Jordan v. SSA Terminals, LLC, No. 19-70521 (9th Cir. 2020)
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Jordan worked for SSA as a longshoreman and operated a small landscaping business. In 2014, the truck Jordan was driving was dropped by a crane. He suffered extensive damage to his lower back. After treatment by medication and physical therapy, Jordan had spinal fusion surgery. Before the 2018 surgery. Jordan sought benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. 901–50. SSA agreed that Jordan was totally disabled immediately following the accident and again as he recovered from surgery. Surveillance videos, recorded in 2015-2016, showed Jordan engaging in physical activities and attending events where he apparently sat and stood for long periods without difficulty. Jordan testified, “There’s nothing I can’t do, but it all either is painful, elevates the pain, or I can’t do it for the amount of time that would be considered a job.” Jordan continued his landscaping but testified that his capacity was limited. Dr. Reynolds corroborated Jordan’s complaints of pain and opined that Jordan was totally disabled from work as a longshoreman.
The Ninth Circuit remanded the denial of benefits. Credible complaints of severe, persistent, and prolonged pain, arising out of an injury, can establish a prima facie case of disability, even if the claimant can literally perform his past work. The claimant need not experience excruciating pain to be considered disabled. The ALJ apparently erroneously believed Jordan had to establish that it was literally impossible for him to do his past work.
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Court Description: Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. The panel granted a claimant’s petition for review of the Benefits Review Board’s denial of his claim for disability benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act; and remanded with instructions to the administrative law judge to apply the proper legal standard in assessing claimant’s allegations of disabling pain. The panel held, as a matter of first impression, that credible complaints of severe, persistent, and prolonged pain can establish a prima facie case of disability, even if the claimant can literally perform his or her past work. The panel held further that a claimant need not experience excruciating pain to be considered disabled. The panel held that the ALJ’s opinion as a whole suggested that the ALJ believed claimant had to establish that it was literally impossible for him to do his past work, and this was error. The panel left it to the ALJ on remand to determine, based on consideration of all the facts and circumstances of the case, whether claimant’s complaints of pain were (1) credible, and (2) if so, whether the level of pain was sufficiently severe, persistent, and prolonged to significantly interfere with the claimant’s ability to do his or her past JORDAN V. SSA TERMINALS 3 work. The panel held that the pain must relate to an injury that arose out of and in the course of employment.
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