Kellie Lehouillier v. Carolyn Colvin

633 F. App'x 328
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 21, 2015
Docket15-1516
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 633 F. App'x 328 (Kellie Lehouillier v. Carolyn Colvin) 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
Kellie Lehouillier v. Carolyn Colvin, 633 F. App'x 328 (7th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

*329 ORDER

Two years after fracturing her right femur, Kellie Lehouillier applied for Social Security disability benefits claiming that she no longer could work because of that leg injury and other impairments, including a congenital heart defect. An agency Administrative Law Judge concluded that Lehouillier was still capable of performing unskilled, sedentary work. The agency’s Appeals Council upheld that determination, as did a district court when Lehouillier sought judicial review under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). Lehouillier appeals from the district court’s ruling, which we affirm.

Lehouillier was 40 in late 2010 when she applied for benefits. She alleged an onset date of October 3, 2008, the day she had fallen and broken her femur while working at a Culver’s restaurant. Before her onset date, Lehouillier had graduated high school, attended a 2-year college program in child development, and held a variety of jobs over a 20-year period. She is married and has a stepdaughter who was 17 at the time she applied for benefits. After her workplace accident Lehouillier also became the foster parent of an infant. She eventually returned to Culver’s part-time — with increasing hours up to 25 per week — but quit just before applying for benefits. The Social Security Administration denied benefits initially in March 2011 and again on reconsideration in July 2011. Lehouillier’s hearing before the ALJ was in August 2012.

Lehouillier did not submit any medical records predating her leg injury, but the records she did provide allude to several conditions diagnosed previously. Descriptions of her medical history note that she was born with LEOPARD syndrome (also called “multiple lentigines syndrome”), a rare condition that affects many areas of the body including the heart. At times over the years, this ailment had caused “pulmonary insufficiency” and obstructed electrical impulses from the heart, leading to pulmonary valve surgeries in 1972 (when Lehouillier was 2 1/2) and again in 1997 (at age 27). Medical records from after her accident also note that Lehouillier had self-reported suffering from sleep apnea and asthma.

Doctors had performed emergency surgery after the accident and screwed a metal rod to the fractured femur. A few weeks later Lehouillier attended an Occupational Medicine consultation with Dr. Andrew Floren concerning her claim for worker’s compensation. During that first visit Dr. Floren outlined his plan for Le-houillier’s' eventual return to work.' But he wrote in his progress notes that already she had 'mentioned possibly seeking disability benefits because unnamed doctors at the Mayo Clinic thought she could “get on Social Security Disability” even though her heart was “getting stronger.”

Over the next two years, Lehouillier had continued seeing Dr. Floren. Although the fractured femur took longer to heal than Floren expected, by June 2009 he had authorized Lehouillier to work 2 hours per day with restrictions. Later he increased that number to 4 hours, prompting Le-houillier to complain of intolerable pain after a few weeks. When she. again brought up the subject of disability benefits, Floren had responded, according to his progress notes, that the topic was “quite premature.”

In October 2009, a year after her fall, Lehouillier had seen cardiologist John Ro-zich complaining of sporadic numbness and tingling in both hands going back 18 months. Dr. Rozich sent her to neurologist Donn Dexter, who was unable to explain the symptoms and recommended more testing. Another neurologist later attributed Lehouillier’s hand numbness to ulnar neuropathy.

*330 That same month, Lehouillier had worn a heart monitor for 48 hours. A few irregular heartbeats were detected, but the cardiologist who conducted the monitoring did not explain their significance or recommend treatment. Nor did Dr. Rozich alter his approach of simply monitoring Lehouil-lier’s condition.

Meanwhile, Dr. Floren had increased Lehouillier’s work authorization to 5 hours daily. Lehouillier had requested that increase 'even while continuing to report “achy pain” in and above her right knee. In his progress notes Floren commented that she was angry because a lawyer had said she had “no recourse” except to work. Floren had responded that, given the nature of her injury and the surgical repair, continued progress toward full-time work “would reasonably be expected.”

Then in November 2009, Lehouillier had met again with Dr. Dexter, the neurologist, to discuss the results of an MRI of her brain. The results were “unremarkable” except for “[ajbnormal positioning of the cerebellar tonsils consistent with Chi-ari one malformation.” Dexter suggested consulting another doctor to evaluate the Chiari malformation and related headaches, and he also recommended that Le-houillier use elbow pads for her ulnar neu-ropathy. That same month Lehouillier also had returned to Dr. Floren complaining of swelling in her right foot and ankle. Floren was “at a loss” to explain these symptoms, and he opined that his “ability to help the patient is somewhat limited at this time.”

At the end of 2009, Dr. Rozich had recommended to Lehouillier that she seek evaluation for disability benefits. Yet he wrote in his progress notes that “really she has had no problems.” Still, he said, Lehouillier had “the beginning of the potential for the more common or typical coronary artery disease that will potentially form.” He noted her complaints of fatigue without explaining the significance of his clinical findings or saying whether his observations corroborated her reported symptoms. Rozich wrote that she was “headed for full or partial disability,” that he would “gladly support her candidacy in this,” and that she “is simply going to be unable to perform at her current level or the level of normal activity.” But he did not recommend any treatment for her heart condition.

The hardware was removed from Le-houillier’s leg in February 2010, and in April Dr. Floren had cleared her to resume working with “permanent work restrictions” including “rare kneeling and no standing or walking more than occasionally.” Floren opined that Lehouillier had reached “maximum improvement” and that, for purposes of Wisconsin’s worker’s compensation statute, her right leg rendered her 10% disabled.

In August 2010, after she quit working, Lehouillier had visited Dr. Rozich. He wrote in his progress notes that they had “talked again about her application for disability” and that he was “firmly supportive of the fact that she is disabled in terms of her ability to work and certainly will answer any questions.” But the only medical treatment he recommended concerned a flare-up of seasonal allergies.

A month later, on September 24, 2010, Lehouillier had returned to Dr. Floren, who afterward wrote in his progress notes: “The patient is most insistent that Dr. Rozich does not want her to ever work again and is strongly desiring that somehow I get her on Social Security Disability. I tried to tell her several times that I am unable to do that but she was very insistent that Dr. Rozich had told her ‘never to work again,’ and since she needs an income she needs to be on Social Security Disability.” Floren apparently, had reviewed Le- *331

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633 F. App'x 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellie-lehouillier-v-carolyn-colvin-ca7-2015.