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C.C. v. O'Malley

United States District Court, Northern District of California
Mar 28, 2024
23-cv-00408-LJC (N.D. Cal. Mar. 28, 2024)

Opinion

23-cv-00408-LJC

03-28-2024

C.C., Plaintiff, v. MARTIN O'MALLEY, Defendant.


ORDER REGARDING CROSSMOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT RE: DKT. NOS. 12, 14

LISA J. CISNEROS UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE

I. INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff C.C. challenges the final decision of Defendant Martin O'Malley Commissioner of Social Security (the Commissioner), finding C.C. not disabled and thus ineligible for disability benefits and Supplemental Security Income benefits. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment under Civil Local Rule 16-5. For the reasons discussed below, C.C.'s Motion is GRANTED, the Commissioner's Cross-Motion is DENIED, and the matter is REMANDED to the Commissioner for further administrative proceedings.

Because opinions by the Court are more widely available than other filings, and this Order contains potentially sensitive medical information, this Order refers to the plaintiff only by her initials. This Order does not alter the degree of public access to other filings in this action provided by Rule 5.2(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Civil Local Rule 5-1(c)(5)(B)(i).

Martin O'Malley was sworn in as Commissioner of Social Security on December 20, 2023, and is therefore automatically substituted as the defendant in this case under Rule 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

The parties have consented to the jurisdiction of a magistrate judge for all purposes under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).

II. BACKGROUND

A. Administrative Record

C.C. is a woman in her late thirties with impairments that include degenerative disc disease, myalgia, a rotator cuff syndrome, and extreme obesity. See AR (ECF No. 9) at 23.

During the period at issue in the administrative record, C.C.'s weight ranged from 380 to 409 pounds. AR at 51 (380 pounds at November 19, 2021 administrative hearing); AR at 344 (409 pounds as of January 30, 2019 progress note). Since the parties' arguments focus on the administrative law judge's (ALJ's) treatment of C.C.'s obesity and the degree to which the ALJ's conclusions were supported by medical opinion evidence, this summary focuses on those issues, without addressing detailed medical records addressing C.C.'s other impairments. This summary is not intended as a complete recitation of C.C.'s medical history or the administrative record.

C.C.'s back pain began when she was working as a caregiver and fell backwards while lifting a client in 2018. See, e.g., AR at 614. She had previously injured her right shoulder in a similar accident. Id. C.C. is right-handed. AR at 49.

In a June 12, 2020 progress note for C.C.'s pain treatment, physician assistant (PA) Beth Grossman McKee indicated that C.C. was “working at losing weight,” which was “helping a little with back pain.” AR at 472. In a September 23, 2021 progress note, Grossman McKee reported that C.C. complained of lower back pain at the level of eight out of ten, and that Grossman McKee believed “weight loss would help her pain as well” as seeking a different field of work. AR at 614.

Although not addressed by the ALJ or the parties, PA Grossman McKee and PA Brooke Aber's progress notes are cosigned by medical doctors, including Dr. Ruben Kalra and Dr. William Longton. See, e.g., AR at 524, 613.

PA Brooke Aber, who also treated C.C., provided a physical assessment on November 9, 2020 indicating that C.C.'s back and shoulder impairments would frequently interfere with the attention and concentration necessary for simple work, would require C.C. to lie down during a workday beyond generally accepted break times, and would require unscheduled ten- to fifeen-minute breaks every hour. AR at 319. Aber stated that C.C. could only sit for a total of three hours in a workday, or stand or walk for a total of three hours, and that she would likely be absent from work more than four times per month. AR at 319-20.

Progress notes from both Grossman McKee and Aber describe C.C. as “morbidly obese.” E.g., AR at 529, 617. Some notes indicated that C.C. had a normal gait and other largely normal findings (e.g., AR at 348), while others indicated an antalgic gait-in other words, a limp to manage pain-and that she was slow to get up from an examination table (e.g., AR at 510), and others had mixed findings (e.g., AR at 441, noting normal gait but inability to heel-and-toe walk). One doctor's note from February of 2019 indicated that C.C. could “walk with no difficulty,” although that note also indicated that C.C. reported having “good and bad days,” and that was “a good day.” AR at 338.

Dr. Steven Kao, a state agency physician who reviewed C.C.'s medical records, determined (among other limitations) that C.C. could only stand or walk for four hours and sit for six hours out of an eight-hour workday, AR at 75, and concluded that she was limited to sedentary work, AR at 80. Dr. Kao specifically noted C.C.'s obesity. AR at 87 (“Morbid obesity noted.”).

