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Parties Involved:
Brian Bainbridge
Appellant
Carolyn W. Colvin
Appellee

Document Text:

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 

FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT 

 

BRIAN BAINBRIDGE, 

 Plaintiff - Appellant, 

v. 

CAROLYN W. COLVIN, Acting 

Commissioner of Social Security, 

 Defendant - Appellee. 

No. 14-1409 

(D.C. No. 1:13-CV-01698-MEH) 

(D. Colo.)

 

ORDER AND JUDGMENT*

 

Before BRISCOE, Chief Judge, McKAY and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges. 

 

 Brian Bainbridge appeals from an order of the district court affirming the 

Commissioner’s decision denying his application for disability insurance benefits. 

Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), we affirm. 

 

*

 After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined 

unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral 

argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore 

ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is not binding 

precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral 

estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with 

Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1. 

FILED 

United States Court of Appeals 

Tenth Circuit 

July 7, 2015

Elisabeth A. Shumaker 

Clerk of Court

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I. BACKGROUND 

Bainbridge alleged he was unable to work since November 29, 2009, due to 

back pain, chronic bronchitis, asthma, lung inflammation, and narrowing of the 

esophagus, trachea, and larynx. An administrative law judge (ALJ) held a hearing 

and took testimony from Bainbridge, his wife, and a vocational expert (VE). The 

ALJ found that although Bainbridge suffered from several severe impairments 

(chronic bronchitis, asthma/chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, low back pain 

due to mild degenerative disc disease, and obstructive sleep apnea), none of them, 

separately or in combination, met or equaled a disabling impairment described in the 

Listings, 20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, App. 1. Based on the medical evidence and a 

finding that Bainbridge was not fully credible regarding the limiting effects of his 

symptoms, the ALJ determined that Bainbridge retained the residual functional 

capacity (RFC) to perform sedentary work, provided he could sit or stand 

alternatively at will without being off-task more than 10% of the work period. The 

ALJ also found a number of other physical limitations, but only one is relevant to this 

appeal—the need to avoid even moderate exposure to weather and extreme 

temperatures. 

Given this RFC, the ALJ found that Bainbridge could not perform any of his 

past relevant work as a correctional officer, heavy-equipment driver, or lubrication 

technician. However, at step five of the controlling five-step sequential analysis set 

out in 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4), the ALJ determined that he could perform several 

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other jobs that exist in significant numbers in the national economy: surveillance 

system monitor, cutter/paster, and document preparer. Accordingly, the ALJ denied 

benefits. Bainbridge submitted additional medical evidence (two opinions from a 

treating physician) in support of his appeal to the Appeals Council. The Council 

considered that evidence but determined it would not change the outcome and denied 

review. The district court affirmed. 

II. DISCUSSION

 Bainbridge challenges the ALJ’s adverse credibility finding, her rejection of an 

opinion from one of his treating physicians in favor of an opinion from another, and 

the accuracy of the dispositive hypothetical she posed to the VE. Our task is limited 

to determining whether substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s factual findings and 

whether she applied the correct legal standards. Lax v. Astrue, 489 F.3d 1080, 1084 

(10th Cir. 2007). Substantial evidence is “more than a scintilla, but less than a 

preponderance.” Id.

A. Credibility finding 

The ALJ gave a number of reasons for finding Bainbridge not fully credible 

regarding the limiting effects of his symptoms: He had been conservatively treated 

for minimal respiratory impairments. He was significantly noncompliant with 

prescribed treatments. He was uncooperative or made poor efforts in performing 

diagnostic tests. He had consistently unremarkable physical examinations and test 

results. One treating-physician thought he could return to work and another 

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commented that he might be motivated by secondary gain. He was vague in 

describing his symptoms and the factors that trigger them. And his activities of daily 

living (ADLs) were inconsistent with a disability. “Credibility determinations are 

peculiarly the province of the finder of fact, and we will not upset such 

determinations when supported by substantial evidence.” Diaz v. Sec’y of Health & 

Human Servs., 898 F.2d 774, 777 (10th Cir. 1990). 

Bainbridge challenges the ALJ’s credibility finding in several ways but largely 

ignores her reliance on the lack of supporting objective medical evidence. He first 

claims the ALJ erred in stating her lay opinion that an oximetry test performed in 

July 2010 failed to “note any serious or disabling impairments.” Aplt. App. at 25. 

