Trauernicht v. Genworth Fin. Inc., No. 24-1880, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 667917 (4th Cir. Mar. 10, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Niemeyer, Agee, and Richardson)

This week’s notable decision addresses the interaction between ERISA’s remedial scheme and the federal rules governing class actions. Plaintiffs often bring breach of fiduciary duty claims under ERISA pursuant to Section 502(a)(2), which authorizes plan participants to sue on behalf of the plan. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 further allows participants to bring such claims as a class action if they can satisfy all the Rule’s requirements.

Section 502(a)(2) class actions are often straightforward in the context of a traditional defined benefit plan such as a pension plan. All of the plan assets are held in one place, and thus a breach of duty typically affects the plan as a whole, affecting the participants similarly. Thus, a mandatory class action encompassing all plan participants makes sense.

But what if the plan is a more modern defined contribution plan? In this scenario a breach of fiduciary duty likely will not affect everyone similarly because the plan assets are squirrelled away in individual accounts. These accounts may be invested in a number of different assets and can change on a regular basis. Should a mandatory class action be allowed under these circumstances? The Fourth Circuit tackled this issue in this published opinion. Its conclusions could significantly alter the way investment performance cases are brought in the future.

The plaintiffs were Peter Trauernicht and Zachary Wright, former employees of Genworth Financial, Inc. Both participated in the company’s defined contribution retirement plan, the Genworth Financial Plan, which has accounts for more than 4,000 participants and a total value exceeding $900 million.

The company allows participants to choose from a suite of roughly a dozen investment options, in addition to Genworth stock. One of these options was “Diversified Pre-mixed Portfolios (Target Date Funds) [‘TDFs’],” which was where Trauernicht and Wright placed their money. Trauernicht invested in three vintages of the BlackRock LifePath Index Funds – the 2050 Fund, the 2040 Fund, and the Retirement Fund – while Wright invested solely in the 2050 Fund.

These funds were passively managed, aimed at tracking specific indices, and charged relatively low fees. They also received high ratings from industry trackers like Morningstar. However, Trauernicht and Wright were unhappy with the funds’ performance and filed this action contending that Genworth breached its fiduciary duties under ERISA “by failing to appropriately monitor the performance of the BlackRock LifePath Index Funds, resulting in the imprudent retention of those funds in the Plan, in violation of ERISA.”

Genworth filed two motions to dismiss. The district court granted the first one, rejecting plaintiffs’ claim for injunctive relief because they had withdrawn from the plan and thus lacked standing to obtain prospective relief. However, the court denied Genworth’s second motion, ruling that plaintiffs plausibly alleged that Genworth breached its fiduciary duty. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our September 20, 2023 edition.)

Plaintiffs then filed a motion for class certification, which the court granted, certifying a class of “Plan participants and beneficiaries whose accounts were invested in the BlackRock TDFs during the Class Period,” dating back to 2016. The court certified the class as a mandatory class under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(1), i.e., a class without notice and opt-out requirements. The court explained that a mandatory class was appropriate due to the derivative nature of plaintiffs’ claims, which were brought on behalf of the plan as a whole under ERISA Section 502(a)(2). (Your ERISA Watch reported on this decision in our August 21, 2024 edition.)

Genworth appealed to the Fourth Circuit. Genworth contended that the district court erred by “certifying a mandatory class under Rule 23(b)(1) for claims seeking individualized monetary relief.” In response, plaintiffs contended that ERISA Section 502(a)(2) “authorize[d] them to bring a representative action on behalf of the Plan to recover all losses sustained by the Plan as a result of the alleged breach of fiduciary duty and that, as a result, claims under these sections are ‘paradigmatic examples of claims appropriate for certification as a Rule 23(b)(1) class.’”

In determining who was right, the court emphasized that the plan was a defined contribution plan, and thus “the assets of the plan are allocated to participants’ individual accounts,” as opposed to a defined benefit plan, where “the assets of the plan are held collectively and then are used to pay the defined and fixed benefits that the employer promised to plan participants.”

The court explained that in a defined benefit plan “a plan participant injured by a fiduciary’s breach must, by necessity, seek losses on behalf of the plan as a whole – there is no other way ‘to make good to such plan [the] losses to the plan resulting from [the fiduciary] breach.’”

However, defined contribution plans are different because “the plan assets are allocated to individual accounts, and a participant’s ‘benefits [are] based solely upon the amount’ held in his individual account.” Thus, when a participant brings a claim under Section 502(a)(2) in this context, he is seeking “monetary relief, again on behalf of the plan, for the losses sustained with respect to the plan assets in his individual account.” This recovery is not paid to the plan or the participant, but “to the participant’s individual retirement account based on the losses that particular account sustained as a result of the fiduciary breach.”

The court discussed the Supreme Court’s decisions in Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Russell, and LaRue v. DeWolff, Boberg & Assocs., Inc., on this issue, concluding that they supported the conclusion that “ERISA § 502(a)(2) and § 409(a) may apply differently depending on whether the retirement plan at issue is a defined benefit plan or defined contribution plan.” As a result, “We thus conclude that in the context of a defined contribution plan, a participant’s damages claim under § 502(a)(2) is an ‘individualized monetary claim.’”

This conclusion doomed plaintiffs’ mandatory class action under Rule 23(b)(1). The court emphasized that Rule 23(b)(1) is limited to cases where individual adjudications would be “impossible or unworkable,” while “individualized monetary claims belong in Rule 23(b)(3).” Because plaintiffs’ claims fell in the second category, a mandatory class action was inappropriate. The court further noted “a constitutional dimension to the principle against aggregating individualized damages claims as part of a mandatory class,” because the “absence of notice and opt out violates due process[.]”

The court then addressed Genworth’s second argument, which contended that the district court erred by “fashioning a…per se rule that ERISA fiduciary-duty claims [under § 502(a)(2)] ‘inherently’ satisfy Rule 23(a)(2)’s requirement of commonality.” The Fourth Circuit agreed with this objection as well. The court emphasized that the commonality prerequisite requires “‘a common contention’ that is ‘of such a nature that it is capable of classwide resolution.’” Here, the district court did not “conduct a ‘rigorous analysis’ of commonality” and instead “postponed” it by finding that Section 502(a)(2) claims are “inherently” common.

This was incorrect because of the potential for different class members suffering different injuries – or even no injuries. The court stated that “each plaintiff, as well as each class member, participated in the plan in a materially different way.” The class members could choose their own funds, change those decisions at any time, and withdraw their investments at any time. The district court did not address these facts with particularity and instead used an “overgeneralized” approach that relied on mistaken “inherent” commonality.

As a result, the Fourth Circuit reversed the district court’s class certification and remanded for further proceedings. The plaintiffs must now decide whether to pursue class certification by a different route, or forgo it altogether.

Below is a summary of this past week’s notable ERISA decisions by subject matter and jurisdiction.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Third Circuit

Jacobs v. Hackensack Meridian Health, Inc., No. 25CV1272 (EP) (CF), 2026 WL 710229 (D.N.J. Mar. 13, 2026) (Judge Evelyn Padin). The plaintiffs in this putative class action are current or former participants in ERISA-governed retirement plans sponsored by Hackensack Meridian Health, Inc. (HMH). The plans are defined contribution retirement plans under ERISA, allowing participants to make tax-deferred contributions from their salaries. Plaintiffs allege that HMH, as a fiduciary of the Plans, “breached its duties of loyalty and prudence by: (1) offering and allowing substantial assets in the Plans to be invested in the TIAA Stable Value Fund (‘TIAA SVF’) – an underperforming investment option; and (2) failing to pay reasonable recordkeeping and administration fees (‘RKA’) services for the Plans.” Plaintiffs contended that when the TIAA SVF was available, “‘identical or substantially similar stable value funds’ with higher crediting rates were also available, but Defendant did not select those better-performing plans to be included in the Plans… Defendant allegedly violated its fiduciary duty of prudence by allowing substantial assets in the Plans to be invested in the TIAA SVF instead of other stable value funds with higher crediting rates.” Furthermore, plaintiffs contended that the $45 per participant RKA fee they paid “was almost double the average” of “thirty-five plans similar in size to the Plans when combined[.]” HMH moved to dismiss. Addressing plaintiffs’ failure to monitor claim first, the court acknowledged that “the Third Circuit has not explicitly used the terms ‘meaningful benchmark’ to describe what a plaintiff must plead in this context, but it has endorsed that language used in cases from other Circuits,” and thus applied that standard to plaintiffs’ complaint. The court concluded that plaintiffs had not met this standard because the two comparators they selected were “general account GICs [guaranteed investment contracts]” instead of “separate account GICs” like the TIAA SVF, and plaintiffs “do not provide the Court with sufficient facts to determine whether these funds are substantially similar.” The court thus granted HMH’s motion regarding its alleged failure to monitor, although it gave plaintiffs leave to amend. Turning to plaintiffs’ excessive RKA fee claim, the court found that plaintiffs provided sufficient circumstantial evidence to support their claim. Plaintiffs (1) included a chart comparing the RKA costs in the HMH plans to similar plans, (2) alleged that HMH did not conduct an RFP (request for proposal), which might have identified a lower-fee servicer, and (3) explained that the recordkeeping market is competitive, and that HMH had considerable bargaining power because its plans were “jumbo plans,” which should have resulted in lower fees. The court ruled that these allegations, “when considered holistically, raise the inference that Defendant violated its fiduciary duty of prudence.” HMH contended that plaintiffs had miscalculated the fees at issue, but the court rejected this argument because it was not based on information publicly available to plaintiffs, and thus could not be used against them at the pleading stage. As a result, plaintiffs’ RKA fee claim survived.

Fifth Circuit

Chavez-DeRemer v. Sills, Civ. No. 23-41-SDD-SDJ, 2026 WL 700073 (M.D. La. Mar. 12, 2026) (Judge Shelly D. Dick). The Department of Labor brought this action against Coastal Bridge Company, LLC, and its owner, Kelly Sills, alleging multiple violations of ERISA arising from their misadministration of Coastal’s self-insured employee health plan. The DOL contends that between September of 2019 and January of 2020 Coastal withheld contributions from employees’ paychecks, but frequently failed to pay premiums for coverage under the plan. This led to multiple denied or delayed health insurance claims for at least 78 employee participants due to lapses in coverage. The DOL obtained a default judgment against Coastal in 2023, and now brings this motion for summary judgment against Sills, who is representing himself. At the outset, the court expressed considerable frustration at Sills because he “has repeatedly failed to follow the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Local Rules for the Middle District.” Sills did not conduct any discovery and did not comply with discovery orders. Furthermore, Sills filed multiple briefs without leave of court, and in those briefs he did not offer admissible evidence to support his claims and “has not advanced a single legal theory or argument supported by any applicable authority.” Most importantly, Sills failed to submit an opposing statement of material facts. As a result, the court deemed as admitted all of the factual assertions in the DOL’s statement of uncontested material facts. Those facts demonstrated that Sills (1) “oversaw and was responsible for all activities of Coastal,” (2) “was a fiduciary of Coastal for purposes of ERISA,” (3) “intentionally failed to comply with ERISA,” including “refus[ing] to implement a run-out agreement…which…would have resulted in restoring health care coverage,” and (4) “withheld insurance payments from his employees but did not use that money to pay for their insurance coverage.” The court further found that Coastal’s May 2020 payment, signed by Sills, “did not cover all unpaid claims,” and the “balance remains $209,466.34, plus prejudgment interest.” The court ruled that “Coastal and Defendant are responsible for all unpaid claims during the suspension of the [administrative services agreement], claims not reprocessed after reinstatement of insurance coverage, and all run-out claims.” Furthermore, Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, which issued various performance and payment bonds naming Coastal as principal, “is not responsible for Defendant’s and/or Coastal’s ERISA violations.” The court found that “Nationwide never had any role whatsoever regarding medical claims associated with the Plan, specifically but not limited to those medical claims that went unpaid or uncovered.” As a result, the court granted the DOL’s motion for summary judgment and ordered it to submit a proposed judgment.

Eighth Circuit

Batt v. 3M Co., No. 25-CV-3149 (ECT/DTS), 2026 WL 674322 (D. Minn. Mar. 10, 2026) (Judge Eric C. Tostrud). The plaintiffs in this case are current or former employees of the 3M Company who invested in target-date funds (TDFs) available in 3M’s ERISA-governed retirement plans. Plaintiffs alleged that these funds underperformed the relevant S&P indices and other comparable TDFs “on annual and trailing 3-, 5-, and 10-year bases, and cumulatively.” Plaintiffs asserted two claims under ERISA against 3M, its board of directors, its investment committee, and other related defendants. The first alleged that defendants breached their duty of prudence by failing to remove the 3M TDF Series funds from the plans, while the second alleged that defendants failed to monitor the performance of those who owed fiduciary duties to the plans. Defendants moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim, arguing that plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that their proffered indices and TDFs were “meaningful benchmarks” for the 3M TDFs. The court noted that its inquiry must be “context-specific,” and ultimately ruled that plaintiffs’ allegations were too “high-level.” The court rejected plaintiffs’ reliance on the S&P indices because their allegations showed that “roughly half of the surveyed target-date funds benchmarked against the S&P Indices,” which meant that “roughly half did not. In other words, this figure does not show TDF-industry acceptance any more than it shows industry reluctance to benchmark against the S&P Indices.” Furthermore, “the Complaint must plausibly allege that all TDFs are meaningful benchmarks for all other TDFs, or it must allege that the S&P Indices and 3M TDF Series share like composition… The Complaint does not include either allegation.” The complaint also failed to allege that the 3M TDFs were designed to track the S&P indices. The court further rejected plaintiffs’ comparator TDFs, ruling that “characteristics such as size, category, and risk ratio” were insufficient on their own to be a fair comparison. Moreover, the court noted that some of plaintiffs’ risk ratio comparisons were inaccurate; some of plaintiffs’ comparator funds were designed with “through retirement” glidepaths instead of “to retirement,” as the 3M funds were designed, or had different asset allocations. Next, the court addressed plaintiffs’ underperformance allegations, accepting that they “have plausibly alleged that the 3M TDF Series underperformed the Comparator TDFs,” noting returns trailing by as much as 13%. However, the court found that the underperformance relative to the S&P indices was “moderate and inconsistent,” and thus did not plausibly state a claim for relief. As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss. However, “Plaintiffs could conceivably plead facts making it plausible that the proffered comparator TDFs are meaningful benchmarks,” and thus the dismissal was without prejudice.

Class Actions

Seventh Circuit

Shaw v. Quad/Graphics, Inc., No. 20-CV-1645-PP, 2026 WL 710944 (E.D. Wis. Mar. 13, 2026) (Judge Pamela Pepper). This is a five-year-old class action in which the plaintiffs contended that Quad/Graphics, Inc. and its board of directors mismanaged the company’s ERISA-governed employee retirement plan. Last year the court preliminarily approved a $850,000 settlement, and on February 18, 2026, it held a fairness hearing. In this brisk order the court marched through the requirements for final approval and found the settlement fair, reasonable, and adequate. The court stated that the settlement resulted from negotiations conducted at arm’s length by experienced and competent counsel, overseen by a neutral mediator, that the negotiations occurred after class counsel received sufficient information from defendants to assess the value of the case, and the settlement avoided the expense, risk, and uncertainty of extended litigation for both parties. The settlement amount was fair considering the nature of the claims, potential recovery, litigation risks, and similar case settlements. The court noted that class members had the opportunity to object to the settlement, but none did so. Furthermore, an independent fiduciary, Newport Trust Company, LLC, reviewed and approved the settlement on behalf of the plan. The court also approved plaintiffs’ motion for attorney fees, costs, administrative expenses, and a case contribution award. In the end, the action and all released claims were dismissed with prejudice, and the class members were barred from pursuing any further claims related to the released claims. The court retained jurisdiction for enforcing and interpreting the final approval order and the settlement agreement.

Disability Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Darden v. Anthem Blue Cross Life & Health Ins. Co., No. 25-CV-00911-RFL, 2026 WL 708311 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 13, 2026) (Judge Rita F. Lin). In 2021, Michael Darden began receiving benefits under Nuro, Inc.’s ERISA-governed long-term disability employee benefit plan from the plan’s insurer, Anthem Blue Cross Life and Health Insurance Company. However, Anthem closed his claim in 2023, contending that no further benefits were payable pursuant to the plan’s 24-month limitation for mental illnesses. Darden was subsequently approved for Social Security disability benefits. Anthem denied Darden’s appeal and thus he filed this action in January of 2025. In it he alleged one claim for relief under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), in which he “asked for a declaration that Anthem violated the terms of the plan, he was entitled to monthly benefits until July 2033, and Anthem had ‘no entitlement to recoup any overpayment to Plaintiff that the Plan’s Administrator’s described failures have caused.’” In August of 2025 Anthem re-reviewed Darden’s claim and reversed itself. It approved the claim retroactively to the termination date after finding that the mental illness limitation did not apply and Darden was unable to perform the duties of any occupation. As a result, Anthem paid retroactive benefits to Darden. However, it informed Darden that there was an overpayment due to his receipt of Social Security benefits, which was an offset under the plan, and it reduced the benefits it paid by the estimated amount of those benefits. The parties filed cross-motions for judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. The court ruled that Darden’s claim was not moot, despite Anthem’s reversal, because there was a live controversy over the offsets applied by Anthem. The court determined that the best course of action was to remand the case to Anthem “so it can resolve the dispute over offsets in the first instance.” The court noted that “the record contains minimal evidence about how these offsets were calculated, so it would be inappropriate to determine as a matter of law that the offsets are permissible and properly calculated.” Next, the court noted that Darden had requested “various forms of equitable relief,” including “restitution of the offset benefits, a related injunction, surcharge for financial harm, transfer of his claim to a different company affiliated with Anthem, and referral to the Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration.” However, although the court sympathized with Darden (“[h]is frustration with Anthem is understandable”), the court ruled that it could not award these equitable remedies because Darden had not pled an equitable cause of action in his complaint. As a result, the court granted Darden’s motion, denied Anthem’s, and the case was remanded to Anthem “for further proceedings concerning the validity and calculation of offsets based on his Social Security disability benefits.”

Discovery

Seventh Circuit

Schulmeier v. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co., No. 1:24-CV-284-CCB-ALT, 2026 WL 668269 (N.D. Ind. Mar. 9, 2026) (Judge Cristal C. Brisco). Julie Schulmeier brought this action seeking benefits under an ERISA-governed disability benefit plan. Schulmeier served discovery seeking information regarding the number of claims terminated or denied by the physician who reviewed her claim, seeking to demonstrate that there was bias or were procedural defects in Lincoln’s claim handling. Lincoln objected, and Schulmeier brought a motion to compel. The assigned magistrate judge denied her motion, and Schulmeier requested review by the district court judge. In this order, the court upheld the magistrate’s ruling. The court noted that in the Seventh Circuit “discovery in ERISA cases is the exception, rather than the norm,” and is “only allowed in ‘exceptional’ cases.” As a result, Schulmeier “must show two things: (1) that there is prima facie evidence of bias or misconduct that would call into question the fairness of the claim evaluation, and (2) that there is good cause to believe that the requested discovery will reveal an actual procedural defect.” However, Schulmeier “fails on both prongs.” The only evidence she presented was that the claim evaluator was paid by the insurance administrator, which was insufficient to demonstrate bias under Seventh Circuit precedent. Furthermore, the type of discovery Schulmeier requested – a list of all claims denied or terminated by the claim evaluator – “would not cast any light on the procedures or bias in this specific case.” The court noted that the Seventh Circuit “has declined to reference general statistics when evaluating bias[.]” As a result, the magistrate judge’s decision was neither “clearly erroneous” nor “contrary to law,” and thus Schulmeier’s motion was denied.