Dr. E. Trias, another state agency physician who reviewed C.C.'s medical records, determined that C.C. could stand or walk for six hours and sit for six hours in an eight-hour workday, assessed various other limitations, and concluded that C.C. could perform light work. AR at 106-11. Dr. Trias did not specifically note C.C.'s obesity. See id.

B. Administrative Hearing

At the administrative hearing, C.C. testified that she last worked sporadically in 2019, ceasing work because she could not find a less strenuous job after her 2018 injury. AR at 46-47. She testified that she considered working in security and at a call center but was unable to perform that work because of her impairments, including her inability to walk consistently or sit for eight hours. AR at 47. She attempted to provide cooking demonstrations on YouTube (largely without using her right arm) but did not attract a sufficient audience to make money off of that endeavor. AR at 47-49. C.C. testified that she experiences pain in her right shoulder all the time and that any form of reaching exacerbates that pain, particularly over her head. AR at 49-50.

C.C. stated that she also experiences back pain all the time, exacerbated by sitting or standing for too long. AR at 50-51. She stated that she could not stand for more than twenty or thirty minutes without needing to sit down because of the pain, and would need to rest for an hour before she could stand again. AR at 52. She testified that she would also feel uncomfortable after sitting for more than twenty or thirty minutes. AR at 52. C.C. testified that she can only walk around half a block at a time. AR at 52. She finds lying down on her side with a pillow between her legs most comfortable, and initially testified that she typically spends a third of the day lying down. AR at 52-53. C.C. later testified that she spends a majority of her time lying down. AR at 58. She stated that if she is not able to lie down between periods of sitting and standing, her “lower back hurts a lot” and “the pain shoots down [her] leg.” AR at 56. C.C. has declined surgery recommended by one of her doctors. AR at 57-58

C.C. testified that she is able to cook sitting down, and can handle most grooming and hygiene without assistance except for washing her back. AR at 54. C.C.'s mother does her laundry. AR at 54. C.C. does some shopping, but she has difficulty when she is not able to use a seated electric cart. AR at 54-55. She stated that she can carry multiple grocery bags or a gallon of milk with her left arm, but a gallon of milk would be “pushing it” with her right arm. AR at 55. If her back is not hurting too much, she sometimes walks five minutes round trip to and from a bench on a trail behind her house. AR at 59. She has no hobbies besides watching cooking videos. AR at 59.

The remainder of the hearing consisted of testimony from a vocational expert. AR at 6067.

C. Legal Standard for Administrative Proceedings

1. Five-Step Process to Assess Disability

The Social Security Administration uses a five-step process to determine whether claimants are entitled to disability benefits:

Step 1. Is the claimant presently working in a substantially gainful activity? If so, then the claimant is “not disabled ” within the meaning of the Social Security Act and is not entitled to disability insurance benefits. If the claimant is not working in a substantially gainful activity, then the claimant's case cannot be resolved at step one and the evaluation proceeds to step two. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(b).
Step 2. Is the claimant's impairment severe? If not, then the claimant is “not disabled” and is not entitled to disability insurance benefits. If the claimant's impairment is severe, then the claimant's case cannot be resolved at step two and the evaluation proceeds to step three. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(c).
Step 3. Does the impairment “meet or equal” one of a list of specific impairments described in the regulations? If so, the claimant is
disabled” and therefore entitled to disability insurance benefits. If the claimant's impairment neither meets nor equals one of the impairments listed in the regulations, then the claimant's case cannot be resolved at step three and the evaluation proceeds to step four. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(d).
Step 4. Is the claimant able to do any work that he or she has done in the past? If so, then the claimant is “not disabled” and is not entitled to disability insurance benefits. If the claimant cannot do any work he or she did in the past, then the claimant's case cannot be resolved at step four and the evaluation proceeds to the fifth and final step. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(e).
Step 5. Is the claimant able to do any other work? If not, then the claimant is “disabled” and therefore entitled to disability insurance benefits. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(f)(1). If the claimant is able to do other work, then the Commissioner must establish that there are a significant number of jobs in the national economy that claimant can do. There are two ways for the Commissioner to meet the burden of showing that there is other work in “significant numbers” in the national economy that claimant can do: (1) by the testimony of a vocational expert, or (2) by reference to the Medical-Vocational Guidelines at 20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P, app. 2. If the Commissioner meets this burden, the claimant is “not disabled” and therefore not entitled to disability insurance benefits. See 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520(f), 404.1562. If the Commissioner cannot meet this burden, then the claimant is “disabled” and therefore entitled to disability benefits. See id.
Tackett v. Apfel, 180 F.3d 1094, 1098-99 (9th Cir. 1999) (footnote omitted); see also Maxwell v. Saul, 971 F.3d 1128, 1130 n.2 (2020). “At steps one through four, the claimant retains the burden of proof; at step five, the burden shifts to the Commissioner.” Maxwell, 971 F.3d at 1130 n.2.

