Wilder v. Apfel

Decision Date28 August 1998
Docket NumberNo. 98-1499,98-1499
Parties, Unempl.Ins.Rep. (CCH) P 16174B Rose WILDER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Kenneth S. APFEL, Commissioner of Social Security, Defendant-Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Seventh Circuit

Barry A. Schultz, Schultz & Winick, Evanston, IL, for Rose Wilder.

Carole J. Kohn, Social Security Administration, Office of Gen. Counsel, Region V, Chicago, IL, for Kenneth S. Apfel.

Before POSNER, Chief Judge, and BAUER and KANNE, Circuit Judges.

POSNER, Chief Judge.

Three years ago almost to the day, we reversed the denial of social security disability benefits to Rosie Wilder, Wilder v. Chater, 64 F.3d 335 (7th Cir.1995), holding that the decision of the administrative law judge was unreasonable in light of the record before him. On remand, further evidence was taken, benefits were again denied (by a different administrative law judge), the district court (a different district judge) again affirmed, and we again reverse on the same ground as we did in our original decision. But this time, to bring the charade to an end, we order the Social Security Administration to award Wilder the benefits that she applied for.

Wilder was employed (most recently as a security guard in a retirement home) until 1986, and she claims that in that year, when she was 47 years old, she became permanently and totally disabled by severe depression. There is no doubt that she is today and has been since 1992 totally disabled, but, for a reason explained in our original opinion, she can get nothing unless she was totally disabled before the end of 1986. The only medical evidence that was before the administrative law judge in the first round was the testimony of a psychiatrist selected by the Social Security Administration, a Dr. Adams. He testified that, on the basis of the description of Wilder's condition in 1986 by her daughter (who also testified), Wilder was indeed totally disabled by major depression back then. The administrative law judge thought Adams's testimony outweighed by other "facts": the retirement home would not have allowed Wilder to carry a gun on duty if she had really been mentally ill; the Illinois Department of Child and Family Services would not have let her, had she been mentally ill, adopt her grandson (the mother, Wilder's daughter, was a drug addict); her medical records did not mention mental illness; her daughters believed that her condition had gotten worse in 1988 and 1989, so it must have been better in 1986; and she had won the state lottery shortly before she quit her job in the retirement home, and this rather than mental illness was probably the factor that had precipitated her exit from the labor force.

We ruled that these facts (not all of which were facts) could not reasonably be thought to outweigh, or even seriously to contradict or qualify, Dr. Adams's disinterested expert testimony. (And remember that he was the agency-appointed expert, not a party expert. Cf. Saelee v. Chater, 94 F.3d 520, 522-23 (9th Cir.1996).) There was no evidence from the retirement home; so far as appears, it had no awareness of Wilder's mental condition. There was no evidence from the DCFS either; it may have been unaware of Wilder's condition, careless, or willing to overlook it in light of her having money from her lottery winnings and the mother's being a drug addict; in any event, it had lost Wilder's file. The medical records were of purely physical ailments. Although the first mention in the records of a psychiatric disorder does not appear until 1992 (when she was diagnosed as suffering from major depression), Wilder is an inner-city black woman with a sixth-grade education who, so far as appears, was not advised to seek psychiatric treatment by any of the doctors who saw her for her diabetes and other physical illnesses, or by family and friends, who come from the same deprived milieu. As for the timing of her quitting her job, Adams testified that the winning of the lottery may have been a factor (along with the arrival a few days later of the later-to-be-adopted baby) that precipitated her major depression. There was also evidence that Wilder wasn't actually fit to work; that she worked out of financial desperation; that she could do her job only because one of the residents of the retirement home sat with her all day and her daughters constantly looked in on her at work. As we pointed out in our previous opinion, employment is not proof positive of ability to work, since disabled people, if desperate (or employed by an altruist), can often hold a job. 64 F.3d at 337-38; see also Kelley v. Callahan, 133 F.3d 583, 588 (8th Cir.1998). One can be unemployable (O'Connor v. Sullivan, 938 F.2d 70, 72-73 (7th Cir.1991)), yet employed.

