Most ERISA practitioners are familiar with Cigna v. Amara, the 2011 Supreme Court decision that helped defined the contours of ERISA’s remedial scheme. But did you know, fifteen years later, that the case is still going?

Read on to learn about Amara’s latest trip to the Second Circuit, and then stick around for this week’s other cases, which include (1) an eleven-year-old case on remand from the Second Circuit (again) involving shenanigans in a Vermont retirement plan (Browe v. CTC Corp.), (2) the demise of another putative class action alleging the misuse of forfeited unvested employer contributions to a retirement plan (Polanco v. WPP), (3) an award of long-term disability benefits stretching all the way back to 2009 (Nabi v. Provident), and last, and probably least, (4) a plaintiff who cited hallucinated AI-generated cases in her pleadings and got away with a slap on the wrist and a chance to amend those pleadings (Moore v. Wireless CCTV).

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

Attorneys’ Fees

Second Circuit

Browe v. CTC Corp., No. 2:15-CV-00267-CR, 2026 WL 1102837 (D. Vt. Apr. 23, 2026) (Judge Christina Reiss). This is an unusual case in several ways: (1) it is eleven years old; (2) it has been up to the Second Circuit and back twice; and (3) it is from your editor’s home state. The case involves a deferred compensation plan created and maintained by Bruce Laumeister for certain employees of his company, CTC Corporation. Lucille Launderville, who held various executive positions at CTC, was an administrator of the plan. Beginning in 2004, Laumeister, Launderville, and another employee, Donna Browe, “began withdrawing funds from the Plan in order to pay CTC’s operating expenses. By 2008, Plaintiffs Launderville and Browe knew that CTC was struggling financially and entered into a side deal with Defendant Laumeister, in which Defendant Laumeister was to personally fund Plaintiffs Launderville’s and Browe’s Plan benefits. Plaintiffs Launderville and Browe remained silent regarding the Plan’s shortfall and their side deal until 2015, when it fell through.” This lawsuit followed in which Launderville, Browe, and other former CTC employees alleged that defendants CTC and Laumeister violated ERISA by inadequately funding the plan and failing to pay benefits, among other claims. Defendants counterclaimed against Launderville for contribution and indemnification as a breaching co-fiduciary. In 2017-18, the district court held a bench trial and ruled in favor of plaintiffs. The case went up to the Second Circuit, which in 2021 largely ruled in favor of plaintiffs, but reversed and remanded on several issues. The district court then issued supplemental findings and remedial orders, which once again went up to the Second Circuit. That court again reversed for more fact-finding, and also ruled that Launderville and Browe were not entitled to benefits. The district court finally wrapped the merits up in an April 7, 2026 order, and in this order it ruled on motions for attorney’s fees from both sides. First the court addressed whether defendants had standing to seek fees. Plaintiffs argued that defendants, as “former fiduciaries,” lacked standing. However, the court found that defendants had already been adjudicated to be fiduciaries and thus had standing to seek fees. Plaintiffs had more success with their argument that defendants could not receive fees based on their counterclaim for contribution; the court agreed that contribution was “an equitable remedy” and “not a cause of action under ERISA for which attorney’s fees are available pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1).” Next, the court concluded that defendants had achieved “some degree of success on the merits” by successfully defending against Launderville’s and Browe’s ERISA claims, but because defendants lost regarding the remaining plaintiffs, they “may not recover attorney’s fees from the Remaining Plaintiffs.” Next, the court applied the five-factor Chambless test, concluding that it weighed in favor of awarding defendants fees against Launderville, but not against Browe, primarily because Launderville “did not act in good faith in bringing this lawsuit and because Defendants prevailed in demonstrating she was not entitled to any recovery.” The court then turned to the motion for fees by the remaining plaintiffs. The court agreed with defendants that plaintiffs’ request for $465,000 in fees included work done on behalf of Launderville and Browe, and thus their request would need to be recalculated. The court ruled that the remaining plaintiffs “undisputedly obtained some degree of success on the merits,” and after applying the Chambless factors, concluded that an award of fees was appropriate. As a result, both sides were partially victorious and now have 30 days to refile their fee requests in accordance with the court’s ruling.

Sixth Circuit

Erickson v. Walsh Construction Grp., LLC, No. 2:23-CV-3296, 2026 WL 1101968 (S.D. Ohio Apr. 23, 2026) (Judge Edmund A. Sargus, Jr.). Bradley D. Erickson filed this action against his employer, Walsh Construction Group, LLC, for relief under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and analogous state laws. Additionally, Erickson brought a claim under ERISA alleging that Walsh failed to remit insurance contributions and deductions on his behalf. The parties eventually reached a settlement, which required Walsh to pay $35,000, which included payment for wages to Erickson, payment of attorneys’ fees and costs, and a $100 payment to Erickson’s son to release any potential ERISA claims. Walsh was supposed to make these payments within 21 business days of court approval, but it failed to do so. This led to a series of court orders and motions to enforce the settlement, during which Walsh’s counsel withdrew. Eventually, the court granted Erickson’s unopposed motion to enforce the settlement, after which Erickson filed an unopposed motion for attorney’s fees. In this order the court granted Erickson’s motion, awarding $3,988.45. The court used the lodestar method to calculate the attorneys’ fees, determining that the 14.30 hours worked by Erickson’s counsel to enforce the settlement were reasonable. The court approved $600 per hour for the partner on the case, finding his rate to be “at the high end of billing rates for private employment lawyers,” but “given Attorney DeRose’s significant experience, the Court finds this rate to be reasonable.” The court also approved $215 per hour for a junior associate and $170 per hour for a paralegal.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

Polanco v. WPP Grp. USA, Inc., No. 24-CV-9548 (JGK), 2026 WL 1099370 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 22, 2026) (Judge John G. Koeltl). Rafael Polanco and Monique Johnson are former participants in a retirement plan sponsored by WPP Group USA, Inc. They filed this action against WPP and the plan’s investment committee, alleging that defendants breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA by using plan forfeitures to reduce WPP’s contributions to the plan instead of reducing the plan’s administrative costs. Like many such plans, the WPP plan allows employees to contribute wages to individual retirement accounts, with the employer making matching contributions. Employee contributions vest immediately, while WPP’s contributions are subject to a three-year vesting schedule. If a participant leaves before vesting, the unvested contributions are forfeited. The court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ first complaint, jettisoning plaintiffs’ breach of the duty of loyalty and self-dealing claims with prejudice. The court also dismissed plaintiffs’ claims for breach of the duty of prudence and the duty to monitor, but allowed plaintiffs to amend their complaint to re-allege these claims. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our November 5, 2025 edition.) Plaintiffs accepted the court’s invitation and filed an amended complaint, and again defendants filed a motion to dismiss. In their new complaint, plaintiffs continued to focus on forfeitures, arguing that the plan committee was imprudent by “failing to use Forfeitures to cover administrative costs and by failing to allocate all Forfeitures by the end of each Plan year.” Plaintiffs advanced two new theories in an effort to overcome the court’s objections to their first complaint. First, plaintiffs argued that “there is ‘no indication’ that using Forfeitures was necessary to maintain current employer-contribution levels or to cover future employer-contributions,” or that “WPP’s process in determining the amount of its Company Contributions is based on any consideration of the amount of Forfeited Plan Assets.” The court rejected these allegations, finding them “fundamentally…no different” from plaintiffs’ first complaint. The court ruled that plaintiffs had to allege “specific facts…that invite the inference that the fiduciary actually engaged in imprudent conduct. And the simple assertion that the employer did not need to use the Forfeitures for discretionary employer contributions does not suggest that it was imprudent to do so.” Second, plaintiffs argued that the committee did not “ensure[ ] that all [Forfeitures] for the plan year were promptly exhausted by year end or shortly thereafter, and did not remain in an unallocated Plan account.” This did not pass muster either “because the plaintiffs never explain why it would be imprudent for the Plan Committee not to allocate all Forfeitures at the end of the Plan year.” The court noted that “Forfeitures accrue whenever a Plan participant experiences a break in service before the employer contributions in the participant’s account vest,” and thus “the time at which Forfeitures accrue in the Plan’s Forfeitures account is variable.” As a result, “[i]t is therefore not only reasonable but entirely expected that the Plan’s Forfeitures account would contain potentially large sums of money on December 31 of each year.” Indeed, “it is difficult to imagine a situation in which the Form 5500 filings would show a balance even close to zero at year end.” As a result, the court found plaintiffs’ amended claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence to be insufficient, and dismissed it. The court dismissed their derivative claim alleging breach of the duty to monitor as well. This time both dismissals were with prejudice, and thus the case is now over.

Sixth Circuit

Trout v. Meijer, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-1378, 2026 WL 1098213 (W.D. Mich. Apr. 23, 2026) (Judge Hala Y. Jarbou). Meijer, Inc., is a Midwest grocery store chain which offers an ERISA-governed health insurance plan to its employees. The plan includes a “wellness program” which requires employees to pay a $20 per week surcharge if they use tobacco products. If an employee signs a pledge at the start of the year stating they do not use tobacco products, they avoid the surcharge. Meijer collects these surcharges directly from employees’ paychecks and uses them to offset its contributions to the health plan. For employees who use tobacco, Meijer offers a cessation program as an alternative standard. If completed within the first six months of coverage, the surcharge for the entire year is eliminated. If completed later, only future surcharges are reduced. Justin Trout, a Meijer employee, paid the surcharge and filed this putative class action challenging the program. He brought claims under section 502(a)(2) and (a)(3) of ERISA, alleging that Meijer violated 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-4(j)(3)(D) by not providing the “full reward” to employees who complete the wellness program in the second half of the year. He also claimed Meijer violated § 300gg-4(j)(3)(E) by failing to disclose that physician recommendations would be accommodated. Additionally, Trout alleged that Meijer breached its fiduciary duties and engaged in prohibited transactions by collecting unlawful surcharges and using them to offset its contributions. Meijer moved to dismiss. The court addressed the “full reward” issue first, and ruled that the plan complied with ERISA. The court rejected Trout’s interpretation of the law, instead “adopt[ing] a more plausible reading: § 300gg-4 requires employers to allow employees to qualify for the full reward at least once per year. As long as employers meet that requirement, they are free to offer additional opportunities to qualify for a partial reward.” Trout complained that this did not treat “similarly situated” people the same, but the court explained that “the prohibition on unequal treatment of similarly situated individuals is designed (like the statute as a whole) to prevent discrimination based on participants’ health conditions. It is not designed to prevent discrimination based on the time of year a participant qualifies for the program.” Moving on to notice requirements, the court agreed that Trout stated a claim that Meijer violated the requirement to disclose the availability of a reasonable alternative standard. The court found that Meijer’s benefits guides described the wellness program sufficiently to trigger the notice requirement and failed to include necessary disclosures about accommodating physician recommendations. Meijer argued that this conclusion relied on Department of Labor regulations, and that Congress “did not grant the DOL authority to interpret § 300gg-4(j)(3)(E) or impose additional requirements beyond those included in the statute.” However, the court found that “a regulation clarifying § 300gg-4’s notice requirement is authorized by the general delegation in § 1135.” The DOL was thus permitted to “fill in” the details of the law, “[a]nd imposing the accommodation disclosure requirement contained in 29 C.F.R. § 2590.702 is a reasonable exercise of that authority.” The court also found that Trout had adequately alleged causation of loss because he was forced to pay the surcharge. Moving on, the court ruled that Trout did not state a claim for breach of fiduciary duties or engaging in prohibited transactions. The court found that Trout failed to allege harm to the plan and did not have standing to sue for breach of fiduciary duty, as he did not demonstrate that Meijer’s actions caused a loss to the plan or that the surcharges were plan assets. The court further noted that Meijer’s imposition of the surcharge was done in a settlor capacity, not a fiduciary capacity. The court also ruled that claims that accrued before November 5, 2021 were barred by the federal four-year catch-all statute of limitations in 28 U.S.C. § 1658. Finally, the court addressed remedies. Citing the Sixth Circuit’s recent decision in Aldridge v. Regions Bank, the court ruled that Trout could seek equitable restitution and disgorgement but not equitable surcharge because surcharge is a remedy that was not typically available in equity. However, Trout could only obtain restitution and disgorgement if he could trace the tobacco surcharges to a specific fund, which the court noted could be difficult due to commingling. In the end, Trout’s action survives, but in a greatly diminished capacity.

Disability Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Nabi v. Provident Life & Casualty Ins. Co., No. 1:23-CV-00844-HKS, 2026 WL 1132875 (W.D.N.Y. Apr. 27, 2026) (Magistrate Judge H. Kenneth Schroeder, Jr.). Angelika Nabi was employed as the office manager of her husband’s medical practice, ENT Medical Associates, where she performed various administrative tasks. Because of her employment, she had long-term disability coverage under an ERISA-governed group policy issued by Provident Life & Casualty Company. In August of 2003, Nabi was diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme, a type of aggressive brain cancer, after experiencing a seizure. Despite undergoing surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, her condition was considered terminal. Over time, Nabi experienced a gradual decline in her cognitive abilities, which affected her ability to perform her job. She stopped working in December 2009 due to these impairments. Nabi should have applied for benefits with Provident at this time, but she did not, allegedly due to her cognitive decline. She finally applied in 2021 when her husband discovered the policy. By this time Nabi had undergone four brain surgeries, three facial surgeries, and two knee surgeries. Provident investigated her claim and began paying it, but only retroactively to September 8, 2021, the date of her notice. Nabi thus filed this action, contending that Provident wrongly denied her benefits from 2009 to 2021. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, but the court denied both in a June 30, 2025 order in which it concluded that genuine issues of material fact existed as to whether Nabi filed her claim “as soon as reasonably possible,” as required by the policy. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our July 9, 2025 edition.) The case proceeded to a bench trial in December of 2025, and this order represented the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court reviewed Provident’s decision de novo, as agreed by the parties, and ruled in Nabi’s favor. The court concluded that that due to the cognitive effects of her cancer treatments, Nabi was unable to give notice of her disability claim when she stopped working in 2009. The court determined that she filed her claim “as soon as reasonably possible” after her husband discovered the policy. The court found that the testimony of Nabi’s neurosurgeon was credible and supported the conclusion that Nabi’s cognitive impairments prevented her from filing a claim: “The full record thus supports the conclusion that Nabi’s inability to remember the policy, recognize that she could file a claim after she stopped working in December 2009, and take the necessary steps to do so was not a garden-variety memory lapse but rather the physiological result of the radiation and chemotherapy that she had undergone.” The court further concluded that Provident could not rely on the proof of loss provision as a basis for denial, as it was not a reason provided during the administrative appeal process. Consequently, the court awarded Nabi benefits retroactive to 2009 and determined she was entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and prejudgment interest.

