Packaging Corp. of Am. Thrift Plan for Hourly Emps. v. Langdon, No. 25-1859, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 262954 (7th Cir. Feb. 2, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Brennan, Lee, and Kolar)

ERISA, like many statutory schemes, is one that attempts to balance competing interests. It is designed to protect plan participants, which means honoring their desires in managing their benefits. However, ERISA is also designed to simplify and streamline plan management by giving administrators uncomplicated rules to follow.

So, what happens when these principles collide? What happens, for example, if a participant makes a decision – such as a benefit election or a beneficiary designation – that does not fully comply with the plan’s procedures? Do we honor that participant’s intent, to the extent it can be discerned, or do we strictly apply the plan’s rules to negate the choice?

Federal courts have tried to strike their own balance on this issue by applying the “substantial compliance” doctrine. Under this doctrine, a participant’s decision will be upheld, even if it does not fully comply with plan procedures, if the participant “substantially complied” with those procedures.

Of course, the devil is in the details. How much compliance is “substantial” compliance? And is this doctrine even consistent with Supreme Court jurisprudence in the first place? The Seventh Circuit confronted these issues in this week’s notable decision.

The case revolves around Carl Kleinfeldt, who was an employee of the Packaging Corporation of America (PCA) and a participant in the company’s Thrift Plan for Hourly Employees, a retirement plan governed by ERISA. The plan stated, “You should keep your beneficiary designation and your beneficiary’s address up to date. To do so, contact the PCA Benefits Center at [a designated phone number] or you can update your beneficiaries online.”

Initially, Kleinfeldt designated his wife, Dená Langdon, as the primary beneficiary of his retirement account. However, after their divorce in September 2022, Kleinfeldt attempted to remove Langdon as the beneficiary by sending a fax to PCA’s benefits center requesting that the plan “remove [his] former spouse” from his “health, vision[,] and dental insurance and as a beneficiary from [his] 401k, pension[,] and life insurance accounts.” PCA complied with regard to Kleinfeldt’s health, vision, and dental insurance, and changed Langdon’s status from “spouse” to “ex-spouse.” However, it did not remove Langdon as the primary beneficiary under the plan.

Kleinfeldt died on January 16, 2023, and the plan indicated that it intended to pay Langdon as the designated beneficiary. However, Kleinfeldt’s estate intervened, contending this was improper, and the funds were frozen. The plan subsequently filed this interpleader action, naming Langdon and the estate as the competing claimant defendants. The district court subsequently added Kleinfeldt’s sister, Terry Scholz, as a defendant because she was a potential contingent beneficiary. (Scholz passed away before the case was decided, so her estate stepped in to represent her interest.)

After the plan deposited the funds at issue with the court, the court dismissed it. Langdon and the Kleinfeldt estate then filed cross-motions for summary judgment, but the district court denied them both. Instead, the district court granted summary judgment sua sponte in favor of Scholz’s estate. The court ruled that Kleinfeldt had substantially complied with the plan’s requirements to remove Langdon as the beneficiary, which meant that Scholz was the proper beneficiary under the plan’s contingent beneficiary rules. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our May 7, 2025 edition.)

Langdon appealed, and the Seventh Circuit issued this published opinion. The court addressed the standard of review first, noting “there is some question as to whether the Plan’s initial decision to distribute the retirement funds to Langdon means we should apply the arbitrary and capricious standard when deciding the merits.”

The court chose to apply the de novo standard of review, however, noting that the plan never made a final decision (“the Plan threw its arms in the air and filed this interpleader action”), and, more importantly, the case involved the application of the substantial compliance doctrine, which was an issue of law that the court was required to review de novo.

Next, the court addressed Langdon’s argument that the substantial doctrine test had been weakened by the Supreme Court’s 2009 decision in Kennedy v. Plan Administrator for DuPont Savings & Investment Plan. The court stated, “we have long recognized the doctrine of substantial compliance in ERISA cases” as a matter of federal common law, and it doubted that it should change course because of Kennedy.

The court acknowledged that Kennedy emphasized the importance of acting in accordance with plan documents, but here the plan administrator did not exercise its discretion, and instead filed an interpleader action which “[left] it up to the court.” As a result, “the need for the straightforward administration of plans and the avoidance of potential double liability – while central to the Supreme Court’s decision in Kennedy, are not implicated.” However, giving away the game, the court stated, “we think Langdon prevails either way,” and thus “we will assume without deciding the continued viability of the substantial compliance doctrine here.”

Turning to the merits, the Seventh Circuit observed that the substantial compliance test requires that “the insured (1) evidenced his intent to make the change and (2) attempted to effectuate the change by undertaking positive action which is for all practical purposes similar to the action required by the change of beneficiary provisions of the policy.”

The court found that the first element was “undeniably met here: Kleinfeldt’s fax unequivocally evidences his intent to make a change of beneficiary.” The fax was “a clear expression that he wanted Langdon removed from all of his benefit plans, including his retirement plan.”

However, the question of whether the fax was a satisfactory “positive action” was “a closer question and requires a deeper dive into our prior application of the doctrine.” The court examined several cases applying the doctrine and noted that in the cases finding substantial compliance “the plan participants took pains to follow the procedures the plan required, including obtaining the appropriate forms and even completing them to the extent they were able.”

Kleinfeldt’s estate argued that his fax was “for all practical purposes similar to” the procedures set forth in the plan documents. The court was unconvinced: “Kleinfeldt did not even attempt to utilize the proper procedures. Nowhere in the plan documents is the participant allowed to request a beneficiary change via fax.” The court found that the fax was “a method that deviates materially from the Plan’s terms” and therefore it “falls short of being ‘for all practical purposes similar to’ the procedures required by the plan documents[.]”

The court further noted that in his fax Kleinfeldt requested that the plan “fax [him] any necessary paperwork…that [he] may need to complete” to effectuate his beneficiary change, which suggested that “he himself understood that further steps may have been required to do so. Rather than following up with PCA, however, Kleinfeldt did nothing more.”

In short, the Seventh Circuit ruled that “Kleinfeldt did not substantially comply with the plan’s beneficiary-change requirements.” It reversed and remanded with instructions to enter judgment for Langdon, serving as a warning to all plan participants: follow the rules in designating your beneficiaries.

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

DeDyn v. Gintzler Graphics, Inc., No. 1:23-CV-1291-GWC, 2026 WL 221434 (W.D.N.Y. Jan. 28, 2026) (Judge Geoffrey W. Crawford). J. Patrick DeDyn, Jeffrey Erny, and Jeffrey Kasprzyk are current or former employees of Gintzler Graphics, Inc. who filed this putative class action against Gintzler and its parent company, Resource Label Group, challenging Gintzler’s pay practices and benefit plan administration. Plaintiffs alleged three causes of action, asserting violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), New York Labor Law § 191(1)(a), and ERISA. Plaintiffs moved for conditional certification of a FLSA collective action, defendants filed a motion to dismiss, and the assigned magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation (R&R) on both motions. The magistrate recommended that defendants’ motion be granted in full and plaintiffs’ motion be denied. Plaintiffs filed objections on which the court ruled in this order. The court adopted the R&R’s ruling that defendants’ changing of its pay schedule for manual workers from weekly to biweekly did not constitute a violation of the FLSA, and dismissed that claim with prejudice. However, it rejected the R&R’s ruling that plaintiffs improperly alleged a violation of Labor Law § 191(1)(a). That law requires employers to pay “manual workers” on a weekly basis. Defendants admitted that plaintiffs properly alleged they were “manual workers,” but contended there was no private right of action under the law. However, the court noted that after the R&R was issued, the New York legislature amended the law to add “new language [which] explicitly provides a private right of action for violations of § 191(1)(a)” and “explicitly applies to cases pending at the time of its enactment.” As a result, the court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss this claim. As for plaintiffs’ ERISA claim, they contended that defendants “violated §§ 404 and 406 of ERISA by failing to timely remit employees’ 401(k) contributions and improperly using those unremitted contributions to operate the business.” Defendants contended that this count was thinly pled and “cursory.” The court agreed with the R&R that plaintiffs “failed to allege sufficient factual matter to support their claims,” and upheld the dismissal of the ERISA count, but without prejudice, allowing plaintiffs to amend their complaint to plead their claim more specifically. The court also addressed defendants’ argument that the court should sever the ERISA claim from the other claims. Because the court was allowing the § 191(1)(a) claim to proceed, “it is not appropriate to sever the [ERISA] claim at this time.” However, the court ruled that defendants could “renew their request to sever the claims in a future motion.” Thus, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss in part, denied it in part, and denied plaintiffs’ motion for conditional certification as moot because of the dismissal of the FLSA claim.

Fourth Circuit

Carter v. Sentara Healthcare Fiduciary Committee, No. 2:25-CV-16, 2026 WL 252616 (E.D. Va. Jan. 30, 2026) (Judge Jamar K. Walker). Plaintiffs Tracey Carter and Bonny Davis are participants in the Sentara Health 403(b) Savings Plan, an ERISA-governed defined contribution retirement plan. In this action they allege that the Sentara Healthcare Fiduciary Committee and Sentara Health breached their fiduciary duties by imprudently managing a stable value option, the Guaranteed Interest Balance Contract (GIBC), in the plan. Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment and a motion seeking the exclusion of expert witness testimony. In its summary judgment motion, defendants argued that their conduct was prudent as a matter of law because they enlisted the services of an investment consultant, adopted the consultant’s recommendations, and held quarterly meetings. The court agreed that this “suggests that Sentara engaged in a generally prudent process” regarding the plan’s investments as a whole, but did not answer the question of whether the GIBC in particular was prudently managed. On the GIBC, plaintiffs contended that defendants did not regularly review its status, did not obtain requests for information or proposals from competitors, and “exclusively relied on a benchmark and peer group that fundamentally differed from the GIBC and were thus ‘ill-suited for meaningful evaluation[.]’” The court concluded that “genuine disputes remain regarding what a reasonably prudent monitoring process looks like for a stable value investment option like the GIBC,” “whether the conduct of the defendants satisfies that standard,” and “whether the defendants prudently followed [their monitoring] process for the GIBC.” As for defendants’ motion regarding plaintiffs’ experts, they challenged the qualifications of Matthew Eickman, arguing that he was not qualified to opine on appropriate benchmarks and peer groups for the GIBC. The court found that Eickman’s experience as a retirement plan investment advisor provided a sufficient basis for his opinions, and that any challenges to his credibility could be addressed through cross-examination. Defendants’ motion regarding Christian Toft, however, was partly successful. The court found that Toft was not qualified to render opinions on proper benchmarks and peer groups for the GIBC, as he lacked relevant experience and relied on Eickman’s opinions rather than his own analysis. The court thus limited Toft’s testimony to quantifying losses based on comparing the GIBC’s performance to competing products. Having ruled on defendants’ motions, the court then referred the parties to the assigned magistrate judge for a settlement conference, and ordered them to meet and confer to propose a trial schedule.

Peeler v. Bayada Home Health Care, Inc., No. 1:24-CV-00231-MR, 2026 WL 208630 (W.D.N.C. Jan. 27, 2026) (Judge Martin Reidinger). Donna Peeler and Kathleen Hanline are participants in Bayada Home Health Care, Inc.’s 401(k) plan. They filed this putative class action, individually and on behalf of the plan, alleging that Bayada and related defendants mismanaged the plan, resulting in financial losses due to excessive fees and investment underperformance. Plaintiffs asserted six causes of action: breach of fiduciary duty of prudence, breach of duty of loyalty, co-fiduciary liability, breach of duty to monitor, and two counts of engaging in prohibited transactions. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss. In this order the court granted the motion based on plaintiffs’ lack of standing and the implausibility of their claims. The court found that plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the selection and monitoring of certain funds because they did not invest in those funds and failed to allege a non-speculative financial loss. Plaintiffs contended that they were not required to personally invest in each fund because suits brought under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2) are representative actions on behalf of the plan to recover losses suffered by the plan. However, the court, quoting the Supreme Court’s ruling in Thole v. U.S. Bank N.A., emphasized, “[t]here is no ERISA exception to Article III.” The court admitted that this case was different because it involved a defined contribution plan, not a defined benefit plan as in Thole, but cited the Second Circuit’s decision in Collins v. Northeast Grocery, Inc. (Your ERISA Watch’s case of the week in our August 27, 2025 edition), for the proposition that plaintiffs “must allege a non-speculative financial loss actually affecting, or imminently threatening to affect, their individual retirement accounts.” Plaintiffs could not do so here and thus they had no standing to assert breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence for “selection and monitoring.” The court also found that plaintiffs could not obtain equitable relief under this claim in any event because it was unclear how defendants had been “unjustly enriched” by their alleged conduct. As for plaintiffs’ recordkeeping fees claim, the court ruled that plaintiffs failed to state a plausible claim because the comparator plans they offered were not “meaningful” and their alleged similarity was belied by Form 5500s. The court also ruled that plaintiffs’ allegation that defendants “failed to solicit bids from other recordkeepers” was insufficient, by itself, to support a claim for imprudence. Plaintiffs’ claim based on advisory fees was rejected for the same reasons: “The Plaintiffs have failed to adequately allege that comparator plans offered similar services for less,” and thus could not “‘advance the [advisory fees] claim across the line from conceivable to plausible.’” The court further dismissed the claims for breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty and co-fiduciary liability, as they were not supported by independent facts beyond those alleged for imprudence. The breach of duty to monitor claim was dismissed because it was derivative of the dismissed imprudence claim. Finally, the court dismissed the prohibited transactions claims for lack of standing and failure to state a claim. The court found that “Plaintiffs’ allegations fail to draw a meaningful comparison between the advisory fees incurred by the Plan and the advisory fees incurred by the alleged comparator plans,” and furthermore, “the Plaintiffs nowhere allege that the value of their individual accounts declined because of these advisory fees.” The court also ruled that plaintiffs’ prohibited transactions allegations were “conclusory” because they “provided no factual basis to distinguish between ordinary compensation for services in the form of revenue-sharing payments and illicit kickbacks.” Thus, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss in full.

Fifth Circuit

Wilson v. Whole Food Market, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-00085-DAE, 2026 WL 196517 (W.D. Tex. Jan. 20, 2026) (Judge David Alan Ezra). The plaintiffs – Paul Wilson, Tyler Houston, and James Besterfield – are current and former Whole Foods employees who brought this class action against Whole Foods Market, Inc. and the Whole Foods Market, Inc. Benefits Administrative Committee, contending that Whole Foods’ imposition of a tobacco surcharge in its employee health plan violates ERISA. To avoid the surcharge, participants were allowed to enroll in a tobacco cessation program, but the surcharge was only removed prospectively, not retroactively. Plaintiffs allege that the wellness program is non-compliant with ERISA because it does not provide retroactive reimbursement and fails to provide proper notice to participants. They seek declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as other forms of equitable relief. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that plaintiffs lacked standing and failed to state a claim. On the standing issue, defendants argued that the “alleged statutory violation underlying the Complaint is not the imposition of the tobacco surcharge, but rather that [Whole Foods] did not offer a retroactive refund of the surcharge once a participant completed the cessation program.” Thus, because plaintiffs did not actually participate in the program, they had not suffered an injury. The court disagreed, ruling that plaintiffs had standing because they alleged the surcharge is unlawful on its face due to non-compliance with regulatory requirements. It did not matter if they participated in the program; plaintiffs had “the right to not to be charged an illegal surcharge in the first instance.” The court rejected defendants’ standing argument regarding plaintiffs’ claim that they received insufficient notice on the same grounds: “Plaintiffs assert not that the failure to notify injured them but that the failure to notify in accordance with the statutory and regulatory requirements rendered the surcharge they paid unlawful. As already explained, Plaintiffs have standing to raise that challenge.” The court then turned to the merits. The court found that plaintiffs plausibly pled that the imposition of the tobacco surcharge violated ERISA because the plan did not provide a “full reward” for completing the wellness program. Instead, it only provided prospective relief in the form of lower future premiums. “The Court finds that to make available the ‘full reward’ to ‘all similarly situated individuals,’ a wellness program must provide retroactive reimbursements of all tobacco surcharges paid that Plan year.” This interpretation, the court ruled, was consistent with statutory and regulatory language. As for plaintiffs’ second claim, for breach of fiduciary duty, defendants contended that they were not acting as ERISA fiduciaries when they performed the challenged actions, and that plaintiffs did not allege a loss to the plan. Again, the court disagreed. The court noted that while decisions regarding the form or structure of a plan do not amount to fiduciary acts, plaintiffs’ allegations went beyond mere plan design by alleging that defendants engaged in discretionary decisions, such as depositing surcharge amounts into Whole Foods’ general account instead of in a plan trust account, failing to disclose information about the wellness program, and failing to supervise and monitor the plan to ensure compliance with ERISA. The court further ruled that plaintiffs alleged a cognizable loss to the plan by contending that defendants withheld surcharge amounts and deposited them into Whole Foods’ general accounts, earning interest and reducing their financial contributions to the plan. As a result, the court was satisfied that plaintiffs had properly alleged “at this stage of the case” that defendants’ conduct constituted a breach of fiduciary duty and prohibited transactions in violation of ERISA, and denied defendants’ motion in its entirety.

Seventh Circuit

Gardner-Keegan v. W.W. Grainger, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-5233, 2026 WL 194772 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 26, 2026) (Judge Mary M. Rowland). Plaintiffs Adrianne Gardner-Keegan, Scott A. Norman, and Alison Dela Riva, participants and beneficiaries of the W.W. Grainger, Inc. Retirement Savings Plan, filed this six-count action against Grainger and related defendants contending that they violated ERISA in their use of plan forfeitures. Like other similar plans, the Grainger plan is funded by wage withholding contributions from participants and employer profit-sharing contributions from Grainger, which vest over time. If a participant’s employment ends before vesting, Grainger’s contributions are forfeited. This plan differed from many others, however, because it specified that “Forfeiture Account amounts shall be utilized to pay reasonable administrative expenses of the Plan and to restore Accounts for a Plan Year, as directed by the Committee, and then (i) for Plan Years prior to the 2016 Plan Year, to increase the amount allocated as Company Profit Sharing Contributions for that Plan Year, (ii) beginning with the 2016 Plan Year, to offset Company Profit Sharing Contributions, and (iii) beginning with the 2021 Plan Year, to offset Company Contributions[.]” Plaintiffs alleged that from 2019 to 2023, “the Plan Committee did not utilize forfeitures to pay reasonable administrative expenses for the Plan but instead utilized forfeitures to offset Grainger’s profit-sharing contributions to the Plan,” thus violating the plan and breaching fiduciary duties to participants. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss in which it first argued that plaintiffs lacked standing because, under the plan, participants are responsible for administrative expenses. The court rejected this argument, agreeing with plaintiffs that the plan was unambiguous, and that the provision directing defendants to use forfeitures to pay reasonable administrative expenses governed over any other plan language suggesting the contrary. “By alleging that the Plan Committee disregarded this language – resulting in the Plan and its participants being stuck with the bill – Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged an Article III injury.” On the merits, the court ruled that plaintiffs plausibly pled that the committee breached its fiduciary duty of loyalty by failing to abide by plan terms. The court acknowledged that many courts had ruled against plaintiffs on similar forfeiture claims, but stressed that this case was different because the operative plan language “does not give discretion as to how the Plan Committee can allocate forfeitures. It instead mandates the Plan Committee to utilize forfeitures to pay reasonable administrative expenses (Step 1) before offsetting employer contributions (Step 2).” The court noted that defendants’ interpretation might be “in some situations…in the best interests of Plan participants (and thus not a breach of loyalty),” but “[w]hether this situation occurred in the present case, however, is unfit for resolution at this stage in the proceedings.” The court further ruled that plaintiffs plausibly pled a breach of the duty of prudence by alleging that the committee used “an imprudent and flawed process in determining how forfeitures would be allocated,” and that plaintiffs had plausibly alleged that the committee’s breach harmed the plan because it “reduce[d] the funds available to participants for distribution and/or investing[.]” Plaintiffs’ winning streak ended with their prohibited transactions claims, however. The court agreed with defendants that plaintiffs “have not identified any ‘transaction’ within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 1106.” Instead, “forfeitures remained in the Plan and were simply shifted to other employees in the form of contributions… Movement of funds within a plan ‘does not fit neatly within the plain meaning of ‘transaction.’’” Indeed, the court stated that “Plaintiffs’ prohibited transaction theory yields absurd implications” because it “seems to classify any intra-plan transfer of funds to offset employer contributions – even if expressly permitted in a plan – as a violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1106. The broad reach of Plaintiffs’ theory is untenable.” As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss the prohibited transaction claims. The remainder of plaintiffs’ claims survived, however, and the court set a status conference for February 4 to discuss next steps in the case.

