This week’s ERISA-related decisions run the gamut from individual benefit claims to class actions to unpaid employer contribution disputes and so much more!

Read on to learn about (1) an insurer’s creative lawsuit contending that medical providers are gaming the independent dispute resolution process of the No Surprises Act (Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia v. HaloMD), (2) two published appellate decisions involving multiemployer plan contributions (IAM Nat’l Pension Fund v. M&K, Board of Trustees v. Barnhart), (3) the final approval of a $3.3 million settlement regarding insurance coverage for minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fusion surgery (Nixon v. Elevance), (4) the rejection of a challenge to the management of Intermountain Healthcare’s retirement plans (Johnston v. Intermountain), (5) the dismissal of a case alleging inadequate notification regarding the conversion of a pension plan to a cash balance plan (Lorusso v. Northwell), (6) a reminder that a summary plan description is not the same as the plan itself (Strong v. MetLife), and last, but certainly not least, (7) a decision explaining that when you click “I agree” on terms and conditions including an arbitration agreement, off to arbitration you must go (Gluesing v. PrudentRx).

There are even more cases to check out below if these don’t float your boat. As usual, we’ll be back next week.

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

Arbitration

First Circuit

Gluesing v. PrudentRx LLC, No. 24-CV-549-JJM-AEM, 2026 WL 1972065 (D.R.I. July 8, 2026) (Judge John J. McConnell, Jr.). Plaintiff Sheila Gluesing receives health insurance through Wellmark Health Plan of Iowa, which contracts with Caremark Rx LLC for pharmacy benefit manager services. Wellmark also participates in the PrudentRx Copay Program, which has partnered with Caremark and promises participants “they will enjoy a $0 copay for their qualifying specialty medications.” In this putative class action Gluesing alleges that PrudentRx and Caremark violated ERISA and the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act by “engag[ing] in a scheme to take copay assistance funds designed by drug manufacturers to help patients afford high-cost specialty prescription drugs and divert those funds to insurers rather than to the patients themselves, which resulted in the patients having to bear additional healthcare costs.” The merits of this claim will have to wait for another day, however, because defendants filed a motion to compel arbitration. As it turns out, Gluesing was required to purchase her prescription through CVS Specialty Pharmacy in order to be covered by her insurance, and the CVS Specialty online registration process includes agreeing to terms and conditions that contain a dispute resolution provision mandating arbitration. Gluesing opposed the motion, arguing that (1) no agreement to arbitrate was formed, (2) any agreement was invalid due to economic duress, and (3) defendants, as non-signatories, could not enforce the arbitration agreement. The court addressed each argument in order. First, the court found that Gluesing formed an agreement to arbitrate through a “clickwrap” agreement because she was required to click “I agree” to the terms and conditions, which included an arbitration provision. The court found that the CVS Specialty online registration page provided reasonably conspicuous notice of its terms, and Gluesing “unambiguously manifested assent” by clicking the “I agree” box and creating an account. Gluesing contended that she did not remember creating the account, but her lack of recall did not create a genuine dispute of material fact because defendants “submitted ample evidence to support the conclusion that Ms. Gluesing created the online account,” and her “version of events” – in which a provider must have created an account for her – “raise[d] implausibilities.” Second, the court ruled that the issue of economic duress was a question of contract validity, not formation, and thus was for an arbitrator to decide. The court noted that that the agreement incorporated the American Arbitration Association rules, which delegate questions of arbitrability to an arbitrator. Third, the court addressed Gluesing’s argument that defendants were non-signatories to the agreement. The court rejected defendants’ argument that this issue was also for the arbitrator to decide, but nevertheless decided it in defendants’ favor. The court agreed that Caremark and PrudentRx were “affiliates” and “vendors” under the agreement, and thus were entitled to invoke the arbitration provision under a third-party beneficiary theory. As a result, the court rejected all three of Gluesing’s arguments for avoiding arbitration, granted defendants’ motion to compel, and stayed the case pending arbitration.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

Lorusso v. Northwell Health Pension Plan, No. 24-CV-2785(JS)(AYS), 2026 WL 1998738 (E.D.N.Y. July 10, 2026) (Judge Joanna Seybert). The plaintiffs in this case are participants in the Northwell Health Pension Plan. They allege that the plan and associated defendants violated ERISA by failing “to properly and adequately notify plan participants before the conversion of North Shore University Hospital’s pension plan [] to a cash balance plan [] in 1999[.]” Plaintiffs’ first amended complaint (FAC) contains seven causes of action, including violations of 29 U.S.C. § 1054(h) for inadequate notice (Claims I and II), violations of 29 U.S.C. § 1022 for misleading disclosures (Claims III, V, and VI), a violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(1)(B) for deficient quarterly benefits statements (Claim IV), and breach of fiduciary duty under 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a) (Claim VII). Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which was referred to a magistrate judge for a report and recommendation (R&R). The R&R recommended granting the motion, finding that the claims were either untimely or failed on the merits. Plaintiffs filed six objections, and this ruling was the result. Taking the objections in order, the court first ruled that defendants provided adequate notice of the conversion as required by Section 204(h). The court noted that defendants’ communications, including a letter and a subsequent summary plan description (SPD), complied with statutory requirements by summarizing the amendment and its effective date. Second, the court determined that the SPD adequately informed participants under Section 102 of potential benefit reductions, including the possibility of a “shortfall” or “wear-away” effect. “Regardless of the specific terminology used, the SPD’s plain text clearly informed the average plan participant the new Cash Balance formula could result in less retirement benefits than the Prior Plan’s formula, had it continued.” Third, the court saw no breach of fiduciary duty, concluding that plaintiffs failed to allege that defendants made materially false or misleading statements about the plan conversion. The court found that the SPD and other communications did not “misle[a]d plan participants to believe they were better off under the new Cash Balance Plan.” Indeed, “the SPD clearly and repeatedly informed participants they were not guaranteed to accrue benefits that exceeded, or even met, those they would have earned under the Prior Plan, had it continued.” Fourth, under plaintiffs’ Section 105 claim, the court agreed with defendants that plaintiffs’ allegations were “conclusory” because they described “account statements purportedly received by unnamed putative class members, rather than factual allegations regarding account statements received by the Plaintiffs and how those statements were purportedly deficient.” The court emphasized that the FAC did not allege any plaintiff was entitled to a different benefit from what was reflected in their statements. Fifth, the court agreed with the R&R that all of plaintiffs’ claims were untimely because any ambiguity or confusion about the plan conversion arose at the time of disclosure in 1998 and 1999. Plaintiff argued for extension of the deadline because of “fraud and concealment,” but these allegations “are contradicted by the plain language of the SPD which repeatedly advises participants of a possible significant reduction in benefits.” Sixth, and finally, the court denied plaintiffs’ request for leave to amend, noting that they “have known, or should have known, about the deficiencies in the FAC since well before the R&R was filed[.]” The court also cited plaintiffs’ failure to comply with procedural rules for amending pleadings. As a result, all of plaintiffs’ objections were overruled, the R&R was upheld in its entirety, and defendants’ motion to dismiss was granted in full.

Tenth Circuit

Johnston v. Intermountain Healthcare, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-00073-JNP-DAO, 2026 WL 1998490 (D. Utah July 10, 2026) (Judge Jill N. Parrish). The plaintiffs in this action are participants in defined contribution retirement plans sponsored by Intermountain Healthcare, Inc. In this putative class action they allege that Intermountain and associated entities breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA in mismanaging the plans. Plaintiffs alleged that the plans, which include a 401(k) plan and a 403(b) plan, had substantial assets and were thus “jumbo plans” with significant bargaining power regarding fees and expenses. The 401(k) plan included the Principal Stability Fund, a synthetic guaranteed investment contract (GIC), which plaintiffs claimed was underperforming and riskier compared to other available options. Plaintiffs asserted three main claims: (1) breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence by “failing to objectively and adequately review the Plans’ investment portfolio, initially and on an ongoing basis, with due care to ensure that each investment option was prudent, in terms of performance,” specifically citing the Principal GIC; (2) failure to monitor the committee responsible for managing the Plans; and (3) engaging in a prohibited transaction by excessively compensating T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan Services, Inc. (TRP) for recordkeeping and trustee services. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. On plaintiffs’ first claim, the court found that they failed to provide a “meaningful benchmark” to support their claim that the Principal GIC was imprudent. Plaintiffs offered GIC comparators, but most were not synthetic GICs like the Principal GIC. To the extent plaintiffs’ comparators had similarities, “even if those similarities do indeed exist and are relevant, the characteristics identified by Defendants – investment strategy and risk profile – are necessary to identify meaningful comparators in this context.” The court emphasized that a meaningful comparison requires more than superficial similarities and must consider the structural differences affecting crediting rates. “Otherwise, a comparison will not be meaningful; it will be comparing apples to oranges.” Furthermore, the court faulted plaintiffs for emphasizing underperformance rather than process, even though prudence inquiries focus on the “decision-making process itself.” Plaintiffs’ second claim, breach of the duty to monitor, also failed because it was derivative of the duty of prudence claim. As for plaintiffs’ third claim, for prohibited transaction, the court did not accept defendants’ argument that it was time-barred because “the court must accept as true that Plaintiff only learned of all material facts shortly before this suit was filed.” The court further rejected defendants’ attempt to place a “more involved pleading standard” on plaintiffs, stating, “This court thus sees no reason to not take the Supreme Court at its word that ‘plaintiffs seeking to state a § 1106(a)(1)(C) claim must plausibly allege that a plan fiduciary engaged in a transaction proscribed therein, no more, no less.’” However, plaintiffs’ claim failed on the merits: “The most immediate issue is that Plaintiffs circularly allege that the alleged prohibited transaction they find fault with is the same transaction that caused TRP to be a party in interest. That cannot be so… When TRP contracted with the Plans to provide its recordkeeping services, it was not yet a party in interest.” Thus, there could be no prohibited transaction because there was no “prior relationship.” As a result, all of plaintiffs’ claims were non-starters, and the court thus granted defendants’ motion to dismiss.

Class Actions

Sixth Circuit

Nixon v. Elevance Health, Inc., No. 3:19-CV-00076-GFVT-EBA, 2026 WL 1990461 (E.D. Ky. July 9, 2026) (Judge Gregory F. Van Tatenhove). The plaintiffs in this action challenged insurance company Elevance Health’s medical policy of denying coverage for minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fusion surgery as “investigational” and “not medically necessary.” After the suit was filed, Elevance revised its policy to cover the procedure in certain instances, and the parties engaged in discovery and then successful settlement discussions. In December of 2025 the court granted preliminary approval of the parties’ settlement, and a fairness hearing was held on July 6. In this order the court granted final approval of the settlement and awarded attorney’s fees and service awards to the class representatives. The court found that all three steps of the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 process were satisfied, as preliminary approval had been granted, class members were given notice and none objected, and a final fairness hearing had taken place. The court determined that the settlement met the standard for final approval based on the Sixth Circuit’s UAW v. GMC factors, which include the risk of fraud or collusion, the complexity and expense of litigation, the amount of discovery, the likelihood of success on the merits, the opinions of class counsel and representatives, the reaction of absent class members, and the public interest. The court noted that there was little risk of fraud or collusion, given the extensive litigation history and discovery conducted. The likelihood of success on the merits was uncertain, but the denial of defendants’ motions to dismiss and to strike class allegations suggested a possible favorable outcome for plaintiffs. The opinions of class counsel and representatives supported the settlement, as it provided substantial relief to class members. (The settlement is for $3.3 million and permits class members to “receive up to $15,000 to reimburse their out-of-pocket expenses used to pay for the procedure.”) The absence of objections from class members and the strong policy favoring settlement in class actions further supported approval. Regarding attorney’s fees and service awards, the court applied the “percentage of the fund” method, finding the requested fees of $825,000 to be reasonable, as they constituted 24.3% of the total settlement benefits. The court considered factors such as the value of the benefit to the class, society’s interest in rewarding attorneys for beneficial class actions, the contingency basis of the litigation, the complexity of the case, and the professional skill of counsel. The court also approved service awards of $17,500 for each class representative, noting their instrumental role in achieving relief for the class and finding the awards “in line with…other class action settlements in the Sixth Circuit.” The court thus dismissed the action and entered judgment.

