The cab and tire cylinders have safety check-valves built into them which will keep the load from falling if you should have a hose or fitting fail. There are restricted orifices in these circuits that keep the flow within the limits of the safety checks. The checks are basically a check ball centered between 2 springs, and too much flow forces the ball against a seat which blocks the flow And stops the cylinder movement. If air gets in there, sometimes it can cause the ball to lock up and if the air is under pressure, hold it against the seat. You can sometimes get it to release by repeatedly reversing flow(raise, pump, lower, pump, repeat). You can also remove the fitting and access the ball and physically force it off of the seat to release the trapped pressure behind it. you have to remove a clip, a screen, and a screw-in hollow setscrew and spring.
here, watch this
I am not sure if the port I explored in the video is the one that would be causing the lockup, or if it is the fitting located on the underside of the cylinder though, but once the screen and setscrew and spring are out of the way, you can push a narrow probe in there and you should be able to feel the ball move against the spring on the other side of the checkball... if it is under pressure, you may have to tap on it, and it may squirt fluid and air when you push it in off of the seat...
i occasionally have to do something similar on my tractor grapple when I re-connect it, if it is warmer out than when I last disconnected it. The fluid expands and you cannot push the quick connects together against the pressure. You take the male end and smack it against the side of the bucket or loader frame which forces the ball in and it squirts a little fluid and releases the trapped pressure so you can connect the fittings into the system...