Medical Benefit Claims

Fifth Circuit

Antohi v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., No. 3:25-CV-00267-LS, 2026 WL 690001 (W.D. Tex. Mar. 5, 2026) (Judge Leon Schydlower). In this very brief order, the background facts are difficult to discern. The plaintiffs are Dr. Octavian Antohi and Cherryl Antohi, and they have sued Aetna Life Insurance Company, Optum RX, and Tenet Healthcare Corporation under ERISA for failing to provide healthcare plan documents and breach of fiduciary duty. Aetna and OptumRX filed motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and the court granted both in this order. On plaintiffs’ first claim, the court noted that ERISA only requires plan administrators to respond to requests for plan documents, and “the plan in this case expressly names Tenet as both administrator and sponsor.” Plaintiffs offered no facts to support their argument that OptumRX was the plan administrator, and they “fail to allege that they requested plan documents from Aetna, much less that Aetna is the plan administrator.” Plaintiffs contended that even if Aetna and OptumRX were not administrators, they were fiduciaries “that play a role in the denial of a claim.” However, the court noted that this was insufficient to confer a statutory duty on them to provide plan documents. Furthermore, the court noted that plaintiffs did not even allege what documents were withheld, which “prevents any analysis about whether the documents fall within the statute’s ambit.” As for plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claim, the court ruled that plaintiffs could not obtain injunctive relief under ERISA § 1132(a)(3) because they had adequate relief available through their right to sue the plan directly under § 1132(a)(1). Plaintiffs had already sued the plan, through Tenet, under § 1132(a)(1), and thus this claim “bars any ostensible claim against Aetna and Optum RX under 1132(a)(3).” As a result, the court dismissed all claims against Aetna and Optum RX; the case will proceed against Tenet.

Ninth Circuit

Brian W. v. Premera Blue Cross of Washington, No. C24-0154-KKE, 2026 WL 710140 (W.D. Wash. Mar. 13, 2026) (Judge Kymberly K. Evanson). Brian W. was a participant in an ERISA-governed employee health benefit plan insured by Premera Blue Cross of Washington, which covered the mental health treatment of his son, A.W. A.W. exhibited severe behavioral issues from a young age, including aggression and suicidal ideation, leading to multiple hospitalizations and residential treatments. In 2016, A.W. began treatment at Cherry Gulch, a therapeutic boarding school in Idaho, and in 2019 he received treatment at Heritage School, a residential treatment center in Utah. Premera denied coverage for A.W.’s treatment at Cherry Gulch, “articulat[ing] evolving reasons for denying coverage.” At first Premera stated that Brian W. failed to timely submit his claim, then it said there was no prior authorization, even though the penalty for that did not allow for denying the claim, then it said it needed more information, then it referred the claim to a peer reviewer who found no medical necessity, but when it upheld the denial it did not invoke medical necessity and instead told Brian W. that the plan excluded coverage for A.W.’s treatment because Cherry Gulch was not properly licensed. As for the Heritage School claim, Premera determined that the treatment A.W. received there was not medically necessary, but when Brian W. appealed, Premera contended that it was missing documents, never asked Brian W. for those documents, never told him it needed more information, and then never issued a decision on his appeal, despite a complaint filed by Brian W. with Washington’s insurance commissioner. Exasperated, Brian W. filed this action under ERISA seeking payment of plan benefits and asserting breach of fiduciary duty. The parties filed dueling motions on the merits which the court construed as cross-motions for judgment under Rule 52. The parties agreed that the default de novo review was appropriate. Addressing the Cherry Gulch claim first, Premera contended that A.W.’s treatment was not medically necessary, “[b]ut Premera never cited medical necessity as the basis for denying the claim in its letters, and it cannot do so now.” As a result, Premera was stuck with its licensing argument, which the court rejected: “Premera makes no arguments defending this rationale, relying instead only on the medical necessity of the treatment.” In response, “Brian W. has presented uncontested evidence that Cherry Gulch was licensed at all relevant times by the Idaho State Department of Health and Welfare to operate as a Children’s Residential Care Facility.” Thus, the court reversed Premera’s Cherry Gulch decision and awarded judgment to Brian W. Moving on the Heritage claim, the court ruled that Premera’s denial incorrectly stated that the plan did not cover residential mental health treatment, and that A.W.’s treatment was in fact medically necessary. The court found that the Heritage treatment satisfied the four contested elements of medical necessity under the plan because (1) “a physician, exercising prudent clinical judgment, would provide [it] to a patient,” (2) it was consistent with “generally accepted standards of medical practice,” (3) it was “‘[c]linically appropriate, in terms of type, frequency, extent, site and duration, and considered effective for the patient’s’ condition, and (4) it was “not primarily for the convenience of the patient or provider or more costly than equally effective alternatives.” The parties argued over which “generally accepted standard” the court should use – Brian W. argued for CALOCUS/CASII while Premera argued for Interqual – but the court ruled that it did not matter because A.W.’s treatment satisfied both. Premera contended that if the court ruled in Brian W.’s favor on the Heritage claim, it should remand to Premera for further review because it never completed its appeal, but the court declined, finding that its claim review process “fell well short of the ‘full and fair review’ ERISA mandates.” Premera’s denial offered no support for its conclusion, it never responded to Brian W.’s appeal because “[a]pparently, the appeal was lost,” and Premera misread Brian W.’s complaint to the insurance commissioner, thinking he was referring to the Cherry Gulch claim. As a result, “Forcing Brian W. to slog through the administrative process again after Premera failed to meaningfully participate in that process the first time is unwarranted[.]” Finally, the court dismissed Brian W.’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty, ruling that payment of benefits was adequate relief and thus no equitable remedy was necessary. The court ordered the parties to meet and confer and submit a proposed judgment.

Pension Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Local 55 Trustees of the Iron Workers’ Pension Plan v. Prince, No. 3:25 CV 1962, 2026 WL 693119 (N.D. Ohio Mar. 12, 2026) (Judge James R. Knepp II). Warren Prince was an iron worker and a participant in the ERISA-governed multiemployer pension plan managed by Local 55 Trustees of the Iron Workers’ Pension Plan. In 2013, Warren designated his son Matthew as the primary beneficiary of his pension benefits. In 2022, Warren passed away. The plan provided that pre-retirement death benefits should be paid to either the decedent’s beneficiary or the surviving eligible spouse. Because Local 55 was unaware of any surviving spouse, it approved Matthew’s claim and began paying him death benefits in September of 2022. More than three years later, Darlene Prince contacted Local 55, claiming to be Warren’s surviving spouse; in support she provided a 1993 marriage certificate from New York. In August of 2025 Local 55 conducted a meeting to determine the rightful beneficiary. At the meeting Matthew submitted evidence, including a 2003 marriage license and a 2009 divorce judgment from Mississippi involving Warren and another woman, as well as Facebook posts by Darlene suggesting that she had married someone else. Local 55 chose not to resolve the impasse and instead filed this interpleader action. Darlene responded by filing a cross-complaint against Matthew seeking (1) a declaratory judgment recognizing her as Warren’s surviving spouse and the rightful beneficiary, and (2) equitable restitution from Matthew for his unjust receipt of Warren’s pension benefits to date. At issue in this order was Matthew’s motion to dismiss the second claim. In it, Matthew contended that the relief Darlene sought was legal, not equitable, and thus unavailable under ERISA § 502(a)(3). As the court put it, “the operative question at this stage is whether Darlene’s request for ‘equitable restitution’ falls within the scope of § 1132(a)(3)’s ‘other appropriate equitable relief’ language as a matter of law.” Matthew argued that Darlene’s claim failed because it “‘identifies no segregated fund or lien by agreement’ to which an equitable claim for the restitution of property may attach,” and that “the remedy sought by Darlene is, in effect, ‘repayment of general funds – legal damages not available under’ § 1132(a)(3).” The court disagreed. It ruled that Darlene had identified a specific fund of money, the pre-retirement death benefits paid to Matthew, as the subject of her claim, and that she had alleged they were “traceable and thus recoverable.” Matthew contended that “no specifically identifiable funds remain in his possession,” but the court ruled that this was an issue of fact and thus not resolvable on a motion to dismiss. The court also addressed three other arguments made by Matthew in support of his motion, finding them all without merit. First, the court rejected Matthew’s claim that Darlene failed to plausibly allege she was Warren’s surviving spouse, noting that Darlene’s factual assertion of her status must be accepted as true at this stage. Second, the court dismissed Matthew’s argument that Darlene’s counter-claim was duplicative of the interpleader action, ruling that the interpleaded funds only consisted of “those funds yet to be paid on Warren’s pre-retirement death benefit,” and did not include benefits already paid to Matthew, which was what Darlene sought to recover in her counter-claim. Third, the court ruled that Matthew’s laches argument regarding the timeliness of Darlene’s claim was not grounds for dismissal because it was an affirmative defense that “has no bearing on whether Darlene plausibly plead a claim for equitable restitution in the first instance sufficient to survive a Rule 12(b)(6) challenge.” As a result, the court denied Matthew’s motion and the case will proceed.

Ninth Circuit

Metaxas v. Gateway Bank, F.S.B., No. 20-CV-01184-EMC, 2026 WL 673787 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 10, 2026) (Judge Edward M. Chen). This is a long-running case by Poppi Metaxas, the former president and CEO of Gateway Bank, for benefits under Gateway’s supplemental executive retirement plan (SERP). Metaxas was suspended by the bank in 2010 for engaging in fraudulent transactions to conceal Gateway’s financial condition. Eventually, she pled guilty to federal conspiracy to commit bank fraud and was sentenced to 18 months incarceration. When she subsequently submitted her claim for benefits under the plan, Gateway denied it, and she filed suit. The court determined in 2022 that despite Metaxas’ criminal conduct, “the administrative denial of Metaxas’s claim was inadequately supported by evidence in the record and thus an abuse of discretion.” The court remanded to Gateway for a further determination as to whether Metaxas was entitled to benefits. Gateway approved benefits on remand, but Metaxas was unhappy with the way Gateway handled her claim and thus the court granted her request to reopen the case in 2024. Metaxas alleged numerous claims in her new complaint, but after two motions to dismiss, she was left with a single claim regarding how her benefits were calculated. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment which the court ruled on in this order. As the court put it, “At this juncture, the parties no longer dispute that Metaxas is eligible for termination benefits. The dispute here solely concerns the amount of the monthly benefit and, in particular, the meaning and application of the SERP’s calculation of ‘salary rate’ and ‘salary allowance.’” These terms were important because under the SERP, Metaxas’ termination benefit required calculating her “salary allowance,” which involved multiplying her “salary rate” by a fraction that varied depending on her years of service. The court employed the abuse of discretion standard of review, but tempered that review with “some skepticism” given Gateway’s structural conflict of interest. The court ultimately agreed with Gateway. The court concluded that Gateway’s determination was not an abuse of discretion because its interpretation of “salary rate” was grounded in the SERP’s plain language, compensation records, and Gateway’s payroll and tax documentation. These documents did not support Metaxas’ competing interpretation, which involved treating a bank-owned life insurance policy (BOLI) as deferred salary, and thus as part of her “salary rate.” “Instead, the record unequivocally establishes that the BOLI was a Gateway-owned and controlled asset… And the SERP makes clear that Metaxas had no entitlement to the policy… Under these circumstances, she cannot reasonably assert that the premiums paid to the policy constituted deferred salary.” Metaxas offered a competing calculation using “reverse engineering” from Gateway’s accounting records, but the court found this “methodology unpersuasive,” “flawed,” and “makes no sense.” Thus, the court granted Gateway’s motion for summary judgment and denied Metaxas’.

Plan Status

First Circuit

Lucchesi v. Guaranty Fund Mgmt. Servs. Health & Welfare Plan, No. 25-CV-10773-AK, 2026 WL 679526 (D. Mass. Mar. 11, 2026) (Judge Angel Kelley). James Lucchesi worked for Guaranty Fund Management Services (GFMS) for seventeen years, holding various positions. In 2019, Lucchesi experienced worsening anxiety and was diagnosed with acute situational stress disorder, situational anxiety, and mild depression by his doctor, who recommended an eight-week leave from work. Lucchesi applied for benefits under GFMS’ Short-Term Disability Plan (STDP), but “GFMS denied the claim without explanation… Lucchesi then took unpaid leave, and upon returning, retired early.” Lucchesi filed suit against GFMS and its Health and Welfare Plan, asserting four claims: (1) short-term disability benefits under ERISA, (2) equitable relief under ERISA, (3) short-term disability benefits under state law, and (4) equitable relief under state law. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, contending that (1) the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the first two clams because the STDP was a payroll practice, and thus not governed by ERISA, and (2) the court should not hear the second two claims under its supplemental jurisdiction. The court explained, “Plans are payroll practices – not subject to ERISA – where they: (1) administer benefits ‘on account of periods of time during which the employee is physically or mentally unable to perform his or her duties, or is otherwise absent for medical reasons (such as pregnancy, a physical examination or psychiatric treatment),’ (2) provide payment as normal employee compensation, and (3) are self-funded from the employer’s general assets.” Lucchesi did not dispute that the first two criteria were met, so the court turned to the third. Defendants relied on the plan, which stated that it was “self-insured by GFMS” and “the benefits provided hereunder will be paid solely from the general assets of GFMS.” A GFMS employee also testified in an affidavit that GFMS “directly pa[ys] all short-term disability benefits” “from GFMS’[ ] assets.” Lucchesi argued that the plan documents alternately referred to the plan as “self-insured” and “self-funded,” thus creating an ambiguity, but the court described this as “irrelevant,” a distinction without a difference. Lucchesi also argued that the plan indicated that it intended to be governed by ERISA. However, “such intent is non-dispositive where the plan otherwise functions as a payroll practice…where all three prongs of the payroll practice exception are met, the plan is not ERISA-governed, even if it claims to be.” Finally, Lucchesi argued that it was unclear whether the plan was funded by general assets because it stated that GFMS was not required to create a segregated fund for STDP benefits. The court responded that this language, “if anything, appears to emphasize that the STDP benefits are paid from the employer’s general funds. Moreover, the existence of a separate fund is insufficient evidence on its own anyways.” In short, it was clear to the court that the STDP met all three elements of a payroll practice and was thus exempt from ERISA. The court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss and declined to exercise jurisdiction over Lucchesi’s state law claims, dismissing them without prejudice.

Sixth Circuit

Clem v. Ovare Grp., Inc., No. 3:25-CV-00614-GNS, 2026 WL 734667 (W.D. Ky. Mar. 16, 2026) (Judge Greg N. Stivers). Toni Clem held several executive positions at Ovare Group, Inc., including president, chief operating officer, and chief revenue officer. In 2009, Clem and Ovare entered into a long-term incentive plan (LTIP) that granted Clem stock appreciation rights (SARs). Clem exercised some of her SARs before resigning in 2021, and the remaining SARs were deemed exercised 90 days after her resignation. However, Clem contends that she has not received payment for them, despite her inquiries. She alleges that Ovare repeatedly told her that it had not “made Ceiling,” i.e., the company did not earn enough to fund the SARs. Clem thus brought this action, asserting breach of contract and, alternatively, claims for declaratory judgment, unjust enrichment, and violation of ERISA. Ovare moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim, contending that ERISA preempted Clem’s claims and that she conceded that she could not bring an unjust enrichment claim. Addressing ERISA first, Ovare argued that the LTIP was a “top hat” plan governed by ERISA and thus Clem’s state law claims were preempted. Ovare also argued that Clem’s ERISA claim was unviable because she failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. Clem responded that the plan was a “bonus plan outside of ERISA.” The court ruled that “it is not clear from the materials submitted that the LTIP is a top hat plan rather than a bonus plan.” The allegations did not establish who was covered by the plan, how many people were covered by the plan, and whether they were highly compensated, all of which were factors in determining whether the LTIP was a top hat plan. As a result, the court ruled that “‘it is not appropriate to make a determination of the nature of the [LTIP] before the facts are developed and properly before the Court for consideration.’… It is therefore also inappropriate to determine whether Clem’s state law claims are preempted or Clem failed to exhaust her administrative remedies.” Ovare’s motion on this issue was therefore denied. As for Clem’s unjust enrichment claim, the court agreed that she did not respond to Ovare’s argument on this issue and thus granted its motion to dismiss the claim, without prejudice.

Provider Claims

Second Circuit

The Central Orthopedic Grp., LLP v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., No. 24-CV-3144 (BMC), 2026 WL 673306 (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 10, 2026) (Judge Brian M. Cogan). Plaintiff The Central Orthopedic Group, LLP performed out-of-network surgeries on a patient who executed a document allowing defendant Aetna Life Insurance Company, his insurance provider, to pay the healthcare provider directly. Plaintiff charged $325,400 for the surgeries, but Aetna paid only $1,844. Plaintiff sent two letters to Aetna’s appeals department demanding that the entire claim be “re-reviewed and reprocessed.” Aetna acknowledged the appeal but stated that “it lacked ‘key elements necessary to accurately classify, research and resolve [the] issue.’ Defendant’s letter informed plaintiff that, absent any response within ‘30 days…the original adverse determination will be considered final.’” Plaintiff did not respond and Aetna upheld its decision. This action followed, in which plaintiff sought payment of plan benefits under ERISA. Aetna moved for summary judgment on the grounds that plaintiff lacked standing and failed to exhaust administrative remedies. Addressing standing first, the court noted that healthcare providers are not “participants” or “beneficiaries” under ERISA and cannot sue unless they have been properly assigned the rights of a patient. Aetna asserted that no assignment was allowed, pointing to plan language stating, “When you assign your benefits to your out-of-network provider, we will pay them directly. A direction to pay a provider is not an assignment of any legal rights.” However, the court found this language ambiguous: “Obviously, a patient cannot ‘assign’ his right to receive ‘health services,’ so the ‘assignment of benefits’ provision must refer to the ‘[defendant’s] obligation to pay.’ And that necessarily includes ‘the associated right to sue for non-payment.’… In other words, the terms ‘benefit’ and ‘legal right,’ as used in the plan, both refer to the ‘right to sue for non-payment.’ It is irreconcilable that a direction to pay simultaneously constitutes an assignment of that ‘benefit’ but not an assignment of that ‘legal right.’ Thus, the provision is ambiguous.” Because the provision was ambiguous, the court construed it against Aetna, the drafter of the provision, and thus ruled that plaintiff had standing to sue. The court ruled against Aetna on its exhaustion argument as well. The plan required an appeal to be initiated by seeking written or telephonic review of an adverse benefits determination, and the court found that plaintiff’s letters satisfied this requirement. Aetna contended that the appeal was never properly initiated because plaintiff did not respond to Aetna’s request for information, but the court noted that Aetna’s letter also stated that the original adverse determination would be considered final if the information was not received. “So, by defendant’s own word, ‘the plan issue[d] a final denial.’… Plaintiff therefore did its part in seeking ‘re-review of [the] adverse benefits determination.’ Accordingly, plaintiff exhausted its administrative remedy.” Thus, the court denied Aetna’s motion for summary judgment.

Third Circuit

Genesis Laboratory Mgmt. LLC v. United Healthcare Servs., Inc.,  No. 21CV12057 (EP) (JSA), 2026 WL 709863 (D.N.J. Mar. 13, 2026) (Judge Evelyn Padin). The plaintiff in this case is Genesis Laboratory Management LLC, which provided COVID-19 testing services during the pandemic. Metropolitan Healthcare Billing, LLC, provided billing services for Genesis. (Both have the same physician owner.) Genesis brought this action claiming that defendants United Healthcare Servs., Inc. and Oxford Health Insurance, Inc. underpaid for those services. Defendants responded with counterclaims alleging that Genesis and Metropolitan (1) overcharged them, (2) billed for duplicative tests, and (3) billed for ancillary unnecessary expensive tests. Defendants contended that while federal law (the CARES Act) required testing facilities to publicly post their cash price for COVID-19 tests, and insurers were required to reimburse these facilities at the posted rate, Genesis charged self-paying members $100 for COVID-19 tests but publicly posted and charged defendants a rate of $513. Defendants asserted ten counts in all, including recoupment of overpayments under ERISA and non-ERISA plans, violation of the New Jersey Insurance Fraud Prevention Act, common law fraud, fraudulent misrepresentation, fraudulent concealment, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, civil conspiracy, and declaratory judgment. Genesis and Metropolitan filed a motion to dismiss these counterclaims, which the court granted in part and denied in part. Addressing the “cash price allegations” first, the court dismissed defendants’ state law and common law claims based on these allegations, finding them preempted by ERISA, as amended by the CARES Act. However, it allowed defendants’ claim for equitable relief under ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(B), to proceed. Genesis and Metropolitan contended that this claim sought impermissible legal damages, not equitable relief, but the court agreed with defendants that their claim was viable because they alleged that they “seek relief based on an equitable lien that exists ‘in accordance with the ERISA plan provisions governing recoupment of overpayments.’” These allegations were only viable against Genesis, however, not Metropolitan. As for defendants’ remaining claims, which were based on “duplicative billing allegations” and “ancillary testing allegations,” the court dismissed these due to defendants’ failure to meet the particularity requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b). The court found that defendants’ allegations lacked specificity regarding the fraudulent conduct and did not explain Metropolitan’s role in the purported scheme. As a result, defendants’ only remaining counterclaims are count one, “against Genesis for overpayments under ERISA plans based on the Cash Price Allegations,” and count ten, which is derivative of count one and seeks “declaratory judgment to prevent Genesis from recovering for unpaid reimbursements pursuant to ERISA plans based on the COVID-19 test price.”

