Kenneth Scrogham v. Carolyn Colvin

765 F.3d 685, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 16517, 2014 WL 4211051
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2014
Docket13-3601
StatusPublished
Cited by448 cases

This text of 765 F.3d 685 (Kenneth Scrogham 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
Kenneth Scrogham v. Carolyn Colvin, 765 F.3d 685, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 16517, 2014 WL 4211051 (7th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

RIPPLE, Circuit Judge.

Kenneth Owen Scrogham applied for disability benefits under the Social Security Act, submitting that a variety of medical conditions — including degenerative discs, spinal stenosis, sleep apnea, hypertension, arthritis, atrial fibrillation and restless leg syndrome — constituted a qualifying disability. After his application was denied, Mr. Scrogham participated in a hearing before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) for the Social Security Administration (“Administration”). The ALJ denied Mr. Scrogham’s application for benefits, and the Administration’s Appeals Council denied his request for review. Accordingly, Mr. Scrogham filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, seeking judicial review of the ALJ’s decision. The district court affirmed the denial of benefits, holding that the ALJ did not err in giving less weight to the opinion of a treating physician than to the opinions of non-treating physicians, that the ALJ permissibly found Mr. Scrogham not to be credible and that the ALJ’s decision otherwise was supported by substantial evidence. Mr. Scrogham timely appealed.

We now reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings. In our view, the ALJ’s methodology was flawed in several respects. The ALJ impermissibly ignored a line of evidence demonstrating the progressive nature of Mr. Scrogham’s degenerative disc disease and arthritis. As a result, the *688 ALJ inappropriately undervalued the opinions of Mr. Scrogham’s treating physicians, whose longitudinal view of Mr. Scrogham’s ailments should have factored prominently into the ALJ’s assessment of his disability status. Second, even if we confined our review of the record to the snapshots of evidence that the ALJ considered, we do not think that this limited evidence builds the required logical bridge to her conclusions. Specifically, the ALJ seems to have misapprehended or at least to have considered only partially some of the evidence about Mr. Scrogham’s daily activities, rehabilitation efforts and physicians’ evaluations. This lapse affected both the ALJ’s credibility determination and her residual functional capacity assessment. Because the ALJ’s opinion reflects a flawed evaluation of the record evidence, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I

BACKGROUND

A.

When the Administration denied Mr. Scrogham’s request for benefits, he was fifty-three years old and married with adult children. He had a high school education and, until November 2007, had been employed consistently since 1993. He had worked as a sales manager at an automotive sales company, as a landscaper and a landscape designer, as a sales representative for a building supply store and as the marketing director of a company. Most recently, he had worked from January 2007 to November 2007 in a restaurant, where he made pizzas and did some supervisory and managerial tasks, such as scheduling. Mr. Scrogham claims that he had to stop working because he had a variety of health problems, primarily back and leg pain, that made working “just entirely too rough on [him].” 1

The Administrative Record contains evidence of extensive treatment by both primary care physicians and specialists, as well as evidence from physicians associated with the state disability agency. Mr. Scrogham has been receiving medical attention for a number of conditions, including back and leg pain, since at least 2004. An x-ray of Mr. Scrogham’s lumbar spine in 2004 revealed, among other problems, “mild to moderate spondylosis ... from LI through L5” and “degenerative joint disease of the T10 costotransverse joints.” 2 Apart from this report, the record is relatively sparse until 2008. Reports by Clifty Falls Chiropractic from 2008 reflect the pain that Mr. Scrogham was experiencing due to his back issues, and treatment notes indicate that Mr. Scrogham’s pain was increasing in frequency as time went on. Mr. Scrogham also was treated for a heart condition in 2008. In March, he was hospitalized with atrial fibrillation. Dr. James Jackson performed a cardiac catheterization. Mr. Scrogham’s primary physician at that time, Dr. Steven Adams, wrote a note when Mr. Scrogham was discharged from the hospital indicating that Mr. Scrogham had “severe degenerative arthritis” and morbid obesity. 3

On April 8, 2008, Dr. Adams listed Mr. Scrogham’s ailments as obstructive sleep apnea, atrial fibrillation, severe degenerative arthritis in his knees and hypertension. Dr. Adams indicated that all of these conditions were related to Mr. Scrogham’s *689 weight and expressed his opinion that lap-band surgery was “medically necessary” for Mr. Scrogham. 4 Mr. Scrogham then was transferred to the care of Dr. Mark Totten, whose diagnoses corresponded with those of Dr. Adams. On July 18, 2008, Dr. Totten stated that Mr. Scrogham had hypertension, severe sleep apnea, morbid obesity, back problems and numbness in his legs. Dr. Totten included notes about Mr. Scrogham’s activity level; specifically, he indicated that Mr. Scrogham “has been helping work on his sister[’]s roof recently although normally he isn’t quite that active. He has been trying to do work on a bicycle that seems to be tolerated by his joints and back. He has been trying to watch his diet.” 5

Dr. Totten referred Mr. Scrogham to Dr. Alcorn for evaluation of his sleep apnea. In May 2008, Mr. Scrogham underwent a sleep study, after which he was instructed to use a CPAP device 6 to treat his sleep apnea. When Dr. Alcorn saw Mr. Scrogham on July 21, 2008, for a consultation regarding sleep apnea, recurrent leg movement affecting his sleep apnea treatment and lap-band surgery, Dr. Alcorn observed that Mr. Scrogham was morbidly obese, and that he was “unable to have a decent day.” 7 On March 19, 2009, Dr. Alcorn reported that Mr. Scrogham was experiencing numbness in his legs and feet and that he was “unable to walk more than about a block before he cramps up.” 8 Dr. Alcorn stated that Mr. Scrogham was unable to work. About a week after that appointment, on March 25, 2009, Mr. Scrogham underwent an MRI, which revealed “moderate to severe bilateral neural foraminal narrowing and moderate spinal stenosis” at his L2-L3 vertebrae and “moderate bilateral neural foraminal narrowing and moderate to severe spinal sten-osis” at his L3-L4 vertebrae, all due to degenerative spondylosis. 9

On April 9, 2009, Dr. Alcorn saw Mr. Scrogham and wrote that he was having “a terrible time with his morbid obesity. He is being evaluated for morbid obesity bar-iatric surgery.” 10 He observed that the medical findings were “consistent with what appears to be a spinal stenosis case, symptomatic in which he can barely walk.” 11 This opinion was echoed by Dr. John Guarnaschelli, who met with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
765 F.3d 685, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 16517, 2014 WL 4211051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-scrogham-v-carolyn-colvin-ca7-2014.