20 C.F.R. § 416.920 sets forth materially identical steps to assess disability for the purpose of Supplemental Security Income benefits, which are also at issue in this case.

2. Consideration of Disability

Social Security regulations previously included obesity among the listings of impairments that can categorically establish disability at Step 3, but the Social Security Administration removed that listing in 1999. Since then, the Commissioner has issued a series of Social Security Rulings (SSRs) addressing how obesity will be considered in assessing disability, beginning with SSR 00-3p in 2000, which was superseded by SSR 02-1p in 2002. Most recently, the Commissioner issued SSR 19-2p in 2019, superseding SSR 02-1p. SSR 19-2p, Titles II & XVI: Evaluating Cases Involving Obesity, 2019 WL 2374244 (May 20, 2019). Although obesity is no longer a listed impairment, “the functional limitations caused by the MDI of obesity, alone or in combination with another impairment(s), may medically equal a listing” if, for example, obesity “increase[s] the severity of a coexisting or related impairment(s) to the extent that the combination of impairments medically equals a listing.” Id. at *4. Under the SSR, the Social Security Administration “will not make general assumptions about the severity or functional effects of obesity combined with another impairment(s),” but instead “evaluate[s] each case based on the information in the case record” to determine how obesity affects other impairments. Id. “As with any other impairment,” the Social Administration must “explain how [it] reached [its] conclusion on whether obesity causes any limitations.” Id.

SSRs are official interpretations of law and regulation issued by the Social Security Administration. Although they do not have the force of law, they are binding on ALJs and entitled to some deference from courts, and an ALJ's failure to comply with an SSR can constitute error requiring remand under at least some circumstances. See Bray v. Comm'r of Soc. Sec. Admin., 554 F.3d 1219, 1229 (9th Cir. 2009); Avenetti v. Barnhart, 456 F.3d 1122, 1124 (9th Cir. 2006); Quang Van Han v. Bowen, 882 F.2d 1453, 1457 n.6 (9th Cir. 1989).

In addition to assessing obesity at Step 3, the Social Security Administration also “must consider the limiting effects of obesity when assessing a person's RFC,” or residual functional capacity, to determine whether the claimant can perform their past work or available work at Steps 4 and 5. Id. The Social Security Administration must “explain how [it] reached [its] conclusion on whether obesity causes any limitations.” Id. SSR 19-2p notes that obesity can affect the exertional functions of “sitting, standing, walking, lifting, carrying, pushing, and pulling”; nonexertional functions including “climbing, balancing, stooping, kneeling, crouching, and crawling”; range of motion of the spine and extremities, and “the ability to sustain a function over time,” including as a result of fatigue. Id.

D. The ALJ's Decision

C.C.'s applied for disability benefits and Supplemental Security Income benefits on October 23, 2020, alleging disability beginning November 24, 2018. AR at 21. C.C. requested a hearing before an ALJ after her applications were denied initially and on reconsideration. Id. She was represented by counsel during the administrative process. Id.

At Step 1, the ALJ determined that C.C. had not engaged in substantial gainful activity since her alleged onset date, finding that although she had performed some work during that time, it did not meet the relevant threshold to establish non-disability on that basis. AR at 23.

At Step 2, the ALJ identified the following impairments as severe: “Degenerative Disc Disease, Myalgia, Obesity, [and] Rotator Cuff Syndrome of the Right Shoulder”. AR at 23. The ALJ did not identify any impairments as less than severe. Id.

At Step 3, the ALJ found that none of C.C.'s impairments, alone or in combination, met the criteria for any listing. AR at 24. The ALJ considered Listings 1.15 (skeletal spine disorders resulting in nerve root compromise), 1.16 (lumbar spinal stenosis resulting in compromise of the cauda equina), and 1.18 (joint abnormalities in extremities). Id. The ALJ also addressed C.C.'s obesity, as follows:

I have evaluated obesity pursuant to the detailed guidelines set forth in SSR 19-2p. Obesity is not a listed impairment; however, the functional limitations caused by the medically determinable impairment of obesity, alone or in combination with other impairments, may medically equal a listing. For example, obesity may increase the severity of a coexisting or related impairment to the extent that the combination of impairments medically equals a listing. General assumptions about the severity or functional effects of obesity combined with another impairment will not be made. Obesity in combination with other impairments may or may not increase the severity or functional limitations of the other impairments. Obesity is often associated with musculoskeletal, respiratory, cardiovascular, and endocrine disorders. Each case will be evaluated based on the information in the case record. Accordingly, I have fully considered obesity in the context of the case record in making this decision, and obesity does not equal a listing alone or in combination with other impairments.
Id. Aside from that paragraph, and the inclusion of obesity among C.C.'s severe impairments noted above, the ALJ's decision does not otherwise discuss C.C.'s obesity.