Fourth Circuit

Karnes v. Midland Credit Mgmt., d/b/a Encore Capital Grp., No. 7:24-CV-00335, 2026 WL 1103453 (W.D. Va. Apr. 23, 2026) (Judge Robert S. Ballou). Alana Marie Karnes was terminated as a Midland Credit Management employee in 2022. While employed, she participated in Midland’s ERISA-governed disability benefit plan, which was administered by Prudential Insurance Company. Karnes became disabled in 2021 and took several medical leaves of absence over the next year prior to her termination. Eventually, she was approved for both short-term disability (STD) and long-term disability (LTD) benefits from Prudential, although she was required to appeal denials of both benefits before prevailing. Karnes brought this pro se action in 2024 against Midland, asserting claims for breach of contract, disability discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), interference under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and interest on delayed benefits under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B). The court dismissed Karnes’ complaint, but granted her leave to amend all of her claims except for her ADA discrimination claim. Karnes filed an amended complaint in which she reasserted all of her dismissed claims and also asserted “several new claims, including retaliation under the ADA, FMLA, and ERISA § 510; breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA §§ 502(a)(3) and 404; and state law claims for forgery, wrongful discharge, and defamation.” Midland moved to dismiss once again. On Karnes’ non-ERISA claims, the court (1) dismissed her ADA discrimination claim, citing res judicata, and noting that Karnes “remained disabled long after her termination and does not allege that she was able to return to work,” which meant that she could not be “a ‘qualified individual’ capable of performing the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable accommodation”; (2) dismissed her FMLA interference claim, ruling that Karnes could not show prejudice from her termination, because once again she “remained disabled and unable to work through at least February 2024, long after any FMLA leave would have expired”; (3) dismissed her claim for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing because she failed to plead any specific contractual obligations Midland had under the employment contract; (4) dismissed her claim for ADA retaliation because she pled no causal link between her alleged protected conduct and her termination, and failed to allege any pretext or hostility; (5) dismissed her FMLA retaliation claim for similar reasons; (6) dismissed her claim for forgery because it is a criminal offense with no private right of action; (7) dismissed her claim for wrongful discharge because she failed to plead a public policy violated by Midland; and (8) dismissed her claim for defamation because it was time-barred and her alleged defamatory statements were “merely hypothetical.” As for Karnes’ ERISA claims, the court dismissed her benefits claim which alleged “improper delay and mishandling” of her claim, noting that Karnes did not allege Midland had control over the administration of the STD or LTD benefit plans. Indeed, Karnes admitted that “Prudential ‘is responsible for conducting any ERISA mandated claim evaluation and final review rests with [Prudential] and with no other entity.’” The court also dismissed Karnes’ Section 510 retaliation claim, ruling that “Karnes does not allege facts showing that her termination was motivated by her pursuit of ERISA-protected benefits or that Midland acted with intent to interfere with her ability to obtain such benefits. Indeed, by her own admission, Karnes received all benefits she was eligible for under the plan.” The court also dismissed Karnes’ breach of fiduciary duty claim, ruling that her allegations of “reckless mismanagement of Plaintiff’s disability and leave claims” were insufficient because her “allegations appear to be attributable to Prudential, not Midland,” and furthermore, “any administrative delays or errors do not appear to have reduced the amount of benefits paid or changed the outcome of her claims.” As a result, Midland’s motion to dismiss was granted once again, this time with prejudice.

Ninth Circuit

McLeod v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. CV 22-87, 2026 WL 1133684 (D. Mont. Apr. 27, 2026) (Judge Susan P. Watters). Dona McLeod was an operator at CHS, Inc., a refinery in Billings, Montana, and was a member of United Steel Workers Local 11-443, which provided ERISA-governed long-term disability insurance coverage to its members through a group policy issued by Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company. McLeod became disabled in 2020 following a stroke and was approved for a monthly benefit of $4,000 by Reliance. Later, McLeod became eligible to collect a pension from CHS; she elected to receive a lump-sum distribution of $75,701.89, which she rolled over into an individual retirement account (IRA). In 2021 Reliance informed McLeod that these pension benefits were “Other Income Benefits” under the policy and therefore triggered the policy’s offset provision. Reliance thus reduced her benefit to $1,261.70 per month. McLeod unsuccessfully appealed and then filed this action, seeking recovery of plan benefits and other equitable remedies. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the assigned magistrate judge recommended granting Reliance’s motion and denying McLeod’s motion. McLeod filed an objection, arguing that the contract-interpretation doctrine of contra proferentem should apply under the de novo standard of review, which would require any ambiguities in the policy to be construed in her favor. In this order the court agreed with Reliance and the magistrate. The court applied the de novo standard of review because the policy did not grant Reliance discretionary authority to interpret the policy. The court explained that the policy identified the union as the policyholder and provided, “[t]he Policyholder and any subsidiaries, divisions, or affiliates are referred to as ‘you,’ ‘your,’ and ‘yours,’ in this Policy.” It further defined “Other Income Benefits” subject to offset as including “that part of Retirement Benefits paid for by you.” The court agreed with Reliance that “the Policy’s use of ‘you’ is clear and unambiguous when read in context,” and included CHS as an “affiliate” of the union. Because the result was clear and unambiguous, the contra proferentem doctrine did not apply. McLeod argued that “you” only applied to the union, not her employer, but the court found that this interpretation would render key provisions of the policy meaningless, and in fact would eliminate McLeod’s benefit entirely because “[u]nder McLeod’s interpretation – limiting ‘you’ to the Union – only the Union’s own employees would qualify for coverage.” The court further noted that McLeod “does not specifically challenge the finding that she ‘was not only ‘entitled’ and ‘eligible’ to receive this Retirement Benefit, but in fact received the Retirement Benefit when she rolled the lump sum distribution into an IRA.’” As a result, because the policy included the CHS pension as an offset, and she did not dispute that she received it, the court found that Reliance did not err in using the pension to reduce her disability benefit. Reliance was granted summary judgment.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Fifth Circuit

Ellis-Young v. The Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., No. CV H-26-321, 2026 WL 1075158 (S.D. Tex. Apr. 21, 2026) (Judge Lee H. Rosenthal). Sherri Ellis-Young was employed by JPMorgan Chase and was a participant in the company’s ERISA-governed long-term disability benefit plan, which was administered by The Prudential Insurance Company of America. Ellis-Young alleged she “‘suffers from multiple medical conditions resulting in both exertional and nonexertional impairments,’ which cause ‘chronic pain and limitations,’ and from ‘anxiety, depression and visual impairments.’” Prudential initially approved her claim for benefits, but terminated them less than a year later, asserting she was no longer disabled under the policy. Ellis-Young filed this action, and Prudential responded with a motion for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that Ellis-Young’s complaint should be dismissed because she failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. The court construed the motion as one for summary judgment. The court noted that the plan required Ellis-Young to appeal Prudential’s denial within 180 days of the date of denial, which was extended by COVID-19 emergency regulations to the end of the national emergency, or May 11, 2023. 180 days from this date gave Ellis-Young until January 6, 2024 to appeal. Ellis-Young argued that communications from her and her counsel during 2023 and 2024 constituted an appeal. The court did not agree, ruling that these communications expressed only an “intent to appeal” rather than constituting an actual appeal. The court cited letters which stated that Ellis-Young “will be [filing] an appeal,” provided “legal notice of Mrs. Sherri Ellis-Young’s intent to appeal,” and “repeatedly requested additional information so that she could file a proper appeal.” As a result, the court likened this case to Holmes v. Proctor & Gamble Disability Benefit Plan and Swanson v. Hearst Corp. Long Term Disability Plan, two Fifth Circuit cases on this issue. “This case has all the material facts that led to dismissal in Holmes and Swanson.” The court noted that Ellis-Young “did not submit to Prudential any factual or substantive arguments or evidence explaining her disagreement with its denial until September 2025,” which was too late. The court also rejected Ellis-Young’s argument that the exhaustion requirement should be excused, again relying on Swanson. The court found no evidence that Prudential misled Ellis-Young or failed to notify her of the appeal deadline, and thus “[t]here is no basis to excuse Ellis-Young’s exhaustion obligations.” As a result, the court ruled in favor of Prudential, granting its motion for summary judgment.

Medical Benefit Claims

Seventh Circuit

Danielle B. v. Lafayette School Corp., No. 4:26-CV-014-GSL-JEM, 2026 WL 1113353 (N.D. Ind. Apr. 23, 2026) (Judge Gretchen S. Lund). Danielle B. is the mother of a minor, I.B., and was employed by Lafayette School Corporation. Danielle B. participated in the school’s health benefit plan, which insured I.B. as well. The plan was administered by Anthem Insurance Companies, Inc., and provided coverage for mental health services. I.B. received treatment for various mental health disorders, and was eventually admitted in 2023 to blueFire, a licensed outdoor therapeutic program in Idaho. blueFire is designed to support teens with behavioral health issues in a wilderness setting, with treatment by licensed therapists. I.B. received treatment at blueFire for approximately three months; plaintiffs were charged approximately $71,500. However, when plaintiffs submitted claims to Anthem for this treatment, Anthem denied them, citing missing procedure codes, ineligible provider types, and the plan’s exclusion of wilderness programs. Plaintiffs responded by filing this action in state court against the school and Anthem, asserting two claims: one for breach of contract and declaratory relief, and one for violation of the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (“Parity Act”), as amended to ERISA. Defendants removed the case to federal court and moved to dismiss the Parity Act claim only. The court denied the motion. The court found that plaintiffs sufficiently pled a facial Parity Act violation by alleging that the plan imposed “specific, enumerated accreditation requirements on residential mental-health treatment centers, while imposing no comparable, enumerated accreditation requirements on skilled-nursing, rehabilitation, or hospice facilities that provide medical or surgical care.” The court also addressed the plan’s exclusion of wilderness programs, noting that while the exclusion appeared not to violate the Parity Act on its face because it categorically denied coverage for all charges from such programs, it was still premature to dismiss at this stage. As for plaintiffs’ as-applied challenge, the court found that they adequately alleged that the plan’s accreditation requirements for mental health facilities were more stringent than for medical or surgical facilities, thus plausibly stating a Parity Act violation. The court was “puzzled” by defendants’ arguments to the contrary because plaintiffs “specifically allege[d], and specifically list[ed], the four accreditation organizations that mental-health facilities must use and that the Plan does not have the same accreditation requirements for skilled nursing or hospice facilities.” The court emphasized that dismissal of Parity Act claims at the pleading stage in the Seventh Circuit is disfavored because plaintiffs often need discovery to obtain “comparative analyses” required by the Act. As a result, the court concluded that plaintiffs plausibly stated a Parity Act violation and denied defendants’ motion to dismiss.

Pension Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Taylor v. Sheet Metal Workers’ Nat’l Pension Fund, No. 24-CV-04321, 2026 WL 1133599 (D.N.J. Apr. 27, 2026) (Judge Christine P. O’Hearn). Plaintiff Stultz G. Taylor is the owner of STS Sheetmetal Inc. and a longtime member of the Sheet Metal Workers’ Union Local Numbers 43 and 27. As a member, he is a vested participant in the ERISA-governed Sheet Metal Workers’ National Pension Fund (NPF) pension plan. In 2018, Taylor submitted an application to NPF indicating he intended “to retire from [the] Local Union with the understanding that [he] will not be able to collect [his] pension until [he] reach[es] the age of 62 or at such time [he is] no longer the owner of STS.” He further represented that he “intend[ed] to continue operating STS” but his duties would involve “office work only.” NPF recharacterized his application as a request for information about plan benefits, explaining that he was not retiring because he would continue to own STS. Taylor continued to own STS and perform clerical work there. In 2021, Taylor applied for pension benefits effective January 1, 2022. However, NPF denied his request, concluding that his continued clerical work for STS constituted “Disqualifying Employment” under the plan. Taylor unsuccessfully appealed this decision and then filed this action, asserting four counts under ERISA: (1) failure to provide ERISA benefits; (2) breach of fiduciary duty; (3) estoppel; and (4) failure to provide a full and fair review. The case proceeded to cross-motions for summary judgment. At the outset, the court struck two affidavits offered by Taylor, ruling that they were outside the administrative record. On the merits, the court applied the arbitrary and capricious standard of review because the plan gave the appeals committee discretionary authority to make benefit determinations. The court noted that the plan required a participant to be “retired” in order to receive benefits, meaning “he has ceased working in Covered Employment, as well as in any Disqualifying Employment, and such cessation of work is intended to be permanent.” Taylor argued that his continued work was not “Disqualifying Employment,” and that he fell within one of the plan’s exceptions, but the court rejected both contentions. First, the court stated that “Disqualifying Employment is defined to include, inter alia, ‘employment with any Contributing Employer,’” and “[i]t is undisputed that STS is a Contributing Employer… And the clerical work Taylor performed for STS is certainly ‘employment’ on its face, meaning it qualifies as Disqualifying Employment under the Plan.” Thus, the plan provision was not simply limited to “trade work” as Taylor suggested. Second, Taylor did not qualify for his cited exception because the work he was doing was not covered by the collective bargaining agreement. Moving on to count two, the court ruled that Taylor’s breach of fiduciary duty claim failed because he was not seeking relief on behalf of the plan under Section 1132(a)(2), and was seeking legal, not equitable, relief, which made Section 1132(a)(3) unavailable as well. Finally, counts three and four were non-starters because they were either duplicative of Taylor’s benefits claim or not supported by an independent cause of action under ERISA. Thus, the court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment and denied Taylor’s.

Remedies

Second Circuit

Amara v. Cigna Corp., No. 24-2913, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 1113470 (2d Cir. Apr. 24, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Livingston, Jacobs, and Leval). This case turns a quarter-century old this year and refuses to die. As background, this is a class action by employees of Cigna who alleged that Cigna miscalculated their benefits under its pension plan. The highlight of the litigation was the Supreme Court’s 2011 ruling in Cigna v. Amara that federal courts are not allowed to reform benefit plans under Section 1132(a)(1)(b) of ERISA, but can achieve the same result under Section 1132(a)(3), which provides equitable relief. On remand, the plan was reformed to provide class members all accrued benefits from the defined benefit pension plan (“Part A”), plus all accrued cash balance plan benefits (“Part B”). A plus B sounds simple enough, but the parties spent years litigating over how to calculate these sums. Eventually, the math was appropriately crunched, and a judgment issued. The Second Circuit affirmed in 2014. In recent years, however, the parties have squabbled over enforcing this judgment. In 2022 the Second Circuit affirmed a lower court ruling against plaintiffs, finding that Cigna had adequately complied with the judgment. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our November 16, 2022 edition, which we foolishly titled “The End of Amara?”) Plaintiffs did not give up, however. They again filed a motion for an accounting or post-judgment discovery based on their belief that defendants were improperly calculating award payments. The district court denied this motion in May of 2024. Plaintiffs appealed, and in this summary order the Second Circuit affirmed again. The appellate court was clearly tired of the case and only devoted four paragraphs to dismissing plaintiffs’ arguments. Plaintiffs argued that the district court inappropriately required a “showing of actual noncompliance as a prerequisite for Plaintiffs to prevail on their motion.” The Second Circuit disagreed: “Instead of requiring actual noncompliance, the district court stated that ‘the question for the Court is whether, as applied here, Plaintiffs have raised ‘significant questions regarding noncompliance with a court order’ sufficient to justify the remedy sought.’” This was good enough for the appellate court, which stated that, “[i]n its careful and thorough opinions, the district court concluded that Plaintiffs did not meet their burden under this standard. For substantially the reasons in the district court’s opinions, we AFFIRM the orders of the district court.” Perhaps at long last this really is the end of Amara, but we would not dare to predict it.

