so the ALJ’s decision was the
    Commissioner’s final decision. See Varga v. Colvin, 
    794 F.3d 809
    , 813 (7th Cir. 2015).
    Dudley sought judicial review, and the district court upheld the Commissioner’s
    decision. The court rejected both of Dudley’s arguments—first, that the ALJ failed to
    properly account for limitations on Dudley’s ability to maintain concentration,
    persistence, and pace when formulating Dudley’s RFC; and second, that the ALJ failed
    to assign weight expressly to the opinion of Dudley’s consultative psychologist,
    Dr. Sandra King. The district court explained that the ALJ’s listed mental limitations
    exceeded the limitations opined by the state-agency doctors, who were the only sources
    to opine on Dudley’s functional work-related limitations. In addition, the RFC was, in
    its “entirety,” “clearly directed at minimizing [Dudley’s] stress,” so the ALJ did not
    disregard Dr. King’s opinion.
    II
    A. Whether the ALJ failed to properly encapsulate his finding of Dudley’s
    moderate limitations in concentration, persistence, and pace into the
    hypothetical posed to the VE
    Dudley argues that the ALJ failed to account for her moderate limitations in
    concentration, persistence, and pace in both the residual functional capacity assessment
    and resulting hypothetical posed to the VE. In his RFC assessment and hypothetical to
    the VE, the ALJ identified these mental limitations:
       Limitation to simple, routine and repetitive tasks;
       Work involving no more than simple decision-making;
       No more than occasional and minor changes in the work setting;
    No. 18-1629                                                                          Page 5
       Work requiring the exercise of only simple judgment;
       Tolerance of an average production pace, but not above average or variable pace;
       Preclusion from work involving direct public service, in person or over the
    phone;
       Tolerance for brief and superficial interaction with the public, which is incidental
    to job duties;
       Preclusion from work in crowded, hectic environments;
       Tolerance for brief and superficial interaction with supervisors and coworkers;
    and
       No tandem task work.
    Without a “logical bridge” to link these moderate limitations to the limitations
    presented by the hypothetical, see Lanigan v. Berryhill, 
    865 F.3d 558
    , 563 (7th Cir. 2017),
    Dudley argues that the hypothetical did not orient the VE to her limitations. And
    because the hypothetical was flawed, Dudley adds, the vocational testimony was not
    supported by substantial evidence. This court has specified that “the most effective
    way” to inform the VE fully of a claimant’s limitations is to include all of them directly
    in the hypothetical. O’Connor-Spinner v. Astrue, 
    627 F.3d 614
    , 619 (7th Cir. 2010).
    Although the ALJ did not explicitly include Dudley’s moderate limitations in
    concentration, persistence, and pace in the hypothetical, he did adequately account for
    these limitations. Dudley’s greatest limitations are stress- and panic-related, and the
    ALJ adequately addressed them by limiting her to “simple, routine and repetitive tasks,
    work involving no more than simple decision-making, no more than occasional and
    minor changes in the work setting, and work requiring the exercise of only simple
    judgment”; by excluding work above an average pace, at a variable pace, or in crowded,
    hectic environments; and by limiting her interactions with the public, supervisors, and
    coworkers. Although this court recently observed that limitations on social interaction
    might not encapsulate concentration difficulties because a claimant may have stress-
    related symptoms even when others are absent, Winsted v. Berryhill, --- F.3d ----, 
    2019 WL 1941179
    , at *4 (7th Cir. Feb. 8, 2019), the ALJ here specifically limited Dudley to
    “work requiring the exercise of only simple judgment,”—a limitation that specifically
    accounts for Dudley’s concentration difficulties.
    Critically, Dudley did not identify any limitations that the ALJ omitted and
    should have included in the hypothetical question. Indeed, the hypothetical that the
    ALJ posed to the vocational expert contained limitations that were more restrictive than
    the functional work-related limitations identified by the state-agency doctors. The ALJ’s
    No. 18-1629                                                                        Page 6
    stated limitations, for example, went so far as to preclude Dudley from tandem tasks
    with supervisors and coworkers, as well as work above an average or variable pace.
    This limitation was more restrictive than that suggested by the report of Dr. Kang, who
    opined that Dudley would have some difficulty focusing on detailed tasks, but that she
    could “maintain concentration and persistence to complete workdays and workweeks
    in performance of simple repetitive task[s]”; that Dudley “may have difficulty in
    dealing with general public but she can interact otherwise”; and that Dudley “might
    have some difficulty dealing with work place stresses but she can adjust to the settings
    requiring simple repetitive task[s].” The ALJ’s stated limitation was also more
    restrictive than that suggested by the report of Dr. Biscardi, who opined that Dudley
    would become overwhelmed with complicated procedures, but retained the capacity to
    complete a normal workday, interact briefly with coworkers and supervisors, and adapt
    to “changes/stressors” associated with “simple routine competitive work activities.”