Disability Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Magdalasov v. ByteDance Inc., No. CV 25-13824 (ES) (JBC), 2026 WL 2017269 (D.N.J. July 13, 2026) (Judge Esther Salas). Yakov Magdalasov was an employee of ByteDance and a participant in its ERISA-governed short-term disability plan, which was administered by Sedgwick Claims Management Services, Inc. He began a medical leave in March 2025 due to mental health conditions and submitted a claim for benefits under the plan. Sedgwick approved it, but only for about a month. Magdalasov unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action. Magdalasov contends that the denial was retaliatory, influenced by employment-related considerations, and that he “received no meaningful response” from Sedgwick or ByteDance when seeking clarification. His pro se complaint contains three claims under ERISA: (1) denial of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), (2) retaliation in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1140, and (3) a request for equitable relief under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). Both defendants filed motions in response; ByteDance sought to dismiss the first claim for benefits and compel arbitration of any remaining claims, while Sedgwick moved to dismiss the complaint or compel arbitration. Starting with count one, the court dismissed it regarding both ByteDance and Sedgwick. The court found that Magdalasov failed to identify any specific provisions of the plan that entitled him to benefits beyond the termination date. “A plaintiff cannot plausibly allege that benefits are due under an ERISA plan merely by asserting that he should have received a different benefits determination… Rather, the complaint must identify the plan language that allegedly confers the claimed entitlement and explain how the administrator’s decision contravened that language.” Additionally, the court noted that Sedgwick was not a proper defendant for this claim because Magdalasov did not allege that Sedgwick “exercise[d] control over the administration of benefits,” a requirement for fiduciary status under ERISA. The court also dismissed Magdalasov’s second claim under ERISA § 502(a)(3), ruling that (a) he could not proceed against Sedgwick because it was not a fiduciary, and (b) the claim was duplicative of his first claim for plan benefits. The court noted that pleading in the alternative is allowed, but here Magdalasov’s claim was “premised on the same underlying conduct as his Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim,” and “identifies no distinct injury separate from the alleged denial of benefits[.]” Thus, it was functionally the same as his first claim and redundant. As for Magdalasov’ retaliation claim, the court dismissed it regarding Sedgwick because ERISA § 510 is limited to actions affecting the employer-employee relationship, and Sedgwick was not Magdalasov’s employer. For ByteDance, the court compelled arbitration of the retaliation claim, finding that it fell within the scope of the parties’ Mutual Agreement to Arbitrate (MAA). The court rejected Magdalasov’s arguments that (1) his claim was “part of the ERISA carve-out” and therefore “falls within ERISA’s remedial scheme and outside arbitration,” and (2) the MAA was unconscionable. The court found that the arbitration provision “appears to be rather broad, calling for arbitration of ‘any dispute arising out of or relating to’ claims under ERISA except for claims for benefits.” Furthermore, Magdalasov “makes no argument pertaining to the insufficiencies of the procedure afforded him with respect to the MAA,” and “the MAA does not limit Plaintiff’s substantive rights or remedies otherwise available to him[.]” As a result, the MAA was enforceable. The court thus granted both ByteDance’s and Sedgwick’s motions, and gave Magdalasov leave to amend due to his pro se status.

Sixth Circuit

Fitzgerald v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 23-13169, 2026 WL 1990460 (E.D. Mich. July 9, 2026) (Judge David M. Lawson). Kirk Fitzgerald was as a production machine operator for Nexteer Automotive when he developed severe health problems in 2015. Fitzgerald primarily suffered from major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and general anxiety disorder, but also had physical issues such as pelvic floor dysfunction and back discomfort. He stopped working and applied for short-term and then long-term disability (LTD) benefits under Nexteer’s ERISA-governed employee disability plan, which was insured and administered by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. MetLife approved Fitzgerald for both benefits, and continued paying LTD benefits through 2020, when it determined that Fitzgerald no longer met the definition of disability. Fitzgerald unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action under ERISA Section 502(a)(1)(B), seeking to recover plan benefits. The case proceeded to cross-motions on the administrative record, where the court applied de novo review. At the outset, the court was required to decide which version of the plan applied: the 2011 version or the 2016 version. As the court explained, “the 2016 certificate [] sets out a definition of disability that is more generous to the plaintiff here,” because it allowed for benefits when a claimant is “‘unable to engage in any occupation for remuneration or profit covered under a collective bargaining agreement with’ Nexteer and must not be ‘working in an occupation for any other employer.’” However, “the 2016 certificate is more limiting on the duration of LTD benefits,” with a 60-month maximum benefit period. The court agreed with MetLife that the 2016 version governed Fitzgerald’s claim because it was the version in effect when he applied for and was granted LTD benefits. Turning to the evidence of disability, the court quickly determined that Fitzgerald’s claim was not supported by any physical condition. However, the court found that that MetLife improperly terminated Fitzgerald’s claim because the evidence showed that his psychiatric conditions continued to prevent him from working in a job for which he was qualified at Nexteer. The court emphasized that MetLife’s prior determinations, which found Fitzgerald unable to perform his job due to severe depression and anxiety, “remain relevant,” and that Fitzgerald continued to suffer from the same functional limitations during the relevant review period. The court stated that the Social Security Administration’s decision, which denied benefits, was relevant, but only in a limited fashion, because it predated MetLife’s review and evaluated Fitzgerald’s ability to perform jobs that “do not fall within the scope of the manufacturing positions encompassed by Fitzgerald’s Nexteer job class.” The court relied heavily on the opinion of Fitzgerald’s treating psychiatrist and was unconvinced by the reports of MetLife’s reviewing physicians. The court found that these reports were incomplete, emphasized marginally relevant facts, did not focus on key issues, “contained reasoning that effectively heightened the standard for disability,” and “relied on cherry-picked observations that lacked context[.]” Specifically, MetLife’s doctors did not “meaningfully address the central evidence supporting Fitzgerald’s disability, particularly his inability to regulate emotions and sustain concentration throughout a workday.” As a result, the court concluded that Fitzgerald was entitled to LTD benefits until October of 2021, when the 60-month maximum benefit period expired. The court found that remanding the case to MetLife “would serve no useful purpose,” as the record demonstrated Fitzgerald’s continued disability. The court ordered supplemental briefing regarding the benefit amount due.

Eleventh Circuit

Wang v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 25-11527, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 1960673 (11th Cir. July 7, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Rosenbaum, Jill Pryor, and Branch). Yu Wang was an Engineering Technical Leader for General Electric and a participant in GE’s ERISA-governed long-term disability benefit plan, which was insured by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Wang stopped working in 2022 due to shortness of breath, chest pain, and arrhythmia. He applied for benefits under the plan, claiming disability due to a stress-related heart condition. However, the plan’s third-party administrator, Sedgwick Claims Management Services, denied Wang’s claim, contending that his condition was “relatively benign,” with “no evidence of heart disease or risk of cardiac arrest.” Wang appealed twice to MetLife, submitting updated evidence of an anxiety condition, but MetLife upheld the denial. MetLife “reaffirmed the prior finding that Wang’s cardiac condition did not result in restrictions or limitations,” and addressed Wang’s “alleged anxiety and/or depression,” finding “there is no available evidence documenting a severe psychiatric disorder.” Wang thus filed this pro se action for plan benefits against MetLife, contending that MetLife “failed to review his conditions holistically, that it arbitrarily disregarded his mental-health claims, that the claims process was plagued by procedural deficiencies, and that MetLife’s decisions were tainted by bias, conflicts of interest, and impartiality.” The district court was unconvinced and granted MetLife’s motion for judgment on the administrative record. Wang appealed, and this per curiam decision from the Eleventh Circuit was the result. Addressing the standard of review first, the court acknowledged Wang’s argument that the plan language did not confer discretionary authority on MetLife. The court even thought “he might be right about that,” but it did not matter because the district court employed de novo review, and “[w]e also agree with the court that MetLife’s decision was not de novo wrong, for the reasons we explain in more detail below[.]” Next, the court declined to consider four new pieces of evidence offered by Wang, ruling that they were not submitted to the district court below and were not especially probative in any event. Turning to the merits, the Eleventh Circuit agreed with the district court that MetLife’s decision to deny Wang’s claim was de novo correct. Although some doctors opined that Wang was unable to work due to symptomatic premature ventricular contractions, “objective testing…failed to show that Wang’s PVCs were anything more than a ‘benign condition’ that likely did not cause his symptoms of chest pain, tightness, and shortness of breath.” Indeed, Wang’s own doctors ultimately agreed with MetLife’s reviewing physician that “Wang’s symptoms were likely caused by anxiety, not by a cardiac condition.” The court also found no evidence of treatment for anxiety or depression that would render Wang unable to perform his job duties. The court noted that references to anxiety and panic disorder in the records were not supported by diagnosis or treatment. The court further rejected Wang’s allegations of procedural defects, concluding that MetLife conducted a full and fair review of his claim. The court stated that the denial letters consistently outlined the plan’s definition of “total disability” and explained why Wang’s medical records did not meet this standard. The court also dismissed Wang’s allegations of bias and conflicts of interest as unfounded, as well as his claims regarding litigation misconduct, noting that MetLife had abided by court deadlines and kept him reasonably informed. As a result, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the judgment in MetLife’s favor in its entirety.

Discovery

Second Circuit

Rakhmanchik v. Cigna-Evernorth Servs., Inc., No. 26-CV-01339 (JAV), 2026 WL 1974075 (S.D.N.Y. July 8, 2026) (Judge Annette A. Vargas). Aleksandr Rakhmanchik alleges various violations of ERISA in this action arising from his termination by Cigna-Evernorth Services, Inc. Specifically, his complaint asserts “(1) violation of Plaintiff’s rights guaranteed by ERISA, (2) promissory estoppel under ERISA Section 502, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), (3) wrongful discharge under ERISA Section 510, 29 U.S.C. § 1140, and (4) unjust enrichment.” During his employment, Rakhmanchik signed a Voluntary Arbitration Agreement, which “applies to any dispute, past, present or future, arising out of or related to [Plaintiff’s] employment or relationship with Cigna.” Thus, Cigna filed a motion to dismiss and a motion to compel arbitration, arguing that Rakhmanchik’s claims under ERISA Sections 502 and 510 failed to state a claim and that his unjust enrichment claim should be compelled to arbitration. (Cigna did not move for arbitration of Rakhmanchik’s ERISA claims because the arbitration agreement contained a carveout exempting “claims for employee benefits under any benefit plan sponsored by Cigna…covered by [ERISA].”) However, these motions were not decided in this order. Instead, the court ruled on a third motion by Cigna, to stay discovery pending the resolution of its first two motions. Cigna contended that discovery related to the unjust enrichment claim should be stayed due to arbitration and that discovery related to the ERISA claims should be stayed “due to both a lack of merit and central factual issues that overlap” with the unjust enrichment claim. The court agreed with Cigna. The court explained that ordinarily it applies a three-factor test in evaluating stay requests, which involves assessing whether the defendant has made a strong showing that the plaintiff’s claim is unmeritorious, the breadth and burden of discovery, and the risk of unfair prejudice to the opposing party. However, in cases involving a motion to compel arbitration, courts in the Second Circuit typically do not apply the test and simply grant a stay “absent compelling reasons to deny it.” Furthermore, the court ruled that “Defendant has made a substantial showing that the plaintiff’s ERISA claims are unmeritorious. In particular, Defendant in its moving papers contends that Plaintiff not only failed to plead that he met the criteria to recover benefits under the Severance Plan, his own allegations make clear that he did not qualify, as he was not employed at Cigna on the relevant dates.” In his briefing, Rakhmanchik “does not aver that he satisfies the plan criteria.” As a result, the court was clearly skeptical of Rakhmanchik’s claims and granted Cigna’s motion to stay discovery until the court could rule on Cigna’s other two motions.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Third Circuit

Sparks v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc., No. CV 25-630 (MAS) (TJB), 2026 WL 1959349 (D.N.J. June 29, 2026) (Judge Michael A. Shipp). Corey Sparks was hired by Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. in 2019 and was promoted in 2021 to Vice President, Regional Finance Director, U.S. In November of 2022 Sparks attended a conference where he allegedly made aggressive comments and exhibited inappropriate behavior, including claims of intoxication and making others uncomfortable. Teva conducted an investigation, after which it terminated Sparks in December of 2022, finding that that he was ineligible for benefits under Teva’s Separation Benefits Plan due to his misconduct. Sparks subsequently filed this action against Teva and one of its subsidiaries (Anda Inc.), asserting ten counts: (1) violation of the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (NJLAD), (2) breach of employment contract, (3) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, (4) declaratory judgment, (5) violation of the Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA), (6) tortious interference with business relations, (7) a second claim for breach of employment contract, (8) negligence, (9) piercing the corporate veil/alter ego liability, and crucially for our purposes, (10) failure to pay severance benefits under ERISA. Three of Sparks’ claims were dismissed in state court (counts four through six) before the case was removed to federal court. Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment on all of Sparks’ remaining claims. The court first found that Sparks failed to establish a prima facie case of discriminatory discharge under the NJLAD because he did not provide evidence that Teva “sought similarly qualified individuals to fill his role after his termination… [T]he Court’s review of the record has not revealed any evidence – to show that Teva sought any individuals to fill his role, let alone individuals that were similarly qualified.” The court further dismissed counts two, three, seven, and eight because these common law claims were based on the same factual predicate as his NJLAD claim and sought the same relief. “Because Plaintiff ha[s] merely repackaged [his] NJLAD claim into [common law claims here], the NJLAD preempts the [common law] claim[s].” Even if not preempted, the claims failed on their merits. For breach of contract, Sparks’ employment was at-will, and he failed to demonstrate any enforceable contract. For breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, no contract existed due to the at-will employment status. The negligence claim was barred by the New Jersey Workers’ Compensation Act. As for Sparks’ “Reverse-Veil Piercing and Alter Ego Liability Claim,” the court dismissed this claim because New Jersey does not recognize reverse veil piercing, and even if it did, Sparks failed to provide evidence to support such a claim. Finally, on Sparks’ ERISA-governed severance claim, the court ruled that Sparks failed to exhaust his administrative remedies before filing suit, as required by the plan: “[participants] must use and exhaust the Plan’s administrative claims and appeals procedure before bringing suit in either state or federal court[.]” Sparks relied on a demand letter from his counsel, but the court found that this letter did not constitute a formal appeal because it did not follow the instructions in the plan. Sparks also argued that “any pursuit of administrative remedies ha[s] been and will continue to be futile.” The court disagreed, noting that Sparks did not even allege his ERISA claim until his third amended complaint, “failed to set forth [any] evidence that the policy of denial was fixed such that the appeal would be automatically denied,” did not identify anything in the record “evidencing that Defendants or Plan Administrators failed to comply with their own policies in denying his claim,” and “has presented no testimony of plan administrators noting that administrative appeal would be futile.” Sparks’ only evidence was the letter from his counsel, which was insufficient because it “only broadly claimed that Plaintiff’s termination ‘resulted in significant repercussions’ including ‘the loss of benefits[.]’” As a result, defendants’ summary judgment motion was granted in its entirety.

