In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________
No. 02-4318
PATTY CARRADINE,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
JO ANNE B. BARNHART, Commissioner of Social Security,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division.
No. 1:02-CV-122—Roger B. Cosbey, Magistrate Judge.
____________
ARGUED JUNE 11, 2003—DECIDED MARCH 12, 2004
____________
Before POSNER, COFFEY, and RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge. Applicants for social security
benefits who claim to be disabled from working because of
extreme pain make the job of a social security administra-
tive law judge a difficult one. Medical science confirms that
pain can be severe and disabling even in the absence of
“objective” medical findings, that is, test results that de-
monstrate a physical condition that normally causes pain of
the severity claimed by the applicant. E.g., Dennis C. Turk
& Akiko Okifuji, “Assessment of Patients’ Reporting of
2 No. 02-4318
Pain: An Integrated Perspective,” 353 Lancet 1784 (1999);
Paula M. Trief et al., “Functional vs. Organic Pain: A Mean-
ingful Distinction?” 43 J. Clinical Psych. 219 (1987). And so
“once the claimant produces medical evidence of an under-
lying impairment, the Commissioner may not discredit the
claimant’s testimony as to subjective symptoms merely
because they are unsupported by objective evidence.” Lester
v. Chater, 81 F.3d 821, 834 (9th Cir. 1996). “A claimant’s
subjective testimony supported by medical evidence that
satisfies the pain standard is itself sufficient to support a
finding of disability. Indeed, in certain situations, pain alone
can be disabling, even when its existence is unsupported by
objective evidence.” Foote v. Chater, 67 F.3d 1553, 1561 (11th
Cir. 1995) (per curiam) (citations omitted). “Pain, fatigue,
and other subjective, nonverifiable complaints are in some
cases the only symptoms of a serious medical condition. To
insist in such a case, as the social security disability law
does not . . . that the subjective complaint, even if believed
by the trier of fact, is insufficient to warrant an award of
benefits would place a whole class of disabled people
outside the protection of that law.” Cooper v. Casey, 97 F.3d
914, 917 (7th Cir. 1996) (citations omitted); see 20 C.F.R. §
404.1529(b)(2).
But of course this dispensation invites the unscrupulous
applicant to exaggerate his or her pain without fear of being
contradicted by medical evidence. The administrative law
judge must be alert to this possibility and evaluate the
applicant’s credibility with great care. His responsibility is
all the greater because determinations of credibility are
fraught with uncertainty, e.g., Judy Zaparniuk, John C.
Yuille & Steven Taylor, “Assessing the Credibility of True
and False Statements,” 18 Int’l J.L. & Psychiatry 343 (1995);
Michael W. Mullane, “The Truthsayer and the Court: Expert
Testimony on Credibility,” 43 Me. L. Rev. 53, 64 (1991);
despite much lore the contrary, it appears that it is actually
No. 02-4318 3
more difficult to assess the credibility of oral than of written
testimony. Michael J. Saks, “Enhancing and Restraining
Accuracy in Adjudication,” 51 L. & Contemp. Probs., Autumn
1988, pp. 243, 263-64. Appellate review of credibility
determinations, especially when made by specialists such as
the administrative law judges of the Social Security Admin-
istration, is highly limited because the reviewing court lacks
direct access to the witnesses (which may be a mixed
blessing, however, if Professor Saks is correct), lacks the
trier’s immersion in the case as a whole, and when review-
ing decisions by specialized tribunals also lacks the trier’s
experience with the type of case under review. See, e.g.,
Dixon v. Massanari, 270 F.3d 1171, 1178-79 (7th Cir. 2001);
Shramek v. Apfel, 226 F.3d 809, 811 (7th Cir. 2000); Fairman v.
Anderson, 188 F.3d 635, 647 (5th Cir. 1999). The administra-
tive law judge thought that Carradine was exaggerating her
pain—that it was not severe enough to prevent her from
working. Ordinarily this determination would be conclusive
upon us, but in this case the administrative law judge based
his credibility determination on serious errors in reasoning
rather than merely the demeanor of the witness, and when
that occurs, we must remand. Clifford v. Apfel, 227 F.3d 863,
872 (7th Cir. 2000).
Patty Carradine applied for social security disability ben-
efits in 1994, when she was 42 years old, following a back
injury from a slip and fall on ice. The administrative law
judge acknowledged that Carradine “has a severe impair-
ment . . . . She has upper body pain and right hand numb-
ness. [Medical] records establish objective evidence of a
medical condition that would cause limitations of work
capacity.” In fact, in the years since her back injury caused
pain that triggered a protracted search for relief from a large
battery of physicians, she has been diagnosed with a variety
of ailments, including degenerative disk disease, scoliosis,
depression, fibromyalgia, and “somatization disorder,” the
4 No. 02-4318
last term (along with synonyms like “somatoform disor-
ders” and “somatoform pain disorder”) being a fancy name
for psychosomatic illness, that is, physical distress of
psychological origin. See 20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P, app. 1,
§ 12.07; Stedman’s Medical Dictionary 528 (27th ed. 2000); Cass
v. Shalala, 8 F.3d 552, 554 (7th Cir. 1993); Latham v. Shalala, 36
F.3d 482, 484 (5th Cir. 1994); Vaughn v. Nissan Motor Corp. in
U.S.A., Inc., 77 F.3d 736, 737 (4th Cir. 1996); Easter v. Bowen,
867 F.2d 1128, 1129-30 (8th Cir. 1989); Trief et al., supra. The
issue in the case is not the existence of these various condi-
tions of hers but their severity and, concretely, whether, as
she testified with corroboration by her husband, they have
caused her such severe pain that she cannot work full time.
While acknowledging as he had to that severe pain can be
totally disabling, see, e.g., Zurawski v. Halter, 245 F.3d 881,
889 (7th Cir. 2001); 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1529(c)(4), (d), the
administrative law judge gave two reasons for disbelieving
Carradine’s testimony about the severity of her pain. The
first involved the primarily psychological origin not of
the pain itself but of its severity. He said, “Psychological
testing confirms a finding that the claimant is inclined to
exaggerate her account of limitations . . . . Among the find-
ings from the examination and testing, Dr. Martin observed
that [Carradine’s] psychological stress and personal con-
flicts likely affected the claimant’s account of physical
symptoms and ailments. He noted that results of the
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) did
not indicate invalid responses or exaggeration of psycholog-
ical symptoms. However, he noted that her performance
indicated somatization. This finding implies she exaggerates
the severity of symptoms she reports.” It implies no such
thing. It implies merely that the source of Carradine’s pain
is psychological rather than physical. If pain is disabling, the
fact that its source is purely psychological does not
disentitle the applicant to benefits.
No. 02-4318 5
Pain is always subjective in the sense of being experienced
in the brain. The question whether the experience is more
acute because of a psychiatric condition is different from the
question whether the applicant is pretending to experience
pain, or more pain than she actually feels. The pain is
genuine in the first, the psychiatric case, though fabricated
in the second. The cases involving somatization recognize
this distinction. Metz v. Shalala, 49 F.3d 374, 377 (8th Cir.
1995); Latham v. Shalala, supra, 36 F.3d at 484; Easter v. Bowen,
supra, 867 F.2d at 1129. The administrative law judge in our
case did not.
His misunderstanding of the point is further shown by his
remarking that “medical examiners and treating physicians
have not been able to find objective evidence to support
[Carradine’s] extreme account of pain and limitation.” That
inability is consistent of course with a psychological origin
of the pain. He acknowledged Carradine’s long history of
treatment. “This extensive and exhaustive treatment,” he
remarked, “would on its face appear to reflect a severely
disabling condition. However, it also appears that the
doctors accepted the claimant’s complaints at face value and
proceeded to treat her in the absence of significant findings
upon diagnostic testing and physical examination.” Since
severe pain is consistent with “the absence of significant
findings upon diagnostic testing and physical examination,”
which would not reveal a psychological origin of pain, the
doctors had no choice but to take Carradine’s complaints of
pain “at face value” and treat her. What is significant is the
improbability that Carradine would have undergone the
pain-treatment procedures that she did, which included not
only heavy doses of strong drugs such as Vicodin, Toradol,
Demerol, and even morphine, but also the surgical implan-
tation in her spine of a catheter and a spinal-cord stimulator,
merely in order to strengthen the credibility of her com-
plaints of pain and so increase her chances of obtaining
6 No. 02-4318
disability benefits, cf. Easter v. Bowen, supra, 867 F.2d at 1130;
likewise the improbability that she is a good enough actress
to fool a host of doctors and emergency-room personnel into
thinking she suffers extreme pain; and the (perhaps lesser)
improbability that this host of medical workers would
prescribe drugs and other treatment for her if they thought
she were faking her symptoms. Such an inference would
amount to an accusation that the medical workers who
treated Carradine were behaving unprofessionally.
The administrative law judge could not get beyond the
discrepancy between Carradine’s purely physical ailments,
which although severe were not a plausible cause of dis-
abling pain, and the pain to which Carradine testified. He
failed to take seriously the possibility that the pain was in-
deed as severe as Carradine said but that its origin was
psychological rather than physical. The evidence that she
presented went far beyond a merely self-serving, uncorrob-
orated claim of pain by a malingerer.
The administrative law judge thought Carradine’s
testimony inconsistent with the activities that she acknowl-
edged engaging in, such as performing household chores
and taking walks as long as two miles. Since exercise is
one of the treatments that doctors have prescribed for
Carradine’s pain, and she does not claim to be paralyzed,
we cannot see how her being able to walk two miles is
inconsistent with her suffering severe pain. And if she was
testifying truthfully and against her interest about her daily
activities, why did the administrative law judge think she
was lying about her pain?
But there is a deeper problem with the administrative law
judge’s discernment of contradiction. He failed to consider
the difference between a person’s being able to engage in
sporadic physical activities and her being able to work eight
hours a day five consecutive days of the week. Clifford v.
Apfel, supra, 227 F.3d at 872; Vertigan v. Halter, 260 F.3d 1044,
No. 02-4318 7
1050 (9th Cir. 2001); Easter v. Bowen, supra, 867 F.2d at 1130.
Carradine does not claim to be in wracking pain every
minute of the day. When she feels better for a little while,
she can drive, shop, do housework. It does not follow that
she can maintain concentration and effort over the full
course of the work week. The evidence is that she cannot.
The weight the administrative law judge gave to
Carradine’s ability to walk two miles was perverse: not only
is it a form of therapy, but it is not a form of therapy
available at work. A clinical psychologist opined that
Carradine’s attention and concentration are impaired by her
focus on pain.
As in this case, the applicant for disability benefits in
Vertigan v. Halter, supra, 260 F.3d at 1049-50, was “able to go
grocery shopping with assistance, walk approximately an
hour in the malls, get together with her friends, play cards,
swim, watch television, and read. She also took physical
therapy for six months and exercised at home. The ALJ re-
lied on this evidence to conclude that Ms. Vertigan’s daily
activities involved physical functions that were inconsistent
with her claims of pain. Yet, these physical activities did not
consume a substantial part of Ms. Vertigan’s day. . . . In
addition, activities such as walking in the mall and swim-
ming are not necessarily transferable to the work setting
with regard to the impact of pain. A patient may do these
activities despite pain for therapeutic reasons, but that does
not mean she could concentrate on work despite the pain or
could engage in similar activity for a longer period given
the pain involved. As such, we find only a scintilla of
evidence in the record to support the ALJ’s finding that she
lacked credibility about her pain and physical limitations.
As revealed by the medical reports, Ms. Vertigan’s constant
quest for medical treatment and pain relief refutes such a
finding.” So the court reversed. See also Cox v. Apfel, 160
F.3d 1203, 1207 (8th Cir. 1998), where the court “questioned
whether a claimant with seven years of medical records
8 No. 02-4318
detailing repeated complaints of severe pain, who under-
goes three back surgeries in the hopes of alleviating that
pain and who now lives with a morphine pump implanted
in her body, can be found not credible regarding her
complaints of pain.”
We do not decide that Carradine is in fact entitled to
benefits. Maybe she is exaggerating her pain. Maybe we are
naïve in doubting Carradine’s thespian capabilities or the
willingness of physicians to perform intrusive, even danger-
ous, therapies on patients whom they believe to be fakers.
Maybe even severe pain is not much of a distraction for
people at Carradine’s vocational level. (Her last job before
her back injury was driving a van for a rehabilitation clinic.)