Bainbridge argues that the report shows the test could not be performed because he 

was coughing and could not hold his breath. In fact, the report states that, because of 

the coughing, the results were the “best obtainable,” and that Bainbridge could not do 

a “DLCO maneuver due to cough—could not maintain breath hold.” Id. at 345. 

Further, as the Commissioner notes, the report showed Bainbridge had oxygen 

saturation levels of 93% on room air, and the Mayo Clinic indicates that normal 

oxygen saturation levels are between 95% and 100%, while those below 90% are 

considered low.1

 Hence, the ALJ’s statement that the report did not show any serious 

 

1

 See Mayo Clinic, Hypoxemia (low blood oxygen), available at

http://mayoclinic.org/symptoms/hypoxemia/basics/definition/sym-20050930 (last 

visited June 19, 2015). 

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or disabling impairment was accurate, and we see no error in her reliance on the 

report in support of her adverse credibility finding. 

Bainbridge next argues that the ALJ erred in finding he was treated 

conservatively when he was seen 28 times in less than two years and, during that 

interval, had a number of pulmonary-function and diagnostic tests (two 

bronchoscopies, a laryngoscopy, an esophagogastrodudenoscopy, an x-ray of his 

esophagus, and two sleep studies). But frequency says little about intensity of 

treatment, and his treatment amounted to a variety of prescription drugs, including a 

nebulizer; a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine for nighttime use; 

rest; physical therapy; and a recommendation for speech therapy. We therefore see 

no error in the ALJ’s characterization of the treatment for his respiratory ailments as 

conservative.2

Bainbridge also questions the accuracy of the ALJ’s statement that he was 

largely noncompliant with his prescribed CPAP machine. He points to a treatment 

note where he reported that he tried to get acclimated to the machine by using it 

during the day but woke up gasping when he wore it at night. He also notes that 

Dr. Christopher Bates, a pulmonary specialist with whom he had the most extensive 

treating relationship, reported in May 2010 that Bainbridge wore the machine for four 

or five hours each night he used it. Although all that is true enough, Bainbridge 

 

2

 The ALJ separately found that Bainbridge was treated conservatively for his 

lower back pain, and he has not challenged that finding. 

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overlooks that the ALJ also relied on later reports from Dr. Bates (July and 

September 2010, and January 2011) stating that Bainbridge was not using the CPAP 

machine at all. The ALJ did not err in relying on his failure to use the CPAP 

machine in support of her adverse credibility finding. See Qualls v. Apfel, 206 F.3d 

1368, 1372 (10th Cir. 2000) (explaining that ALJ may rely on claimant’s attempts to 

relieve pain as part of credibility determination). 

Bainbridge’s final challenge to the ALJ’s credibility finding concerns her 

reliance on his ADLs. Those activities included doing “errands and light housework 

some days,” preparing “meals weekly,” having “no problems with personal care,” 

watering plants, loading and unloading the dishwasher, hanging up clothes, going 

outside daily, driving, watching television, riding “a bike about once a week per his 

doctor’s request,” walking half a mile a day, sometimes making meals, “shopping 

twice a week,” helping with his son’s homeschooling, vacuuming, mopping, driving, 

using a computer one or two hours a day, and socializing with friends. Aplt. App. 

at 28.3

 Pointing to the rule that “sporadic performance [of household tasks or work] 

does not establish that a person is capable of engaging in substantial gainful activity,” 

Frey v. Bowen, 816 F.2d 508, 516-17 (10th Cir. 1987), he contends that his ability to 

 

3

 In addition to stating that Bainbridge shopped twice a week, the ALJ also 

recited that he “shops monthly.” Aplt. App. at 28. The reference to shopping 

monthly was apparently based on a statement in his benefits application, see id.

at 203, but at his hearing he said he went to the store “[a] couple of times a week,” id.

at 69. 

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perform some ADLs on his good days is not inconsistent with his claim of needing 

help from his wife and children on bad days. 