Sixth Circuit

Strong v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 25-12693, 2026 WL 1971254 (E.D. Mich. July 8, 2026) (Judge F. Kay Behm). This case revolves around Nicole C. Strong, who was employed by Ford Motor Company and was a participant in Ford’s ERISA-governed accidental death and dismemberment employee benefit plan. She died in 2023. Her death certificate indicated that her death was an “accident” due to “medication abuse,” described as “Diphenhydramine Toxicity.” Nicole’s husband, Ondrea Strong, submitted a claim to the plan’s insurer and claim administrator, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, which denied it. MetLife found that Nicole ingested a lethal dose of Benadryl, and thus her death fell within an exclusion that “bar[s] coverage when loss results from a ‘voluntary’ ingestion of a medicine other than as prescribed by a physician.” MetLife rejected Ondrea’s argument that Nicole’s “blood levels…were not even toxic, much less lethal,” as well as his contention that its denial “was based on a demonstrable, mathematical error or a disregard of medical/scientific data.” Ondrea filed this action, and in this order the court addressed two issues that it had ordered the parties to brief after a status conference: (1) whether the case should be dismissed due to failure to exhaust administrative remedies; and (2) whether discovery was warranted. On the first issue, MetLife contended that “Plaintiff did not follow the claim exhaustion procedure set forth in the Summary Plan Description (SPD)[.]” However, the court noted that “the appeal process described in the SPD is not contained in the Plan documents contained in the Administrative Record.” Relying on the Sixth Circuit’s 2020 decision in Wallace v. Oakwood Healthcare, Inc., the court noted that “for a plan fiduciary to avail itself of this Court’s exhaustion requirement, its underlying plan document must – at minimum – detail its required internal appeal procedures.” Because Ondrea followed the plan’s claims procedure, the SPD did not control: “The fact that the claims review process on which Defendant relies is contained in the SPD does not render it applicable under the circumstances of this case because statements in the SPD are not plan terms.” Thus, MetLife’s exhaustion argument was rejected. As for Ondrea’s request for discovery, the court denied it, stating, “Discovery generally is not permitted in an ERISA case and a district court may ordinarily review only the administrative record.” The court recognized that exceptions existed in cases where there was a procedural challenge to the administrator’s decision, such as bias or lack of due process. However, here “the real focus of Plaintiff’s discovery request is on conducting depositions of the Administrator and the Macomb County Medical Examiner, both of whom Plaintiff alleges misread or misunderstood the testing data[.]” This was not connected to a “procedural challenge of an inherent conflict of interest,” and thus discovery on this topic was impermissible. The court finished by remanding the case to MetLife so Ondrea could pursue an administrative appeal. Meanwhile, the case will be stayed.

Pension Benefit Claims

Seventh Circuit

Dumke v. Chicago & Vicinity Laborers’ Dist. Council Pension Fund, No. 25 C 50328, 2026 WL 2017297 (N.D. Ill. July 13, 2026) (Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer). Jeffrey Dumke was a participant in a multiemployer pension plan administered by the Chicago & Vicinity Laborers’ District Council Pension Fund. He married the plaintiff in this case, Kristen Dumke, in 2005, and they divorced in 2015. The settlement agreement from their divorce, incorporated into the divorce judgment, awarded Kristen “50% of the portion of Jeff’s pension that was accrued during the course of the marriage with the Laborer’s Pension Fund pursuant to a QDRO to be prepared and entered by Jeff within 60 days.” Both Jeffrey and Kristen contacted the Fund about complying with its QDRO process, but the required documentation was never submitted. Later, Jeffrey married Elizabeth Fischer, and then died in March of 2024. After his death Kristen submitted to the Fund a draft QDRO, which she thought had already been submitted by Jeffrey’s attorney. In May of 2024 a state court entered the order nunc pro tunc to the date of divorce. The Fund, however, determined that this order was not a valid QDRO under ERISA and began paying benefits to Fischer. Kristen thus filed this action in state court against the Fund, Fischer, and Jeffrey’s estate, asserting four claims: “Counts I and II, against Jeffrey’s Estate, allege breaches of the Marital Settlement Agreement. Count III, against the Fund, asks the court for an injunction reversing the Fund’s determination that Kristen is not entitled to a portion of Jeffrey’s pension fund. Count IV, against Elizabeth, asks for imposition of a constructive trust on pension benefits to which Kristen believes she is entitled.” The Fund removed the case to federal court based on ERISA preemption, and both Kristen and the Fund filed cross-motions for summary judgment on Count III. The court ruled that the Fund’s refusal to treat the divorce order as a valid QDRO was mistaken. The court explained that Kristen had an equitable interest in a portion of Jeffrey’s pension benefits due to the marital settlement agreement, which was not negated by the absence of a pre-death QDRO. The court stated that ERISA does not require a QDRO to be in place before benefits become payable and that a QDRO can be obtained after a participant’s death. The court distinguished the Fund’s authorities by noting that Kristen “does not seek to establish ownership rights via a newly ordered QDRO; she seeks only to enforce rights she had already won in a court determination.” Furthermore, the Fund was on notice of Kristen’s interest shortly after Jeffrey’s death and should have segregated the disputed funds while the QDRO’s status was determined. As a result, the court granted Kristen’s motion and ordered the Fund to qualify her DRO and pay her the appropriate share of the benefits at issue. The remaining state-law claims were dismissed without prejudice to renewal in state court.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

First Circuit

Morales-Álvarez v. Intelvox LLC, No. CV 26-1256 (FAB), __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2026 WL 1983483 (D.P.R. July 1, 2026) (Judge Francisco A. Besosa). Erick Iván Morales-Álvarez was the Chief Financial Officer of Intelvox LLC from 2019 to 2026. After he was terminated, he initiated this action in Puerto Rico court, alleging claims for unjust dismissal under Puerto Rico Law 80, age discrimination under Puerto Rico Law 100, failure to compensate for accrued vacation pay and unpaid wages under Puerto Rico Law 180, and failure to authorize the release of his ERISA-governed 401(k) benefits. Intelvox removed the case to federal court, and, as we chronicled in our June 17, 2026 edition, was unsuccessful in moving to strike Morales’ jury trial demand regarding his Puerto Rico-based claims. (It was successful regarding his ERISA claim.) Now Morales seeks to amend his complaint to add claims against two new defendants, Erick Juan Morales-Díaz and Sila Margarita Otero-Tavarez. According to Morales, these two “obstructed Morales’s access to his 401(k) retirement savings account by refusing to sign an authorization releasing funds after Morales was fired.” He contends that “this interference entitles him to relief under Sections 502 and 510 of ERISA.” Morales also sought to increase the amount he requested for mental pain and suffering from $50,000 to $1 million. In response, Intelvox argued that Morales’ proposed amendments were unnecessary, futile, and that the increase in damages sought was “baseless and prejudicial.” Intelvox argued that the amendment would be futile because Morales-Díaz and Otero were not properly alleged to be plan administrators under ERISA. However, even though Morales cited ERISA Section 510, “the Court reads his allegations as fitting better under ERISA section 502(a)(1)(B),” which represented “a relatively straightforward denial of benefits to a plan participant.” Under this provision, the court found that Morales plausibly stated a claim for relief because the alleged refusal of Morales-Díaz and Otero to sign an authorization was interpreted as “exercising control over the administration of the benefits,” i.e., effectively denying his claim. As for Morales’ increase in claimed emotional damages, the court found that it “does not alter Intelvox’s defenses or litigation strategy enough to create substantial prejudice.” The court saw no danger of what Intelvox called “tactical prejudice,” and did not agree with Intelvox that Morales was required to buttress his increased demand with “supporting factual development… Federal notice pleading standards do not require a complaint to plead evidence.” As a result, the court granted Morales’ motion and he was allowed to file his first amended complaint.

Sixth Circuit

Azab v. General Motors LLC, No. 2:25-CV-12915, 2026 WL 1962580 (E.D. Mich. July 7, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Judge Curtis Ivy, Jr.). Plaintiff Mohammad Azab, proceeding pro se, brought this action against his former employer, General Motors LLC, alleging various violations of state and federal law. Azab was employed by GM from 2021 to 2024 as a senior software engineer. He contends that GM “made misrepresentations about the position that was offered to him, which induced him to leave his previous job and forfeit benefits.” These promised benefits included “$80,000 in unvested equity and long-term career stability.” Azab’s complaint includes claims for Title VII retaliation, retaliation under Michigan civil rights law, and wrongful discharge. Now he has moved to amend his complaint to add claims for violations of interference under ERISA Section 510 and the WARN Act, and to “clarify ‘chronology and dates.’” Meanwhile, GM has moved to dismiss, contending that Azab’s claims are barred by a separation agreement he signed when he left the company. The assigned magistrate judge examined whether Azab’s claims were barred by the separation agreement and whether his proposed amendments were futile. Addressing the agreement first, the court applied the Sixth Circuit’s five-part test from Adams v. Philip Morris, Inc. to determine if it was “knowingly and voluntarily executed.” The court found that the first four factors were met, but under the fifth factor, “the totality of the circumstances,” the court accepted Azab’s allegations that a material part of the contract was misrepresented, i.e., that “Defendant misrepresented the date through which it agreed to pay Plaintiff’s compensation and/or benefits through.” As a result, the release did not bar Azab’s claims. Next, the court turned to Azab’s proposed amendments. It found his ERISA Section 510 claim plausible, as he alleged that GM “intentionally chose an earlier separation date to prevent Plaintiff’s 401(k) from vesting and in doing so reduced his bonus.” GM did not address these allegations in its briefing, and thus the court ruled that Azab “has plausibly stated a claim upon which relief can be granted[.]” Similarly, the court found Azab’s WARN Act claim plausible, as he alleged that he did not receive the full value of wages and benefits promised. The court thus granted Azab’s motion for leave to amend his complaint and denied GM’s motion to dismiss as moot.

Eleventh Circuit

Blue Cross Blue Shield Healthcare Plan of Georgia, Inc. v. HaloMD, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-2919-TWT, 2026 WL 2017291 (N.D. Ga. July 10, 2026) (Judge Thomas W. Thrash, Jr.). This is an unusual ERISA case in that a health insurer is the plaintiff. Blue Cross Blue Shield Healthcare Plan of Georgia, Inc., alleges that defendants, including HaloMD, Inc. and other medical providers, “conspired to defraud the Plaintiff through abuse of the [No Surprises Act (NSA)] Independent Dispute Resolution [(IDR)] process.” BCBS claims that defendants submitted “thousands of ineligible IDR disputes,” made false attestations of IDR eligibility, and manipulated the IDR process to overwhelm BCBS and IDR entities (IDREs), resulting in erroneous payments. BCBS specifically targeted HaloMD, which it claims solicited providers, used artificial intelligence to prepare claims, and then “flooded the IDR system with fraudulent disputes.” BCBS contends HaloMD was incentivized to do this because of its commission-based model, incentivizing it to maximize financial gains regardless of the merits of its claims. BCBS alleged both federal and state law claims in its complaint, including relief under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). Defendants moved to dismiss on various grounds, but the court started with jurisdiction. First, the court found that BCBS possessed Article III standing because it alleged financial injury caused by defendants. However, the court agreed with defendants that BCBS’ claims largely amounted to collateral attacks on IDR awards, which are not subject to judicial review under the NSA except in four specific circumstances outlined in the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA). The court concluded that BCBS’ claims were essentially end-runs around the IDR process, the results of which are statutorily protected from examination by the courts. These claims included the ERISA claim (which the NSA was incorporated within). The court noted that district courts have consistently concluded that the NSA does not provide a right to equitable injunctive or declaratory relief, regardless of ERISA’s civil enforcement scheme. The court found it “irrelevant” that ERISA provides a general private right of action because the NSA, which was enacted afterward, controls with its more specific language regarding challenging IDR awards. As a result, BCBS’ “only avenue to challenge the IDRE determination” was through vacatur. Next, the court ruled that it lacked personal jurisdiction over HaloMD because BCBS failed to establish that HaloMD “purposefully initiated contact with Georgia for the purpose of engaging in business in Georgia.” The court noted that HaloMD did not solicit business in Georgia or have significant contacts with the state. On the merits of BCBS’ vacatur claim, the court dismissed it because BCBS failed to meet the heightened pleading standards for “fraud and undue means.” The court determined that BCBS did not provide specific details about defendants’ alleged misrepresentations or how they misled the IDREs. Additionally, the court concluded that the IDREs did not exceed their authority, as they were empowered to make eligibility determinations under federal regulations. Finally, the court denied BCBS’ request for leave to amend the complaint, concluding that amendment would be futile: “[J]ustice is not served by prolonging the inevitable.”