Redstone v. Aetna, Inc., No. 21-19434 (JXN)(JBC), 2026 WL 705539 (D.N.J. Mar. 12, 2026) (Judge Julien Xavier Neals). Jeremiah Redstone, M.D., and Wayne Lee, M.D., are plastic surgeons who are not in Aetna’s provider network but have contracts with Multiplan, which in turn has a contract with Aetna. Redstone and Lee performed breast reconstruction surgery on two patients and allege that they received prior authorization for those procedures. The two doctors billed $226,630 and $102,000 for the surgeries but were only paid $20,149.23 and $5,559.37 respectively, which they contend is far less than the negotiated percentage of billed charges at which they should have been paid (85% for Redstone and 75% for Lee). Aetna denied their appeals and this putative class action ensued. Plaintiffs sought monetary relief under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), injunctive relief under § 502(a)(3)(A), and equitable relief under § 502(a)(3)(B). Last March the court determined that plaintiffs had standing to bring their claims and had sued the proper defendants, but granted defendants’ motion to dismiss because plaintiffs failed to identify specific plan provisions entitling them to benefits for the surgeries. Plaintiffs amended their complaint, defendants moved to dismiss again, and in this order the court denied their motion. The court found that the plaintiffs adequately alleged a legal entitlement to benefits based on mandatory language in the plan summaries, which stated that a pre-negotiated charge “will be paid” if services are received from a contracted provider. The court thus concluded that the amended complaint sufficiently alleged that Aetna approved the surgeries for coverage, that plaintiffs had a contractual relationship with Aetna, that the plans required payment at contracted rates, and that Aetna failed to pay these rates. As for plaintiffs’ claims under § 502(a)(3), because the § 502(a)(1) claim survived, the § 502(a)(3) claims also survived. Thus, the case will continue with all claims intact.

Sixth Circuit

DaVita Inc. v. Marietta Mem’l Hosp. Employee Health Benefit Plan, No. 2:18-CV-1739, 2026 WL 668321 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 10, 2026) (Judge Sarah D. Morrison). This case, which has gone up to the Supreme Court and back, has been around since 2018. Initially, plaintiff DaVita Inc., the kidney dialysis giant, asserted claims for violation of the Medicare Secondary Payer Act (MSPA), benefits under ERISA Section 502(a)(1)(B), several breach of fiduciary duty claims under ERISA, a co-fiduciary liability claim, a claim for knowing participation in a fiduciary breach, and a claim for violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(1), all based on alleged discrimination against plan participants and beneficiaries with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss in 2019 and DaVita appealed. The Sixth Circuit reversed in part and remanded to the district court for further proceedings on the ERISA benefits claim, the Section 1182 claim, and the MSPA claim. Defendants then filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court granted certiorari, heard the case, and ruled for defendants, holding that there was no disparate-impact liability under the MSPA, and that the plan’s outpatient dialysis provisions did not violate the MSPA’s non-discriminatory provisions because its terms applied uniformly to all covered individuals. The Supreme Court remanded to the Sixth Circuit, which remanded to the district court, which pared DaVita’s claims further on a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Now, defendants have moved for summary judgment on the two remaining claims – an anti-discrimination claim under ERISA Section 702, and a derivative claim for benefits under ERISA Section 502. In opposing, DaVita contended that the plan violated Section 702 and “discriminated against its enrollees suffering from ESRD by eliminating network coverage for enrollees with ESRD and, by extension, by exposing enrollees to higher costs[.]” The court stressed that Section 702 was a “disparate treatment” anti-discrimination statute, not a “disparate impact” statute, and thus “discriminatory intent is an essential element of a claim under ERISA § 702.” The court examined DaVita’s evidence on the issue of discriminatory intent and found it lacking. The court ruled (a) there was no evidence that Marietta considered costs associated with ESRD when implementing the plan terms, (b) an inquiry by Marietta’s HR director into where employees were receiving dialysis did not mention ESRD, and occurred before the plan was adopted, thus making it “too tenuous” to support DaVita’s claims, (c) agenda items on meetings between Marietta and its third party administrator mentioned repricing of dialysis treatment, but “the suggestion that ESRD was part of the discussion is wholly speculative,” and (d) while DaVita presented evidence highlighting the disparate impact of the plan terms on ESRD patients, this was insufficient on its own because, as above, Section 702 requires proof of discriminatory intent. In sum, “DaVita’s evidence fails to establish that Marietta adopted unique benefits terms for outpatient dialysis services because of their adverse effects on Plan participants with ESRD. DaVita thus lacks evidence to support an essential element of its ERISA § 702 claim: discriminatory motive. Accordingly, no reasonable jury could return a verdict for DaVita on Count III.” Count II, for plan benefits, went down in flames as well because it was wholly dependent on Count III. Defendants’ summary judgment motion was thus granted and the case was terminated. DaVita must now decide whether the case is worth another trip to the Sixth Circuit.

Retaliation Claims

Fourth Circuit

Harris v. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. Health System Authority, Civ. No. 3:25-cv-644, 2026 WL 674192 (E.D. Va. Mar. 10, 2026) (Judge John A. Gibney, Jr.). Naliah Harris was a nurse at a children’s hospital operated by Virginia Commonwealth University Health System Authority (VCUHS). She contends that she observed racial discrimination against African-American nurses like herself, including demotions and failures to promote. She further alleges that when she reported this she suffered from increased scrutiny and criticism at work, and her requests for mental health accommodations were partially denied. She also alleges that her supervisor gave her drink coasters “with undesirable messages.” Harris was eventually terminated after refusing to sign a settlement agreement under threat of termination. Harris filed this pro se action alleging numerous claims under several federal statutes, including Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 1981, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), state law, and Section 510 of ERISA. Defendants, which consisted of VCUHS and several of its employees, filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. The court explained that there are two kinds of claims under ERISA Section 510 – unlawful interference and retaliation – and it was unclear from the complaint which kind of claim Harris was bringing. However, it did not matter because “she fails under either.” The court ruled that Harris “does not state that anyone discriminated against her for exercising her rights under any ERISA-backed plan,” and “she has failed to adequately allege that anyone acted for the purpose of interfering with her benefits.” The court noted that Harris did not include “specific ‘factual allegations’ supporting the intent requirement,” and without these, “the intent element ‘is nothing more than [the plaintiff’s] subjective speculation.’” Thus, dismissal was appropriate. Harris’ other claims fared no better. The court ruled that Harris’ Title VII race discrimination and retaliation claims were time-barred, as well as her ADA claims, because they were filed after the 90-day deadline following the receipt of her right-to-sue letter from the EEOC. Harris’ Title VII sex discrimination and ADEA claims were dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies, as these claims were not included in her EEOC charge. Harris’ claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 for racial discrimination, retaliation, and wrongful termination were dismissed because she “does not sufficiently allege the causation element of any of her § 1981 claims.” The court acknowledged that Harris was acting pro se and thus her claims must be liberally construed, but held that it could not “fill the gaps” in her factual allegations. Finally, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims after dismissing all of Harris’ federal claims. As a result, Harris’ complaint was dismissed in its entirety.

Cogdell v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 24-1940, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 588427 (4th Cir. Mar. 3, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Agee, Quattlebaum, and Floyd)

ERISA requires benefit plan administrators to give participants a “full and fair review” when they challenge the denials of their claims. 29 U.S.C. § 1133. However, the statutory scheme does not provide any details as to what such a review should include.

Instead, Congress passed the buck to the Department of Labor, which promulgated 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1, titled “Claims procedure.” This regulation extensively sets forth requirements and time limits that apply to claims, appeals, and determinations on both.

In 2018, the Department of Labor amended the regulation to tighten the screws on disability benefit plan administrators. The amendment requires “strict adherence” to the regulation, and provides that if an administrator does not strictly adhere, e.g. by missing a deadline, “the claimant is deemed to have exhausted the administrative remedies available under the plan” and is entitled to file suit in federal court. Furthermore, “the claim…is deemed denied on review without the exercise of discretion by an appropriate fiduciary.”

So, what happens if a benefit plan gives the fiduciary discretionary authority to make benefit determinations? Ordinarily this would result in a deferential “abuse of discretion” or “arbitrary and capricious” standard of review by the court. But, if the fiduciary misses a regulatory deadline, does the absence of exercise of discretion mandated by the regulation mean that that the fiduciary is no longer entitled to deferential review? The Fourth Circuit addressed this issue in this week’s notable decision.

The plaintiff was Heather Cogdell, who was employed at MITRE Corporation as a principal business process engineer. In 2021, she contracted COVID-19 and suffered long-COVID symptoms such as intense fatigue and sporadic headaches. As a result, Cogdell took a medical leave, during which she worked part-time.

As she was recovering, in 2022, she contracted COVID again. This time she could not return to work, so she submitted a claim for benefits under MITRE’s ERISA-governed employee long-term disability benefit plan, which was insured and administered by Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company.

Reliance denied Cogdell’s claim, contending that she did not meet the insuring policy’s definition of “totally disabled.” Cogdell submitted additional medical records, but Reliance reaffirmed its decision.

Cogdell filed an appeal on August 15, 2023, which started a 45-day clock for Reliance under ERISA’s claims procedure regulation. This meant Reliance had to make a benefit determination by September 29, 2023.

However, it did not refer the case to its appeals department until September 11, 2023, and on September 25, 2023, Reliance informed Cogdell that it wanted to conduct an independent medical review of her claim, and thus it needed more than 45 days to make a final decision. Reliance did not inform Cogdell when it expected to make a final determination, nor did it invoke any “special circumstances,” as required by the regulation, to justify its claimed extension.

When the original 45-day deadline expired, Cogdell brought this action alleging wrongful denial of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). On October 26, 2023, 72 days after Cogdell appealed, Reliance upheld its decision denying her claim.

On cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record, the district court ruled in favor of Cogdell. Reliance argued that the policy gave it discretionary authority to make benefit determinations, and thus the court should use the abuse of discretion standard of review. The court rejected this argument, concluding that because Reliance did not timely decide Cogdell’s appeal, it had forfeited any deference from the court. The court then made findings of fact and conclusions of law, determining that under de novo review Cogdell was entitled to benefits. (This decision was Your ERISA Watch’s case of the week in our September 18, 2024 edition.)

Reliance appealed, and as the Fourth Circuit put it, “[t]he standard of review takes center stage[.]” This issue required a two-step analysis. First, the court addressed “whether Reliance timely decided Cogdell’s internal appeal as required by the applicable ERISA regulations and the Plan.”

Reliance acknowledged that it did not issue a decision by the initial 45-day deadline, but argued that it properly invoked the 45-day “special circumstances” extension allowed for by the regulation, which was necessary because it needed time to review Cogdell’s appeal and was seeking an independent medical report. As the Fourth Circuit put it, Reliance’s argument was that “in its view, so long as a plan administrator determines special circumstances exist, that finding in and of itself is sufficient.”

The court disagreed. It noted that Reliance did not inform Cogdell that its extended review “was a special circumstance, nor did it explain how it could be one.” Furthermore, although the regulation “do[es] not define ‘special circumstances,’ giving little guidance as to what it means,” the plain meaning of the word “special” indicated something “out of the ordinary” or “unusual.” However, “a circumstance is not ‘special’ if it is commonplace in the appeals process.” The court observed that the activities of reviewing medical records and scheduling an independent medical report are “routine,” “commonplace – and often required – in the internal appeal process.”

The court also faulted Reliance because “[t]he record…reveals that Reliance’s failure to complete its review within 45 days was completely of its own making,” citing the delay in assigning the appeal to the appropriate department. Indeed, the court noted that once the gears started turning in that department, Reliance was able to render a decision in 36 days. Thus, “Reliance could have completed its review of Cogdell’s internal appeal well within the initial 45 days. And, if it could not have, it provided no valid reason for failing to do so.”

The Fourth Circuit then turned to the issue of what consequences Reliance should face for its non-compliance. The court noted the two immediate results compelled by the regulation: (1) Cogdell was “deemed to have exhausted the administrative remedies available under the plan,” and (2) “the claim or appeal is deemed denied on review without the exercise of discretion by an appropriate fiduciary.”

Reliance conceded the first consequence, but argued that the second should not affect the applicable standard of review for two reasons. First, Reliance contended that it did in fact decide Cogdell’s appeal, even if it was late, and thus this case was “different from those that have held that a plan administrator forfeits discretionary review when it simply fails to decide an internal appeal.” The Fourth Circuit characterized this as “a substantial compliance argument… No harm, no foul?”

Unfortunately for Reliance, “We think not.” The court acknowledged that it had applied the substantial compliance doctrine in reviewing certain other procedural defects in claim administration, “[b]ut we have not located, and Reliance has not cited, a single case where we have applied the substantial compliance doctrine to the failure to observe the affirmative requirements of ERISA’s timing regulations or the provisions of the Plan.”

Furthermore, the court declined to apply it in the first instance here, holding that “failure to follow the Plan’s time restraints negates the discretion that would otherwise be due[.]” In short, “[d]ecisions made outside the boundaries of conferred discretion are not exercises of discretion[.]” The court approvingly cited then-Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s 2019 Seventh Circuit decision in Fessenden v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co. (which we covered as the case of the week in our June 26, 2019 edition) for the proposition that “the substantial compliance doctrine is incompatible with the applicable ERISA time restraints.”

Reliance’s second argument for retaining discretion was that the 2018 amendment to the regulation “was an impermissible exercise of the Secretary’s rulemaking authority” under the Supreme Court’s 2024 blockbuster decision in Loper Bright v. Raimondo. Reliance contended that the amendment “sets forth the judicial consequences of a fiduciary’s failure to follow the procedures by specifically revoking discretion” even though “ERISA does not grant the Secretary the authority to do so.”

This argument went nowhere with the district court, and was equally unsuccessful with the Fourth Circuit. The court stated that the standard of review did not flow from the regulation “but by [Supreme Court precedent] and the principles of trust law we must consider when determining the appropriate standard of review.” The regulation “simply says that a certain set of circumstances leads to a certain result. It does not, however, invade the role of courts in setting the standard of review.”

Finally, the court arrived at the merits of the case. Reliance argued that (1) “the district court erroneously evaluated Cogdell’s claim based on her specific job at MITRE rather than the duties of her ‘regular occupation,’” as required by the policy, (2) “the district court erred by not considering the reports from the two independent medical professionals that Reliance received after Cogdell’s claim was deemed denied and she filed suit,” and (3) “the district court impermissibly applied a ‘treating physician’ rule, assigning more weight to certain reports from Cogdell’s treating physicians.”

The Fourth Circuit rejected all three arguments. First, the court ruled that the district court “reasonably identified Cogdell’s occupation and its associated duties” by looking to her job description and other evidence in the record. The district court was also allowed to give the Dictionary of Occupational Titles entry for “Consultant,” used by Reliance, little weight because “many of the broad tasks it listed do not ‘involve comparable duties’ to the work Cogdell performed in her role at MITRE.” Furthermore, the sedentary nature of Cogdell’s job was insufficient to show that she could return to work because this “leaves out any consideration of the cognitive requirements of Cogdell’s occupation[.]”

Second, the Fourth Circuit upheld the district court’s decision not to look at Reliance’s late medical reports. “We see no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision not to consider evidence that the claims processing regulations required be provided to Cogdell with an opportunity to respond within the appeals period because the evidence was not provided until after the claim was deemed denied, leaving Cogdell with no opportunity to respond.”

Finally, although the Fourth Circuit agreed with Reliance that there is no “treating physician” rule in ERISA benefit cases, it was still the district court’s institutional role to act as a finder of fact, “and that role encompasses ‘assessing credibility and determining the appropriate weight to assign evidence.’” Here, the district court gave more weight to Cogdell’s physicians, and “[a]lthough Reliance may dispute the weight of the evidence, given the district court’s extensive review of the record evidence that supports its conclusion that Cogdell was ‘Totally Disabled,’ Reliance has failed to show anything that would leave this Court ‘with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’”

As a result, the Fourth Circuit affirmed the judgment in Cogdell’s favor in its entirety.

Below is a summary of this past week’s notable ERISA decisions by subject matter and jurisdiction.

Arbitration

Ninth Circuit

Dixon v. MultiCare Health System, No. CV25-5414, 2026 WL 607769 (W.D. Wash. Mar. 4, 2026) (Judge Benjamin H. Settle). Ryan Adam Dixon was hired as a registered nurse at MultiCare Good Samaritan Hospital in 2023. He alleges that during his onboarding, an incorrect Social Security number and his nickname were used to set up his employment records and 401(k) retirement account. Dixon contends that as a result he was unable to access the employee portal to stop his 401(k) contributions, which eventually totaled $1,317.25. His request for a refund was denied, so he filed this action pro se, asserting claims under ERISA for recovery of benefit and breach of fiduciary duty, willful withholding of wages under Washington state law (RCW 49.52.070), and unlawful retaliation under ERISA. The parties filed several motions, including MultiCare’s motion to dismiss and Dixon’s motion to compel plan documents. MultiCare argued for dismissal on the grounds that Dixon failed to exhaust administrative review procedures and that his claims were subject to arbitration. It also contended that Dixon’s state law claim was preempted by ERISA and that he failed to allege a specific retaliatory act. The court addressed Dixon’s ERISA claims first, ruling that they were subject to the plan’s mandatory arbitration provision. The court found that the arbitration provision was enforceable and Dixon’s claims were within its scope, rejecting Dixon’s argument that it was unenforceable because it “eliminates plan-wide relief.” The court noted that Dixon was not representing others and that the arbitration provision in fact preserved all his rights. The court further rejected Dixon’s argument that MultiCare had waived its right to invoke arbitration, noting that MultiCare raised the issue at its first opportunity. The court thus granted MultiCare’s motion to compel arbitration and stayed Dixon’s ERISA claims. As for Dixon’s state law withholding claim, the court agreed with MultiCare that it was preempted by ERISA. The court ruled that the claim related to an ERISA-governed employee benefit plan, as the alleged liability arose from Dixon’s automatic enrollment in MultiCare’s 401(k) plan. As a result, this claim was dismissed with prejudice. Dixon’s retaliation claim under ERISA Section 510 was also dismissed because it was based on allegations that MultiCare might take adverse action against him in the future; the court agreed with MultiCare that potential future claims are not actionable. This dismissal was without prejudice. The court then turned to Dixon’s motion to compel production of documents. The court ruled that (a) MultiCare had produced all statutorily required documents, (b) MultiCare was not required to produce other documents requested by Dixon, and (c) Dixon failed to meet and confer under the court’s local rules before filing his motion. Finally, the court admonished Dixon because he “repeatedly cites to nonexistent cases and to other cases that do not support the proposition for which they were offered.” The court warned Dixon that this conduct, if it continued, could lead to monetary sanctions. Thus, the case will go to arbitration, and the parties’ other motions were denied as moot.