Ninth Circuit

Moran v. ESOP Committee of the Aluminum Precision Products, Inc. Employee Stock Ownership Plan, No. SACV 24-00642-MWF (ADSx), 2026 WL 235573 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 28, 2026) (Judge Michael W. Fitzgerald). The Aluminum Precision Products, Inc. (APP) Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) was established in 2009 to provide retirement benefits to employees. The ESOP holds primarily APP stock but also maintains an “Other Investments Account” (OIA) consisting of non-APP stock assets. The plan purchased APP stock via a loan in 2011 and 2012, which was paid off by 2017 using dividends and cash contributions. Since then, these contributions have accumulated in the OIA, which now represents about 20-25% of the plan’s total assets. In this action plaintiff Gustavo Moran alleges that from 2018 to 2021 the plan committee invested the OIA assets in a money market fund and a short-term U.S. Treasury bond fund, significantly reducing investment returns for the participants. Moran further contends that the committee intentionally kept the OIA balance liquid for self-serving reasons, as the company wanted to “use the OIA has a backup reserve to satisfy its long-term liability to repurchase shares from departing participants.” Moran brought two claims under ERISA: breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1), and a prohibited transaction in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1106(a). The committee filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, which the court ruled on in this order. The committee argued first that ERISA’s statutory exemption from diversification for ESOPs created a complete bar to the duty of prudence claim. However, the court noted that Moran was challenging the investment of the OIA assets within the ESOP, not the ESOP as a whole. The court observed that the issue of whether the statutory exemption applied to non-employer assets within an ESOP was one that the Ninth Circuit had not addressed, “and district courts appear to have reached divergent conclusions.” Ultimately, the court concluded that the “plain language of the statute” was “relatively clear” and held that ERISA “does not purport to exempt the management of other assets from prudence review simply because those assets are held within an ESOP.” As a result, the court turned to the merits of Moran’s claim, and ruled that his allegations were sufficiently specific: “Here, Plaintiff has done more than allege that Defendant should have pursued ‘higher returns’ or ‘riskier assets.’ Plaintiff alleges an objective ‘mismatch’ between the Plan’s assets and its purpose as a retirement plan.” Moran also “points to relevant comparators, alleging that the APP ESOP holds 100 times more cash equivalents than the median cash holdings of comparator ESOP plans[.]” The court ruled that this “vast disparity [between plans] supports a reasonable inference of a lack of prudence.” The committee argued that plan language gave it the authority to invest OIA assets as it saw fit, but the court ruled that this did not foreclose a prudence claim, and in any event “the duty of prudence trumps the instructions of a plan document.” As for Moran’s prohibited transaction claim, the committee argued that its investment strategy was not a “transaction,” and furthermore it was “not for an improper purpose.” The court ruled that Moran had sufficiently specified investment activity by the OIA, including “an alleged 2021 reallocation in which Defendant moved approximately half of the OIA from a money market fund into a short-term treasury fund…such affirmative purchases suffice to satisfy the ‘transaction’ component of a § 1106(a) claim[.]” Furthermore, Moran had identified an improper purpose, i.e., the “reallocation was for Defendant’s ‘use’ of the OIA for the benefit of APP and APP’s repurchase obligations.” The committee argued that repurchasing shares was not “prohibited” because, through repurchasing, the OIA funds would be used to pay benefits. However, the court ruled that this was not enough: “Plaintiff here has plausibly alleged that the primary purpose of the 2021 transaction was to serve APP’s interest in liquidity rather than the participants’ interest in long-term growth.” Thus, the problem was not that the plan had a liquid reserve or cash buffer, but that the committee “engage[d] in affirmative investment transactions to create an allegedly excessive buffer for the employer’s benefit. At this stage, those allegations are sufficient to state a claim under § 1106(a)(1)(D).” With that, the court denied the committee’s motion for judgment on the pleadings in its entirety.

Class Actions

Third Circuit

Bennett v. Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis LLP, No. 2:24-CV-00592-JMY, 2026 WL 202548 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 22, 2026) (Judge John M. Younge). In this case Jo Bennett, an attorney, sued her defunct law firm on behalf of a class of employees, alleging numerous violations of ERISA in the firm’s administration of its 401(k) benefit plan. In Your ERISA Watch’s July 31, 2024 edition, we detailed the judge’s order in the case denying defendants’ motion to dismiss, and since then the parties have negotiated and reached a settlement which was presented to the court. Here, the court granted final approval of the class action settlement, which included certifying the class for settlement purposes, approving attorney’s fees and expenses, and granting a class representative service award. The court determined that the settlement, which included a monetary component of $675,000, representing approximately 68% of the maximum potential recovery, and non-monetary benefits, such as tax-favored treatment of distributions through a “Special SubTrust,” was fair, reasonable, and adequate. The court also considered the Third Circuit’s Girsh and Prudential factors, which include the complexity and duration of the litigation, the reaction of the class to the settlement, and the risks of establishing liability and damages. The court found that the settlement was reasonable given the complexity of ERISA litigation and the potential risks and costs of continued litigation. The plan of allocation was approved, providing for a pro rata distribution of the net settlement fund based on the losses in class members’ accounts. The court also approved the requested attorney’s fees, which were one-third of the settlement fund, and reimbursement of expenses totaling $7,650.11. A service award of $10,000 was granted to Bennett as class representative. The court thus entered judgment, ordered the case dismissed, and retained jurisdiction over the implementation and enforcement of the settlement agreement.

Tamburrino v. United Healthcare Ins. Co., No. 21-12766 (SDW) (LDW), 2026 WL 234155 (D.N.J. Jan. 28, 2026) (Judge Susan D. Wigenton). In 2018 plaintiff Barbara Williams underwent post-mastectomy delayed bilateral breast reconstruction with deep inferior epigastric perforator (“DIEP”) flap microsurgery. In this action Williams alleges that defendant United Healthcare Insurance Company denied her claim “because of its application of a denial policy that relies on inapplicable Medicare billing and coding guidelines. Specifically, Plaintiff contends that Defendant relied on Medicare billing and coding guidelines, rather than using HCPCS S2068, the billing code created for DIEP flap microsurgery.” Williams’ operative complaint alleges three claims under ERISA: one for wrongful denial of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), and two for equitable relief under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). Williams filed a motion for class certification on which the court ruled in this order. The court evaluated the motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, which imposes numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy requirements. The court ruled that the numerosity requirement was met because United did not dispute that the potential number of plaintiffs exceeded 40. However, the court found that the commonality requirement was not satisfied because of variation in benefit plan language among the members of the proposed class. The court noted that some plan language required an abuse of discretion standard of review while some language would result in de novo review. As a result, “individualized, fact-specific” inquiries would be required, thus defeating her proposed class. “[T]he question of which standard of review applies to the members’ plan cannot be resolved on a class-wide basis and as such, Plaintiff fails to satisfy the commonality requirement.” As for typicality, the court noted that the variety of limitation periods in members’ plans could render some claims untimely. “Based on the sample claims and thousands of putative class members, it is likely that the numerous class members with untimely claims could render Plaintiff’s timely claims atypical.” Regarding adequacy, the court noted “significant concerns” about Williams’ ability to serve as a class representative, citing “sworn deposition testimony where Plaintiff expressed doubts or an unwillingness to serve as a class representative.” Furthermore, the remedy she sought, reprocessing of claims, “may be harmful to some class members as they could be worse off financially while providers may be better off financially.” The court did not make definitive rulings on these other elements, however, and relied on Williams’ failure to satisfy the commonality requirement to deny her motion for class certification.

Fourth Circuit

Alford v. The NFL Player Disability & Survivor Benefit Plan, No. 1:23-CV-00358-JRR, 2026 WL 216349 (D. Md. Jan. 28, 2026) (Judge Julie R. Rubin). In this closely watched case, former players of the National Football League have brought numerous claims under ERISA against the league’s disability benefit plan and its review board alleging wrongful denial of benefits, failure to provide adequate notice of denial, denial of the right to a full and fair review, and breaches of fiduciary duties. The players argue that defendants “have rigged the claims process against those in whose best interests they are supposed to be administering the Plan” by engaging in practices that unfairly disadvantage applicants for disability benefits, including failing to consider all evidence, misinforming applicants, and employing financially conflicted physicians. (The players’ claims are supported in large part by the findings made by the district court in Cloud v. Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Player Ret. Plan. In that case the plan eventually prevailed at the Fifth Circuit, although that court “commend[ed]” the district court for “expos[ing] the disturbing lack of safeguards to ensure fair and meaningful review of disability claims brought by former players who suffered incapacitating on-the-field injuries, including severe head trauma,” and for “chronicling a lopsided system aggressively stacked against disabled players.”) The players survived defendants’ motion to dismiss in March of 2024 (as we detailed in our March 27, 2024 edition), and in September of 2024 the players filed a motion for class certification. The players sought to certify a class of all plan participants who filed applications for disability benefits between August 1, 1970, and the date of class certification, and proposed five subclasses based on different types of disability benefits and adverse determinations. In this ruling the court denied the players’ motion. As in every class action, the court focused on whether plaintiffs met Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23’s requirements of numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation, and concluded that plaintiffs could not satisfy the Rule’s commonality and typicality requirements. On commonality, the court noted that in the Fourth Circuit, “[a]llegations of generalized policies are not usually sufficient for the purposes of class certification,” and thus courts “are skeptical” when plaintiffs “rely on nebulous references to ‘systemic failures’ or ‘systemic deficiencies’ to satisfy commonality.” The players admitted that any particular plaintiff might be “unaffected by one or more of the policies and practices at issue,” but contended that “Defendants’ panoply of practices and policies steeply tilted the playing field against benefits applicants and amounted, in their totality, to objectively unreasonable conduct.” This was not enough for the court, which agreed with defendants that the players had not alleged “a uniformly-applied or well-defined common practice that affected (or affects) each member of the proposed class[.]” The court stated that each player’s claim would ordinarily involve “a highly individualized assessment,” and thus the class could not proceed without “some common thread or ‘glue’ (such as a uniform or common application of a policy) to tie ‘those decisions together in a way that suggests that they can productively be litigated all at once.’” The court also noted that the proposed class reached back to 1970 and thus raised questions about how common the players’ claims could be given the various plan changes and legal precedents that occurred during that lengthy time period. As for Rule 23’s typicality requirement, the court held that the players “fail to show that their claims are typical of putative class members’ claims” because “Plaintiffs have not persuaded the court that their claims arising from this overarching policy are typical of the claims of class members from decades ago, asserting their own unique medical conditions and applications, under different Plan terms.” The court was further unconvinced that the players’ claims “‘arise from the same factual nexus and are based on the same legal theories as’ those of the proposed class members.” As a result, the court denied the players’ motion for class certification.

Franklin v. Duke Univ., No. 1:23-CV-833, 2026 WL 191142 (M.D.N.C. Jan. 26, 2026) (Judge Catherine C. Eagles). This is a class action brought by Joy G. Franklin alleging that Duke University and related defendants violated ERISA by using outdated and unreasonable actuarial equivalency formulas which resulted in reduced benefits for participants in Duke’s pension plan. Specifically, Franklin claimed that this conduct violated ERISA’s actuarial equivalence requirement and anti-forfeiture rules, and breached fiduciary duties. Defendants responded with a motion in which it sought to dismiss Franklin’s Section 1132(a)(3) claim and/or compel arbitration of both her individual and class claims. As Your ERISA Watch detailed in our March 13, 2024 edition, the district court denied defendants’ motion, ruling that Franklin had standing to bring her claim and that the unilaterally added arbitration provision in the plan was unenforceable. (The district court subsequently denied defendants’ motion to dismiss Franklin’s Section 1132(a)(2) claim as well.) Defendants appealed to the Fourth Circuit on the arbitration issue, and in September of 2025, while that appeal was pending, the parties reached a settlement. The Fourth Circuit agreed to remand the case back to the district court for settlement approval proceedings. Notice was given to the class, and no objections were raised. A final fairness hearing was held on January 21, 2026, and in this order the court granted final approval of the settlement. The settlement class was defined as participants and beneficiaries of Duke’s retirement plan who began receiving benefits between September 29, 2017, and July 1, 2023, and were receiving certain types of annuities. The proposed settlement awarded the class roughly 17% of the calculated class-wide damages, which the court admitted was “marginally lower than similar ERISA cases[.]” However, the court also acknowledged that “the plaintiff here faces unusually strong headwinds if litigation continues” because recent precedent “may have altered the analysis of the arbitration provision at issue in the defendants’ pending appeal.” Furthermore, plaintiff could not be certain of success on the merits, given the complex and expert-dependent nature of ERISA cases in general and actuarial equivalence cases in particular.” The court noted that an independent fiduciary had reviewed and approved the settlement terms. The court marched throughout the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, including numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation, and found all were satisfied. The court found the settlement fair and reasonable, and noted that it was reached through arm’s length negotiations with the assistance of an experienced ERISA mediator. The court thus granted final certification of the class and approval of the class action settlement, finding it in the best interests of the class members. The court retained jurisdiction over the settlement and dismissed the operative complaint with prejudice.

Disability Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Robinette v. Appalachian Regional Healthcare, Inc., No. 6:26-CV-22-REW-EBA, 2026 WL 252992 (E.D. Ky. Jan. 30, 2026) (Judge Robert E. Wier). Dayna Suzanne Robinette stopped working as a ward clerk for Appalachian Regional Healthcare, Inc. (ARH) in 2023 due to chronic pain from congenital left hip dysplasia and degenerative lumbar spine disease. She applied for disability retirement benefits under ARH’s pension plan, supported by a letter from her treating provider. The provider stated that Robinette “was born with congenital hip dysplasia, was born without a hip, and had surgery when she was eight years old to try to help build a hip.” The provider further attested that Robinette had “progressive left hip joint pain and lower back pain due to a marked lower extremity deformity,” and “faces ‘ongoing pain’ that is ‘progressively worse.’” The plan’s first medical reviewer “acknowledged Robinette’s severe hip deformity and osteoarthritis but concluded that she was not ‘Totally Disabled’ under the Plan, suggesting she could work with restrictions.” On appeal, the plan arranged an independent medical examination (IME) which concluded that Robinette “could work in a sedentary position with adequate pain control.” As a result, the plan denied Robinette’s claim and she initiated this action for unlawful denial of benefits under ERISA. Robinette filed a motion for judgment which was the subject of this order. The court began with the standard of review; both parties agreed that the plan granted discretionary authority to the review committee, so the court employed the arbitrary and capricious standard. Robinette advanced three arguments in support of her motion: “First, she argues that the Committee applied an incorrect standard of disability in making the disability determination… Second, she claims the Committee’s reliance on [the IME] opinion in reaching its decision to deny benefits was arbitrary and capricious… Third, she contends that the medical evidence provides compelling support that she is ‘Totally Disabled’ as provided in the Plan.” Addressing the first argument, the court ruled that the committee reasonably interpreted the plan definition of disability, and that Robinette’s contention that the definition was ambiguous was defeated by the standard of review, which gave the committee discretion to interpret the provision. On her second and third arguments, the court agreed, however. The court found that the IME reviewer “plainly did not review or have access to the full record,” conditioned his conclusion on “adequate pain management,” which was not reflected in the record, and his report “has glaring internal inconsistence and a stark logic deficit.” The court faulted the reviewer’s reference to potential hip replacement because “that prospective possibility hardly speaks to Robinette’s condition at the time of the claim or denial,” and furthermore he “denies any reference to such surgery in any of the medical records ‘available.’” These contradictions, according to the court, “will not do, even in the forgiving arbitrary and capricious world.” The court also criticized the medical reviewer supporting the committee’s initial decision, which was a “documents-only review” that “ultimately lands on a work ability unsupported by the record and cites only a job that plainly involves duties (e.g., bending) that exceed Robinette’s capacities[.]” As a result, the court granted Robinette’s motion, and chose to award her benefits rather than remand because she was “clearly entitled to benefits.” The court further authorized Robinette to seek “reasonable attorney’s fees and costs under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g) by timely post-judgment motion[.]”

ERISA Preemption

Second Circuit

Doolittle v. Hartford Fin. Servs. Grp., Inc., No. 1:25-CV-00148 (BKS/TWD), 2026 WL 266009 (N.D.N.Y. Feb. 2, 2026) (Judge Brenda K. Sannes). Micky R. Doolittle brought this pro se action against Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company alleging that Hartford unlawfully underpaid his long-term disability benefits. The dispute stems from Doolittle’s Social Security disability benefit award. Before he received that award, Doolittle agreed to receive unreduced benefits from Hartford with the understanding that the award was an offset under Hartford’s policy and he would have to pay Hartford back if he received the award. Doolittle subsequently received a retroactive Social Security disability check for $31,000, and Hartford requested reimbursement. Doolittle contends that he entered into a verbal agreement with a Hartford representative in which he would pay $10,000 to settle the overpayment, and subsequently sent a check for $10,000, which Hartford cashed. However, Hartford allegedly stopped paying benefits anyway, presumably to recover the remainder of the overpayment. Doolittle filed a complaint in state court alleging two state law causes of action, and last year Hartford moved to dismiss. As we chronicled in our September 17, 2025 issue, the court granted Hartford’s motion, ruling that Doolittle’s two claims were preempted by ERISA. Doolittle amended his complaint, and Hartford moved to dismiss again. In this order, the court granted Hartford’s motion again for the very same reasons. Doolittle asserted the same two state law causes of action in his new complaint – breach of contract and bad faith – and thus the court again ruled that these claims were preempted. However, the court ruled that due to the limited facts before it, it “cannot conclude as a matter of law that Plaintiff does not have a cause of action under Section 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B).” As a result, the court granted Hartford’s motion to dismiss Doolittle’s state law claims, but allowed him to pursue a federal claim under Section 502(a)(1)(B).