We see no error. The ALJ did not rely on Bainbridge’s ADLs to establish that 

he could work or as the sole basis for finding him not fully credible. Instead, the ALJ 

used them as one part of her adverse credibility finding, as the Commissioner’s 

regulations require and our case law recognizes. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1529(c)(3)(i) 

(stating that an ALJ is to consider ADLs as part of credibility evaluation); Wilson v. 

Astrue, 602 F.3d 1136, 1146 (10th Cir. 2010) (considering ALJ’s reliance on ADLs 

as permissible part of substantial evidence supporting credibility evaluation). The 

ALJ was entitled to base her adverse credibility finding, in part, on his performance 

of these activities, so the ALJ did not violate Frey. Furthermore, the other reasons 

the ALJ gave for not fully believing Bainbridge, most pertinently the lack of 

supporting medical evidence and the suggestion that he might be motivated by 

secondary gain, support the ALJ’s implicit finding that he was not fully credible 

regarding his need for help on bad days. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1529(c)(2) (stating that 

objective medical evidence is “useful indicator” of intensity and persistence of 

symptoms); Diaz, 898 F.2d at 777 (approving ALJ’s reliance, for credibility 

purposes, on consulting physician’s suspicion that claimant was “‘malingering’”). 

B. Physician opinions 

Bainbridge contends that the ALJ inadequately explained why she afforded 

some weight to Dr. Craig Shapiro’s opinion that Bainbridge “may return to work,” 

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Aplt. App. at 252, and no weight to Dr. Bates’s later request, in an open 

to-whom-it-may-concern letter, that Bainbridge “be considered for disability,” id. 

at 381. We disagree. 

Like Dr. Bates, Dr. Shapiro is a pulmonary specialist. Dr. Shapiro examined 

Bainbridge in January 2010, finding “symmetrical breath sounds” and a bilaterally 

clear chest. Id. at 257. He thought Bainbridge’s persistent cough was 

“multifactorial, including GE reflux disease, asthma, and postnasal drainage.” Id. 

He referred Bainbridge for a bronchoscopy. His review of that test revealed 

“significant moderate airway inflammation and upper airway edema . . . consistent 

with acid reflux,” and “acute tracheobronchitis.” Id. at 252. Dr. Shapiro noted that 

Bainbridge had been on a prescription stomach-acid reducer for two weeks, gave him 

two weeks of Augmentin (an antibiotic), and instructed him to continue “nebulized 

therapy.” Id. Dr. Shapiro opined that “within four more weeks [Bainbridge] should 

feel better” and that he “may return to work.” Id.

The ALJ considered Dr. Shapiro’s opinion that Bainbridge could return to 

work somewhat vague because he did not make clear whether he meant a return to 

past work or to any substantial gainful activity (i.e., a step-five finding). Despite 

that, the ALJ gave it “some weight” because she “agree[d] the claimant was not 

suffering from any disabling limitations.” Id. at 28. Bainbridge takes issue with this 

statement, arguing that the ALJ gave Dr. Shapiro’s opinion some weight because it 

aligned with her lay opinion, in violation of McGoffin v. Barnhart, where we stated 

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that an ALJ “‘may reject a treating physician’s opinion outright only on the basis of 

contradictory medical evidence and not due to [the ALJ’s] own credibility judgments, 

speculation, or lay opinion,’” 288 F.3d 1248, 1252 (10th Cir. 2002) (emphasis 

omitted) (quoting Morales v. Apfel, 225 F.3d 310, 317 (3d Cir. 2000)). But 

Bainbridge overlooks the ALJ’s next sentences: “As discussed, the medical evidence 

of record does not support the existence of any disabling impairments during the 

alleged period of disability. Dr. Shapiro also had a treatment relationship with 

[Bainbridge]. I therefore give this opinion some weight.” Aplt. App. at 28-29. 

Viewed in context, the ALJ’s agreement with Dr. Shapiro that Bainbridge was not 

disabled is most naturally read as a conclusion that Dr. Shapiro’s opinion was 

consistent with the objective medical evidence and the ALJ’s conclusion that the 

objective medical evidence did not support a finding of disability. The ALJ did not 

err with regard to Dr. Shapiro’s opinion. 