Retaliation Claims

Second Circuit

Wilson v. International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees Local 52, No. 25-CV-2907 (OEM) (LKE), 2026 WL 1110227 (E.D.N.Y. Apr. 24, 2026) (Judge Orelia E. Merchant). This is a putative class action brought by three craftsmen working in film and television production in the New York City area. They are associated with the labor union IATSE Local 52. Local 52 distinguishes between three tiers of union membership: members, applicants, and permits. Members have more consistent work, opportunities for advancement, and eligibility for the pension plan, unlike applicants and permits. In their complaint plaintiffs asserted various challenges to the way Local 52 manages its membership and administers benefits under state and federal law. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged (1) breach of contract under Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA) § 301, (2) interference under ERISA § 510, (3) breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA § 502(a)(3), and (4) retaliation under New York State Human Rights Law (NYSHRL) § 290. They seek “several forms of relief, including class certification…; a declaration that Defendants breached…the IATSE Constitution; an award of compensatory and consequential damages for breach of the IATSE Constitution; an order for declaratory and equitable relief under ERISA §§ 510 and 502(a)(3); permanent injunctive relief…compensatory and emotional distress damages for Local 52’s retaliation; reasonable attorneys’ fees; pre- and post-judgment interest; and all ‘such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.’” Local 52 filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ second amended complaint for lack of jurisdiction and failure to state a claim, and further argued that the court should strike the class allegations. The court addressed subject matter jurisdiction first, ruling that plaintiffs’ claims were not subject to “Garmon preemption,” which prohibits courts from deciding controversies that “arguably arise” under the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (NLRA). (For more on Garmon preemption, check out our discussion of the case of the week in our April 8, 2026 edition.) The court acknowledged that the NLRA provides exclusive jurisdiction over some activities, but “federal courts simultaneously possess subject-matter jurisdiction over suits alleging violations of labor contracts.” Regarding ERISA specifically, the court stated that (1) “ERISA operates independently of the NLRA, governing the administration of most employee benefit plans,” and does not generally apply to unfair labor practices; (2) “[e]ven assuming that Plaintiffs’ ERISA claims raised labor issues, however, federal courts may decide such issues that arise collaterally in cases brought under independent federal remedies”; and (3) Garmon “primarily addresses potential conflicts between state and federal laws, not potential conflicts between federal laws.” However, the court found that the NYSHRL claim of one plaintiff was preempted under LMRA § 301, as it involved determining whether Local 52 violated the IATSE Constitution. As for the merits of plaintiffs’ claims, the court ruled that (1) plaintiffs plausibly stated a LMRA § 301 claim by alleging a breach of the IATSE Constitution, which provided for immediate membership upon achieving vested status; (2) the LMRA claims of one plaintiff were not time-barred because the IATSE Constitution was adopted in 2021, and his claims were brought within six years; (3) plaintiffs plausibly stated an ERISA § 510 claim because they alleged specific intent to interfere with their rights by granting certain benefits to members and not them; (4) plaintiffs could not obtain monetary damages, including “the value of lost future employment benefits,” under ERISA §§ 510 and 502(a)(3) because those sections only allow for equitable relief; and (5) one plaintiff’s NYSHRL retaliation claim could not proceed because he failed to plausibly plead “temporal proximity” which might establish a causal connection between his protected activity (filing a lawsuit against the union) and the adverse action (blocking his invitation of membership). Finally, the court denied Local 52’s motion to strike plaintiffs’ class allegations, finding it premature to rule on class certification at this stage of the litigation. As a result, Local 52’s motion to dismiss was granted in part, denied in part, and the case will continue.

Fifth Circuit

Moore v. Wireless CCTV LLC, No. CV H-25-5476, 2026 WL 1130370 (S.D. Tex. Apr. 27, 2026) (Judge Lee H. Rosenthal). Bridgett Moore filed this action against her former employer, Wireless CCTV LLC, where she worked as a regional account manager. Moore alleged that she was mistreated in numerous ways by Wireless, including Wireless’ manipulation of commission payments, failure to provide compensation information, and interference with her physician-approved medical leave and insurance coverage. Moore alleged fourteen causes of action against Wireless: “(1) breach of contract, (2) breach of implied-in-fact contract/promissory estoppel; (3) quantum meruit or unjust enrichment; (4) the procuring-cause doctrine; (5) violation of Chapter 61 of the Texas Labor Code; (6) retaliation under the FLSA; (7) retaliation under the Texas Labor Code; (8) fraud and constructive fraud; (9) negligent misrepresentation; (10) interference with protected rights under ERISA § 510; (11) COBRA notice violations; (12) intentional infliction of emotional distress; (13) ERISA breach of fiduciary duty; and (14) declaratory judgment.” Wireless moved to dismiss Moore’s complaint. Addressing the federal claims first, the court found that Moore did not allege complaints about rights protected by the FLSA, such as minimum wage or overtime, but rather about commission payments, which are not protected under the FLSA. The court also ruled that Wireless complied with COBRA obligations, as Moore’s change to unpaid, non-FMLA medical leave constituted a “reduction in hours,” and thus was a qualifying event under COBRA. On Moore’s ERISA claims, the court ruled that “Moore has pleaded no facts plausibly showing interference under § 510; the alleged facts merely show that Moore lost benefits during non-FMLA medical leave. The loss of benefits is, alone, insufficient to state a claim under § 510 anyway… For similar reasons, Moore has not plausibly pleaded an ERISA breach of fiduciary duty claim. Even setting aside Wireless’s argument that Moore failed to plead that Wireless was a fiduciary, the facts do not show that Wireless breached any fiduciary duty. Rather, the alleged facts show that Wireless properly sent Moore a notice under COBRA and properly returned a payment for an expired plan.” Moving on to the state law claims, the court dismissed Moore’s breach of contract and related claims because she had an active Texas Workforce Commission claim and had not exhausted administrative remedies. The court also found Moore’s tort claims insufficiently pleaded, lacking the necessary factual basis. The court thus granted Wireless’ motion to dismiss, but allowed Moore to file an amended complaint, likely because she had been proceeding pro se and recently retained counsel. Finally, the court agreed with Wireless in a footnote that Moore’s pleadings “indicate[d] the use of generative AI” and cited cases “that do not exist.” The court warned Moore that “briefing ‘built on AI-generated cases that stand for legal propositions in direct contravention of actual case law’ ‘is the epitome of baseless’ and that, ‘[w]hile courts afford pro se litigants considerable leeway, that leeway does not relieve pro se litigants of their obligation under Rule 11 to confirm the validity of any cited legal authority.’”

Milligan v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., No. 25-1385, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 1041935 (4th Cir. Apr. 17, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Wilkinson, Wynn, and Berner)

American employers, particularly large ones, offer all kinds of benefit and compensation packages to their employees. Parceling these arrangements out into legal categories usually is not difficult. For example, salary disputes are generally governed by state contract and employment laws, while disputes over pension benefits are generally federally governed by ERISA.

However, not all compensation is so easily sliced and diced. One type of arrangement that keeps popping up in litigation is the long-term incentive program. On one hand, these programs defer payment of a benefit, which sounds like an ERISA plan. On the other, the timing of the payments is often not tied to retirement, which sounds like a simple delayed bonus. Are these programs governed by ERISA or not?

In this week’s notable decision, the Fourth Circuit waded into the fray. The case involved Kelly Milligan, a former financial advisor at the venerable firm of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, a subsidiary of Bank of America. Milligan worked at Merrill Lynch from 2000 to 2021, and during that time he was granted several WealthChoice Awards, which are part of Merrill Lynch’s compensation package designed to incentivize productivity and retention among its financial advisors.

WealthChoice Awards are annual awards which are contingent on an advisor meeting certain performance criteria and remaining employed with Merrill Lynch for a specified period, typically eight years. These awards are calculated based on the advisors’ production credits, which are tied to the revenue generated from their clients. A “notional account” is created whenever there is an award, but this account does not actually contain any money. Instead, the employee chooses an investment to serve as a benchmark, and the account value tracks that benchmark.

Crucially, WealthChoice Awards are not immediately payable. Instead, they vest over time, and the advisor must remain employed through the vesting date to earn them. If an advisor’s employment ends before the awards vest, the awards are generally canceled, although there are exceptions, such as for retirement, disability, or death. Once the award vests, it is immediately payable; the advisor cannot defer it.

In 2021, Milligan resigned his employment at Merrill Lynch to cofound a competitor investment firm. As a result, Merrill Lynch canceled the awards Milligan had earned that had not yet vested. This decision was consistent with the program’s rules, but Milligan contended that the program was illegal. He filed a putative class action alleging that the program qualified as an employee pension benefit plan under ERISA, and that it violated ERISA’s vesting and anti-forfeiture requirements. He further alleged that the plan administrator breached its fiduciary duties in implementing the plan.

Milligan did not get much traction with the district court, which granted summary judgment in favor of Merrill Lynch. The district court concluded that the WealthChoice Award program did not qualify as an ERISA-covered employee pension benefit plan, and instead was a “bonus plan exempt from ERISA.” Milligan appealed to the Fourth Circuit, and this published decision was the result.

The court began by examining ERISA, which defines an employee pension benefit plan as any plan that “provides retirement income to employees” or “results in a deferral of income by employees for periods extending to the termination of covered employment or beyond.” The court then examined Department of Labor (DOL) regulations interpreting ERISA which clarified that bonus payments for work performed do not qualify as pension plans unless they are “systematically deferred to the termination of covered employment or beyond, so as to provide retirement income to employees.”

Milligan began by attacking the DOL regulation on the ground that it was “inconsistent with the clear statutory language of ERISA” and thus should be rejected pursuant to the Supreme Court’s 2024 ruling in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which forbids courts from deferring to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes.

The Fourth Circuit was unpersuaded, noting that Congress delegated authority to the Secretary of Labor to define terms and promulgate regulations under ERISA. Furthermore, the DOL had responsibly acted “in response to concerns raised immediately after ERISA was passed,” and reasonably concluded that bonus programs generally do not qualify as pension plans unless they systematically defer payments until after termination.

The Fourth Circuit noted that this interpretation was consistent with ERISA’s purpose of protecting employees from losing anticipated retirement benefits. After all, a bonus is a “‘premium paid in addition to what is due or expected,’ not a guaranteed benefit that employees reasonably forecast to be retirement income.” The court emphasized that the DOL had adopted this regulation less than one year after ERISA’s enactment, and Congress had not challenged it in the decades since, despite numerous amendments to ERISA.

The Fourth Circuit then examined three cases from other circuit courts (the Fifth, Eighth, and Tenth), and noted that “[o]ur peer circuits have consistently held that plans similar to the WealthChoice Award program are bonus payment plans” under the DOL regulation. From these cases the Fourth Circuit distilled a list of non-exhaustive factors that are “useful to consider when determining whether a plan is a bonus payment plan: (1) whether the plan contemplates universal employee participation or imposes heightened eligibility requirements, (2) whether the plan is funded with money that would otherwise be immediately payable to the employee, (3) whether the plan is actually funded or involves phantom investments, (4) whether employees can unilaterally postpone payments until termination or beyond, (5) whether the plan is presented as a vehicle for obtaining retirement income, and (6) whether firm performance impacts plan payments.”

Applying these factors, the court was “convinced that the WealthChoice Award program…comfortably qualifies as a bonus payment plan.” The court explained that (1) the program “has heightened eligibility requirements” that only allowed “high-performing Advisors” to qualify; (2) the program’s revenue threshold did not guarantee a benefit because of the vesting rules, and thus “the Program is not funded with money that employees would otherwise be immediately entitled to receive”; (3) the program did not actually set aside any money, and instead created an unfunded notional account that was unsecured and only represented a “‘contingent promise’ to pay its hypothetical value once the Advisor satisfies the other Program requirements”; (4) advisors had no power to defer payment of their awards because “vesting triggers automatic and mandatory payment,” which generally occurred during employment, not after termination; (5) the program was not promoted by Merrill Lynch as a pension plan; and (6) awards were calculated based on contribution to firm revenue, and thus were “at least somewhat correlated with the firm’s overall performance, another feature common to bonus plans.”

As a result, the Fourth Circuit agreed with the district court that the WealthChoice program was a bonus plan not governed by ERISA, and affirmed the judgment in Merrill Lynch’s favor.

Judge Wilkinson penned a concurrence, explaining, “I write separately to emphasize that any other conclusion would generate an avalanche of deleterious consequences.” According to Judge Wilkinson, Milligan’s interpretation of the relevant statute was “anything but a slam dunk” and “invites chaos which the courts in the absence of congressional clarity may not sanction.”

Specifically, Judge Wilkinson stated that Milligan’s interpretation was “reductive and destabilizing” because it “would treat every compensation scheme as a pension plan subject to ERISA so long as it results in any deferral of income to a period extending beyond a person’s employment.” Judge Wilkinson offered as an example paychecks that are issued after an employee dies, retires, or is terminated. Under Milligan’s interpretation, “a single incidental, or perhaps even accidental, deferral of income would create an ERISA pension plan… Can even the stray deferred penny now suffice to trigger Subsection (ii)?”

If Milligan’s interpretation were to be adopted, Judge Wilkinson feared that it would create an “explosion” in the number of ERISA-governed plans which would have “profound repercussions,” including increased and expensive compliance by employers, as well as “possible downstream consequences” such as reduction or removal of benefits. “The irony is thus that Milligan’s view may harm some of the exact individuals ERISA and the bonus regulation intended to protect.”

Finally, Judge Wilkinson argued for judicial restraint and deference to the legislative process, noting that Congress had not acted to change the DOL’s bonus regulation in the decades since its adoption. As a result, he was hesitant to “invite widespread tumult” and “initiate great social and economic change” by interpreting it in a way that would suddenly expand the scope of ERISA. Alluding to the major questions doctrine, he concluded that, until Congress says otherwise, “we are left to exercise restraint and find a path that respects the legislative process and prevents unwarranted disruption.”

*          *          *

As a footnote, two weeks ago we reported on Lahoud v. Merrill Lynch, a case that is also challenging the WealthChoice Awards plan on ERISA-related grounds. The court in that case granted Merrill Lynch’s motion to transfer the case from the District of New Jersey to the Western District of North Carolina. Because the latter district is in the Fourth Circuit, the case is now governed by this decision, and is likely doomed.

