Eichstadt v. Astrue

534 F.3d 663, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15184, 2008 WL 2764636
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 2008
Docket06-4295
StatusPublished
Cited by412 cases

This text of 534 F.3d 663 (Eichstadt v. Astrue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eichstadt v. Astrue, 534 F.3d 663, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15184, 2008 WL 2764636 (7th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

WOOD, Circuit Judge.

Susan Eichstadt has fibromyalgia, a chronic condition that causes pain all over one’s body, as well as fatigue and tenderness. Fibromyalgia is difficult to diagnose, for the symptoms vary depending on both the person and the time and circumstances of any given day. Eichstadt’s disorder was diagnosed in 1999. At that point, she had been out of the workforce for 13 years. Four years later, in 2003, she filed for Disability Insurance Benefits under Title II of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 423, claiming that her fibro-myalgia, along with a potpourri of other conditions, rendered her disabled and unable to work.

Eichstadt quickly confronted a serious problem. At her administrative hearing, the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) found (and neither party disputes) that because Eichstadt has not been in the workforce since May 22,1986, her “insured status” under the Act expired on December 31, 1987. The ALJ then found that the record did not support a finding that the onset of Eichstadt’s disability occurred before her “date last insured” (as Social Security jargon has it) and thus she was ineligible for benefits. See 42 U.S.C. § 416®. Eichstadt challenged that finding unsuccessfully before the district court, and now she has turned to this court. We affirm.

I

The standard of review that governs decisions in disability-benefit cases is deferential. Both the district court and this court must evaluate only “whether the final decision of the [Commissioner] is both supported by substantial evidence and based on the proper legal criteria.” Briscoe ex rel. Taylor v. Barnhart, 425 F.3d 345, 351 (7th Cir.2005). Though we “conduct a critical review of the evidence, considering both the evidence that supports, as well as the evidence that detracts from, the Commissioner’s decision,” we will uphold a decision so long as the evidence supports it and the ALJ explains her anal *666 ysis of that evidence with “enough detail and clarity to permit meaningful appellate review.” Id.

Eichstadt offers several reasons why we should reject the decision of the ALJ, but she relies most heavily on the assertion that the ALJ came to the wrong conclusion because she failed to follow the requirements of Social Security Ruling (“SSR”) 83-20. SSR 83-20 addresses situations in which an ALJ finds that a person is disabled as of the date she applied for disability insurance benefits, but it is still necessary to ascertain whether the disability arose prior to an even earlier date — normally, when the claimant was last insured. See Scheck v. Barnhart, 357 F.3d 697, 701 (7th Cir.2004). Eichstadt argues that her case triggered SSR 83-20 and that, had the ALJ properly followed its framework, she would have been required to engage a medical expert to establish the date when Eichstadt was first disabled.

The fundamental problem with Ei-chstadt’s claim is that she did not file for benefits until more than 15 years after her insured status expired. Though that, in itself, does not doom her application, the long lapse in time raises obvious evidentia-ry problems. Unsurprisingly, Eichstadt was able to obtain very little information from the period prior to the expiration of her insured status, producing only a couple of records from 1986 and 1987 that related to dental pain and jaw surgery. She offered nothing that foreshadowed the fibro-myalgia that was to come.

The remainder of the record consists primarily of Eichstadt’s own testimony regarding a host of problems that pre-dated the expiration of her insured status, as well as testimony from her current physicians and medical records detailing her condition and diagnoses during the period post-dating her date last insured. To the extent that she focused on problems that pre-dated her insured status, Eichstadt presented a litany of ailments dating back to her childhood, for which no medical records exist. The ALJ correctly concluded that these conditions were irrelevant to Eichstadt’s claim for disability benefits, not only because Eichstadt was able to engage in substantial gainful employment during and after experiencing these problems, but also because they were conditions (such as hypothyroidism, sun rashes, dry eyes, etc.) that do not substantially impair one’s ability to work and therefore do not amount to a “disability” under the Act. As for the evidence post-dating Ei-chstadt’s date last insured, the ALJ reasonably concluded that this, too, failed to support Eichstadt’s claim. Although this evidence tended to suggest that Eichstadt is currently disabled, and perhaps was disabled during the late 1990s, it provided no support for the proposition that she was disabled at any time prior to December 31, 1987.

Eichstadt’s only response to that conclusion is that the evidentiary record might have been different if the ALJ had followed SSR 83-20. She reads SSR 83-20 as requiring the use of a medical expert whenever onset date is at issue. The relevant text of the ruling is:

How long the disease may be determined to have existed at a disabling level of severity depends on an informed judgment of the facts in the particular case. This judgment, however, must have a legitimate medical basis. At the hearing, the administrative law judge (ALJ) should call on the services of a medical advisor when onset must be inferred. If there is information in the file indicating that additional medical evidence concerning onset is available, such evidence should be secured before inferences are made.

*667 SSR 83-20 (emphasis added). Eichstadt relies on the italicized language to argue that the ALJ was required, to call a medical expert in her ease. In our view, however, the ruling imposes no such command. For one thing, it describes something that the ALJ “should” do, rather than something he or she “must” do or “shall” do, implying that the ultimate decision is up to the ALJ. In addition, the ruling speaks of the need for a “legitimate medical basis” for the ALJ’s judgment and the need for “additional” evidence about onset. A medical expert here, however, would not have been giving “additional” evidence; the expert would have been providing the only evidence in the record about Eichstadt’s condition before December 31, 1987. The Commissioner reads SSR 83-20 as urging the ALJ to seek a medical examiner’s opinion only after a finding of disability has been made. We give some deference to the Commissioner’s interpretations, and we find this one to be entirely reasonable. The ALJ in this case found that Eichstadt was not disabled at any point before December 31, 1987. With no finding of disability, there was no need to determine an onset date.

Even if Eichstadt’s current condition rendered it appropriate to determine an onset date, SSR 83-20 requires a “legitimate medical basis” for any decision regarding when an impairment became “disabling” under the Act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
534 F.3d 663, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15184, 2008 WL 2764636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eichstadt-v-astrue-ca7-2008.