Bainbridge also argues that the ALJ’s rejection of Dr. Bates’s request that he 

be considered for disability violated McGoffin because her analysis is “essentially 

conjecture.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 36. We disagree. As she was required to do, the 

ALJ provided “specific, legitimate” reasons for affording no weight to Dr. Bates’s 

opinion. A treating physician’s opinion is not entitled to controlling weight if it is 

not “well-supported by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic 

techniques,” but such an opinion is “still entitled to deference and must be weighed 

using all the factors provided in 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527.” Watkins v. Barnhart, 

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350 F.3d 1297, 1300 (10th Cir. 2003) (quoting SSR 96-2P, 1996 WL 374188, at *2, 

*4). The § 404.1527 factors are: 

(1) the length of the treatment relationship and the frequency of 

examination; (2) the nature and extent of the treatment relationship, 

including the treatment provided and the kind of examination or testing 

performed; (3) the degree to which the physician’s opinion is supported 

by relevant evidence; (4) consistency between the opinion and the 

record as a whole; (5) whether or not the physician is a specialist in the 

area upon which an opinion is rendered; and (6) other factors brought to 

the ALJ’s attention which tend to support or contradict the opinion. 

Watkins, 350 F.3d at 1301 (quotation omitted). 

The ALJ reasoned that the medical evidence did not support Dr. Bates’s 

opinion. She pointed out that although Dr. Bates referred in his letter to the fact that 

an “airway biopsy” documented Bainbridge’s “chronic respiratory condition 

characterized by chronic airway inflammatory change,” Aplt. App. at 381, his own 

treatment notes consistently showed normal physical exams and contained statements 

and diagnoses that did not square with his opinion that Bainbridge should be put on 

disability. The ALJ referred to a number of those statements: “believe[d]” his 

“[i]nflammatory airway disease [was] under control,” id. at 371 (September 2010); 

there was “no good explanation for [his fatigue] and he is never bad off when I see 

him . . . not sure if there are secondary gain issues going on or am I just missing 

something” id. at 367 (November 2010); “[e]ach time I see him he appears healthy,” 

id. at 388 (January 2011); and he has “asthma, mild persistent,” id. at 398 (April 

2011). Hence, the ALJ reasonably concluded that Dr. Bates’s own medical records 

did not support his opinion that Bainbridge was disabled. 

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The ALJ recognized that both Dr. Bates and Dr. Shapiro had a treating 

relationship with Bainbridge, and both reviewed diagnostic test results.4

 Although 

the ALJ did not note that Bainbridge saw Dr. Bates six or seven times and 

Dr. Shapiro only twice, we find that omission inconsequential in light of the other 

factors supporting the ALJ’s rejection of Dr. Bates’s opinion. In particular, the ALJ 

found that the opinion was not supported by the other medical evidence and was 

inconsistent with the record as a whole, including the opinions of three other doctors, 

including Dr. Shapiro, that Bainbridge did not have disabling impairments. 

In addition, the ALJ considered Dr. Bates’s opinion “vague and conclusory” 

because it was “not based on a function-by-function analysis of what [Bainbridge] is 

capable of doing despite his impairments” and did not specify whether Bainbridge 

was unable to perform his past work or any substantial gainful activity at all. Id. 

at 30. Although Dr. Shapiro’s opinion suffered from these same shortcomings, the 

ALJ’s decision to reject Dr. Bates’s opinion and afford some—but not controlling—

weight to Dr. Shapiro’s contrary opinion was permissible because the other factors 

weighed against Dr. Bates’s opinion but not against Dr. Shapiro’s opinion. 

The ALJ also reasoned that, although difficult to confirm, the likelihood a 

treating physician provides a disability note out of sympathy for a patient or in 

response to the patient’s insistent demands for one is greater where, as here, the 

opinion “departs substantially from the rest of the evidence of record.” Id. An 

 

4

 We note that both were pulmonary specialists. 

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assertion that a treating physician “naturally advocates his patient’s cause” is not a 

good reason “to reject [his] opinion” unless the ALJ “suggest[s] some exceptional 

basis in the facts of [the] case.” Frey, 816 F.2d at 515. Here, the ALJ suggested an 

exceptional basis—that Dr. Bates’s opinion was markedly at odds with the rest of the 

medical evidence, including his own treatment notes. But even if this reason was 

improper, the other reasons the ALJ gave were more than sufficient for rejecting 

Dr. Bates’s opinion. 