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Fourth Circuit

Fezer v. Lockheed Martin Corp., No. CV 25-0908-TDC, 2026 WL 1041276 (D. Md. Apr. 16, 2026) (Judge Theodore D. Chuang). The plaintiffs in this case are participants in three ERISA-governed retirement plans sponsored by Lockheed Martin Corporation; the plans are managed by Lockheed’s subsidiary, Lockheed Martin Investment Management Company (LMIMCo). Plaintiffs claim that the LMIMCo target date funds (TDFs), which were offered as investment options within the plans, were “chronic underperformers” compared to benchmarks and other comparable funds, and that management fees were unreasonably high. Plaintiffs also allege that Lockheed and LMIMCo engaged in prohibited transactions and failed to act in the best interests of the plan participants. Plaintiffs have asserted five claims: (1) breach of fiduciary duty based on the selection and retention of the LMIMCo TDFs as plan investments; (2) breach of fiduciary duty based on the selection of, failure to monitor, and retention of LMIMCo as plan manager; (3) breach of fiduciary duty based on unreasonable management fees; (4) prohibited transactions in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a)(1); and (5) prohibited transactions in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1106(b). Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which the court ruled on in this order. Defendants argued first that Lockheed “is not a fiduciary with respect to any of the conduct alleged in the fiduciary duty claims because it acted only as a settlor with respect to the appointment of LMIMCo and because it ‘had no fiduciary role in selecting, monitoring, or removing investment options.’” The court rejected this as to Count 2 because Lockheed had “the power to replace LMIMCo as the Plan Manager,” and rejected it as to Counts 1 and 3 because plaintiffs alleged Lockheed was liable as a co-fiduciary to LMIMCo. Turning to the underperformance allegations, the court denied the motion to dismiss Count 1, finding that plaintiffs adequately alleged underperformance of the LMIMCo TDFs and provided appropriate comparators. Defendants criticized these comparators on various grounds, but the court found that their demands were too “granular” and “are more appropriately addressed after more factual development, rather than at the motion-to-dismiss stage.” The court further noted that plaintiffs had alleged more than just underperformance; they “have alleged additional facts in support of a claim of imprudence, including that the underperforming LMIMCo TDFs were established and managed in-house, with potential financial benefits to Lockheed Martin.” The court also noted that plaintiffs relied on “a prior lawsuit that resulted in a $62 million settlement in 2015 and an internal review of the performance of the Plans’ funds in 2019.” However, the court reached a different conclusion on Count 3, determining that plaintiffs failed to provide meaningful comparators for their alleged too-high management fees. As for the duty of loyalty, the court denied the motion to dismiss as to Count 1 because plaintiffs plausibly alleged that defendants acted in their own interest by maintaining the underperforming TDFs. However, the court dismissed the duty of loyalty claim as to Count 3 because the allegations did not demonstrate that defendants failed to act solely in the interest of the plan participants: “the fact that the LMIMCo TDFs were in-house funds is insufficient[.]” As for the prohibited transaction claims in Counts 4 and 5, the court denied the motion to dismiss, finding that plaintiffs adequately alleged transactions between Lockheed, the plans, and LMIMCo that fell under 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a) and (b). The court noted that defendants might have persuasive affirmative defenses to justify the transactions at issue, but plaintiffs were not required to plead around them pursuant to the Supreme Court’s 2025 decision in Cunningham v. Cornell and thus their claims survived to fight another day. Finally, the court granted defendants’ request to strike plaintiffs’ demand for a jury trial, as the relief plaintiffs seek is equitable in nature, and ERISA does not confer a right to a jury trial for actions brought under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2) or (3). Thus, while Lockheed won some minor skirmishes, the war will continue.

Ninth Circuit

Ang v. Franklin Resources, Inc., No. 25-CV-06130-VC, 2026 WL 1045698 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 17, 2026) (Judge Vince Chhabria). The plaintiffs in this putative class action are participants in an ERISA-governed 401(k) retirement plan sponsored by Franklin Resources, Inc. (better known as Franklin Templeton). They allege that prior to 2023 Franklin and related defendants breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA by including in the plan’s investment options Franklin-affiliated funds, which were costly and performed poorly. In 2023, the plan was amended to require the inclusion of certain affiliated funds, known as the “Flagship Funds,” and Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC was appointed as an independent fiduciary to monitor these funds. Plaintiffs allege that this change did not improve matters. They contend that the plan retained several poorly performing Franklin funds, and both before and after the 2023 amendment defendants prioritized Franklin’s interests over those of plan participants. This order ruled on motions to dismiss filed by Franklin and Gallagher. Franklin sought dismissal of the claims against them, arguing that their actions were not disloyal or imprudent. Gallagher sought dismissal of claims related to its actions before its appointment in 2023 and argued that it did not profit from the inclusion of the Flagship Funds. The court denied Franklin’s motion to dismiss, finding that plaintiffs plausibly alleged breaches of fiduciary duties under ERISA. The court noted that plaintiffs’ performance analysis was consistent with direction from the Ninth Circuit and used “meaningful benchmarks,” in one case using “Franklin’s own customized benchmark, as well as specific comparator funds with similar investment goals.” Furthermore, the court emphasized that plaintiffs’ underperformance allegations were combined with allegations that Franklin prioritized its financial interests over sound investment choices, which was “enough to raise the inference that the Franklin Defendants breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA.” As for Gallagher, its motion to dismiss was granted in part and denied in part. The court dismissed claims against Gallagher for actions prior to its 2023 appointment, as the complaint did “not plausibly allege that Gallagher had any relevant involvement with the Plan prior to its appointment as an independent fiduciary in 2023.” However, the court found that plaintiffs plausibly alleged breaches of fiduciary duties post-2023 because the “independent fiduciary structure” did not absolve Gallagher of its responsibilities under ERISA. The court emphasized that fiduciary duties under ERISA cannot be diminished by plan terms. It further noted that both Franklin and Gallagher were disclaiming fiduciary responsibility over monitoring the plan’s portfolio, which was concerning: “In light of these issues and the plaintiffs’ plausible allegations that at least some funds were improperly retained, the defendants’ argument that neither of them is responsible must be rejected.” The court also ruled that Franklin was not exempt from fiduciary liability as a plan settlor, because their conduct could be interpreted as “an attempt to circumvent fiduciary responsibilities under ERISA,” and because plaintiffs “don’t challenge the ‘act of amending.’… Rather, they allege that the structure, as well as the way the structure was implemented, resulted in a fiduciary review process that violated ERISA.” The court further ruled that because plaintiffs’ other claims survived, their derivative claim for violation of the duty to monitor also survived. Finally, the court addressed standing, ruling that plaintiffs had standing to challenge plan-wide mismanagement, even if they only invested in a subset of the funds. “[A]llegations of investment in a specific fund is not a prerequisite for standing to challenge plan-wide mismanagement so long as a plaintiff can plead injury to their own plan account.” With that, defendants’ motions were largely denied, although Gallagher escaped liability for its pre-2023 activities.

Class Actions

Eighth Circuit

Mehlberg v. Compass Grp. USA, Inc., No. 2:24-CV-04179 SRB, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2026 WL 1021456 (W.D. Mo. Apr. 9, 2026) (Judge Stephen R. Bough). Richard L. Mehlberg and Angela R. Deibel brought this class action against their former employer, Compass Group USA, Inc., a Fortune 500 foodservice company, alleging that Compass’ employee health plan violated ERISA by imposing an unlawful tobacco surcharge on participants. Counts I and II of plaintiffs’ complaint allege that the tobacco surcharge violated statutory provisions under ERISA. Count III claims that Compass breached fiduciary duties owed to the plan under ERISA by collecting and retaining tobacco surcharges for its own benefit, while Count IV seeks individual relief for those breaches. Counts V and VI allege that Compass violated the terms of the plan by operating a discriminatory wellness program. Specifically, plaintiffs argue that Compass did not notify participants of an alternative way to avoid the surcharge, did not comply with ERISA’s “full reward” requirement, and breached its fiduciary duties by collecting the surcharge. At issue in this order was plaintiffs’ motion for class certification, seeking certification of four classes. Before tackling class certification requirements under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, the court first addressed the nature of plaintiffs’ claims. The court ruled that (1) the plan did not provide “a reasonable alternative standard” because participants “could not receive a retroactive reimbursement to avoid the tobacco surcharge in its entirety,” (2) Compass did not provide adequate notice of an alternative reasonable standard, and instead simply informed participants that they would have to pay the surcharge if they used tobacco, and (3) the surcharge was not in the plan and instead was only described in supplemental documents. As for standing, the court ruled that (1) the named plaintiffs were no longer employees and thus could not seek prospective relief, and (2) plaintiffs had standing because their “payment of a fee that they had a ‘statutory right not to be charged’ counts as a concrete injury for standing purposes.” The court further ruled that plaintiffs’ claims were not time-barred because all of their claims fell within either the four-year federal catch-all statute of limitations or ERISA’s six-year statute of repose. Moving on to certification requirements, the court found that plaintiffs’ four proposed classes satisfied Rules 23(a) and (b). The court determined that the numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy requirements were met for all four proposed classes. Compass challenged typicality and adequacy, arguing that the named plaintiffs never participated in a tobacco cessation program or sought a reasonable alternative standard. The court rejected these arguments, stating that “[e]ven if there are some factual differences to be resolved at a later stage,” the named plaintiffs’ claims were similar enough to those of the rest of the class because they were based on the same violations. The court further found that separate actions would create a risk of inconsistent adjudications, and that common questions predominated over individual questions, making class certification under Rule 23(b) appropriate. The court ruled that class certification was the superior method for adjudicating the claims, given the small monetary amounts involved and the efficiency of a class action. As a result, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for class certification, limited to retrospective relief, and ordered the parties to meet and confer regarding proper notice procedures to class members.

Randall v. GreatBanc Trust Co., No. 22-CV-2354 (LMP/DJF), 2026 WL 1068035 (D. Minn. Apr. 20, 2026) (Judge Laura M. Provinzino). The plaintiffs in this case are former employees of Wells Fargo who participated in an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) established by Wells Fargo. The plan in question was a “leveraged KSOP,” which combined a leveraged ESOP with a 401(k) defined contribution retirement plan. Wells Fargo made annual ten-year loans to the plan, which were used to purchase convertible preferred Wells Fargo stock. The preferred stock was held in a suspense account as collateral for the loans, and as the loans were repaid, the stock was released, converted into common stock, and “then allocated to Plan participants’ accounts up to the 6% cap for employer matching contributions under the Plan and any profit-sharing contributions under the Plan.” Plaintiffs filed suit, challenging these transactions under ERISA. On defendants’ motion to dismiss, the court ruled that plaintiffs lacked Article III standing to pursue their claim that the plan overpaid for the preferred stock. However, the court allowed plaintiffs to proceed under their alternate theory that the transactions violated ERISA because the released stock was improperly used to satisfy Wells Fargo’s matching contributions and profit-sharing contributions, instead of increasing the amount of common stock allocated to the plan. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our February 28, 2024 edition.) In January of 2025, the court granted plaintiffs’ unopposed motion for class certification, and the parties were subsequently able to reach a settlement under which Wells Fargo would deposit $84 million into a qualified settlement fund. In December of 2025 the court granted preliminary approval to this settlement, and in this order it gave final approval. The court found that the notice program satisfied the requirements of Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the due process clause, and the Class Action Fairness Act. In assessing the settlement’s fairness, the court considered the Eighth Circuit’s Van Horn factors, including the merits of the case, defendants’ financial condition, the complexity and expense of further litigation, and the amount of opposition to the settlement. The court noted that plaintiffs’ likelihood of success was “in doubt” due to the complexity of ERISA and the novelty of their legal theories. Plaintiffs acknowledged that their theories were potentially undermined by recent case law relating to plan forfeitures, which led the court to characterize future litigation as an “uphill battle.” Thus, the court deemed the $84 million settlement reasonable because it provided a substantial remedy to class members without the risks and delays of continued litigation. (Plaintiffs noted that this settlement would be “the largest-ever class action settlement of ERISA claims arising from an employee stock ownership plan.”) The court also evaluated the Rule 23(e)(2) factors, finding that the class representatives and counsel adequately represented the class, the settlement was negotiated at arm’s length, and the relief provided was adequate and equitable. Next, the court approved the requested attorneys’ fees of $20,160,000, which represented 24% of the settlement fund, as reasonable based on several factors, including the benefit to the class, the risk to counsel, and the complexity of the case. The court also conducted a lodestar cross-check in which it found that hourly rates between $1,000 and $1,375 per hour for senior counsel were “perhaps slightly elevated hourly rates for litigation in this District,” but “are generally in line for attorneys involved in complex, national class-action litigation.” Additionally, the court awarded $173,995.58 in litigation expenses and $25,000 service awards to each of the three class representatives. The court also authorized payment for settlement administration expenses from the qualified settlement fund, which is being administered by Simpluris and will potentially exceed $400,000. With that, the settlement was approved and the case was dismissed with prejudice.

Disability Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Wallace v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., No. 25-2716, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 1046667 (9th Cir. Apr. 17, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Graber, Hurwitz, and Desai). Jeffery Wallace filed this action against Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company, seeking reversal of Hartford’s determination that he was no longer entitled to benefits under an ERISA-governed long-term disability benefit plan. The district court, under the deferential abuse of discretion standard of review, sided with Hartford, ruling that nothing in the record showed that Hartford’s decision was unreasonable, illogical, implausible, or “without support in inferences that may be drawn from the facts in the record.” (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our April 9, 2025 issue). Wallace appealed, and the Ninth Circuit made short work of it in this four-paragraph memorandum disposition. The court affirmed, ruling that (1) the plan expressly granted Hartford discretionary authority to interpret its terms and determine eligibility for benefits, which justified the abuse of discretion standard of review; (2) although a structural conflict of interest existed because Hartford was both the administrator and insurer of the plan, this conflict was mitigated by the “thorough, neutral, and independent review process” conducted by Hartford; and (3) Hartford did not abuse its discretion because “[t]he updated medical records that Plaintiff submitted failed to support his continued eligibility for benefits,” yet Hartford still “developed facts to inform its determination by arranging for an independent medical examination and independent medical analyses of all relevant information,” and “engaged in a ‘meaningful dialogue’ with Plaintiff[.]” Thus, the district court’s judgment in favor of Hartford was upheld.

Eleventh Circuit

Dunham-Zemberi v. Lincoln Life Assur. Co. of Boston, No. 22-13316, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 1031851 (11th Cir. Apr. 16, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Newsom, Branch, and Luck). Bryce Dunham-Zemberi was employed by Mattress Firm and was covered under its ERISA-governed long-term disability (LTD) insurance plan administered by Lincoln Life Assurance Company of Boston. His job as a store manager required him to lift up to 50 pounds. In November of 2019, Dunham-Zemberi suffered a spinal injury from a skiing accident, which led to spinal fusion surgery. Lincoln approved his claim for LTD benefits at first, but after a series of medical evaluations, including x-rays, a CT scan, and assessments by his orthopedic surgeon and a pain psychologist, Lincoln determined that there were no complications from the surgery, and his strength had returned. Dunham-Zemberi’s surgeon was “perplexed” by his condition and referred him to a pain psychologist, who reported “no pain behaviors observed” despite his complaints. As a result, Lincoln terminated Dunham-Zemberi’s benefits in February of 2021. Dunham-Zemberi appealed, providing the results of a functional capacity evaluation (FCE) which attested that he could only carry fifteen pounds for thirty feet using both his hands, which “represent[ed] his maximal, occasional, material handling ability.” Lincoln was not persuaded and upheld its decision on appeal, and this action followed in which Dunham-Zemberi sought reinstatement of his LTD benefits. Pursuant to cross-motions for judgment, the district court ruled in Lincoln’s favor, ruling that Dunham-Zemberi did not meet his burden of proving continued disability. Dunham-Zemberi appealed, and in this unpublished decision the Eleventh Circuit affirmed, upholding Lincoln’s decision to terminate benefits. The court applied its idiosyncratic multi-step framework to determine whether Lincoln’s decision was correct, and did not make it past step one, which asks whether the decision was “de novo correct.” The court found that it was because Dunham-Zemberi failed to provide objective medical evidence, as required by the plan, to prove his continued inability to lift up to fifty pounds. Indeed, the court found that “[t]he objective medical evidence showed the opposite,” citing his CT scan and the conclusions of his physicians. The court rejected Dunham-Zemberi’s argument that Lincoln misapplied the plan, noting that the plan had an objective evidence requirement, and his argument that the burden was on Lincoln to follow up with his medical provider, emphasizing that the plan placed the burden on Dunham-Zemberi to provide proof of continued disability. The court also found that the evidence Dunham-Zemberi provided, such as the FCE and a letter from his primary care physician, did not constitute objective medical evidence of his inability to lift fifty pounds. The FCE did not measure Dunham-Zemberi’s heart rate during the lifting test – only before – and the letter did not provide any new information, let alone objective information, to support his claim. As a result, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed.

