Glenn Huber, Jr. v. Nancy Berryhill

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 2018
Docket17-2284
StatusUnpublished

This text of Glenn Huber, Jr. v. Nancy Berryhill (Glenn Huber, Jr. v. Nancy Berryhill) 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
Glenn Huber, Jr. v. Nancy Berryhill, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued February 28, 2018 Decided May 4, 2018

Before

DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge

DIANE S. SYKES, Circuit Judge

DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge

No. 17-2284

GLENN H. HUBER, JR., Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. v. No. 16-cv-1947 NANCY A. BERRYHILL, Deputy Commissioner for Operations, Matthew P. Brookman, Social Security Administration, Magistrate Judge. Defendant-Appellee.

ORDER

Glenn Huber, a 67-year old veteran who suffers from knee and hip pain, arthritis in his spine, and poor hearing, appeals the district court’s judgment upholding the denial of his application for disability insurance benefits. An administrative law judge found that, despite his impairments, he had the residual functional capacity to perform light work. Huber challenges the adequacy of the ALJ’s RFC finding. Because the ALJ overlooked relevant medical evidence regarding Huber’s abilities to walk, stand, and hear and made a patently wrong credibility finding when assessing his symptoms, we reverse and remand. No. 17-2284 Page 2

I. Background

Huber applied in 2013 for disability insurance benefits based on his spinal arthritis, hip and knee pain, and impaired hearing—ailments that, he said, rendered him unable to work beginning in the spring of 2011. Huber, who served in the military and completed one year of college, previously worked as an insurance agent (1994–2010) and as an auditor for a federally funded weatherization program (2010– 2011).

Huber’s relevant medical records date back to 2010, when he was examined at a Veterans Administration hospital for complaints related to his hips, knees, and hearing. At his appointment, Huber complained to an orthopedic surgeon of hip and knee pain that he said was “getting worse.” The surgeon diagnosed him with degenerative joint disease in his knees and inflammation in his hips (trochanter bursitis). Huber then saw a VA audiologist, who determined Huber to have “moderately-severe to profound” hearing loss for high-frequency sounds that, he wrote, would have “[s]ignificant effects” on his ability to work. The audiologist reported that Huber said he had tinnitus that made it difficult for him to hear in crowds, concentrate, and sleep.

Huber’s spinal problems were first documented in 2011. In mid-2011, a doctor specializing in pain medicine diagnosed him with a fracture in his vertebrae and performed a procedure to reduce his back pain and restore his spine’s alignment (kyphoplasty surgery). Five months later, radiologists x-rayed Huber’s spine and concluded that he had degenerative disc disease in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar areas of his spine. In late-2011 and early-2012, pain specialists administered anesthetic injections into his lumbar spine to reduce his back pain. Still experiencing “chronic low back pain” one month later, Huber underwent radiofrequency ablation, which sought to reduce pain in his lumbar spine by using an electrical current to heat nerve tissue in this part of his back.

Roughly fourteen months later, Huber told a state consultative examiner of his “difficulty with standing, sitting or walking, bending over or lifting.” The examiner observed that Huber could bend his lumbar spine fully forward but that “it was painful” and noted that he had chronic hip, knee, and back pain. In the medical report for this visit, the examiner wrote under the heading “Medical Source Statement” that Huber “has difficulty with standing, walking, bending over and lifting.” No. 17-2284 Page 3

In August 2013, a VA physiatrist (a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician) performed electromyography to examine the muscles and nerves in Huber’s legs. According to the physiatrist, the results of this procedure showed damage to a nerve providing movement and sensation in his right leg (right peroneal motor neuropathy) and to a nerve in his right calf (mild, right sural sensory neuropathy).

Around this time, two state agency doctors weighed in on Huber’s functional limitations, and Huber’s wife provided a report on his daily activities. The doctors opined that Huber could perform a range of light work involving walking and/or standing for six hours per day. Meanwhile Huber’s wife said that her husband could “walk around the house,” but “[o]ther movements” and “staying in one position for a long time cause him a lot of pain.” She added that it took him longer than normal to do “all chores,” including laundry and cleaning the bathroom.

At his hearing before an administrative law judge in 2014, Huber asserted that back, knee, and hip pain and hearing problems prevented him from working. He reported that his medical treatment was “not resolving the [pain] issue,” and therefore he could sit for only “about 30 minutes,” stand for “about 10 minutes,” and walk for 5 to 10 minutes before experiencing pain and/or cramping. He further testified that because of his “hearing problems,” his friends “abandoned [him], for the simple reason that they got tired of me asking them, ‘What did you say?’”

The ALJ asked a vocational expert to consider the possible employment opportunities for a person of Huber’s age, education, and vocational background who could only occasionally climb ladders, ropes, scaffolds, ramps, and stairs, and must only occasionally stoop, balance, crouch, crawl, kneel, and be exposed to hazardous conditions. The vocational expert said that this person could perform Huber’s past job as an insurance agent, but not his last position as a weatherization auditor.

The ALJ applied the five-step analysis in 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4), and found Huber not disabled. The ALJ determined that he had not engaged in substantial gainful activity since the alleged onset date of April 15, 2011 (step one); that degenerative disc disease, degenerative joint disease in his hips and right knee, and hearing loss were severe impairments (step two); that these impairments did not equal a listed impairment (step three); that he had the residual functional capacity to perform light work, limited to workspaces with non-slippery surfaces, moderate exposure to noise, occasional climbing of stairs, ramps, scaffolds, ladders, and ropes, occasional balancing, No. 17-2284 Page 4

crouching, crawling, stooping, kneeling, and exposure to hazardous conditions; and that he could perform his past job as an insurance agent (step four).

In determining Huber’s RFC, the ALJ found his testimony about the severity of his impairments “not entirely credible.” The ALJ emphasized two reasons:

First, allegedly limited daily activities cannot be objectively verified with any degree of certainty. Secondly, even if the claimant’s daily activities are truly as limited as alleged, it is difficult to attribute that degree of limitation to the claimant’s medical condition, as opposed to other reasons, in view of the relatively weak medical evidence and other factors discussed in this decision.

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Glenn Huber, Jr. v. Nancy Berryhill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-huber-jr-v-nancy-berryhill-ca7-2018.