Withdrawal Liability & Unpaid Contributions

Eighth Circuit

Board of Trustees of Iron Workers St. Louis Dist. Council Pension Fund Trust v. Barnhart Crane & Rigging Co., No. 25-1497, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 2016237 (8th Cir. July 13, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Colloton, Shepherd, and Erickson). The plaintiffs in this case are local iron workers unions and union fund trustees who allege that Barnhart Crane & Rigging Co. failed to make required contributions to the funds for work performed by its employees within the funds’ territorial jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged claims under ERISA and the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA). Barnhart moved for summary judgment on Count 3, which related to Local 321, contending that it was not a signatory to the collective bargaining agreement with Local 321 and thus was not obligated to make contributions to any funds associated with Local 321. Barnhart also filed a motion to exclude the testimony of Bradley Soderstrom, a witness for the plaintiffs, “asserting Plaintiffs were attempting to use him as an expert witness despite not having disclosed him as such and arguing his opinions were based on unreliable methodology.” The district court granted Barnhart’s motion for partial summary judgment on Count 3. It also granted Barnhart’s motion to exclude Soderstrom’s testimony in part, noting that “excluding evidence is a harsh remedy” but finding it “warranted based on Plaintiffs’ reasons for failing to disclose Soderstrom and the prejudicial effect on Barnhart.” This ruling devastated plaintiffs’ case, and resulted in the court granting Barnhart summary judgment on the other three counts due to the lack of admissible evidence regarding plaintiffs’ damages. Plaintiffs appealed, challenging the exclusion of Soderstrom’s testimony and the grant of summary judgment. Addressing Soderstrom first, the Eighth Circuit affirmed the exclusion of his testimony. The appellate court noted that although the district court’s exclusion order “was based both on the fact that Plaintiffs failed to disclose him as an expert witness and the fact that his damages model was speculative,” plaintiffs only argued the disclosure issue on appeal. Plaintiffs appeal “does not offer any challenge to the district court’s conclusion regarding Soderstrom’s methodology. Accordingly, we affirm…on this basis alone[.]” Next, plaintiffs argued that Soderstrom’s testimony was unnecessary, and they could prove their damages without it, specifically pointing to Barnhart’s business records. The Eighth Circuit disagreed and concluded that plaintiffs failed to provide evidence from which damages could be assessed without expert testimony. Barnhart’s business records contained “voluminous data, in spreadsheet and remittance report form, that needs explanation for a jury to be able to discern whether it proves Plaintiffs’ entitlement to damages.” Thus, the court upheld the district court’s entry of summary judgment in Barnhart’s favor. Finally, plaintiffs challenged the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees to Barnhart, arguing that “the facts and procedural history of this case did not warrant an award of fees.” However, plaintiffs conceded in their briefing that the issue was not yet ripe for appeal because the district court had not set an amount for the fee award. Thus, the Eighth Circuit determined that the award was not a final and appealable order, and it lacked jurisdiction over the issue. Judge Erickson penned a concurrence in which he explained that even if the court had reached the issue of Soderstrom’s testimony, he would still affirm. Judge Erickson agreed with the district court that plaintiffs failed to disclose Soderstrom as an expert, his testimony was based on specialized knowledge, and “Plaintiffs’ failure to disclose him as an expert was neither harmless nor substantially justified.” As a result, “[t]he district court was within its discretion to exclude Soderstrom’s expert testimony and reports.”

D.C. Circuit

IAM Nat’l Pension Fund v. M&K Employee Solutions, LLC, No. 23-7146, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 1958520 (D.C. Cir. July 7, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Katsas, Rao, and Randolph). You may recall that this case resulted in the sole ERISA-related opinion by the Supreme Court in the just-finished October 2025 term. In that decision, the high court unanimously ruled that ERISA does not impose a statutory deadline for selecting actuarial assumptions when calculating withdrawal liability under the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments Act of 1980 (MPPAA). In doing so, the court allowed the IAM National Pension Fund to use a discount rate determined in 2018 in assessing 2017 withdrawal liability for M&K Employee Solutions, LLC, a family of 28 truck dealerships. (For more details, read our summary of the decision in our May 27, 2026 edition.) This was not the only issue in the case, however. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on several other issues, and the fund prevailed in a September 2023 decision, pursuant to which the district court awarded $13 million to the fund, representing principal, interest, and liquidated damages. In this appeal to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, M&K challenged (1) the conclusion that one of its subsidiaries (ES Summit) owed certain delinquent contribution obligations, (2) the outstanding balance of another subsidiary’s (ES Alsip) withdrawal liability, and (3) the district court’s joint-and-several liability ruling. On the first issue, the appellate court reversed, finding that the fund’s complaint did not adequately plead the necessary elements to treat ES Summit as a “single employer” when combined with another M&K subsidiary, ES Northern Illinois. The court cited the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) test, which considers whether two entities have “interrelated operations, common management, centralized control of labor relations, and common ownership.” The court expressed “doubts about whether the NLRB test is the right one here” because “the Board lacks any such authority over ERISA,” but “assume[d] without deciding that the NLRB standard applies.” Even under this relaxed standard, however, M&K prevailed because the two companies were “formally separate companies” and the fund only alleged one element of the NLRB test, common ownership. As for M&K’s second issue on appeal, the court affirmed the district court’s decision to allocate a $1.8 million partial payment to interest rather than principal, applying the default common-law United States Rule, which allows creditors to allocate payments to interest first unless otherwise agreed. M&K argued that “ERISA displaces the United States Rule,” citing three statutory provisions, but the court “fail[ed] to see how these provisions speak at all to the question whether a partial payment should be allocated to the withdrawal liability itself rather than to interest, much less speak with the requisite clarity to overcome a longstanding, settled background common-law rule.” However, the court reversed the district court’s decision to apply an increased interest rate retroactively, ruling that the trust agreement did not expressly authorize imposing new liabilities after the collective-bargaining agreement’s termination. The court emphasized, “Collective-bargaining agreements do not create obligations that outlive the agreement unless their terms expressly indicate otherwise.” The appellate court agreed with the district court that ES Alsip’s liability obligations continued post-termination, but the new interest rate “constituted a new liability impermissibly imposed after the collective-bargaining agreement had expired.” Finally, the court addressed joint-and- several liability. The court rejected the fund’s argument that this issue was moot because the judgment had been paid in full, noting that it was unclear who had paid what and thus allocation remained an issue. The court upheld some of the district court’s rulings on this issue, but reversed as to the two owners of ES Alsip, Chad and Jodi Boucher. The appellate court found genuine factual disputes regarding whether the Bouchers’ house-flipping operation constituted “a trade or business under common control with ES Alsip.” Thus, summary judgment was reversed as to their personal liability. The court thus affirmed in part and reversed in part, ensuring that this case will continue.

Your ERISA Watch would like to take this opportunity to wish a happy 250th birthday to the United States of America. This year’s celebration was unfortunately not as unifying and good-natured as our 200th, but your editor is optimistic that by 2076 American patriots of all political stripes will have resolved their differences and we will be living in peace and harmony. After all, ERISA will be 100 years old by then and surely all of its issues will have been ironed out as well. Maybe the U.S. will even win a World Cup by then. (I will leave it up to the reader to decide which of these is most unlikely.)

Until then, we must trudge on. It was a light week for the federal courts, but keep reading to learn about (1) ERISA’s preemption of California state and local laws regulating sick pay in the dockworker context (Hill v. Pacific Maritime Ass’n), (2) the dismissal of a class action alleging mismanagement of Molson Coors’ 401(k) plan (Hensley v. Molson Coors), (3) the settlement of a complex class action involving the alleged dilution of shares in an employee stock ownership plan (Howell v. Argent Trust), and last, but certainly not least, (4) the end of a case that was originally filed in 1992(!), just after the country’s quasquibicentennial (Breidenbach v. IBEW).

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Seventh Circuit

Hensley v. Molson Coors Beverage Co. USA LLC Governance Committee, No. 25-C-1371, 2026 WL 1878633 (E.D. Wis. June 30, 2026) (Judge William C. Griesbach). This case revolves around the 401(k) retirement plan established by Molson Coors Beverage Company USA LLC for its employees. The plan is a huge one, with more than $1.5 billion in assets and 9,700+ participants. The plaintiff is Winston Hensley, a plan participant and former employee, who accuses the company, its governance committee, and the plan investment subcommittee of mismanaging the plan by maintaining the Fidelity Stable Value Fund (SVF) as an investment option in the plan. Hensley contends that the SVF “is a ‘synthetic investment contract’ that carried significantly more risk and provided a significantly lower rate of return than other comparable funds that Defendants could have made available to Plan participants.” Hensley’s complaint asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, failure to monitor fiduciaries, and engaging in transactions prohibited by ERISA. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Addressing the claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence first, the court agreed with defendants that “Plaintiff improperly relies upon hindsight and a cherry-picked assortment of comparators in the [complaint].” The court found that Hensley’s exemplar funds were not “meaningful benchmarks” when compared with the Fidelity SVF. While Hensley did provide other SVFs for comparison, “the mere fact that a fund falls in the SVF category is not enough to show it is comparable to other SVF investments.” Indeed, “[s]ynthetic stable value funds are generally the least risky because principal is guaranteed by multiple wrap providers and plan participants own the assets of the underlying funds.” This was by design, because “[t]he principal objective of an SVF is capital preservation, not maximization of returns.” The court found that Hensley’s comparator SVFs did not reflect similar investment strategies, risk profiles, or potential rewards. Furthermore, “out of the fourteen putative comparator funds in the [complaint], Plaintiff only cited one other SVF…that he alleges outperformed the Fidelity SVF in each year of the putative class period. And even that fund is sufficiently dissimilar to belie any fair comparison[.]” As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss Hensley’s duty of prudence claim. Because this claim failed, his derivative claim for breach of the duty to monitor was also dismissed. Finally, the court agreed with defendants that Hensley lacked standing to bring his prohibited transaction claim. “Plaintiff’s bare allegation that Defendants violated ERISA by allowing contractual payments by plan fiduciaries to third parties in exchange for plan services may be enough to state a claim, but it does not establish the injury necessary to satisfy the Article III requirement of standing.” The court ruled that Hensley did not show that “the fees paid to Fidelity were unreasonably high or more than it would have had to pay a non-party in interest.” As a result, defendants’ motion was granted. Moreover, because Hensley had already amended his complaint once and had not indicated how he would overcome the identified defects, the dismissal was with prejudice. “Considering the high costs of litigation, such ‘cat and mouse game[s] of motions to dismiss followed by a motion to amend,’ need not be allowed.”

Class Actions

Sixth Circuit

Breidenbach v. IBEW Local No. 82, No. 3:92-CV-184, 2026 WL 1894213 (S.D. Ohio July 1, 2026) (Judge Walter H. Rice). No, that case number is not a typo – this case originated in 1992. As a result, it was no surprise that the court opened this order by “first acknowledg[ing] the unconscionable length of time which this case has been pending. The Court extends its deepest appreciation to parties and counsel for their efforts in achieving final resolution.” The case is a class action by Fredric S. Breidenbach and others similarly situated against IBEW Local No. 82 and associated defendants. The court held an initial fairness hearing on a settlement agreement in 2008, which required defendants to deposit $232,000 with the clerk of the court, to be paid to Breidenbach with interest upon final regulatory approval. The trustee for the pension fund was to hold contributions made by the class members in escrow, to be transferred from a defined benefit plan to a defined contribution plan upon ultimate approval of the settlement agreement. A letter requesting a private letter ruling from the IRS was submitted in 2010, but the IRS did not give final approval until 2020. Meanwhile, Breidenbach passed away. The settlement agreement included a “clawback” provision to prevent participants from receiving duplicate benefits from both of the plans at issue. In this ruling the court addressed multiple motions, including a motion for release of funds to the estate of Breidenbach, a motion for attorney’s fees, and a joint motion for approval of class action settlement agreement. The court granted all three motions and overruled objections to the proposed settlement agreement. The court found that the clawback provision was part of the agreement from the start, as evidenced by testimony and documentation, and was necessary to prevent “double-dipping” by class plaintiffs. The court further determined that the settlement agreement was fair, reasonable, and adequate, considering the costs, risks, and delay of trial and appeal. “[T]he alternative to settlement is for this matter to continue for several more years, during which time even more class members will likely pass away without ever getting the option to move from the DB to DC Plan. The best and most comprehensive relief available to the Plaintiff class is the submitted settlement agreement.” The court commended counsel for effectively providing notice of the settlement and deadlines for election to class members. The court also found that the requested attorney’s fees (which only totaled $25,000 because the attorney had only “been on the case for less than a year”) were reasonable given his work in finalizing the settlement. The court concluded that the class representatives adequately represented the class and that the proposal was the product of an arm’s-length negotiation. The court thus approved the settlement agreement and directed the court clerk to disburse the $232,000 in the escrow account, plus (presumably significant) interest, to the administrator of Breidenbach’s estate.