Discovery

Second Circuit

Mazzola v. Anthem Health Plans, Inc., No. 3:25-CV-1433 (OAW), 2026 WL 1045702 (D. Conn. Apr. 17, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Robert Richardson). Plaintiffs Michelle Mazzola, Guy Mazzola, Baby Doe, Amec, LLC, and Lisa Kuller filed this putative class action against defendants Anthem Health Plans, Inc., Carelon Behavioral Health, Inc., and Elevance Health, Inc. Plaintiffs, who purchased or enrolled in Anthem’s health insurance plans, allege that Anthem misrepresented that its behavioral health provider directory was “robust and accurate.” In fact, plaintiffs contend that Anthem’s directories were more like “ghost networks” in that “over 70% of doctors listed do not exist, are not actually in-network, do not accept new patients, or have other inaccurate information listed[.]” Plaintiffs alleged that these “ghost networks harm them because they force Plaintiffs to turn to out-of-network providers at significant costs, exacerbate behavioral health problems, and cause delays and/or abandonment of treatment.” Plaintiffs have alleged ten claims for relief, including breach of contract, bad faith, violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUPTA), fraud, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, and violations of ERISA and the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA). Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss, and while that motion is pending they have also filed a motion to stay discovery. In this order the assigned magistrate judge reviewed the motion to stay, considering three factors: the strength of the dispositive motion, the breadth of the discovery sought, and the prejudice a stay would have on plaintiffs. The magistrate found that defendants’ motion to dismiss is “lengthy and raises substantial arguments in favor of dismissal, including issues related to personal jurisdiction, ERISA preemption, standing, exhaustion of administrative remedies, and various other potential pleading deficiencies.” The court refused to predict the outcome of defendants’ motion, but ruled that because the motion “raises potentially meritorious grounds for dismissal,” and “resolution of the [motion] in favor of the Defendants may dispose of all claims, this factor weighs slightly in favor of a discovery stay.” The magistrate also agreed with defendants that the scope of discovery in this putative class action was “extensive and complex,” thereby “creat[ing] an unnecessary burden.” The magistrate noted that plaintiffs sought “certification of a class consisting of similarly situated individuals over the past seven years, plus five separate sub-classes.” Finally, the magistrate found that plaintiffs’ concerns about potential prejudice due to the passage of time were “too speculative to weigh in favor of a stay.” The magistrate stated that “it is well-settled that delay ‘cannot itself constitute prejudice sufficient to defeat a motion to stay discovery,’” and furthermore, “the potential risk that employees will have ‘moved on’ from Defendants’ control as time passes is an ordinary risk of litigation.” As a result, the magistrate concluded that there was good cause for a stay of discovery pending a decision on defendants’ motion to dismiss, and thus he granted defendants’ motion to stay discovery. However, the magistrate allowed for the possibility of lifting the stay if the motion to dismiss was not resolved by October 16, 2026.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Seventh Circuit

Cox v. United Parcel Service, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-05597, 2026 WL 986186 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 13, 2026) (Judge Edmond E. Chang). Janay Cox was a part-time unloader working for United Parcel Service and a member of Teamsters Local Union No. 705. During her initial job training, Cox disclosed that she had a disability, but maintained she could perform her duties without accommodations. Cox contended that after this disclosure, she encountered increased scrutiny, discipline, sexualized comments, and harassment from supervisors, including being written up for minor infractions and receiving off-the-clock safety violations. She reported these incidents to UPS’ human resources department and even filed a police report. She also attempted to contact Local 705 about her discrimination claims, but her union representatives allegedly failed to advocate for her. Later, Cox aggravated her disability, was placed on a “six-month ADA hold without pay,” and was then transferred to a non-union position where she allegedly faced further retaliation and harassment. Cox filed EEOC charges and subsequently filed two pro se lawsuits, which were consolidated into this action. In her complaints she alleged employment discrimination under federal and state law and violations of ERISA and NLRA. Her claims were brought under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) against both UPS and Local 705, as well as claims under the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, the Illinois Whistleblower Act, and for intentional infliction of emotional distress. Both UPS and Local 705 filed motions to dismiss. The court found that Cox’s Title VII and ADA claims were time-barred because they were filed 91 days after the EEOC issued right-to-sue letters, exceeding the 90-day limit. The court found that Cox could not successfully argue for equitable tolling or the continuing-violation doctrine, but allowed her to amend to allege facts regarding what information she received from the EEOC and when. As for Cox’s ERISA claim, she alleged that UPS was liable for breach of fiduciary duty regarding its mishandling of her disability claims. UPS contended that Cox failed to exhaust her administrative remedies before filing suit, and the court agreed. The court noted that “Cox did not describe any steps she took to exhaust this claim before filing suit,” and did not respond to UPS’ arguments during briefing on this issue. The court explained that it “cannot fashion arguments for Cox (or any litigant), so the ERISA claim must be dismissed for failure to exhaust. Given the complete absence of any response argument from Cox on this claim, the dismissal of this claim is with prejudice.” Next, the court dismissed Cox’s workers compensation claim without prejudice, allowing Cox to replead if she could allege interference with her benefits.  The Whistleblower Act claim was dismissed due to insufficient allegations and preemption by the Human Rights Act, but again the court allowed Cox to replead based on alleged safety violations. Cox’s emotional distress claim was dismissed as it was “inextricably linked” to her alleged employment discrimination and not “extreme and outrageous” enough to be independently actionable. The NLRA claim against Local 705 was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, as the issues were identical to those presented to the NLRB. Thus, the only surviving claim was under the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, as Cox sufficiently alleged an agreement for continued pay during her ADA hold. Cox was given until April 27, 2026 to file an amended complaint addressing the court’s concerns.

Thomason v. Southern Illinois Laborers’ and Employers’ Health & Welfare Trust Fund, No. 3:25-CV-01409-GCS, 2026 WL 1066997 (S.D. Ill. Apr. 20, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Gilbert C. Sison). Michael Thomason filed this action against the Southern Illinois Laborers’ and Employers’ Health & Welfare Trust Fund under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), alleging that the fund failed to pay $142,303.47 in medical benefits. The fund filed a combined motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim and to strike the jury demand. The fund argued that Thomason did not exhaust administrative remedies, did not adequately plead an exception to exhaustion, and that the damages he sought, which included “consequential damages and unspecified relief,” were not available under ERISA. Thomason opposed the motion, arguing that exhaustion should be excused due to futility or lack of an available administrative remedy. (His counsel admitted at a scheduling conference that Thomason had not exhausted his administrative remedies before filing suit.) The court ruled that “Plaintiff has not pled sufficient facts in his amended complaint to show he is entitled to excusal from exhaustion on either of the theories he advances.” The court found that Thomason “has not alleged specific, nonconclusory facts to indicate that the claims and appeals procedures could not redress his grievances. He simply claims that Defendant denied his claims.” As for “unavailability of the administrative process,” Thomason contended that “Defendant has made no showing that it created any procedures for review much less provided the Plaintiff with any statement of reasons for its denial of coverage.” However, Thomason only made this argument during briefing on the motion to dismiss. Thus, the court found that “[t]hese new allegations in the response to the motion to dismiss are inconsistent with the allegations in the Amended Complaint. A fair reading of the Amended Complaint reveals that the only allegations relating towards exhaustion are based on futility.” Despite these rulings, the court did not dismiss on this ground: “[R]elying on the discretion afforded to it, the Court is not going to dismiss this action, but instead sua sponte STAYS this matter and DIRECTS Plaintiff to exhaust the administrative remedies.” In the end, the court granted the fund’s motion only to the extent it struck Thomason’s jury demand. The court denied the motion on all other grounds, not even reaching the issue of appropriate damages/relief.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Bertranou v. UnitedHealth Grp. Inc., No. 2:25-CV-03366-AB-E, 2026 WL 1046778 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 13, 2026) (Judge André Birotte Jr.). Patrick Bertranou was a participant in an ERISA-governed health insurance benefit plan administered by UnitedHealthcare Benefits Plan of California. In 2016, when he turned 65, Bertranou’s primary health insurer became Medicare; United dropped to secondary coverage. In 2019, Bertranou was diagnosed with stage-three bladder cancer and received treatment at UCLA Medical Center totaling $119,947.02. Medicare “conditionally” paid this amount. In 2024, Bertranou settled with UCLA for medical negligence related to his cancer treatment. This led Medicare to request reimbursement under the Medicare Secondary Payer law. Bertranou contends that after he filed this action against United, Medicare “reduced its demand for payment by ‘about $31,000’ but ‘did not pay’ the remaining $86,855.12 – $81,794.11 in principal and $5,061 in interest – for Plaintiff’s medical care because it is requiring Plaintiff to reimburse it from his settlement.” Bertranou contends in this action that United, as the secondary insurer, made a “contractual written pledge to pay” for his treatment if United’s benefit “totaled more than Medicare’s payment.” However, United “totally ignored Plaintiff’s demands[.]” Bertranou’s complaint asserts one cause of action: a claim for benefits under ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). United filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and in this order the court denied it, ruling that the plan’s terms were ambiguous. The court found that United did not identify any plan provisions that defined “health care expenses,” which was used in the definition of “allowable expenses,” as only those billed directly to Bertranou or the insurer. Nor did United identify any plan terms governing Medicare subrogation, leading to the conclusion that the plan was silent on these issues. The court noted that “[t]he parties’ filings discuss the Medicare Secondary Payer law at length,” but ultimately found no cases on point. As a result, “[t]his Court therefore looks to the terms of the plan. And because the plan’s terms are ambiguous, the Court concludes that resolution of this case on a motion to dismiss would be improper.” Thus, the court denied United’s motion.

Campbell v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co., No. 24-5736, __ App’x __, 2026 WL 982848 (9th Cir. Apr. 13, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Tallman, VanDyke, and Tung). This case involves a claim for ERISA-governed health insurance benefits by Leah Campbell, who was treated by co-plaintiffs Emergency Surgical Assistants. Campbell submitted claims for her treatment to her health insurance plan administrator, UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company, which denied her claims in part because the services billed were “not documented as performed.” Campbell unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action. The district court upheld one of United’s grounds for denial but remanded as to another. The court denied Campbell’s claim for statutory penalties for failure to produce certain documentation, and also denied her claim for attorney’s fees regarding her partial success. In this unpublished memorandum decision, the Ninth Circuit reversed. The appellate court agreed with the district court that abuse of discretion was the proper standard of review because the plan unambiguously granted discretionary authority to United to determine benefit eligibility. However, the Ninth Circuit ruled that United abused its discretion in denying Campbell’s claim because it did not engage in a “meaningful dialogue” with Campbell. Instead, it “repeat[ed] the same ambiguous – even misleading – rationale” in “a stream of cookie-cutter denial letters.” United’s letters repeatedly informed Campbell that the services were “not documented as performed” but did not explain further and “never provided Campbell with an understandable description of the additional material that it deemed necessary for her to perfect her claim.” The Ninth Circuit further noted that United had the information it needed to properly adjudicate Campbell’s claim the entire time, and “never produced any documents” when Campbell “repeatedly requested the ‘entire administrative record’ underlying United’s denial[.]” The court further found that the district court abused its discretion by denying Campbell’s motion for attorneys’ fees. The court noted that attorneys’ fees should only be denied to a successful plaintiff in an ERISA benefit case when “special circumstances would render such an award unjust,” and no such circumstances were present here. The district court had rejected Campbell’s motion because, after a resubmission by Campbell, the court was concerned with the “accuracy and reliability of the billing records.” But the Ninth Circuit found that even a “cursory comparison” showed there was “no basis to doubt the accuracy and reliability of the billing records as a whole.” Finally, the Ninth Circuit determined that the district court abused its discretion by declining to impose statutory penalties against United. United failed to produce the administrative record, including the governing plan document, for more than three years, even though Campbell requested “the entire administrative record” on “four separate occasions.” Furthermore, this failure was prejudicial to Campbell because it “impeded her ability to perfect and prevail” on her claim; without the plan, Campbell “lacked a reference point against which to evaluate the validity of United’s reasons for denying her claims.” As a result, the Ninth Circuit instructed the district court to award attorneys’ fees and impose statutory penalties consistent with its findings.

Plan Status

Eighth Circuit

Thompson v. Pioneer Bank & Trust, No. 5:24-CV-05067-RAL, 2026 WL 1045620 (D.S.D. Apr. 17, 2026); Thompson v. Pioneer Bank & Trust, No. 5:26-CV-05002-RAL, 2026 WL 1045757 (D.S.D. Apr. 17, 2026) (Judge Roberto A. Lange). These two related orders close the books on one case while allowing a second to continue. The two cases address the same dispute between financial advisor Andrew Taylor Thompson and his former employer, Pioneer Bank & Trust. Thompson contended that in 2024 Pioneer forced him to resign, after which he was entitled to benefits under a salary continuation agreement (SCA). Pioneer refused to pay up, and Thompson brought this suit, alleging among other things that the SCA was governed by ERISA. In his response during summary judgment briefing Thompson advanced a new theory, which was that he was entitled to benefits under a profit sharing and 401(k) plan, not just under the SCA. However, this was too little too late for the district court, which noted that Thompson’s pleading was focused on the SCA and never mentioned his alternate theory. The court ultimately ruled that the SCA was in fact a draft proposal, and had never been executed, and thus could not be an ERISA plan. As a result, the court had no subject matter jurisdiction over the case and dismissed it without prejudice. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our January 7, 2026 edition.) Thompson then (1) filed a new lawsuit with the same claims, but focused on the profit-sharing plan, not the SCA, and (2) filed motions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59 to alter or amend the judgment in the first suit and amend/correct the complaint. Meanwhile, Pioneer filed a motion to dismiss the second suit. In these two orders everyone won something. The court denied Thompson’s motion to reopen the first case, reiterating that the SCA was not an ERISA plan and did not represent an agreement between the parties. The court further explained that in its prior order it “reviewed extensively why the Complaint did not give fair notice to Pioneer that Thompson intended to rely on any other document other than the SCA in its Opinion.” The court further denied Thompson’s motion to amend his complaint, noting that it was filed well after the deadline set in the scheduling order, and that to the extent Thompson sought relief under an agreement other than the SCA, he was already pursuing such relief in his second suit. As for that second suit, the court denied Pioneer’s motion to dismiss it. The court ruled: (1) res judicata did not apply to the new 2026 suit because the 2024 case was dismissed without prejudice, which is not a final judgment on the merits; (2) it had federal question jurisdiction over the ERISA claim; (3) Pioneer’s waiver argument failed because there were factual disputes over “Thompson’s knowledge and prior possession of the Plan,” (4) Thompson’s allegations were sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss for failure to exhaust administrative remedies at this stage because the exhaustion requirement is “not absolute,” potentially did not apply to Thompson’s Section 510 claim, and Thompson sufficiently alleged that exhaustion was “unnecessary, inapplicable, and futile”; and (5) Thompson’s allegations were sufficient to state a claim under Section 510 of ERISA, as he alleged that Pioneer interfered with his ERISA-governed rights and he was “constructively terminated by Pioneer because Pioneer created intolerable working conditions.” The court further ruled that because Thompson’s ERISA claim survived, it retained supplemental jurisdiction over his state law claims. Finally, the court addressed Pioneer’s argument regarding standing, concluding that Thompson had established Article III standing by alleging an actual injury to his plan account, a causal connection to Pioneer’s conduct, and that the injury could be redressed by a favorable judgment. The court acknowledged that Pioneer raised a statutory standing issue – whether Thompson was actually a plan participant entitled to sue under ERISA – in its reply brief, but declined to consider it because Thompson’s status was “beyond the four corners of the Complaint” and because Pioneer raised the issue for the first time on reply. As a result, Pioneer’s motion was denied, and while Thompson’s first suit is dead, his second will continue.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Eighth Circuit