At the hearing on remand, another psychiatrist, a Dr. Blackman, testified. He had known and respected Dr. Adams (who had died since the first hearing), but said that he himself could not offer an opinion on whether Wilder had been afflicted with major depression back in 1986, because the evidence presented at the first hearing (he had read the transcript) pointed in both directions. So one of the daughters was called to the stand to give a more particular description of her mother's condition back in 1986. She testified that she had to get her mother's uniform together for her every day because otherwise mother would "grab a pair of pants and maybe a blouse and put it on," forgetting that she had to wear a uniform in her job at the retirement home. Although Wilder had a car and a driver's license and it was only a half mile from home to work, the daughter testified that she had to drive her to and from work because Wilder got lost if she tried to get there and back herself. She no longer cooked, "because she started burning up, burning things up." She did no shopping by herself, though sometimes she accompanied her daughter on shopping trips, and since 1984 this daughter had taken care not only of all the household bills but of all the grandchildren whom Wilder had adopted. As early as 1986 the daughter would only allow Wilder to hold the baby (the first of the adopted children) for a minute or two "because she [that is, Wilder] had a nervous condition. She would shake and stuff like that so I didn't want her to drop the baby." At work, a resident of the retirement home kept Wilder company all the time because Wilder would fall asleep and also had a bladder problem that sent her to the bathroom two or three times an hour.

Blackman was recalled and Wilder's lawyer, summarizing the testimony of the daughter and other testimony that had been given at the original hearing (testimony that Wilder left burning cigarettes around the house, had frequent, unexplained crying jags, wasn't happy about winning the lottery, and that the daughters would remove Wilder's gun when she came home from work, lock it up, and only give it back to her when they drove her to work the next day), asked Blackman whether if all this testimony was true Wilder had been suffering from major depression and Blackman said yes. The administrative law judge then asked him a hypothetical question that emphasized the absence of documentation of Wilder's mental condition in 1986 and to this he answered that with that information he would adjudge her condition not to have been severe. From Blackman's not wholly clear testimony, it appears that he believes that a diagnosis of mental illness requires contemporaneous medical documentation. That is a legal rather than a medical judgment, and happens to be incorrect. What is required is contemporaneous corroboration of the mental illness, Estok v. Apfel, 152 F.3d 636, 1998 WL 446211 (7th Cir.1998), not necessarily contemporaneous medical corroboration. Soc. Sec. Ruling 83-20 (1983); Lichter v. Bowen, 814 F.2d 430, 435 (7th Cir.1987); Grebenick v. Chater, 121 F.3d 1193, 1198-99 (8th Cir.1997); Likes v. Callahan, 112 F.3d 189 (5th Cir.1997) (per curiam). That would be a peculiarly unreasonable requirement in the case of depression, a notoriously underreported disease. Nguyen v. Chater, 100 F.3d 1462, 1465 (9th Cir.1996). A psychologist and a psychiatrist had examined Wilder in 1991 and 1992 respectively and reported that Wilder had been seriously depressed for a long time. The psychiatrist said that Wilder "appears to have a severe major depression that has been going on for many years." Blackman said these reports were accurate but irrelevant because not contemporaneous--again offering gratuitously an erroneous legal opinion unfortunately adopted by the administrative law judge in her opinion.

That opinion is no more reasoned than the first one. It makes no reference to our opinion and it is unclear whether this administrative law judge ever saw it. The pertinent discussion (we will not have to consider the evidence of disability based on Wilder's physical ailments, and hence the testimony of the vocational expert, which related mainly to those ailments) starts off on the wrong foot by stating that Blackman "testified that there is no evidence of claimant having a severe mental impairment prior to December 31, 1986." That is not what he testified. He testified that there was evidence of such an impairment and evidence against and he couldn't decide which body of evidence was more persuasive. In answering the two hypothetical questions, one based on the evidence favorable to Wilder's claim and the other on the evidence against it, as he did, Blackman was in effect merely repeating that he could not form any opinion. If Blackman's testimony dropped out as hopelessly inconclusive as well as contaminated by...

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