Eleventh Circuit

Howell v. Argent Trust Co., No. 1:22-CV-03959-SDG, 2026 WL 1876784 (N.D. Ga. June 29, 2026) (Judge Steven D. Grimberg). This is a complicated class action concerning The North Highland Company Employee Stock Ownership Plan. The plaintiffs are plan participants and beneficiaries who alleged that a corporate reorganization significantly diluted plan equity to their detriment. They alleged 17 causes of action against various defendants under ERISA. In 2024, the court granted in part and denied in part defendants’ motion to dismiss and to compel arbitration, holding that certain claims were time-barred but that defendants could not compel arbitration of the remaining claims. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our October 9, 2024 edition.) Defendants appealed, and the appeal was held in abeyance while the Eleventh Circuit decided a case with similar arbitration issues. (That case was Williams v. Shapiro, which adopted the effective vindication doctrine in the ERISA context and was one of our cases of the week in our December 24, 2025 edition.) Meanwhile, the parties continued to discuss settlement and eventually reached an agreement. The parties stipulated to a limited remand from the Eleventh Circuit so that the district court could enter an order granting plaintiffs’ unopposed motion for preliminary approval of class settlement and certification of a settlement class. In this order the court granted plaintiffs’ motion. The court found that the proposed settlement (the details of which were not itemized, but apparently totals $2.375 million) was fair, reasonable, and adequate, meeting the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e)(2). The court further found that the settlement was negotiated in good faith at arm’s length between experienced attorneys and facilitated by an experienced mediator. The court certified a class under Rule 23(b)(1) composed of all participants in the plan who held vested shares in North Highland ESOP Holdings, Inc. between dates in 2016 and 2025. The court appointed the three named plaintiffs as class representatives and Bailey & Glasser LLP as class counsel. The plan of allocation was deemed fair, reasonable, and adequate, “as it proposes to compensate each class member based on the number of shares held in [the ESOP] over the Class Period, which is a fair proxy for the harm alleged, which was based on the number of shares held in the ESOP when shares were diluted[.]” The Court also approved the notice of settlement as reasonable. Simpluris was appointed as the settlement administrator and will be responsible for the duties in the settlement agreement, including establishing a qualified settlement fund. The court scheduled a fairness hearing for November of this year to determine final approval of the settlement and any applications for attorneys’ fees and costs.

Disability Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Smith v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:21-CV-294-KAC-CHS, 2026 WL 1949312 (E.D. Tenn. July 6, 2026) (Judge Katherine A. Crytzer). Jeffrey Scott Smith was a senior software engineer for Silicon Graphics International Corporation when he became disabled in 2015. Unum Life Insurance Company of America, the administrator of the company’s ERISA-governed employee long-term disability benefit plan, approved his claim based on cervical and lumbar radiculopathy and memory loss. However, in 2020 Unum changed its mind and concluded that Smith could return to the duties of his old occupation. Smith unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action against Unum and its corporate parent, alleging that their termination of his claim was arbitrary and capricious. The parties filed cross-motions for judgment, and Smith also filed a motion to determine the extent of deference that should be given to Unum’s decision, arguing that defendants’ financial interests tainted their decision-making process. The motions were referred to the assigned magistrate judge, who issued a report and recommendation. The report recommended denying Smith’s motion regarding deference, but “still considers Defendants’ financial interests in assessing whether Defendants’ denial was supported[.]” The report further recommended that the court grant Unum’s motion for judgment and deny Smith’s. Smith filed an objection to the recommendation, making three arguments: (1) defendants’ denial was unreasonable because “because it ‘relied on inconsistent file reviewing physicians’ and, in any event, ‘the weight of the evidence shows’ that he ‘is disabled due to cognitive deficits’”; (2) the report “erred ‘[i]n finding Unum’s reliance on file review credibility determinations appropriate’ and ‘granting no weight to Unum’s failure to physically examine’ Plaintiff”; and (3) the report did not adequately consider defendants’ bias. First, the court found that defendants did not abuse their discretion in terminating Smith’s claim, concluding that new evidence in the form of updated neuropsychological testing justified their changed position. The court also found that defendants adequately accounted for other testing which may have supported Smith’s claim. Specifically, that evidence was sufficiently countered by Unum’s reviewing physicians, who determined that the results “do[] not reflect a significant function deficit,” and that Smith’s “mild relative weakness” did not prevent him “from performing his own occupation.” The court stated that defendants’ decision was not unreasonable “just because the administrator ‘chooses to rely upon the medical opinion of one doctor over that of another.’” Second, the court concluded that defendants acted within their discretion in relying on file review physicians and the available record, and they were not required to conduct a physical examination. The court did not agree with Smith that Unum’s doctors were making “credibility determinations”; instead, those doctors relied on the same testing as Smith’s physicians but “just reached different conclusions from the testing.” Third, the court determined that there was insufficient evidence of bias affecting defendants’ decision-making process. The court agreed that defendants had a structural conflict of interest, but rejected the idea that bias was proven by (1) tracking reports showing monthly termination goals, (2) bonuses for which defendants’ on-site physicians might be eligible “if the Company succeeds,” or (3) Unum’s regulatory settlement agreement from 2004 and subsequent jury verdicts against them. None of these facts showed that defendants’ conflict “materialized in a concrete way to influence the administrator’s decisional process” in this particular case. As a result, the court overruled Smith’s objections, adopted the conclusions of the magistrate’s report and recommendation, and entered judgment in defendants’ favor.

ERISA Preemption

Ninth Circuit

Hill v. Pacific Maritime Ass’n, No. 24-CV-00336-JSC, 2026 WL 1909997 (N.D. Cal. July 2, 2026) (Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley). This is an action by unionized California dockworkers who “allege Defendants violated California law and several local ordinances by failing to pay them and the putative class sick pay.” The defendants are the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) and its more than 50 member companies, which consist of marine terminal operators, cargo-handling specialists, and other related port businesses. As the court explained, West Coast port operations are “unique”; dockworkers do not work for any specific PMA member company, but instead are dispatched to jobs for multiple employers based on collective bargaining agreements and local rules. They can choose when to seek work and can decline jobs offered through dispatch. PMA functions as a centralized payroll agent, collecting funds from member companies to pay dockworkers. PMA also administers certain benefits through several ERISA-governed trust funds. In this action plaintiffs have asserted claims under California’s Healthy Workforce Healthy Families Act (HWHFA) and local sick leave ordinances enacted in the cities of Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, and San Diego. They contend that these laws require defendants to implement a sick pay policy; they request an injunction to that effect and restitution for past sick pay owed. Plaintiffs also added a claim for retaliation based on allegations that defendants excluded Local 26 Watchmen from a $70 million Pandemic Appreciation Pay fund. Plaintiffs contend that this was done to punish Local 26 for filing complaints with the California Labor Commission regarding the lack of sick leave. Before the court was defendants’ motion for summary judgment, which asserted that ERISA preempts all of plaintiffs’ claims. The court was sympathetic because plaintiffs were contending that “California state and local laws require Defendants to adopt a paid sick leave plan, that is, an employee welfare plan within the meaning of ERISA. As a result, their sick leave claims are related to an ERISA plan [] are preempted.” Indeed, the court noted that the other benefit plans in which plaintiffs participated were ERISA-governed, strongly suggesting that any new plan established by defendants would have to be also. Plaintiffs contended that defendants “could adopt a sick leave plan that falls within ERISA’s payroll practice exemption,” but the court found this argument “unpersuasive” for two reasons. First, “the record does not include evidence that supports a finding any defendant could pay sick leave out of its general assets.” The court emphasized that the benefits plaintiffs already received were not paid from PMA’s “general assets,” and neither would the benefits they sought in this action. Instead, all benefits originate from the member companies. Second, because of the unusual nature of employment assignments, any proposed plan would have to consider which workers were taking leave from which assignments, and “how to allocate paid sick leave payments when a dockworker does not make herself available to dispatch due to sickness.” For these complicated logistical reasons, “It is thus unsurprising Plaintiffs cannot cite a single case – or even an actual example – of dockworker benefits being paid from anything other than an ERISA plan.” Thus, defendants’ motion was granted as to plaintiffs’ sick-leave claims. The court also denied plaintiffs’ request for additional discovery, finding it untimely and unsupported by a sufficient explanation for the delay. However, the court denied defendants’ motion regarding plaintiffs’ Pandemic Pay retaliation claims. “Unlike sick leave, Defendants have not shown that pay – including bonuses – falls within ERISA’s definition of an employee benefit plan… So, even though the record shows that to make such payments Defendants would have to adopt a plan and separate fund to allocate payments among them to the excluded watchmen, Defendants have not shown that plan would fall within ERISA.” The court thus only granted defendants’ summary judgment motion in part.

Medical Benefit Claims

Tenth Circuit

E.O. v. Premera Blue Cross, No. 2:23-CV-00443-TS-JCB, 2026 WL 1875695 (D. Utah June 30, 2026) (Judge Ted Stewart). E.O. is a participant in an ERISA-governed medical benefit plan, and his son, E.L., is a beneficiary of the plan, which is insured by Premera Blue Cross. E.L. was diagnosed with ADHD and dysgraphia in third grade and experienced significant mental health issues which only grew worse as he progressed to high school. E.L. began to have severe panic attacks and thoughts of suicide, and was sometimes violent and aggressive. His treating physicians stated that “outpatient treatment would be unsuccessful given the severity of E.L.’s condition” and recommended residential treatment. In 2022 E.L. attended blueFire, an outdoor behavioral health program, after which he was admitted to Gateway, a residential treatment center. However, Premera denied E.O.’s claim for benefits for E.L.’s treatment at Gateway, contending that his treatment there was not medically necessary. E.O. unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action against Premera, asserting two claims: (1) for recovery of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), and (2) under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008. The case proceeded to cross-motions for summary judgment, where the court applied the arbitrary and capricious standard of review. The court identified numerous procedural violations by Premera. Premera’s denial letters did not reference specific plan provisions or adequately explain the basis for the denial. “[H]ere, any discussion of or citation to the Plan is entirely absent. Premera provides no explanation as to how the referenced admission guidelines, including the InterQual criteria and Premera’s internal policy, apply to the terms of the Plan.” The court also noted that “any citation to the record to support [its] conclusions is entirely absent. Likewise, Premera offers no explanation of clinical judgment regarding how it applied the terms of the Plan and InterQual criteria to those health conclusions such that denial was warranted.” Premera further “mischaracterized and unreasonably applied the InterQual criteria.” Premera did not consider all of the relevant criteria, misinterpreted the criteria, and limited its review to evidence as of a specific date, thereby excluding relevant evidence. Finally, and “[p]erhaps most egregiously, the Court finds that Premera blatantly failed to consider, engage with, or even acknowledge the letters from E.L.’s clinicians who opined that residential mental health treatment was medically necessary.” Premera conceded that it did not engage with the provider opinions, but argued that an “administrator is not required to engage provider opinions that do not contain information relevant to medical necessity of benefit claimed.” The court found Premera’s arguments “misplaced and reflect Premera’s failure to even consider the provider opinions,” which contained relevant evidence supporting medical necessity. The court emphasized that while an administrator is not required to defer to the opinions of a treating physician, it must address medical opinions, particularly those that may contradict its findings. In the end, the court found an “overwhelming amount of evidence supporting” severe functional impairment, an inadequate support system, E.L.’s inability to be managed safely in the community, and a lack of success at lower intensity treatment levels. In its briefing Premera attempted to rectify its errors, offering arguments to counter E.L.’s treatment providers, but “[t]hese rationales were never communicated to Plaintiff and thus are late and will not be considered in determining whether Defendant properly provided Plaintiff with a full and fair review.” The court addressed them anyway and found them unpersuasive. As a result, the court ruled that Premera acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying benefits for E.L.’s treatment and issued judgment in E.O.’s favor. As for a remedy, the court awarded retroactive benefits. The court stated, “Not only did Premera admit to not performing its core duty to provide a full and fair review, the reasons articulated for not doing so are egregious.” Remand was inappropriate for this reason and because it would give Premera a second “bite at the apple” to re-evaluate the claim based on rationales not raised in the administrative record. The court denied E.O.’s Parity Act claim as moot and ordered additional briefing regarding interest, attorney’s fees, and costs.

Retaliation Claims

Fifth Circuit

Engler v. Paycom Payroll, LLC, No. CV 25-145, 2026 WL 1872309 (E.D. La. June 30, 2026) (Judge William J. Crain). Kaitlin Gates Engler was employed as a sales representative at Paycom Payroll LLC in 2022 when she accepted a promotion to sales manager. As part of the promotion, Engler moved from St. Louis to New Orleans and received unvested shares of company stock under its long-term incentive plan. At the time, the company knew Engler was pregnant and would require medical leave. Engler went on approved leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) after her daughter was born in December of that year. However, while she was out, one of Engler’s subordinate sales representatives at Paycom resigned and accused Engler of directing sales representatives to falsify records. After an investigation (which Engler claims was incomplete and biased), Engler was terminated in March of 2023, shortly after returning from leave. Engler filed this action, asserting three claims: (1) retaliation under the FMLA; (2) retaliation under section 510 of ERISA; and (3) detrimental reliance under Louisiana Civil Code article 1967. Paycom filed a motion for summary judgment. The court denied Paycom summary judgment on Engler’s FMLA claim. The court found that Engler had established a prima facie case of retaliation by showing temporal proximity between her FMLA leave and termination, which was sufficient to establish a “causal link.” The court accepted that Paycom had provided a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for termination, citing violations of its ethics code, and thus the burden shifted to Engler to show that the reason was pretextual. Engler offered evidence that “(1) no one else was ever fired for falsifying time and attendance records; (2) Paycom did not follow its usual practice of progressive discipline before the ultimate act of firing her; and (3) Engler was fired without an opportunity to defend herself.” Paycom disputed these allegations, but “[t]he court cannot resolve such conflicts without weighing credibility, which cannot be done on summary judgment.” Paycom had better luck on Engler’s remaining two claims. The court found that the stock awards Engler received with her promotion “neither provide retirement income nor defer income beyond termination.” As a result, the awards were not part of any ERISA-governed plan, and thus Engler could not bring a claim under ERISA for retaliation. Finally, the court granted Paycom summary judgment on Engler’s detrimental reliance claim. Her claim failed because the promise on which she relied was fulfilled: she was awarded shares under the incentive plan as promised, even if they did not vest right away. The court found no clear and unambiguous promise that they would vest regardless of her employment status. “A detrimental reliance claim cannot rest on something Paycom never promised.” As a result, the case will proceed, but only on Engler’s FMLA claim.