In assessing residual functional capacity (RFC) for the purpose of Steps 4 and 5, the ALJ determined that C.C. could:

perform light work as defined in 20 CFR 404.1567(b) and 416.967(b) except the claimant can only occasionally climb, balance, stoop, kneel, crouch and crawl, can only occasionally reach overhead with the upper right extremity, can have no exposure to unprotected height and dangerous moving mechanical parts, [and] requires the option to alternate between sitting and standing as needed, as long as doing so will not cause the claimant to be off task or need to leave the work station.
AR at 24.

The ALJ acknowledged C.C.'s testimony regarding relatively severe limitations in areas including standing, walking, sitting, lifting, and reaching, AR at 25, but found that testimony not fully credible because the ALJ determined that it was contradicted in part by medical evidence, AR at 26. The ALJ found the state agency consultants, Drs. Kao and Trias, partially persuasive, and did not find PA Aber persuasive, although the ALJ specifically noted that all of those opinions were “well supported” by objective medical evidence. AR at 27-28. In assessing a less restrictive RFC than indicated by C.C.'s testimony and the opinions of Dr. Kao and PA Aber, the ALJ relied heavily on the “many exams where the claimant walked with a normal gait” and exhibited normal strength and range of motion. AR at 26-28. Although the ALJ acknowledged that some “more recent exams noted more remarkable findings, such as the claimant walking with an antalgic gait” (i.e., a limp to minimize pain), the ALJ decided that C.C.'s limitations were sufficiently captured by the RFC that the ALJ assessed. Id.

Based on the RFC above and testimony from a vocational expert, the ALJ determined at Step 4 that C.C. could not perform her past work as a home attendant, but found at Step 5 that C.C. was not disabled because she could perform other work that was available in the national economy. AR at 28-29.

The Appeals Council denied C.C.'s request for review of the ALJ's decision, making it the final decision of the Commissioner. AR at 1.

E. The Parties' Arguments

C.C. contends that the ALJ failed to explain how obesity influenced C.C.'s RFC as required by SSR 19-2p, the Ninth Circuit's decision in Celaya v. Halter, 332 F.3d 1177 (9th Cir. 2003), and district court decisions interpreting that authority. ECF No. 12-1 at 3-4. She argues that given her five-foot, nine-inch height, she would have been classified as disabled under the former Listing 9.09 if she weighed 298 pounds, which the record demonstrates she greatly exceeded with weight measurements from 380 to 409 pounds. Id. at 4. C.C. notes that one of her treating physician assistants recommended weight loss to help with her pain, that medical notes indicated she was trying to lose weight to reduce her back pain, and that her medical providers had difficulty finding an MRI machine that would accommodate her weight. Id. at 5. According to C.C., the ALJ's recitation of SSR 19-2p's standard of review at Step 2 does not excuse the ALJ's failure to mention C.C.'s obesity in assessing her RFC. Id. at 6-7. In addition to the Ninth Circuit's decision in Ceyala, C.C. cites several district court decisions finding error requiring remand where ALJs either failed to mention a claimant's obesity at all or failed to address obesity when formulating a claimant's RFC. Id. at 7-10.

C.C. also discusses the Ninth Circuit's unpublished decision in Petersen v. Barnhart, 213 Fed.Appx. 600 (9th Cir. 2006). ECF No. 12-1 at 10. Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3(c) prohibits citing that court's unpublished decisions issued before January 1, 2007 “to the courts of this circuit” in most circumstances. This Court has withdrawn its former Local Rule 3-4(e), respecting other courts' designation of decisions as not for citation. Peterson is not necessary to the disposition of this case, and the Court need not consider whether Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3 effectively prohibits its citation in the absence of a corresponding local rule promulgated by this Court.