These are issues for the administrative law judge to address
utilizing whatever body of expert opinion, scholarly or
otherwise, may be available to him or within the institu-
tional memory of the Social Security Administration. But an
administrative agency’s decision cannot be upheld when the
reasoning process employed by the decision maker exhibits
deep logical flaws, Steele v. Barnhart, 290 F.3d 936, 941 (7th
Cir. 2002); Sarchet v. Chater, 78 F.3d 305, 307 (7th Cir. 1996);
Adorno v. Shalala, 40 F.3d 43, 44 (3d Cir. 1994), even if those
flaws might be dissipated by a fuller and more exact
engagement with the facts. The judgment is therefore
reversed and the case remanded to the Social Security
Administration for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
No. 02-4318 9
COFFEY, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The issue on appeal is
whether the administrative law judge’s (“ALJ”) decision
to deny disability insurance benefits to the claimant, Patty
Carradine, is supported by substantial evidence. In his
decision, the ALJ determined that Carradine’s testimony
regarding the extent of her allegedly disabling pain was less
than credible, finding that:
(1) Carradine’s testimony was not supported by objective
medical evidence from the records of her “[m]edical examiners
and treating physicians,” R. at 19 (emphasis added);
(2) Carradine’s testimony regarding pain was
“significant[ly] inconsisten[t]” with her own account of her
“routine daily activities including self-care and household
chores,” as well as “routinely driving and hobbies such as
reading, taking walks, and gardening,” R. at 18 (emphasis
added);
(3) Carradine’s credibility “[wa]s further diminished by
the results of [physical] capacity testing that indicated
her responses were significantly invalid” because she was
exerting “minimal efforts” during the exam, id.; and
(4) Carradine’s somatization disorder inclined her to
“exaggerate[] the severity of the symptoms she reports.” R. at
1
19.
1
I believe it is incumbent that I point out that the majority
incorrectly states that the ALJ gave just two reasons for disbeliev-
ing Carradine’s testimony about the severity of her pain. In fact,
the ALJ expressly referenced four independent bases for discrediting
Carradine’s allegation of disabling pain. And I believe it is beyond
cavil that these four, solid reasons for discrediting Carradine’s
testimony, together, comprise more than enough evidence to
support the ALJ’s determination that the extent of Carradine’s
claimed impairment on account of her pain allegations was
(continued...)
10 No. 02-4318
For all of these reasons, the ALJ concluded that Carradine’s
“statements concerning her impairments and their impact
on her ability to work . . . [we]re not entirely reliable,” and
thus failed to support her allegation that she suffered from
2
debilitating pain. R. at 27.
The majority’s sole basis and reasoning in reversing and
remanding—purportedly to allow the ALJ to undertake “a
fuller and more exact engagement with the facts”—is that,
in the majority’s view, the ALJ “based his credibility deter-
mination on serious errors in reasoning rather than merely
3
the demeanor of the witness.” After reviewing the record,
(...continued)
incredible (particularly considering the “substantial evidence”
standard requires “no more than ‘such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclu-
sion.’ ” Smith v. Apfel, 231 F.3d 433, 439 (7th Cir. 2000)).
2
Ms. Carradine is a 54-year-old white female who, according to
an assessment done by Dr. Karl Manders and physical therapist
Kim Wagler in June of 1993, claimed to suffer from “constant
burning pain [in her mid back], occasional headaches . . . muscle
spasms, and right hip pain” on account of a February 1993 slip-
and-fall accident. R. at 266. This initial evaluation further noted
that Carradine’s rehabilitation goal was to return to work, and
that her rehabilitation potential was “good.” Id.
3
The majority utterly fails to support its creative assertion that
the ALJ’s credibility determination was somehow based on these
so-called “errors in reasoning” as opposed to Carradine’s de-
meanor and presentation at the hearing. While the majority
is apparently suggesting that the ALJ “erred” in stating that
Carradine’s somatization disorder “implies [that Carradine]
exaggerates the severity of the symptoms she reports,” as I ex-
plain later, it is an accepted medical fact that somatics do tend to
exaggerate the severity of their symptoms, see infra; thus, the ALJ’s
explanation and reasoning was proper and was not in “error” as
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 11
I am forced to disagree with the majority’s broad and un-
supported conclusion that there were “deep logical flaws”
in the ALJ’s reasoning, much less that his decision warrants
reversal. By casting aside the well-supported credibility
determination of the ALJ, who (unlike any judge on this
panel) witnessed Carradine’s testimony firsthand, the ma-
jority insists on running roughshod over longstanding
principles of deference that continue to govern this Court’s
appellate review of decisions by administrative law judges.
Because this case is so fact-intensive, and involves a
wealth of medical evidence from doctors, physical thera-
pists, psychologists, as well as vocational experts, I have
thoroughly reviewed the materials before the court and
have made every attempt to make a complete record on
review. Furthermore, I trust I have made clear in this opin-
(...continued)
the majority claims. Moreover, this was not the only stated reason
the ALJ rejected Carradine’s pain allegations.
Instead, the ALJ set forth three other reasons he found
Carradine’s testimony incredible—namely, (1) the lack of ob-
jective medical evidence supporting her pain claims; (2) the fact
she overstated her physical limitations on a previous strength test
by giving “minimal efforts”; and (3) the inconsistency between
her daily activities and her complaints of constant, disabling pain.
These factors provide more than substantial evidence to support his
credibility determination.
Furthermore, it is undisputed that as the judge presiding over her
benefits hearing, the ALJ had the “best ‘opportunity to observe [her]
verbal and non-verbal behavior . . . focusing on [her] reactions and
responses to the interrogatories, [her] facial expressions, attitudes, tone
of voice, eye contact, posture and body movements,’ as well as confused
or nervous speech patterns.” United States v. Tolson, 988 F.2d 1494,
1497 (7th Cir. 1993). And as this Court has long held, this places
the ALJ in a superior position to render credibility determinations
as he did here. See infra at 29-35.
12 No. 02-4318
ion why I am convinced that the ALJ’s credibility deter-
mination and his decision to deny the claimant benefits
are supported in the record with substantial evidence, and I
would thus affirm the district court’s judgment upholding
the decision. I respectfully dissent.
There can be no doubt that the law mandates that our
Court on review, after considering the record in its entirety,
must uphold an ALJ’s decision to deny disability benefits to
a claimant as long as the ALJ’s ruling is supported by substan-
tial evidence and is without any error of law. See 42 U.S.C. §
405(g); Sims v. Barnhart, 309 F.3d 424, 428 (7th Cir. 2002);
Butera v. Apfel, 173 F.3d 1049, 1055 (7th Cir. 1999). The
substantial evidence standard “requires no more than ‘such
relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate
to support a conclusion.’ ” Diaz v. Chater, 55 F.3d 300, 305 (7th
Cir. 1995) (quoting Richardson v. Perales, 402 U.S. 389, 401
(1971)) (emphasis added). Furthermore, in reaching our
“substantial evidence” determination, this Court’s review
and evaluation of the record is limited; when “review[ing] the
record as a whole,” we are “not allowed to substitute [our]
judgment for the ALJ’s ‘by reconsidering facts, reweighing
evidence, resolving conflicts in evidence, or deciding questions of
credibility.’ ” Cannon v. Apfel, 213 F.3d 970, 974 (7th Cir. 2000)
(emphasis added) (quoting Williams v. Apfel, 179 F.3d 1066,
1071-72 (7th Cir. 1999)).
With respect to this Court’s treatment of a credibility
assessment by the ALJ, there has developed a firm and ten-
able rule of law “that an ALJ’s credibility determination will not
be disturbed unless it is patently wrong.” Cannon, 213 F.3d at
977 (emphasis added) (internal quotation omitted); see also
Herr v. Sullivan, 912 F.2d 178, 182 (7th Cir. 1990). As this
Court has previously observed, this is a “strict standard for
reversal,” Powers v. Apfel, 207 F.3d 431, 435 (7th Cir. 2000)
(emphasis added), for a “credibility determination by the ALJ,
adopted by the Secretary, is entitled to considerable deference.”
No. 02-4318 13
Lee v. Sullivan, 988 F.2d 789, 793 (7th Cir. 1993) (emphasis
added) (citing Steward v. Bowen, 858 F.2d 1295, 1302 (7th Cir.
4
1988)). Thus, “after review [of the entire record and evi-
dence therein,] we must accept the findings of the ALJ”— and
most certainly the ALJ’s credibility determinations—“if supported
by substantial evidence.” Meredith v. Bowen, 833 F.2d 650, 653
(7th Cir. 1987) (emphasis added). The majority has em-
barked upon a course of reasoning that is far afield of this
principle.
I. Objective Medical Evidence
In denying Carradine’s disability claim, the ALJ stressed
in his opinion the lack of objective medical evidence veri-
fying her asserted disability. Indeed, as the record reveals,
Carradine sought medical attention from a vast number of
specialists (some thirteen doctors) for a period of over seven
years following her February 1993, slip-and-fall acci-
dent—but these medical records, and the findings inscribed
therein, fail to substantiate the alleged severity of pain and re-
sulting limitations claimed by Carradine to the standard of
5
making her eligible for benefits.
4
The majority acknowledges this high degree of judicial def-
erence granted to “specialists such as the administrative law
judges of the Social Security Administration,” conceding that
“[a]ppellate review of [their] credibility determinations . . . is
highly limited.” It then fails to follow and circumvents its own
statement of the law, and indeed goes on to obscure this pre-
scribed level of deference, by somehow creating alleged errors
(which it somehow interprets as errors in reasoning) that the ALJ
is said to have made.
5
At the time of her accident, Carradine was classified as an
addiction counseling aide at the Wabash (Indiana) Addiction
Care Center, while actually serving as a transport driver—a
(continued...)
14 No. 02-4318
(...continued)
position which she had filled for about eight years. (Prior to her
work as a counseling aide, Carradine had worked as a production
line assembly worker.) On February 16, 1993, a few days after her
accident, she began receiving workers’ compensation related to
her fall and injury. According to a “Report of Claim Status” form
that was filed with the State of Indiana Worker’s Compensation
Board, these benefits ceased on June 8, 1993, for the reason that
“Recent medical evidence indicate [sic] your current treatment is
not related to your fall at work.” R. at 160 (emphasis added). This
same form notes that Carradine disagreed with the decision to
terminate her benefits.
Two months later, in August of 1993, she returned to her job
and, according to her testimony before an ALJ, she worked out an
agreement with her supervisor to perform lighter work. The Care
Center later terminated her in February of 1994 for failing to
follow clinic procedures. While the record fails to specify what
procedures Carradine ignored (she stated that it was for missing
work), she testified that her termination was not for avoiding any
lifting at work following her accident, as the following exchange
between the ALJ and Carradine at her April 1995 hearing
demonstrates:
ALJ: So you worked from August of ‘93 to February
of ‘94 in a job and you did not have to do any
lifting. Is that correct?
Carradine: I didn’t do any.
ALJ: Why were you terminated?
Carradine: Failure to follow procedures.
ALJ: Pardon me?
Carradine: Failure to follow procedures is what they
stated.
ALJ: And what did you fail to do?
Carradine: Nothing.
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 15
Carradine’s medical history is as follows: in March 1993,
a month after she suffered her injury in the slip-and-
fall accident, she visited C.S. McMarrow, a chiropractor,
who noted that x-rays of the plaintiff’s spine revealed
nothing but a mild to moderate degenerative disc disease and
scoliosis. In June and July of that year, when Carradine
attended a pain management program at the Community
Hospital (Indianapolis) Center for Pain (on referral of her
rheumatologist), the Medical Director of the Center, Karl
Manders, M.D., remarked that Carradine’s participation
in the program was successful: she met her goals during the
(...continued)
ALJ: Well, what did they allege that you failed to do?
Carradine: I had started, I had missed work—
ALJ: You weren’t fired for not lifting anything, were
you?
Carradine: No.
R. at 47 (emphasis added). When this topic came up at her April
2000 hearing before ALJ Bernstein, Carradine did not specifically
state that her termination was related to her slip-and-fall acci-
dent; instead, she stated: “There was no just cause . . . . I had
missed a lot of work. In the six months that I returned after my
fall, I was having to have a lot of help . . . .” R. at 99-100.
Within the next month after her termination, on March 3, 1994,
Carradine applied for disability insurance benefits with the
SSA, alleging that she “became unable to work because of [her]
disabling condition on February 3, 1994,” and that “[she is]
still disabled.” R. at 146. There isno evidence in the record
establishing that, since that time, Carradine has made any at-
tempt to apply for alternative gainful employment. The record
shows only the following information based on a colloquy be-
tween Carradine and the ALJ: “ALJ: How long did you do [your
job as a counseling aide]?; Carradine: I’m thinking it was 5 or 6
years.; ALJ: That’s the last job that you had, when you stopped?;
Carradine: Yes.” R. at 99.
16 No. 02-4318
program, improved her ranges of motion, experienced
decreased pain and muscle spasms, and experienced an
improved ability to sleep. Dr. Manders noted that her over-
all prognosis “should be good.” R. at 251.