Third Circuit

Kirmser v. Unity Bancorp, Inc., No. 24-10663 (MAS) (TJB), 2026 WL 265476 (D.N.J. Feb. 2, 2026) (Judge Michael A. Shipp). Michelle S. Kirmser was employed by Unity Bank and was a participant in the Bank’s Executive Life Insurance Plan. The plan stated that a participant’s rights would cease if terminated for cause, if employment ended before early retirement age for reasons other than disability, or if the participant became gainfully employed elsewhere after terminating due to disability. Kirmser alleges she became disabled in 2023 and that her employment was terminated after reaching early retirement age due to disability, not for cause, and thus she was entitled to continued coverage under the life insurance plan. Kirmser also challenges her payments under the Bank’s executive long-term disability (LTD) benefit plan. Kirmser contends the Bank informed her that her premiums were paid in a manner that would not subject her benefits to taxation. However, after becoming disabled and receiving LTD benefits, Kirmser discovered the income was reported as taxable. Kirmser thus filed this action against three related Bank defendants, alleging (1) declaratory judgment under ERISA, (2) breach of contract, (3) breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, (4) promissory estoppel, and (5) misrepresentation. Defendants moved to dismiss. First, defendants argued that the Bank’s holding company was an improper defendant because it did not play any role in controlling the plan or its administration. The court agreed and dismissed the holding company. The court then addressed the merits of Kirmser’s claims. In her first claim, Kirmser sought a declaratory judgment that she was a participant in the life insurance plan, but the court dismissed this claim sua sponte for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because Kirmser did not demonstrate a “real and immediate” threat of future harm. The court acknowledged that although Kirmser “alleges a theoretical future harm – that her beneficiaries would not recover any money upon a claim made after her death – Plaintiff has not otherwise alleged that she or her beneficiaries face an immediate threat of this occurring absent a declaration from this Court or that any purported limitations period is set to expire.” The court allowed Kirmser an opportunity to amend her complaint “to bolster allegations related to the threat of imminent harm she may face.” As for Kirmser’s state law claims, which all addressed the taxability of her benefits under the LTD plan, the court ruled that they were preempted by ERISA. Kirmser contended that these claims “do not seek benefits under any ERISA plan,” but instead “ask only that the Court require [Unity] to make good on various representations that were made to [P]laintiff[.]” However, the court ruled that her claims “clearly require an analysis of the EX LTD Plan itself, and its administration, to discern the responsibility for paying premiums for coverage, and thus, whether Plaintiff should be taxed on the EX LTD Benefits as she receives them.” Thus, these claims were preempted and dismissed. As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss in its entirety.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Eleventh Circuit

Bolton v. Inland Fresh Seafood Corp. of Am., Inc., No. 24-10084, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 205635 (11th Cir. Jan. 27, 2026). In our October 22, 2025 edition we reported on the Eleventh Circuit’s published opinion in this case in which that court once again adhered to its 40-year-old rule that plaintiffs must “exhaust,” i.e., fully appeal, all their ERISA claims – even statutory claims, such as breach of fiduciary duty or prohibited transactions – before they can file a civil action in federal court. As the court admitted, its rule is at odds with seven other circuits, which have all held there is no exhaustion requirement under ERISA for statutory claims. (Only the Seventh Circuit agrees, and its rule is more forgiving.) The judges on the panel were clearly not thrilled with Circuit precedent, so two of them (Adalberto Jordan and Jill Pryor) issued a concurrence in which they “propose[d] that we convene en banc to consider overruling” the Circuit’s outlier rule. Lo and behold, three months later the full court issued this order granting their wish and vacating the panel’s October decision. The Circuit will now reconsider the case and decide whether to jettison its idiosyncratic exhaustion rule.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

R.R. v. California Physicians’ Service, No. 24-6337, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 207507 (9th Cir. Jan. 27, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Paez, Bea, and Forrest). Plaintiffs R.R. and his minor son E.R. brought this action challenging defendant Blue Shield of California’s denials of their claims for reimbursement for E.R.’s treatment at a mental health residential treatment center. Although the ERISA-governed plan insured and administered by Blue Shield covered residential treatment, Blue Shield denied plaintiffs’ claims because it concluded that E.R.’s residential treatment was not medically necessary under its clinical guidelines. Plaintiffs thus filed this action under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) seeking recovery of benefits, and the case was decided on summary judgment proceedings. The district court acknowledged that there “is no doubt that E.R. has a serious psychiatric condition and has suffered substantially from it, as has his family,” but in the end granted summary judgment to Blue Shield, ruling that its decision was not an abuse of discretion. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our August 21, 2024 edition.) Plaintiffs appealed, and in this unpublished decision the Ninth Circuit affirmed. The court agreed with the district court that the proper standard of review was abuse of discretion because the plan authorized Blue Shield to interpret its provisions and determine eligibility for benefits. The court nominally tempered this deference with skepticism because Blue Shield “acts as both the administrator that decides claims and the insurer that pays benefits” and thus “has a conflict of interest.” However, plaintiffs did not offer evidence that this conflict of interest affected the benefits decision. Thus, Blue Shield’s use of an independent physician reviewer, “combined with Plaintiffs’ failure to meet their burden of production, makes Blue Shield’s conflict ‘less important’ to our analysis, ‘perhaps to the vanishing point.’” The court then turned to the merits, determining that Blue Shield did not abuse its discretion in determining that E.R.’s residential treatment was not “medically necessary” under the terms of the plan. The court ruled that Blue Shield properly used its Magellan Care Guidelines in interpreting medical necessity because they are “nationally recognized” and “widely used.” The court further ruled that Blue Shield did not abuse its discretion in determining that E.R. did not meet specific criteria under these guidelines. Plaintiffs argued against Blue Shield’s reliance on the treatment center’s records, claiming they were based on E.R.’s self-reports, which were not credible. However, the court found it was not an abuse of discretion for Blue Shield to consider these records, as “they were the most contemporaneous reports of E.R.’s mental state” and “reflect the judgment of independent clinicians.” Plaintiffs also contended that Blue Shield failed to explain why it reached a different conclusion from E.R.’s treating physicians and parents, but the court noted that administrators are not required to accord special weight to the opinions of a claimant’s physician, and furthermore those entreaties post-dated E.R.’s admission and did not address the guidelines at issue. The court further found that Blue Shield complied with ERISA’s procedural rules and that it did not “present a new rationale to the district court that was not presented to the claimant…during the administrative process.” Instead, the court stated, “There is a difference between offering a new rationale,” which is forbidden, and “offering new evidence to bolster an existing rationale,” which is what Blue Shield did: “[A]n administrator may cite evidence in litigation that it had not cited during the administrative process, so long as that evidence supports the same underlying legal theory.” As a result, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the decision below in its entirety. Judge Richard A. Paez dissented, arguing that the majority misapplied the standard of review because Blue Shield’s conflict of interest required more skepticism. Judge Paez further argued that Blue Shield failed to credit plaintiffs’ reliable evidence and did not engage in a meaningful dialogue with plaintiffs. Specifically, Blue Shield did not engage with the arguments or evidence presented by plaintiffs; “Indeed, the final denial letter either misstated or ignored the contents of Plaintiffs’ internal appeal.” In short, Judge Paez concluded that Blue Shield was entitled to less deference because of its conduct, and thus he “would hold that Blue Shield abused its discretion. At minimum, I would remand to the district court to reconsider Plaintiffs’ claim for benefits under a less-deferential standard of review.”

Pension Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Woo v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Inc., No. 23-CV-05063-RFL, 2026 WL 194578 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 26, 2026) (Judge Rita F. Lin). Plaintiff Sarah Woo has been employed by Kaiser Foundation Hospitals since 2002. In 2009, Woo transferred from Kaiser’s Southern Region to its Northern Region. Upon transfer, she received confirmation of her eligibility to participate in Kaiser’s Supplemental Retirement Plan, an after-tax component of the Kaiser Permanente Employees Pension Plan Supplement. Woo enrolled, and over the next decade made voluntary contributions from her paychecks. During this time Kaiser confirmed her eligibility multiple times in both phone calls and letters. However, in December 2020, Kaiser informed Woo that it had made a mistake. Woo was in fact ineligible to participate in the plan because “her transfer to Northern California had brought her outside the Plan’s definition of Eligible Employee.” Woo’s internal appeals were unsuccessful, and thus she brought this action, seeking equitable relief pursuant to ERISA Section 1132(a)(3) under an estoppel theory. The parties filed cross-motions for judgment which were decided in this order. The court noted that estoppel claims under ERISA require “(1) a material misrepresentation; (2) reasonable and detrimental reliance on the representation; (3) extraordinary circumstances; (4) the provisions of the plan at issue are ambiguous, such that reasonable persons could disagree as to their meaning or effect; and (5) the representations must have been made to the beneficiary involving a spoken or written interpretation of the plan.” The court ruled that Woo satisfied all five elements. The court found that Kaiser “materially misrepresented Woo’s eligibility to participate in the SRIP and the KPEPP for over a decade,” either directly to her or through its agents. The court acknowledged that some of these communications included disclaimers, but others, such as the initial eligibility letter, did not, and thus the multiple misrepresentations over several years were sufficiently misleading. The court further found that Woo reasonably relied on Kaiser’s representations because continuing participation in the plan was “a high priority” for her when deciding to transfer to the Northern Region. Woo “engaged in years of financial planning – as reflected by her numerous calls to KPRC regarding her retirement benefits – under the assumption she would be able to count on receiving retirement benefits through the SRIP and the KPEPP.” The court further ruled that “extraordinary circumstances” existed due to Kaiser’s repeated misrepresentations over time: “This pattern of repeated misrepresentation is a prototypical example of extraordinary circumstances that support an equitable estoppel claim under ERISA.” The court also found that the plan provisions were ambiguous because, while it was clear that Woo was not an “Eligible Employee,” “[t]he Plan is ambiguous as to what happens when KFH, the Participating Company, makes an error in the eligibility determination.” The court concluded that “[o]ne could reasonably read the Plan as treating KFH’s eligibility determination as conclusive and binding…even if it was an erroneous application of the eligibility criteria[.]” Finally, the court found that the fifth element was met because the representations made to Woo involved interpretations of the plan, and thus “Woo has established all the elements of her equitable estoppel claim under ERISA.” The court granted her motion for judgment, denied Kaiser’s, and ordered the parties to meet and confer to prepare a proposed judgment.

Provider Claims

Third Circuit

Samra Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co., No. CV 25-6001 (MAS) (JTQ), 2026 WL 266754 (D.N.J. Feb. 2, 2026) (Judge Michael A. Shipp). Samra Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, a healthcare services provider, performed surgical services on a patient insured by UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company. Samra alleges that it obtained prior authorization from United, which “explained to Plaintiffs that the out-of-network benefit to be paid by Defendant was the FAIRHealth Benchmark at the 75th percentile.” However, Samra alleges that United only paid a fraction of the billed amount, leaving a significant outstanding balance. Samra and the patient filed this suit in state court alleging six causes of action: breach of contract, promissory estoppel, account stated, failure to pay benefits under ERISA, breach of fiduciary duty and co-fiduciary duty under ERISA, and failure to provide a summary plan description in accordance with ERISA. The state law claims were asserted by Samra, while the ERISA claims were asserted by the patient. United moved to dismiss Samra’s claims on preemption grounds, and all claims for failure to state a claim. The court first addressed United’s preemption argument, ruling that Samra’s claims were not preempted by ERISA because they did not require an “impermissible reference” to the patient’s ERISA-governed plan and were based on a separate agreement between Samra and United. The court acknowledged that some reference to the plan might be necessary, but such a reference would be nothing more than “a cursory examination,” which “is ‘not the sort of exacting, tedious, or duplicative inquiry that the preemption doctrine is intended to bar.’” The court then examined Samra’s state law claims and found they were all properly pleaded. The court ruled that Samra had alleged claims for (1) breach of contract based on United’s “multiple representations” that it would pay the patient’s claim at a certain rate, (2) promissory estoppel based on those same representations, as well as Samra’s detrimental reliance, and (3) account stated because Samra had sent a bill to United for a precise amount which United had accepted and did not dispute. However, the patient had less luck with her ERISA claims. The court found that the patient’s allegations supporting her claim for benefits were too vague and that she did not identify a specific plan provision that entitled her to benefits. The court also dismissed the patient’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA, concluding that the relief sought was legal rather than equitable, and that she had merely relabeled her claim for benefits. As for the alleged failure to produce plan documents, it was dismissed as well because the patient did not allege that United was a plan administrator, a necessary element under Section 1132(c)(1)(B). As a result, the court denied United’s motion as to Samra’s state law claims but granted it as to the patient’s ERISA claims.

Fifth Circuit

Abira Med. Laboratories LLC v. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas, No. 3:24-CV-2001-B, 2026 WL 252097 (N.D. Tex. Jan. 30, 2026) (Judge Jane J. Boyle). Abira Medical Laboratories LLC, d/b/a Genesis Diagnostics, brought this action against Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas seeking $7.1 million in reimbursement for laboratory testing Genesis provided to BCBS’ insureds. Genesis initiated arbitration proceedings against BCBS in 2022, contending that BCBS failed to pay both in-network and out-of-network claims. In 2023, the out-of-network claims were severed from the arbitration, leading Genesis to file this separate lawsuit in state court. In its complaint Genesis asserted claims for account stated, breach of contract, and quantum meruit. BCBS removed the case to federal court and moved to dismiss. The court granted the motion, dismissing Genesis’ quantum meruit claim with prejudice, and the breach of contract and account stated claims without prejudice. Genesis then filed an amended complaint asserting ERISA, breach of contract, and account stated claims. BCBS again moved to dismiss the amended complaint, and the court issued this decision. BCBS first argued that “Genesis failed to sufficiently allege it has standing to bring an ERISA claim because the requisition excerpts it relies upon only contain an authorization for direct payment, not an assignment.” The court agreed, ruling that the requisition excerpts did not contain an assignment: “For starters, the word ‘assign’ is absent. Moreover, the requisition excerpts contain no manifestation of an intent to vest in Genesis the right to enforce the members’ insurance plans against BCBSTX… Instead, the requisition excerpts merely authorize Genesis to receive payment and, in some instances, release the members’ medical information.” As for Genesis’ state law claims, the court ruled that (1) Genesis’ breach of contract claim failed for the same reason as its ERISA claims, i.e., lack of assignment; and (2) Genesis failed to state a claim for account stated because it did not “sufficiently allege an express or implied agreement between it and BCBSTX that fixed the amount due.” The court thus granted BCBS’ motion in its entirety. The court granted leave to amend the ERISA and breach of contract claims, but dismissed the account stated claim with prejudice because Genesis had already had two chances to plead that claim.

Withdrawal Liability & Unpaid Contributions

Fourth Circuit

International Painters & Allied Trades Indus. Pension Fund v. Florida Glass of Tampa Bay, Inc., No. 25-1312, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 191344 (4th Cir. Jan. 26, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Wilkinson, Wynn, and Keenan). Florida Glass of Tampa Bay stopped paying into the International Painters & Allied Trades Industry Pension Fund in 2015, and subsequently filed for bankruptcy in 2016. During the bankruptcy proceedings, International Painters submitted a proof of claim for withdrawal liability, requesting $1,577,168. However, International Painters was uncertain as to whether Florida Glass had in fact withdrawn, due to the inconsistent start-and-stop nature of the building and construction industry (BCI), and thus labeled the proof of claim “contingent.” Ultimately, the claim was not objected to and was deemed allowed, resulting in a distribution of $48,349 to International Painters. In 2021, during one of its annual reviews, International Painters identified Florida Glass as one of its participating employers that had not contributed to the plan for five years and began investigating. It determined that Florida Glass and its control group satisfied the plan conditions for withdrawal in 2015, and in 2022 it assessed withdrawal liability of $1,577,168, sending a notice and demand letter. Defendants contested the notice but did not seek arbitration within the statutory 180-day window, and thus International Painters brought this action to collect the withdrawal liability. On summary judgment, defendants contended that International Painters’ statute of limitations had expired because the 2016 bankruptcy claim constituted a notice and demand and request for acceleration under ERISA, as amended by the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments Act of 1980 (MPPAA), which started a six-year limitations clock. The district court disagreed, ruling that the claim was not a notice and demand, and alternatively ruled that defendants waived their statute of limitations defense by failing to initiate arbitration. Defendants appealed, and the Fourth Circuit issued this published opinion. The court noted that the case “presents two important questions for our circuit, both of which concern what happens when a multiemployer pension plan submits a proof of claim for withdrawal liability in the bankruptcy of a contributing employer. First, does the proof of claim operate as a notice and demand under 29 U.S.C. § 1399(b)(1)? Second, does it operate as an acceleration under 29 U.S.C. § 1399(c)(5)?” The court held that the answer to both questions “may in some cases be ‘yes’,” but in this case, the answer was “no.” The court explained that the MPPAA and the bankruptcy laws are “an imperfect fit,” and thus rejected defendants’ contention that “every proof of claim operates as a notice and demand as a matter of law.” Indeed, the court noted that defendants’ argument “would seriously undermine the optionality the MPPAA was designed to provide pension plans,” observing that the MPPAA “bespeaks a deliberate legislative choice to afford some flexibility” to plans and “purposely ‘place[s] the running of the statute of limitations in the control of the fund’” by giving them discretion as to when to start the collection process. “Forcing a pension plan’s protective, contingent filing against a BCI employer to operate as a notice and demand would turn this concept on its head by handing the stopwatch to the bankrupt employer.” Furthermore, defendants’ argument “would also constrain the ability of pension plans to recover withdrawal liability from BCI employers at all” because it, in combination with the MPPAA’s industry-specific rules for identifying BCI withdrawals, which provide a five-year window, would place plans on an unfairly shortened clock. As a result, the Fourth Circuit concluded that “the better rule – the rule that leaves the stopwatch in the hands of the pension plan and provides it the flexibility to protect its assets, as Congress directed – is that a proof of claim operates as a notice and demand only when it clearly satisfies the MPPAA’s requirements… Ambiguity should be resolved by concluding that the proof of claim is not a notice and demand.” Here, International Painters’ notice and demand letter clearly satisfied the MPPAA’s requirements, but its bankruptcy claim, which did not even use the word “demand” and was labeled as “contingent,” did not. The Fourth Circuit acknowledged that International Painters accepted some money from its bankruptcy claim, but ruled that defendants could not “transform the filing into a clear notice and demand” simply by not objecting to it. Instead, the district court appropriately treated the distribution as a set-off from the plan’s award in this action. Finally, the Fourth Circuit declined to rule on the alternative waiver holding by the district court, stating that it was unnecessary to do so because the appellate court had “fully resolved the case on the basis of the notice and demand question.” Thus, the Fourth Circuit affirmed the ruling in International Painters’ favor, concluding that defendants could not “use a quirk of bankruptcy law to avoid paying what it owes[.]” The court ordered defendants to pay the withdrawal liability, minus the amount already recovered through bankruptcy, along with interest, liquidated damages, attorney’s fees, and costs.