In a succinct five-page Cross-Motion, the Commissioner argues that the ALJ acknowledged C.C.'s obesity in assessing severe impairments, but reasonably found that it did not result in any particular limitations, because no “reliable opinion” in the record “assessed limitations stemming from the condition, greater than those already included in the residual functional capacity finding.” ECF No. 14 at 4-5. Portions of the Commissioner's Cross-Motion appear to go further and assert that no medical opinion assessed greater restrictions than the ALJ's RFC determination at all, without qualifying that assertion as a lack of opinions specifically addressing obesity. E.g., Id. at 5 (“Without any medical opinions, as imperatives, containing greater restrictions than those already included in the [RFC] finding, it is very easy to a reasonable mind to see how the ALJ reached the conclusion.”). The Commissioner contends that the Court cannot substitute its judgment for that of the ALJ. Id. The Commissioner's Cross-Motion does not acknowledge SSR 19-2p or any case cited in C.C.'s Motion except for Biestek v. Berryhill, 139 S.Ct. 1148 (2019), a Supreme Court decision with no connection to obesity that both parties cite for generally applicable standards of review. See generally id.

C.C. argues in her Reply that multiple sources in the record assessed greater restrictions than the ALJ's RFC, including PA Aber and state agency consultant Dr. Kao, both of whom stated that C.C. could perform only a limited range of sedentary work. ECF No. 15 at 2. C.C. also highlights PA Grossman McKee's note that “weight loss would help her pain” as specifically connecting C.C's obesity to her impairments. Id. C.C. otherwise reiterates arguments from her Motion that her “extreme morbid obesity” was apparent from the record, that its connection to her back pain is obvious, and that the ALJ's failure to address obesity in the context of C.C.'s RFC was inconsistent with SSR 19-2p and relevant caselaw. See generally id. at 1-4.

C.C. seeks remand for further administrative proceedings, and does not argue that the case should be remanded with instructions to award benefits. ECF No. 12-1 at 10; ECF No. 15 at 4.

III. ANALYSIS

A. Legal Standard

In cases challenging the denial of disability benefits, district courts have authority to review and “affirm[], modify[], or revers[e] the decision of the Commissioner of Social Security, with or without remanding the cause for a rehearing.” 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). “An ALJ's disability determination should be upheld unless it contains legal error or is not supported by substantial evidence,” which “‘means more than a mere scintilla, but less than a preponderance; it is such relevant evidence as a reasonable person might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.'” Garrison v. Colvin, 759 F.3d 995, 1009 (9th Cir. 2014) (quoting Lingenfelter v. Astrue, 504 F.3d 1028, 1035 (9th Cir. 2007)). A court must consider evidence both supporting and detracting from the Commissioner's decision; if the evidence could reasonably support either outcome, the court may not substitute its judgment for that of the ALJ. Id. at 1010. Courts “review only the reasons provided by the ALJ in the disability determination and may not affirm the ALJ on a ground upon which he did not rely.” Id.

B. Caselaw Regarding Obesity and Disability

In Celaya v. Hunter, the pre-1999 listing for obesity was still in effect when the plaintiff filed her application, but the record did not show that she consistently met the weight threshold that would have met that listing for her height. 332 F.3d 1177, 1180-81 & n.1 (9th Cir. 2003). Since the plaintiff weighed somewhat less than 212 pounds and was 57 inches tall, Id., her BMI was slightly under 46. The Ninth Circuit held that the ALJ erred in failing to consider any effects that the plaintiff's obesity on her other severe impairments of hypertension and diabetes, and ordered remand for the ALJ to conduct a “multiple impairment analysis that explicitly accounts for the direct and marginal effects of the plaintiff's obesity during the period in question and that culminates in reviewable, on-the-record findings.” Id. at 1181-84. The Commissioner conceded on appeal that the ALJ had not evaluated the effects of the plaintiff's obesity “even implicitly.” Id. at 1182. The Ninth Circuit ordered the case remanded “to the ALJ for a step-three multiple impairment analysis that explicitly accounts for the direct and marginal effects of the plaintiff's obesity during the period in question and that culminates in reviewable, on-the-record findings”, and “for a proper step-four analysis based on all of the evidence in the record currently and as it is supplemented.” Id. at 1183, 1184. The Ninth Circuit's decision relied in part on the fact that the claimant was illiterate and unrepresented, and “very likely never knew that she could assert obesity as a partial basis for disability.” Id. at 1183.

BMI, or body mass index, is a common (albeit imperfect) measure of obesity calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters. SSR 19-2p, 2019 WL 2374244, at *2. The plaintiff in Celaya's weight of 212 pounds is equal to approximately 96 kilograms. Her height of 57 inches is equal to approximately 1.45 meters.