C. Hypothetical to the VE

Bainbridge’s final argument is that the dispositive hypothetical question the 

ALJ posed to the VE (which mirrored the ALJ’s RFC finding) should have included 

(1) a limitation regarding exposure to air conditioning and (2) a restriction to only 

occasional reaching and handling. When Bainbridge’s attorney posed these 

additional limitations to the VE at the hearing, the VE said a person limited to 

sedentary, unskilled jobs such as those the ALJ ultimately relied on for her step-five 

finding (again, cutter/paster, document preparer, and surveillance system monitor) 

would have no ability to adjust air conditioning or to move further away from a vent. 

The VE also said that the manipulative limitations would exclude the cutter/paster 

and document-preparer jobs but not surveillance system monitor. 

If a hypothetical question does not precisely relate all of a claimant’s 

impairments, the testimony it elicits cannot be considered substantial evidence in 

support of an ALJ’s decision. Hargis v. Sullivan, 945 F.2d 1482, 1492 (10th Cir. 

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1991). However, a hypothetical question must contain “only . . . those impairments 

borne out by the evidentiary record.” Bean v. Chater, 77 F.3d 1210, 1214 (10th Cir. 

1995). Here, the only evidence that air conditioning aggravated Bainbridge’s 

respiratory symptoms is the testimony he and his wife gave at the hearing and a note 

from Dr. Bates, dated after the ALJ’s decision and submitted to the Appeals Council, 

stating that the symptoms of Bainbridge’s respiratory condition, which had “been 

present since early 2010,” are “worse in cool, dry environments” and therefore “it 

would be extremely difficult for him to perform any type of job in an air conditioned 

environment without making this condition worse.” Aplt. App. at 437.5

 Bainbridge 

twice reported that “cold air” or “cold weather” triggered his cough. Id. at 305 

(reporting “cold air” to Dr. Bates); id. at 350 (reporting “cold weather” to a 

consulting examiner). But there are no record references to Bainbridge complaining 

that air conditioning—as opposed to the vague references to “cold air” or “cold 

weather,” each of which suggests something more extreme than the level of coolness 

typically associated with air conditioning—aggravated his condition. Nor did any 

medical source except Dr. Bates opine that he should not be exposed to air 

conditioning. Further, the hypothetical asked the VE to assume a person who must 

avoid “even moderate exposure to non-weather related extreme temperatures of both 

cold and heat,” id. at 96, which appears reasonably calculated to accommodate the 

 

5

 Because the Appeals Council considered Dr. Bates’s post-decision letter but 

concluded it did not affect the outcome, we examine it as part of the record. 

See Martinez v. Barnhart, 444 F.3d 1201, 1208 (10th Cir. 2006). 

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limited credence the ALJ gave to Bainbridge’s testimony about his need to avoid air 

conditioning. Accordingly, we see no error in omitting a specific air-conditioning 

restriction from the dispositive hypothetical. 

We need not resolve whether the ALJ should have included the additional 

manipulative limitations because, even if she should have, the error was harmless. 

We may hold an ALJ’s error harmless “where, based on material the ALJ did at least 

consider (just not properly), we could confidently say that no reasonable 

administrative factfinder, following the correct analysis, could have resolved the 

factual matter in any other way.” Allen v. Barnhart, 357 F.3d 1140, 1145 (10th Cir. 

2004). The VE testified that the additional manipulative limitations would not 

preclude work as a surveillance system monitor and stated that there were 20,000 

such jobs in Colorado and 500,000 such jobs nationally. The relevant test in a 

disability case is whether there is a significant number of jobs in the regional or

national economy. Raymond v. Astrue, 621 F.3d 1269, 1274 n.2 (10th Cir. 2009). 

Excluding the cutter/paster and document-preparer jobs leaves 500,000 

surveillance-system-monitor jobs in the national economy. Any reasonable trier of 

fact would be compelled to conclude that 500,000 is a significant number of jobs for 

purposes of a step-five determination. See id. at 1274 (recognizing that this court has 

considered 152,000 jobs in the national economy to be legally significant). 

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III. CONCLUSION 

 The judgment of the district court is affirmed. 

 Entered for the Court 

 Gregory A. Phillips 

 Circuit Judge 

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