T.E. v. Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield, No. 25-5407, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 172050 (6th Cir. Jan. 22, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Griffin, Thapar, and Hermandorfer)

The tide appears to be turning in medical benefit cases. For years consumers have grown accustomed to receiving opaque and uninformative denial letters from their health insurers. These letters were often tolerated by the courts, which found the denials acceptable partly due to the deferential standard of review they were typically required to apply under ERISA.

However, it appears the courts have become increasingly frustrated with such denial letters and are beginning to scrutinize them more closely, regardless of the operative standard of review. The Tenth Circuit has led the way on this issue (see, e.g., Ian C. v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co. and D.K. v. United Behavioral Health), but other courts have weighed in as well (such as the Fifth Circuit in Dwyer v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co.; see below for this week’s attorney’s fees ruling in that case). Most of these cases have involved health insurance giant UnitedHealthcare.

This week it was the Sixth Circuit’s turn to express its displeasure, but this time with a different insurer: Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield. As a bonus, the court also discussed the 2008 Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (the “Parity Act”).

The plaintiff in the case was T.E., who sued individually and on behalf of his son, C.E. (initials were used for both because C.E. was a minor). Unfortunately, C.E. has a history of behavioral and mental health issues, including ADHD, anxiety, and autism. He received therapy and medication throughout his childhood, but in January of 2020 his condition worsened. C.E. exhibited aggressive behavior and suicidal ideation and was placed in a partial hospitalization program. C.E. did not improve, and thus he was moved to acute inpatient hospitalization for a few days.

C.E. returned to partial hospitalization, but he was discharged in February of 2020 with a recommendation that he “needed intensive in-patient treatment to address his symptoms.” T.E. then enrolled C.E. at Elevations, a residential treatment center.

Anthem, the administrator of the benefit plan covering C.E., initially approved coverage for two weeks at Elevations. It then approved another week of treatment based on Elevations’ comments that C.E. had “severe executive functioning” issues and “struggle[d] to self-regulate.”

C.E. did not improve, however; Elevations “noted that C.E was again confined to his dorm for safety reasons and would not follow staff instructions. C.E. also continued to be disruptive and argumentative, on top of reporting continued anger and feelings of aggression towards others.”

Despite this, Anthem denied coverage for further treatment at Elevations, stating it was no longer “medically necessary” under the plan’s guidelines. T.E. appealed, but to no avail. As a result, T.E. filed this action alleging that Anthem (1) arbitrarily and capriciously denied his claim for benefits, and (2) violated the Parity Act. The district court granted summary judgment to Anthem (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our April 9, 2025 edition), and T.E. appealed to the Sixth Circuit.

The appellate court began with the standard of review, which both parties agreed was the arbitrary and capricious standard because the benefit plan at issue gave Anthem discretionary authority to make benefit decisions. The court reviewed the district court’s application of this standard de novo.

The Sixth Circuit explained that “ERISA’s arbitrary-and-capricious standard has both a procedural and substantive component.” However, the court never even reached the substantive component because “Anthem’s coverage decision was procedurally arbitrary and capricious.” The court ruled that this was so because “Anthem failed to ‘engage in reasoned decisionmaking’” in three different ways.

First, Anthem “inadequately assessed C.E.’s treating-clinician evidence.” The Sixth Circuit observed that three of C.E.’s treating clinicians had supported his continued treatment, but Anthem “never addressed the[ir] opinions,” did not “provide a reason for rejecting” those opinions, and “‘never explained’ their ‘disagreement with the opinions.’”

Instead, Anthem “decided, without explanation, to adopt the contrary opinions of its physician reviewers…based only on cursory ‘[f]ile reviews’ – rendering Anthem’s decision even more ‘questionable,’ particularly given that T.E.’s claim ‘involves a mental illness component.’” This “total failure to address the opinions of C.E.’s treating clinicians falls short of the meaningful review ERISA requires.”

Anthem argued that it did consider the clinicians’ opinions. However, the Sixth Circuit explained that Anthem only mentioned some of the opinions, “did not address the crux” of their evidence, contradicted some of the clinicians’ evidence, ignored evidence that cut against its decision, and offered conclusory statements about the scope of its review. In short, Anthem failed “the bare minimum required by our caselaw,” which is to “‘give’ some ‘reasons’ for rejecting the opinions of the participant’s treating doctors… Anthem failed to do so. All told, Anthem shut its eyes to the medical opinions of C.E.’s treating clinicians, which suggests that its coverage denial was arbitrary and capricious.”

Second, the Sixth Circuit accused Anthem of evidentiary cherry-picking, which is “a hallmark of arbitrary-and-capricious decisionmaking.” The court found that one of Anthem’s physician reviewers quoted parts of C.E.’s medical records while ignoring others, and “never explained why he privileged one portion of the notes over the other or how he reconciled the conflicting evidence.” Another reviewing physician incorrectly interpreted C.E.’s milieu notes, which actually indicated ongoing struggles rather than improvement.

Third, the Sixth Circuit found that Anthem “failed to ‘adequately explain[] any change from an earlier benefits ruling.’” The court noted that Anthem covered the first 21 days of C.E.’s treatment, but then denied further coverage without identifying “a rational reason” for doing so.

The court examined the appeal denial letters, the initial denial letter, and the physician reviewer reports to find such a reason, but none satisfied ERISA’s requirements. The appeal denial letters misrepresented C.E.’s condition and contradicted its clinical guidelines. The initial denial letter misrepresented the medical records, nebulously referred to “improvement” without explaining how that changed coverage, and cited facts which were irrelevant to Anthem’s coverage determination. The physician reviewers either “offered only bottom-line conclusions, devoid of any explanation,” or “misstated the record and never addressed why treatment was no longer needed to address C.E.’s ‘mood disorder’ and ‘severe executive functioning’ issues.”

In sum, “Anthem justified its coverage denial by citing considerations that were unrelated to C.E.’s initial admission and contradicted its prior assessment. Anthem’s justification for its coverage-decision change was, in short, irrational.”

As for a remedy, the Sixth Circuit ruled that remand was appropriate. The court stated that while “T.E. has put forth evidence that C.E.’s treatment is medically necessary under Anthem’s coverage guideline,” the court was not a “medical specialist” and thus it would not make a coverage determination in the first instance. “The ‘proper remedy’ in such a case is to vacate the district court’s decision and remand with instructions that the district court remand to the plan administrator for ‘a full and fair inquiry.’”

The decision was not a total victory for T.E., however, as the Sixth Circuit turned next to his Parity Act claim. The court acknowledged that to date it had “neither interpreted nor applied the Parity Act,” and in fact, “we have not even accepted that there is a private cause of action to enforce the Parity Act[.]”

However, the court found it unnecessary to “resolve here exactly how to evaluate Parity Act claims because T.E.’s claim fails in any event.” The court noted that, “[a]t a minimum, the statutory text directs that Parity Act claims require a comparison between an insurer’s treatment limitations for mental-health care and the treatment limitations for medical or surgical care.” Such an analysis requires plaintiffs to “demonstrate what those medical or surgical treatment limitations are and how they apply in practice.”

Here, however, the Sixth Circuit ruled that T.E. did not identify the comparable medical/surgical guidelines or how they applied. The court stated that T.E. also “failed to identify evidence of how those limitations are ‘separate’ from or less ‘restrictive’ than Anthem’s ‘treatment limitations’ on mental-health care.” As a result, even if T.E. could bring a private right of action under the Parity Act, he did not satisfy his burden of proof, and thus the court affirmed the judgment in Anthem’s favor on this claim.

Despite the court’s Parity Act ruling, the decision can only be considered a huge success for T.E., and will certainly assist plan beneficiaries looking to challenge future health insurance denials.

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

Arbitration

Second Circuit

Moody v. Starbucks Corp., No. 25-CV-8739 (PAE) (BCM), 2026 WL 146404 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 20, 2026) (Judge Barbara Moses). Amari J. Moody, proceeding pro se, brought this action “alleging claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)…the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA)…and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)…all arising out of the termination of his employment in August 2025, ‘while Plaintiff’s approved medical leave…remained active.’” Starbucks filed a motion (1) to dismiss the ADA claim, (2) for failure to exhaust required administrative remedies, and (3) to compel arbitration of all of plaintiff’s claims. The court granted Starbucks’ motion to compel arbitration, noting that Moody had signed an arbitration agreement as a condition of his employment, which required arbitration for employment-related claims. The court found that the agreement was valid and that all of Moody’s claims fell within its scope. The court acknowledged that “[i]n some cases, the court must also consider whether the plaintiff’s federal statutory claims are exempt from the reach” of the Federal Arbitration Act, but “[t]hat is not an issue here. It is well-settled that individual claims under the ADA, the FMLA, and ERISA are arbitrable… Shafer v. Stanley, 2023 WL 8100717, at *20 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 21, 2023) (‘Second Circuit law makes clear that compulsory arbitration of ERISA claims is lawful.’).” Moody contended that Starbucks waived its right to compel arbitration by “engaging in litigation-stage conduct fundamentally inconsistent with that right, including merits briefing, submission of fact-disputed declarations, and continued post-notice retaliation following formal litigation notice,” but the court found this argument “borders on the frivolous.” The court observed that Starbucks had timely and repeatedly informed the court that the case belonged in arbitration, and had not participated in any discovery or other litigation activities that would suggest a waiver. As a result, the court sent the case to arbitration and stayed all matters pending its completion.

Attorneys’ Fees

Fifth Circuit

Dwyer v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co., No. A-17-CV-439-RP, 2026 WL 184247 (W.D. Tex. Jan. 21, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Mark Lane). In 2017, Kelly Dwyer sued UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company, the administrator of his ERISA-governed medical benefit plan, for wrongfully terminating mental health benefits for his daughter and for failing to process claims under the correct rates in the plan. After a 2019 bench trial, the district court ruled against Dwyer almost four years later, in March of 2023, on both arguments. Dwyer appealed, and in 2024 the Fifth Circuit reversed in a published decision that was highly critical of United. (That ruling was Your ERISA Watch’s case of the week in our September 25, 2024 edition.) The Fifth Circuit ruled that United’s denial letters were unhelpful and unsupported by medical evidence, and that United failed to conduct a meaningful dialogue with Dwyer when handling his claims. The Fifth Circuit further ruled that United had forfeited the right to contest the issue of the correct rates because it never responded to Dwyer’s internal appeal. The Fifth Circuit remanded, and in this report and recommendation the assigned magistrate judge addressed the issues of attorney’s fees, costs, and interest. First, the court applied the Fifth Circuit’s five-factor test to determine whether fees should be awarded at all. The court ruled that all five factors favored an award. The court stated that the Fifth Circuit “made clear that United was entirely culpable for Dwyer’s damages,” “[t]he court has no doubt that United can satisfy an award of attorneys’ fees,” “the court can only hope that such an award may cause United to pause before acting again under similar circumstances,” “Dwyer…sought to make clear to United that it could not treat other plan beneficiaries the way it treated him,” and “as made clear by the Fifth Circuit, United had little to no merit in its position. Accordingly, Dwyer has shown that a fee award is appropriate.” The court then applied the lodestar method – multiplying a reasonable hourly rate by the hours reasonably spent on the case – to determine an appropriate fee. The court acknowledged that “[g]enerally, the ‘relevant market for purposes of determining the prevailing rate to be paid in a fee award is the community in which the district court sits.’” However, based on the declarations of Dwyer and his counsel, the court was “satisfied that Dwyer has shown the necessity of turning to out-of-district counsel for representation in this matter.” As a result, it awarded the prevailing market rates in the Central District of California, where Dwyer’s counsel was located, ranging from $800-900 per hour. The court also found that using the attorneys’ current rates was reasonable to compensate them for the fact that they took the case on contingency and had not been paid “for the nearly decade of time that has gone by.” The court dismissed United’s concerns about the rates, stating, “United did not illustrate its point by sharing how much it spent in fighting to deny $109,063.50 in benefits of life-saving treatment for a child.” Next, the court examined the hours spent on the case by Dwyer’s counsel and ruled that they were mostly reasonable as well. Again, the court noted that Dwyer’s attorneys worked on contingency and thus “had no incentive to spend unnecessary time on this case.” The court examined United’s individual arguments regarding certain tasks, and reduced minor time for travel and clerical tasks, but largely dismissed its objections. In the end, the court “recognize[d] that the amount of attorneys’ fees far outpaces the amount recovered. United makes much of this. However, there is no indication that Dwyer could have recovered his benefits without the expenditure. Reducing the fee award would only make it harder for future plaintiffs to find vindication in the courts.” The court then turned to costs and interest. Dwyer sought litigation costs of $6,517.27 and prejudgment interest of $87,596.77 (8% compounded annually) beginning on the date of the Fifth Circuit’s ruling. The court found both justified, noting that Dwyer “was forced to drain his savings and refinance his home to pay for his daughter’s care.” Thus, in the end, the magistrate judge recommended granting Dwyer’s motion for attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest, with minimal reductions, and ordered Dwyer to submit a notice reflecting its reductions. (Disclosure: Kantor & Kantor LLP is counsel of record for Mr. Dwyer in this action.)

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Fourth Circuit

Jacob v. RTX Corp., No. 1:25-CV-1389 (LMB/WBP), __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2026 WL 173228 (E.D. Va. Jan. 22, 2026) (Judge Leonie M. Brinkema). This is yet another case challenging an employer’s use of forfeited contributions to a retirement plan, and it ended in the same manner as the vast majority of similar cases preceding it. The plaintiffs, Melissa Jacob and Thomas Miller, were employees of aerospace and defense conglomerate RTX Corporation and participants in the RTX Savings Plan, an ERISA-governed 401(k) plan. Like many such plans, it is funded by participants and company matching contributions. Participants are immediately vested in their contributions, but matching contributions vest after two years of service. If a participant leaves before full vesting, unvested contributions are forfeited. Plaintiffs filed this putative class action alleging eight counts under ERISA against RTX and related defendants, including breaches of fiduciary duties and prohibited transactions. They contended that defendants improperly used forfeitures to offset future employer contributions instead of covering administrative expenses, reducing funds available for participants and depriving the plan of potential earnings. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which the court adjudicated in this published decision. First the court found that defendants acted in accordance with plan documents because the parties agreed that defendants did use forfeitures to pay some plan expenses, and because there was no plan provision requiring forfeitures to be used by the end of the year, as plaintiffs contended. Second, the court dismissed the claims for breach of ERISA’s duties of loyalty and prudence for similar reasons. The court stated that “Plaintiffs’ interpretation, which reads as a prioritization of using forfeitures to pay for administrative expenses instead of for reducing employer contributions into the Plan, is both unsupported by the language of the Plan, and the principles of ERISA.” Third, the court ruled against plaintiffs on their anti-inurement claim because “Plaintiffs’ Complaint does not allege any facts showing that defendants have removed any of the forfeited funds from the Plan.” On the contrary, the forfeitures remained within the plan and were used for permissible purposes. Defendants may have benefited from using forfeitures to reduce employer contributions, but such a benefit was only “indirect” and thus “insufficient to state a claim under the anti-inurement provision.” Fourth, the court found no prohibited transactions because the forfeitures remained within the plan, and the transactions at issue did not “present a special risk of plan underfunding” or otherwise harm the plan. Fifth, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ duty to monitor claim because it was derivative of plaintiffs’ other claims, which the court had already found failed to state a claim. In short, the court concluded that none of plaintiffs’ claims were supported by the plan’s language or ERISA principles, and thus it granted defendants’ motion to dismiss.

Eighth Circuit

Adams v. U.S. Bancorp, No. 22-CV-509 (NEB/LIB), 2026 WL 151825 (D. Minn. Jan. 16, 2026) (Judge Nancy E. Brasel). The plaintiffs in this putative class action are former employees of U.S. Bank who sued the bank and related defendants, alleging that they violated ERISA by underpaying early retirement benefits under the bank’s pension plan. Specifically, plaintiffs argued that defendants used unreasonable mortality tables and discount rates, which resulted in benefits that were not actuarially equivalent to those they would have received had they retired at the normal age of 65. Plaintiffs sought declaratory and equitable relief under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3), alleging breach of fiduciary duty and violations of 29 U.S.C. § 1054(c)(3) and 29 U.S.C. § 1053(a). In 2022, the court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss, but the court “left open whether actuarial equivalence, in practice, requires reasonable assumptions.” (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our October 26, 2022 edition.) The parties conducted expert discovery, after which defendants filed a motion to exclude plaintiffs’ expert and a motion for summary judgment, both of which were granted in this order. The court ruled that the testimony of plaintiffs’ expert, Ian Altman, was inadmissible because his “methodology (a) uses an inapposite interest-rate assumption (b) as a brightline point of comparison, rather than measuring the Plan’s [early commencement factors (ECFs)] against a range of possible values.” The court noted that Altman used interest-rate assumptions from 26 U.S.C. § 417(e), which “is not in line with actuarial science or the practices of other actuaries.” Furthermore, his methodology “would require annually updating the underlying interest-rate assumption to reflect current market conditions,” which “would be ‘impractical and unprecedented’” and “would generate considerable administrative burdens for plan sponsors.” Also, “Altman’s approach, which assesses the Plan’s ECFs against a single data point rather than a range of values, is so unconventional as to be unreliable.” Thus, the court excluded Altman’s testimony as “untested, unsupported, and ultimately unreliable.” The court then moved on to defendants’ summary judgment motion and answered the question it had left open on their motion to dismiss: “[T]he Court concludes that actuarial equivalence does not require reasonable underlying assumptions.” The court explained that actuarial equivalence “is an exercise in relative comparison of value under consistent assumptions, not absolute value.” As a result, “a plan’s actuarial equivalence is properly assessed in reference to those assumptions and conversion factors stated in the plan document.” Under this lenient standard, the court concluded that the plan’s ECFs were “within a range of reduction factors that generate actuarially equivalent early retirement benefits.” The court noted that even if ERISA required “reasonable assumptions,” plaintiffs could not meet their burden on this issue because their expert had been excluded, and in any event defendants had presented evidence supporting the reasonableness of their ECFs. Furthermore, even if Altman’s evidence had been admitted, he failed to rebut defendants’ expert’s argument that the plan’s assumptions were reasonable, and conceded that “other assumptions, beyond those he used in his framework, could be reasonable and generate actuarially equivalent ECFs.” As a result, the court concluded that the plan did not violate ERISA and there was no breach of fiduciary duty. Defendants’ motions were granted, plaintiffs’ class certification motion was denied as moot, and judgment was entered for defendants.

