- 1 2 3 4 5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 6 WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE 7 KELLY B., 8 Plaintiff, CASE NO. 3:20-cv-05552-BAT 9 v. ORDER AFFIRMING AND 10 DISMISSING COMMISSIONER OF SOCIAL SECURITY, 11 Defendant. 12 13 Plaintiff appeals the ALJ's decision finding him not disabled for the closed period 14 between October 27, 2017 and February 4, 2019. Docket 22 at 2, and Tr. 34. The ALJ found 15 obesity, coronary artery disease status post bypass surgery, right frozen shoulder, Charcot Marie 16 Tooth Syndrome (CMT), diabetes with peripheral neuropathy and hypertension are severe 17 impairments, Plaintiff has the residual functional capacity to perform light work with additional 18 limitations, Plaintiff cannot perform past work but is not disabled because he can perform other 19 work in the national economy. Tr. 15-24. Plaintiff contends the ALJ misevaluated his testimony 20 and the case should be remanded for further administrative proceedings. 21 The Court finds the ALJ's determination to discount Plaintiff's testimony is supported by 22 substantial evidence and free of legal error and accordingly AFFIRMS the Commissioner’s final 23 decision and DISMISSES the case with prejudice. 1 DISCUSSION 2 The ALJ found Plaintiff's medically determinable impairments could reasonably cause 3 the symptoms he alleged, Tr. 19, and was thus required to provide “specific, clear, and 4 convincing” reasons supported by substantial evidence to reject his testimony. Trevizo v. 5 Berryhill, 871 F.3d 664, 678 (9th Cir. 2017). Plaintiff's contends the ALJ erred in rejecting his 6 testimony about the impact CMT had on his ability to perform work. 7 The ALJ found CMT caused foot and ankle problems but was not disabling because 8 although Plaintiff had "weakness in gait" he could ambulate effectively and reported significant 9 improvement in walking in late 2018. Tr. 20. Plaintiff argues the ALJ erred because he failed to 10 account for how CMT causes him to trip and to have lack of "control sideways." Dkt. 22 at 5. 11 Plaintiff is correct the ALJ's determination to discount his testimony on the grounds he can 12 ambulate effectively does not necessarily account for whether he is nonetheless prone to tripping 13 and lacks sideways control. However, assuming the ALJ erred, the error is harmless. First, 14 Plaintiff returned to work in early 2019. He testified in June 2019 that he is still prone to tripping 15 due to CMT unless he stretched. See Tr. 42 ("that will happen to this day if I don't stretch for 40 16 minutes a day."). Plaintiff's ability to work despite continued standing or walking problems 17 caused by CMT undermines his testimony and supports the ALJ's determination. 18 The ALJ also discounted Plaintiff's testimony about CMT because Plaintiff reported 19 significant improvement in walking in 2018. Tr. 20. Although Plaintiff argues CMT continued to 20 cause walking limitations through 2019, he testified that in 2018 "I did a lot of hiking, a lot of 21 walking, a lot of biking." Tr. 42. The Court thus cannot say the ALJ unreasonably found Plaintiff 22 showed improvement and that his activities do not square with his claimed disabling walking 23 limitations. 1 And finally, Plaintiff's counsel asked the vocational expert (VE) whether Plaintiff could 2 perform jobs the VE identified if he did not have the "full use of one leg." Tr. 55. The VE 3 testified that work as a Cashier II would be viable with that limitation because the majority of 4 sites for the job require standing only 10 percent or have a sit/stand option. Id. Plaintiff argues 5 his balance problems erodes the occupational base and thus the ALJ erred in relying on the VE's 6 testimony. But Plaintiff presents nothing showing the VE is incorrect about the Cashier II job 7 requirements, or that he could not perform a Cashier II job with the balance or tripping 8 limitations caused by CMT. Plaintiff also argues light work requires a good deal of standing and 9 walking. But the VE identified a light job that does not. Plaintiff has the burden of establishing 10 harmful error and has failed to show the ALJ's finding is unsupported or unreasonable. 11 The Court concludes the ALJ's decision is supported by substantial evidence and free of 12 legal error and accordingly AFFIRMS the Commissioner's final decision and DISMISSES the 13 case with prejudice. 14 DATED this 3rd day of March 2021. 15 A 16 BRIAN A. TSUCHIDA Chief United States Magistrate Judge 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Document Info
Docket Number: 3:20-cv-05552
Filed Date: 3/3/2021
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/4/2024