Martin v. NFL Disability Plan, No. 4:25-CV-00100-RK, 2026 WL 1008961 (W.D. Mo. Apr. 14, 2026) (Judge Roseann A. Ketchmark). Christopher Martin filed this pro se action against the NFL Disability & Survivor Benefit Plan, the Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Player Retirement Plan, Michael B. Miller, Gabriella Brown, and Tammy Parrott. Martin’s claims centered on the wrongful denial of his 2008 claim for total and permanent disability benefits under the NFL’s ERISA-governed retirement plan. Defendants moved to dismiss, and the court granted their motions in August of 2025, ruling that Martin did not administratively exhaust his claim and his claim was time-barred. Subsequently, Martin filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e), which was denied in September of 2025. Martin then filed a notice of appeal to the Eighth Circuit and was awarded Social Security disability benefits. Martin alleged that the Social Security Administration (SSA) determined that he was disabled under SSA rules as of January 5, 2005. Before the court here were three motions for relief by Martin under Rule 60(b)(2). Martin argued that the SSA’s determination constituted “newly discovered evidence” supporting his contention that the NFL plan’s denial of his 2008 claim was erroneous. The court did not agree. It ruled that the SSA determination was not in existence at the time judgment was entered and thus could not constitute grounds for relief under Rule 60(b)(2). Furthermore, even if the SSA’s decision had pre-dated the judgment, it would not have produced a different result because Martin’s claims remained “unexhausted, time-barred, and meritless.” The court noted that “the plan expressly precludes total and permanent benefits in Plaintiff’s situation,” and furthermore, “SSA determinations are not binding on plan administrators under ERISA.” As a result, Martin will have to try his luck with the Eighth Circuit.

Tenth Circuit

Estate of Victor Harold Forsman v. Barnes, No. 2:25-CV-00283-JNP-CMR, 2026 WL 1068064 (D. Utah Apr. 20, 2026) (Judge Jill N. Parrish). This case is a battle over $750,000 in proceeds from a 401(k) plan account belonging to the late Victor Harold Forsman. The plan was managed by Empower Retirement, which believed Rory Jake Barnes was Forsman’s beneficiary and thus transferred the funds to him in 2022. The representative of Forsman’s estate challenged this distribution and brought this action asserting a claim under ERISA against Empower, and a state law claim against Barnes for wrongful conversion. Empower moved to dismiss, contending that it was not a fiduciary under the plan, and in January of 2026 the court agreed. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our January 21, 2026 edition.) This left only the wrongful conversion claim against Barnes. The court issued an order to show cause why the case should not be dismissed because the court no longer had federal question jurisdiction over the case, and the representative responded, arguing that he “could have solely brought his suit in [f]ederal court under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) to recover benefits due [to] him under the terms of his plan and/or to enforce his rights under the terms of the plan.” The court rejected this, stating that he had no colorable claim under ERISA against the only remaining defendant, Barnes: “Barnes has no connection to the plan at all beyond applying for and receiving benefits.” The representative also argued that his “conversion claim under Utah law implicates a federal issue that is “(1) necessarily raised, (2) actually disputed, (3) substantial, and (4) capable of resolution in federal court without disrupting the federal-state balance approved by Congress.” However, the court found that “the only federal issue identified by Plaintiff is whether Empower complied with ERISA when it paid benefits to Barnes,” and his claim against Barnes “appears fully capable of resolution without determining whether Empower complied with its obligations under ERISA.” Indeed, Barnes had filed a motion to dismiss which did not even mention ERISA, suggesting that no federal issues were implicated. Finally, the court rejected the representative’s invocation of discretionary supplemental jurisdiction, noting that courts “should normally dismiss supplemental state law claims after all federal claims have been dismissed, particularly when the federal claims are dismissed before trial.” As a result, Forsman’s estate could not overcome the court’s order to show cause, and the court thus dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

Provider Claims

Seventh Circuit

Abira Medical Laboratories LLC v. Managed Health Servs. Ins. Corp., No. 24-CV-962, 2026 WL 1005154 (E.D. Wis. Apr. 14, 2026) (Judge Lynn Adelman). Abira Medical Laboratories, LLC, doing business as Genesis Diagnostics, is back at it again in this action, which was originally filed in New Jersey state court but was removed to federal court and then transferred to the Eastern District of Wisconsin. Abira provided medical laboratory tests for patients covered by Managed Health Services Insurance Corporation (MHS). Abira attempted to collect payment from MHS pursuant to assignments from 21 patients, but MHS “refused for various (allegedly) pretextual reasons or simply did not respond… MHS has not made payment, or has made only partial payments, toward certain claims totaling more than $58,069.00.” The court has already granted one motion to dismiss by MHS. Abira amended its complaint, and this order constituted the court’s ruling on MHS’ renewed motion to dismiss. The court noted that it did not have diversity jurisdiction because the amount at issue was insufficient, but Abira’s new complaint contained a federal claim under ERISA, which conferred subject matter jurisdiction. The complaint alleged claims for (1) unpaid ERISA plan benefits pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a), (2) breach of contract in the alternative for any of the reimbursement claims not governed by ERISA, (3) breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, (4) promissory estoppel, and (5) quantum meruit/unjust enrichment. On Abira’s first claim for violation of ERISA, the court found that Abira’s amended complaint plausibly alleged that MHS issued employee benefit plans covering laboratory testing services and that MHS failed to pay according to those plans. MHS complained that Abira did identify which of its claims were governed by ERISA and which were not, and that Abira did not cite specific plan language entitling it to relief. However, the court ruled that Abira was allowed to plead in the alternative regarding claims that might be governed by federal or state law, and that it was not required by the Supreme Court’s Twombly/Iqbal rules to set forth specific plan language. As for Abira’s non-ERISA claims, the court ruled that (1) Abira plausibly alleged valid assignments of benefits from patients, which was sufficient to state a breach of contract claim, and that any defenses based on plan language could be raised by MHS later; (2) the complaint did not state a claim for bad faith because it did not plausibly allege bad faith conduct separate and independent from the underlying breach; (3) Abira could not bring its promissory estoppel claim because its allegations were incompatible and did not support a reasonable inference of reliance; and (4) the complaint did not state a claim for quantum meruit because the benefit conferred to the insured patients was not a direct benefit to MHS under Wisconsin law. Finally, MHS argued that 9 of the 21 claims at issue were untimely under Wisconsin’s six-year statute of limitations for contract claims. The court denied MHS’ motion on this ground, explaining that at this point it was unclear which claims were governed by ERISA and which were not, which would affect the applicable limitation period. (Given the length of time at issue, in some cases dating back to 2016, MHS will likely assert this defense again on summary judgment.) As a result, the court granted MHS’s motion only in part, dismissing all of Abira’s claims except its primary claims for benefits under ERISA and for breach of contract.

Remedies

Ninth Circuit

Woo v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Inc., No. 23-CV-05063-RFL, 2026 WL 980241 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 10, 2026) (Judge Rita F. Lin). In our February 4, 2026 edition, we detailed the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in this case, in which Sarah Woo contended that she was entitled to eligibility in a Kaiser Foundation pension plan pursuant to the doctrine of equitable estoppel. The court ruled for Woo and ordered the parties to meet and confer to prepare a proposed judgment. Unfortunately, the parties were unable to agree, which led them to submit separate proposals. In this two-paragraph order the court adopted defendants’ proposal. The court noted that it did “not conclude that Woo was, in fact, eligible to participate in the Plan, nor did it authorize perpetual participation in the Plan in contravention of the Plan’s eligibility requirements.” Instead, the court clarified that defendants were prohibited “from declaring Woo ineligible to participate in the Plan for the time period during which it was ambiguous whether she was eligible to participate in the Plan and she had detrimentally relied upon their representations that she was eligible.” Defendants, in their proposed judgment, offered “to provide Woo with a lump-sum payment in the amount equal to her pension benefits,” and for the court this offer “constitutes the sort of make-whole equitable relief that section 1132(a)(3) contemplates.” Woo provided no persuasive evidence to the contrary, and thus the court agreed with defendants “detailed explanation,” which was “sufficient to support Defendants’ proposed judgment.”

Statute of Limitations

Sixth Circuit

Armstrong v. Western & Southern Financial Grp., No. 1:24-CV-00424, 2026 WL 982712 (S.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2026) (Judge Jeffery P. Hopkins). Barbara Armstrong worked as an insurance sales representative for Western & Southern Financial Group for eighteen years. While there, she participated in Western & Southern’s Long Term Incentive and Retention Plan. In early 2022 Armstrong informed Western & Southern of her intention to retire, and elected to commence receiving plan benefits in May of 2022. However, on February 17, 2022, Western & Southern “suspended Armstrong’s employment after notifying her that it was investigating allegations of potential sales practices policy violations.” It terminated her on April 28, 2022, “just days before Armstrong had elected to commence receiving Plan benefits,” alleging breaches of multiple company policies, and also denying her claim for benefits under the plan. Armstrong filed this action, asserting violations of ERISA Sections 510 and Section 502(a)(3), claiming that Western & Southern terminated her employment with the specific intent to interfere with her attainment and receipt of benefits under the plan and retaliated against her for seeking benefits. Western & Southern moved to dismiss, arguing that Armstrong’s claims were barred by both a contractual statute of limitations and the applicable Ohio statute of limitations. The court first discussed whether Armstrong had properly characterized her claims, or whether she had intentionally mispled them in an effort to avoid the applicable limitation period. The court agreed with Western & Southern that “Plaintiff’s claim is a benefits claim and 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) is sufficient to provide a remedy.” As a result, Armstrong could not “repackage” her claim as one under Section 502(a)(3), which only provides a “safety net” for injuries not adequately remedied elsewhere in ERISA. Next, the court ruled that Armstrong failed to plausibly allege violations of Sections 510 and 502(a)(3). Armstrong contended that the denial of her claim was “pretextual and fabricated,” and a “scheme,” that involved “actively hid[ing] information from Plaintiff, such as the information about the allegations against her.” This was insufficient for the court because these allegations were not detailed enough to “permit a reasonable inference that Western & Southern was motivated to deny Plaintiff’s benefits because of her decision to retire” and did not demonstrate “specific intent of violating ERISA.” Finally, the court concluded that because Armstrong’s claim was one for benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B), her claims were governed by the plan’s six-month contractual limitation period, which was enforceable because it was not “unreasonably short.” The plan’s final decision was issued on December 8, 2022, which meant that Armstrong had to file by June 8, 2023; however, she waited until August 12, 2024, which was too late. The court thus granted Western & Southern’s motion and dismissed Armstrong’s case with prejudice.

McKee Foods Corp. v. BFP Inc., No. 25-5416, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 936759 (6th Cir. Apr. 7, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges McKeague, Readler, and Davis)

Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) play a pivotal role in American health care. They act as intermediaries between insurers, benefit plans, pharmacies, and manufacturers. Among the services they provide are administrative services, negotiating drug rebates, setting up pharmacy networks, and working with health plans to structure and manage benefits.

As the Sixth Circuit noted in this decision, PBMs have become “ubiquitous.” PBMs administer prescription drug benefits for around 270 million people, which is basically “everyone with a prescription drug benefit.” The three major nationwide PBMs are CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, and OptumRx, which together process about 80% of prescription claims.

Ideally, the expertise, volume, and exclusivity PBMs bring to the market enable lower prices for health plans and their beneficiaries. However, PBMs have their critics. Many PBMs are part of the ever-growing vertical integration of health care, which means they (or their corporate parents) own their own pharmacies. PBMs have been accused of giving their own pharmacies “preferred” status in their networks and “steering” customers to those pharmacies.

As a result, state and local governments have sought to regulate PBMs, alleging that these steering practices have led to the closure of smaller, rural, out-of-network pharmacies, thus limiting prescription drug access in the communities they serve.

Of course, because health care is often delivered through employee benefit plans, PBMs and their practices are deeply intertwined with ERISA. Recently, as governments have sought to tighten the reins on PBMs, one question keeps recurring: does ERISA preempt these regulations? This was the question faced by the Sixth Circuit in this week’s notable decision.

The case has an unusual origin. It did not begin, as you might think, as a dispute between a PBM and the government. Instead, it began as a dispute between a snack cake manufacturer and a local pharmacy based in Ooltewah, Tennessee.

The plaintiff was McKee Foods Corporation, which most people know through its bakery brands such as Little Debbie’s and Drake’s. McKee offered an ERISA-governed health benefit plan to its employees, which included a prescription drug program managed by the PBM MedImpact. In establishing the program, McKee also created a preferred pharmacy network.

Defendant BFP, Inc. (which does business as Thrifty MedPlus Pharmacy) used to be in McKee’s preferred pharmacy network. However, McKee kicked Thrifty Med out after an audit “revealed issues with its billing practices.” Thrifty Med contested this, and waged a multi-year campaign to get reinstated to the program.

Central to Thrifty Med’s efforts was the State of Tennessee’s enactment of Public Chapter 569 in 2021, followed by Public Chapter 1070 in 2023. These legislative initiatives were triggered by the Supreme Court’s 2020 decision in Rutledge v. PCMA, in which the high court ruled that certain Arkansas laws regulating the reimbursement rates PBMs offered to pharmacies were not preempted by ERISA. (This case was Your ERISA Watch’s notable decision in our December 16, 2020 edition.)

Rutledge emboldened Tennessee to take on PBMs by passing PC 569. Among other things, this statute “barred PBMs and covered entities from making participants pay higher or additional copays or coinsurance when obtaining prescriptions,” and “barred PBMs and covered entities from interfering with a patient’s choice of pharmacy” through the use of “inducement, steering, or offering financial or other incentives.”

Tennessee later amended these provisions by passing PC 1070. This new law “revised the prohibitions against PBMs and covered entities…to prevent interference with provider choice and restrict incentives that persuade patients to choose PBM-owned pharmacies.” It also “expanded the definitions of ‘pharmacy benefits manager’ and ‘covered entity’ to include plans governed by ERISA.” Finally, it “added language requiring PBMs to admit to their networks any willing pharmacy and precluding pharmacy favoritism.”

After PC 569 was enacted, Thrifty Med sought reinstatement to the McKee plan’s pharmacy network. McKee said no, which prompted three administrative complaints by Thrifty Med in 2021. (All three were eventually dismissed.)

McKee, annoyed by the onslaught, filed this action in 2021, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. The State of Tennessee intervened as a party. McKee argued, among other things, that ERISA preempted Tennessee’s PBM laws. McKee sought a declaration to that effect, an injunction against the enforcement of the PBM laws, and an order preventing ThriftyMed from seeking reinstatement to McKee’s network.