Disability Benefit Claims

First Circuit

Butter v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., No. 24-11499-MJJ, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2026 WL 172049 (D. Mass. Jan. 22, 2026) (Judge Myong J. Joun). Alison Butter was employed by Metrowest Jewish Day School and covered by the school’s employee long-term disability benefit plan, which was insured by Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company. She stopped working in March of 2021 due to various health issues, including leg pain, neck pain, overall body pain, and fatigue. She was diagnosed with conditions including mild bilateral osteoarthritis, complex ovarian cyst, bilateral leg paresthesia/pain, cervical radiculopathy, fibromyalgia, chronic pelvic congestion, and Raynaud’s anemia of chronic disease. Hartford initially approved her claim for benefits, but in 2022 it conducted surveillance of Butter and requested that she undergo an independent medical examination (IME). Based on the IME findings, which concluded that Butter could perform various physical activities, such as sitting for up to 8 hours per day and walking for up to 60 minutes at a time, Hartford terminated Butter’s benefits in March of 2023, determining that she did not meet the plan’s definition of disability under the “Any Occupation” standard. Butter appealed, submitting her own IME report and the results of a functional capacity evaluation, but Hartford upheld its decision on appeal and this action followed. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, which were decided in this published order. The court ruled that the abuse of discretion standard of review applied because the plan granted Hartford discretionary authority to determine benefit eligibility. Butter argued that this standard should be weakened because of Hartford’s structural conflict of interest as “both the adjudicator and payor of claims.” However, the court “agree[d] with Hartford” that this conflict “is not entitled to any weight” because there were no procedural errors in Hartford’s review. Turning to the merits, the court found that Hartford gave “undue weight” to the surveillance footage of Butter because its assessment “fails to consider her slow gait, the obvious struggle in her movements, and the short length of observation.” The court also criticized Hartford’s IME, noting that it contradicted the findings of Butter’s personal physicians and “provides no explanation” as to why those findings were less persuasive. The court further criticized Hartford for not adequately addressing the “years of documentation” of Butter’s chronic pain. The court noted that Hartford did a better job on appeal because it “grapple[d] more with the medical evidence submitted by Ms. Butter,” but it still “fails to explain why Ms. Butter would be capable of full-time functioning[.]” The court also cited Hartford’s finding that “there is no documentation of clinical findings to suggest total inability of activity, such as functional loss of strength/sensation and mobility/gait,” and stated that “[t]his misses the point” because it did not address Butter’s chronic pain symptoms. The court also critiqued Hartford’s assessment of Butter’s award of Social Security Disability Insurance benefits. Hartford only “provided a vague explanation for why an award of SSDI did not entitle her to long-term disability benefits,” and did “not sufficiently explain that the actual medical evidence it relied upon was different than that which was in the SSA’s possession, how it was different, and how it relied on vocational and behavioral evidence that differed from the SSA.” Because of all this, the court was “inclined to rule in Ms. Butter’s favor,” but “it would be unwise to take this step without first giving [Hartford] the chance to address the deficiencies in its approach.” Thus, the court remanded to Hartford “for further review in accordance with this decision.”

Sixth Circuit

Potthoff v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:24-CV-991, 2026 WL 177603 (W.D. Mich. Jan. 22, 2026) (Judge Paul L. Maloney). William Potthoff was a general and vascular surgeon who worked in Traverse City, Michigan, for more than 25 years. Throughout his career, Potthoff suffered from back pain, which led to the closure of his clinic in 2018. He began looking for new work, and at the same time Unum Life Insurance Company of America approved his claim for residual long-term disability benefits, which allowed him to work on a reduced schedule as recommended by his doctors. Seven months into his job search, Potthoff’s back pain worsened to the point he felt he could no longer return to work at all, so he applied for total disability benefits. Unum approved Potthoff’s claim, but classified his disability as arising from “sickness,” not “injury,” which was important because the policy insuring the plan limited benefits to 42 months for sickness, whereas benefits due to injury are payable for life. Potthoff appealed, contending that his back pain was due to a slip-and-fall accident in 1996, and from “repetitive stress injuries through decades of performing surgery as part of his high-volume practice.” However, Unum’s reviewing physicians concluded Potthoff’s back pain had started in 1995 and was due to degenerative disc disease, and thus upheld its determination that his disability was due to “sickness.” Potthoff then sued Unum under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), contending that he was entitled to benefits under the injury provision of the policy, and filed a motion for judgment on the administrative record, which the court reviewed in this order. The court applied a de novo standard of review because the plan did not give Unum discretionary authority to determine benefit eligibility. The court asked two questions: (1) “Did Potthoff’s slip-and-fall cause his total disability?”; and (2) “Did Potthoff’s repetitive stress injuries cause his total disability?” The court, noting the 20-year gap between the slip-and-fall and the disability, found “there is not enough evidence in the record to prove, more likely than not, that the slip-and-fall caused his total disability.” As for the repetitive stress argument, Unum’s policy defined “injury” as an “accidental bodily injury.” Unum argued that the court should apply Michigan law to interpret this term, but the court explained that because this was an ERISA case, federal common law applied. As a result, it applied the First Circuit’s Wickman test, borrowed by the Sixth Circuit, to determine whether Potthoff had suffered an “accident.” The court noted that “[c]ourts in the Sixth Circuit have so far only applied this test to accidental death policies,” but “[t]here is no…reason that the Sixth Circuit would limit its use of the First Circuit’s test only to accidental death policies,” and thus it adopted the test in the disability context as well. The Wickman test involves a subjective/objective inquiry, but “the record here does not reflect Potthoff’s subjective expectations about his injury.” As a result, the court evaluated “whether a reasonable person in the insured’s position (here, a reasonable general and vascular surgeon) with the insured’s same knowledge and experience might know or reasonably believe about whether developing their condition (like degenerative disc disease) is ‘highly likely.’” The court concluded that the answer was no. The medical studies in the record showing the connection between back pain and performing surgery did not appear until after 2018, and “although some of these risks could have been known to Potthoff during his working years, there is nothing in the record to reflect that a reasonable surgeon would have been aware of how his or her work affected his or her wellbeing in this way.” As a result, “it is…reasonable that Potthoff would not have known about the risk of repetitive stress injuries. Potthoff’s repetitive stress injuries are therefore ‘accidental.’” The court further determined that Potthoff’s work as a surgeon, which involved standing in contorted positions for long hours while wearing uncomfortable equipment, “more likely than not” led to his repetitive stress injuries and total disability. As a result, the court agreed with Potthoff that his total disability was due to “injury” and not “sickness.” As for a remedy, the court determined that the record “clearly establishes that Potthoff is totally disabled,” and thus remand was unnecessary; Unum was “not entitled to a ‘second bite at the apple’ during remand.” The court thus granted Potthoff’s motion for judgment and declaratory relief, and ordered the parties to meet and confer regarding the issues of interest, attorney’s fees, and costs.

Eleventh Circuit

Tunkle v. ReliaStar Life Ins. Co., No. 24-12563, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 144606 (11th Cir. Jan. 20, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Newson and Brasher, and District Court Judge Paul C. Huck). Dr. Alyosha S. Tunkle was a general surgeon for 21st Century Oncology, Inc., which funded its employee long-term disability benefit plan with a group insurance policy issued by ReliaStar Life Insurance Company. The policy covered employees who worked at least 30 hours per week and excluded coverage for preexisting conditions. Due to complications from shoulder surgery, Dr. Tunkle developed a disabling tremor, which eventually forced him to stop working on July 30, 2020. His 2020 pay summaries showed he worked 40 hours per week until March 15, after which his hours and pay decreased significantly until May 23. His full-time work and salary resumed on May 24 and continued through mid-July. Dr. Tunkle submitted a claim for benefits to ReliaStar, but ReliaStar denied it, contending that Dr. Tunkle’s disability was caused by a preexisting condition. ReliaStar explained that it had obtained Dr. Tunkle’s pay summary and productivity reports, which showed that he did not work at least 30 hours per week between March 15 and late May 2020. As a result, Dr. Tunkle was not “actively at work” during this period as required by the policy and his coverage lapsed. According to ReliaStar, Dr. Tunkle regained his coverage in May, but because he received treatment for his tremor in the three months prior to the date of his restarted coverage, his tremor was a preexisting condition under the policy and thus ReliaStar refused to pay his claim. Dr. Tunkle appealed, arguing that he had voluntarily reduced his salary during the pandemic to keep the practice afloat, and that he had in fact worked more hours than the reports showed. ReliaStar denied Dr. Tunkle’s appeal, contending that he did not produce sufficient documentation to support his claims. Dr. Tunkle then filed this action, and the case proceeded to cross-motions for summary judgment, which were decided in ReliaStar’s favor. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our August 14, 2024 edition.) Dr. Tunkle appealed to the Eleventh Circuit, which issued this per curiam decision. The court reviewed the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, but, like the district court, applied the arbitrary and capricious standard to ReliaStar’s decision because the policy gave ReliaStar discretion to review claims. Dr. Tunkle contended that “ReliaStar’s decision was arbitrary and capricious because his productivity report, payroll records, and letters prove that ReliaStar had no reasonable basis to conclude that he worked for fewer than thirty hours per week.” However, the Eleventh Circuit agreed with ReliaStar for two reasons. First, “Dr. Tunkle’s productivity report and payroll records reasonably support that he lost coverage because neither reflects thirty or more hours of weekly work between March 15 and May 23, 2020.” Second, “21st Century Oncology told ReliaStar that Dr. Tunkle’s payroll records and productivity report were its only records of his hours and that all his hours were recorded. 21st Century Oncology also asserted that it lacked ‘any information to support Dr. Tunkle working full time’ between mid-March and mid-May.” The court acknowledged that “[s]ome record evidence supports a contrary conclusion,” such as Dr. Tunkle’s explanation for his salary reduction and assertions of undocumented work. However, this was insufficient to overcome the deferential standard of review because “the record reasonably supported” ReliaStar’s decision, “regardless of whether the record also supported a different conclusion.” As a result, the court concluded that ReliaStar had a reasonable basis to determine that Dr. Tunkle lost his coverage in March 2020 when his weekly hours decreased, and his coverage did not restart until May 24, 2020. This meant that the preexisting condition provision applied and ReliaStar correctly denied Dr. Tunkle’s claim. Finally, the court considered whether ReliaStar operated under a conflict of interest, but because Dr. Tunkle “‘does not dispute’ that ReliaStar ‘was not operating under a conflict of interest,’” the court’s analysis ended there and the judgment below was affirmed.

Discovery

Eighth Circuit

Gibson v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 25-CV-2711 (JWB/JFD), 2026 WL 172541 (D. Minn. Jan. 22, 2026) (Magistrate Judge John F. Docherty). This action arises from defendant Unum Life Insurance Company of America’s denial of plaintiff Tyrone Gibson’s claim for long-term disability benefits. Gibson alleged two claims for relief under ERISA: one for plan benefits and another for equitable relief under the theory of surcharge for harm caused by Unum’s breaches of fiduciary duty. Before the court was Gibson’s motion for discovery. Gibson sought information to support his second claim for breach of fiduciary duty, claiming that Unum lied about the opinions of his treating physicians. Gibson acknowledged that plaintiffs are typically not entitled to discovery beyond the administrative record in ERISA benefit cases, but contended that “because he alleges misrepresentations by Unum the administrative record alone cannot provide the information he needs to fully litigate his claim for breach of fiduciary duty.” Gibson specifically requested to conduct discovery regarding “1) a correct and full record of the conversation between his treating physician and the Unum physician; 2) whether the Unum physician lied about that conversation; 3) why Unum relied on the Unum physician after Mr. Gibson raised his concerns about the alleged lie; 4) a full understanding of the qualifications of the nurse who opined on Mr. Gibson’s condition; and 5) whether Unum ‘compl[ied] with its obligations under the Regulator Settlement Agreement.’” Unum responded that “Mr. Gibson’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty is duplicative of his claim for benefits owed and is not a legitimate claim but an impermissible end-run around ‘ERISA’s goal of inexpensive and expeditious resolution of claims.’” Relying on recent decisions from within the district, the court ruled for Gibson, concluding that “a Plaintiff asserting a breach of fiduciary duty claim, alongside a separate claim for payment of benefits under ERISA, is entitled to discovery beyond the administrative record.” (The court noted that Unum failed to cite these decisions to the court, even though it was a party in one of those cases, had the same defense counsel, and made “indistinguishable” arguments in both.) The court “agrees with Mr. Gibson and other courts in this District that such misrepresentations would not have been recorded by Unum in the administrative record.” The court noted that it “of course expresses no view on the merits of the breach of fiduciary duty claim as this case goes forward. In fact, the Court has hesitations about the viability of a breach of fiduciary duty claim where such a claim alleges the denial of the claim itself as its sole basis.” However, “a court can find a claim well-pleaded and still entertain skepticism about the likelihood of success on that claim at trial.” As a result, “discovery beyond the administrative record is appropriate here.” Thus, the court granted Gibson’s motion and directed the parties to meet and confer and submit a proposed amended pretrial scheduling order.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Clove v. Teamsters Local 631 Security Fund for S. Nev., No. 2:24-CV-02348-APG-DJA, 2026 WL 146490 (D. Nev. Jan. 18, 2026) (Judge Andrew P. Gordon). Craig L. Clove is a retired former member of Teamsters Local 631 who argues in this action that the Teamsters’ Security Fund failed to notify him that he could retain health insurance benefits under the Fund’s benefit plan at a reduced rate after retiring. Clove’s last day of work for a contributing employer was in 2018, and he retired in April of 2021, after which the Teamsters’ pension plan approved him for a pension. In January of 2024, Clove applied to the Fund to participate in the retiree program for health care coverage, but his application was denied by the Fund on timeliness grounds. Clove appealed, and the Fund denied his application again, this time adding that he was ineligible for the benefit he sought because he did not work sufficient hours for contributing employers. Clove then filed this action. The Fund moved to dismiss, and both parties filed motions for summary judgment. The court reviewed the Fund’s decision for abuse of discretion because the plan gave the trustees discretionary authority to determine benefit eligibility. The court found there was no conflict of interest affecting this review because the Fund was administered by a joint labor-management board and funded by employer contributions that could not revert to the employers. However, the court noted a procedural irregularity because the Fund introduced a new reason for denial (Clove’s ineligibility) in its final decision, so the court weighed this in its abuse of discretion analysis. This irregularity was insufficient, however, as the court concluded that the Fund did not abuse its discretion in denying Clove’s claim. The court found that the plan “clearly and unambiguously” stated that a retiree was only eligible if the “Contributing Employer for whom the Retiree worked has contributed to the Plan (minimum 500 hours per year or equivalent) on behalf of the Retiree as an Employee for at least five (5) of the last seven (7) years immediately preceding retirement.” However, “[t]he evidence shows that Clove has not met this requirement because he has only four years of 500 contribution hours in the seven years preceding his retirement.” As a result, “Even considering the procedural irregularity, the Fund did not abuse its discretion in determining that Clove is ineligible.” Clove complained about inadequate notice from the Fund, but the court found this argument irrelevant, because the Fund clearly told him why he was ineligible, and “[e]ven if the Fund was required to give Clove notice of the eligibility requirements and did not do so, he would not meet those requirements.” As a result, the court granted the Fund’s motion for summary judgment, denied Clove’s motion, and denied the Fund’s motion to dismiss as moot.

Delgado v. ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan, No. 24-1845, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 161403 (9th Cir. Jan. 21, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Wardlaw, N.R. Smith, and Miller). This case involves multiple plaintiffs who are participants in the ILWU-PMA Welfare Benefit Plan, a multiemployer health plan governed by ERISA. The plaintiffs all received treatment at Advanced Pain Treatment Medical Center (APTMC), a physician-owned surgery facility in San Pedro, California. Prior to January 1, 2013, the plan consistently paid facility fees for surgical procedures at APTMC, but after that date the plan stopped paying such fees, determining that APTMC was not a “hospital” as that term was defined by the plan. Plaintiffs brought this action under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), alleging that this decision was incorrect. The case proceeded to a bench trial, after which the district court ruled in favor of the plan, concluding that the plan’s trustees and the reviewing arbitrator did not abuse their discretion in determining that APTMC was not a “hospital.” Plaintiffs appealed, and in this memorandum disposition the Ninth Circuit reversed. The court first addressed the standard of review, and found that the district court correctly applied an abuse of discretion standard, as the plan conferred discretionary authority to the trustees. The court further found that plaintiffs did not demonstrate any procedural irregularities or conflicts of interest that would necessitate altering this standard of review. The court then addressed the merits and ruled that the district court erred in concluding that APTMC was not a “hospital.” The plan defined “hospital” to include a “licensed non-Medicare approved ambulatory surgical facility” that met specific criteria. However, the plan did not define “ambulatory surgical facility” or specify the type of license a facility must have. The court noted that the State of California no longer issues licenses for physician-owned surgical clinics and instead requires accreditation by an approved agency. APTMC was accredited to perform outpatient surgery. The court stated, “We do not understand the Plan to argue that APTMC fails to qualify as a ‘licensed’ facility solely because it lacks a license that California no longer issues.” The district court ruled that APTMC was not a licensed ambulatory surgical facility because its accreditor classified it as an “office-based surgery/procedure center,” but the Ninth Circuit agreed with plaintiffs that “this distinction has no significance in California law and does not affect the applicable accreditation standards. Neither category mirrors the exact term used in the Plan. Even under the abuse-of-discretion standard, it was error to define the term ‘ambulatory surgical facility’ solely by reference to a seemingly arbitrary distinction in the accreditor’s classification system.” As for a remedy, the Ninth Circuit noted that the district court did not make findings regarding other criteria defining the plan’s definition of “hospital,” and thus it declined to do so in the first instance. The court noted that these findings “will require close review of the extensive record, a task that we generally entrust in the first instance to the district court.” Thus, the Ninth Circuit remanded for further proceedings. Judge N. Randy Smith dissented, however. He argued that the majority failed to properly apply the standard of review and that the Trustees did not abuse their discretion in determining that APTMC was not a “hospital.” Judge Smith argued that three of the four criteria of the Plan definition of “hospital” were not met by APTMC, and that “the Plan provides no definition as to what an ‘ambulatory surgical facility’ is, thus leaving it to the Trustees’ discretion to determine its meaning.” Because of “the Plan’s complete lack of instruction as to what constitutes an ‘ambulatory surgical facility,’ and an abuse of discretion standard for making this determination on appeal, the majority cannot show how the Trustee’s determination ‘clearly conflicts with the plain language’ of the Plan.” As a result, Judge Smith would have affirmed the decision below. (Disclosure: Kantor & Kantor LLP is counsel of record for plaintiffs in this action.)