A year later, in May 1994, Susan Steffy, M.D. conducted
an in-depth physical, musculoskeletal and neurological ex-
amination of Carradine, and even after conducting all three
of these exams, did not ascertain any medical basis for
Carradine’s subjective complaints of pain. Dr. Steffy noted
that Carradine was able to walk, hop and squat “without any
difficulty,” and that she got on and off the examination table with
ease. The doctor further reported that Carradine maintained
a normal posture and gait, normal muscle and grip strength,
normal range of motion in her back, exhibited no swelling in
her joints, and also evidenced a normal ability to manipulate
and experience sensation in her fingers. According to Dr.
Steffy, although Carradine’s active range of motion in her
neck was just “slightly” decreased, her passive range of
motion was entirely normal. Based on these observations,
Dr. Steffy concluded Carradine’s only limitation was her
“subjective complaints of pain” (for which there was no present
medical cause), and further recommended Carradine pursue a
most conservative course of treatment (namely, non-steroidal
anti-inflammatories (such as Aspirin), neck exercises and
application of local heat).
As for Carradine’s laboratory tests, a magnetic resonance
imaging (“MRI”) test conducted in September 1994 revealed
mild narrowing of the cervical spine, slight flattening of the dorsal
spinal cord, and absolutely no disc herniation. An electromy-
No. 02-4318 17
6
ogram (“EMG”) taken a month later (October 1994) likewise
revealed no abnormal findings.
Between August 1994 and December 1995, Carradine vis-
ited and was treated by another doctor, Samuel Goodloe,
M.D., an anesthesiologist specializing in the “diagnosis and
treatment of pain.” R. at 346. According to Dr. Goodloe,
Carradine complained of some numbness in the ring and
little fingers on her right hand, tenderness in her back, and
slightly abnormal deep tendon reflexes. Upon examination,
he reported Carradine had a supple neck and normal sensation
in the lower extremities, her straight-leg raising tests were neg-
ative, and she walked without difficulty. As far as Carradine’s
claims of numbness were concerned, a current perception
threshold test administered by Dr. Goodloe in December 1995
revealed that the plaintiff had anywhere from “no [sensory]
abnormalit[ies]” to only “mild” sensory dysfunction and in-
creased nerve sensitivity. R. at 352 (emphasis added).
Some four years thereafter (April 1999), at the request of
ALJ Bryan Bernstein, Brett Windsor, a physical therapist,
performed a functional capacity evaluation on Carradine. During
the evaluation, Windsor observed Carradine perform
various physical tasks, and noted that, while she failed twenty
of the thirty validity criteria for those tasks, four of these failures
(i.e., 20% of these failures) were due to her exerting only
“minimal efforts” during testing. He remarked that his finding
that Carradine exerted only “minimal efforts” during testing
6
An EMG is a “test . . . used to record the electrical activity of
muscles . . . .” See “What is an Electromyogram?”, available at
http://www.medicinenet.com/electromyogram/page1.htm.
EMGs may be used “to detect abnormal muscle electrical activity
[and] can also be used to detect true weakness, as opposed to
weakness from reduced use because of pain or lack of motivation.”
Id. (emphasis added).
18 No. 02-4318
was supported by her physiological responses during the isometric
strength test, as well as her results on the hand dynanometer
(“squeeze”) test. R. at 483. In spite of Carradine’s decision
to exert only “minimal efforts,” Windsor was nonetheless
able to conclude from a compilation of his testing that the
plaintiff was “capable of repetitive gripping on a frequent to
constant basis,” was “able to lift up to 20 [lbs.] occasionally, 10
[lbs.] frequently, and negligible amounts constantly,” could “sit
constantly, stand constantly, and walk constantly,” and was fully
“able to climb stairs on a frequent basis,” R. at 483. Most
importantly, Windsor determined and advised Carradine
that she was “capable of sedentary work.” Id.
A short time after these strength tests, Carradine made
two brief visits to hospital emergency rooms in the summer of
1999, complaining of increasing pain in her neck and back.
Upon examination, Carradine’s emergency room doctors
reported some limited range of motion in her neck and back,
but concluded that Carradine enjoyed a full range of motion
in her shoulders and upper extremities, negative straight-leg tests,
and excellent muscle strength. Furthermore, Dr. Bainbridge
(her emergency room doctor during the August 1999 visit)
noted she exhibited only “slight” tissue swelling in her back, and
Dr. Mann (her examining physician during the July 1999 visit)
noted “no swelling” upon examination.
As far as Carradine’s mental condition is concerned, in June
of 2000, at the SSA’s request, Carradine underwent a thorough
psychological evaluation administered by Dr. Henry Martin,
a clinical psychologist. After the evaluation, Dr. Martin also
submitted an assessment of Carradine’s ability to perform work-
related activities. R. at 620-21. Although Dr. Martin did diag-
nose Carradine as suffering from somatization disorder, defined
as “the conversion of mental experiences or states into bodily
symptoms,” Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary 1546 (27th
ed. 1988) (hereinafter Dorland’s) (emphasis added), his
assessment of Carradine’s work-related capabilities fell short
No. 02-4318 19
of supporting the claimant’s pain allegations and her alleged
limitations on her ability to work.
After all, Dr. Martin described Carradine as being neatly
groomed, cooperative and friendly, and, in 17 out of 22
different functional areas, Dr. Martin rated Carradine’s capa-
7
bilities as “good to excellent.” These areas included (but were
not limited to) her ability to understand and execute simple
as well as detailed instructions, to interact appropriately with
the public, to get along with co-workers, to be aware of normal
hazards and take appropriate precautions, and to travel in un-
familiar places or use public transportation. As for the remain-
ing five functional areas (namely, Carradine’s concentration,
her ability to perform within a schedule, complete a work
day, perform at a consistent rate, and to sustain work
without special supervision) Dr. Martin rated Carradine as
performing at a “fair” level—and this “fair” rating obviously falls
short of qualifying as a severe impairment that significantly limits
8
an individual’s ability to do basic, light work activities. Indeed,
the fact that Carradine did not receive a single “poor” rating
further supports that nothing regarding her psychological state
9
would prevent her from performing light work.
Although there were other occasions between the time of her
injury and the ALJ’s decision when Carradine sought medi-
cal attention, these other physician visits, similar to those just
7
According to the source-statement form completed by Dr.
Martin, “excellent” signifies that one’s “ability is not limited,”
while “good” infers that “the individual can perform the activity
satisfactorily most of the time.”
8
“Fair” signifies that “the individual can perform the activity
satisfactorily some of the time.”
9
A rating of “poor” means that the person has “no useful ability
to function” in that discrete ability category.
20 No. 02-4318
described, consistently failed to establish a disabling condition.
As such, her medical history was succinctly and accurately
set forth in the ALJ’s decision as a basis for finding that her
condition demonstrated physical and mental conditions that are
most unlikely to produce disabling pain, which is pain that must
be “constant, unremitting, and wholly unresponsive to thera-
peutic treatment” for it to qualify someone for social security
benefits. Falco v. Shalala, 27 F.3d 160, 163 (5th Cir. 1994) (em-
phasis added) (internal quotations omitted). Thus, upon
review, I remain convinced that there is no reason to find fault
10
with and cast heated aspersions on the ALJ’s conclusion that the
“claimant’s statements concerning her impairments . . . and their
impact on her ability to work . . . are not entirely reliable,” R. at
27, realizing that we are obliged to follow the law that “an ALJ’s
credibility determination will not be disturbed unless it is patently
wrong.” Cannon, 213 F.3d at 977. While I certainly sympa-
thize with the plaintiff’s alleged medical problems, which
she has recounted so eloquently since her slip-and-fall
accident of some ten years ago, based upon the record and
findings before us I am forced to remain, like the ALJ,
a “doubting Thomas” as to the veracity of Carradine’s claims
10
Notably, ALJ Bernstein is not the first judge to find Carradine’s
claim of disabling pain incredible: in a decision and order dated
September 11, 1996, the previous ALJ to address Carradine’s claim
(ALJ Donahue) similarly stated that she did not “find the claimant to
be totally credible.” R. at 322 (emphasis added). Nor was Judge
Bernstein the first (or the last) to deny Carradine’s claim. Prior to
Judge Bernstein’s order, Carradine’s benefits claim was denied by
the SSA initially and upon reconsideration, as well as by the prior
ALJ. And since Judge Bernstein entered his order, the Appeals
Council denied review, and the district court affirmed his
decision to deny benefits. All told, five different reviewing entities
have refused Carradine’s claim for disability benefits on a total of
six different occasions. See infra note 28.
No. 02-4318 21
of pain. Such claims must be looked at with a balanced,
though not a jaundiced view; and in this case, the record so
eloquently displays that the ALJ did conduct a most thorough
balancing test, and ultimately reached a well-reasoned conclusion
that Carradine’s testimony was unreliable.
Meanwhile, the majority’s very surprising opinion can
best be read and logically interpreted as trivializing the lack
of objective medical evidence in Carradine’s case. Why my col-
leagues adopted this approach is a most disturbing mystery.
After all, the majority of accepted and well-reasoned legal
authority emphasizes the significance of, and this Court’s
continued reliance on, objective medical evidence when rendering
social security disability determinations. When determining
whether an individual qualifies as “disabled,”
[a]n individual’s statement as to pain or other symptoms
shall not alone be conclusive evidence of disability . . . ;
. . . Objective medical evidence of pain or other symptoms
established by medically acceptable clinical or laboratory
techniques (for example, deteriorating nerve or muscle tissue)
must be considered in reaching a conclusion as to whether the
individual is under a disability.
11
42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(5)(A) (emphasis added).
11
Although Section 423(d)(5)(A) formally applies only to eligi-
bility determinations for disability insurance benefits made prior
to January 1, 1987, see Social Security Disability Benefits Reform
Act of 1984, Pub. L. No. 98-460(3)(a)(3), 98 Stat. 1794, 1799 (1984),
“[Section 423(d)(5)(A)] still appears in the statutory codification
and decisions have continued to be rendered under it . . . .” Craig
v. Chater, 76 F.3d 585, 593 (4th Cir. 1996); see also Moothart v.
Bowen, 934 F.2d 114, 116 n.1 (7th Cir. 1991) (noting that applicable
(continued...)
22 No. 02-4318
Social Security Administration regulations, as codified at
20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1529 and 416.929, provide the authoritative
standards for evaluating pain in disability determinations
and further “incorporate the standard set forth in section
423(d)(5)(A).” Craig v. Chater, 76 F.3d 585, 593 (4th Cir.
1996). These regulations emphasize the importance of
objective medical evidence:
Objective medical evidence is evidence obtained from
the application of medically acceptable clinical and labor-
atory diagnostic techniques.
. . . Objective medical evidence of this type is a useful indica-
tor to assist [the SSA] in making reasonable conclusions
about the intensity and persistence of [the claimant’s]
symptoms and the effect those symptoms, such as pain, may
have on [the claimant’s] ability to work. [The SSA] must
always attempt to obtain objective medical evidence and,
when it is obtained, [the SSA] will consider it in reach-
ing a conclusion as to whether [the claimant is] dis-
abled.
20 C.F.R. § 404.1529(c)(2) (emphasis added); see also 20
C.F.R. § 416.929(c)(2). The regulations further state that
the SSA will consider and weigh all of the available evidence
in evaluating the intensity and persistence of one’s symptoms,
such as pain, including “medical history, the medical signs and
laboratory findings, and statements by [the claimant’s] treating
or examining physician or psychologist or other persons about
how [the claimant’s] symptoms affect [her].” 20 C.F.R.
§§ 404.1529(c)(4) & 416.929(c)(4) (emphasis added). The SSA
must then examine the alleged consistency between the subjective
(...continued)
regulations are identical to this standard and that this “statutory
language still provides analytic[al] guidance”) (emphasis added).
No. 02-4318 23
claims of pain and the objective evidence when “determin[ing] the
extent to which [the claimant’s] alleged functional limitations and
restrictions due to pain or other symptoms can reasonably
be accepted as consistent with the medical and scientific medi-
cal signs and laboratory findings and other evidence to decide
how [the claimant’s] symptoms affect [her] ability to work.” 20
C.F.R. § 404.1529(a) (emphasis added); see also 20 C.F.R.
§ 416.929(a).