The district court granted ThriftyMed’s motion to dismiss, finding that McKee’s claims were moot following the passage of PC 1070. However, on appeal the Sixth Circuit disagreed and sent the case back to the district court. (We covered this ruling in our March 27, 2024 edition.)

On remand, McKee added the State of Tennessee and the Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance as defendants. The district court dismissed the State on sovereign immunity grounds but allowed McKee’s claims against the Commissioner to proceed. On dispositive motions, the court granted McKee relief, finding that McKee had standing to bring a pre-enforcement challenge and that the PBM laws had an impermissible connection with ERISA plans, thus preempting them. (This ruling was covered in our April 9, 2025 edition.) By this point Thrifty Med had become an afterthought; the court dismissed the pharmacy because it had ceased efforts to join McKee’s network.

The Commissioner appealed and this published decision, featuring the same lineup of judges as in the prior appellate ruling, was the result.

First, the Commissioner raised various procedural issues, which the Sixth Circuit quickly swatted away. The Commissioner argued that McKee had no standing to bring its ERISA claims, but the court ruled that McKee was acting as both a sponsor and a plan fiduciary, which gave it standing to sue under ERISA. Furthermore, ERISA authorized McKee to seek declaratory relief as a fiduciary.

Next, the Commissioner argued that the federal courts did not have jurisdiction to hear the case. However, the court ruled that it had jurisdiction over McKee’s pre-enforcement challenge because McKee “intended to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional interest and proscribed by statute” by dictating which pharmacies could be included in its plan, thereby limiting beneficiary choice under Tennessee’s PBM regulations. Furthermore, there was a “credible threat of enforcement” because of (1) the prior challenges to McKee’s network by ThriftyMed, and (2) repeated comments by the Commissioner that “he and his Department will enforce the PBM laws against ERISA plans – going as far as to single them out in at least two letters and a response to public comments.”

The Commissioner’s final procedural argument was that he had sovereign immunity. The court rejected this, finding that McKee’s claims against the Commissioner met the Ex Parte Young conditions of (1) “the complaint alleges an ongoing violation of federal law,” and (2) it “seeks relief properly characterized as prospective.”

Having wolfed down the appetizers, the court arrived at the main course of its meal: were Tennessee’s PBM regulations preempted by ERISA? The court examined ERISA’s preemption clause, which states that ERISA “supersede[s] any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan.” The Supreme Court has held that a state law “relates to” an ERISA plan if it has “either an impermissible ‘connection with’ the plan or a ‘reference to’ it.” The district court focused on the “connection with” prong, and thus the Sixth Circuit did as well.

The court examined separately the “any-willing-provider” provisions and the “incentive provisions” of Tennessee’s PBM laws. The “any-willing-provider” provisions required plans to admit into their networks any pharmacy willing to accept the terms and conditions of the plans. The court found that these laws were preempted by ERISA because they mandated a specific benefit structure, governed a central matter of plan administration, and disrupted nationally uniform plan administration.

The court emphasized that one of the primary goals of using a PBM was to create a network of preferred pharmacies that generated cost savings; the Tennessee laws “seek to upend this structure” by giving all pharmacies the ability to become “preferred.” This approach “requires a plan to be designed in a particular way. ERISA prohibits this.” Furthermore, the PBM laws affected “the scope and extent of a plan’s pharmacy network,” and required plans “to tailor benefits in ways specific to Tennessee,” both of which interfered with uniform plan implementation.

The Sixth Circuit explained that this conclusion was consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in Rutledge because the Arkansas regulations in Rutledge were solely aimed at costs while Tennessee’s laws “diminish, if not outright eliminate, a plan’s ability to design its network in a way most accommodating and beneficial to its participants.”

As for the “incentive provisions” of the PBM laws, the court explained that they generally prohibited PBMs from offering financial incentives to steer patients to certain pharmacies. However, these provisions “impede cost-sharing arrangements, an important facet of pharmacy network structure.” The laws effectively “divvy up the allocation of who bears what cost and include things like copays and coinsurance…The effect [] is to impose across-the-board, universal copays and other fees at every pharmacy in a given network.” This interference was too much for the Sixth Circuit: “These provisions disrupt uniformity in McKee’s Health Plan and impermissibly dictate its plan’s design.”

Having found both sets of provisions preempted, the Sixth Circuit then examined whether they might be spared by ERISA’s “savings” clause, which saves from preemption state laws regulating insurance. The court ruled that the Commissioner had waived this argument by not raising it below, and in any event, it was not meritorious because the McKee plan was self-funded, which meant that state insurance laws could not reach it pursuant to ERISA’s “deemer” clause.

As a result, the district court’s ruling that Tennessee’s PBM laws were preempted by ERISA was upheld by the Sixth Circuit: “States can enact laws looking to regulate health care and PBMs. But those laws cannot trespass into ERISA’s territory. Because the Tennessee laws McKee challenges have an impermissible connection with ERISA plans, they are preempted.”

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

Arbitration

Eleventh Circuit

Snelling v. Coca Cola Beverages Florida, LLC, No. 8:25-CV-02444-JLB-LSG, 2026 WL 925652 (M.D. Fla. Apr. 6, 2026) (Judge John L. Badalamenti). Nicole M. Snelling worked for Coca Cola Beverages Florida, LLC and participated in its “P3 Connections Program.” This program is designed to be “the exclusive method through which Work-Related Issues will be resolved, with binding Arbitration being the final forum for any Work-Related Issue that is a Legal Dispute[.]” Snelling filed this action, which included, among other causes of action, two counts under ERISA alleging: “(1) that Defendant failed to properly provide Plaintiff with a timely and compliant COBRA election notice and (2) that Defendant breached its fiduciary duty by failing to ensure that Plaintiff received such COBRA notices and failed to administer and transition Plaintiff’s ‘HSA benefits.’” Coca Cola filed a motion to compel arbitration of the entire action based on the P3 Connections Program. The assigned magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation (R&R) in which she recommended granting the motion; Snelling objected to the recommendation, raising three arguments. First, Snelling argued that arbitration was premature because the parties had not yet mediated. However, the court noted that the Program included a mediation provision, and “[t]he parties need not mediate this case in federal court.” Second, Snelling argued that the P3 Program did not delegate decision-making regarding the arbitration’s scope to the arbitrator, but the R&R and the court disagreed: “The P3 Connection Program defines ‘Legal Dispute’ to include ‘any disagreement between an Employee and Coke Florida regarding the interpretation or scope of this Program.” Third, Snelling argued that her ERISA claims were not encompassed by the P3 Program’s arbitration provision. On this issue the court agreed, differing from the magistrate judge. “The P3 Connection Program exempts ‘an Employee’s claim for…any benefits under a plan governed by [ERISA]’ from its definition of ‘Work-Related Issue.’… [The ERISA] counts both concern benefits under a plan governed by ERISA… Accordingly, those two claims are not subject to arbitration under the plain language of the P3 Connections Program.” However, despite this conclusion, the court still adopted the R&R’s ruling that Snelling’s ERISA claims did not bar the court from compelling arbitration of Snelling’s other claims. The P3 Program provided that if only some of an employee’s claims are excluded from arbitration, “then the claims subject to arbitration shall proceed to arbitration and the claims excluded from arbitration will be stayed pending a final outcome of the arbitration proceedings.” Thus, the court stayed the case pending arbitration of Snelling’s non-ERISA claims.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Third Circuit

Chrupcala v. Firstrust Savings Bank, No. CV 25-6578, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2026 WL 927226 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 6, 2026) (Judge Chad F. Kenney). Kyle Chrupcala was an employee of Firstrust Savings Bank and participated in the bank’s ERISA-governed 401(k) and Profit Sharing Plan. The plan has an atypical investment strategy; according to Chrupcala the bank “has sole control over how employer contributions are invested and does not permit participants to direct the investment of any employer contributions to their accounts.” Instead, the bank directs its contributions exclusively into its “proprietary certificates of deposit and savings accounts,” the Firstrust Fund. Chrupcala contends that this investment strategy, which focuses on capital preservation and reducing volatility risk, is inappropriate for long-term investment objectives and resulted in losses to the plan. He filed this putative class action against the bank, asserting two causes of action under ERISA: violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1) for breach of the fiduciary duties of prudence and loyalty (Count I), and violations of 29 U.S.C. §§ 1106(a) and 1106(b)(1) for engaging in prohibited transactions (Count II). The bank filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, which resulted in this published decision. On Count I, the court found that Chrupcala plausibly alleged a breach of the duty of prudence by showing that Firstrust’s investment strategy was outside a range of reasonableness, given the long-term investment objectives of the plan participants. The court noted that the earnings rate of Firstrust’s contributions was 2.27% from 2000 to 2024, which was well below the 4.2% rate of inflation. The court rejected Firstrust’s argument that compliance with plan requirements shielded it from liability, emphasizing that ERISA’s duty of prudence supersedes plan terms. As for the duty of loyalty, the court found that Chrupcala’s allegations that Firstrust benefited from the investment strategy and reduced its withdrawal risks were sufficient to suggest a breach. The court noted that discovery might reveal that Firstrust’s actions were consistent with its fiduciary duties, but at this stage Chrupcala’s allegations “just pass the bar of plausibility[.]” The court then turned to Count II, the prohibited transaction claim, ruling that Chrupcala plausibly alleged violations of 29 U.S.C. §§ 1106(a)(1)(D) and 1106(b)(1) by showing that Firstrust used plan assets for its own benefit. Firstrust asserted as a defense the exemption outlined in Section 1108(b)(4) (addressing investment of plan assets in bank deposits). The court noted that “[w]hether a Section 1106(b)(1) claim is subject to an ERISA exemption under Section 1108(b)(4) appears to be an issue of first impression in this Circuit.” Ultimately, the court agreed that it was a proper defense, but ruled that its applicability was not apparent from the face of the complaint: “Whether employer contributions were invested ‘in deposits which bear a reasonable interest rate’ is a question of fact that requires discovery before it can be resolved.” The court arrived at a similar conclusion regarding Firstrust’s statute of limitations argument, ruling that this defense could not be resolved without discovery into when Chrupcala had “actual knowledge” of the material facts. In doing so, the court rejected Firstrust’s argument that “Plaintiff had actual knowledge based simply on the fact that he participated in the Plan, ergo he must have known that employer contributions were being directed towards the Firstrust Fund since that information was available to him.” As a result, Firstrust’s defenses may yet win the day, but that day is not today; its motion to dismiss was denied in its entirety.

Leslie v. Rentokil N. Am., Inc., No. 5:25-CV-01423-JLS, 2026 WL 950490 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 8, 2026) (Judge Jeffrey L. Schmehl). Kristin Leslie and Amy Ross are employees of Rentokil North America, Inc., the pest control company. They brought this putative class action alleging that they were required to pay a tobacco surcharge to maintain health insurance coverage under Rentokil’s employee health plan. Plaintiffs contend that the tobacco surcharge violates the non-discrimination provisions of ERISA, specifically 29 U.S.C. § 1182, because Rentokil did not offer a reasonable alternative standard to being tobacco-free, failed to provide proper notice of such a standard, and did not offer reimbursement of the surcharge paid prior to completing a smoking cessation program. They also allege that Rentokil breached its fiduciary duty under 29 U.S.C. §§ 1104 and 1106 by using plan assets to benefit itself at the expense of plan participants. Rentokil filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1) and for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6). Rentokil argued that plaintiffs lacked standing because they “failed to allege that it would have been ‘unreasonably difficult due to a medical condition’ or ‘medically inadvisable’ for them to cease using tobacco products,” and did not request a waiver or alternative method of satisfying the plan’s requirements. Rentokil acknowledged that this argument was countered by 2013 regulations which “eliminated the ‘unreasonably difficult due to a medical condition’ or ‘medically inadvisable’ requirement that ERISA imposed on outcome-based programs,” but contended that the regulations were invalid because they conflicted with statutory language. The court disagreed, finding that the regulations did not conflict with ERISA and that Congress granted the relevant agencies the authority to promulgate such regulations. Furthermore, the court cited two cases disfavoring Rentokil’s argument, and noted that none supported Rentokil. The court further ruled that plaintiffs had standing because “Rentokil caused them a concrete injury when it imposed a tobacco surcharge that is traceable to Rentokil’s decision to impose tobacco surcharges under a discriminatory ERISA plan, which can be redressed with a refund of the surcharge which Plaintiffs seek in their Prayer for Relief.” On the merits, the court ruled that plaintiffs satisfactorily alleged that the plan did not offer “the full reward” as required by ERISA regulations because it did not provide retroactive reimbursement upon compliance with the wellness program procedures. The court found this understanding supported by the preamble to the 2013 regulations, which the court interpreted to mean that “[t]he term ‘full reward,’ then, must entail something more than merely the absence of the surcharge.” Rentokil also argued that plaintiffs’ interpretation of “full reward” conflicted with ERISA Section 702(b), which was designed to reward participants for adhering to health promotion programs. The court did not discern any conflict, concluding that the terms “adhere” and “full reward” are “actually distinct requirements.” Finally, the court found that Rentokil acted as a fiduciary, not a settlor, because Rentokil engaged in ongoing activity: “Rentokil withheld millions of dollars in tobacco surcharges from participants’ paychecks and used those funds to reduce its own financial obligations to the Plan.” To the extent Rentokil argued that it did not retain these funds, and they remained in the plan, the court ruled that this issue “can be fleshed out in discovery.” As a result, Rentokil’s motion was denied in its entirety.

Ninth Circuit

Berkeley v. Intel Corp., No. 5:23-CV-00343-EJD, 2026 WL 948725 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 8, 2026) (Judge Edward J. Davila). This class action (certified by the court on June 27, 2025) involves participants in Intel Corporation’s Minimum Pension Plan (MPP). The MPP was designed as a supplement to Intel’s Retirement Contribution Plan (RCP), and ensures a minimum monthly annuity for participants, compensating for any shortfall from the RCP. MPP pension benefits are paid as a single life annuity (SLA) for non-married participants, and are converted to joint and survivor annuities (JSAs) for married participants. The MPP used actuarial assumptions to calculate the JSA conversion, specifically the “GAM-83 mortality table” and interest rates set by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC). Plaintiffs contend in this action that these assumptions are outdated and unreasonable, and that the plan’s JSA calculations are not “actuarially equivalent” to SLAs as required by ERISA. They allege that Intel and the MPP administrative committee have violated “(1) the joint and survivor annuity requirements in 29 U.S.C. § 1055; (2) the anti-forfeiture rules of 29 U.S.C. § 1053; and (3) the Administrative Committee’s fiduciary duty to the class.” Defendants filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, or, alternatively, for summary judgment. The court agreed with defendants that the term “actuarially equivalent” in 29 U.S.C. § 1055 does not inherently require the use of “reasonable” actuarial assumptions. The court examined the ordinary meaning, Congressional intent, and a Department of Treasury regulation, concluding that there is no evidence that Congress intended to impose a reasonableness requirement. The court accepted defendants’ argument that “‘actuarial equivalence’ merely reflects a mathematical principle, devoid of an implied ‘reasonableness’ requirement.” Here, that requirement was satisfied because the GAM-83 mortality table and PBGC interest rates used such principles and were employed consistently throughout the plan. The court acknowledged that other courts disagreed with this interpretation – most prominently the Sixth Circuit in Reichert v. Kellogg, decided just last month – but emphasized that the record in this case was different because it contained the 1976 Society of Actuaries Report, which “sought to ‘standardize and clarify’ actuarial terms to ‘achiev[e] compliance’ with ERISA,” and omitted any reference to reasonableness. The court further stressed that Section 1055 did not use the word “reasonable,” while other sections of ERISA did, thereby suggesting that “if Congress intended to impose a similar requirement to SLA and JSA conversions, it would have done so.” The court then turned to plaintiffs’ Section 1053 anti-forfeiture claim, ruling that this claim was tied to the Section 1055 claim because both relied on the same theory of unreasonable actuarial assumptions. Because the court found no violation of Section 1055, it also granted summary judgment on the forfeiture claim. Finally, the court ruled that the administrative committee did not breach its fiduciary duty because the use of the GAM-83 mortality table and PBGC interest rates did not violate ERISA. Additionally, the court found no evidence that the MPP authorized the committee to change the actuarial assumptions, as the plan terms did not grant such authority. As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Given the Eighth Circuit’s contrary ruling in Reichert, an appeal to the Ninth Circuit seems likely.