Eleventh Circuit

Vickie B. v. Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield, No. 1:25-CV-3054-MLB, 2026 WL 146545 (N.D. Ga. Jan. 20, 2026) (Judge Michael L. Brown). Plaintiff Vickie B. is a participant in the self-funded Bank of America Group Benefits Program, and her son, D.B., is also insured under the plan. Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield is the third-party claims administrator for the plan. D.B. has a history of anxiety, ADHD, and drug and alcohol abuse, which led to his admission to Wingate Wilderness Therapy in February 2022. Wingate is a treatment facility in Utah that provides sub-acute treatment to adolescents with mental health, behavioral, and substance abuse problems. Anthem denied payment for D.B.’s treatment at Wingate, claiming it was not a covered service under the plan. In May 2022, D.B. was admitted to Crossroads Academy, another treatment facility in Utah, where he received mental health, behavioral, and substance abuse treatment. Anthem initially denied payment for this treatment because Vickie did not seek preapproval for the benefit, and later stated D.B.’s treatment at Crossroads did not meet the plan’s medical necessity requirements for residential mental health treatment. Vickie then brought this action against Blue Cross and the plan alleging two claims for relief under ERISA: one for plan benefits under Section 1132(a)(1)(B), and one under Section 1132(a)(3) for violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Act of 2008 (Parity Act). Defendants moved to partially dismiss the complaint, seeking dismissal of all claims except Count I regarding D.B.’s Crossroads treatment. First, defendants contended that Wingate was an “alternative residential program” not covered by the plan. Plaintiffs responded that Wingate’s services were covered because the language defining covered mental health and chemical dependency services is “inclusive rather than exclusive.” The court found this argument “puzzling” because it ignored the definition of an approved treatment facility. Plaintiffs also argued that the plan defines a treatment facility as one that only deals with substance abuse issues, and because D.B. received both substance abuse and mental health treatment, the facility requirements did not apply. However, the court found that the plaintiffs cited the wrong definition of “treatment facility,” and regardless, “even without a specific definition in that section of the Plan, Wingate fits comfortably within the ‘plain and ordinary meaning’ of a treatment facility.” Plaintiffs further alleged that Wingate was an “outdoor behavioral health program” rather than a “wilderness camp,” but the court found that this was a distinction without a difference for the purposes of the plan. Finally, plaintiffs argued that the plan’s requirement of 24-hour nursing and an onsite psychiatrist was “not consistent with generally accepted [sic] at outdoor behavioral health providers,” However, the court stated that this “seems more like an argument that the terms of the Plan are unfair rather than an argument that Defendant misapplied or misinterpreted the plan.” Thus, the court concluded that Wingate fell within the plan’s exclusion and did not meet the plan’s requirements for coverage. Plaintiffs had more luck with their Parity Act claim, however. Defendants contended that this claim was duplicative of plaintiffs’ claim for benefits, but the court disagreed, ruling that plaintiffs’ two claims were not based on the same underlying conduct and did not rely on similar allegations. “Plaintiffs’ allegations in [the first] count concern Defendants’ application of the Plan’s requirements for coverage of D.B.’s treatment at Wingate and Crossroads… In Count II, however, they shift their allegations and focus to the substance of the Plan’s coverage requirements themselves[.]” As a result, “Plaintiffs’ Section 1132(a)(1)(B) and Section 1132(a)(3) claims can comfortably coexist.” The court further found that plaintiffs’ Parity Act claim properly sought equitable relief and was not merely “cloaking the relief sought in equitable language.” As for the merits of the Parity Act claims, the court rejected plaintiffs’ claim against Wingate, (1) ruling that plaintiffs irrelevantly cited to billing codes, (2) noting that “the Plan does not categorically exclude outdoor behavioral health and wilderness programs,” and (3) finding that plaintiffs’ allegations regarding analogous medical/surgical facilities were conclusory and belied by plan language. As for Crossroads, the court found that plaintiffs failed to identify the specific medical necessity criteria used for analogous medical or surgical treatment, rendering their allegations of disparity conclusory. The court allowed plaintiffs to replead this claim, however, because they did not have the criteria at the time they filed their complaint. Finally, plaintiffs alleged that defendants violated the Parity Act by failing to provide a comparable degree of in-network residential treatment facilities compared to in-network skilled nursing and inpatient rehabilitation facilities. However, the court found that plaintiffs lacked standing to assert this claim, as they did not “explain the causal connection between Defendants’ alleged network inadequacy and the denial of benefits at Wingate or Crossroads.” In the end, the court granted in part and denied in part defendants’ motion, allowing plaintiffs to amend Count II of their complaint to reallege their Parity Act claim against Crossroads, while dismissing Counts I and II as to Wingate.

Provider Claims

Second Circuit

Long Island Plastic Surgical Grp., PC v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co. of N.Y., No. 21-CV-5825(JS)(ST), 2026 WL 161152 (E.D.N.Y. Jan. 21, 2026) (Judge Joanna Seybert). In this action Long Island Plastic Surgical Group, P.C. asserted seven claims against UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company of New York arising from non-payment for plaintiff’s treatment of patients insured by United. Before the court was plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend its complaint. In August of 2025 a magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation (R&R) suggesting the court grant in part and deny in part plaintiff’s motion. Specifically, the magistrate ruled that plaintiff’s ERISA benefits claim was valid for plans without anti-assignment provisions, but not for those with such provisions, and that plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim was preempted by ERISA. Both parties objected, and in this order the district court mostly overruled the objections. On its claim for ERISA plan benefits, plaintiff objected to the dismissal of claims with anti-assignment provisions, contending that it is “plausible that the health plans’ actions waived the anti-assignment clauses or estopped the plans from asserting them.” The court noted that plaintiff’s counsel had “lodged an objection in another case before this Court just two months ago that is identical to the above objection, save for changes to the names of the parties and citations[.]” The court overruled the plaintiff’s objection in that case, and did the same here, ruling that there was no “clear intent” by United to waive its rights under the anti-assignment clause; simply participating in the claims administration process was insufficient. The court also overruled plaintiff’s objection regarding its unjust enrichment claim, ruling that it was preempted by ERISA. As for defendants’ lone objection, the court overruled it, upholding the R&R’s determination that plaintiff had properly alleged that it had assignments from its patients to assert their ERISA claims because the assignments “conveyed ownership.” In doing so, the court distinguished a Second Circuit case relied on by defendants (Cortlandt St. Recovery Corp. v. Hellas Telecomm., S.a.r.l., 790 F.3d 411 (2d Cir. 2015)), noting that it was not an ERISA case and was inconsistent with other Second Circuit precedent regarding the assignment of benefits in the ERISA context. In the end, the court overruled all of the objections by the parties except for plaintiffs’ objection regarding its state law claim for unjust enrichment claim relating to emergency services, which was sustained. The court ordered plaintiff to file a second amended complaint consistent with this order by February 4.

Rowe Plastic Surgery of N.J., LLC v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., No. 23CV7049 (DLC), 2026 WL 158610 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 20, 2026) (Judge Denise Cote). Regular readers of Your ERISA Watch are familiar with Rowe Plastic Surgery of New Jersey, which has filed numerous actions against insurers asserting breach of contract and other claims relating to non-payment or underpayment for treatment it provided to patients. As the court noted, “The complaint filed in this lawsuit is identical in all material respects to a score of such complaints filed by Rowe in this district and in the Eastern District of New York.” In this case, defendant Aetna Life Insurance Company originally filed a motion to dismiss in 2023, but the action was stayed pending a decision by the Second Circuit in one of Rowe’s other cases. After the ruling in that case, Rowe moved to amend its complaint and the magistrate judge recommended that the motion be denied. Rowe objected, and the court considered both Aetna’s motion to dismiss and Rowe’s objections in this order. The court was not pleased with Rowe: “As several judges have warned Rowe and its counsel, their continued litigation – in a raft of lawsuits of virtually identical claims which have been repeatedly dismissed – risks the imposition of sanctions. That remains true.” (Your ERISA Watch detailed Judge Colleen McMahon’s irritation with Rowe in another case – in which she called Rowe’s arguments “frivolous” and “ridiculous” and threatened sanctions – in our March 12, 2025 edition.) The court ruled that Rowe’s amended complaint was essentially identical to its previous versions: “All of these claims rely on a May 14, 2021 call and the statement by an Aetna employee that Aetna’s payment for the procedure would be calculated using the ‘80th percentile of reasonable and customary.’ As courts have repeatedly held, this conversation did not create a contract and did not constitute a promise to pay a particular sum. It was a benefits verification call.” The court then quickly rejected Rowe’s other state law claims on various grounds. Finally, the court noted that “Rowe in essence seeks to stand in the shoes of its surgical patients and to challenge the ERISA benefits that are provided to those patients. Its state law claims allege an ‘improper processing of a claim for benefits,’ and ‘undoubtedly meet the criteria for pre-emption’ under ERISA’s express preemption clause… On this separate ground, Rowe’s claims are preempted and must be dismissed.” As a result, the court granted Aetna’s motion to dismiss, denied Rowe’s motion to amend, overruled Rowe’s objections, and entered judgment in Aetna’s favor.

The federal courts were quite busy this week, despite the MLK Day holiday, issuing numerous rulings on procedural and substantive issues across the ERISA spectrum. No one case stood out, but there is something for almost everyone in the cases discussed below.

Read on to learn about (1) a tough week for disability claimants (they went 1-for-5, with the lone bright spot a long-COVID California plaintiff (Doe v. LINA)); (2) the dismissal of two putative class actions alleging the misuse of retirement plan forfeitures (Tillery v. WakeMed, Curtis v. Amazon), a common theme over the last year; (3) the approval of two class action settlements in cases alleging mismanagement of retirement plans (Singh v. Capital One, Nado v. John Muir Health); (4) a case ruling that Lockheed Martin was arbitrary and capricious when it refused to pay pension benefits to a plan participant’s estate after his death (Marchetti v. Lockheed); and (5) a case encouraging siblings at legal war with each other to “embrace…forgiveness, self-reflection, and grace, predicated on the very faith instilled in them by their parents” (Maas v. JTM Provisions). Good advice for all! We’ll see you next week.

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

Arbitration

Fifth Circuit

Elmihi v. PayPal Holdings, Inc., No. 2:25-CV-00025, 2026 WL 92046 (S.D. Tex. Jan. 13, 2026) (Judge David S. Morales). This order addresses a dispute over the enforceability of an arbitration agreement between plaintiff Sameh Elmihi, proceeding pro se, and his employer, defendant PayPal Holdings, Inc. The assigned magistrate judge issued a memorandum and recommendation that the court grant PayPal’s motion to compel arbitration, stay the case pending the outcome of arbitration, and deny all of Elmihi’s pending motions as moot. Elmihi raised eight objections to the recommendation; only one of those objections related to ERISA. (The court noted that Elmihi’s amended complaint had removed all references to ERISA, but Elmihi contended he was still pursuing ERISA remedies, so to avoid all doubt the court discussed the issue.) Elmihi contended that his ERISA claim “falls squarely within the narrow but critical exception where arbitration cannot apply.” Specifically, he argued that his claim sought injunctive and prospective relief, which an arbitrator lacked the authority to enforce, thereby preventing him from effectively vindicating his rights. The court rejected this argument, ruling that the arbitration agreement specifically granted the arbitrator the authority to award any legal or equitable relief authorized by law in connection with the asserted claim. The court noted that Elmihi did not provide any reason why the arbitral forum would be inaccessible and that district courts have the authority to confirm and enforce an arbitrator’s award of equitable relief. Therefore, the court overruled Elmihi’s objection regarding the non-arbitrability of his ERISA claim. It also upheld the remainder of the magistrate’s recommendations, except for Elmihi’s claim under the Dodd-Frank Act. The court construed this claim as raising issues under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which contains an anti-arbitration provision, and therefore sustained Elmihi’s objection as to this claim only. However, in the end, because most of Elmihi’s claims were arbitrable, the court arrived at the same conclusion as the magistrate judge. It stayed all claims pending arbitration, denied Elmihi’s pending motions, and ordered the parties to file a joint status report at the conclusion of arbitration.

Attorneys’ Fees

Ninth Circuit

Sarruf v. Lilly Long Term Disability Plan, No. C24-0461-JCC, 2026 WL 89621 (W.D. Wash. Jan. 13, 2026) (Judge John C. Coughenour). In our July 9, 2025 edition we reported on this victory by plaintiff David Sarruf in which Sarruf convinced the district court that the administrator for Eli Lilly and Company’s employee long-term disability benefit plan erred by denying his claim as untimely. The court agreed that defendants were estopped from arguing untimeliness because their written statements reasonably led him to believe that his claim complied with the plan’s procedures. The court demurred from deciding whether Sarruf was disabled and entitled to benefits, and instead remanded the case for further review by the administrator. However, the court did rule that Sarruf was entitled to attorney’s fees for his efforts thus far. His motion for fees was decided in this order. Defendants argued that a fee award was not warranted based on the Ninth Circuit’s five-factor test set forth in Hummell v. S.E. Rykoff & Co. These factors include the degree of the opposing parties’ culpability or bad faith, their ability to satisfy a fee award, whether a fee award would deter similar conduct, whether the fee-seeking parties aimed to benefit all ERISA plan participants or resolve a significant legal question, and the relative merits of the parties’ positions. The court found that these factors supported a fee award, citing the following: the plan administrator’s unreasonable denial of Sarruf’s appeal, which “evinced bad faith”; Eli Lilly’s ability to satisfy the fee award; the deterrent effect of a fee award; the “significant legal issue” regarding conflicting plan documents and federal guidance on COVID-19; and Sarruf’s argument that “a simple remand would award the plan administrator for its unreasonable conduct.” As for the amount, Sarruf sought $239,900 in fees and $7,026.73 in costs, based on 267.2 hours spent by three experienced ERISA attorneys. This resulted in a “blended rate” of $897.83 per hour, which the court found exceeded the rates typically allowed in the Puget Sound region for similar work. Instead, the court ruled that a blended hourly rate of $500 was more appropriate. The court applied this rate to the hours reasonably incurred in support of the litigation, which excluded 43.1 hours spent on matters outside of the litigation, such as the administrative appeal. Consequently, the court’s total award was $112,050 in attorney fees, and the full amount of requested costs, $7,026.73. (Disclosure: Kantor & Kantor LLP is counsel of record for Mr. Sarruf in this action.)

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Fourth Circuit

Tillery v. WakeMed Health & Hospitals, No. 5:25-CV-408-D, 2026 WL 125784 (E.D.N.C. Jan. 15, 2026) (Judge James C. Dever III). Jeanette Tillery filed this putative class action against her employer, WakeMed Health & Hospitals, and related defendants alleging violations of ERISA in their management of WakeMed’s defined contribution retirement savings plan for its employees. WakeMed makes contributions to the plan which vest after three years. However, if an employee leaves before three years, WakeMed’s contributions are forfeited. Tillery alleges that WakeMed violated ERISA by not using forfeitures to pay plan expenses, and instead used them to reduce future employer contributions. She claimed this breached ERISA’s duties of loyalty and prudence, its anti-inurement provision, and its prohibited transactions provision. She also alleged a failure to monitor the committee responsible for the plan. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which the court adjudicated in this order. Defendants made two preliminary arguments: (1) Tillery sought benefits beyond what the plan entitled her to, contradicting plan documents and ERISA principles; and (2) her claims contradicted established understandings of the Treasury Department and Congress regarding the use of forfeitures. The court opted not to rule on these arguments for two reasons. “First, whether the Plan permits defendants’ actions is not dispositive because fiduciary duties ‘trump[ ] the instructions of a plan document.’… Second, proposed regulations lack the force of law, enacted regulations interpreting law do not bind the court, and legislative history documents are, at best, minimally persuasive evidence of congressional intent.” The court thus addressed the merits of Tillery’s claims. It noted, “Most courts have rejected duty of loyalty claims concerning forfeitures, reasoning that ‘[w]hen (1) a plan document gives a plan fiduciary discretion in how to use forfeitures and (2) participants otherwise receive everything guaranteed by the plan’s terms, plan fiduciaries do not violate their duty of loyalty merely by declining to use forfeitures to cover administrative expenses.” The court “agree[d] with the weight of authority.” The court distinguished Tillery’s authorities, explaining that the plan language in those cases differed and they were less persuasive than the majority cases. As for Tillery’s breach of prudence claims, they focused on defendants’ decision-making process regarding forfeitures and their failure to use all forfeitures by year-end. The court found that Tillery’s allegations did not plausibly suggest a breach of prudence, as they were based on assumptions and did not demonstrate imprudent conduct. The court also noted that the mere existence of forfeiture balances did not give rise to an inference that a breach had occurred. As for Tillery’s anti-inurement claims, the court ruled that using forfeitures to pay benefits to participants did not violate this provision, as it benefited participants and did not constitute an impermissible employer benefit. The court also ruled that the plan was permitted to use plan assets to forgive defendants’ debts because contributions, unlike debts, were discretionary. The court also dismissed Tillery’s prohibited transaction claims because it found that using forfeitures to fund contributions was not a prohibited transaction, as no assets left the plan and contributions were paid to participants. The court further dismissed Tillery’s failure to monitor claim because her other ERISA claims failed. Finally, the court noted that Tillery’s claims were barred to the extent they predated May 4, 2021, due to a class action settlement in Conte v. WakeMed. That settlement released claims related to the Plan’s management and administration, including fiduciary breaches. The court found that Tillery’s claims shared the same factual predicate as the Conte settlement, thus barring them. As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion and dismissed Tillery’s complaint with prejudice.

Ninth Circuit

Curtis v. Amazon.com Servs., LLC, No. C24-2164RSM, 2026 WL 124323 (W.D. Wash. Jan. 16, 2026) (Judge Ricardo S. Martinez). Cory Curtis and Jonathan Torres, former employees of Amazon.com Services, LLC, filed this action against Amazon and related defendants alleging breaches of fiduciary duties and other violations under ERISA in the administration of Amazon’s 401(k) Savings Plan. They contend that defendants improperly assessed administrative fees and expenses on their accounts without utilizing forfeited plan assets to offset these costs, which reduced the funds in their accounts. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that plaintiffs’ “theory of liability has been rejected by nearly every court that has considered it.” In this concise order, the court agreed. Relying primarily on the district court’s ruling in Hutchins v. HP (which Your ERISA Watch covered in our June 26, 2024 edition), the court found that “Defendants did not breach any fiduciary duty in this case because they followed the terms of the Plan, and that Plaintiffs’ theory that this nevertheless violated ERISA is not plausible for the reasons stated in Hutchins… The Court agrees with the many courts who have found that, under Plaintiffs’ theory, a fiduciary would always be required to use forfeitures to pay administrative costs even if the plan document gave it the option to reallocate those funds to reduce employer contributions. This, in essence, would use the fiduciary duties of loyalty and prudence to create a new benefit to participants that is not provided in the plan document itself.” (Hutchins is currently on appeal to the Ninth Circuit; briefing is complete and hopefully oral argument will take place this spring.) The court also rejected plaintiffs’ prohibited transactions claim, again relying on Hutchins to find that “Plaintiffs have failed to plausibly allege an unlawful transaction.” Finally, the court ruled that plaintiffs could not cure these deficiencies in an amended pleading and thus granted defendants’ motion to dismiss with prejudice.