Reflective of these regulations, this Circuit and many
of our sister circuits, in circumstances similar to those
presented here, have explained that a lack of objective medical
evidence—evidence that is based upon accepted medical studies
and evaluations combining the use of x-ray, MRI, cat scans,
and other recognized and reliable techniques—supporting a
claimant’s declaration of severe pain, while not conclusive nor
exclusive, will greatly inhibit the finding of disability. See, e.g.,
Clifford v. Apfel, 227 F.3d 863, 871 (7th Cir. 2000) (“[T]he ALJ
must consider a claimant’s subjective complaint of pain if sup-
ported by medical signs and findings.” (emphasis added));
Herron v. Shalala, 19 F.3d 329, 335 (7th Cir. 1994) (“ ‘Al-
though we cannot discredit a complaint of pain simply be-
cause objective medical evidence was not introduced to
support the extent of the pain, n[or] are we required to give full
credit to every statement of pain . . . .’ ”) (emphasis added)
(quoting Pope v. Shalala, 998 F.2d 473, 486 (7th Cir. 1993)); see
also Craig, 76 F.3d at 595 (“Although a claimant’s allegations
about her pain may not be discredited solely because they
are not substantiated by objective evidence of the pain itself
or its severity, they [certainly] need not be accepted to the extent
they are inconsistent with the available evidence, including
objective evidence of the underlying impairment, and the extent
to which that impairment can reasonably be expected to cause the
pain the claimant alleges she suffers. . . .” (emphasis added));
Harrell v. Bowen, 862 F.2d 471, 481 (5th Cir. 1988) (“The
[Social Security Disability Benefits Reform] Act, regulations
24 No. 02-4318
and case law mandate that the Secretary require that subjective
complaints be corroborated, at least in part, by objective medical
findings.” (emphasis added)).
Indeed, the majority’s willingness to rely solely on a claim-
ant’s subjective testimony creates an increased likelihood of error,
runs counter to the intent of Social Security law, and pos-
sesses a greater “potential for manipulation because outward
manifestations of pain can easily be contrived by a calculating
claimant. . . .” Cline v. Sullivan, 939 F.2d 560, 568 (8th Cir.
1991) (emphasis added); see also Rucker v. Chater, 92 F.3d 492,
496 (7th Cir. 1996) (stating that this Court is not “required to
give full credit to every statement of pain, and require a finding
of disabled every time a claimant states that she feels unable to
work”) (internal quotations omitted). The majority concedes
the danger of relying on purely subjective evidence of pain
when it professes at the beginning of its opinion that
“[a]pplicants for social security benefits who claim to be disabled
from working because of extreme pain make the job of a social
security administrative law judge a difficult one.” This comment
turns out to be a self-fulfilling prophecy, as the majority
essentially relies on nothing but Carradine’s subjective claims of
pain, as well as her husband’s statements, and opines that the ALJ
must also agree with such allegations of pain—even in spite of the
fact that the ALJ finds the claimant’s account to be incredible and
has numerous logical reasons to support such conclusion. Indeed,
it is precisely decisions of the nature rendered by the majority
today that will serve to make the job of an ALJ, as well as the task
of reviewing courts, a most difficult one.
To be sure, the majority’s opinion will create a trouble-
some incentive among those whom the majority refers to as
“unscrupulous applicants,” who tend to “exaggerate [their]
pain without fear of being contradicted by medical evi-
dence.” All other things being equal, individuals are more
apt to pursue false claims when the cost to them of seeking
No. 02-4318 25
potential benefits is lower. With that in mind, we may as
well note the obvious that, from a claimant’s perspective, it
costs nothing for her merely to testify on her own behalf,
with the aid of her husband only—something she must do
anyway in the course of advancing her claim. In contrast,
the cost of her obtaining witnesses and presenting objective
medical evidence supporting a claim of disabling pain will
invariably be higher (a factor which tends to reduce the
frequency of frivolous lawsuits).
Another principle that I believe we can all agree upon is
that subjective claims made by persons who have a history of
being discharged from their latest employment for failure to report
for duty (missing work), and who thereafter have sought public
disability benefits, are generally far less reliable than objective
medical evidence regarding such claims. Even the majority
concedes this point (at least to some degree) by stating that
“determinations of credibility are fraught with uncertainty.”
Thus, if a claimant’s only evidence supporting the alleged
severity of her pain is her own testimony, an ALJ’s ability to
detect claims that are based on untruths is severely impaired,
12
making his job almost impossible. For all of the foregoing
12
The majority quotes language from Cooper v. Casey, 97 F.3d 914
(7th Cir. 1996), which reads: “Pain, fatigue, and other subjective,
nonverifiable complaints are in some cases the only symptoms of
a serious medical condition. To insist in such a case, as the social
security disability law does not . . . that the subjective complaint,
even if believed by the trier of fact, is insufficient to warrant an
award of benefits would place a whole class of disabled people
outside the protection of that law.” Cooper certainly falls far short
of establishing what the majority suggests it does—namely, that
subjective claims of suffering from severe pain are alone sufficient in
Social Security benefits cases. Most notably, the portion of the Casey
decision discussing Social Security benefits was dictum, see Casey, 97
(continued...)
26 No. 02-4318
reasons, it is clear that the approach the majority counte-
nances and espouses will invariably lead to a rapid and
consistent increase in the number of claims filed, many of
which, I’m afraid, will be contrived, fraudulent, and most
difficult to control.
Considering the law and economics impact of this deci-
sion, I wonder whether the author of the majority opinion, along
with my other colleague who joins in that opinion, has fully
considered the possible financial impact on taxpayers and the
insurance industry as a whole that will result from casting to the
birds the requirement that the fact-finder (in this case, the
ALJ) consider all of the available objective medical evi-
dence (or lack thereof) when evaluating a claimant’s account of
severe pain. Courts would be well-advised to be “justly
concerned with proposed changes in law that would foster
additional litigation,” Lawyers Title Ins. Corp. v. Dearborn Title
Corp., 118 F.3d 1157, 1161 (7th Cir. 1997), and take into con-
sideration the weighing of the “consequences—the benefits and the
costs—of attempting to prevent [the] harms,” of having non-
meritorious disability claims succeed in the legal system. Richard
A. Posner, Overcoming Law 396 (1995) (emphasis added); see
also Jansen v. Packaging Corp. of Am., 123 F.3d 490, 510 (7th
Cir. 1997) (Posner, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part) (exhorting judges to create legal principles that will deter
unlawful conduct “without imposing an unreasonable burden” on
(...continued)
F.3d at 916-17; that case did not even involve a claim for Social
Security benefits but rather was an appeal from a § 1983 action by
prison inmates claiming that guards had beaten them and refused to
give them necessary medical assistance. Id. As to the three cases that
Casey cites in support of the language from which the majority quotes,
none spoke as strongly in endorsing the use of only subjective testimony
as that penned in Casey—this is true even of Sarchet v. Chater, 78 F.3d
305 (7th Cir. 1996), the only Seventh Circuit case cited.
No. 02-4318 27
businesses). A decision of the nature made by the majority
today certainly falls short of these admired, accepted, and
well-reasoned goals. (Indeed, one need not wonder why the
federal deficit is so high if we are to come down with a
decision like the majority has penned in this case.)
The majority could respond that it is following the ap-
proach commanded by the revisions to the Social Security
Disability regulations made in 1991 (which were aimed at
clarifying the pain standard in disability determinations)
and by our decision in Pope v. Shalala, 998 F.2d 473 (7th Cir.
1993), overruled on other grounds by Johnson v. Apfel, 189 F.3d
561 (7th Cir. 1999), interpreting the effect of those changes.
As this Court recognized in Pope, the regulations in 20
C.F.R. § 1529 continue to require objective medical evidence of the
existence of an underlying medical impairment that “could
reasonably be expected to produce the pain or other symptoms
alleged. . . .” 20 C.F.R. § 404.1529(a) (emphasis added); see
also Pope, 998 F.2d at 482. However, this Court also con-
cluded in Pope that the SSA’s revised regulations “worked to
supersede this circuit’s restrictive test” articulated in “cases
such as Moothart v. Bowen, 934 F.2d 114, 116 (7th Cir.1991),
and Walker v. Bowen, 834 F.2d 635, 641 (7th Cir.1987),
[which] ha[d] limited the use of pain in making a disability
determination to only those complaints the intensity and per-
sistence of which are supported by objective medical evidence.”
13
Pope, 998 F.2d at 482, 485 (emphasis added). In other
words, the law of Pope only states that an ALJ may not reject
13
20 C.F.R. § 1529(c)(2), while acknowledging the need for ALJs
to look at objective medical evidence, states that “[the SSA] will
not reject [a claimant’s] statements about the intensity and per-
sistence of [her] pain or other symptoms or about the effect [her]
symptoms have on [her] ability to work solely because the
available objective medical evidence does not substantiate [her]
statements.”
28 No. 02-4318
a claimant’s account of disabling pain “simply because the
objective medical evidence may not support the extent of
pain claimed by [the claimant].” Id. at 486.
Be this as it may, the majority’s transgression in this case
(discussed in detail infra) is its willingness to cast aside and
attempt to take issue with the ALJ’s well-reasoned and de-
tailed finding that Carradine’s subjective claims of severe and
constant pain were incredible, when that finding was based only
partially on the absence of objective medical evidence supporting
the alleged pain. It is precisely in cases such as this one—where
the only evidence purportedly supporting a finding of disability
from pain is nothing but the claimant’s own self-serving, sub-
jective accounts of her alleged pain—that appellate courts should
always be mindful of the mandate that we are obligated to be most
deferential to an ALJ’s reasoned credibility finding. After
weighing the evidence, the ALJ concluded that Carradine’s
subjective complaints were less than credible, and thus failed to
meet the prerequisite for subjective claims of severe pain to
overcome the absence of objective evidence. See Herron, 19 F.3d
at 335; Ramirez v. Barnhart, 292 F.3d 576, 581 (8th Cir. 2002).
In fact, the ALJ in this case dutifully followed the majority’s
admonition to “be alert to [the unscrupulous applicant who ex-
aggerates his or her pain without fear of being contradicted
by medical evidence], and evaluate the applicant’s credibility with
great care.” It is quite obvious that the ALJ meticulously
weighed all the factors, including those supporting and undermin-
ing Carradine’s credibility, and came to a well-balanced and
reasonable decision that, due to their unreliability, her claims
fell far short of overcoming the lack of objective medical evidence
in the record of the alleged severity of her pain.
Unlike the majority, I must stress that it was indeed most
proper for the ALJ to consider the paucity of objective
evidence in rendering his ultimate decision that Carradine
was not disabled. If courts and administrative agencies
No. 02-4318 29
devalue the need for verifiable evidence of pain—as the
majority surely seems to do—then we may as well ring the
dinner bell for any and all potential applicants to come and
feed at the ever-diminishing public trough of social security
benefits. A more reasoned and reliable course of action would be
to continue to mandate that objective medical evidence (or the lack
thereof) properly continue to be a most significant factor in
determining the intensity and persistence of a claimant’s pain
and, consequently, her eligibility for disability benefits. See,
e.g., Luna v. Shalala, 22 F.3d 687, (1994) (noting that the ALJ
must first determine whether the claimant’s allegation of
pain is substantiated by objective medical evidence and, if
not, the ALJ must consider other factors, including daily activ-
ities, prior work record, etc.); see also 20 C.F.R. § 404.1529 (“In
evaluating the intensity and persistence of your symptoms,
including pain, we will consider all of the available evidence,
including your medical history [and] medical signs and laboratory
findings . . .”). To the extent that the majority opinion will be
read as disregarding or diminishing the role of objective
evidence, it should be rejected and viewed with suspicion.
II. Subjective Accounts of Pain
Given the lack of objective medical evidence supporting
a disability finding in this case, Carradine’s claim may succeed
(if at all) only insofar as her own subjective accounts of pain are
found to be credible and adequate to support a determination of
disability. The law is clear that “the disabling extent of the
claimant’s pain is a question of fact [to be determined by] the
ALJ,” Kapusta v. Sullivan, 900 F.2d 94, 97 (7th Cir. 1990) (per
curiam) (emphasis added), and, pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
§ 405(g), “ ‘[t]he findings of the Commissioner of Social Security
as to any fact, if supported by substantial evidence, shall be
conclusive . . .’ ”, Butera, 173 F.3d at 1055 (quoting 42 U.S.C.
§ 405(g)) (emphasis added).
30 No. 02-4318
As the author of the majority opinion in this case recently
wrote, an ALJ’s “finding [that a claimant exaggerated her
physical limitation is] a well-nigh unreviewable determina-
tion of credibility.” Barrett v. Barnhart, 355 F.3d 1065, 1067 (7th
Cir. 2004) (emphasis added). Indeed, based upon an ever-
growing wealth of case law, our deference to the ALJ’s cre-
dibility determination is exceedingly wise, because the trier
of fact (in this instance the ALJ):
has the best “opportunity to observe the verbal and nonverbal
behavior of the witnesses focusing on the subject’s reactions
and responses to the interrogatories, their facial expressions,
attitudes, tone of voice, eye contact, posture and body
movements,” as well as confused or nervous speech patterns
in contrast with merely looking at the cold pages of an
appellate record.