Attorneys’ Fees

Tenth Circuit

J.H. v. United Behavioral Health, No. 2:23-CV-00190-JNP-CMR, 2026 WL 632244 (D. Utah Mar. 6, 2026) (Judge Jill N. Parrish). In June of 2025 the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, and denied defendants’, in this case involving United Behavioral Health’s denial of benefits for treatment of mental health and substance abuse. (Your ERISA Watch reported on this decision in our June 25, 2025 edition.) In so doing, the court ruled, “the record establishes that United’s decision to deny benefits was arbitrary and capricious. United failed to engage in anything resembling a meaningful dialogue in explaining its decisions, and no reasonable beneficiary in J.H.’s shoes could have been expected to understand its reasoning or decision-making process from its appeal-decision letters.” The court remanded the case to United for further consideration, and plaintiffs filed a motion for attorney’s fees, which the court ruled on in this order. The court noted that ordinarily it must consider whether plaintiffs achieved “some degree of success on the merits,” and then use the Tenth Circuit’s five-factor test, to determine whether fees should be awarded. However, “Here, Plaintiffs clearly achieved some level of success on the merits… Defendants also do not seriously dispute that attorney’s fees are available.” As a result, the court focused on the reasonableness of plaintiffs’ request. The court used the hybrid lodestar method to determine the appropriate amount, which involves multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended by a reasonable hourly rate. The parties agreed that plaintiffs’ counsel’s hours were reasonable, but they differed as to the appropriate hourly rates to be applied to that time. Plaintiffs’ counsel argued for a “national rate” in awarding fees, contending that “ERISA litigation is sufficiently specialized such that there ‘may be no local community of comparable lawyers from which to draw hourly rates for comparison.’” The court disagreed, noting that there were other ERISA practitioners in Utah, and that ERISA was not an unusual enough area of law to justify awarding a national rate. Thus, the court “looks to the prevailing rates in the community to determine reasonable hourly rates, with the relevant community being the Salt Lake City market.” Brian S. King requested $650 per hour, and the court agreed that “Mr. King has an exceptional, perhaps unparalleled depth of experience and skill in ERISA cases in this District. He has been exclusively handling ERISA cases for nearly thirty years, has lectured on various aspects of ERISA, and has testified before the Department of Labor twice on proposed changes to ERISA.” The court acknowledged that “no other court has yet found a rate of $650 per hour to be reasonable for Mr. King,” but other courts had awarded $600 per hour, and he had not raised his rates since 2021, so the court agreed $650 was reasonable. However, the court reduced the hourly rates for two other attorneys at Mr. King’s firm, from $400 to $300 for Samuel Hall, and from $300 to $250 for Andrew Somers. As a result, while plaintiffs requested $51,170, the court ultimately awarded $46,435, in addition to the undisputed $400 in incurred costs.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

Hammell v. Pilot Products, Inc. Defined Benefit Pension Plan, No. 24-3283-CV, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 586699 (2d Cir. Mar. 3, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Bianco, Pérez, and Kahn). This case is a dispute between family members over the management of the pension plan for the family-owned business Pilot Products, Inc. The company was founded by husband and wife Herbert and Marcia Hebel. When Herbert died in 2011, the family litigated over control of the company, and in 2014 they agreed that Marcia and one of the couple’s daughters, Elizabeth, would resign and sell their shares to the other daughter, Carolyn, who became the sole officer, shareholder, and trustee of the pension plan. Carolyn began terminating the plan in 2018, but it was underfunded by $1.5 million, and thus she demanded that Elizabeth and Marcia contribute “to correct the underfunding.” In the same letter Carolyn also informed them that benefits could be distributed in a lump sum, but did not explain the financial implications of doing so. During the back-and-forth between the two sides about these issues, Marcia died in 2020 without completing the lump-sum election forms, resulting in a final distribution to her estate that was far less than she could have received in a lump-sum amount. Carolyn later distributed additional plan funds to herself. Elizabeth, on her own behalf and on behalf of Marcia’s estate, filed this action alleging breaches of the fiduciary duties of care and loyalty under ERISA, and a conversion claim under New York law. After a three-day bench trial, the district court found Carolyn liable for breaching her fiduciary duty of care by failing to provide proper notice of Marcia’s right to elect a lump-sum payment. The court awarded $1.78 million in damages, plus interest, amounting to the difference between the hypothetical lump sum and the amount Marcia’s estate actually received. (The court also awarded Elizabeth more than $1 million in attorney’s fees). The court found in favor of Carolyn on the remaining claims, determining that the conversion claims were preempted by ERISA and that Elizabeth failed to prove a breach of the fiduciary duty of loyalty. Both sides appealed. Carolyn argued that Elizabeth did not have standing, relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Thole v. U.S. Bank, N.A. The Second Circuit disagreed, ruling that Elizabeth had standing because she properly alleged financial loss; Marcia’s estate received less than it would have if Carolyn had given sufficient notice regarding Marcia’s lump-sum options. Next, Carolyn argued that the district court applied “a ‘heightened’ standard of fiduciary duties based on the familial relationship between Carolyn and Marcia.” The Second Circuit ruled that the district court applied the proper fiduciary standard and upheld its ruling that Carolyn did not give proper notice of the lump-sum option because “Carolyn failed to accurately explain the effects of not taking the lump sum prior to the Plan’s termination.” The Second Circuit agreed that Carolyn’s notice was inadequate and obfuscating, and “most properly understood as litigation posturing” given its accompanying demand for money to correct the plan’s underfunding. The appellate court further agreed that Elizabeth demonstrated prejudice, concluding that Elizabeth and Marcia would have likely elected the lump sum if they had received adequate notice given the large monetary discrepancy. The court also upheld the district court’s calculation of damages, which restored Elizabeth to the financial position she would have been in if the lump-sum option had been selected. The Second Circuit then turned to Elizabeth’s cross-appeal, ruling that there was no basis to disturb the district court’s ruling that Carolyn did not breach her fiduciary duty of loyalty. The court ruled that Carolyn’s actions did not violate any plan documents or ERISA, and the post-termination distribution to herself was approved by an independent pension actuary which determined that “Carolyn was the only person who was eligible to receive additional contributions.” As a result, the court affirmed the judgment below in its entirety.

Stern v. JPMorgan Chase & Co., No. 1:25-CV-02097 (JLR), 2026 WL 654714 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 9, 2026) (Judge Jennifer L. Rochon). This is a putative class action by current and former employees of JPMorgan Chase & Company alleging that JPMorgan and related defendants breached their fiduciary duties and engaged in prohibited transactions by mismanaging the prescription drug component of JPMorgan’s self-funded ERISA-governed employee health plan. Plaintiffs contend that defendants “agreed to or permitted grossly inflated prescription-drug prices, causing the Plan and its participants to pay millions of dollars more than necessary.” They allege that defendants failed to prudently select and scrutinize the plan’s pharmacy benefit manager (PBM), CVS Caremark, by not conducting competitive requests for proposals, failing to benchmark Caremark’s pricing against the market, and not negotiating pricing terms to protect the plan. Additionally, plaintiffs allege that defendants “permitted the Plan to pay excessive prices for prescription drugs, particularly generic drugs, relative to pharmacy acquisition costs and publicly available cash prices.” Plaintiffs also alleged that Caremark classified certain drugs as “specialty” drugs without consistent or objective standards, and that the defendants “allowed Plan participants to overpay for biosimilar drugs by narrowing the field of options.” Plaintiffs further alleged that the defendants failed to consider lower-cost alternatives to the traditional PBM model. Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of standing and failure to state a claim. On standing, defendants argued that (1) “because Plaintiffs received all benefits promised under the Plan, they suffered no cognizable injury under [the Supreme Court’s ruling in] Thole v. U.S. Bank N.A.,” (2) “Plaintiffs’ out-of-pocket costs theory of standing is too speculative because Plaintiffs do not provide the appropriate price comparisons to establish actual overpayment,” and (3) “Plaintiffs’ higher premiums theory is likewise speculative because there is no direct relationship between Plan costs and participant premiums.” The court agreed that plaintiffs’ “higher premium theory is too speculative to serve as a basis for standing,” but approved their “out-of-pocket cost theory,” noting that “[a]llegations of this kind are generally sufficient to confer standing.” The court distinguished Thole, noting that “unlike the defined-benefit pension plan in Thole, through which participants ‘receive[d] a fixed payment each month’…the Plan here is a self-funded welfare plan under which Plaintiffs allege they personally paid inflated out-of-pocket costs[.]” This “personal financial harm can confer standing.” The court distinguished other cases (including Navarro v. Wells Fargo, in which that court issued a new order last week, discussed below), finding them either different on the facts or the issues, or simply unpersuasive. Turning to the merits, the court ruled that the conduct challenged under the plaintiffs’ first two counts was not fiduciary in nature and dismissed them. These counts focused on the design and structure of the plan’s pharmacy benefit arrangements, which were settlor functions not subject to ERISA liability. The court also dismissed plaintiffs’ duty of loyalty claims, ruling that their allegations pointed to broader corporate activities, such as business relationships and joint ventures, which involved business judgments undertaken in a corporate capacity and not fiduciary actions under ERISA. The court emphasized that ERISA does not require that corporate business transactions, which may have a collateral effect on employee benefits, be performed solely in the interest of plan participants. However, the court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss counts four and five, which alleged prohibited transactions. The court noted that hiring a service provider, such as a PBM, is a fiduciary function, and plaintiffs plausibly alleged that defendants engaged in prohibited transactions by transferring plan assets to Caremark in exchange for services with unreasonable compensation. The court acknowledged that defendants “may have ample defenses to this claim,” but at this stage, under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Cunningham v. Cornell Univ., it was compelled to let the claims move forward. Thus, defendants’ motion to dismiss was only partly successful.

Fourth Circuit

Fitzwater v. CONSOL Energy, Inc., No. 24-2088, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 595435 (4th Cir. Mar. 3, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Wilkinson, Wynn, and Keenan). This ten-year-old case was brought by coal miners who were employees of CONSOL Energy, Inc. and its subsidiaries. CONSOL offered medical benefits to its employees through an ERISA-governed plan which included retiree medical benefits for employees who had worked for CONSOL for ten years and were 55 or older. Throughout, CONSOL issued plan documents containing reservation-of-rights clauses, stating that the company “reserved the right to modify or terminate the benefits plan at any time.” Plaintiffs, however, alleged that they were verbally told by CONSOL numerous times that their benefits would last a lifetime. Plaintiffs were also told, in an effort to deter unionization, that their benefits would be “at least as good as the benefits provided to members of the United Mine Workers of America…which provided lifetime retirement benefits.” Predictably, CONSOL terminated the retiree medical benefit by the end of 2015 and this action followed. Plaintiffs brought two actions against CONSOL, asserting multiple violations of ERISA, including breach of fiduciary duty because of CONSOL’s material misrepresentations about the permanence of their benefits. The actions were consolidated in 2017. The district court denied plaintiffs’ two motions for class certification, and in 2020 the court granted most of defendants’ summary judgment motion, but allowed plaintiffs’ claim for breach of fiduciary duty to proceed. (This decision was Your ERISA Watch’s case of the week in our October 28, 2020 edition.) The case was tried in February of 2021, and more than three years later the court issued its decision. The court ruled that CONSOL breached its fiduciary duty in misrepresenting the future of plaintiffs’ benefits. However, only two of the seven plaintiffs were victorious; the court found that the claims of one were time-barred while the other four did not demonstrate detrimental reliance on CONSOL’s misstatements. (We covered this ruling in our October 9, 2024 edition.) Both sides appealed to the Fourth Circuit. The court addressed class certification first, upholding the denial of plaintiffs’ two motions because plaintiffs abandoned the rationale behind their first motion and failed to address the district court’s reasoning in denying the second motion. Next, the Fourth Circuit addressed the summary judgment ruling, in which the district court rejected plaintiffs’ claim that CONSOL discriminated against certain retirees based on “claims experience.” The Fourth Circuit noted that plaintiffs’ “theory of discrimination shifted over the course of litigation,” and that regardless of their theory, they “were required to show discriminatory intent – not just differing impacts on the two groups.” The Fourth Circuit did not see any such intent, stating, “There is no evidence in the summary-judgment record that CONSOL even considered claims experience when deciding to whom it would offer the prorated payment.” Finally, the Fourth Circuit tackled the rulings at trial. Plaintiffs argued that the district court erred in finding no detrimental reliance for four of the employees, but the appellate court stated that “each of those Plaintiffs had knowledge that their benefits could be terminated at any time.” Furthermore, plaintiffs inappropriately focused on CONSOL’s behavior as a whole instead of its conduct with respect to those four employees. “This failure to grapple with factfinding that was central to the district court’s analysis – issued following a detailed, lengthy bench trial – is fatal to Plaintiffs’ arguments on appeal.” The Fourth Circuit rejected CONSOL’s arguments as well, upholding the district court’s factual determinations that CONSOL misled the two prevailing plaintiffs about their benefits and that they detrimentally relied on those misstatements by making “significant life decisions based on CONSOL’s erroneous promises.” As a result, the appellate court was “satisfied that the district court dispatched its duty admirably,” and affirmed the judgment.

Forrest v. Moore & Van Allen PLLC, No. 3:25-CV-624-MOC-SCR, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2026 WL 607290 (W.D.N.C. Mar. 3, 2026) (Judge Max O. Cogburn Jr.). This is a putative class action by employees of Hollandia Produce Group who allege that various defendants abused the company’s employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) to enrich themselves at the expense of the ESOP and its employee beneficiaries. According to plaintiffs, in 2015 investors approached Hollandia’s owners about creating the ESOP. Hollandia’s owners agreed, and in various transactions all of Hollandia’s shares were sold to the ESOP and loans were issued to finance the transfer. GreatBanc Trust Company was appointed as trustee for the ESOP, and Moore & Van Allen (MVA) acted as GreatBanc’s legal counsel throughout this process. Plaintiffs contend that the terms of the loans, which included a 14% interest rate, gave significant control over Hollandia to the outside investors, which they used to maximize their returns at the expense of the ESOP. In 2022, the ESOP was terminated when Hollandia was sold to Local Bounti. The investors “received more than $75 million in cash and stock – of which more than 70% was paid in cash,” while “the ESOP walked away with only $3.1 million – of which only 20% was paid in cash.” Plaintiffs allege that “the ESOP beneficiaries’ retirement accounts would be worth approximately $4.2 million if the ESOP was never formed,” but instead “the ESOP beneficiaries are expected to receive just $1 million once the lock-up period expires and the ESOP’s funds are distributed.” Plaintiffs alleged numerous claims against the defendants, including breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA, prohibited transactions, and legal malpractice. Three motions to dismiss were filed: one by GreatBanc, one by the investor defendants, and one by the MVA defendants. Addressing the GreatBanc motion first, the court ruled that (a) plaintiffs’ claims were not barred by ERISA’s statute of repose because they alleged a continuing violation of fiduciary duties, (b) plaintiffs properly alleged that GreatBanc had a duty to prudently manage its investment in Hollandia and protect the ESOP’s assets from managerial malfeasance, (c) GreatBanc could be held liable for failing to investigate and pursue legal action against the other defendants, but (d) plaintiffs could not bring a claim for legal malpractice against GreatBanc. As for the investor defendants’ motion, the court held that (a) plaintiffs had standing, as they alleged financial harm to the ESOP, and the investors’ arguments to the contrary could not be resolved on a motion to dismiss, (b) plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claims were not untimely, for the same reason as their claims against GreatBanc, but their prohibited transactions claim under 29 U.S.C. § 1106(b) regarding the ESOP formation in 2015 was untimely, (c) plaintiffs sufficiently alleged that the investor defendants were fiduciaries of the ESOP because their control over GreatBanc gave them “functional authority or control over the ESOP” and because they effectively controlled Hollandia during the life of the ESOP, and (d) plaintiffs did not engage in “shotgun pleading” because they “sufficiently articulated what each defendant is charged with and provided a factual basis for those allegations.” On the MVA defendants’ motion, the court ruled that (a) plaintiffs had standing because they alleged that the defendants’ actions caused financial harm to the ESOP, (b) MVA’s attorney was not a fiduciary based solely on his role as an attorney, but plaintiffs properly alleged that he was a fiduciary “based on his role as an investor and member of the alleged conspiracy with the Investor Defendants,” (c) the statute of repose did not bar plaintiffs’ claims for the same reason as the claims against the investor defendants, and (d) issues of fact existed as to when the last act giving rise to plaintiffs’ legal malpractice claim occurred, and thus dismissal of this claim was inappropriate on timeliness grounds. As a result, plaintiffs’ complaint emerged from the motions largely unscathed, and discovery will now commence.

Ninth Circuit

McGeathy v. Reinalt-Thomas Corp., No. CV-25-01439-PHX-DLR, 2026 WL 617343 (D. Ariz. Mar. 5, 2026) (Judge Douglas L. Rayes). Cory McGeathy filed this putative class action against The Reinalt-Thomas Corporation (better known as Discount Tire) and its board of directors, alleging that they breached their fiduciary duties in their management of the company’s ERISA-governed profit-sharing retirement plan. McGeathy alleges that the plan has nearly $1.2 billion in assets, of which about $519.5 million is invested in the American Century Target Fund Suite, which he alleges is “one of the worst-performing investment suites in the entire market.” McGeathy provided market benchmarks which he alleged demonstrated underperformance, and contended that the Fund Suite was not adequately monitored or removed by defendants. Defendants moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim, arguing that ERISA does not provide a cause of action for underperforming investments and that McGeathy’s benchmarks were inappropriate. The court examined McGeathy’s five benchmarks and concluded that they were “meaningful comparators.” The court was satisfied that the complaint did not conclusorily allege that the funds were comparable; instead, it “evaluates the aims, risks, and potential rewards of each comparator fund with those of the American Century Target Fund Suite,” and “describes the glide path of each comparator fund and the types of investments they engage in.” Furthermore, McGeathy alleged that the Fund Suite “underperformed the benchmark designated by the Plan itself: the S&P Index.” The court noted that the Fund Suite’s performance was not a minor short-term loss; McGeathy “alleges the underperformance occurred over a 15-year period, 10 years prior to and then through the proposed Class Period, and that this underperformance cost Plan participants between $11 and $44 million.” As a result, the court ruled that McGeathy adequately stated a claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence, and because his imprudence claim was sufficiently alleged, his derivative failure to monitor claim also survived. Defendants’ motion was denied in its entirety.

Oregon Potato Co. v. Strong, No. 4:25-CV-05139-MKD, 2026 WL 580167 (E.D. Wash. Mar. 2, 2026) (Judge Mary K. Dimke). This case is a dispute over the administration of the Oregon Potato Company’s (OPC) ERISA-governed employee medical benefit plan. OPC engaged Marsh & McLennan Agency (MMA) for brokerage and consulting services. OPC also engaged Darrell Strong and his company, DWS Holdings, d/b/a Pinnacle Peak, to provide administrative services. In 2023, MMA and Strong proposed changing the plan from a fully insured plan to a “guaranteed level funded premium plan.” Under this arrangement, OPC would pay a level premium, backed by stop-loss insurance. Fees were paid to Strong and DWS to manage the stop loss insurance and claims. However, OPC had second thoughts once the arrangement went into effect and it became aware of the extensive fees it was paying to Strong and DWS. OPC terminated its relationship with Strong, and in the ensuing months OPC alleges it became aware of a deficit in the plan, and discovered plan funds were being transferred improperly by Strong. OPC brought this action against Strong, DWS, and MMA, alleging (1) equitable relief under ERISA Section 502(a)(3) against Strong and DWS, (2) breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA Sections 404 and 405 against all defendants, (3) failure to disclose and misrepresentation against Strong and DWS, and (4) prohibited transactions under ERISA Section 406 against all defendants. MMA filed a motion to dismiss, contending that OPC did not adequately allege that MMA was a fiduciary, breached a fiduciary duty, or engaged in a prohibited transaction. The court noted that it was “undisputed that MMA is not a named fiduciary.” However, OPC alleged in its complaint that MMA “exercised management control by granting Pinnacle Peak control over banking relationships for the Plan” and “further exercised discretion over management and over the assets of the Plan by guaranteeing a level premium.” This was sufficient for the court to establish MMA’s fiduciary status. The court further determined that the complaint adequately alleged that MMA breached its fiduciary duty by misrepresenting fees and causing excessive fees to be paid, which led to prohibited transactions under ERISA. Finally, the court concluded that the plaintiffs sufficiently pleaded a prohibited transaction claim under 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a), as they alleged that MMA used its status to cause the plan to engage in prohibited transactions, including “(1) the payment of excessive fees for services performed, (2) the transfer of Plan assets for the use or benefit of a party-in-interest, and (3) the receipt of assets on their own account for a transaction involving the assets of the Plan.” As a result, the court denied MMA’s motion in its entirety.