Reyna v. Walmart Inc., No. 1:25-CV-02159-ABD-SH, 2026 WL 1920919 (W.D. Tex. July 2, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Susan Hightower). This order begins, “Reyna is a vexatious litigant,” and it goes downhill for plaintiff Joseph Anthony Reyna from there. Reyna is subject to a Pre-Filing Injunction in the Western District of Texas, where he has been “BARRED from filing future complaints…without obtaining prior approval from a district or magistrate judge” because he “has filed more than two dozen lawsuits in federal courts across Texas since June 2025,” almost all of which have been dismissed. As for this action, it is an employment discrimination suit against Walmart which was originally filed in two different places: the federal Southern District of New York and Travis County state court in Texas. The two cases were transferred and consolidated in the Western District of Texas, after which Walmart filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b) for Reyna’s failure to comply with the court’s Pre-Filing Injunction and under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Reyna opposed the motion “and brings a litany of frivolous and duplicative motions and notices in response.” The assigned magistrate judge recommended granting Walmart’s motion on multiple grounds. First, the court found that Reyna violated the Pre-Filing Injunction by bringing the lawsuits without obtaining prior approval. The court stated that the injunction applied to transferred and removed cases; “To find otherwise would defeat the purpose of the sanction.” Second, although Reyna was granted in forma pauperis status based on his financial status, the court found his suit to be “malicious” because it violated the Pre-Filing Injunction. The court thus recommended dismissal under § 1915(e)(2)(B)(i). Third, the court found that Reyna failed to state a plausible claim for relief under the ADA and ERISA. Under his ADA claims, Reyna “fails to allege sufficient facts that he was qualified for the job or subject to an adverse employment action because of his purported disability.” His allegations were instead vague and conclusory. Similarly, on his ERISA claims, Reyna “alleges no facts showing that Walmart took any adverse employment action against him for exercising his rights under ERISA.” Reyna also alleged that Walmart did not give him plan documents upon request, but he did not adequately plead “that Walmart was the plan administrator or that he was denied any records. Walmart points out that it was not the plan administrator and that Reyna’s own allegations show he received the requested documents in November 2025.” Because these rulings disposed of Reyna’s federal claims, the court recommended declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over his remaining state law claims. Finally, the magistrate recommended dismissing Reyna’s “thirteen non-dispositive motions and recommends that the District Court dismiss his two dispositive motions.” She further recommended that the Pre-Filing Injunction be amended “to specifically state that he is barred from proceeding as a plaintiff in this Court, including in removed and transferred cases, without prior leave.”

Ahn v. Cigna Health & Life Ins. Co., No. 25-1723, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 1813215 (3d Cir. June 24, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Hardiman, Scirica, and Ambro)

ERISA is famous for many things, but near the top of the list is its sweeping preemptive force. 29 U.S.C. § 1144 provides that ERISA “shall supersede any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan.”

As Justice Thomas noted in his concurrence in Gobeille v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. (2016), ERISA “contains what may be the most expansive express pre-emption provision in any federal statute.” He was not a fan: “Read according to its plain terms, § 1144 raises constitutional concerns.” Justice Thomas worried that ERISA’s “relate to” language, taken to an extreme, might unduly infringe on powers typically reserved to the states.

While Justice Thomas was concerned with structural issues, other Justices have been troubled by remedies. Justice Ginsburg, in her concurrence in Aetna Health Inc. v. Davila (2004), agreed with “the rising judicial chorus urging that Congress and [this] Court revisit what is an unjust and increasingly tangled ERISA regime.” She opined that ERISA’s expansive preemptive scope, combined with a “cramped construction” of its remedies, has resulted in a “regulatory vacuum” in which “virtually all state law remedies are preempted but very few federal substitutes are provided.”

Regardless of how you feel about ERISA preemption, until the Supreme Court (or Congress) changes course, ERISA’s preemptive power will continue to thwart efforts to apply state law in cases involving employee benefits. This week’s notable decision provides yet another example.

The plaintiff in the case is Dr. Jeffrey M. Ahn, an otolaryngologist. He is not part of Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company’s provider network, but some of his patients are insured by Cigna. Dr. Ahn alleges that he submitted claims to Cigna for several of these patients. However, Cigna denied his claims “about 50 times.” In its explanations of benefits (EOBs) Cigna allegedly stated that it “did not pay for services performed by unlicensed providers – i.e., that Dr. Ahn was not licensed to practice medicine.” When Dr. Ahn appealed these claims, “Cigna allowed them in whole, in part, or denied them for a reason unrelated to his licensed status.”

Dr. Ahn was annoyed by Cigna’s insinuation that he did not have a license to practice medicine, so he filed this action in New Jersey state court, asserting claims against Cigna for defamation, defamation per se, and tortious interference. Dr. Ahn contended that the EOBs harmed his professional reputation and interfered with his business relationships.

Cigna removed the case to federal court and moved to dismiss or, alternatively, for summary judgment, citing ERISA preemption. The district court initially found that it was premature to rule on Cigna’s preemption argument because it could not determine from Dr. Ahn’s complaint which of the allegedly defamatory EOBs related to Cigna’s administration of ERISA-governed plans.

The parties thus conducted discovery, after which Cigna once again moved for summary judgment on all of Dr. Ahn’s claims, again relying on ERISA preemption. Dr. Ahn withdrew his defamation and tortious interference claims, leaving only his defamation per se claim.

On this sole remaining claim the district court granted Cigna’s motion. The court found that the plans at issue were all governed by ERISA, and that ERISA preempted Dr. Ahn’s claim. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our March 26, 2025 edition.) Dr. Ahn appealed to the Third Circuit, which issued this published opinion.

The appellate court began by identifying two categories of state laws that ERISA preempts: those that have a “reference to” ERISA plans and those that have an impermissible “connection with” ERISA plans. Cigna relied on the second category, in which a state law “governs…a central matter of plan administration” or “interferes with nationally uniform plan administration.”

The Third Circuit agreed with Cigna that Dr. Ahn’s claim fell within this second category. The court emphasized that “[t]he communication of claim adjudications to plan participants and beneficiaries is a ‘central matter of plan administration.’” ERISA requires plans to “provide adequate notice in writing to any participant or beneficiary whose claim for benefits under the plan has been denied, setting forth the specific reasons for such denial.”

Here, Cigna fulfilled this duty by issuing EOBs. As a result, “statements therein about the reasons for the denial of a claim are inseparable from Cigna’s duty to provide a written explanation of claim denials under ERISA. And any state-law claims challenging the content of such statements would impermissibly allow state law to regulate matters squarely within ERISA’s ‘heartland.’”

In so ruling, the court relied heavily on the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Mayeaux v. Louisiana Health Service & Indemnity Co. (2004), in which that court dismissed a physician’s tort claims, including defamation, that challenged an insurance carrier’s claims handling. Mayeaux held that allowing such claims “would undoubtedly jeopardize the relationships among the traditional ERISA entities, of which the treating physician is not one. These are the sort of claims that go to the very heart of the ERISA administration process.”

Dr. Ahn attempted to distinguish Mayeaux, arguing that “accusing a medical professional of being ‘unlicensed’ does nothing to establish standards of conduct, responsibility and obligation for fiduciaries of employee benefit plans.” However, this was irrelevant to the court: “[T]he relevant inquiry is not whether defaming providers is central to an administrator’s fiduciary duties. It is not. The right question to ask is whether communicating benefits determinations to subscribers and beneficiaries is a central matter of plan administration. It is.”

The Third Circuit further concluded that Dr. Ahn’s claim, if allowed to proceed, would interfere with nationally uniform plan administration. The court noted that one of ERISA’s “principal goals” is “to establish a uniform administrative scheme, which provides a set of standard procedures to guide processing of claims and disbursement of benefits.”

Dr. Ahn’s claim would upset this goal. “Uniformity is impossible if plans are subject to different legal obligations in different states.” The court explained that ERISA provides a civil enforcement mechanism for claims, making state tort claims like defamation “unnecessary and impractical.” Allowing state law tort claims “would require plan administrators and fiduciaries to consider not only ERISA’s requirements but also the common law of each state, undermining the congressional goal of minimizing administrative and financial burdens on plan administrators.”

Dr. Ahn, citing two other Third Circuit cases – Plastic Surgery Ctr., P.A. v. Aetna Life Ins. Co. (2020) and Pascack Valley Hosp., Inc. v. Loc. 464A UFCW Welfare Reimbursement Plan (2004) – attempted to argue that his claim was not preempted because it “neither seeks benefits under an ERISA plan nor requires more than a cursory examination of an ERISA plan.” However, according to the Third Circuit, this approach “offers a mistaken understanding of the governing caselaw.” The court stated that “Plastic Surgery applied the same standards we apply today,” and Pascack Valley “involved a different ERISA preemption provision than this one.”

Thus, for the Third Circuit, this case was a simple one: “ERISA broadly preempts state-law claims. The explanation of benefits forms at issue in this appeal fall well within the scope [of] ERISA preemption. We will therefore affirm the District Court’s summary judgment.”

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Third Circuit

Fumich v. Novo Nordisk Inc., CV 24-9158 (ZNQ) (JBD), 2026 WL 1816026 (D.N.J. June 24, 2026) (Judge Zahid N. Quraishi). This putative class action alleges mismanagement in the administration of Novo Nordisk Inc.’s 401(k) Savings Plan by various defendants, which include the company, its board of directors, and the company’s retirement committee. Plaintiffs, who were participants in the plan, allege that the plan’s assets included Schwab Managed Retirement Target Date Funds (TDFs), which underperformed compared to other funds. They also allege that defendants engaged in a prohibited transaction by contracting with Schwab for recordkeeping and administrative (RKA) services, and that those fees were unreasonably high. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint contains three claims for relief under ERISA: (1) breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence against the retirement committee for selecting the Schwab TDFs and failing to minimize recordkeeping fees; (2) failure to monitor other fiduciaries against the company and the board; and (3) prohibited transactions against all defendants. Defendants filed a consolidated motion to dismiss and motion to strike; the motion to dismiss was directed at the first two counts (but only regarding the TDFs, not the RKA fees) while the motion to strike was directed at the third count. Taking plaintiffs’ claims in order, the court first found that plaintiffs failed to allege sufficient facts to show that the committee acted imprudently in selecting the Schwab TDFs. Plaintiffs pointed to comparator funds (the T. Rowe Price Retirement Target Date A Series, the American Funds Target Date R6 Series, the Callan GlidePath Target Date Cl Z Series, and the MFS Lifetime R6 Series) to support their claim, but the court found that these funds were not “meaningful benchmarks” because they were actively managed and had different asset allocations. Furthermore, the court noted that the Schwab TDFs only slightly underperformed plaintiffs’ selected comparators. “These levels of underperformance do not plausibly suggest that Defendants acted imprudently when selecting the Schwab TDFs for the Plan and courts have routinely dismissed claims where the alleged underperformance was minimal, as it is here.” Because count one failed, plaintiffs’ derivative second claim for failure to monitor also failed. As for plaintiffs’ third claim, the court granted defendants’ motion to strike because the claim exceeded the scope of the leave to amend previously granted by the court. The court noted that “Plaintiffs’ initial Complaint did not include a prohibited transaction claim, nor did the Court identify any defects that could be addressed regarding such a claim.” (Your ERISA Watch reported on the court’s previous order in our August 27, 2025 edition.) The claim was thus “unauthorized.” The court “exercise[d] its discretion to strike Count Three of the Amended Complaint without prejudice to Plaintiffs’ right to seek leave to amend their complaint.” As a result, defendants succeeded on all their arguments, although the dismissals were without prejudice.

