Michael Zellweger applied for Social Security disability benefits, claiming that he suffered from a spinal disorder equivalent to Listing 1.04 in the agencys Listing of Impairments. The Listings describe impairments that are considered so severe as to be per se disabling. An administrative law judge (“ALJ”) denied his claim, concluding that the medical evidence did not meet the criteria for Listing 1.04 and that Zellweger could perform light work.
Zellweger sought judicial review. A magistrate judge reversed, ruling that the ALJs discussion was too cursory at step three of the sequential analysis prescribed in the agency regulations. Thats the step in the decision process at which the ALJ is tasked with assessing whether the claimant has an impairment that meets or medically equals one of the Listings. Although the ALJ explained his reasoning more thoroughly later in his decision, the magistrate judge refused to consider that discussion. He thought the Chenery doctrine barred him from doing so. See SEC v. Chenery, 318 U.S. 80, 63 S.Ct. 454, 87 L.Ed. 626 (1943).
The magistrate judge was mistaken. As we recently explained in a similar case involving Listing 1.04, the sequential process is not so rigidly compartmentalized, and nothing in the Chenery doctrine prohibits a reviewing court from reading an ALJs decision holistically. Jeske v. Saul, 955 F.3d 583 (7th Cir. 2020). Here, as in Jeske, the ALJ thoroughly analyzed the medical evidence at the step in the sequential analysis that addresses the claimants residual functional capacity. That analysis elaborated on the more cursory discussion at step three and was easily adequate to support the ALJs rejection of a per se disability under Listing 1.04. Zellweger identifies no other infirmity in the ALJs decision, so we reverse and remand with instructions to enter judgment for the Commissioner of Social Security.
I. Background
Zellweger applied for disability benefits in June 2013, claiming a per se disabling spinal condition equivalent to Listing 1.04. He initially alleged an onset date in October 2008 but later amended it to August 28, 2013. His last-insured status expired on September 30, 2013, so the application presented a very narrow question: whether he was disabled during the one-month period from August 28 to September 30, 2013. See 42 U.S.C. § 416(i)(3)(B). The primary medical basis for his application was cervical and lumbar degenerative disc disease. His treatment history included two spinal surgeries many years earlier: a cervical fusion in 2007 and lumbar surgery in 2010. In the meantime, he had also been treated for carpal tunnel syndrome, shoulder pain, diabetes, and other conditions.
Zellweger served time in prison from June 2011 to May 2013. About a month after his release, Zellweger visited Dr. Michael Merry, his primary-care physician. They discussed his diabetes, and he asked to be referred to a specialist for treatment of shoulder pain. Dr. Merrys notes indicate that Zellwegers diabetes had been well controlled by medication while he was in prison but that he suffered from bilateral shoulder pain and a restricted range of shoulder movement likely attributable to a rotator-cuff problem. Dr. Merry also noted that Zellweger was suffering from right-elbow epicondylitis, an inflammation of the tendons colloquially known as “tennis elbow.” Zellweger had no signs of wasting or muscle loss, and his reflexes were intact.
Dr. Merry referred Zellweger to Dr. Kevin Draxinger, an orthopedist. Dr. Draxinger found a 20% restriction in Zellwegers ability to bend his neck and rotate his right arm laterally. He referred Zellweger to Dr. M. Marc Soriano, a neurosurgeon. Dr. Sorianos September 2013 examination revealed Zellwegers neck and shoulder range of motion were normal. All other sensory and reflex exams also showed normal results.
Zellwegers application for disability benefits was denied in early 2014. The agency reconsidered it in August of that year and again denied it. Zellweger then requested a hearing before an ALJ, which took place in February 2016. The ALJ denied the claim after working through the five-step analysis required by 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4).
A brief summary of the five-step sequential process will help illuminate the narrow issue on appeal. At step one the ALJ determines whether the claimant has engaged in gainful employment between his alleged disability-onset date and the expiration of his insurance. At step two the ALJ considers whether the claimant suffers from a serious impairment or combination of impairments. At step three the ALJ decides whether the claimant has an impairment that meets or equals one of the categories listed in the agencys Listing of Impairments at 20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P, app. 1. If the criteria for a listing are met, the claimant is per se disabled. If not, the decision process moves on and the ALJ considers the claimants residual functional capacity (“RFC”)—that is, his ability to work despite his impairments. At step four the ALJ determines whether the applicant can perform his past relevant work in light of his RFC. Finally, at step five the ALJ decides whether the claimant can do some other work that exists in significant numbers in the national economy.
At steps one and two, the ALJ determined that Zellweger had not worked since his alleged onset date and suffered from the following severe impairments: cervical and lumbar degenerative disc disease, diabetes, and carpal tunnel syndrome. At step three—the per se disability analysis—the ALJ considered whether Zellwegers impairments met or equaled the criteria in Listing 1.04A, the relevant listing for per se disabling spinal disorders. Those criteria are:
[E]vidence of nerve root compression characterized by neuro-anatomic distribution of pain, limitation of motion of the spine, motor loss (atrophy with associated muscle weakness or muscle weakness) accompanied by sensory or reflex loss and, if there is involvement of the lower back, positive straight-leg raising test (sitting and supine).