In Burch v. Barnhart, a precedential decision not addressed here by either party, the Ninth Circuit held that a plaintiff did not meet her burden to show any prejudicial error where the ALJ acknowledged that her “obesity likely contributes to her back discomfort” but did not identify it as a severe impairment at Step 2 or address it in an RFC assessment, and the plaintiff failed to identify any listing she might have met or functional limitation that should have been assessed if the ALJ had properly considered her obesity. 400 F.3d 676, 681-84 (9th Cir. 2005). The Ninth Circuit acknowledged that ALJs still have some affirmative duty to develop the record when a claimant is represented, but noted the plaintiff's representation by counsel during administrative proceedings as one distinguishing factor as compared to Celaya. Id. at 682. A physician in that case characterized the plaintiff as “slightly obese,” and the ALJ described her as “somewhat obese.” Id. at 678, 684.

District courts have followed Celaya to hold that ALJs erred by wholly ignoring claimants' obesity, including in some cases where plaintiffs were represented by counsel. E.g., Browning v. Colvin, 228 F.Supp.3d 932, 936, 942-44 (N.D. Cal. 2017); Cruz v. Colvin, No. SACV 12-600 AJW, 2013 WL 1912786, at *2-4 (C.D. Cal. May 8, 2013); Kerl v. Astrue, No. C11-00330 HRL, 2012 WL 900899, at *2 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 15, 2012); see also Jaroch v. Barnhart, No. C03-01971 SI, 2004 WL 1125050, at *3 (N.D. Cal. May 17, 2004) (finding error where an ALJ's decision “twice mentions plaintiff's ‘size'”, but failed to address obesity as a potential impairment or its effect on the plaintiff's RFC).

District court decisions have also understood Celaya and applicable SSRs as requiring an ALJ to address specifically the effects of obesity on a claimant's RFC. In Wright v. Berryhill, for example, “the ALJ found obesity to be a severe and stated that he considered [the claimant's] obesity in combination with his other impairments and its impact on his ability to work.” No. 17-cv-01476-LB, 2018 WL 3109818, at *16 (N.D. Cal. June 25, 2018) (footnote omitted). Judge Beeler held that although the ALJ's acknowledgment of the claimant's obesity differed from the administrative decision in Celaya, the ALJ erred by “fail[ing] to consider and adequately explain how obesity exacerbated [the claimant's] other impairments, including his knee pain, spinal abnormalities, depression, and anxiety,” and specifically in failing “explain how he analyzed [the claimant's] obesity in combination with his other impairments”. Id. at *16-17. The ALJ in that case also “did not identify which signs, symptoms, and lab findings he relied on.” Id. at *17.

Decisions from other districts within the Ninth Circuit have reached similar results. In a 2020 case, the Central District of California found an ALJ's mere acknowledgment of obesity as a severe impairment insufficient when the ALJ failed to provide “meaningful analysis” to “explain how Plaintiff's obesity impacts her other impairments [including diabetes and asthma] or why he does not factor Plaintiff's obesity in her RFC assessment.” Mary Elizabeth C. v. Saul, No. CV 19-3723-KS, 2020 WL 2523116, at *16 (C.D. Cal. May 18, 2020). Records noted that the plaintiff in that case was at times “morbidly obese with BMI between 50 and 59.9”, while at other times her BMI was 35.8 or lower. Id. The Eastern District of Washington held in a 2022 decision that the ALJ's failure to address what effects the plaintiff's “morbid obesity with BMI frequently higher than 45” had on the plaintiff's knee impairments was one of several errors requiring remand, notwithstanding the ALJ's conclusory assertion that a restriction to sedentary work with additional conditions sufficiently accommodated any limitations caused by the plaintiff falling “in the obese range”. Yolanda P. v. Kijakazi, No. 1:20-cv-03245-JAG, 2022 WL 17248127, at *4 (E.D. Wash. Sept. 30, 2022); see also Ramirez v. Berryhill, No. SACV 17-0417 (KS), 2018 WL 2392155, at *11 (C.D. Cal. May 25, 2018) (“The ALJ found obesity to be a severe impairment, but offers no explanation of how that impairment impacts Plaintiff's other impairments and no explanation for why obesity is not discussed.”).

C. The ALJ Did Not Sufficiently Address C.C.'s Obesity

There is no question that the record in this case reflected C.C.'s obesity sufficiently for the ALJ to recognized its potential effect on C.C.'s ability to work, because the ALJ specifically acknowledged C.C.'s obesity as a severe impairment. AR at 23. As in Wright, the record also “indicates that [C.C.'s] obesity exacerbated [her] other impairments”. 2018 WL 3109818, at *17. PA Grossman McKee acknowledged as much in a note indicating that losing weight would likely reduce C.C.'s back pain. AR at 614. The ALJ also should have recognized as a matter of common sense and knowledge that extreme obesity could exacerbate a spinal impairment. See, e.g., Celaya, 332 F.3d at 1182 (noting “the potential effect of obesity on” diabetes and hypertension as triggering “a responsibility to consider their interactive effect”, without citing record evidence specifically drawing such a connection); Ramirez, 2018 WL 2392155, at *11 (noting “the well-established correlation between obesity and diabetes milletus, kidney disease, glaucoma, and the neuropathy symptoms that Plaintiff suffers”).