Ninth Circuit

Dawson-Roberts v. Norman S. Wright Mech. Equip. LLC, No. 26-CV-01171-AGT, 2026 WL 1834788 (N.D. Cal. June 25, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Alex G. Tse). Norman S. Wright Mechanical Equipment LLC offers retirement benefits through an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP), which primarily invests in the company’s stock but also holds other assets in an Other Investments Account (OIA). Between 2021 and 2024, the OIA grew from $4.1 million to $11.9 million, invested entirely in cash equivalents. Christopher Dawson-Roberts, an ESOP participant and former employee of the company, alleges that his ESOP account would be more valuable if the OIA assets had been invested in more appropriate asset classes for long-term retirement savings, such as stocks and bonds. Dawson-Roberts alleges that because of this failure defendants (the company, the governing committee, and the committee members) breached their duties of prudence and loyalty under ERISA. He also alleges a breach of duty of disclosure related to the company’s 2024 conversion from an S-corporation to a limited liability company, which he claims was not communicated to ESOP participants. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, asserting a host of arguments, which Dawson-Roberts opposed. In this order the court marched briskly through the eight issues raised. First, the court found that Dawson-Roberts had Article III standing to pursue his claims based on a theory of “relative loss,” even if the plan did not suffer an “absolute loss.” Second, the court concluded that Dawson-Roberts plausibly alleged a breach of the duty of prudence. The committee defendants allegedly left the OIA in cash equivalents that earned minimal returns, which was inconsistent with the ESOP’s long-term investment objectives. The court noted that Section 1104(a)(2) (which provides that “an ESOP fiduciary’s investment in the employer’s stock cannot be challenged as imprudent on the basis of insufficient asset diversification”) did not bar a prudence claim because that section “is limited to diversification-based objections to the ‘acquisition or holding’ of ‘qualifying employer securities’ or real property[;] it does not, by its terms, immunize the management of non-employer-security assets such as the OIA from scrutiny[.]” Defendants argued that they had “good reasons for keeping high OIA cash balances,” and the court did not discount them, but “those reasons are more appropriately considered on a full factual record, not on a motion to dismiss.” Third, the court found that Dawson-Roberts plausibly alleged a breach of the duty of loyalty. The committee defendants allegedly managed the ESOP to ease corporate liabilities, rather than in the interest of the participants, by maintaining a large OIA cash balance to relieve the company from its obligation to repurchase shares. Fourth, the court determined that Dawson-Roberts stated a plausible claim under 29 U.S.C. § 1106, as a 2024 transfer of OIA assets constituted a “transaction” under the statute. Fifth, the court ruled that Dawson-Roberts’ allegations were sufficient to state claims against the committee members as individual defendants, as they were plausibly ESOP fiduciaries. Sixth, the court found that Dawson-Roberts plausibly alleged that the company breached its duty to monitor the committee, as it failed to remove or change the committee’s investment decisions despite imprudent investments. Seventh, the court rejected defendants’ argument for dismissal of the co-fiduciary liability claim because, as explained above, Dawson-Roberts had stated actionable underlying claims. Eighth, and finally, the court dismissed Dawson-Roberts’ duty-to-disclose claim, as he did not identify a viable source for the duty related to the corporate conversion. The court noted that ERISA’s fiduciary duties do not apply in “the settlor context,” i.e., decisions regarding the form or structure of the plan. As a result, Dawson-Roberts’ complaint survived defendants’ motion to dismiss almost entirely unscathed; the court even gave him leave to amend the only casualty, his duty-to-disclose claim.

Ninth Circuit

Williams v. Lawrence Livermore Nat’l Security, LLC Benefits & Investment Committee, No. 24-CV-07593-VC, 2026 WL 1865363 (N.D. Cal. June 29, 2026) (Judge Vince Chhabria). Dean Williams had been employed at Lawrence Livermore National Security (LLNS) for more than 30 years when he faced a choice: retire, or enroll in one or both of two disability programs offered by LLNS. He consulted two benefits personnel at LLNS, and based on their advice he chose to enroll in both the traditional long-term disability program and the “Defined Benefit Eligible Disability” program. He alleges he was led to believe by the personnel that enrolling in the second program would result in him receiving pension credit for his time on disability, thereby increasing his pension payments upon retirement. However, this turned out to be incorrect. He thus brought this action against the LLNS Benefits and Investment Committee and related defendants, asserting a claim for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA based on the misrepresentations. The case proceeded to cross-motions for summary judgment, which the court ruled on in this order. Defendants contended first that the two employees were not acting as fiduciaries when they advised Williams. The court disagreed, noting that the employees “advised Williams on which benefits he should choose and why,” and one of the employees had the title of “Retirement Counselor” (and was later named Delegate of Plan Administrator), which “strongly suggests” that she “was entrusted with discretion, ‘one of the central touchstones for a fiduciary role.’” Defendants further argued that any misrepresentation was not actionable unless it was “accompanied by ambiguous plan language on the same topic.” However, the court emphasized that ERISA imposes a duty on fiduciaries to convey complete and accurate information, regardless of whether the misrepresentation was intentional or inadvertent: “If a fiduciary advises a beneficiary to take a course of action based on the fiduciary’s misunderstanding of the plan, and the beneficiary takes that course of action to their detriment, it’s unclear why it should matter whether the advice was intentionally or inadvertently erroneous, or whether the advice was clearly contrary to the plan or just potentially contrary to the plan.” In any event, the plan language at issue was “embarrassingly ambiguous” because two different provisions explaining pension calculations were in “direct contradiction” of each other. The court characterized defendants’ attempt to harmonize them as “ridiculous.” Next, the court dismissed defendants’ argument that Williams’ reliance on oral misstatements was unreasonable due to his failure to consult written plan documents. The court highlighted that reliance is a context-specific inquiry and found that Williams reasonably relied on the advice given the ambiguous plan language and the fiduciary role of the advisors. Turning to remedies, the court discussed the options of equitable estoppel and surcharge. For equitable estoppel, Williams “must satisfy the traditional requirements for equitable estoppel as well as three ERISA-specific requirements.” The court found the plan terms ambiguous and that the representations were interpretations of the plan rather than amendments or modifications, but noted insufficient evidence regarding the intent requirement. “Specifically, it’s unclear whether [the employees] acted with the intent to induce Williams to enroll in the defined benefit disability program or acted in a way that entitled Williams to believe that their intent was to induce him to enroll in the program.” While the requirements for proving surcharge were not as onerous, the court still noted that there were issues of fact as to whether and how Williams was harmed by the misrepresentations. As a result, regardless of which remedial theory applied, the court ruled that a trial was necessary to establish the amount of compensation Williams could receive.

Class Actions

Third Circuit

Cezus v. Konica Minolta Bus. Solutions U.S.A., Inc., No. CV 21-792 (JXN)(LDW), 2026 WL 1801135 (D.N.J. June 23, 2026) (Judge Julien Xavier Neals). This case has its origins in the merger of Konica and Minolta in 2003. The new company maintained separate offices in Connecticut (Konica) and New Jersey (Minolta) at first. However, in 2016 it decided to consolidate most of its operations in New Jersey, although some jobs in Connecticut would remain. (The company eventually closed the Connecticut office in 2025.) Unsurprisingly, this consolidation resulted in job terminations. The company had a severance plan under which employees terminated due to a reduction in force (RIF) were eligible for severance, but those refusing a transfer were not. Plaintiff James Cezus, who had worked in the Connecticut office for more than 30 years, refused a transfer and was terminated. Cezus made an unsuccessful claim for severance benefits and then filed this putative class action in New Jersey state court, alleging that the company used the relocation “as a guise to conduct a mass layoff without having to pay severance.” He claimed that the company knew most Connecticut employees would not accept a transfer to a facility 123 miles away and that the positions were effectively eliminated, constituting a RIF which entitled him and others to severance benefits under the plan. The company removed the case to federal court, after which Cezus filed a motion to certify a class of employees who were denied severance benefits under the plan. The company opposed the motion, arguing that the relocation was not a RIF, that the plan’s eligibility requirements must be determined individually, and that the class was not clearly defined or ascertainable. (The company did not oppose the motion based on numerosity or adequacy of counsel.) The court granted Cezus’ motion. The court found the class ascertainable because it was narrowly and specifically defined as Connecticut employees who were selected for transfer, did not accept the transfer, were terminated, and were “ineligible for severance benefits under the Plan as an employee ‘who has refused an offer of employment in another division, department, office, or unit of the Company.’” Company records could identify these class members “without extensive and individualized fact-finding or ‘mini-trials.’” The court further determined that the class satisfied the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a): numerosity was met because the class included up to 400 members, and no fewer than 100; commonality was satisfied because the case “presents common questions of liability and relief,” such as whether the relocation constituted a RIF; typicality was met because Cezus’ claims were based on the same legal theories and facts as the class; and adequacy was satisfied because Cezus’ interests aligned with the class and counsel was qualified. The court also found certification appropriate under Rule 23(b)(1) because “[i]ndividual cases could produce different interpretations of the Plan and set incompatible standards of conduct for the Plan and its administrator[.]” The court did not address certification under Rules 23(b)(2) or (b)(3) because Rule 23(b)(1) was satisfied. As a result, Cezus’ motion for class certification was granted.

Disability Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Jump v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 25-1021, __ F. App’x __, 2026 WL 1847149 (9th Cir. June 26, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Wardlaw, Owens, and De Alba). Denise Jump brought this action seeking benefits under an ERISA-governed long-term disability plan. The district court ruled in favor of the plan’s insurer, defendant Unum Life Insurance Company of America, and in this terse memorandum disposition the Ninth Circuit quickly affirmed. The court noted that it “review[s] for abuse of discretion the district court’s denial of benefits under an ERISA plan that grants the administrator discretionary authority… Under this standard, we reverse only when we are convinced that ‘the reviewed decision lies beyond the pale of reasonable justification under the circumstances.’” The appellate court found that the district court did not abuse its discretion by not explaining “why its conclusion differed from that of the Social Security Administration (‘SSA’).” Jump contended that while the district court took judicial notice “of the fact that the SSA awarded benefits,” it “did not delve into the actual reasoning behind the SSA’s decision[.]” However, “such an explanation was not required,” and in any event, “even if the district court wanted to provide a more detailed explanation of why its decision differed from that of the SSA, it could not have; Jump never submitted the SSA’s award notice to the district court.” The court further ruled that the district court did not abuse its discretion by not remanding the matter to Unum for further consideration of the SSA award. The Ninth Circuit noted that the award was issued after Unum’s final decision, so Unum “cannot be faulted for not considering it.” As a result, the judgment in Unum’s favor was affirmed.

Discovery

Second Circuit

David F. v. Cigna Life & Health Ins. Co., No. 3:25-CV-02188 (SRU), 2026 WL 1815680 (D. Conn. June 24, 2026) (Judge Stefan R. Underhill). This action seeks relief under ERISA and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (Parity Act). At issue was a discovery dispute: “Although the parties agree that discovery on the plaintiffs’ ERISA claim will be limited to the administrative record, they disagree on whether limited discovery should be permitted on plaintiffs’ Parity Act claim.” In this brief order the court ruled that it would permit “limited discovery,” noting that “the nature of Parity Act claims is that they generally require further discovery to evaluate whether there is a disparity between the availability of treatments for mental health and substance abuse disorders and treatment for medical/surgical conditions.” The court observed that “information about how insurance companies process treatment limitations will often be in the hands of insurers alone,” and thus, “[i]f claimants were barred from accessing that information via discovery, they would very likely face ‘a serious obstacle’ in bringing ‘meritorious Parity Act claims.’” The court relied on other district court rulings arriving at a similar conclusion. However, the court emphasized that “[i]n submitting discovery requests to the defendants, the plaintiffs must remember not to ‘attempt to obtain indirectly what they cannot obtain directly’ with regard to their ERISA claim.”

Tenth Circuit

Mayor v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 1:25-CV-00012-DBB-DAO, 2026 WL 1815564 (D. Utah June 24, 2026) (Judge David Barlow). This is an action for accidental death benefits against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and two officers of Union Pacific Railroad. The deceased is Casey Mayor, who was employed by the Railroad and covered by its ERISA-governed benefit plan, and the plaintiff is his wife, Nicole Mayor. In December of 2025, defendants filed the administrative record, but Mayor was unhappy with it and responded with a motion objecting to it and requesting additional discovery. As we detailed in our May 20, 2026 edition, the assigned magistrate judge recommended granting Mayor’s motion in part and denying it in part. Mayor filed objections to the magistrate’s ruling, and this order from the district court judge was the result. The court reviewed the magistrate’s non-dispositive ruling under the “clearly erroneous or contrary to law” standard. The court first addressed Mayor’s “primary objection,” which was that the magistrate did not order the production of additional plan documents. The magistrate found her requests “speculative and unnecessary” because she did not demonstrate that “a separate master plan document must exist.” The court agreed, noting that the summary plan description could serve as the required ERISA plan document alongside the insurance policy, consistent with Tenth Circuit precedent. The court noted that Mayor would nevertheless likely obtain the documents she sought, if they existed, because “the magistrate judge still essentially granted Plaintiff’s motion by requiring production of any additional plan documents compiled in the course of denying Ms. Mayor’s claim.” Mayor also objected to the inclusion of an insurance application document in the administrative record. The magistrate allowed it because it was part of the contract and relevant to determining applicable law. The court found no clear error because “the application preceded the relevant policy and could have been considered by MetLife in denying the claim.” Mayor also contended that the application was not properly authenticated, but “Ms. Mayor offers no authority to support her assertion that each document in an ERISA administrative record must be authenticated under oath.” Finally, Ms. Mayor argued that the magistrate improperly treated defendants’ assertions as factual and mischaracterized her discovery requests. The court again found no clear error, as the magistrate independently considered each category of requested discovery and appropriately focused on “principal arguments in favor of that discovery rather than every potential application of the requested category of documents.” As a result, the court overruled Mayor’s objections and upheld the magistrate’s order in full.