Discovery

Eighth Circuit

Tripp v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 4:26-CIV-04003-CBK, 2026 WL 936072 (D.S.D. Apr. 7, 2026) (Judge Charles B. Kornmann). Kristy Tripp filed this action contending that Unum Life Insurance Company of America wrongfully denied her claim for ERISA-governed long-term disability benefits. The court ordered the parties to file a joint discovery report. In the report Unum claimed that “this matter is exempt from the initial disclosure under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(B)(i) and from any discovery, contending that this matter is limited to review of the administrative record before the plan administrator, who is the defendant.” Tripp, on the other hand, contended that discovery was appropriate. Tripp argued that Unum hired an attorney to assist her in obtaining Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits, which she argued “would implicate the defendant’s breach of its fiduciary duty to plaintiff in its determination whether she is entitled to disability benefits – such fact may imply a preference for insureds to seek and obtain SSDI in lieu of plan benefits.” The court acknowledged that “[p]roof of such an allegation would not be part of the administrative record.” As a result, the court ruled, “When there are allegations of procedural irregularity in the plan fiduciary’s denial of benefits, district courts may admit ‘supplemental evidence for the limited purpose of determining the proper standard of review.’… Compliance with Rule 26 preliminary disclosures and discovery is appropriate in this case.” The court thus ordered the parties to file a revised joint report.

ERISA Preemption

Ninth Circuit

Aanerud v. Northrop Grumman Corp., No. 2:25-CV-01167-MEMF-PVC, 2026 WL 928619 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 31, 2026) (Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong). Paul B. Aanerud was employed by Northrop Grumman for nearly 40 years, where he contributed to a 401(k) account under the ERISA-governed Northrop Grumman Savings Plan. He created the Aanerud Trust in 1994. In 2002 he married Sandra Overman-Aanerud, and in 2006 he designated the trust as the primary beneficiary of his 401(k) account. Overman-Aanerud executed a spousal consent form allowing this designation. In 2012, Aanerud allegedly submitted an electronic beneficiary designation changing his primary beneficiary to Overman-Aanerud. After Aanerud’s death, his son, Gary Aanerud, claimed that the 2012 designation was fraudulent and that the assets should be distributed to the Trust pursuant to the 2006 designation, but the plan denied his claim. Gary filed suit against the plan and Overman-Aanerud, asserting six causes of action: (1) claim for benefits under ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), (2) constructive fraud, (3) undue influence, (4) negligence, (5) breach of fiduciary duty under 29 U.S.C. §§ 1104, 1132(a)(3), and (6) breach of fiduciary duty under 29 U.S.C. §§ 1104, 1132(a)(3), 1133. Only the second and third claims for constructive fraud and undue influence were asserted against Overman-Aanerud. Overman-Aanerud filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that Gary’s two claims against her were inadequately pleaded and both were preempted by ERISA. The court found that Gary’s constructive fraud claim was subject to Rule 9(b) pleading standards, which require particularity in alleging fraud.  Gary argued for a relaxed standard due to the circumstances being within Overman-Aanerud’s knowledge, and the court agreed, ruling that his allegations were sufficient under that standard.  The court determined that the complaint adequately alleged a confidential relationship and that Overman-Aanerud changed the beneficiary designation without Aanerud’s knowledge, satisfying the elements of constructive fraud. The court also applied Rule 9(b) standards to Gary’s undue influence claim, as it was intertwined with his fraud allegations. This claim was also sufficiently pled because Gary alleged undue influence by detailing Overman-Aanerud’s position of trust and Aanerud’s vulnerability due to age and cognitive impairment. Gary’s luck ran out on preemption, however. The court agreed with Overman-Aanerud that both claims were preempted by ERISA because the claims, “at their core, seek to invalidate the 2012 beneficiary designation determination made by the Administrative Committee.” Gary contended that through these claims he was not directly seeking benefits in the 401(k) account, but “the allegations explicitly assert that the 2012 beneficiary designation is invalid due to Overman-Aanerud’s fraud or undue influence which altered the primary beneficiary against Aanerud’s intentions.” As a result, because “Gary Aanerud appears to seek the invalidation of an ERISA beneficiary designation – the 2012 designation – its state law claims can reasonably be said to directly reference an or connect to an ERISA plan, thereby directly conflicting with 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a).” As a result, the court granted Overman-Aanerud’s motion to dismiss, without leave to amend, because Gary “has failed to identify how he could amend his claims to avoid ERISA preemption.”

Belz v. Wright, No. 25-CV-00517-DKW-RT, 2026 WL 937993 (D. Haw. Apr. 7, 2026) (Judge Derrick K. Watson). In 2018 Monica Belz was hired by Kauai Federal Credit Union (KFCU) as its president and CEO. In 2020 they entered into a Split Dollar Agreement (SDA), a retirement compensation benefit in which KFCU would fund premiums on a life insurance policy owned by Belz. The SDA allowed Belz to borrow against the policy starting in 2030 and 2040, or immediately if her employment was terminated due to disability. In June of 2024, Belz alleged she experienced severe health issues rendering her unable to work, and requested termination due to functional disability. Belz contends that in response KFCU stopped paying her salary and refused to classify her as disabled or pay her benefits, despite medical affirmations of her condition. Belz filed this action in state court, asserting seven state law claims against numerous defendants. The defendants removed the case to federal court and then filed this motion to dismiss, arguing that Belz’s state law claims were preempted by ERISA and inadequately pled. Belz moved to remand the case to state court, asserting that her claims were not governed by ERISA. The court noted that in the Ninth Circuit, “a relatively simple test has emerged to determine whether a plan is covered by ERISA: does the benefit package implicate an ongoing administrative scheme?” Belz argued that the SDA did not meet this test because there “is nothing discretionary about the determination of disability, or the timing, amount or form of the payment” under the SDA. The court disagreed: “The reality is far different. Analyzing the actual provisions of the SDA shows that a significant part of the agreement demands discretionary decisionmaking on the part of KFCU, including provisions which are central to Belz’s claims.” This included the definition of disability, whether there was “good reason” to terminate employment, and the “reasonableness” of the SDA’s annual borrowing cap. As a result, the SDA was an ERISA plan, giving the court jurisdiction over the case and requiring the denial of Belz’s motion to remand. The court then turned to Belz’s individual claims and determined that they were all preempted by the SDA plan because the existence of the SDA was a “critical factor” in each. Belz’s claims explicitly referred to the SDA and alleged she was denied benefits under it, thus enabling ERISA preemption. Belz contended there was an independent basis for her claims – her employment agreement – but the court noted that “[i]n cases involving both ERISA and non-ERISA contracts, the Ninth Circuit has found that where ‘at least some of the contracts at issue…are ERISA plans,’ a plaintiff’s claims may still be completely preempted by ERISA.” As a result, the court found that the SDA was an ERISA plan and that it preempted Belz’s claims. It thus denied her motion to remand and granted defendants’ motion to dismiss. The court gave Belz leave to amend.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Third Circuit

In Re: Cigna ERISA Litigation, No. 25-CV-2465-JMY, 2026 WL 949101 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 8, 2026) (Judge John Milton Younge). The plaintiffs in this case are current and former employees of Cigna and participants in the Cigna Group 401(k) Plan. They allege that Cigna and various related defendants violated ERISA by investing plan funds into the Cigna Fixed Income Fund, which underperformed compared to other available investment vehicles on the market. Plaintiffs also challenge the plan’s use of forfeitures, contending that forfeitures should have been used to pay the plan’s administrative expenses rather than offset the cost of Cigna’s matching contributions. Defendants filed a motion to stay the proceedings, which the court considered in this order. Defendants argued that in January the Supreme Court granted certiorari to review the Ninth Circuit’s decision last year in Anderson v. Intel Corp. Investment Policy Committee (which we covered in our May 28, 2025 edition), and that the issues in that case were “directly relevant to the resolution of one of the issues asserted by Defendants in their motion to dismiss – that is the question about whether a plaintiff must plausibly plead a ‘meaningful benchmark’ that can be compared to the challenged underperforming investment vehicle to be able to establish an ERISA claim based on a legal theory of fiduciary imprudence.” The court denied defendants’ motion. The court reasoned that a stay would not serve judicial economy or be fair to the plaintiffs: “a stay would unnecessarily delay disposition of this litigation when resolution of issues in Anderson will not dispose of all theories of liability asserted by Plaintiffs…  Entry of a stay would mean staying the progress of Plaintiffs’ allegations regarding Defendants’ allocation of forfeitures, a central factual theory encompassing all seven counts in the Complaint. In contrast, forfeiture related claims are not at issue in Anderson.” The court further found that a stay would be “inappropriate because the impact of the potential decision in Anderson on ERISA litigation is too tentative and uncertain to warrant staying this matter in its current procedural posture.” The court noted that there were “factual distinctions and subtle nuances between this case and Anderson” that “limit the potential impact that Anderson might have on contested matters in this case.” Furthermore, it was impossible to predict “whether the United States Supreme Court will render a dispositive ruling or establish a consistent pleading standard for all ERISA cases,” or when that would even occur. As a result, the court determined that a stay was not warranted, and the case will proceed as usual.

Ninth Circuit

Karim v. International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, No. 2:25-CV-11929-SPG-PD, 2026 WL 930227 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 31, 2026) (Judge Sherilyn Peace Garnett). Audra Karim is a wardrobe, dresser, and sewing professional who has been a member of IATSE Local 768 since 2008. She alleges that in 2024 she filed internal charges against the former secretary-treasurer of Local 768 for commingling of funds, and against two other former board members “for conduct she perceived to be threatening and retaliatory.” She contends that she was mistreated and intimidated during the proceedings, which concluded in a finding that her charges were “specious.” Karim alleges that IATSE then fined her $17,000, which she could not pay within 30 days, and thus she was suspended from the union. She has subsequently been threatened with expulsion; her appeal is apparently pending. In this pro se action she has alleged twelve causes of action against IATSE, Local 768, and various individuals, including, for our purposes, “failure to remit required contributions to benefit plans under ERISA[.]” Three motions were before the court in this order: Karim’s motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO), IATSE defendants’ motion to dismiss, and Local 768 defendants’ motion to dismiss or to join the IATSE motion. The court denied the Local 768 motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(5), finding that Karim’s service was sufficient under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4. As for the merits of the parties’ arguments, the court granted in part and denied in part the IATSE motion to dismiss on various grounds. It also denied Karim’s TRO motion because she did not demonstrate irreparable harm, as her alleged harms were compensable by monetary damages or not imminent. As for Karim’s ERISA claim in particular, defendants contended that Karim did not specify which defendants she was targeting, and furthermore she did not plead that they were fiduciaries or how they breached any fiduciary duty. The court agreed, ruling that “Plaintiff does not identify any relevant ERISA plan and alleges no facts suggesting that any of the named Defendants have the discretionary authority required for such a designation. Moreover, as Defendants argue, the [complaint] is not entirely clear which Defendants are alleged to violate which ERISA provisions.” The court further ruled that “Plaintiff’s references to §§ 1104, 1106, and 1132 each raise different claims, with different elements that need to be separately alleged.” Regarding Karim’s claim for benefits under § 1132(a)(1)(B), the court ruled that her complaint was “devoid of any allegations identifying the provisions of any applicable ERISA plan and demonstrating how Defendants’ actions violated those provisions.” As a result, Karim’s ERISA claim was dismissed, although the court gave her leave to amend.

Provider Claims

Fifth Circuit

ER Addison, LLC v. Aetna Health, Inc., No. 3:25-CV-2861-D, 2026 WL 948511 (N.D. Tex. Apr. 8, 2026) (Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater). Four free-standing emergency centers in Texas (“ER”) brought this action against Aetna Health Inc. and its affiliates alleging that Aetna underpaid them for emergency healthcare services they provided on an out-of-network basis to Aetna’s insureds. In a prior lawsuit, ER sued Aetna under ERISA and Texas law, but the court dismissed the suit, ruling that ER lacked standing to assert the ERISA claims of Aetna’s insureds, and declining to hear ER’s supplemental state law claims. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our July 16, 2025 edition.) Subsequently, ER re-filed their claims in state court, claiming that the Fifth Circuit’s 2025 decision in Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Alabama constituted a “change in intervening law,” giving them a second chance. (We covered Angelina in our October 29, 2025 issue.) Aetna removed the case to federal court and filed a motion to dismiss, which was decided in this order by the same judge as in the first case. The court granted Aetna’s motion to dismiss in part and denied it in part. The court dismissed the negligent misrepresentation claim, agreeing with Aetna that ER failed to plausibly allege reliance or harm, as the alleged misrepresentations occurred after ER submitted claims to Aetna. The court also dismissed ER’s unjust enrichment claim, finding it duplicative of ER’s state-law contract claim. (Under Texas law, “quasi-contractual claims are unavailable when a valid, express contract governing the subject matter of the dispute exists.”) The court declined to dismiss ER’s breach of contract claim for pre-2020 services, ruling that the Texas Emergency Care Statutes (which create a mandatory binding arbitration process) did not apply to services rendered before January 1, 2020. The court further found that ER’s allegations focused on Aetna’s payment obligations under its own plans, and not on violations of the statute. However, the court dismissed ER’s breach of contract claim for services provided after January 1, 2020 due to lack of standing. The court found that Aetna’s insureds did not suffer a concrete injury because the Texas Emergency Care Statutes (like the No Surprises Act (NSA)) shielded them from liability for out-of-network coverage costs, and thus ER had no derivative standing to sue. As for ER’s ERISA claim, the court denied Aetna’s motion to dismiss this claim for lack of standing under the NSA because that law took effect on January 1, 2022, and ER agreed to dismiss all claims involving treatment after that date. The court also found that ER’s allegations regarding underpayment were plausible and that it was not required to exhaust administrative remedies because doing so would have been futile. The court further found that ERISA completely preempted ER’s state-law breach of contract claim “to the extent that this claim is based on the denial of benefits under an ERISA-regulated benefit plan[.]” Finally, the court denied Aetna’s motion to dismiss claims for Texas Teachers Retirement System plan benefits on sovereign immunity grounds, as Aetna did not meet its burden to prove it was an arm of the state. Thus, in sum, the court dismissed ER’s claims for negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, and breach of contract for post-2019 services, while allowing other claims to proceed.