Tolson, 988 F.2d at 1497 (first emphasis added with second
emphasis in original) (quoting Churchill v. Waters, 977 F.2d
1114, 1124 (7th Cir. 1992)).
I am thus forced to disagree with the majority’s dubious and
fallacious and unsupported assertion that “it is actually more
difficult to assess the credibility of oral than of written testi-
mony.” Based upon more than twenty years of trial experi-
ence combined with my basic knowledge from treatises and
writings that I have studied, I find that a statement of this
nature could not be more inaccurate. As the above-quoted
language from Tolson explains, the trier of fact, whether a
judge or a jury of twelve citizens, has the opportunity to
observe a witness’s responses and demeanor with his or her own
eyes and ears. The trier of fact, thus, is unquestionably far better
equipped to assess a person’s credibility than someone who later
reads a witness’s testimony from a faceless transcript containing
only black type on white paper.
It is indeed surprising, if not confounding, that the author
of the majority opinion attempts to downplay the impor-
No. 02-4318 31
tance of in-person witness testimony in this manner,
considering that he, on other occasions, has opined that
“[s]o much goes on in the courtroom that the written record
can never reveal. Why else do we routinely grant so much
deference to the trial judge, who sees and hears the witnesses
firsthand, who supervises the trial from start to finish . . . . Our
acquiescence in the decisions of the trial court is dictated as much
by pragmatism as by principle.” Bracy v. Gramley, 81 F.3d 684,
702 (7th Cir. 1996) (emphasis added), rev’d on other grounds,
510 U.S. 899, 117 S. Ct. 1793 (1997).
Similarly, in Taliferro v. Augle, 757 F.2d 157, 160-61 (7th
Cir. 1985), the author of the majority emphasized the
propriety of this Court’s deferral to a decision to deny a
motion for new trial made by a trial judge in the context of
a 1983 action. In rendering a decision to uphold a trial
judge’s determination not to grant defendants a new trial,
this Court reasoned that the trial judge had viewed the wit-
nesses’ testimony firsthand, while the court of appeals panel had
not; thus the trial judge was in a better position to assess the
appropriateness of granting a new trial:
[I]t is not our role to play district judge and decide whether
we would have decided the motion for a new trial as he did.
We cannot put ourselves in his shoes; we did not see the
witnesses testifying, or the jurors listening to the
testimony. . . . [Because] we cannot say from the evi-
dence in the appellate record that the jury would have
been unreasonable to evaluate the testimony as we have
just suggested it may have done, we cannot call the
judge unreasonable in refusing to grant the defendants
a new trial; and we certainly cannot say that he was
“inescapably wrong["] . . . .
Id. at 160-61.
Indeed, as the author of the majority further noted in
Partington v. Broyhill Furniture Industries, Inc., 999 F.2d 269,
32 No. 02-4318
272 (7th Cir. 1993) (emphasis added), “[l]ive witnesses make
14
a more forceful impression [than written testimony].”
For all of these reasons articulated by the authoring judge
in other contexts, the majority’s current notion that the
credibility of written testimony is easier to assess than that
of live testimony would most certainly be a troubling and a
15
wholly novel mindset for this Court to adopt. As this
14
My other colleague in the majority has similarly authored
opinions emphasizing this Court’s deference to credibility de-
terminations of the trial judge based on his superior position to
observe witnesses firsthand. See, e.g., United States v. Roe, 210 F.3d
741, 749 (7th Cir. 2000) (“ ‘We defer to the sentencing judge’s
credibility determinations because the presiding judge while lis-
tening to the witnesses’ testimony is in the best position to observe,
weigh, and evaluate a witness’ verbal as well as nonverbal behavior.’ ”)
(emphasis added); Knight v. Chater, 55 F.3d 309, 334-35 (7th Cir.
1995) (citing Herron v. Shalala, 19 F.3d 329 (7th Cir. 1994) and Luna
v. Shalala, 22 F.3d 687 (7th Cir. 1994) in support of the proposition
that deferral to credibility determinations made by the ALJ is
proper, for he in the “best position to observe witnesses”). He has
also joined in opinions outlining the well-settled principle of this
Court’s deference to the fact-finding capabilities of the trial court.
See, e.g., Aviles v. Cornell Forge Co., 241 F.3d 589, 594 (7th Cir. 2001)
(noting this Court’s deference to trial judge’s fact-finding
determinations “because of the trial court’s superior ability to judge
the credibility of the witnesses”) (emphasis added); United States v.
Jensen, 169 F.3d 1044, 1046 (7th Cir. 1999) (“We defer to the trial
court’s credibility determinations because ‘only the trial judge
can be aware of the variations in demeanor and tone of voice that
bear so heavily on the listener’s understanding of and belief in
what is said.’ ”).
15
I fail to understand and am forced to disagree with the major-
ity’s reliance on Professor Saks’s article to lend credence to its
statement, for the article does not support the proposition that written
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 33
(...continued)
testimony is more accurate than oral testimony. The majority claims
“it is actually more difficult to assess the credibility of oral than of
written testimony.” Although Saks’s compilation of social science
research does suggest that the use of transcripts in detecting
witness credibility is “not dramatically worse” than live testi-
mony that includes the observation of facial demeanor, Saks’s
data ultimately establishes that viewing a witness in person (whether
by viewing his entire body or just his face) is a statistically superior
method of determining witness credibility as compared to viewing only
the transcript of a witness’s testimony. Michael J. Saks, Enhancing
and Restraining Accuracy in Adjudication, 51 L. & Contemp. Probs.,
Autumn 1988, 243, 263-64 (Table 4) [hereinafter Saks, Enhancing
Accuracy in Adjudication]. Thus, Saks’s study in fact supports what
this Court has long held, and a principle I continue to es-
pouse—that the trier of fact, who has “the best ‘opportunity to
observe the verbal and nonverbal behavior of the witnesses” in
this Carradine case, “focusing on the subject’s reactions and
responses to the interrogatories, their facial expressions, attitudes,
tone of voice, eye contact, posture and body movements,’ as well
as confused or nervous speech patterns,” Tolson, 988 F.2d at 1497,
is in a superior position to determine a witness’s credibility than a
panel of appellate judges who “merely look[] at the cold pages of
an appellate record.” Id.
In this case, the ALJ observed the witness testify in person—
and thus had the opportunity to view her entire body, including her
movements, tremors, perspiration, etc. Thus, the fact-finder (ALJ)
employed a method of digesting witness testimony that Saks demon-
strated to be statistically superior at detecting deception than the use
of only a transcript. See Saks, Enhancing Accuracy in Adjudication,
supra, at 264 (Table 4).
One final note regarding this study is that Saks’s data is limited
to the perceptions of laypersons, see id. at 263, as contrasted with
those of highly-trained, experienced and knowledgeable judges
(continued...)
34 No. 02-4318
Court has always recognized, when determining credibility,
a presiding judge is in the “best position to see and hear the
witnesses and assess their forthrightness.” Powers, 207 F.3d at
435 (emphasis added); accord Chicago Tribune Co. v. NLRB,
974 F.2d 933, 934 (7th Cir. 1992) (“What is true is that an
administrative law judge’s determinations of credibility are
entitled to a certain weight by a reviewing court, because he
sees and hears the witnesses and the Board has only a
transcript of their testimony.”). Because credibility determi-
nations involve ambiguous elements that “leave no trace
that can be discerned [from a] transcript,” Herron, 19 F.3d at
335, and because “[the ALJ is] in the best position to see and
hear the witnesses and assess their forthrightness, we afford [an
ALJ’s] credibility determinations special deference.” Powers, 207
F.3d at 435. Thus, it is well settled that, on appeal, this Court
is not allowed to “reweigh the evidence nor does it reconsider
credibility determinations made by the ALJ.” Prince v. Sullivan,
933 F.2d 598, 601-02 (7th Cir. 1991) (emphasis added); see
also Sierra Res., Inc. v. Herman, 213 F.3d 989, 993 (7th Cir.
2000) (“[Claimant] is asking this court to substitute our own
credibility determinations for that of the ALJ[, the trier of fact],
(...continued)
who regularly make credibility assessments for all types of claims
including disability benefits claims. Thus, the study is, in any case,
of limited applicability to this discussion of an ALJ’s capacity to
render accurate credibility determinations insofar as the ALJ is
(as the majority concedes) a “specialist”—not only in the matter
of credibility findings, but also in the area of rendering social
security decisions as well. See Opinion at 3 (admitting that
appellate “review of credibility determinations [is highly limited],
especially when made by specialists such as the administrative
law judges of the Social Security Administration[,] [who have]
direct access to the witnesses [as well as] immersion in the case
as a whole . . . .”) (emphasis added).
No. 02-4318 35
something we decline to do.”) (emphasis added) (citations
omitted); Cannon, 213 F.3d at 974. Indeed, absent an error of
law, we may only reject the ALJ’s credibility determination if it is
not supported by substantial evidence. Cannon, 213 F.3d at 974.
In this case, the ALJ had the benefit of viewing the witness
firsthand, thus observing Carradine’s “reactions and responses
to the interrogatories, [her] facial expressions, attitudes, tone of
voice, eye contact, posture and body movements, . . . confused or
nervous speech patterns,” perspiration, fidgeting, wringing of
hands, or shuffling of her feet. United States v. French, 291 F.3d
945, 951 (7th Cir. 2002); accord Tolson, 988 F.2d at 1497. From
his vantage point, the ALJ concluded that Carradine was
exaggerating her alleged pain symptoms and that her
testimony referring to debilitating and disabling pain was
16
less than credible. Because the record makes clear that the
ALJ’s determination is supported by substantial record evidence,
I believe, if we are to follow the well-established law regarding
review of social security benefits determinations, we are bound to
affirm.
The first factor influencing the ALJ’s determination that
Carradine’s complaints of disabling pain were incredible
was the fact that her well-documented medical diagnosis of
somatization disorder makes clear that one suffering from
this malady all too frequently “exaggerates the severity of the
symptoms she reports.” R. at 19 (emphasis added). Notwith-
standing the majority’s assertion to the contrary, this
conclusion is well substantiated in accepted medical
16
The majority writes: “The administrative law judge thought that
Carradine was exaggerating her pain—that it was not severe
enough to prevent her from working.” Far from merely “think-
ing” that Carradine was exaggerating her pain, the ALJ made a finding
of fact that she was exaggerating her pain, to which we owe great
deference.
36 No. 02-4318
literature. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders, which is regarded as a definitive psy-
chiatric authority on mental disorders, “[i]ndividuals with
Somatization Disorder usually describe their complaints in . . .
exaggerated terms, but specific factual information is often
lacking.” American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 446 (4th ed. 1994)
(hereinafter “DSM-IV”) (emphasis added). The DSM-IV
warns that, when diagnosing persons suffering from soma-
tization disorders, “[o]bjective findings should be evaluated
without undue reliance on subjective complaints.” Id. at 448
(emphasis added). In addition, while “[s]ymptoms that are
intentionally produced should not count toward a diagnosis of
Somatization Disorder[,] . . .the presence of some factitious or
malingered symptoms, mixed with other nonintentional
symptoms, is not uncommon.” Id. at 449 (emphasis added).
Other medical experts have similarly linked somatization
and related disorders with a patient’s tendency to exag-
gerate symptoms. According to one source, persons who
suffer from a conversion type of somatoform disorder, while
perhaps suffering some real pain, are at the same time
“prone either to exaggerate the magnitude of their complaints
or to present these complaints in a melodramatic fashion,”
often “cho[osing] . . . emotionally laden and flamboyant
language [to describe their pain].” See Gerald M. Aronoff,
“Evaluating and Rating Impairment Caused by Pain,” in
Disability Evaluation 552, 553 (Stephen L. Demeter & Gunnar
B.J. Anderson eds., 2d ed. 2003) (emphasis added). Gerald
Aronoff goes on to remark that such patients “are at high risk
17
for iatrogenic complications, and should be managed conserva
17
“Iatrogenic,” when used in this context, is a medical term to
describe “disorders induced in the patient by autosuggestion
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 37
tively [by their physicians] unless there are clear signs of objective
pathology warranting more aggressive treatment,” id.;
otherwise, the tendency of the somatic patient to exaggerate
his or her symptoms “often prejudices the clinician.” Id.
Without citing support from medical journals and treatises,
much less from case law, and in the face of medical evidence to the
contrary, the majority takes issue with the well-founded conclu-
sion that someone suffering from a somatization disorder will, in
all probability, tend to exaggerate the severity of her symptoms.
The majority transgresses through a medical fantasyland
and somehow contends that a somatization disorder
“implies no such thing. It implies merely that the source of
Carradine’s pain is psychological rather than physical,” id.