This record therefore differs from cases where courts have found an ALJs' erroneous failure to address effects of obesity to be harmless because no evidence showed that obesity exacerbated an impairment. E.g., Sorian v. Berryhill, No. 19-cv-00445-DMR, 2020 WL 2768935, at *8 (N.D. Cal. May 28, 2020) (noting that doctors discussed the plaintiff's obesity only as a complicating factor for surgery, not as exacerbating symptoms or limitations); but see Ramirez, 2018 WL 2392155, at *11 (holding that an ALJ's decision could not be affirmed based on a lack of “record evidence that any doctor placed limitations or restrictions on Plaintiff's activities based solely on his obesity” when the ALJ failed to address that issue). The Commissioner does not assert harmless error in this case. See generally ECF No. 14.

C.C. has one thing in common with the plaintiff in Burch, where the Ninth Circuit found at most harmless error: she was represented by counsel during administrative proceedings. But as the Ninth Circuit acknowledged, an ALJ's duty to develop the record and provide reviewable reasoning is not limited to unrepresented claimants. Burch, 400 F.3d at 682. “The ALJ always has a special duty to fully and fairly develop the record and to assure that the claimant's interests are considered even when the claimant is represented by counsel.” Celaya, 332 F.3d at 1183 (cleaned up). Where obesity could reasonably be expected to affect a plaintiff's other impairments or ability to work, the fact that a plaintiff was represented by counsel during administrative proceedings does not excuse an ALJ's failure to explain the effects of obesity. See Wright, 2018 WL 3109818, at *17 (noting that the plaintiff was represented, like in Burch and unlike Celaya, but still finding that the ALJ's failure to address the effects of obesity required remand).

There are also significant differences between C.C.'s circumstances and Burch. In that case, the plaintiff was only “somewhat” or “slightly” obese, weighing up to 222 pounds, 332 F.3d at 678, 684, while C.C. at times weighed over four hundred pounds and was consistently characterized as “morbidly obese,” e.g., AR at 529, 617. Medical records listed C.C.'s BMI as high as 60.43 kg/m2, e.g., AR at 337, well above the values characterized as “morbidly” or “extremely” obese in other cases. See Celaya, 332 F.3d at 1183 n.3 (noting that the plaintiff's height and weight “required trivial arithmetic calculations to determine that her BMI [of approximately 46] placed her in the ‘extremely obese' range”); Mary Elizabeth C., 2020 WL 2523116, at *16 (“morbidly obese with BMI between 50 and 59.9”); Yolanda P. v. Kijakazi, 2022 WL 17248127, at *4 (“morbid obesity with BMI frequently higher than 45”); see also Mettias v. United States, No. CIV. 12-00527 ACK, 2015 WL 1931082, at *8 (D. Haw. Apr. 21, 2015) (“Morbid obesity is generally defined as a BMI of 40 or greater, or 35 or greater with comorbidities.”).

The ALJ in Burch also specifically addressed the potential effects of the plaintiff's obesity (noting that it might exacerbate her back pain) and found that it was not a severe impairment, 332 F.3d at 682, 684, thus providing at least some degree of “reviewable, on-the-record findings” as to the “effects of the plaintiff's obesity”, see Celaya, 332 F.3d at 1183. Here, in contrast, the ALJ found that C.C.'s obesity was a severe impairment, meaning that it “significantly limit[s] the ability to perform basic work activities”. AR at 23-24; see also SSR 19-2p, 2019 WL 2374244, at *3. But the ALJ did not address how obesity limits C.C.'s ability to work, thus failing to “explain how [the ALJ] reached [a] conclusion on whether obesity causes any limitations” as required by SSR 19-2p, and failing to provide the sort of reviewable findings required by Celaya.

The Commissioner contends that the Court should defer to the ALJ's conclusion because no medical opinion found that C.C.'s obesity caused more significant limitations than those assessed by the ALJ. ECF No. 14. As C.C. correctly notes, however, the record includes at least two opinions of greater restrictions, by PA Aber and Dr. Kao. AR at 75-80, 319-30. Those opinions presumably took into account C.C.'s obesity, since PA Aber treated C.C. and described her as “morbidly obese,” e.g., AR at 529, and Dr. Kao reviewed C.C.'s medical records and also noted “[m]orbid obesity,” AR at 87.