20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P, app. 1.
The ALJ explained that the evidence did not establish the necessary criteria:
As discussed more below, medical records establish lumbar and cervical degenerative disc disease, with neurological involvement, status post surgery. (See, for example, Exhibit B4F/122-129). However, the criteria of [L]isting 1.04 are not satisfied in this case. For example, during an examination on June 19, 2013, the claimant displayed obesity, right lateral epicondylitis, and limited shoulder range of motion, but normal functioning otherwise. (Exhibit B3F/6-8).
After step three, the ALJ provided an in-depth discussion of the medical evidence in his analysis of Zellwegers RFC. He analyzed the reports of treating physicians and state-agency consultants in order to assess Zellwegers limitations. The ALJ found that Zellwegers claim of disabling pain was not entirely credible because the medical evidence did not support it and indeed some treating physicians reported that Zellweger was not in pain. Although Zellweger could not perform physically strenuous work, the ALJ concluded that he had the residual functional capacity to perform light physical labor.
At step four the ALJ concluded that Zellwegers past relevant work—as a truck driver, janitor, and machine operator—exceeded his RFC. At step five the ALJ determined that considering Zellwegers age, education, experience, and RFC, there were jobs in significant numbers in the national economy that Zellweger could perform. As such, Zellweger was not disabled during the relevant time period. The ALJ denied the claim for benefits.
Zellweger sought review in the district court. See 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). He challenged the ALJs step-three determination that he was not per se disabled, arguing that the ALJ had not adequately explained his conclusion that the evidence did not satisfy the Listing 1.04A criteria.
The parties consented to transfer the case to a magistrate judge for decision. The magistrate judge sided with Zellweger and reversed. Though skeptical about the merits of Zellwegers claim, the magistrate judge held that the ALJs cursory discussion at step three was inadequate and that the Chenery doctrine barred consideration of the more detailed explanation that appeared in the next section of the decision. The Commissioner moved for reconsideration under Rule 59(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, but the magistrate judge denied the motion, again citing the Chenery doctrine. The Commissioner appealed.
II. Discussion
The sole issue in this case is whether the magistrate judge correctly applied the Chenery doctrine. He did not. Chenery generally confines a reviewing court to the agencys actual rationale for its decision, not an after-the-fact justification. See Chenery, 318 U.S. at 87–88, 63 S.Ct. 454. As we recently explained in Jeske, however, nothing in Chenery prohibits a reviewing court from reviewing an ALJs step-three determination in light of elaboration and analysis appearing elsewhere in the decision. 955 F.3d at 590.
Like this case, Jeske involved a claim of per se disability under Listing 1.04. The similarities continue: In Jeske the ALJs analysis at step three was “brief,” but “the discussion picked up in the next part of the ALJs decision.” Id. at 589. We explained that a reviewing court does “not violat[e] Chenery’s command by looking at the ALJs more thorough discussion of the evidence” elsewhere in the decision. Id. at 590. We noted that the five-step decision process “comprises sequential determinations that can involve overlapping reasoning,” and “[t]his is certainly true of step three and the RFC determination that takes place between steps three and four.” Id. We summed up the point in this way:
[W]hen an ALJ explains how the evidence reveals a claimants functional capacity, that discussion may doubly explain how the evidence shows the claimants impairment is not presumptively disabling under the pertinent listing. And, as weve already recognized, “[t]o require the ALJ to repeat such a discussion throughout [the] decision would be redundant.” Id. (quoting Curvin v. Colvin, 778 F.3d 645, 650 (7th Cir. 2015)).
Jeske shows why the magistrate judge was wrong to think he was barred from considering the whole of the ALJs decision—more particularly, the ALJs discussion of the medical evidence in the section of his decision addressing Zellwegers RFC. That discussion is quite detailed, and it easily supports the ALJs step-three rejection of Zellwegers claim of per se disability under Listing 1.04. Its worth noting that the ALJs step-three analysis specifically incorporates his evaluation of the medical evidence in the next section of his decision. Zellweger hasnt identified any substantive flaw in that lengthy analysis; rather, his argument rests entirely on the relative brevity of the ALJs step-three discussion.
Zellweger argues that the magistrate judges application of the Chenery doctrine finds support in Minnick v. Colvin, 775 F.3d 929 (7th Cir. 2015), and Kastner v. Astrue, 697 F.3d 642 (7th Cir. 2012). Not so. In Minnick both the step-three discussion and the RFC analysis were inadequate. 775 F.3d at 936–38. We did not suggest that an ALJs step-three determination cannot be supported by a discussion of the medical evidence appearing under the RFC heading. In Kastner we relied on Chenery to reject the Commissioners post hoc rationale for the ALJs decision because it did not appear anywhere in the ALJs opinion. Thats hardly the case here, where the RFC analysis is extensive and supports the ALJs determination that Zellweger is not per se disabled under Listing 1.04.
The magistrate judges misapplication of Chenery requires reversal of the judgment below. Because Zellweger identifies no other error in the ALJs decision, on remand the court should enter judgment for the Commissioner.
REVERSED AND REMANDED
Sykes, Chief Judge.