Class Actions

Second Circuit

Carfora v. Teachers Ins. Annuity Ass’n of Am., No. 21 CIV. 8384 (KPF), 2026 WL 604448 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 3, 2026) (Judge Katherine Polk Failla). Here at Your ERISA Watch we have reported on this putative class action numerous times, as it has been dismissed, resurrected, and is now in the discovery phase. The plaintiffs are university researchers and professors who are participants in retirement plans administered by two related TIAA entities. They have challenged TIAA’s practice of “cross-selling,” which plaintiffs contend TIAA used to encourage plan participants to divert their lower-fee employer-sponsored investments into higher-fee proprietary individually managed TIAA offerings. Plaintiffs contend, among other things, that this practice was “fraught with conflicts of interest” and did not lead to better returns. In its previous orders the court concluded that plaintiffs could not proceed with claims that sought to impute fiduciary duties on TIAA itself, but could proceed with a “knowing participation” claim against TIAA for breaches conducted by others. Before the court here was defendants’ third motion to dismiss. This time defendants challenged “whether Plaintiffs have class standing to pursue a knowing participation claim on behalf of participants in approximately 9,900 plans in which Plaintiffs themselves did not participate.” The court analyzed the difference between Article III standing and class standing, noting that there is a “‘tension’ in [Supreme Court] case law as to whether ‘variation’ between [i] a named plaintiff’s claims and [ii] the claims of putative class members ‘is a matter of Article III standing…or whether it goes to the propriety of class certification.’” Furthermore, the Second Circuit’s test on this issue “has created some confusion among district courts.” After discussing pertinent authorities, the court noted “certain patterns: Where plaintiffs allege that defendants engaged in different conduct giving rise to the same claim across class members, class standing is often found to be lacking… Where plaintiffs allege that defendants engaged in the same conduct across class members, however, class standing is often found to be present.” However, even in the second scenario, “class standing may still be lacking if the question of defendants’ liability requires the court to perform a fact-specific analysis of some other party’s conduct that dwarfs any consideration of defendants’ conduct.” Under this framework, the court concluded that plaintiffs lacked class standing to bring their knowing participation claim on behalf of participants in different retirement plans. The court found that the inquiry into whether each plan sponsor breached its fiduciary duty is highly context- and plan-specific, requiring significant differences in proof for each plan. The court emphasized that even if TIAA’s conduct was uniform, the reactions of the plan sponsors were not, and the need to inquire into those reactions precluded class standing. Plaintiffs contended that they could offer generalized proof regarding TIAA’s cross-selling activities, but the court ruled that this was insufficient because the generalized proof related to TIAA’s conduct, and did not address whether the plan sponsors adequately discharged their duties once they were triggered by TIAA’s activities. Consequently, the court determined that plaintiffs could not pursue class-wide claims for plans in which they did not participate and granted TIAA’s motion to dismiss on that basis.

ERISA Preemption

Ninth Circuit

Heintzman v. Lincoln Financial Grp., No. CV-25-01755-PHX-SHD, 2026 WL 621428 (D. Ariz. Mar. 5, 2026) (Judge Sharad H. Desai). This is a dispute between Dustin Heintzman and Lincoln Financial Group about the handling of Heintzman’s claim under Wells Fargo Company’s ERISA-governed short-term disability plan. Heintzman alleges that Lincoln’s agents engaged in deceptive and unlawful business practices, including misrepresenting the terms of the Wells Fargo plan and failing to comply with its fiduciary duties under ERISA. Specifically, Heintzman alleges that Lincoln agents failed to respond to voicemails, altered insurance documents, and disseminated false information to Wells Fargo regarding medical leave dates. Heintzman contends these actions were “willful and predatory.” Lincoln further “falsely insinuated that his Claim was closed because he was no longer employed by Wells Fargo, which Heintzman characterizes as ‘utterly false, predatory, and criminal.’” Heintzman filed this pro se action in state court, alleging state law claims for relief, and Lincoln removed it to federal court citing ERISA preemption and diversity jurisdiction. The parties then filed five motions; three by Heintzman and two by Lincoln. Addressing jurisdiction and remand first, the court bypassed the parties’ ERISA arguments, ruling that even if ERISA preemption did not apply, diversity jurisdiction existed because the action was between citizens of different states and the amount in controversy exceeded $75,000 – indeed, Heintzman “seeks $100 million in compensatory and punitive damages.” The court also rejected Heintzman’s arguments for remand, noting that his motion was untimely filed, and refused to “issue an order precluding Lincoln from seeking removal in any future state court proceedings on ERISA grounds” because “Courts do not prospectively enjoin parties from asserting jurisdictional positions in future proceedings[.]” The court then evaluated Heintzman’s motion for sanctions, which was premised on the idea that Lincoln’s attorneys failed to meet and confer with him before removing the case, and that its removal was “frivolous, made in bad faith, and constituted an abusive litigation tactic.” The court denied Heintzman’s motion, ruling that Lincoln had no legal requirement to confer with him and its removal was proper. Finally, the court turned to the merits of Heintzman’s claims. It ruled that his claims based on criminal statutes were non-starters because there is no private right of action under those statutes. As for his civil claims, the court noted that it was undisputed that the Wells Fargo disability plan was governed by ERISA. Furthermore, all of Heintzman’s claims were preempted by ERISA because, “however liberally construed,” they all “arise[] from the same nucleus of alleged conduct: Lincoln’s handling of Heintzman’s Claim, including the alleged alteration of insurance documents by Lincoln’s agent, the alleged dissemination of false information to Wells Fargo regarding Heintzman’s medical leave dates and employment status, and the alleged misrepresentations made to Heintzman during the claims administration process.” Thus, the court granted Lincoln’s motion to dismiss. Heintzman’s criminal and tort law claims were dismissed with prejudice because amendment would be futile, but the court granted Heintzman leave to file an amended complaint limited to claims arising under ERISA’s civil enforcement provisions.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Second Circuit

Gordon v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., No. 3:24-CV-1447 (VAB), 2026 WL 643134 (D. Conn. Mar. 8, 2026) (Judge Victor A. Bolden). The plaintiffs in this putative class action are transgender women who are seeking or have received gender-affirming facial reconstruction surgery, which they allege is medically necessary under their respective medical insurance plans. They are or were enrolled in health insurance plans designed, sold, or administered by Aetna Life Insurance Company, which has a clinical policy bulletin that plaintiffs allege excludes coverage for gender-affirming facial reconstruction surgeries, labeling them as cosmetic rather than medically necessary. Plaintiffs contend that this policy violates Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, which “prohibits a ‘health program or activity, any part of which is receiving Federal financial assistance’ from violating the non-discrimination mandate of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972[.]” (Title IX generally prohibits sex discrimination in education.) Aetna filed a motion to dismiss and two of the plaintiffs filed a motion for a preliminary injunction. Because this is Your ERISA Watch we will focus on Aetna’s ERISA argument in its motion to dismiss. Aetna contended that one of the plaintiffs, Alma Avalle, “failed to exhaust the administrative remedies under her ERISA-governed plan” and thus her claim was barred. The court was unconvinced. Quoting the Second Circuit, the court stated, “District courts in this Circuit have drawn a distinction between claims relating to violations of the terms of a benefit plan, and claims relating to statutory violations of ERISA, finding that the former, but not the latter, [] must be administratively exhausted.” The court noted that Avalle “asserts neither a violation of the terms of her ERISA-governed plan nor a statutory violation of ERISA. Rather, she brings a claim against Aetna for violating Section 1557 of the ACA, which contains no exhaustion requirement. And the text of ERISA is clear that it does not preempt other federal claims.” The court acknowledged that Avalle sought “individualized review” and “a grant of benefits” as remedies, but “it is neither the injury asserted nor the relief sought that dictates whether exhaustion is necessary. Rather, it is the cause of action under which the suit is brought.” In short, “Because Ms. Avalle is not bringing suit under ERISA for a violation of the terms of her plan, but rather under Section 1557 of the ACA for a violation of its non-discrimination mandate, she was not required to exhaust the administrative remedies prescribed by her plan.” Aetna’s other non-ERISA arguments were also unsuccessful, and in the end the court denied its motion to dismiss in its entirety. The court also granted preliminary injunctive relief to the two moving plaintiffs, enjoining Aetna from enforcing its clinical policy as to them.

Medical Benefit Claims

Seventh Circuit

Hegemann v. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ill., No. 24-CV-286-WMC, 2026 WL 658368 (W.D. Wis. Mar. 9, 2026) (Judge William M. Conley). In May of 2022 Andrew Hegemann suffered a stroke of unknown cause which led to a series of medical evaluations. His physicians discovered that he suffered from a patent foramen ovale (PFO), a congenital heart defect in which there is a small opening in the wall between the upper chambers of the heart. They recommended that “a PFO closure procedure should be done for secondary stroke prevention,” and Hegemann underwent that surgery in December of 2022. Before his surgery, Hegemann was informed by his doctors that his insurer, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, had pre-approved it. However, after the surgery BCBSIL denied Hegemann’s two related claims for benefits under his ERISA-governed health plan, contending that (a) his doctors never initiated a pre-approval process with it, and (b) in any event the procedure was not medically necessary under its medical policy because of the lack of echocardiogram results supporting the need for such a procedure. Hegemann filed this action under ERISA, alleging that BCBSIL wrongfully denied his two claims, and the case proceeded to cross-motions for judgment. The court addressed exhaustion first. Aetna contended that Hegemann could not pursue one of his claims because he had failed to complete the appeal process for that claim. Hegemann acknowledged that he had not done so, but argued that exhaustion was futile because “his two claims involved the same procedure, were denied for identical reasons, and his appeal of the first denial had already been rejected.” The court agreed with Hegemann, finding that “plaintiff reasonably believed that defendant had full access to his records and that a second appeal stemming from the same procedure, which had already been denied, would certainly be denied.” Thus, the court turned to the merits, using the default de novo standard of review. Hegemann relied on three articles in the record discussing when practitioners should recommend PFO closure to patients, but the court found they had limited value: “[T]he articles only provide recommendations and suggestions for an updated PFO closure policy, rather than purporting to articulate generally accepted medical standards and giving them that status would exceed their self-proclaimed purpose.” Furthermore, “the studies proffered by plaintiff indicate that a PFO closure would put him at a higher risk of recurrent stroke and development of late atrial fibrillation.” The court also ruled that “recommendations from a health care provider are insufficient alone to establish that a service is Medically Necessary,” and that Wisconsin’s medical malpractice laws were irrelevant to determining whether Hegemann was entitled to benefits. What was relevant was the BCBSIL medical policy, which required “a large right-to-left interatrial shunt” confirmed by echocardiography. While Hegemann had undergone two echocardiography studies, one did not determine the size of the shunt while the other “revealed a bidirectional shunt, as opposed to a right-to-left shunt[.]” As a result, “the court must reluctantly grant defendant’s motion and deny plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment despite what seems a draconian result[.]” The court closed by hinting that Hegemann’s doctors might not want to insist on payment from him given their apparent missteps in the pre-approval process (“the court draws no conclusions as to whether Aspirus should be estopped seeking payment from plaintiff for his procedure”).

Pension Benefit Claims

Fifth Circuit

Anderson v. Entergy Corp., No. CV 25-2097, 2026 WL 614088 (E.D. La. Mar. 4, 2026) (Judge Jane Triche Milazzo). This case involves a dispute over the rightful beneficiary of funds in a 401(k) plan. Melissa Anne Anderson, the plaintiff, is the ex-wife of Shannon Anderson. At the time of his death, Shannon had been married to Karen Orso Anderson for four months. Shannon was employed by Entergy Services, LLC and participated in the plan, which provided that if a participant is married, the surviving spouse is deemed the beneficiary unless a written waiver is executed by the spouse to designate another beneficiary. As a result, even though Melissa was originally named as the beneficiary, the plan automatically revoked this designation when Shannon married Karen. The plan thus distributed the funds to Karen, and Melissa brought this pro se action against the plan, the benefits committee, Karen, and T. Rowe Price, the plan’s third-party administrator, asserting claims under ERISA and state law. She sought compensatory and punitive damages, and also requested that the plan be amended and the appeals process revised. All defendants filed motions to dismiss, making similar arguments. The court characterized Melissa’s ERISA claim as a wrongful denial of benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and reviewed it under an abuse of discretion standard because the plan contained a grant of discretionary authority. The court found that the ERISA claim was appropriate against the committee and the plan, but not against T. Rowe Price or Karen because they had no control over plan administration. However, the court concluded that Melissa had no plausible claim under ERISA because the plan clearly designated Shannon’s surviving spouse as the beneficiary, and Karen indisputably was that person and did not waive any of her rights. The court acknowledged that Melissa believed that “this result is inequitable and contrary to the decedent’s wishes,” but this was irrelevant because the administrator was required to “act[] in compliance with the Plan terms,” and the court was not allowed to independently “decide who is most deserving of the amount at issue.” As for Melissa’s state law claims, the court quickly concluded that ERISA preempted most of them because “any claims that Plaintiff intends to pursue against the Plan, the Committee, or T. Rowe arise out of the claims handling process” and thus “related to” the plan for preemption purposes. However, the court noted that Melissa’s allegations regarding emotional distress “predominately reference actions taken by [Karen] after the death of Shannon [] and during the funeral and succession proceedings.” As a result, these allegations were not preempted by ERISA, and the court allowed Melissa’s tort claim based on these allegations to proceed because Karen “has not set forth any argument for the dismissal of Plaintiff’s state law tort claim against her.” The court thus granted the motions to dismiss, with prejudice, with the exception of Melissa’s state law claim against Karen for mental anguish.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Eighth Circuit

Navarro v. Wells Fargo & Co., No. 24-CV-3043 (LMP/DLM), 2026 WL 591454 (D. Minn. Mar. 3, 2026) (Judge Laura M. Provinzino). The plaintiffs in this case are former employees of Wells Fargo & Company and were participants in the company’s health benefit plan. They allege that Wells Fargo breached its fiduciary duties under ERISA by mismanaging its prescription drug benefit program, which was administered by Express Scripts, Inc. (ESI), a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM). Plaintiffs contend that the prices negotiated with ESI were significantly above the pharmacy acquisition cost, and that Wells Fargo paid excessive administrative fees to ESI. This resulted in higher contributions and out-of-pocket costs for plan participants, amounting to a breach of fiduciary duties under 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a). Plaintiffs also alleged prohibited transactions under 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a)(1), and sought injunctive and equitable relief, including removal of the plan’s fiduciaries, replacement of ESI as the plan’s PBM, and restitution for losses to the plan. Wells Fargo moved to dismiss, and in March of 2025, the court granted its motion, ruling that plaintiffs lacked standing. (This ruling was Your ERISA Watch’s notable decision in our April 2, 2025 edition.) However, the court allowed plaintiffs to file an amended complaint, to which Wells Fargo responded with another motion to dismiss, which was the subject of this order. The court agreed once again with Wells Fargo, ruling that plaintiffs “have not remedied the deficiencies identified in the Court’s previous order[.]” As before, the court stressed that the plan at issue was a defined benefit plan, not a defined contribution plan, and that plaintiffs “d[o] not allege that they were denied any health benefits promised under the Plan, nor d[o] they allege that the Plan was insolvent or otherwise incapable of continuing to provide covered health benefits.” The court acknowledged plaintiffs’ argument that if Wells Fargo had negotiated a better deal, they might have paid lower contributions, but “these allegations are general in nature and do not solve the variable of [Wells Fargo’s] discretion in setting employee contribution rates.” The court emphasized that plaintiffs’ contributions were used to cover overall plan expenses, not specifically prescription drug benefits or administrative fees. Thus, the court could not draw a straight line between the alleged misconduct and pricing: “participant contribution amounts may be affected by several factors having nothing to do with prescription drug benefits…‘[t]here are simply too many variables in how Plan participants’ contribution rates are calculated’ to infer that Wells Fargo’s payments to ESI for prescription drug payments or administrative fees were the but-for cause of any increases in Plaintiffs’ required contributions.” The court also found that the plaintiffs’ theory of redressability was speculative, as it assumed Wells Fargo would maintain the same contribution ratio, which was not a given because the plan did not require such a ratio. The court ended on a sympathetic note: “To be sure, the price comparisons alleged in Plaintiffs’ complaint are staggering.” However, “it fundamentally cannot be the case that participants in a plan like the one at issue here are injured any time the contractually defined benefits to which they are entitled are available at lower cost to non-participants, absent any express promise by the plan fiduciary to provide those benefits at that lower cost or any specific allegations that the fiduciary’s misconduct diminished those benefits or rendered the plan unable to provide them.” As a result, the court once again ruled that plaintiffs did not have standing and granted Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss.

Retaliation Claims

Second Circuit

Martin v. Google LLC, No. 3:25-CV-587 (SVN), 2026 WL 657265 (D. Conn. Mar. 9, 2026) (Judge Sarala V. Nagala). Peter Martin was a sales representative for Google who was pursuing a contract with Otis Elevator when he was diagnosed with stage four colon cancer in 2023. He alleges that even though he ultimately secured the Otis contract for Google, he was not paid appropriate commissions for it under an oral agreement he had with his supervisors at Google. In early 2024 Martin received a poor performance review, despite the Otis deal, and had several of his accounts reassigned. In July of 2024 he was terminated as part of a reduction in force. Martin brought this action, and in his amended complaint he alleged five claims: (1) violation of Section 510 of ERISA; (2) violation of Connecticut’s Wage Payment Law (Conn. Gen. Stat. § 31-72); (3) fraudulent inducement; (4) breach of contract; and (5) unjust enrichment. Google filed a motion to dismiss, and the court tackled his ERISA claim first. Martin alleged that “he was terminated with the intent to prevent him from attaining his ERISA-covered benefits, including life insurance proceeds to which his beneficiaries would have been entitled if he were still employed by Google at the time of his death.” Quoting the Second Circuit, the court noted that “[a]n essential element of plaintiff’s proof under [§ 510 of ERISA] is to show that an employer was at least in part motivated by the specific intent to engage in activity prohibited by § 510.” The court ruled that Martin “fails to plausibly allege that Google’s termination of his employment was motivated, even in part, by a specific intent to deprive him of ERISA-covered benefits.” The court explained that even if Martin’s allegations were true, “they at most show that Google intentionally terminated him due to his cancer diagnosis, a consequence of which was termination of his ERISA benefits. Plaintiff’s complaint does not take the further necessary step of alleging facts to support a plausible claim that Google’s decision to terminate him was also motivated in any part by an independent desire to terminate Plaintiff’s ERISA benefits.” As a result, the court granted Google’s motion to dismiss this claim, although it allowed Martin an opportunity to amend. As for his remaining claims, the court ruled that (1) Martin failed to allege a breach of contract because the alleged oral agreement was barred by the parol evidence rule (prohibiting evidence that contradicts a written agreement), (2) Martin could not bring a claim under Connecticut’s Wage Payment Law because he did not sufficiently allege a breach of contract, (3) unjust enrichment requires the absence of an enforceable contract, but Martin’s claim was based on his alleged agreements with Google, and (4) Martin’s fraudulent inducement claim was insufficiently alleged because the alleged promise was central to, not collateral to, the relevant agreement. As a result, the court granted Google’s motion to dismiss, but gave him leave to amend, except with regard to his fraudulent inducement claim.