(emphasis added), which (in the majority’s view) conse-
quently explains the utter lack of objective evidence “to
support [Carradine’s] extreme account of pain and limitation.”
Id. (emphasis added).
The majority errs when assuming that these dual implica-
18
tions of a somatization diagnosis are mutually exclusive.
(...continued)
based on the physician’s examination, manner, or discussion[.]”
Dorland’s, supra, at 812.
18
The majority would lead us to believe that, as long as a
claimant alleging disabling pain has been determined to have
some sort of somatic tendencies, her complaints of pain must be
considered as genuine and psychiatric in nature. That is, the
majority separates the universe of pain complainants into just
two categories: (1) those whose pain “experience is more acute
because of a psychiatric condition”; and (2) those who “pretend[]
to experience pain, or more pain than [they] actually feel[].” The
majority then goes on to opine that the “pain [allegation] is
genuine in the first [case,] [i.e.], the psychiatric case,” while it
(continued...)
38 No. 02-4318
(...continued)
is “fabricated in the second,” i.e., the malingering case. Again, the
majority mistakenly views the world of possibilities in “either-or”
terms—that is, a patient either is a somatic whose pain complaints
are real (and more “acute” because of her psychiatric problem),
or a malingerer who merely fabricates her pain allegation. The
majority ignores a third possibility—that a person with
somatization disorder may feel some “real” pain but, at the same
time, may tend to exaggerate her accounts of that pain, claiming that
it is disabling when in fact it is not.
I disagree with the majority’s simplification of the situation,
and believe that (as the ALJ explained) a somatic patient who
feels real pain (as an expression of stress, for example) at the same
time may tend to exaggerate that pain on account of her somatic
problem. Given that this is the case, it is certainly possible (and
indeed reasonable) for an ALJ to find a somatic patient’s complaints of
disabling pain to be “not entirely credible,” as the ALJ did in this case.
Indeed, the Eighth Circuit’s opinion in Metz v. Shalala, 49 F.3d 374
th
(8 Cir. 1995), supports this very proposition.
Although the majority cites to Metz in support of its statement
that pain is “genuine” when caused by a psychiatric condition,
while it is “fabricated” when a person is merely pretending to
experience a certain amount of pain, Metz does not support the
majority’s overall contention in this case—namely, that we
should jettison the ALJ’s well-reasoned credibility finding despite
the substantial evidence in the record to support it. The Circuit
Court in Metz in fact upheld the ALJ’s decision to deny benefits to
a somatic, concluding that “inconsistencies in Metz’s testimony,
lack of severe pain medication, and the absence of objective medical
evidence of severe pain, support[ed] the ALJ’s decision to discredit
Metz’s subjective complaints of pain.” Id. at 377. Indeed, the Metz
court stressed (as I do in this dissent) that the important
factor—particularly in cases where somatic patients allege disabling
pain—is the ALJ’s credibility determination; and in such cases,
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 39
That somatic patients feel real pain insofar as their psycho-
logical stress may manifest itself in real physical symptoms
(pain), see Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary 1546 (27th
ed. 1988) (describing somatization as “the conversion of
mental experiences or states into bodily symptoms”), does
not negate the fact that somatics may and often do exaggerate
their accounts of this (real) pain. Here, the ALJ was well aware
that Carradine suffered from a degree of pain and physical
ailments, and expressly recognized that Carradine’s profile
revealed “a tendency to develop chronic physical ailments,
usually resulting from psychological stress and conflicts.” R. at
24-25 (emphasis added). Thus, the ALJ was well aware and
cognizant of the fact that Carradine experienced some pain,
the origin of which was psychological.
But the mere fact that Carradine experienced some pain
stemming from psychological stress and conflict is not enough to
entitle her to social security benefits—indeed, it is required that
(...continued)
where “the ALJ state[s] that he f[inds the claimant’s] testimony
incredible and explain[s] why[,] . . . [the court] will not reverse
the ALJ ‘simply because some evidence may support the opposite
conclusion.’ ” Id.
Here, there was a plethora of evidence to support the ALJ’s
determination that Carradine was not credible in her allegation
of disabling pain (namely: (1) the inconsistency of her physical
activities with her concomitant claims of 24-hour-a-day severe
pain; (2) her demonstrated tendency to exaggerate her impair-
ment, as she had done during a prior physical strength test;
(3) her somatization disorder, which suggested a tendency to
exaggerate her pain complaints; and (4) a lack of objective med-
ical evidence). Because substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s
determination that Carradine was incredible, just as the court did
in Metz, this Court should defer to the well-founded credibility
determination of the ALJ.
40 No. 02-4318
she establish that her pain is so severe that she is incapable of
working as a result of such discomfort. And in this case,
although Carradine claimed she was disabled on account of
her pain, the ALJ did not agree and made an express finding that
Carradine’s account of the nature and extent of her pain was not
credible insofar as she exhibited a tendency “to exaggerate
her account of [her physical] limitations.” R. at 19 (emphasis
added). Because it is accepted medical knowledge that those
suffering from somatic disorders do tend to magnify complaints
of pain, see supra, it was certainly proper for the ALJ to consider
this factor in making his credibility determination.
Beyond recognizing that Carradine’s somatization dis-
order suggested a tendency to exaggerate symptoms, the
ALJ further attributed his assessment of Carradine’s lack
of credibility to the fact that Carradine’s claim of severe, unremit-
ting pain was, among other things, inconsistent with her own
account of her daily activities. The record is most eloquent in
its clear recitation that Carradine engaged in a variety of
activities, both daily and weekly, including: daily walks
19
for exercise of up to two miles a day; attending church and
19
As for Carradine’s ability to walk two miles on occasion, the
majority apparently believes it was “perverse” for the ALJ to rely
on this fact to support his denial of benefits. But the fact that
Carradine is able to walk two miles means she must be in good
shape, and it certainly supports the ALJ’s determination that
Carradine was “inconsisten[t] in her account of the severity of her
pain,” for, despite her allegation of disabling, “24 hour a day”
back and head pain, Carradine freely admitted she was able to
walk an “average” of one to two miles. R. at 65-66.
In a real stretch, the majority somehow implies that the ALJ
placed improper emphasis on Carradine’s walking activities as
evidence she was exaggerating her pain complaints because, if
Carradine were to return to work she would somehow lose the
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 41
social meetings; gardening; doing housework such as
cooking, cleaning, and some laundry; driving her car to run
errands a couple times a week; and driving a car long dis-
tances (as far as seventy-five miles round-trip to and from
school, a couple days each week, with occasional stops for
lower back discomfort). As the ALJ properly concluded,
Carradine’s ability to frequently engage in and complete
these and other physical activities contradicted her repeated
testimony regarding the severity and constancy of her pain,
thereby undermining her credibility. See Amax Coal Co. v. Burns,
855 F.2d 499, 501 (7th Cir. 1988) (“Drawing inferences from the
evidence is part of the ALJ’s role as factfinder.”) (emphasis
added); 20 C.F.R. § 404.1529(c)(3)(I) (stating that the SSA
will consider a claimant’s daily activities as a factor relevant
to assessing pain symptoms); Social Security Ruling 96-7p
(explaining that an adjudicator evaluating the credibility of
a claimant’s statements should consider the “consistency of
the individual’s statements with other information in the case
record, including reports and observations by other persons
concerning the individual’s daily activities”) (emphasis added).
(...continued)
opportunity to exercise. See Opinion, at 7 (noting that walking is
“not only . . . a form of therapy, but it is not a form of therapy
available at work.”). Does the majority really believe that all
persons who engage in full-time sedentary work are foreclosed
from any opportunities to talk a daily walk? I suspect that many
people who have sedentary jobs nonetheless have ample opportu-
nity to reap the benefits of significant walking exercise—by walking
to and from the bus, or to and from a restaurant or cafeteria on
the lunch hour, etc. It is beyond the pale to imply that the ALJ
was inadvertently or imprudently foreclosing Carradine from
pursuing prescribed physical fitness outlets by concluding she
was capable of work.
42 No. 02-4318
While the majority somehow is able to arrive at a conclu-
sion that her admitted daily activities were consistent with
her accounts of pain, I am forced to disagree, for this is not
borne out in the record. According to the majority,
Carradine “d[id] not claim to be in wracking pain every minute
of the day,” and thus (the majority opines) it is feasible that
“[w]hen she feels better for a little while, she can drive, shop, or do
housework.” To the contrary, the record reveals that
Carradine did claim to be in constant and frequently severe pain,
as the following colloquy between her and the ALJ demonstrates:
ALJ: Let’s talk about your pain, where’s it located and how
often you get the pain. I’m going to be asking you how
intense the pain is on a scale of zero to ten, zero being the
least amount of pain you’ve had and ten you have to go
to an emergency room. Okay. Let’s talk about your
headaches. . . . How often do you get this headache?
CARRADINE: They’re never gone completely.
ALJ: So, it’s 24 hours every day?
CARRADINE: Yes . . . I don’t remember not having [head-
aches].
ALJ: What’s the intensity of these headaches?
CARRADINE: It can range maybe a three or four up to a
ten because I’ve had to go to the emergency room.
...
ALJ: And how often do you get . . . backaches?
CARRADINE: [I]t’s never not there.
ALJ: 24 hours a day, every day?
CARRADINE: Yes, ma’am.
ALJ: What’s the intensity of the backaches on the zero to ten
scale?
No. 02-4318 43
CARRADINE: . . . it’s usually around a seven maybe.
ALJ: And what relieves that?
CARRADINE: I’m not sure anything relieves it. . . .
ALJ: You don’t take any medication for it?
CARRADINE: Yes, I do.
ALJ: And the medication doesn’t help?
CARRADINE: No.
R. at 63-65 (emphasis added). Thus, in her testimony,
Carradine claimed to be in, or close to, “wracking pain every
minute of the day.” Certainly, Carradine’s claim to suffer
from “level 7” backaches and “level 4-10” headaches 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week, and 365 days a year was inconsis-
tent with her continued engagement in a variety of almost daily
physical activities, such as walking for long distances and driving
a vehicle (sometimes for great distances). Thus, the ALJ, after
having had an opportunity to see, hear, and evaluate the
claimant’s testimony, was well within the bounds of reason and
his discretion when he determined that Carradine’s credibility was
undermined by the inconsistency between these unqualified claims
of constant and severe pain and the daily activities that she
20
admitted performing. See R. at 17 (“The claimant’s testimony
20
Furthermore, I must note that, after stating that “Carradine
does not claim to be in wracking pain every minute of the
day,” the majority proceeds to consider the question of whether
Carradine’s daily activities support the ALJ’s ultimate Residual
Functional Capacity (“RFC”) finding. But this discussion of
Carradine’s RFC is inapposite to the issue we are considering
here—namely, whether the ALJ’s reasoning regarding his deter-
mination of Carradine’s incredibility is supported by Carradine’s
admissions regarding her physical activities (walking, driving,
(continued...)
44 No. 02-4318
and her discussions of her impairment are not reliable[,] [for i]n
the course of her testimony, her account of limitations was
inconsistent.”). Clearly, the majority is substituting its own
judgment over that of the ALJ when it completely fails to recog-
21
nize the propriety of the ALJ’s conclusions in this regard.
(...continued)
self-care, shopping, mopping, gardening). After all, the ALJ
reasoned in his decision that Carradine’s admission that she
engaged in these activities contradicted her claims regarding the
extent of her unremitting (24-hour-a-day), severe pain, thereby de-
stroying her credibility. This was an entirely proper credibility
determination, for all of these activities require a significant
amount of physical stamina and agility that is inconsistent with
her claims of disabling pain. (Gardening, in particular, requires
one to position her knees on the ground, and to bend and stoop
and balance her body in order to pick and cut flowers, till soil or
plant seeds. Carradine’s admission that she engaged in gardening
activities—among other various activities—thus belied her claim
to be in unremitting severe pain.)
Indeed, it was Carradine’s ability to regularly engage in all of these
physical activities, combined with the fact that there was not one iota of
credible evidence that she suffered from disabling pain, as well as
the record evidence that Carradine had in the past exhibited “minimal
efforts” during a strength test evaluation, which together led to the
ALJ’s ultimate conclusion that Carradine’s complaints of disabling pain
were less than credible.
21
I would also note that Carradine’s treating physicians similarly
believed that (despite her complaints of pain) Carradine was
capable of doing significant physical activity. Time and time
again, the medical record reveals not only that her treating
physicians prescribed relatively mild and over-the-counter med-
ical treatments for Carradine’s accounts of pain (because they
found no physical source for such pain), they further recommended
daily physical exercise as a treatment method for Carradine’s pain
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 45
For further support of his determination that Carradine’s
pain complaints were unreliable, the ALJ properly referenced
the patient’s medical records, which exhibited an utter lack of any
substantive medical findings supporting a serious disability
(and are thus consistent with his conclusion that Carradine’s
disabling pain complaints were overblown). See 20 C.F.R.