Tenth Circuit

Estate of Victor Harold Forsman v. Barnes, No. 2:25-CV-00283-JNP-CMR, 2026 WL 84252 (D. Utah Jan. 12, 2026) (Judge Jill N. Parrish). Victor Harold Forsman died in 2021. At the time, he had an account in a 401(k) plan managed by Empower Retirement, which contained approximately $750,000. Believing Rory Jake Barnes was the beneficiary of the account, Empower transferred the proceeds to him in 2022 after receiving his claim. The plaintiff, the personal representative of Forsman’s estate, brought this action asserting claims against both Barnes and Empower. Against Barnes, plaintiff asserted a wrongful conversion claim, alleging that Barnes, without authorization, sent a beneficiary designation to Empower using Forsman’s computer, which “interfered with the estate’s rights to the plan proceeds.” Against Empower, plaintiff brought a single claim under ERISA, alleging that Empower’s decision to treat Barnes as the beneficiary without a valid designation was a breach of its fiduciary duty. Empower filed a motion to dismiss, contending that plaintiff failed to state a claim for three reasons: “(1) ‘Plaintiff fails to plead facts showing the availability of any equitable relief, which is [a] required element of a breach of fiduciary duty claim under ERISA’; (2) ‘Plaintiff fails to plead facts showing that Empower acted as a fiduciary under ERISA’; and (3) ‘[e]ven if Plaintiff could plead facts showing that Empower acted as an ERISA fiduciary, Plaintiff fails to allege any conduct by Empower that constitutes a breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA.’” The court focused on the second argument – Empower’s fiduciary status – and because the court “ultimately finds this argument convincing,” it determined that it “need not address Empower’s other arguments.” The court noted that a party can be a fiduciary under ERISA either as a named fiduciary or a functional fiduciary. The court found “no indication that Empower was a named fiduciary,” so it examined Empower’s functional fiduciary status. Empower argued that its activities were limited to processing beneficiary designations and payments, which were purely ministerial tasks not implicating fiduciary status. Plaintiff responded that it had received a statement from a plan trustee suggesting that Empower processed claims without oversight, which meant that it exercised fiduciary duties. However, the court found this insufficient to create fiduciary status: “the statement does nothing to exclude, or even make unlikely, the possibility that Empower’s activities were tightly controlled by established rules and policies and thus ministerial. Indeed, the ministerial nature of Empower’s activities may be the most likely explanation for why the plan trustee…did not bother to oversee Empower.” The court also responded to a new argument made by plaintiff at the hearing on the motion, which was that Empower’s fiduciary status was “established by the allegation that Empower treated Barnes as the beneficiary sua sponte without receiving any communication or information suggesting that Barnes had been designated as the beneficiary.” However, the court stated that “Plaintiff’s current suggestion that Empower’s decision to treat Barnes as a beneficiary was unprompted and not made pursuant to existing procedures and policies is simply missing from the complaint and, consequently, does not change the court’s analysis.” As a result, the court granted Empower’s motion to dismiss the sole claim brought against it.

Class Actions

Second Circuit

Singh v. Capital One Fin. Corp., No. 1:24-CV-08538-MMG, 2026 WL 92311 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 13, 2026) (Judge Margaret M. Garnett). The plaintiffs in this class action allege ERISA violations against Capital One and other related defendants arising from their administration of the Capital One Financial Corporation Associate Savings Plan. The parties reached a settlement, after which plaintiffs submitted a proposed order to the court seeking preliminary approval of the settlement, preliminary certification of a class for settlement purposes, approving the form and manner of a settlement notice, preliminarily approving a plan of allocation, and scheduling a date for a fairness hearing. The court signed off on the proposed order, conditionally certifying a settlement class that includes all persons who participated in the plan during the class period, excluding the defendants and their beneficiaries. The court found that the settlement class meets the requirements of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 23(a) and (b)(1), including numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation. The court also preliminarily approved the settlement as fair, reasonable, and adequate, noting that it was negotiated at arm’s length and the settlement amount of $9.6 million is within the range of settlement values obtained in similar cases. The court also noted that a qualified settlement fund has been established, and the settlement administrator, Analytics LLC, has been appointed to manage the fund and distribute the settlement. The court approved the forms of settlement notice and directed the defendants to provide class data to facilitate the notice process. The court also set deadlines for filing petitions for attorneys’ fees, litigation costs, and case contribution awards, as well as for filing objections to the settlement. The court scheduled a fairness hearing for June 25, 2026 to determine the final approval of the settlement, address any objections, and consider the adequacy of class counsel’s representation.

Ninth Circuit

Nado v. John Muir Health, No. 24-CV-01632-AMO, 2026 WL 82232 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2026) (Judge Araceli Martínez-Olguín). The plaintiff, Conan Nado, filed this putative class action on behalf of himself and similarly situated participants and beneficiaries of the John Muir Health 403(b) Plan against John Muir Health and its board of directors. Nado contended that defendants breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA by “paying excessive recordkeeping and administrative service fees and misallocating plan forfeitures.” Nado asserted four causes of action: two claims for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence and two claims for breach of the fiduciary duty of loyalty. With the help of a mediator, the parties reached a settlement which the court preliminarily approved in June of 2025. Before the court here was Nado’s motion for final approval, attorney’s fees and costs, administrative expenses, and case contribution award, which was granted. Under the terms of the settlement, defendants agreed to pay $950,000 to a common settlement fund. The parties agreed that class counsel’s fees would not exceed $237,500, and its expenses would be capped at $35,000. The settlement also provided for a case contribution award for Nado of up to $5,000, at the court’s discretion. The agreement also required defendants to conduct a request for proposal for plan recordkeeping services within two years of the settlement effective date. The net settlement amount will be distributed to approximately 20,000 eligible class members, with specific provisions for those with and without accounts in the plan. The court found these terms fair, reasonable, and adequate, found the notice to be adequate, and noted no objections from class members. The court also approved the allocation plan, which distributes the settlement fund on a pro rata basis among class members. Class counsel was awarded $237,500 in attorney’s fees, which was 25% of the gross settlement amount, and $22,817.88 in litigation expenses. The settlement administrator was paid $31,986, and an independent fiduciary, Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC, was paid $15,000 for its review of the settlement. Nado was awarded a $5,000 incentive award for his participation in the litigation. The court thus ordered that the action and all released claims be dismissed with prejudice. The parties were required to file a post-distribution accounting no later than one year and one day from the entry of the order.

Disability Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Hans v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. CV 25-3595, 2026 WL 116487 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 15, 2026) (Judge Mark A. Kearney). Ryan Hans was a river pilot, responsible for navigating commercial vessels on the Delaware River and Bay and ensuring maritime safety. Through the Pilots’ Association for the Bay & River Delaware, he was covered by an ERISA-governed long-term disability (LTD) benefit plan insured by Unum Life Insurance Company of America. The plan delegated claims administration to Unum, granting it discretionary authority to make benefit determinations. Hans experienced various medical symptoms and stopped working as a river pilot in May of 2023. He sought medical treatment for long COVID and consulted with multiple healthcare providers, including cardiologists and a primary care physician. He experienced symptoms such as rapid heart rate, left axillary pain, and neurological symptoms. Hans received treatment from a COVID specialist, who diagnosed him with long COVID and prescribed medications. Hans applied for LTD benefits from Unum, claiming he was unable to safely pilot vessels due to physical and mental limitations. Unum determined Hans’ occupation in the national economy was “Pilot, Ship,” with physical demands classified as light work. Unum’s medical reviewers further concluded that the evidence did not support restrictions and limitations precluding him from full-time work in this occupation. Hans appealed unsuccessfully and then filed this action. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment which were decided in this order under a deferential standard of review. First, the court ruled that Unum’s determination of the material and substantial duties of Hans’ regular occupation was not arbitrary and capricious. Unum’s vocational consultants concluded that Hans’ occupation as a ship pilot required light work, and the court found no basis to disturb this conclusion, despite Hans’ argument that his job was better described by a more taxing “composite ship pilot and deckhand” occupation. Next, the court ruled that Unum’s denial based on its medical review was not arbitrary and capricious. According to the court, Unum’s medical reviewers provided reasoned explanations for discounting the opinions of Hans’ treating providers, and the court found no evidence that Unum arbitrarily refused to credit their opinions. The court also ruled that Unum properly sought objective evidence of Hans’ functional limitations resulting from long COVID, rather than improperly seeking objective evidence of the diagnosis itself. Finally, the court considered Unum’s structural conflict of interest, as Unum was both the evaluator and payor of benefits. The court found that Unum’s structural conflict was “a neutral factor” and did not weigh in favor of finding its denial arbitrary and capricious. As a result, the court concluded that Unum’s decision was “reasonable and supported by relevant evidence,” and thus it granted Unum’s motion for summary judgment while denying Hans’. (Disclosure: Kantor & Kantor LLP is counsel of record for Mr. Hans in this action.)

Fourth Circuit

Sramek v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co., No. 1:25-CV-00576-MSN-LRV, 2026 WL 81903 (E.D. Va. Jan. 12, 2026) (Judge Michael S. Nachmanoff). Michael Sramek was a portfolio manager for Sands Capital Management, LLC and a participant in Sands’ ERISA-governed employee long-term disability (LTD) benefit plan, which was insured by United of Omaha Life Insurance Company. Sramek developed chronic low back pain and was diagnosed with several lumbar conditions. After unsuccessful treatment, he underwent back surgery in October 2022 and applied for LTD benefits. United initially approved his claim, but terminated it in June of 2024. According to United, Sramek had recovered from his surgery, medical records from his doctors showed normal examination findings, and a nurse’s review concluded that Sramek could perform sedentary work full-time. An independent neurosurgeon also found no evidence of limitations preventing Sramek from performing his job. Based on this evidence, United terminated Sramek’s LTD benefits, concluding there was no medical evidence supporting his inability to perform his regular occupation. Sramek appealed, but United maintained that Sramek could work with appropriate restrictions. Sramek then filed this action and the parties submitted cross-motions for summary judgment. The court applied the abuse of discretion standard of review because the plan granted United discretionary authority to make benefit determinations. Sramek made three arguments about United: “(1) it failed to employ a reasoned and principled decision-making process, (2) its determinations that Sramek could perform the physical and cognitive elements of his job were unsupported by the record, and (3) it operated under a structural conflict of interest.” The court addressed all three. First, the court found that United conducted a thorough investigation: “it assessed, among other things, medical records from Sramek’s physicians spanning years, written statements from Sramek’s physicians, an occupational analysis, observation of Sramek’s activities, information about his prescriptions, and the evaluation of a nurse and two board-certified physicians.” The court emphasized that United was not required to defer to Sramek’s physicians. Thus, “its process was both reasonable and principled.” Second, the court found that the evidence in the record supported United’s decision. This evidence included Sramek’s ability to travel and engage in activities like golf, which the court felt contradicted his claims of disability. As for Sramek’s cognitive abilities, the court found that the medical records did not demonstrate impairments due to pain or medication, and that his physician’s statements to the contrary were “conclusory.” Finally, the court considered Sramek’s conflict of interest argument. The court acknowledged that United had a structural conflict, but noted that United initially approved and paid LTD benefits for nearly two years before terminating them, and relied on independent providers to assess Sramek’s claims. “These measures strongly suggest that United of Omaha’s decision to terminate Sramek’s benefits was not the product of bias that could cast doubt on the validity of its decision.” As a result, the court concluded that United did not abuse its discretion in terminating Sramek’s benefits, and thus granted United’s summary judgment motion while denying Sramek’s.

Williams v. Friendship Health & Rehab Ctr., Inc., No. 7:25-CV-00254, 2026 WL 84417 (W.D. Va. Jan. 12, 2026) (Judge Robert S. Ballou). Leah Williams, proceeding pro se, filed this action against her former employer, Friendship Health and Rehab Center, Inc. and Friendship Foundation, alleging that Friendship failed to pay her full wages or benefits and subjected her to discriminatory treatment. She asserted a number of claims under various state and federal laws, including one under ERISA. Friendship moved to dismiss Williams’ claims, and the court granted the motion in this order. Williams was terminated in 2017, so the court concluded that “[n]early all of Williams’s claims are…time-barred under the applicable limitation periods.” The one exception was her ERISA cause of action, which involved a claim for benefits under Friendship’s employee long-term disability benefit plan. The plan’s administrator, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, did not deny her claim until 2024 and thus “only Williams’s ERISA claim appears to be timely filed.” The court then addressed the merits of Williams’ claims, regardless of whether they were time-barred. The court concluded that Williams could not bring her ERISA claim against Friendship because it was not a proper defendant. “Williams alleges that Friendship offered a long-term disability plan as a benefit of employment but does not assert that Friendship managed the plan. To the contrary, the documents attached to the Complaint show that the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, not Friendship, made the decision to deny her long-term disability coverage… Accordingly, Friendship is not a proper defendant to any ERISA claim.” The court further ruled that Williams’ remaining claims were not meritorious for various reasons, and as a result it granted Friendship’s motion to dismiss, with prejudice.

Seventh Circuit

Jones v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 24 C 3911, 2026 WL 96985 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 13, 2026) (Judge Robert W. Gettleman). McKenzie Jones began working for Whole Foods in 2018 as a Team Receiver and was a participant in Whole Foods’ employee disability benefit plan, which was governed by ERISA and insured by Unum Life Insurance Company of America. In 2022, Jones stopped working due to back pain, which he attributed to a 2018 vehicle accident and a subsequent flare-up after a busy period at work. He was approved for short-term disability benefits, as well as a few weeks of long-term disability benefits, before Unum terminated his long-term claim in June of 2023. Jones’ appeal was unsuccessful and this action followed, asserting relief under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). The parties filed cross-motions for judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. The parties agreed that the de novo standard of review applied; Unum conceded that the plan did not grant it discretionary authority to make benefit determinations. The case turned on Unum’s argument that “plaintiff failed to satisfy the Plan’s requirement for disability that he be under the ‘regular care of a physician’ because ‘he had absolutely no medical treatment whatsoever for at least the next 9 months after May 31, 2023.’” Jones argued that Unum could not make this argument now because it never raised this as a basis for denial while his claim was pending. The court ruled that it could consider whether Jones was under the “regular care of a physician,” even if Unum did not previously specifically assert the defense. The court noted that “although defendant did not directly discuss the ‘regular care’ issue in its decision letters, it did refer to the frequency of treatments in both letters.” Furthermore, citing Marantz v. Permanente Med. Grp., the court stated, “the Seventh Circuit has more recently made clear that courts can consider alleged ‘post hoc rationalizations’ when, as here, the ‘district court’s judicial review of [the insurers]’s decision is de novo.’” Thus, ““even if [defendant] had violated ERISA by failing to’ raise the regular-care issue ‘in its decision letters,’ it would not prevent the court from considering whether plaintiff meets the regular care requirement for being disabled.” Next, the court examined the record to determine if Jones satisfied the “regular care” provision. Unum argued that Jones received no medical care for nine months and that he failed to follow treatment recommendations, including continuing physical therapy and obtaining an MRI. Jones responded that the plan did not require continuous “regular care” to receive benefits, and that Unum’s withholding of payments prevented him from affording continuous treatment. The court agreed with Unum, ruling that the provision requires “some form of continuity in the insured’s treatment by physicians,” and that Jones “essentially stopped receiving any treatment for eight or nine months after May 31, 2023.” The court highlighted that Jones did not follow through with treatment recommendations during this period. The court was also skeptical of Jones’ argument regarding financial hardship, noting that “other cases have questioned whether financial hardship can excuse the regular-care requirement in the ERISA context.” The court ruled that even if such an argument were permitted, Jones had not offered sufficient evidence to establish that financial hardship prevented him from obtaining regular care. The court noted that Jones could have received treatment while he still had health insurance and was receiving disability benefits, but declined. Furthermore, “plaintiff provides no direct evidence of his financial condition[.]” As a result, the court concluded that Jones did not prove he was under the “regular care of a physician” as required by the plan and therefore granted Unum’s motion for judgment while denying Jones’.

Ninth Circuit

Doe v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., No. 24-CV-00859-NW, 2026 WL 125617 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 16, 2026) (Judge Noël Wise). Plaintiff Jane Doe worked as a Dynamics Analyst and Separation Dynamics Analyst on hypersonic missile programs for Lockheed Martin. As an employee of Lockheed Martin, she was covered by its ERISA-governed long-term disability (LTD) benefit plan, which was administered and insured by defendant Life Insurance Company of North America (LINA). As you might expect from her job title, Doe’s role required high-level cognitive functions, including simulating missile ascent and reentry, designing thermal protection strategies, and developing technical solutions to complex problems. Unfortunately, Doe began suffering from health issues after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine in early 2021, including chest pain, shortness of breath, fatigue, and difficulty concentrating. Eventually she developed chronic symptoms, including profound fatigue, brain fog, cognitive decline, and dysautonomic symptoms. Doe submitted a claim for short-term disability benefits, which was approved, but LINA denied her claim for LTD benefits, asserting a lack of clinical findings supporting functional impairment. Doe appealed, and on appeal LINA determined that Doe was psychiatrically impaired for a limited period, but terminated her benefits after February of 2023. This action followed. The parties filed cross-motions for judgment which the court reviewed under the de novo standard of review. First, the court found that “[t]he material duties of Plaintiff’s occupation require high-level cognitive function.” LINA emphasized the sedentary nature of Doe’s job, but the court found that her job “tasks require consistent concentration and stamina to conduct complicated analyses.” Next, the court concluded that Doe’s subjective complaints of debilitating symptoms were credible. The court emphasized that non-objective evidence can support a disability claim when subjective reports are credible, especially when objective evidence “is impossible to obtain.” The court further found that Doe’s complaints were supported by her treating doctors, who “personally observed many of the symptoms of which Plaintiff complained.” Moreover, these doctors attested that Doe was not malingering. As a result, the opinions of these doctors, who had personally treated her and had expertise in treating vaccine injured patients, were more persuasive than the paper reviews prepared by LINA and its consultants. The court thus concluded that Doe had met her burden of proving her disability under the plan’s terms because the material duties of her occupation were primarily cognitive, and her cognitive impairment rendered her unable to perform these duties. The court ordered the retroactive reinstatement of Doe’s LTD benefits from the time they were terminated to the expiration of the “regular occupation” benefits period. The court remanded the case to LINA to determine whether Doe was disabled and entitled to continued benefits under the “any occupation” standard.

Discovery

D.C. Circuit

Kifafi v. Hilton Hotels Ret. Plan, No. 25-7053, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 125263 (D.C. Cir. Jan. 16, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Pillard, Katsas, and Randolph). As we explained in our March 26, 2025 edition, this case has been around for more than a quarter-century – since 1998 – during which it has been up to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals four times…well, make that five. Kifafi originally alleged that Hilton Hotels violated ERISA in several ways, including improperly backloading retirement benefit accruals toward the end of employees’ careers, failing to provide certain eligible employees early retirement benefits, failing to maintain sufficient data to pay benefits to surviving spouses and former employees, failing to provide benefit statements and plan documents, and breaching fiduciary duties owed to plan participants. In 2011, Kifafi eventually prevailed on his claims for violations of ERISA’s anti-backloading and vesting provisions, obtaining a permanent injunction, and the parties have been mired in enforcement proceedings ever since. The issue on appeal here was Kifafi’s “Motion for Post-Judgment Discovery and Accounting.” He “sought a wide array of information from Hilton, including: ‘all communications’ between Hilton and its officers and agents ‘related to implementation of the permanent injunction,’ all communications since February 2015 with class members who were not yet paid as of that time, and ‘individual records’ for those same class members[.]” Hilton opposed the motion, and the district court ruled for Hilton, ruling that Kifafi’s requests were not warranted because Kifafi “ha[d] not shown that there are ‘significant questions’ regarding [Hilton’s] compliance with the judgment that warrant further discovery.” Kifafi appealed, and in this short decision the D.C. Circuit affirmed, ruling that the district court did not abuse its discretion. The appellate court acknowledged that “the district court retains the power to award appropriate relief as necessary to ensure that its judgment is fully enforced,” and “[n]o one disputes that Hilton has ongoing obligations under the injunction.” However, Kifafi’s requests were simply overbroad. The appellate court suggested that Kifafi “may request current information from Hilton, such as periodic status reports listing the identified class members and basic facts relevant to compliance progress. Those facts could be reasonably discrete, such as a listing of who remains unpaid and why, how much they are due, and what actions Hilton is taking to ensure that they are paid.” However, any such request would have to be reviewed by the district court first, and the appellate court would “not opine on whether it would be within the district court’s sound discretion to deny even a tailored request for an accounting of Hilton’s efforts and progress in identifying and providing the relief due to each class member.”