Withdrawal Liability & Unpaid Contributions

Third Circuit

RTI Restoration Technologies, Inc. v. International Painters & Allied Trades Indus. Pension Fund, No. 24-2874, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 588429 (3d Cir. Mar. 3, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Phipps, Roth, and Rendell). The International Painters and Allied Trades Industry Pension Fund, a multi-employer pension fund, sought to collect withdrawal liability from Industrial Maintenance Industries LLC and RTI Restoration Technologies, Inc. under the Multiemployer Pension Plans Amendment Act (MPPAA), alleging that they were successors to a defunct contributing employer called CTI, which closed shop in 2013. The fund did not notify the two companies of their purported successor liability until July 2021, eight years after CTI turned the lights out. The companies filed this action for a declaratory judgment, contending that they were not liable because they were not signatories to a collective bargaining agreement with the union, and were not under common control with CTI and thus were not responsible for any of CTI’s liability. The fund counterclaimed, and the case proceeded to cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court, relying on the Third Circuit’s decision in Allied Painting & Decorating, Inc. v. Int’l Painters & Allied Trades Indus. Pension Fund (a decision we covered in our July 17, 2024 edition), ruled in favor of the companies based on the fund’s failure to notify the companies of their alleged withdrawal liability “as soon as practicable” as required by 29 U.S.C. § 1399(b)(1). The district court explained that the fund had all the information it needed to take action by 2013, but it waited to demand liability until 2021, which was too long and violated the statute. The fund appealed, contending that the companies waived their “as soon as practicable” argument because that issue can only be determined by an arbitrator, and the time for arbitration had passed. In this published decision, the Third Circuit rejected this argument and affirmed. The court held that the “as soon as practicable” requirement is an independent statutory requirement and not merely an affirmative defense subject to waiver. The court stated that timely notice and demand are essential elements of a withdrawal liability claim, and failure to meet this requirement means the claim never accrues, and thus there is no claim that even requires a defense that might be waived. In doing so, the court criticized other courts that held that the equitable defense of “laches is the only means of addressing timeliness… At bottom, laches is one vehicle for challenging timeliness, but it is not the exclusive means by which alleged delay may be addressed, nor is it the lens through which the ‘as soon as practicable’ requirement should be viewed.” The court further ruled that arbitration was not required on this issue because “timely notice and demand is an element of a withdrawal liability claim, so the existence of this element may be decided by a court sua sponte and without first submitting the matter to an arbitrator, especially where a decision is straightforward.” The court acknowledged that “the MPPAA expresses a ‘clear preference for self-regulation through arbitration,’” but this case fit the “rare case” exception discussed by the Third Circuit’s 1986 decision in Dorn’s Transp., Inc. v. Teamsters Pension Fund because (a) “the timeliness question on the record before the District Court did not require the special expertise of an arbitrator”; (b) the district court’s “decision to resolve the case on the timeliness ground without expending additional resources on the employer status issue served, rather than hindered, the goal of judicial economy”; and (c) “there would have been no benefit to insisting that the parties first arbitrate the matter to develop the factual record” because “[t]his case required little by way of factual development as all that was required was straightforward application of Allied.” Thus, the Third Circuit affirmed. The decision was not unanimous, however. Judge Peter J. Phipps acknowledged that the funds may not have acted “as soon as practicable,” but “clarity as to the resolution of that issue does not mean that the question is properly decided by a federal court instead of by an arbitrator.” Judge Phipps emphasized the MPPAA’s broad arbitration requirement, and criticized the majority’s creation of a “two-tier” approach in which there are “newly conceived ‘predicate elements,’ which are not subject to arbitration under the MPPAA[.]” Judge Phipps also questioned the majority’s application of the “rare case” exception, stating that “[u]ntil today, Dorn’s was in a dustbin” and had been limited to its facts on numerous occasions. Thus, for Judge Phipps, this case was an easy one “because the answer to the question presented here can be found in statutory text: as-soon-as-practicable determinations are subject to mandatory arbitration.”

Sadly, we have no notable decision to highlight for you this week. Still, the federal courts tackled numerous issues across the ERISA spectrum, including pension, health, disability, and severance claims.

Read on to learn about (1) whether a plan administrator can get hit with statutory penalties for not producing administrative service agreements upon request (Bill H. v. Anthem); (2) a judge refusing to reconsider her dismissal of a challenge to Alcoa’s offloading of billions in pension risk to annuity company Athene (Camire v. Alcoa); (3) the latest in a series of cases addressing the legality of tobacco surcharge provisions in health plans (Noel v. PepsiCo); (4) the Fifth Circuit’s rejection of a claim for benefits under the Anadarko change of control severance plan (Miller v. Anadarko), creating an arguable circuit split; (5) the dismissal of yet another lawsuit against a health insurer by medical provider Rowe Plastic Surgery (Rowe Plastic Surgery v. Anthem); and last, but not least, (6) the end of an ESOP breach of fiduciary duty case resulting in an award of $11,029.50 in damages…accompanied by $2.36 million in attorneys’ fees (Robertson v. Argent Trust).

Of course, there’s more in the event these teasers do not whet your appetite. We’ll see you next week.

Below is a summary of this past week’s notable ERISA decisions by subject matter and jurisdiction.

Attorneys’ Fees

Fifth Circuit

Catalani v. Catalani, No. 5:25-CV-01585-JKP, 2026 WL 526722 (W.D. Tex. Feb. 25, 2026) (Judge Jason Pulliam). This is an interpleader action concerning the distribution of assets from the B. Catalani, Inc. Employees’ Profit Sharing Plan. (Fun fact: B. Catalani is a Texas produce supplier whose registered trademark slogan is “Let-tuce Supply You.”) Dan Catalani, a participant in the plan, passed away in 2024, leaving behind his wife, Anna Catalani, and two daughters, Allison and Amanda Catalani. Shortly before his death, Dan submitted a beneficiary designation form to the plan in which he designated Allison and Amanda as beneficiaries, each to receive fifty percent of the remaining amount in his account. At issue was whether the Qualified Joint Survivor Annuity (QJSA) rules in ERISA applied. If they did, the designation would not control and Anna would receive fifty percent while Allison and Amanda would receive twenty-five percent each. According to the three family members, they contacted the plan before the lawsuit was filed and asked for time to discuss an amicable resolution in an effort to avoid litigation. They were eventually able to agree on a 50/25/25 distribution, as contemplated by QJSA rules. However, before they could finalize the agreement, the plan and its trustees allegedly jumped the gun, filed this interpleader action, naming the three family members as competing claimants, and deposited the funds at issue with the court. Because the family had agreed on the allocation of funds, they filed a motion to enter final judgment. Meanwhile, plaintiffs filed a motion for attorney’s fees, seeking $107,000. The court held a hearing in which it made an “oral pronouncement of an award of costs and attorney’s fees to Plaintiffs in the amount of $10,000.00,” but in this order, after reviewing Fifth Circuit authorities on the issue, the court “reconsidered its pronouncement.” First, the court noted that plaintiffs admitted they were “seeking ‘more than the fees [they] incurred in drafting the Interpleader and Declaratory Action’”; instead, they sought “all of the fees [they] have incurred in trying to resolve this conflict.” Furthermore, and more importantly, the court found that plaintiffs were “partially to blame” for the litigation. The reason there was a dispute over whether the QJSA rules applied was because the plan administrator “missed the box” it was supposed to check during a 2006 amendment and restatement of the plan which would have applied the QJSA rules. As a result, “the Court finds Plaintiffs initiated litigation that, at its base, simply required the untangling of Plaintiffs’ own errors. Because Plaintiffs’ actions ‘are in part responsible for causing this litigation,’ rewarding their endeavors with costs and attorney’s fees is inappropriate here.” Finally, the court noted that “Plaintiffs’ counsel did not demonstrate to the Court’s satisfaction that it is a disinterested stakeholder,” as required under Fifth Circuit precedent. Plaintiffs stated that part of the reason they brought the action was because they wanted “to make sure that there’s no exposure” to the trustees and the plan. The court did not “find it necessary to determine the degree to which Plaintiffs are disinterested stakeholders,” but merely noted the contradiction “for any reviewing court.” As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to enter final judgment reflecting their agreement to the 50/25/25 disbursement, and denied plaintiffs’ motion for fees and costs.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

Noel v. PepsiCo, Inc., No. 24-CV-7516 (CS), 2026 WL 558118 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 27, 2026) (Judge Cathy Seibel). Krista Noel is an employee of Frito-Lay, a subsidiary of PepsiCo, and is a participant in PepsiCo’s ERISA-governed health plan. The plan imposes a tobacco surcharge of on participants who indicate during enrollment that they used tobacco in the previous six months. If participants complete a four-week tobacco cessation program between May 1 and November 30, they are exempt from the surcharge for the following plan year. If completed later, the surcharge is removed prospectively, but no reimbursement is provided for the period before completion. Noel filed this putative class action against PepsiCo and related defendants, alleging that the tobacco surcharge is unlawful because participants who complete the program mid-year do not receive retroactive reimbursement for surcharges already paid, violating ERISA’s requirement that participants receive the “full reward.” Noel also claimed that defendants failed to communicate to participants the availability of a reasonable alternative standard and breached their fiduciary duty by implementing the unlawful program and using proceeds to offset their contributions to the plan. Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim. The court addressed jurisdiction first, examining whether Noel had standing to bring her claims. Defendants contended that the time limitations she challenged “never actually affected” her because of the specific timing of her participation and her spouse’s non-participation in the program. Defendants further contended that Noel could not challenge the allegedly deficient notices because she completed the program even though the notices never changed, thus there was no traceable injury. The court was unimpressed by defendants’ arguments, noting that their facts “do not contradict Plaintiff’s allegation that she paid a surcharge that she contends was unlawful. This allegation suffices to establish a concrete harm for standing purposes… Plaintiff need not allege that she was specifically impacted by the elements of the Ex Program that rendered it noncompliant; the mere fact that Defendants required her to pay a surcharge without offering a compliant program suffices to establish that her injury is traceable to Defendants’ unlawful conduct.” The same rationale supported Noel’s standing on her breach of fiduciary duty claim as well. However, the court ruled that Noel did not have standing to seek injunctive or prospective relief because she failed to demonstrate a likelihood of future injury. Moving on to the merits of Noel’s claims, the court noted that the term “full reward” was not defined by ERISA or its regulations, but ruled that even if it accepted Noel’s interpretation of that term – i.e. requiring “the full amount across the entire Plan year” – the plan satisfied this requirement. “Defendants explicitly allowed participants to avoid the surcharge entirely by completing the Ex Program within the designated period during the previous year… Because ERISA only requires employers to provide one opportunity per year for participants to qualify for the reward under the program…Defendants’ program is compliant even assuming that they are required to remove the entire annual surcharge in order to remit the ‘full reward[.]’” The court dismissed Noel’s claims regarding inadequate notification on the same grounds; the notifications could not be illegal if the program it described was legal. Finally, the court dismissed Noel’s breach of fiduciary duty claim, ruling that defendants were performing a settlor, not a fiduciary, function in designing the allegedly deficient plan. Noel argued that defendants engaged in fiduciary acts by carrying out their duties in administering the plan, but this distinction was “illusory…[t]here can be no breach of fiduciary duty where an ERISA plan is implemented according to its written, nondiscretionary terms[.]” Nor was the court convinced by Noel’s argument that defendants used the tobacco surcharge “to offset their own obligations to contribute to the Plan.” The court noted that Noel brought this claim on behalf of the plan under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2), and it was “unclear how this conduct could have caused injury to the Plan, as opposed to the individuals from whom the surcharge was collected,” because “[t]he amount contributed to the Plan would seemingly be the same, regardless of whether the contributions were coming from Defendants or tobacco-using participants.” As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss in its entirety, and declined to grant leave to amend, noting that Noel had already amended once and did not request further amendment.

Ninth Circuit

Robertson v. Argent Trust Co., No. CV-21-01711-PHX-DWL, 2026 WL 508808 (D. Ariz. Feb. 20, 2026) (Judge Dominic W. Lanza). Plaintiff Shana Robertson brought this case as a putative class action against the Argent Trust Company, claiming that the company breached its fiduciary duties and engaged in prohibited transactions in its administration of the Isagenix Worldwide, Inc. Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP). Argent scored an early win in the case when the court granted its motion to compel arbitration. Robertson had argued that the arbitration provision in the plan was unconscionable under Arizona law and void under the effective vindication doctrine because it restricted her rights under ERISA, but the court disagreed and found the provision enforceable. (Your ERISA Watch reported on this decision in our August 3, 2022 edition.) But be careful what you wish for; it was all downhill from there for Argent. The court denied Argent’s request for attorney’s fees for winning its motion to compel, lifted the stay temporarily to allow Robertson to add eight defendants, and then Robertson prevailed in arbitration in June of 2025 after a five-day hearing. The arbitration panel ordered Argent and the selling shareholder trusts to pay Robertson $11,029.50 in damages, $2,359,909 in attorneys’ fees, and $132,310.97 in costs. Robertson moved to confirm these awards. In September of 2025 the court denied Robertson’s motion because it desired more information about the basis for the underlying awards. Robertson provided that information in a new motion, while the trusts, joined by Argent, filed a motion to vacate the awards. The trusts argued that the arbitration panel exceeded its power under the Federal Arbitration Act by “exercis[ing] jurisdiction over an entity lacking the legal capacity to be a party to the proceedings,” and “ignor[ing] settled principles of trust law requiring that actions involving common law trusts be brought against the trustee as the proper legal representative of the trust.” The trusts also argued that they “were not parties to the arbitration agreement” because they were nonsignatories. Addressing the second argument first, the court agreed with Robertson that the trusts were bound by the agreement under the assumption doctrine, under which a nonsignatory “may be bound by an arbitration clause if subsequent conduct indicates that the party is assuming the obligation to arbitrate.” The court found that the trusts’ “conduct demonstrated a clear intent to arbitrate Plaintiff’s ERISA claim” because they “actively participated in the arbitration proceeding,” “retained separate counsel,” “participated in a five-day hearing,” “offered merits-based defenses to Plaintiff’s ERISA claim that were distinct from Argent’s merits-based defenses,” and “failed to submit evidence that they ever objected to the Panel’s jurisdiction over them due to their status as nonsignatories.” Under these facts, the court ruled, “This is a classic case of assumption.” The court then discussed the trusts’ second argument. The trusts contended that they were “not the real parties in interest and…lacked the capacity to be sued.” Robertson pointed out that ERISA’s definition of “party in interest” includes a trust, and noted that hundreds of reported cases included trusts as a defendant. The court ruled that the arbitration panel did not show “manifest disregard for the law” in deciding against the trusts on this issue. Instead, “the Panel believed the relevant decisional law supported Plaintiff’s position; also viewed the relevant statutory provisions as supporting Plaintiff’s position; and then proceeded to apply what it believed was the correct understanding of the law to the facts.” The trusts may have disagreed with this outcome, but “‘[i]t is not enough for petitioners to show that the panel committed an error – or even a serious error”…‘[p]arties engaging in arbitration may trade greater certainty of correct legal decisions by federal courts for the efficiency and flexibility of arbitration, but that is their choice to make.’” As a result, the court granted Robertson’s motion to confirm the arbitration award and denied the trusts’ and Argent’s motion to vacate. Judgment was entered in Robertson’s favor and the case was terminated.

Disability Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Tobin v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:24-CV-1012, 2026 WL 508810 (W.D. Mich. Feb. 13, 2026) (Judge Jane M. Beckering). Mary Rose Tobin was an account executive for a marketing agency in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Her position required her to make complex judgments, lead communication projects, maintain client relationships, manage project scopes and budgets, and work extended hours. In January of 2022 Tobin experienced a severe headache that persisted despite various treatments, including a trip to the emergency room. Eventually, she was diagnosed with “acute intractable headache” and was forced to stop working. Tobin submitted a claim for benefits under her employer’s ERISA-governed short-term disability benefit plan, which was paid in full by the plan’s administrator, Unum Life Insurance Company of America. Tobin then sought benefits under her employer’s long-term disability plan and a waiver of premium under her life insurance plan, both insured and administered by Unum as well. Unum initially approved these claims as of April 2022, but terminated them in March of 2023 “in light of updated information that it had received concerning Tobin’s medical status.” Tobin appealed both denials, submitting additional medical records and vocational assessments, but to no avail. Tobin thus brought this action and filed a motion for judgment on the administrative record. The court reviewed the case de novo, as stipulated by the parties. The court found that Tobin satisfied her burden of showing that her sickness precluded her from performing her duties as an account executive. The court relied on statements from Tobin’s physicians, who had personally examined her, found no evidence of malingering, and opined that she was disabled due to ongoing complaints of daily headache, nausea, fatigue, lightheadedness, brain fog, and decreased concentration. The court also credited evidence from a neuropsychological evaluation which corroborated Tobin’s struggles with sustained attention and concentration. The court concluded that these symptoms and findings supported the conclusion that Tobin’s symptoms precluded her from returning to her job. The court also addressed Unum’s evidence and found it less compelling. The court criticized Unum’s medical reviewers for relying heavily on the lack of a definitive etiology for Tobin’s headaches and for dismissing her symptoms as self-reported. The court emphasized that ERISA does not require a plaintiff to show a particular etiology to prove disability and that the LTD policy expressly allowed for self-reported symptoms for conditions like headaches. The court further criticized Unum’s file reviewers for second-guessing the credibility determinations made by Tobin’s treating physicians, who had directly observed her and described her symptomology as reliable and genuine. The court also noted that Unum’s file reviewers failed to conduct an independent medical examination, which “raised questions” under Sixth Circuit authority about the thoroughness and accuracy of their conclusions. The court concluded that the weight afforded to Unum’s file reviews should be heavily discounted due to these deficiencies. It was not a total victory for Tobin, however. The court found that Tobin did not satisfy her burden of showing that her sickness precluded her from performing “any gainful occupation,” which was the definition of disability for the premium waiver benefit under the life insurance policy, and for the LTD policy after 24 months of benefit payments. The court ruled that while Tobin’s medical and vocational experts provided substantial evidence regarding her inability to work as an account executive, they did not offer similar support for the conclusion that she was unable to work in any gainful occupation. In doing so, the court gave “significant weight” to the neuropsychological report, which concluded that “Tobin may be able to work, even if she cannot perform the highly skilled and demanding work of an account executive.” As a result, the court granted Tobin’s motion for judgment on the administrative record, but only in part. The court ordered the parties to meet and confer and submit a joint proposed judgment consistent with the court’s ruling and addressing any potential attorney’s fee award.

Ninth Circuit

Guy v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 2:24-CV-00293-JCG, 2026 WL 539534 (D. Ariz. Feb. 20, 2026) (Judge Jennifer Choe-Groves). Carla Guy worked as an intensive care unit registered nurse for HonorHealth, and was a participant in HonorHealth’s ERISA-governed employee long-term disability benefit plan, insured and administered by Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company. Guy experienced various medical conditions and symptoms from 2018 to 2019, including thyroid removal surgery in March 2019. She stopped working in March of 2020 due to “severe fatigue, brain fog, and joint pain” and submitted a claim for benefits to Reliance. Reliance initially denied Guy’s claim on the ground that she retained the ability to perform the material duties of her job. On appeal, Reliance’s two reviewing physicians gave different opinions. Reliance’s psychiatrist concluded that Guy was impaired and unable to work through September of 2022, but not thereafter. Reliance’s internal medicine specialist concluded there was no documentation of restriction or impairment from March 2020 onward. Reliance ultimately concluded that Guy was disabled, but only by mental illness, and thus the plan’s limitation on benefits for mental illness disabilities applied. Guy filed this action under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) and the parties submitted briefs on the merits. The parties agreed that the applicable standard of review was abuse of discretion because the plan gave Reliance discretionary authority to determine benefit eligibility, but disagreed as to whether Reliance’s structural conflict of interest as benefit evaluator and payor should serve to reduce any deference owed under that standard. The court determined it would “consider each of Plaintiff’s claims independently and in totality to determine if Defendant abused its discretion in denying Plaintiff’s claim.” The court ruled that Reliance (a) improperly required objective evidence to support Guy’s chronic fatigue symptoms, (b) disregarded or selectively ignored medical evidence regarding Guy’s physical condition, (c) inadequately investigated Guy’s claim by not conducting an independent medical examination, (d) “relied on an inaccurate assessment of Plaintiff’s occupation” by categorizing it as sedentary, (e) “gave little consideration to the Social Security Administration’s disability decision” even though “it was substantive information that Plaintiff submitted for review,” and (f) “fail[ed] to view Plaintiff’s conditions and symptoms in the aggregate,” instead “only looking at the symptoms and conditions present in the medical evidence singularly,” which meant that Reliance “failed to consider the possibility that the combined effect of Plaintiff’s conditions was disabling.” As a result, the court concluded that Reliance abused its discretion and reversed its benefit denial decision. The court further concluded that Guy was entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs and ordered her to file a motion in that regard with supporting documentation.