§ 404.1529(c)(4) (explaining that the SSA “will evaluate [a
claimant’s] statements [about the intensity, persistence, and
limiting effects of her symptoms] in relation to the objective
medical evidence and other evidence, in reaching a con-
clusion as to whether [she is] disabled”); Social Security
Ruling 96-7p (“In determining the credibility of the individual’s
statements, the adjudicator must consider the entire case record,
including the objective medical evidence, the individual’s own
statements about symptoms, statements and other information
provided by treating or examining physicians or psychologists and
other persons about the symptoms and how they affect the
individual, and any other relevant evidence in the case record.”)
(emphasis added).
The majority glosses over and casts aside the claimant’s
history of relatively benign and sporadic periods of treat-
22
ment, and would completely ignore this history’s impor
(...continued)
allegations. If doctors repeatedly prescribed regular exercise
programs for Carradine (for example, Dr. Goodloe recommended
that Carradine “perform water aerobics three times per week,” R. at
415, as well as “daily” walks, id. at 417, and Dr. Macadeag
suggested Carradine should “maintain[] a structured and consistent
exercise therapy program,” R. at 537), they must have believed these
physical fitness and exercise routines would be beneficial to her,
and within her limitations—her pain complaints notwithstand-
ing.
22
The majority states that Carradine underwent “heavy doses” of
(continued...)
46 No. 02-4318
tant role in undermining Carradine’s testimony regarding
(...continued)
“strong drugs such as Vicodin, Toradol, Demerol, and even
morphine,” but as to this contention I must note that the record
speaks otherwise, for she was administered Demerol and mor-
phine on only one occasion each—that is, during separate emer-
gency room visits in July (for the Demerol) and October (for the
morphine) of 1999 when she presented with subjective complaints
of pain. R. at 521, 525. Moreover, the record reports that these
medications were not continued by Carradine’s successor treating
physicians.
As for the Vicodin, the fact that a person with somatoform
disorder was treated with pain medication is not surprising given
that doctors (as the ALJ ably explained was the case here) often
take such patients’ complaints of pain at face value and, seeking
to treat those pain complaints, offer pain medications as a
method of alleviating the purported pain. Indeed, even though
the usual medical doctor’s studies and lectures include a limited
amount of study of psychiatry (as contrasted with a psychiatric
specialist, who goes on to three or four years of study focusing on
psychiatry), a medical doctor’s primary duty is to treat the
physical complaints presented to him by the patient.
Here, the fact that Carradine’s medical doctors treated her
subjective complaints of pain with pain medications does not
mean that her accounts of severe and disabling pain were
accurate. It simply means that the medical doctors, accepting
those subjective complaints at face value, were willing to try
various pain killers (at times, no more than simple non-prescrip-
tion, over-the-counter remedies) as a means of treating her
th
purported symptoms. Cf. Buxton v. Halter, 246 F.3d 762, 775 (6
Cir. 2001) (deferring to the ALJ’s conclusion that the somatic
claimant’s subjective complaints about her physical limitations
were not credible, and denying benefits to the claim-
ant—notwithstanding the fact that the claimant had, inter alia,
been prescribed Vicodin as a treatment for her pain complaints).
No. 02-4318 47
her level of severe and overpowering pain. But under the
law, Carradine’s medical record (reflecting a lack of any
medical evidence of disability therein) does in fact assist in
establishing the “substantial evidence” required to support
the ALJ’s conclusion that her complaints of pain were exag-
gerated. As this Court stated in Powers, “[w]hile a[n ALJ]
may not reject subjective complaints of pain solely because
they are not fully supported by medical testimony, the [ALJ]
may consider [a lack of objective evidence of any medical condi-
tion] as probative of the claimant’s credibility,” for “[t]he
discrepancy between the degree of pain attested to by the witness
and that suggested by the medical evidence is probative that the
witness may be exaggerating her complaints.” Powers, 207
F.3d at 435-36 (emphasis added). And while it is true that
“[p]hysical examination [of individuals with somatization]
is remarkable for the absence of objective findings to fully
explain the[ir] many subjective complaints,” DSM-IV at
23
447, it is not unreasonable to expect that symptoms of pain
and discomfort manifested by one suffering from
somatization disorder would be evidenced in some observ-
able and medically acceptable manner (for example, by
24
inordinate restrictions on movement). This result would
23
According to Social Security Administration regulations,
somatoform disorder is characterized by “[p]hysical symptoms
for which there are no demonstrable organic findings or known
physiological mechanisms.” See 20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, app.
1, § 12.07. In addition, however, an individual suffering from the
disorder may have an “[u]nrealistic interpretation of physical
signs or sensations associated with the preoccupation or belief
that one has a serious disease or injury[.]” Id.
24
It should also be noted that, at each of her hearings before
different ALJs in this matter, the only persons testifying regarding
Carradine’s severity of pain were the claimant herself and her husband.
(continued...)
48 No. 02-4318
seem especially likely when the claimant characterizes and
exaggerates that the pain is ever-present and severe (“24
hours a day, every day . . . . [nothing] relieves it . . . .”),
as does Carradine. Indeed, other courts have cited a lack
of objective medical evidence of severe pain as a proper
grounds of support for an ALJ’s determination that a soma-
tic patient’s complaints of pain are not entirely credible. See,
th
e.g., Metz v. Shalala, 49 F.3d 374, 377 (8 Cir. 1995) (noting
that “the absence of objective medical evidence of severe
pain,” as well as other factors, “support[ed] the ALJ’s
decision to discredit Metz’s subjective complaints of pain.”).
The final evidence cited by the ALJ to support his finding
that Carradine’s pain complaints were incredible was that
“[d]uring a functional capacity evaluation by a competent
therapist, [Carradine] responded with invalid efforts.” R. at
17. According to the physical therapist who evaluated her
on April 13, 1999:
[I]n looking at the 30 validity criteria, [Carradine] did
not satisfy validity criteria on 20 out of 30 tasks . . .
[but a number of] [t]hese invalid criteria were due to minimal
efforts being recorded. Patient’s subjective complaints are
compatible with this, however the physiological re-
sponses recorded during [other testing] do not support
the results obtained in the testing.
R. at 483. The fact that Carradine had exaggerated her physical
limitations as recently as 1999 (i.e., by giving minimal effort
during physical testing), combined with the lack of medical
evidence and the inconsistencies between her accounts of the
(...continued)
Not one independent witness—such as a former employer or, even
better, a medical doctor, physical therapist, psychologist, or expert on
pain—corroborated any part of her account of her disabling pain under
examination at these hearings.
No. 02-4318 49
severity and duration of her pain and her stated daily activities,
lent ample support to the ALJ’s conclusion that Carradine was not
credible in her account of disabling pain.
Despite the substantial record evidence supporting the
ALJ’s assessment of Carradine’s credibility, the majority
misguidedly attempts to assail his credibility determination,
substituting its own findings for that of the trier of fact, and
ultimately engaging in its own unsupported credibility
assessment by speculating over a series of seemingly
25
preconceived “improbabilities.” Yet for all of the
25
Regarding its perceived “improbabilities,” the majority es-
sentially argues that Carradine’s repeated medical visits and oft
time very minimal treatment with conservative (mild) medica-
tions over roughly seven years should be viewed as supporting
the credibility of her complaints of pain. Opinion, at 5-6 (explain-
ing the “improbability” that Carradine would have sought this
medical treatment if she had not been in pain). But the fact that
Carradine has continued to go from doctor to doctor to doctor
with her various (unsubstantiated) complaints of alleged pain—
in spite of each doctor’s repeated failure to discover an objective
physical explanation for such pain—says more about her will-
ingness to outlast the system than it does her credibility as a
disability claimant.
Moreover, with these comments, it appears the majority is en-
gaging in its own misapplication of somatization. The point is not
that Carradine necessarily malingered as part of some conscious
plan to receive benefits; rather, it is that her condition frequently
produces a disconnect between the severity of pain that she reports and
the actual severity of her pain. At its outer limit, the majority’s
reasoning (i.e., that frequent visits to medical personnel by someone
seeking treatment evinces genuine pain) would greatly aid all hypochon-
driacs who seek the receipt of government benefits. In any event, the
(continued...)
50 No. 02-4318
(...continued)
majority’s interpretation ignores the fact that a large majority of
Carradine’s treatment involved conservative approaches,
consisting of self-administered medication (pain medications, as
well as non-prescription, “over-the-counter” anti-inflammatories)
and physical therapy. Likewise, it is equally plausible that
Carradine was simply a “doctor shopper” (and will in all
probability continue to “doctor shop”) in hopes of accomplishing
her ultimate goal of collecting disability payments at the govern-
ment’s expense (while not working).
Next, the majority comments on the improbability that she
could “fool a host of doctors and emergency-room personnel into
thinking she suffers extreme pain.” But according to the record,
the accounts of medical personnel concluding that she actually
was suffering “severe” pain are, at best, very few and far between. It is
noteworthy to observe that statements by medical staff noting
high levels of pain are generally limited to those based on what
Carradine expressed to them. Moreover, the ALJ considered the
very issue raised by the majority when he observed that, from the
record, it appeared “the doctors accepted the claimant’s com-
plaints at face value” and recorded the same (which would
explain why they proceeded to treat her in the absence of any
objective medical evidence of ailment). R. at 19. Indeed, as this
Court recently emphasized in Barrett v. Barnhart, 335 F.3d 1065
th
(7 Cir. 2004), the ALJ must give weight to medical decisions that
are based upon objective physical and scientific tests and evaluations
—not in those cases where, as here, the doctor’s report or
treatment is merely based upon a claimant’s subjective com-
plaints:
“[T]o give no weight at all to [a treating physician’s] report
because [a complainant] had exaggerated her condition
to [the physician] (and we accept the administrative law
judge’s finding on that score, a well-nigh unreviewable
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 51
majority’s efforts to dislodge the ALJ’s credibility determi-
nation, it remains evident from the medical evidence,
Carradine’s own account of her extensive physical activities,
and her history of giving “minimal efforts” on physical
exams (as set forth in the record), that the record in this case
provides more than ample support for the ALJ’s determination
that Carradine’s accounts of pain were unreliable, and,
moreover, that the ALJ’s credibility determination was “not
patently wrong.” See Herron v. Shalala, 19 F.3d 329, 335 (7th
Cir. 1994) (noting that “[s]ince the ALJ is in the best position
(...continued)
determination of credibility) was arbitrary, since the [phy-
sician] based her evaluation on physical tests and observa-
tion, not just on what [the claimant] told her.” Id. at 1067
(emphasis added).
On the other hand, as in this case, where a medical expert’s report is
based solely on a complainant’s own subjective accounts of pain, that
report is not entitled to controlling weight. See Butera v. Apfel, 173
th
F.3d 1049, 1057 (7 Cir. 1999) (doctor’s opinion not entitled to
controlling weight where physician “did not obtain any evidence
beyond . . . [patient’s] subjective complaints . . .”).
Finally, the majority talks of the “improbability that this host
of medical workers would prescribe drugs and other treatment
for her if they thought she was faking her symptoms.” As I men-
tioned previously, the medications and treatments provided to
Carradine were predominantly conservative and mild, reflecting the fact
that the medical professionals realized that only minor treatment was
needed to alleviate her symptoms. Moreover, the offering of
this nature of care does little or nothing to support the alleged
severity of her pain; doctors treat and prescribe medicine to
alleviate discomfort from minor pains as well, even when such
pains fail to rise to the level required to receive social security
disability benefits.
52 No. 02-4318
to observe witnesses,” this Court will “not upset credibility
determinations on appeal so long as they find some support
in the record and are not patently wrong.”).
On the other hand, the record does not support the majority’s
unfounded assertion that the “[ALJ] failed to take seriously
the possibility that the pain was indeed as severe as
Carradine said but that its origin was psychological rather
than physical,” for in fact the record reflects a very exten-
sive, well-reasoned decision by the ALJ. As I noted earlier,
the ALJ, when taking into account Carradine’s somatization
disorder, fully recognized that the claimant had “a tendency
to develop chronic physical ailments, usually resulting from
psychological stress and conflicts.” R. at 24-25 (emphasis
added). Yet, as I also explained heretofore, the ALJ at the
same time reached the reasonable and well-supported
conclusion (and made the same determination that the
previous ALJ had also reached, in an earlier decision, see
infra note 28) that Carradine’s accounts of her pain were
exaggerated. The ALJ’s conclusion may be different than
that which the majority might reach if it were the trier of
fact, but according to accepted law, this Court is not free to
substitute its own judgment. Furthermore, our role “is not to
reweigh any conflicting evidence; so long as reasonable minds may
differ, the [ALJ’s] decision will be upheld.” Lee, 988 F.2d at 793-
26
94 (emphasis added). Only by stripping the
26
Lest a reader of the majority opinion be confused, Carradine’s
case can readily be distinguished from Vertigan v. Halter, 260 F.3d
1044 (9th Cir. 2001), and Cox v. Apfel, 160 F.3d 1203 (8th Cir.