Eighth Circuit

The ERISA Industry Comm. v. Minnesota Dep’t of Commerce, No. 24-CV-04639 (KMM-SGE), 2026 WL 125166 (D. Minn. Jan. 16, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Shannon G. Elkins). This action challenges the legality of Minnesota Statute § 62W.07, which seeks to regulate pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) and health insurers. The plaintiffs contend that “the statute is preempted by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and that it is being applied extraterritorially in violation of the Constitution.” At the outset of the case, plaintiffs argued that no discovery was necessary, and that the case should go directly to summary judgment proceedings. The Department of Commerce disagreed, contending that discovery was necessary. The court sided with the Department, and it propounded written discovery. The Department gave plaintiffs extensions, and plaintiffs eventually responded, but not to the Department’s liking. As a result, the Department filed a motion to compel discovery and modify the scheduling order, which was adjudicated in this order. The court first addressed the scheduling order, and ruled that the Department had not demonstrated good cause to modify it. “[T]he Department cannot now claim that Plaintiffs’ late responses caused the need to extend discovery when it consented to the late productions and knew before the deadline that the productions were insufficient.” Furthermore, the court noted that the Department had waited until after the discovery deadline to seek an extension in order to combine its two motions, which was a “tactical decision” that did not constitute good cause. The Department had better luck with its motion to compel, which was directed primarily at defendants The Cigna Group and Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company. The court granted much of the Department’s motion, ordering Cigna to produce information regarding plans affected by the statute, the activities of PBMs within the state, requirements for participating in various pharmacy networks, recommendations made by PBMs to ERISA plan sponsors, determinations about drug coverage and pharmacy networks made by ERISA plan sponsors, drug coverage and pharmacy networks for ERISA plans, and fiduciary duties owed by PBMs to ERISA plan sponsors. The court denied other requests by the Department as either overbroad, not proportional, or because Cigna did not possess responsive documents. The court directed Cigna to comply with the order within 30 days, and extended the case deadlines in order to accommodate that compliance.

ERISA Preemption

Ninth Circuit

Montana Electrical Joint Apprenticeship & Training Committee v. Wagner, No. CV-25-78-BU-JTJ, 2026 WL 84298 (D. Mont. Jan. 12, 2026) (Magistrate Judge John Johnston). Montana Electrical Joint Apprenticeship & Training Committee (JATC) administers an apprenticeship training program funded by union employers. Participating apprentices sign Scholarship Loan Agreements (SLAs) requiring them to repay JATC for training expenses either through in-kind service by accepting qualifying union employment or by reimbursing JATC directly. JATC filed this action against five individuals, alleging breach of contract against each of them “because after allegedly receiving the training they allegedly failed to accept qualifying union employment at all or for a sufficient time to earn enough in-kind credits to repay the training costs and they failed to repay the resulting amount owed to the JATC.” Through this suit, JATC seeks to recover the cost of the training it provided. Defendants filed a notice of removal based on ERISA preemption, and JATC filed a motion to remand, contending that its claims are not preempted. Defendants opposed the motion, contending that “JATC’s apprenticeship training program and the SLAs constitute ‘employee welfare benefit plans’ under ERISA because they are maintained by employer associations and labor unions to provide apprenticeship training and scholarship funds.” In this order, the court rejected defendants’ argument and granted JATC’s motion to remand. The court explained that under the two-step test established by the Supreme Court in Aetna Health Inc. v. Davila, a state law claim is completely preempted if it could have been brought under § 502(a) and if there is no other independent legal duty implicated. The court determined that the only possible remedy JATC had under § 502(a) was pursuant to § 502(a)(3), which allows for equitable relief. However, JATC could not have brought its claims under § 502(a)(3) because it seeks legal relief in the form of monetary damages, which is not provided for under § 502(a)(3). Because defendants could not satisfy the first step of the Davila test, the court did not address the second. Defendants also argued that the court had jurisdiction under ERISA § 514(a), which provides an affirmative defense of conflict preemption. However, the court noted that even if defendants could maintain such a defense, this was insufficient to confer federal question jurisdiction. As a result, the court concluded that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over JATC’s claims, granted JATC’s motion, and remanded the case to state court.

Life Insurance & AD&D Benefit Claims

Eleventh Circuit

Atkins v. The Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:25-CV-2912-TWT, 2026 WL 86659 (N.D. Ga. Jan. 12, 2026) (Judge Thomas W. Thrash, Jr.). Shannon Atkins was employed by Arch Capital Services LLC and was a participant in its ERISA-governed employee life insurance benefit plan, administered by Prudential Insurance Company of America. Sadly, Shannon was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2020 and stopped working in December 2022 due to her illness. She was approved for short-term and long-term disability leave, and her employment was formally terminated in August 2024. She later passed away. The plaintiff in this case, Shannon’s husband William, contends that Shannon qualified for a waiver of premium and a continuation of coverage under Arch’s life insurance plan because she was disabled. William further contends that Arch and Prudential breached their fiduciary duties by misleading Shannon into believing she was receiving the full benefit of her coverage and failing to inform her about the waiver provision. William also accuses Arch of misinforming Shannon about her right to convert her employer-sponsored coverage under the plan to an individual policy. William asserted three claims in his complaint: “Count I is a benefits claim that seeks compensation under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B)… In the alternative, Count II seeks equitable relief against Prudential and Arch for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA § 502(a)(3)… In the alternative to Counts I and II, Count III seeks compensatory damages against Arch for the common law claim of negligent misrepresentation.” Arch filed a motion to dismiss all three claims, which the court adjudicated in this order. Under his first claim, William argued that “(1) Arch did not correct a mistake on Prudential’s conversion notice; and (2) it issued misleading statements and invoices to the decedent and failed to correct them or otherwise advise her about the death benefit clause.” The court ruled that Arch could not be held liable for Prudential’s alleged mistake in its conversion notice because Arch only had a general fiduciary duty to monitor Prudential’s activities. “Arch is not automatically responsible for every mistake that Prudential may make in the course of processing claims.” However, the court held that William plausibly alleged that Arch had a fiduciary duty to advise Shannon about the “death benefit clause” due to her “special circumstances,” such as her total disability and the importance of maintaining life insurance. Thus, the court denied Arch’s motion as to Count I. As for William’s second claim for equitable relief under Section 502(a)(3), the court dismissed it, ruling that the injury identified in this count was the same as in Count I, and Section 502(a)(3) “only provides a remedy when no such claim under § 502(a)(1)(B) is possible.” The court also dismissed Count III, holding that William’s negligent misrepresentation claim was preempted by ERISA. The court ruled that the claim “concern[s] alleged misrepresentations regarding the extent and timing of the decedent’s coverage. Courts routinely agree that ERISA preempts claims based on conduct of this sort – those brought by a plan participant or beneficiary in the pursuit of lost coverage as damages.” As a result, the court granted Arch’s motion, but only in part, dismissing Counts II and III but allowing Count I to proceed.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Cox v. WSP USA Inc. Grp. Ins. Plan, No. 24-CV-08812-HSG, 2026 WL 121206 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 16, 2026) (Judge Haywood S. Gilliam, Jr.) Andi Cox is a transgender woman and a participant in the ERISA-governed employee group health benefit plan of WSP USA Inc. Cox has a diagnosis of gender dysphoria and sought coverage for facial feminization surgery, which Aetna Life Insurance Company, the plan’s claim administrator, denied. Aetna contended that the treatment was not medically necessary under its clinical policy bulletin covering “Facial Gender Affirming Procedures.” After unsuccessfully appealing, Cox brought this action. Previously, Cox had sued WSP for denying coverage for facial hair removal; that action was settled in June of 2024. As a result, Cox brought two claims: one for denying her benefits in violation of ERISA, and one for a declaration that the Cox I settlement did not preclude this action. In this order the court addressed several motions. First, the court granted WSP’s motion to seal portions of the settlement agreement containing Cox’s personal information and the settlement amount, finding good cause to protect her privacy and financial details. Second, the court granted WSP’s motion to incorporate by reference the plan’s benefit booklet, the policy bulletin, and the settlement agreement. However, it denied WSP’s motion to incorporate the master service agreement, wrap plan, and summary plan description, as they were not relevant to the court’s ruling on WSP’s motion to dismiss. WSP asserted two arguments in its motion to dismiss: (1) the settlement agreement barred this action; and (2) Cox failed to state a claim. The court rejected WSP’s first argument, ruling that the settlement agreement did not preclude Cox’s current claims because “[t]he released claims related to facial hair removal treatments… Although facial hair removal may be a type of facial feminization, the claims at issue in this case relate to chin surgery… And the facts and dates as alleged in the complaint support Cox’s argument that her claims regarding facial feminization surgery had not ripened when Cox I was being litigated, such that she could not have asserted them there.” However, the court agreed with WSP’s second argument on the merits. The court acknowledged that “some medical evidence appears to support [Cox’s] view that facial feminization surgery is medically necessary for people with gender dysphoria.” However, “under the terms of the plan – which are the starting and ending point of the Court’s analysis under ERISA – Cox fails to state a claim because those procedures are expressly excluded.” Cox contended that Aetna’s clinical policy bulletin “creates an exclusion, which she characterizes as an affirmative defense, and contends that she is not required to plead around affirmative defenses.” However, the court ruled that “exclusions laid out in plan documents are not considered affirmative defenses in § 502 cases and can be the basis for granting a motion to dismiss.” As a result, “the plan unambiguously excludes the denied benefit. Therefore, the amended complaint fails to state a claim.” Thus, the case appears to be over, but the court set a case management conference to discuss whether any further action needs to be taken.

Pension Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Marchetti v. Lockheed Martin Corp., No. 3:22-CV-1527 (OAW), 2026 WL 113414 (D. Conn. Jan. 15, 2026) (Judge Omar A. Williams). Natale Marchetti worked for Lockheed Martin Corporation and Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation, a subsidiary of Lockheed, for more than 43 years before he died on October 17, 2021 at the age of 62. As a Lockheed employee, he was a participant in its pension plan and was eligible for early retirement benefits, although he had not yet retired under the terms of the plan. Before his death, in 2020, Natale executed a durable power-of-attorney form (POA) appointing his brother, Dennis Marchetti, the plaintiff in this case, as his attorney-in-fact. The form authorized Dennis to act on Natale’s behalf in matters dealing with “estates, trusts, and other beneficial interests” and “retirement plans.” However, Natale did not check the box next to “Create or change a beneficiary designation.” One day after Natale’s death, Lockheed’s administrator received a completed beneficiary designation form naming Natale’s four siblings as his beneficiaries. The form was dated and postmarked October 15, 2021, two days before Natale’s death, and was signed by “Dennis Marchetti P.O.A.” Lockheed refused to pay death benefits, stating that because Natale was unmarried at the time of his death and the beneficiary designation was invalid, the plan did not authorize payment to anyone. Dennis brought this action, both in his individual capacity and as the administrator of Natale’s estate, alleging two counts: a breach of contract claim against Lockheed for failing to pay retirement benefits from the plan, and a statutory theft claim against both Lockheed and Sikorsky for withholding Natale’s interest in the Plan. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, which were decided in this order. At the outset, the court disposed of three procedural issues. First, it dismissed Sikorsky from the case because Sikorsky had no administrative authority over the plan. Second, the court agreed with Lockheed that Dennis’ claims were preempted by ERISA, ruling that “[t]he complaint clearly prays for Plan benefits.” Thus, “the court reviews the Motions in the context of a single ERISA claim against Lockheed challenging Lockheed’s denial of beneficiary status[.]” Third, the court rejected Lockheed’s argument that Dennis had failed to exhaust his appeals before filing suit. The court noted that “while Lockheed expends considerable effort supporting the general principal of exhaustion, there is almost no argument as to how exhaustion ought to have been accomplished in this specific case.” The court noted that the plan appeal process “does not apparently include in its scope challenges to a POA or beneficiary status.” Furthermore, that process was limited to participants and beneficiaries, but “Lockheed’s determination that Dennis was not a beneficiary excluded him from the process Lockheed now asserts he ought to have used. Accordingly, the court finds that Lockheed has failed to show that there was an administrative process available to Dennis for him to exhaust.” The court then turned to the merits, using the deferential arbitrary and capricious standard of review because the plan gave Lockheed “broad discretionary authority” to make benefit determinations. The court found that Dennis failed to allege any facts that might call Lockheed’s interpretation of the POA, which was made in good faith, into question. The court thus ruled that Dennis did not have authority under the POA to complete the beneficiary designation form on Natale’s behalf, rendering the form ineffective. The court next examined the plan, which stated that “if a participant is at least 55 years old, has completed at least 10 years of continuous service, and dies while still employed by Lockheed, the participant’s spouse is entitled to certain benefits, except if the participant ‘[h]ad designated a Beneficiary other than the [s]pouse[.]’” Lockheed argued that because Natale was not married and had not designated a beneficiary, there was no beneficiary, while Dennis argued that Natale’s estate should be the beneficiary. The court ruled in Dennis’ favor, finding that the plan’s definition of “Beneficiary” included Natale’s estate. The court rejected Lockheed’s argument that a “Beneficiary” must be a person with a natural life because this interpretation was inconsistent with Lockheed’s understanding of other provisions of the plan. For example, Natale was entitled to a cash balance benefit under the plan, which Lockheed had paid to his estate without complaint. The court found no reason to construe the term differently in the two provisions. The court also noted that the plan “is explicit where no benefits will be paid, and there is no language…describing situations where a participant is not entitled to any benefits at all.” Furthermore, the court stated that its “reading is consistent with the foundational principles of ERISA, as well, which generally forbids the forfeiture of a participant’s vested benefit.” As a result, the court ruled that Natale’s service-based benefit should be “reduced to an actuarially equivalent lump sum and paid to his estate.” The court thus granted Dennis’ motion for summary judgment and ordered the parties to meet and confer to determine the amount of that lump sum.

Third Circuit

Shepard-Smith v. PMC Property Grp., Inc., No. CV 25-530, 2026 WL 86825 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 12, 2026) (Judge Harvey Bartle III). The plaintiff, Alisha Shepard-Smith, is the daughter of Charles D. Shepard, who passed away in 2018. Shepard-Smith claims that the day before her father died, he signed beneficiary forms designating her as the sole beneficiary of his 401(k) account, and that a social worker faxed these forms the same day to the human resources director of her father’s employer, defendant PMC Property Group, Inc. However, PMC claims it never received these forms, as they were not found in Mr. Shepard’s personnel files or with Empower, the plan’s recordkeeper. Furthermore, Shepard-Smith did not produce these forms until 2024, after she was informed about the benefits at issue. As a result, according to plan terms, the benefits were divided equally between Shepard’s children – i.e., Shepard-Smith and her brother – because Shepard was unmarried at the time of his death. Shepard-Smith unsuccessfully appealed this outcome and then filed this action against PMC under ERISA, claiming she was entitled to 100% of the proceeds, not 50%. The parties filed cross-motions for judgment. The court acknowledged that a reasonable factfinder could conclude either that PMC received and misplaced the faxed beneficiary form, or that it never received it. However, the court noted that it “is not sitting as a factfinder to decide de novo which version is more likely. Its role is much more limited. It must simply determine whether PMC abused its discretion in coming to the conclusion it did.” The court concluded that PMC did not abuse its discretion. It found no evidence of deception or improper motive and determined that PMC acted reasonably in determining that it never received the beneficiary designation forms produced by Shepard-Smith. As a result, “She must share the benefits with her brother.” The court thus granted PMC’s motion for judgment on the administrative record and denied Shepard-Smith’s.

Retaliation Claims

Sixth Circuit

Maas v. JTM Provisions Co., Inc., No. 1:23-CV-76, 2026 WL 124285 (S.D. Ohio Jan. 16, 2026) (Judge Jeffery P. Hopkins). This case is a dispute between brothers over the ownership and operation of their family-owned business, JTM Provisions Company, Inc. The plaintiff, Joseph R. Maas, has filed three lawsuits against his three brothers and the company “over JTM’s corporate governance and board decision making, including the Company’s continuation of its longstanding charitable giving program.” In this action Joe originally asserted thirteen claims for relief, which the court whittled down to nine at the pleading stage. Now the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the remaining claims, which include one claim for relief under ERISA Section 510. The court began its discussion by noting that “any true reconciliation and restoration of familial relations among the four brothers will not come from any judicial decision, but rather from the brothers’ own embrace of forgiveness, self-reflection, and grace, predicated on the very faith instilled in them by their parents – a faith that each of them still practices by and large in one form or another.” However, the court pressed on in an effort to “cut this corporate and familial Gordian Knot.” On the ERISA claim, the court noted there are two types of Section 510 claims: “(1) a ‘retaliation’ claim where adverse action is taken because a participant availed [him]self of an ERISA right; and (2) an ‘interference claim’ where adverse action is taken as interference with the attainment of a right under ERISA.” On the retaliation claim, Joe needed to show that he was engaged in an activity protected by ERISA, suffered an adverse employment action, and that there was a causal link between his protected activity and the adverse action. Joe asserted that defendants admitted in a state court proceeding that one reason for his termination was his request to withdraw funds from JTM’s 401(k) plan. However, the court ruled that this was not a binding judicial admission, and furthermore, “the lag between when he requested to withdraw funds…in March 2020, and when Defendants terminated him in February 2021, ‘defeats any inference of causation.’” Also, other employees had withdrawn funds from the plan during the same time period without being terminated. As for the interference claim, the court noted that Joe appeared to have abandoned it, “as he does not even address it, nor point to any evidence that would create a factual dispute as to this claim.” In any event, the court was satisfied that Joe could not state a prima facie case for interference because he could not demonstrate that Defendants engaged in prohibited conduct when they amended the plan, or that the amendment was intended to interfere with Joe’s rights. Thus, the court granted defendants’ summary judgment motion on Joe’s ERISA claims. Most of the rest of Joe’s claims suffered a similar fate, although the court did allow one claim to proceed: Joe’s mixed-motive Title VII religious discrimination claim against JTM.

Standard of Review

Second Circuit

Li v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., No. 25-411-CV, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 112655 (2d Cir. Jan. 15, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Parker, Raggi, and Park). In our February 5, 2025 edition we reported on the bench trial victory in this case by defendant First Unum Life Insurance Company in plaintiff Guangyu Li’s challenge to its denial of his claim for ERISA-governed long-term disability benefits. Li appealed that decision to the Second Circuit, and in this ruling the appellate court affirmed in three brief paragraphs. The only issue on appeal was “whether the district court erred by reviewing First Unum’s benefits decision under the arbitrary-and-capricious standard rather than the de novo standard.” The default standard is de novo, but courts will apply the more lenient arbitrary and capricious standard if the benefit plan at issue grants the administrator discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits. The Second Circuit agreed with the district court that such authority had been conferred to First Unum and thus the deferential standard applied. The court ruled that the employer’s “plan is detailed in the Policy and the Summary Plan Description (‘SPD’), which comprises the Additional Summary Plan Description Information and the Certificate of Coverage… Together, these documents are fairly construed to grant First Unum discretionary authority to determine eligibility for long-term disability benefits. Further, First Unum complied with the claims-procedure regulation.” As a result, “We thus AFFIRM for the reasons stated by the district court in its detailed opinion and order.”