Talley v. Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co., No. 8:24-CV-01860-FWS-DFM, 2026 WL 523704 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 25, 2026) (Judge Fred W. Slaughter). Edward Talley worked as a project team leader at Johnson Controls, Inc., where he supervised mechanics, and was a participant in Johnson’s employee long-term disability benefit plan. In 2019 he submitted a claim for benefits under the plan, citing cognitive loss, brain dysfunction, major depressive disorder, and memory loss. Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company, the insurer of the plan, approved Talley’s disability claim based on a mental disorder, which subjected it to a 24-month limitation on benefit payments. The Social Security Administration (SSA) also found Talley disabled and awarded him benefits, citing neurocognitive disorder, depression, and cervical degenerative disc disorder. In 2021, Provident Life reminded Talley that his claim was subject to the mental disorder limitation, but Talley disagreed. Provident Life agreed to pay benefits beyond the 24-month period under a reservation of rights while further evaluating his claim, but ultimately it terminated Talley’s benefits in January of 2022. Talley appealed, arguing in part that his job required demanding physical tasks like climbing ladders and lifting. However, Provident Life disagreed, finding that these tasks were not essential duties of his occupation, and denied Talley’s appeal. Talley then brought this action under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), and the case proceeded to a one-day trial, after which the court issued this ruling. The court agreed with the parties that the default de novo standard of review applied. Under this standard, the court found that “Plaintiff’s evidence persuasive in demonstrating that he is disabled in some form.” However, it also found that Talley did not adequately demonstrate that his condition was not covered by the 24-month mental disorder limitation. The court stated that the SSA’s disability determination “provides limited support” for Talley because it was based on a different standard, the record before the SSA was more limited, and the SSA “described Plaintiff’s physical functional capacity which appears sufficient to sufficiently perform his job.” The court also noted the lack of evidence certified by a physician confirming an organic cognitive impairment that would evade the 24-month limitation. The court further found Provident Life’s evidence, which included multiple medical reviews, persuasive. These evaluations suggested that Talley’s symptoms were of psychological origin and did not support a diagnosis of a neurodegenerative condition. Physical exams by Talley’s own physicians showed “normal physical capabilities,” further supporting the conclusion that Talley was not entitled to further benefits. As a result, the court concluded that Talley “fails to provide sufficient evidence linking his purported medical condition to the performance of his job duties such that he would be disabled under the Policy, after the 24-month mental disorder limitation period expired.” The court further stated that even if it accepted Talley’s description of his job duties, this was insufficient to demonstrate disability under the policy. Thus, the court entered judgment in Provident Life’s favor.

ERISA Preemption

Fifth Circuit

Ardoin v. Williams, No. CV 22-865-JWD-SDJ, 2026 WL 560358 (M.D. La. Feb. 27, 2026) (Judge John W. deGravelles). Marsha Ardoin is an employee of Industrial Fabrics, Inc. who wanted to buy life insurance for her spouse, John Ardoin. Through her employer, Marsha requested coverage from Russia Williams, an agent for HUB International Gulf South, which was a licensed insurance broker for Southern National Life Insurance Company (SNLIC). With Williams’ assistance, Marsha thought she had arranged insurance for John with SNLIC that would go into effect on January 1, 2022. She alleges that premiums were deducted from her paycheck in January of 2022 reflecting that arrangement. However, John passed away suddenly on January 25, 2022. Williams told Marsha that she needed to complete an evidence of insurability (EOI) form, “despite Williams’[s] previous representations that [Plaintiff] had already completed everything necessary to obtain the requested insurance coverage.” Marsha did so and was told by Williams that the form would be backdated and effective January 1. As you might expect, SNLIC saw things differently when Marsha filed her life insurance claim; it denied the claim because the required EOI form was not timely submitted. Marsha filed this action in state court against Williams, HUB, and SNLIC asserting state law claims for relief. SNLIC responded by removing the action to federal court on ERISA preemption grounds, and then filed a motion for summary judgment “on two issues: (1) whether the Policy ‘vests the administrator with discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits and/or construe and interpret the terms’ of the Policy, and (2) ‘whether ERISA preempts all state law claims related to the [Policy].’” The court first discussed whether the policy was an ERISA plan, and expressed frustration because while Marsha did not dispute that it was an ERISA plan (instead she focused on whether ERISA preempted her claims), “neither party has asserted, as an undisputed fact, that the Policy is an ‘employee welfare benefit plan’ within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1).” The court “gleans only that the Policy is voluntary and that Industrial Fabrics, Inc. collected premiums and remitted them to SNLIC,” which was not enough information to know whether the policy fell within ERISA’s “safe harbor” provision. As a result, because the burden of proving ERISA-related issues rested with SNLIC as the moving party, the court denied SNLIC’s motion, although it “will allow SNLIC to re-urge the motion. At this time, the Court will not decide whether the Policy vests SNLIC with discretionary authority or whether ERISA preempts any/all of Plaintiff’s state law claims.” However, the court discussed preemption anyway in an effort to assist the parties with future briefing, requesting that they be more specific regarding which claims were preempted, which defendants’ actions were being challenged, which of Marsha’s claims “involve principal ERISA entities” and “require interpretation of the Policy’s provisions,” and how her claims “relate to” an ERISA plan. “In the event that SNLIC reurges its motion, it will be incumbent upon SNLIC to specify which state law claims are preempted and why – that is, ‘to put flesh on [the] bones’ of its arguments.”

Ninth Circuit

Damiano v. The Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., No. 25-CV-09628-NC, 2026 WL 539619 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 26, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Nathanael M. Cousins). Rose Marie Damiano alleges that, in the middle of a marital dissolution action with her husband Gopal Vasudevan, she served a subpoena on Lockheed Martin to determine the extent of Vasudevan’s insurance and confirm her beneficiary status. Lockheed Martin allegedly referred her to Prudential, which responded that it had no documents related to Vasudevan. After Vasudevan died, Damiano discovered two life insurance policies issued by Prudential which were part of employee welfare benefit plans sponsored by Lockheed Martin. Damiano alleges that Prudential paid benefits from these policies – in the amounts of $1,889,970.14 and $237,103.66 – to Vasudevan’s named beneficiaries in violation of California Family Code § 2040 (which creates an automatic restraining order regarding, among other things, “changing the beneficiaries of insurance”). Damiano filed this action, asserting state law claims for fraud and negligent misrepresentation, alleging that “had Prudential responded to the subpoena properly, she would have been on notice of this violation and would have been in position to seek relief from the court.” Prudential moved to dismiss, contending that (1) Damiano’s claims were preempted by ERISA, (2) her claims were barred by California Insurance Code § 10172 (discharging life insurers of liability if they have properly paid a claim without receiving prior notice of another claim), and (3) Damiano failed to specifically plead all essential elements of her claims as required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b). The court did not reach Prudential’s second and third arguments because it agreed with the first, ruling that both of Damiano’s claims were preempted by ERISA. The court noted that there was no dispute that “Vasudevan’s two life insurance policies were part of employee welfare benefit plans sponsored by Lockheed Martin.” Thus, the only issue was whether Damiano’s claims “related to” the plans; if so, they were preempted under 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). The court ruled that they did because “[t]he crux of Damiano’s claims of fraud and negligent misrepresentation is that Prudential intentionally or negligently failed to disclose the existence of Vasudevan’s policies that were included in the ERISA plans when it stated that it had no information on Vasudevan.” Thus, “but for Vasudevan’s ERISA plans, Prudential would not have had an obligation to disclose the plan’s existence and Plaintiff would not be suing under state law… Moreover, her damages for these claims depend on the ERISA plans’ existence and beneficiaries… Thus, the ERISA plans play a critical factor in establishing liability[.]” As a result, the court ruled that Damiano’s claims were preempted, and granted Prudential’s motion to dismiss. The ruling was with prejudice, because “amendment would be futile.” Damiano was not a participant or beneficiary of the ERISA plans, and thus had no standing to reallege a claim under ERISA.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Connor v. Meta Platforms, Inc. Health & Welfare Benefit Plan, No. 3:25-CV-01836-SI, 2026 WL 524167 (D. Or. Feb. 25, 2026) (Judge Michael H. Simon). Emma Connor is a transgender woman and an employee of Meta Platforms, Inc. She submitted a pre-determination request under Meta’s Health and Welfare Benefit Plan to its administrator, Meritain Health, for gender-affirming surgical procedures, including clavicle shortening, scapular spine shaving, and rib remodeling. Meritain denied this request, determining that the procedures were not covered by the plan. Connor appealed but received no response, so she filed this action, alleging entitlement to plan benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). Defendant filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that Connor lacked standing and failed to state a claim. Addressing standing first, the court quickly disposed of the issue by noting that Connor was a participant in the plan, submitted a claim, and was denied benefits, and thus she had suffered a cognizable harm that could be remedied by her claim. The court then turned to whether Connor had adequately stated a claim, which required her to “identify a provision of the Plan that would entitle her to…benefits.” The plan’s “Transgender Services” section included coverage for “Medically Necessary Gender Affirmation Treatment,” provided pre-determination was obtained. Connor cited the “reconstructive and complementary procedures” subsection as the basis for her entitlement to coverage, while defendant argued that the procedures she sought were not covered because they were “not included in a series of tables at the end of the Transgender Services section and because they are not included in the ‘Aetna Guidelines.’” The court noted that the plan’s language suggested that it covered procedures not explicitly listed in the tables, and that “it is difficult…to see how clavicle shortening, scapular spine shaving, and rib remodeling are not ‘reconstructive procedures intended to feminize the body,’” which was a covered category in the plan. As for the plan’s pre-determination requirement, the court ruled that Connor satisfied it by submitting a letter from a qualified health professional documenting her gender dysphoria and capacity to consent to treatment. The court questioned defendant’s reliance on the Aetna Guidelines on this issue, noting that “the section on pre-determination requirements for those procedures does not mention the Aetna Guidelines. This omission calls into question whether the Aetna Guidelines even apply to reconstructive and complementary procedures.” Finally, although defendant contended that the plan excluded coverage of the requested procedures, the court found that the plan and guidelines were ambiguous, and thus “many material questions must be answered to determine whether the requested procedures are covered or excluded.” Thus, “Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff and giving Plaintiff the benefit of all reasonable inferences, the Court concludes that Plaintiff has stated a claim.” As a result, defendant’s motion to dismiss was denied.

Dancekelly v. Deloitte LLP, No. CV 23-4101-DMG (MRWX), 2026 WL 555538 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 26, 2026) (Judge Dolly M. Gee). Tanya Dancekelly was employed by Deloitte LLP and was a participant in its ERISA-governed self-funded employee health plan, administered by UnitedHealthcare. Dancekelly had a history of morbid obesity and underwent laparoscopic band surgery in 2010. She experienced complications with her lap band, including vomiting, chest pain, and acid reflux, and thus in 2020 she underwent three medical procedures: a hiatal hernia repair, a lap band removal, and a sleeve gastrectomy. United pre-authorized the procedures but later denied full reimbursement, claiming the hiatal hernia repair was incidental to the sleeve gastrectomy. Dancekelly and her providers appealed, but the denial was upheld, and thus she filed this action under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) seeking plan benefits. The case proceeded to a half-day bench trial after which the court issued these findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court began by ruling that the correct standard of review was abuse of discretion because the plan “unambiguously vests” United with discretion to make benefit determinations, interpret the plan, and make factual determinations. However, the court reduced its deference to United’s decisions because of procedural irregularities. Specifically, the court found that United failed to explain the basis for its decision with reference to plan documents or guidelines, failed to produce copies of relevant records, and did not engage in a “good faith exchange” because it did not respond appropriately to Dancekelly’s physicians’ inquiries. “Such a chaotic pattern of communication cannot be deemed a good faith exchange of information.” As for the merits, the court concluded that United’s denial of the hiatal hernia repair and partial reimbursement of the lap band removal and sleeve gastrectomy was an abuse of discretion. The court found that the hiatal hernia repair was not incidental to the sleeve gastrectomy, as it was a standalone medical condition diagnosed and confirmed prior to the procedures. Furthermore, United’s pricing determinations, which were based on determinations by Data iSight, were also an abuse of discretion because they conflicted with the plan, which required consideration of “whether the fees are competitive or whether they are restricted by geographic area[.]” The court thus ruled entirely in Dancekelly’s favor, and remanded the claim for a re-determination consistent with the court’s order.

Pension Benefit Claims

First Circuit

Angus v. Burman, No. 24-CV-328-MRD-AEM, 2026 WL 578770 (D.R.I. Mar. 2, 2026) (Judge Melissa R. DuBose). Carl Angus worked at E.W. Burman, Inc., a general contractor, for 38 years. In January of 2023, he informed Edward and Paul Burman, respectively the president and treasurer of the company, that he intended to retire and move to Portugal. He “mentioned that he wanted to cash-out his funds from the E.W. Burman Inc. Profit Sharing Plan and Trust[], an employer sponsored defined-contribution Plan, as soon as possible.” Angus received $1,356,369.31 from the plan on July 21, 2023, based on the account value as of December 31, 2022. However, Angus was not happy. He contends that his account should have been valued as of December 31, 2023, which would have resulted in over $170,000 in additional funds due to 2023 market performance. Angus’ claim and appeal were denied, and thus he brought this action against Edward, Paul, and the company alleging claims under ERISA for (1) benefits owed pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B); (2) breach of fiduciary duty pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2)-(a)(3); and (3) violation of ERISA’s anti-inurement rule pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1103(c)(1). The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment which were decided in this order. The court began with the standard of review. Angus contended that it should be de novo because, even though the plan granted defendants discretionary authority to make benefit determinations, his claim was “fraught by procedural irregularities.” The court acknowledged that defendants did not produce certain emails during Angus’ claim and appeal, but this did not deprive him of a “full and fair review,” and thus the court applied the arbitrary and capricious standard of review. This deferential standard did not save the day for defendants, however. The court ruled that Angus was a “Terminated Participant,” not a “retiree,” under the plan, and therefore pursuant to the plan’s rules, the account valuation and payout should have occurred on or after December 31, 2023, not 2022. The court rejected defendants’ argument that the plan allowed Angus to “elect” an earlier distribution, and instead interpreted the plan to mean that Angus could only elect to delay his distribution, not advance it before a date scheduled by the plan. Furthermore, Angus’ request for benefits “as soon as possible” was irrelevant. “[N]othing in the record supports that he and the Defendants agreed to change the terms of the Plan to enable his distribution to take place mid-year,” and even if such an agreement existed, “ERISA plans must be in writing and cannot be modified orally.” Furthermore, such an agreement would not be considered because it would “cause conflict with the clear and unambiguous Plan provisions.” As a result, “the Administrator’s decision is not supported by substantial evidence,” and the court granted Angus summary judgment as to his first count for relief, noting that it did not need to rule on the other two claims because they were brought in the alternative. The court ordered the parties to submit a briefing schedule to address an appropriate remedy.

Seventh Circuit

Skowronski v. Briggs, No. 22 C 07359, 2026 WL 560033 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 27, 2026) (Judge John J. Tharp, Jr.). Steven Skowronski was a participant in the IBM 401(k) Plus Plan. In 2020, he designated his children, Sean Skowronski and Megan Kirchner, and his romantic partner, Sandra Jensen Briggs, as one-third equal beneficiaries of his account. At that time, Steven and Briggs were not in a legally recognized partnership, but about a month later they entered into a civil union. Steven died in 2022, and the plan’s committee determined that Briggs, because she was Steven’s civil union partner at the time of his death, qualified as his “spouse” under the plan. As a result, all assets in Steven’s 401(k) account were transferred to an account in Briggs’ name. Sean and Kirchner objected and initiated this action against Briggs and various IBM defendants, seeking a declaratory judgment upholding the January 2020 beneficiary designations. Briggs and the IBM defendants filed motions to dismiss. The court noted that the parties disagreed regarding the appropriate standard of review, but because “the validity of the beneficiary determination depends on whether the legal definition of ‘spouse’ in Illinois extends to civil union partners…this Court proceeds de novo.” The court then tackled both motions, starting with Briggs’. “The only issue in contention is whether a civil union partner is a spouse under the terms of the Plan… This Court concludes that the answer is yes.” The court explained that the plan’s definition of “spouse” incorporated Illinois law, and the legal definition of “spouse” under Illinois law “extends to civil union partners.” Sean and Kirchner argued that Illinois law did not apply because the benefits at issue were governed by federal law, and urged the court to follow “a Department of Labor Technical release explaining that the terms ‘‘spouse’ and ‘marriage’…do not include individuals in…a domestic partnership or a civil union’ as those terms appear in ERISA and the tax code.” However, the court ruled that the plan language controlled, and here “the Plan’s definition of spouse explicitly looks to ‘the marriage laws of the state…of a Participant’s residence.” The court then turned to IBM’s motion and quickly granted it for the same reasons. “As discussed above, the IBM defendants did not err in determining that Briggs was the sole beneficiary. Because they did not breach any fiduciary duty to the plaintiffs, dismissal of all claims against them is proper.” Finally, the court rejected Sean and Kirchner’s request for attorney’s fees against IBM because they did not achieve “some degree of success on the merits.”

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Fifth Circuit

Giusti v. Alliant Ins. Servs., Inc., No. CV 25-1347, 2026 WL 538286 (E.D. La. Feb. 26, 2026) (Judge Lance M. Africk). Ernest J. Giusti, III brought this putative class action on behalf of “franchise owners and employees” of Goosehead Insurance against Alliant Insurance Services, Inc., United Health Group, Inc., United Healthcare, Inc., and Assured Benefits Administrators, Inc., alleging mismanagement of Goosehead’s employee healthcare plan. Giusti alleges that he and his family members, who were plan beneficiaries, paid premiums, but defendants allegedly “failed to pay and/or timely pay in accordance with the plan.” This led to medical providers withdrawing care, contact from collection agencies, and out-of-pocket payments to continue receiving care. Then, Giusti alleges, the plan was suddenly canceled without warning, leaving unpaid claims outstanding “with no mechanism for an administrative appeal or remedy.” As a result, Giusti has alleged claims under ERISA and various Louisiana laws, including breach of contract and unjust enrichment. Defendants filed motions to dismiss, arguing that (1) the complaint should be dismissed for impermissible “group” or “shotgun” pleading, (2) the complaint failed to state a claim under ERISA, (3) ERISA preempts the state law claims, and (4) the class allegations should be stricken because the proposed class is not ascertainable. First, the court ruled that Giusti’s complaint did not amount to impermissible group or shotgun pleading. Giusti admitted that “he does not specifically allege the actions each defendant took that caused or contributed to the untimely payments and non-payments of his approved benefits.” However, he argued that his complaint gave fair notice of his claims, and that the responsibility each defendant had in the denials of his claims was hidden from him. The court gave Giusti the benefit of the doubt because his complaint “explains the roles and interconnectedness of the defendants,” and was “sufficient to give defendants notice of the nature of plaintiff’s claims and the grounds upon which they rest, such that defendants can adequately respond and defend against the claims.” The court then addressed Giusti’s ERISA claims. The court noted that Giusti sought relief pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1) or, in the alternative, § 1132(a)(3). Defendants contended that they were not proper parties under the (a)(1) claim because the plan named a non-party, HPS Advisory Services, LLC, as the plan administrator and fiduciary. However, “whether a defendant is a fiduciary or plan administrator such that it is a proper defendant pursuant to § 1132(a)(1)(B) does not turn only on whether the defendants are so named in the Plan, but includes an inquiry into whether that defendant exercised ‘actual control’ over the claims process.” Furthermore, the court noted that the plan sections cited by defendants on this issue did not address the payment of approved claims, over which defendants may have had fiduciary control. Thus, the court denied the motion to dismiss as to Giusti’s (a)(1) claim. As for Giusti’s (a)(3) claim, the court was confused by his allegations: “at some points, plaintiff’s amended complaint seems to seek the benefits owed to him and the other members of the putative class from the Plan that were deemed covered by the Plan but were never dispersed. At other points, plaintiff’s alleged harm seems to include damages associated with defendants’ prolonged retention of benefits already approved and owed to him and his amended complaint could be read to seek equitable relief of such allegedly improper, prolonged retention.” The court thus ruled that “[a]mbiguities as to the relief sought by plaintiff” made it impossible to determine whether Giusti had a valid (a)(3) claim. The court noted that the plan had been terminated, which suggested that the (a)(1) claim might not provide adequate relief and that (a)(3) equitable relief might thus be justified. Because of the “lack of clarity in the amended complaint and lack of briefing by the parties on the issue of the relief requested and recoverable by plaintiff given the alleged harm and cancellation of the Plan,” the court decided “it is appropriate to deny the motion to dismiss and allow plaintiff one additional opportunity to cure this, and other, potentially dispositive ambiguities in a second amended complaint.” Thus, the court did not reach defendants’ other arguments regarding ERISA preemption and striking the class allegations from the complaint, so we will likely see another motion to dismiss and another ruling in the future.