1998), which are cited by the majority, purportedly to support the
decision to overturn the sound credibility determination of the
ALJ. Even if we assume that the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in
Vertigan is consonant with principles of social security benefits
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 53
(...continued)
law and the role of courts when reviewing decisions of SSA
administrative law judges, in Carradine’s case the evidence is
overwhelming that there is much more than a mere “scintilla of
evidence in the record to support the ALJ’s finding that she
lacked credibility about her pain and physical limitations.”
Opinion, at 7-8 (quoting Vertigan, 260 F.3d at 1050). In contrast to
Vertigan, the ALJ’s credibility finding in this case was supported
by: (1) the lack of objective medical evidence in the record to
support Carradine’s claims of pain; (2) the inconsistency of
Carradine’s physical activities with her claims of pain; (3) the fact
that Carradine had, in the past, exhibited “minimal efforts”
during evaluation of her physical capabilities; and (4) the fact that
Carradine’s somatization disorder inclined her to exaggerate her
accounts of pain. These four factors can hardly be characterized
as a mere “scintilla” of support in the record, and, on the
contrary, represent substantial record support for the ALJ’s finding
that Carradine was not credible in claiming that her pain was disabling.
Moreover, unlike the plaintiff in Vertigan, Carradine’s pain
complaints have been met with relatively conservative medical
treatment, while Vertigan had a total of six spinal surgeries to treat
her chronic back ailment. For all of these reasons, Vertigan
presented a fact pattern that is not at all analogous to the instant
case.
The majority’s citation to Cox is even more troubling. The
majority quotes the following language from Cox, erroneously
finding it informative to Carradine’s case: “We [the court in Cox]
question whether a claimant with seven years of medical records
detailing repeated complaints of severe pain, who undergoes
three back surgeries in the hopes of alleviating that pain, and
who now lives with a morphine pump implanted in her body,
can be found not credible regarding her complaints of pain.” Cox,
160 F.3d at 1207. By contrast to the complainant in Cox, Carradine
only temporarily had a spinal cord stimulator installed. Moreover,
such a procedure is considered to be minimally invasive as
(continued...)
54 No. 02-4318
ALJ of his due deference—and in the process impugning his
reasoning—could the majority obtain the result that it does.
III. Conclusion
The ultimate task facing the ALJ in this case was to deter-
mine whether Carradine’s narration of her unremitting (“24
hours a day,” “level seven”), debilitating pain—which was
not corroborated in her extensive medical history— was
credible to support an awarding of SSA disability benefits.
The ALJ, the trier of fact, answered this inquiry in the
negative and highlighted substantial evidence in the record in
support of his credibility determination—including Carradine’s
somatization disorder (tendency to exaggerate symptoms), the
extent of her daily activities (and their inconsistency with her
accounts of unremitting, “24 hours a day,” severe pain), the lack
of objective medical evidence of ailment (including the testimony
set forth by a myriad of the medical personnel involved in her
medical history), and evidence that she had exaggerated her
physical limitations in a prior physical fitness test by giving
“minimal efforts.”
(...continued)
compared to even a single back surgery—whether it be a
laminectomy or a spinal fusion or the repair of a herniated
disc—much less three major back surgeries and implantation of an
intrathecal morphine pump as occurred in Cox. Id. at 1208. In fact,
most of the medical professionals treating Carradine found such
an invasive course of treatment unnecessary and entirely
uncalled for. For example, Dr. Macadaeg, an anesthesiolo-
gist/pain disorder specialist who examined Carradine in 2000
and also diagnosed her with somatization disorder, specifically
recommended against any further interventional therapy, said that she
would continue to improve, and determined that “[s]he is certainly not
surgical in nature.” R. at 534 (emphasis added).
No. 02-4318 55
Indeed, a brief review of the record reveals that the factors
considered by the ALJ, as well as his reasoning, were
supported by substantial evidence:
(1) In February of 1993, Carradine suffered a slip-and-
fall accident, and shortly thereafter began receiving
workers’ compensation benefits for ensuing back
pain.
(2) As of June 8, 1993, these workers’ compensation benefits
were terminated, based on a determination, made
pursuant to the “medical evidence[,] [that] treat-
ment [for Carradine’s back pain] [wa]s no[] [longer]
related to [her] fall at work.” R. at 160 (emphasis
added).
(3) In August of 1993, Carradine returned to her job as
an addiction counseling aide, but was ultimately
discharged from that position in February of 1994,
for “failing to follow procedures”; Carradine explained
that she wasn’t fired for not being able to lift or
anything, but rather because she “had missed work.”
R. at 47 (emphasis added).
(4) From February of 1993 (her accident), over a period
of more than seven years, Carradine visited some
thirteen doctors and physical therapists to treat her
alleged recurring back and spinal pain; but time
and again, medical tests (MRIs and x-rays of her back)
revealed no abnormal findings (only mild to moderate
degeneration/mild narrowing of the spine and no disc
herniation). R. at 208, 293-94.
(5) During a functional capacity evaluation before a
physical therapist, conducted in April of 1999,
Carradine exerted only “minimal efforts” during tes-
ting—a finding supported by Carradine’s physio-
56 No. 02-4318
logical responses during an isometric strength test,
as well as her results on a hand dynanometer
(“squeeze”) test.
(6) Despite Carradine’s decision to exert only “minimal
efforts” during examination, the physical therapist
administering the test was nonetheless able to
conclude from a compilation of the various other
tests administered that Carradine was “capable of
sedentary work.” R. at 483.
(7) In June of 2000, a clinical psychologist evaluated
Carradine and diagnosed her as having somatization
disorder; according to the DSM-IV, somatics tend to
“describe their complaints in . . . exaggerated terms . .
.,” DSM-IV at 446. Stated differently, somatics are
“prone either to exaggerate the magnitude of their
complaints or to present these complaints in a melo-
dramatic fashion . . . .” See Gerald M. Aronoff,
“Evaluating and Rating Impairment Caused by
Pain,” in Disability Evaluation 552, 553 (Stephen L.
Demeter & Gunnar B.J. Anderson eds., 2d ed. 2003)
(emphasis added).
(8) At her administrative hearings, Carradine claimed
to be in constant pain, stating that both her head-
aches and her backaches are there “24 hours a
day, every day . . .,” R. at 63-65, and further alleged
that these backaches and headaches were consis-
tently severe. Id. (back pain usually around a level
“seven,” headaches constantly in the “three or four
to a ten” range).
(9) Her claims of constant, severe pain notwithstanding,
Carradine admitted to performing the following physical
activities:
(i) daily walks for exercise of up to two miles a day;
No. 02-4318 57
(ii) attending church and social meetings;
(iii) gardening (which involves stooping, bending,
and balancing while tilling soil and planting
seeds or pulling weeds);
(iv) doing housework such as cooking, cleaning, and
some laundry;
(v) driving her car to run errands a couple times a
week, as well as driving long distances (as far
as seventy-five miles round-trip to and from
school), a couple days a week, with occasional
stops.
Based on the foregoing evidence, the ALJ properly con-
cluded that Carradine’s claim of constant, severe and constant
pain was “not entirely credible,” and thus reached the
reasonable and well-supported determination to discount
her allegation of disabling pain. This record evidence also
27
supported the ALJ’s RFC finding that Carradine can
“perform a limited range of light work,” such as continu-
ously standing or walking for up to an hour, occasionally
climbing stairs or a ladder, occasionally pushing or pulling
up to ten pounds, frequently lifting ten pounds, and
occasionally lifting or carrying up to twenty pounds. Cf.
27
RFC is defined as “an administrative assessment of what
work-related activities an individual can perform despite her
limitations.” Dixon v. Massanari, 270 F.3d 1171, 1178 (7th Cir.
2001); see also 20 C.F.R. § 404.1545(a)(1) (defining RFC as what
“you can still do despite your limitations”); Social Security Ruling
96-8p (defining RFC as “an assessment of an individual’s ability
to do sustained work-related physical and mental activities in a
work setting on a regular and continuing basis. . . . [It] is not the
least an individual can do despite his or her limitations or
restrictions, but the most.”).
58 No. 02-4318
Luna v. Shalala, 22 F.3d 687, 690 (7th Cir. 1994) (“[Defen-
dant’s] statements of his own activities further support the
ALJ’s finding that he was capable of performing a full range
of sedentary work.”).
We must not forget that according to Carradine’s
own testimony, she was discharged from her job for fail-
ing to follow procedures (as she explains, she had “missed
work”)—which obviously does not relate to an inability to
perform physical work due to pain. See supra note 5. More
fundamentally, I must disagree with the majority’s falla-
cious reasoning and unsupported conclusion in rejecting the
ALJ’s credibility determination; although their argument is
certainly creative, it is not borne out in the record. I thus fail
to ascertain any alleged “errors in reasoning” to support my
fellow panel members’ qualms about affirming the ALJ’s
decision.
It would be nigh unto impossible for me to justify a claim
barren of any support in the medical evidence inscribed in
the record. Therefore, I can see no reason to accept the
majority’s decision to overturn the ALJ’s detailed findings
of fact and sound application of the law (particularly
considering ALJ Bernstein was but one of a total of five
different administrative and judicial entities to refuse to
award Carradine disability benefits over the course of these
28
proceedings ). While the majority refrains from expressly
28
Throughout the course of pursuing her claim, there have been
six different occasions where separate and distinct governmental
hearing agencies or tribunals set out to determine whether Carradine is
due benefits, as well as a federal district court, have refused to award
Carradine disability benefits based on a lack of any supporting medical
evidence in the record (the SSA—which denied her claim both
initially and on reconsideration, two ALJs, the Appeals Coun-
(continued...)
No. 02-4318 59
going that far, it is also unfathomable to somehow come up
with nonexistent “flaws in logic” and remand this matter to
give the claimant an eighth kick at the cat.
The ALJ found that Carradine’s daily activities, her
testimony, and the available physical and psychological
medical findings did not support her allegations of suffering
from debilitating pain, and that her pain complaints (and
(...continued)
cil—which denied review of ALJ Bernstein’s denial of benefits, as
well as the district judge). Indeed, there has been only one in-
stance—when, after considering the first ALJ’s decision denying
benefits, the Appeals Council determined to remand the cause to
the ALJ to consider additional evidence that had been included
in the record—in which Carradine’s claim for benefits was not
denied by the decision maker.
In 1994, the SSA denied Carradine’s claim initially and again
upon reconsideration. On appeal, her claim was again denied by
ALJ Kathleen Donahue in a decision and order dated September
11, 1996, which had followed a April 24, 1995, hearing. Of note,
ALJ Donahue also made a finding as to the petitioner’s lack of cre-
dibility, stating that she did not “find the claimant to be totally
credible.” R. at 322. On July 13, 1998, the Appeals Council vacated
ALJ Donahue’s decision and remanded the matter in order for the
ALJ to consider post-hearing evidence and some additional
medical evidence. Upon remand, a hearing was held before ALJ
Bryan Bernstein, after which he once again issued a decision
denying Carradine’s claim. ALJ Bernstein also made a finding that
her statements about her impairment were “not entirely reliable.” R. at
27 (emphasis added). After the Appeals Council denied review
of Judge Bernstein’s decision, the district court below concluded
that ALJ’s denial of benefits was a valid decision. While it is only
ALJ Bernstein’s decision that forms the basis for the current
appeal, it is worth asking: How many ALJs who had person-to-
person contact with Carradine—and who did not believe her—do
there need to be before we can put this case to rest?
60 No. 02-4318
the extent thereof) were therefore unreliable. In my opinion,
this credibility determination was well-reasoned, and
supported by substantial evidence in the record, and
certainly not “patently wrong” as the majority somehow
29
incorrectly concludes. I concur with the five other govern-
mental entities that have concluded on six separate occasions
(the SSA, in its initial decision as well as upon reconsidera-
tion, two ALJs, the Appeals Council, and the federal district
court) that Carradine is not disabled from work, and affirm the
district court’s judgment upholding the ALJ’s well-docu-
mented decision to deny the claimant disability insurance
benefits.
A true Copy:
Teste:
_____________________________
Clerk of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
29
And, as I pointed out earlier, let us not forget the economic
effects of what a decision of this nature (i.e., a decision refusing
to apply the great level of deference we owe to the fact-finder)
would do to the ever-depleting social security benefits program
and the insurance industry as a whole.
USCA-02-C-0072—3-12-04