    Dudley also contends that the state-agency psychologists’ opinions were flawed
    because of internal inconsistencies within them. Specifically, she says that Dr. Kang
    provided a written narrative, which failed to account for various limitations that he had
    noted on a checklist elsewhere in his assessment (e.g., limitations in attention and
    concentration). Dr. Biscardi’s narrative similarly failed to account for a limitation in
    work pace. But Dudley mistakenly presumes that the psychologists’ answers to the
    checklist section outweigh the narrative opinion section. In Varga, this court noted that
    while checklist observations cannot be ignored, they are “perhaps less useful to an ALJ
    than a doctor’s 
    narrative.” 794 F.3d at 816
    . Further, an ALJ may rely on a doctor’s
    narrative where it adequately translates those worksheet observations. See, e.g.,
    Johansen v. Barnhart, 
    314 F.3d 283
    , 287–89 (7th Cir. 2002).
    B. Whether the ALJ failed to include a key finding from the opinion of Dudley’s
    consultative examiner in the RFC determination
    Dudley next contends that the ALJ’s RFC assessment failed to account for
    Dr. King’s opinion that Dudley would have moderate-to-severe limitations handling
    work stress or adapting to change. If the limitations contained in the RFC assessment
    were “supposed to address work stress or adapting to changes,” Dudley argues, the
    ALJ did not say enough to justify his reasoning.
    But the ALJ, short of rejecting Dr. King’s opinion, in fact accepted it. True, the
    ALJ did not assign a specific weight to Dr. King’s opinion. But this error was harmless
    because the ALJ took heed of Dr. King’s opinion by adding limitations accounting for
    work stress. The ALJ limited Dudley to only occasional and minor changes in the
    No. 18-1629                                                                                           Page 7
    workplace; he addressed the issue of routine work stress by specifying that she could
    only do tasks requiring simple judgment and at most an average pace—limitations
    accommodating Dr. King’s conclusion that Dudley would have difficulty adapting to
    change-related work stress. When no doctor’s opinion indicates greater limitations than
    those found by the ALJ, there is no error. Rice v. Barnhart, 
    384 F.3d 363
    , 370 (7th Cir.
    2004).
    III
    Finally, three weeks before oral argument, the Commissioner moved for leave to
    submit a supplemental brief to “address concerns” raised by this court in recent
    decisions reversing the judgment on grounds that the ALJ inadequately accounted for a
    claimant’s moderate difficulties in the area of concentration, persistence, and pace.1 In
    each of these decisions, this court urged the ALJ to apprise the VE fully of a claimant’s
    difficulties with “concentration, persistence, and pace.” The Commissioner sought to
    supplement its brief to address “constraints” that ALJs face from agency regulations in
    following the court’s advice. The Commissioner also wished to draw our attention to a
    recent Supreme Court decision, Biestek v. Berryhill, 
    139 S. Ct. 1148
    (2019), which
    “provides pertinent guidance” in that it “rejected a categorical rule relating to
    vocational expert testimony” in favor of a substantiality-of-evidence inquiry to be
    conducted on a “case-by-case” basis. The court granted the Commission’s motion for
    leave to file the brief before receiving Dudley’s opposition to it, so the court deemed
    Dudley’s opposition as a motion to reconsider. Because we need not—and do not—rely
    on the Commissioner’s supplemental briefing for the disposition of this case, we DENY
    the motion to reconsider as moot. The supplemental brief does not prejudice Dudley
    because it does not affect this appeal’s outcome.
    AFFIRMED
    1 DeCamp v. Berryhill, 
    916 F.3d 671
    , 674 (7th Cir. 2019); Radosevich v. Berryhill, 759 Fed.Appx. 492, 495 (7th
    Cir. 2019) (nonprecedential disposition); Paul v. Berryhill, 760 Fed.Appx. 460, 465 (7th Cir. 2019)
    (nonprecedential disposition); Mischler v. Berryhill, No. 18-1523, 
    2019 WL 1299948
    , at *3 (7th Cir. Mar. 20,
    2019) (nonprecedential disposition).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-1629

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 5/16/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/16/2019