D.C. Circuit

Camire v. Alcoa USA Corp., No. CV 24-1062 (LLA), 2026 WL 508003 (D.D.C. Feb. 24, 2026) (Judge Loren L. AliKhan). This is a putative class action by employees of Alcoa USA Corporation challenging Alcoa’s decision to transfer approximately $2.79 billion of its pension risk to Athene Annuity and Life Co. and Athene Annuity & Life Assurance Company of New York between 2018 and 2022 through the purchase of several group annuities. Plaintiffs contend that Athene’s annuities are invested in risky assets and thus the transfers place their benefits in jeopardy, violating statutory and fiduciary duties under ERISA. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss which the court granted in March of 2025. The court invoked the Supreme Court’s 2020 decision in Thole v. U.S. Bank N.A. in ruling that plaintiffs did not have standing to bring their action because they had not adequately pled that their benefits were at “imminent risk of harm.” The court reasoned that, in order to suffer harm, a long chain of events would have to happen, including Athene’s collapse, resulting in catastrophic losses that could not be mitigated, an inability to secure alternative funding, and then losses that exceeded the amount insured by state regulators. For the court, this series of events was too “highly attenuated” to establish imminent risk, and thus it granted defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of standing. Before the court here was plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) in which they sought leave to file a second amended complaint under Rule 15(a). The court addressed the legal standard first – should it use the Rule 59(e) test or the Rule 15(a) test in deciding the motion? Citing D.C. Circuit authority, the court agreed with defendants that Rule 59 applied because it had dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint without prejudice. The court explained that relief under Rule 59 is “disfavored” and “extraordinary,” and that plaintiffs did not meet their burden. Plaintiffs “do not contend that an intervening change of controlling law has occurred since the court’s dismissal, that new evidence has become available, or that amending the judgment is necessary to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice.” Furthermore, plaintiffs did not “argue that any statutes of limitations or other barriers would prevent them from filing a new action after this court’s dismissal without prejudice.” As a result, plaintiffs “do not need any relief from this Court in order to file the Proposed Amended Complaint in a separate action in this judicial district.” Thus, the court denied plaintiffs’ reconsideration motion, and they must now decide whether they want to try again with their new complaint in a new civil action.

Provider Claims

Second Circuit

Rowe Plastic Surgery of N.J., LLC v. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Colorado, No. 23-CV-4536 (RER) (JAM), 2026 WL 540767 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 26, 2026) (Judge Ramón E. Reyes, Jr.). Rowe Plastic Surgery is back, having filed this action against yet another insurance company, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Colorado, alleging state law claims for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, and fraudulent inducement. As the court noted, and as loyal readers of this publication are aware, Rowe has filed “30 nearly identical lawsuits” against insurers seeking reimbursement based on telephone calls with the insurers in which Rowe was allegedly promised one rate but eventually paid something far lower. Anthem filed a motion to dismiss, and the 31st time was not the charm for Rowe. The court noted that Rowe made the same arguments in this case that it made in its other cases, which were not successful there and were not successful on appeal at the Second Circuit. Thus, “In an effort to avoid beating a very dead horse, this opinion relies on the correct and well-reasoned arguments from opinions in this District, the Southern District of New York, and the Second Circuit that have addressed essentially identical issues between Plaintiffs and various insurance providers.” First, the court ruled that Rowe’s claims were preempted by ERISA. Rowe contended that its claims were based on the telephone calls with Anthem and not the contents of the relevant benefit plans, and thus ERISA did not govern, but the court, quoting another case involving Rowe, ruled that “‘any legal duty’ [Anthem] ‘has to reimburse [Plaintiffs] arises from its obligations under the patient’s ERISA plan, and not from some separate agreement or promise,’ and thus ‘[Plaintiffs’] claims are expressly preempted by ERISA § 514(a).’” The court further found that even if some of Rowe’s claims were not preempted by ERISA, they failed to state a claim. The court ruled that (1) there was no breach of contract because the phone conversation with Anthem “did not create a contract and did not constitute a promise to pay a particular sum”; (2) there was no unjust enrichment because “the plaintiff must show that ‘the services were performed for the defendant,’ and not at the ‘behest of someone other than the defendant’”; (3) there was no promissory estoppel because “Plaintiffs do not plead a ‘clear and unambiguous promise’”; and (4) there was no fraudulent inducement because the allegations supporting this claim were “repurposed” from Rowe’s insufficient breach of contract claim. As a result, the court granted Anthem’s motion to dismiss in its entirety, with prejudice. Obviously, this was not the result Rowe wanted, but perhaps it should be thankful that this time its claims were not called “frivolous” and “ridiculous,” and it was not threatened with sanctions.

Third Circuit

SM Medical Holdings Corp. v. United Healthcare Servs., Inc., No. 25-1549 (ZNQ) (JBD), 2026 WL 540175 (D.N.J. Feb. 26, 2026) (Judge Zahid N. Quraishi). SM Medical Holdings Corporation purchased the receivables of medical provider Dynamic Medical Imaging – DMI, LLC. It then filed this action against United Healthcare Services, Inc., contending that United owed it $1,133,062.44 for medical imaging services provided by Dynamic. It alleged only one state law cause of action, for account stated, listing hundreds of sub-claims for individual patients. United filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that “(1) several sub-claims on their face relate to entities other than United; (2) [ERISA] preempts the sub-claims pertaining to ERISA; (3) the Medicare Act preempts the sub-claims pertaining to Medicare and Plaintiff failed to exhaust all administrative remedies; and (4); Plaintiff fails to plead a plausible account stated claim for the remaining sub-claims.” In a concise order, the court agreed with United across the board. Plaintiff admitted that 275 of the sub-claims involved plans not administered by United, and thus those claims were dismissed. As for ERISA, the court ruled, and plaintiff did not contest, that many of the sub-claims were governed by ERISA, and thus its state law claim was preempted as to those sub-claims. “‘Claims involving denial of benefits…require interpreting what benefits are due under the plan’ and ‘are expressly preempted’…Simply stated, the Court cannot decide Plaintiff’s claim as to the ERISA plans without analyzing and interpreting the plans at issue.” Thus, the court dismissed the ERISA-related sub-claims with prejudice. Regarding the sub-claims based on Medicare-regulated plans, the court ruled that these claims were “inextricably intertwined” with Part C of the Medicare Act, and thus they required administrative exhaustion under the Act. Plaintiff failed to allege exhaustion of administrative remedies, and thus the court dismissed these sub-claims without prejudice. Finally, the court dismissed the remaining sub-claims without prejudice because plaintiff failed to state a plausible claim for account stated. The court noted that plaintiff “includes scant factual background,” “has not sufficiently alleged any previous transactions between Dynamic and Defendant,” “has not sufficiently alleged that any agreement existed between Dynamic and Defendant,” and “has not sufficiently alleged that Defendant made any promise to pay the amount Plaintiff alleges is due.” As a result, these sub-claims were dismissed without prejudice. As a result, United’s motion to dismiss was granted in full, and plaintiff was given 30 days to file an amended complaint.

Seventh Circuit

Northwestern Memorial Healthcare v. Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield, No. 25-CV-02481, 2026 WL 562727 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 28, 2026) (Judge Andrea R. Wood). Northwestern Memorial Healthcare (NMHC) provided emergency medical services to three patients who were beneficiaries of health insurance plans administered by Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield. NMHC had a contract with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois (BCBS Illinois) that required it to treat individuals insured by any member company of the national Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, which included Highmark. In 2021 and 2022, NMHC submitted claims according to the contract totaling $220,445.11, but Highmark paid only $62,875.56. NMHC thus filed this action, asserting a claim for breach of implied contract or, alternatively, a claim for quantum meruit. Highmark moved to dismiss, arguing that the state-law claims related to one of the patients were preempted by ERISA, and that neither the breach of implied contract nor the quantum meruit claim was adequately pleaded. Highmark argued that “NMHC’s right to recover the full charges related to that Patient’s medical treatment requires interpreting and applying terms of their ERISA plan[.]” However, the court found that “there are allegations in the [complaint] that at least raise the possibility that the Patient’s state-law claims can be resolved without consulting their health plan.” The court noted Highmark’s pre-authorization for treatment, which suggested that Highmark already considered the treatment medically necessary and covered, and thus “resolving NMHC’s state-law claims as to the Patient…’would not require interpretation or application of the terms of’ that plan.” As for NMHC’s specific claims, the court granted Highmark’s motion to dismiss the breach of implied contract claim, finding that NMHC’s provision of medical care did not constitute consideration for an implied contract because NMHC was already obligated to provide such services under the BCBS Illinois contract. However, the court denied the motion to dismiss the quantum meruit claim, concluding that NMHC had sufficiently alleged that Highmark’s actions gave NMHC a reasonable expectation of payment and that Highmark benefited from the services provided. The court acknowledged the general rule precluding a quantum meruit claim against a third-party beneficiary to an express contract, but here “[n]ot only did NMHC perform non-gratuitous medical services for Highmark’s insureds on the understanding that it would be compensated consistent with the terms of the BCBS Illinois contract, but Highmark also led NMHC to reasonably believe that it would be fully paid for its services by, among other things, pre-authorizing and approving those services as medically necessary. Such allegations suffice to plead a quantum meruit claim against Highmark notwithstanding the existence of the BCBS Illinois contract.” Highmark also argued that the quantum meruit claim could not proceed because “NMHC provided its medical services for the benefit of the Patients, not Highmark.” However, the court ruled that this “ignores the [complaint’s] allegation that Highmark benefitted from NMHC treating the Patients in the following ways: improved health outcomes for the Patients resulting in lower costs for Highmark; increased customer satisfaction; and increased market share by offering Highmark’s customers access to high-quality hospitals like NMHC.” This was sufficient for the court, and thus it allowed NMHC’s quantum meruit claim to proceed.

Severance Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Karim v. RB Health (US) LLC, No. 25-14829 (SDW) (JRA), 2026 WL 578753 (D.N.J. Mar. 2, 2026) (Judge Susan D. Wigenton). Sarah Karim was a marketing analytics manager for RB Health (US) LLC in 2024 when RB told her that her employment would terminate in 2025 due to a reorganization. The notice letter told her she could apply for open positions within the company and that she would be entitled to a severance package if she did not decline a comparable position, resign, or was terminated for cause by the termination date. Karim asked about her 401(k) retirement account, and was allegedly told that employer contributions would be 100% vested for employees terminated as part of the reorganization. Karim alleges she was not offered a comparable role at RB and eventually was hired by another company. She filed this action asserting three claims against RB: “(1) violation of New Jersey’s Millville Dallas Airmotive Plant Job Loss Notification Act…(the ‘Warn Act’); (2) breach of contract to pay severance; and (3) breach of contract to vest 401(k).” RB removed the case to federal court and filed a motion to dismiss the first two claims, and a motion to stay the third claim and compel arbitration on it. The court began by denying the motion as to Karim’s Warn Act claim. RB argued that Karim was offered continued employment, and thus she did not suffer a “termination of employment” under the Warn Act.  However, the court found that Karim sufficiently alleged a termination due to reorganization without an offer of a comparable position, making her claim plausible. On Karim’s severance claim, she did not dispute that the severance plan was governed by ERISA, but contended that RB’s “Notice Letter created a separate contractual right to severance benefits.” The court rejected this argument and dismissed Karim’s claim, agreeing with RB that its severance plan was governed by ERISA and therefore ERISA preempted her state law claim. Regarding Karim’s 401(k) claim, RB asked the court to stay it because it contended that Karim had not yet exhausted her administrative remedies, and in any event she was required to arbitrate her claim. Karim contended that her claim was not subject to arbitration. The court agreed with RB that Karim had not satisfactorily alleged that she exhausted her appeals regarding her 401(k): “Plaintiff’s Complaint only alleges that Plaintiff emailed a company representative regarding the Plan instead of filing a claim as required by the Plan.” Furthermore, “the 401(k) Plan, which is governed by ERISA, contains a valid and enforceable arbitration provision.” As a result, the court denied RB’s motion only as to Karim’s Warn Act claim, but granted it regarding everything else. The court instructed Karim that she could file an amended complaint once arbitration is complete.

Fifth Circuit

Miller v. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. Change of Control Severance Plan, No. 25-20113, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 542628 (5th Cir. Feb. 26, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Jones and Engelhardt, and District Court Judge Robert R. Summerhays). Brad Miller worked for Anadarko Petroleum Corporation for approximately 35 years. In August of 2019, Occidental Petroleum Corporation (Oxy) acquired Anadarko, which triggered the “change of control” provision in Anadarko’s Change of Control Severance Plan. Following the acquisition, Miller kept working for Oxy, but he claimed that his role and responsibilities were significantly diminished, and his salary was reduced, leading him to believe he qualified for benefits under the plan. Miller submitted a Good Reason Inquiry Form in May of 2020 and resigned the next month. The benefits committee denied his claim on the ground that a “good reason event” did not occur, asserting that “Oxy had neither materially and adversely diminished his duties and responsibilities nor materially reduced his salary.” Miller unsuccessfully appealed, and then brought this action under ERISA, seeking benefits from the plan under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and alleging a breach of fiduciary duty under Section 404(a). On summary judgment, the district court applied an abuse of discretion standard and granted summary judgment in favor of the plan and the committee. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our March 19, 2025 edition.) Miller appealed, arguing that (1) the district court should have reviewed the committee’s decision de novo and (2) the Committee erred in denying his claim. Addressing the standard of review first, the Fifth Circuit ruled that the abuse of discretion standard was appropriate because the plan granted the committee discretionary authority to interpret its terms. The plan stated that the committee had the discretion to interpret ambiguous plan terms, and “[t]he validity of any such finding of fact, interpretation, construction or decision shall not be given de novo review if challenged in court, by arbitration or in any other forum, and shall be upheld unless clearly arbitrary or capricious.” Miller contended that de novo review was appropriate because the plan only gave the committee discretion to interpret ambiguous terms, and “good reason” was unambiguous. The Fifth Circuit ruled that this was wrong for two reasons: (1) the plan further conclusively stated that the relevant section “may not be invoked by any person to require the Plan to be interpreted in a manner which is inconsistent with its interpretation by the Committee”; and (2) the term “good reason” was intrinsically ambiguous because it required discretionary “comparisons and the weighing of several factors.” The court noted that this conclusion was consistent with Gift v. Anadarko, a case decided by the Fifth Circuit in 2024 which interpreted the same plan provisions (discussed in our November 13, 2024 edition). The court also distinguished a 2025 Tenth Circuit decision interpreting the plan, Hoff v. Amended & Restated Anadarko Petroleum Corp. Change of Control Severance Plan (covered in our February 12, 2025 edition) on the ground that neither party in that case argued that “good reason” was ambiguous, and in any event, the facts were stronger for the plaintiff in that case. The Fifth Circuit then turned to the merits of Miller’s claim and upheld the committee’s decision, ruling that it did not abuse its discretion. The court found that the committee’s decision was based on substantial evidence, including interviews and documentation, which supported the conclusion that Miller’s duties and responsibilities were not materially and adversely diminished. The court found that the committee had provided reasonable explanations for its conclusions, and indeed, found that some of Miller’s job changes actually gave him “broader exposure to other parts of management, operations, and executive leadership.” As a result, the court ruled that the committee’s decision was not an abuse of discretion and affirmed the judgment in the plan’s favor.

Statute of Limitations

Eleventh Circuit

Bill H. v. Anthem Blue Cross, No. 8:25-CV-647-TPB-LSG, 2026 WL 575161 (M.D. Fla. Mar. 2, 2026) (Judge Tom Barber). Bill H. brought this action regarding benefit claims he submitted to the ERISA-governed Amgen Traditional PPO Health Plan on behalf of his son, S.H., who was a beneficiary of the plan. S.H. suffered from autism spectrum disorder and other behavioral issues, for which he received treatment in 2022. Anthem Blue Cross, the plan’s claim administrator, initially approved benefits for two months but eventually determined that further treatment was not medically necessary and denied additional coverage. Bill H. appealed, but Anthem upheld the denial on October 12, 2022. An external review further upheld the denial on June 21, 2023. Bill H. filed suit against Anthem, Amgen, and the plan on November 29, 2024, alleging four claims for relief: (1) recovery of benefits; (2) violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act; (3) breach of fiduciary duty; and (4) statutory penalties for failing to provide requested documents. Defendants moved to dismiss, arguing (1) counts 1-3 were time-barred, (2) count 2 was duplicative of the claim for benefits under count 1, and (3) Anthem was not responsible for producing responsive documents under count 4, while Amgen provided all documents it was legally required to produce. The court noted that while analogous state law provided a limitation period for claims under count 1, and ERISA provided a limitation period for counts 2-3, “[p]arties, however, may agree in an ERISA plan to a time limit for filing suit different from the one provided by statute.” Here, the plan contained “a one-year period on actions brought under § 502(a) of ERISA, running from the decision in any administrative appeal.” As a result, Bill H.’s complaint was too late because he filed it in November of 2024, more than one year after the June 2023 final denial. As a result, Bill H. could only proceed if he could “avail himself of equitable tolling or equitable estoppel or can point to a controlling statute that prohibits enforcement of the Plan’s limitation provision.” The court found that tolling and estoppel were unavailable because the plan’s language was clear and could not be construed as a misrepresentation. Bill H. argued that the letters denying his claim did not include an express statement regarding the plan’s limitation period, as required by ERISA regulations, and thus the court should decline to enforce it. However, the court found this argument foreclosed by the Eleventh Circuit’s 2015 decision in Wilson v. Standard Ins. Co., and held that Bill H. was still required to show tolling or estoppel regardless of the violation. Finally, Bill H. argued that the one-year limitation was void under 29 U.S.C. § 1110, which “invalidates any contract provision that ‘purports to relieve’ a fiduciary from responsibility or liability for any obligation or duty under ERISA.” The court disagreed, ruling that the limitation did not relieve a fiduciary of responsibility but merely shortened the time period for filing suit, which was permissible. Finally, the court addressed Bill H.’s claim for statutory penalties. The court agreed that Anthem was not responsible for producing the documents requested by Bill H. because it was not a plan administrator, and noted that Amgen had produced plan documents as requested. The court thus focused on whether Amgen’s failure to produce its administrative service agreements with Anthem constituted a violation. The court noted that the Eleventh Circuit had not addressed the issue, and circuit courts differed, with the Seventh and Tenth Circuits ruling that such agreements must be produced to avoid penalties, while the Ninth Circuit suggested otherwise. (Your ERISA Watch covered the Tenth Circuit’s decision, M.S. v. Premera Blue Cross, as our case of the week in our October 9, 2024 edition.) The court found the Seventh and Tenth Circuit rulings persuasive and allowed Bill H.’s statutory penalty claim to proceed, although it cautioned that defendants could raise the issue again on summary judgment, and that any award of penalties was discretionary. The court noted that amendment was “likely futile,” but allowed Bill H. to file an amended complaint on counts 1-3 “if he may do so in good faith.”