C.C.'s obesity also might tend to support C.C.'s testimony regarding the limited time she can spend walking, standing, and sitting without lying down to recover. See AR at 52-53, 56. The ALJ rejected that testimony based in large part on medical records that sometimes indicated normal gait and abilities, such as standing on heels and toes, AR at 26-27, which do not directly speak to C.C.'s ability to walk, stand, or sit for sustained periods. At least one of the assessments that the ALJ cited for its findings of normal gait and strength specifically noted C.C.'s complaints that prolonged sitting or standing exacerbated her back pain. AR at 348 (“Worse with prolonged sitting, standing and bending. Will notice after 30 minutes. Improved with laying flat.”).

The ALJ cites this report using an exhibit number reflecting the manner in which the record was assembled for the ALJ's review. See AR at 25 (citing 2F/28).

Although not addressed by the Commissioner's Cross-Motion-which cites nothing from the administrative record except for the ALJ's decision and the Appeals Council decision declining review, see generally ECF No. 14-the record includes some evidence that is at least in tension with C.C.'s claim of disability and her testimony regarding her symptoms. As the ALJ noted, AR at 26-27, some reports indicated a normal gait and strength, e.g., AR at 348, at least one report indicated that that C.C. could “walk with no difficulty” (albeit on “a good day”), AR at 338, and one report from an emergency room stated that she had “[n]o myalgias, back pain, joint pain,” or decreased range of motion, AR at 560. But the ALJ also acknowledged reports indicating pain, reduced range of motion, antalgic gait, difficulty getting off of an examination table, and osteoarthritis and tendinosis in C.C.'s shoulder. AR at 25-27. Moreover, some of the reports that the ALJ cites as showing that “the claimant denied having any muscle pain, joint pain, numbness or weakness,” in fact report significant pain or other symptoms. AR at 27 (citing “2F/13, 16, 18, 24, 26, 28; 5F/10”); see, e.g., AR at 333 (Ex. 2F at 13) (“Pt presents with worsening complaints. I am concerned as pt . . . feels the pain is worse after PT[.]”); AR at 336 (Ex. 2F at 16) (“Pain is worse with lifting the arm, laying on the arm- feels a sharp pain.”); AR at 338 (Ex. 2F at 18) (noting that C.C. experiences back pain “2-3 times a week and the pain lasts all day”); AR at 348 (Ex. 2F at 28) (noting worsening symptoms after thirty minutes of sitting or standing, improved by lying flat).

C.C. visited the emergency room for suspected food poisoning. AR at 556. It is not clear how thoroughly the doctor who saw her evaluated or recorded symptoms unrelated to C.C.'s gastric distress, or whether the report of no back or joint pain might have been intended by either C.C. or the doctor to indicate no change from C.C.'s baseline condition.

It is the ALJ's role to resolve this sort of mixed record, but the ALJ has a responsibility in such cases to explain the reasoning behind that decision, taking into account all relevant impairments. See SSR 19-2p, 2019 WL 2374244, at *4 (“As with any other impairment, we will explain how we reached our conclusion on whether obesity causes any limitations.”). The Court does not reach the question of whether this record could support the ALJ's conclusions, because the ALJ's failure to address how C.C.'s obesity affected those abilities deprives the Court of “reviewable, on-the-record findings” amenable to evaluation. See Celaya, 332 F.3d at 1183. On remand, the Commissioner should address specifically how C.C.'s obesity affects or potentially alters the conclusion that her limitations are less severe than those assessed by Dr. Kao, PA Aber, and C.C.'s own testimony.

IV. CONCLUSION

For the reasons discussed above, C.C.'s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED, the Commissioner's Cross-Motion is DENIED, and the matter is REMANDED to the Commissioner for further administrative proceedings consistent with this Order. The Clerk shall enter judgment in favor of C.C. and close the case.

IT IS SO ORDERED.


Summaries of

C.C. v. O'Malley

United States District Court, Northern District of California
Mar 28, 2024
23-cv-00408-LJC (N.D. Cal. Mar. 28, 2024)
Case details for

C.C. v. O'Malley

Case Details

Full title:C.C., Plaintiff, v. MARTIN O'MALLEY, Defendant.

Court:United States District Court, Northern District of California

Date published: Mar 28, 2024

Citations

23-cv-00408-LJC (N.D. Cal. Mar. 28, 2024)