ERISA Preemption

Sixth Circuit

Gessford v. July Bus. Servs., Inc., No. CV 5:25-322-KKC, 2026 WL 1834348 (E.D. Ky. June 25, 2026) (Judge Karen K. Caldwell). Doug Gessford filed this action in Kentucky state court against July Business Services, Inc., alleging that July was negligent in the transfer of his retirement funds. Gessford contends that he and his wife initiated an in-service rollover distribution from their 401(k) funds to new IRA accounts, and while July processed Ms. Gessford’s request promptly, thereby allowing her to benefit from favorable market conditions, it delayed processing Mr. Gessford’s request, which caused him to miss out on those conditions, damaging him financially. July removed the case to federal court, alleging ERISA preemption, and Gessford filed a motion to remand, which the court decided in this order. The court applied the Supreme Court’s two-part Davila test to determine whether complete preemption by ERISA was applicable. Under the first prong, the court found that Gessford was not seeking to recover benefits due under the ERISA plan but was instead seeking damages for the alleged negligence of July. The court held that “[w]here a plaintiff includes plan benefits as ‘simply a reference to [the] specific, ascertainable damages [the plaintiff] claims to have suffered as a proximate result of’ a defendant’s tortious conduct, complete preemption under § 1132 does not apply.” Under the second prong of the Davila test, the court determined that Gessford’s claim was based on Kentucky’s “universal duty of care,” which is “independent of ERISA,” because it “is not derived from, nor is it conditioned upon the terms of Gessford’s 401(k) plan.” The court relied on a similar district court case in which that court rejected preemption arguments because the plaintiff “was not seeking benefits from ERISA plan assets directly,” but was instead seeking “monetary damages relative to the diminished value of the benefit she received resulting from the agent’s improper notarization.” Similarly, Gessford sought damages from July directly, not from the 401(k) plan itself. As a result, the court found that Gessford’s claims were not preempted, granted his motion to remand the case back to state court, and denied July’s concurrently filed motion for judgment on the pleadings for lack of jurisdiction.

Eighth Circuit

Flowers v. Caremark PCS Health, LLC, No. 25-3068, __ F.4th __, 2026 WL 1859929 (8th Cir. June 29, 2026) (Before Circuit Judges Gruender, Benton, and Erickson). Kevin Flowers is a participant in an ERISA-governed prescription drug benefit program. The program is administered by the giant pharmacy benefits manager (PBM) Caremark, which maintains a provider network of pharmacies. Flowers alleges in this putative class action that Caremark “covers plan members’ ‘maintenance prescriptions,’ i.e., prescriptions taken regularly for more than ninety days, only if plan members fill those prescriptions ‘at one of its CVS retail pharmacy stores or through its mail-order delivery service.’” According to Flowers this requirement violates two Arkansas statutes: the “Mail Order Provision,” which provides that a pharmacy controlled by a PBM “shall not require that a patient receive his or her prescriptions through home delivery services,” and the “Network Adequacy Provision,” which requires PBMs to provide “[a] reasonably adequate and accessible [PBM] network for the provision of prescription drugs…[with] convenient patient access to pharmacies within a reasonable distance from a patient’s residence.” Caremark moved to dismiss Flowers’ complaint, arguing that he did not adequately plead a violation of the Mail Order Provision, and that both the Mail Order Provision and the Network Adequacy Provision are preempted by ERISA. The district court granted Caremark’s motion, and Flowers appealed. The Eighth Circuit, reviewing the case de novo, “quickly dispense[d]” with Flowers’ Mail Order Provision claim. The court noted that this provision only “prohibits PBMs from requiring that patients receive their prescriptions through home delivery services… But Caremark, as alleged, requires plan members to fill their maintenance prescriptions either by mail or at CVS pharmacies. Therefore, Flowers has not alleged facts sufficient to show that Caremark requires patients to fill prescriptions only through home delivery services.” The court thus turned to Flowers’ claim based on the Network Adequacy provision, which it admitted “is more complicated.” On this issue the court focused on whether ERISA preempted the geographic coverage requirements imposed by the statute’s implementing regulations. (The court followed the parties’ lead on this and thus stated that it would “expressly leave open the question of whether the Network Adequacy Provision, standing on its own or implemented through different regulations, would be preempted by ERISA”.) These regulations required PBMs to ensure that a certain percentage of plan members live within specified distances of a network pharmacy. The Eighth Circuit noted that state laws “relate to” an ERISA plan, and are therefore preempted by ERISA, when the law “has a connection with or reference to such a plan.” The court agreed with Caremark that the geographic coverage requirements had an impermissible “connection with” ERISA plans. Although the requirements “nominally permit PBMs to retain some flexibility to design their networks, the requirements ‘forc[e] … [a] particular scheme of substantive coverage.’” The court stated that ERISA was designed to “minimiz[e] the administrative and financial burden of complying with conflicting directives and ensur[e] that plans do not have to tailor substantive benefits to the particularities of multiple jurisdictions.” However, the requirements “bulldoze through these objectives, requiring PBMs to tailor and retailor their networks – and perhaps even build new brick-and-mortar pharmacies – to comply with a set of exacting particularities.” Flowers argued that the requirements did not “require payment of specific benefits” or “bind plan administrators to specific rules for determining beneficiary status,” but the Eighth Circuit stated that these were only examples of preempted activity and were not an “exhaustive overview…of how state laws might ‘structure benefit plans in particular ways’ and thereby risk running afoul of ERISA… ERISA can also preempt state laws that do not perform these functions.” The court thus affirmed the judgment below, agreeing with the district court that Flowers’ Mail Order and Network Adequacy claims should be dismissed.

Ninth Circuit

Estate of Gilbert Dominguez v. Estes Express Lines, Inc., No. 2:25-CV-10514-DSF-MAR, 2026 WL 1823874 (C.D. Cal. June 24, 2026) (Judge Dale S. Fischer). The complaint in this case alleges that Gilbert Dominguez, a former employee of Estes Express Lines, Inc., was severely injured in 2017 while working at a trucking terminal, and his injuries ultimately led to his death two years later. In 2019, Dominguez’ daughter contacted Estes on behalf of her father’s estate regarding his employment and was informed that he had been terminated due to his inability to return from leave, and that the estate “was not entitled to any back income or funeral costs. Dominguez and his family had been unaware of his termination.” As a result, the estate brought this action against Estes and G.I. Trucking Company, alleging causes of action under California law for wrongful discharge, physical disability discrimination, and negligence, among other claims. Defendants removed the case to federal court based on ERISA preemption, asserting that part of the estate’s case was a claim for $400,000 in ERISA-governed life insurance benefits. The estate filed a motion to remand the case back to state court. The court applied the two-prong Davila test established by the Supreme Court, noting that defendants had failed to do so in their briefing because they had conflated complete preemption (the correct test for determining jurisdiction) and conflict preemption (which is merely an affirmative defense). The court ruled, and the parties stipulated, that the estate “could have brought” a claim under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B). Thus, the first prong was satisfied. However, the claim that defendants asserted the estate could have brought under ERISA failed under the second prong of Davila. Defendants contended that the estate “is really making a claim that Defendants terminated Dominguez in order not to pay benefits – a claim that falls within the scope of ERISA § 510.” However, “the parties filed a joint stipulation in which the Estate agreed to strike all such references and that it would ‘not seek recovery of any benefits covered by ERISA in this action.’” The court found that after disregarding such allegations there was an independent legal duty implicated by defendants’ actions, separate from any ERISA plan. The estate’s claims were based on state-law duties, such as wrongful termination due to disability, which did not require judicial review of any ERISA plan. “Such claims ‘do not rely on, and are independent of, any duty under an ERISA plan’ and ‘would exist whether or not an ERISA plan existed[.]’” Defendants relied on comments by the estate in the parties’ joint report and its discovery responses which could be interpreted as seeking employee benefits, but the court found that these were irrelevant because the correct focus was on the claims in the estate’s complaint. Thus, in the end, defendants failed to satisfy both prongs of the Davila test, which were required to establish complete preemption and federal jurisdiction. The estate’s motion was granted and the case was remanded to state court.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Fifth Circuit

Young v. Woman’s Hosp. Foundation, Civ. No. 24-518-SDD-EWD, 2026 WL 1847413 (M.D. La. June 25, 2026) (Judge Shelly D. Dick). Latasha Young was employed by Woman’s Hospital Foundation from 2021 to 2022 and participated in several of the Foundation’s ERISA-governed employee benefit plans, including a long-term disability plan. The plan required proof of loss within 90 days, and any adverse claim decision was required to be appealed to the insurance company administering the plan. After undergoing surgery in 2022, Young alleges that she inquired about her disability benefits and was informed by a human resources employee that she was not eligible. Young filed this action and has amended her complaint twice. Her complaint now contains a claim under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), alleging that the Foundation improperly denied her disability benefits, and also includes claims under 29 U.S.C. §§ 1132(a)(3) and 1132(c). These claims assert two exceptions to the plan’s exhaustion requirement: estoppel due to the Foundation’s failure to advise her to review the plan provisions, and a claim that the Foundation’s failure to follow the plan’s procedures should relieve her of the exhaustion requirement. The Foundation filed a motion to dismiss. The court first addressed the Foundation’s argument that Young impermissibly alleged Section 1132(a)(3) and 1132(c) claims, and impermissibly alleged exceptions to exhaustion, because the court did not allow such allegations in its previous ruling dismissing Young’s prior complaint. The court agreed: “The Court did not give Plaintiff leave to allege new legal theories. Nor did Plaintiff file a motion seeking such leave. Additionally, nothing in the record indicates that Plaintiff received Defendant’s written consent for these amendments.” The court thus turned to Young’s 1132(a)(1)(B) claim and the issue of exhaustion. Young admitted that she did not exhaust her administrative remedies, as she did not appeal the denial of her long-term disability benefits to the insurance company, as required by the plan. The court found no applicable exceptions to the exhaustion requirement and concluded that Young’s failure to comply with the plan’s procedures barred her from relief. As a result, the Foundation’s motion was granted and the case was dismissed with prejudice.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Second Circuit

Rajappan v. Bloomberg L.P., No. 26-CV-785 (GHW) (BCM), 2026 WL 1803704 (S.D.N.Y. June 23, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Barbara Moses). In this putative class action Rajkumar Rajappan alleges that defendants – Bloomberg L.P., The Bloomberg Investment Committee, and The Bloomberg Retirement Plan Committee – breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA by retaining two “serially underperforming funds” in Bloomberg’s 401(k) plan for over ten years. Defendants contend that Rajappan lacks standing to challenge one of the funds because he never invested in it, and furthermore, “offers only ‘[h]indsight-based performance criticisms and cherry-picked alternatives’” and thus fails to state a plausible claim for imprudence. However, the merits of these claims were not decided in this motion; instead, the motion on the table was by defendants to stay discovery pending the outcome of their motion to dismiss. (Also pending was a motion by Rajappan for leave to amend his complaint to add a new plaintiff who had invested in both challenged funds.) The court granted defendants’ motion to stay, addressing three factors: “(1) the breadth of discovery sought, (2) any prejudice that would result, and (3) the strength of the motion.” On the first factor, the court noted that “it is fairly clear that discovery will likely involve voluminous document production and review.” Furthermore, “[i]n putative class actions under ERISA, discovery is often one-sided.” However, if defendants’ motion were to be granted, “there will be no need for discovery, and if it is granted in part…the discovery burden will be significantly reduced. In these circumstances, a stay of discovery would help avoid ‘burdensome efforts that could be unnecessary … and [may] waste [] precious resources.’” Thus, the first factor weighed in favor of a stay. The court also found that the second factor favored a stay because “plaintiff has not identified any specific prejudice that he will suffer if discovery is delayed.” Plaintiff did not assert that any particular evidence was “crucial,” and “it is well-settled that ‘the general notion that the passage of time will create prejudice’ is an insufficient basis on which to resist a discovery stay.” The court was satisfied that defendants would preserve all relevant evidence and thus plaintiff “should suffer ‘no prejudice’ from the stay.” On the third factor, “it appears to this Court that defendants’ pending motion to dismiss the [first amended complaint] raises ‘substantial arguments for dismissal.’” The court noted that case law frowned on claims relying heavily on “after-the-fact allegations” about a decrease in an investment’s value, and noted that “plaintiff pleads that the challenged funds underperformed their disclosed benchmarks by only 0.67% (on an average annual basis)[.]” Thus, the court found that defendants had a “substantial argument” in favor of dismissal, even if “plaintiff has also ‘raised significant opposition.’” Thus, “[on balance…’the scales tip in favor of a discovery stay.’” As a result, defendants’ motion was granted and discovery will be put on hold until the court rules on defendants’ motion to dismiss.

Fourth Circuit

Trader v. Savage, No. CV 25-975-BAH, 2026 WL 1811525 (D. Md. June 24, 2026) (Judge Brendan A. Hurson). The plaintiff in this case is Virginia Trader and the defendants are William Savage, III, Diamond State Meats LLC (DSM), Savage Poultry, Inc., and the VIP 401k Plan. It is difficult to tell from this decision exactly what claims Trader has brought, but two things are clear: Trader’s claims arise under ERISA and Savage Poultry has entered bankruptcy and taken the VIP 401k Plan with it. In this order the court addressed the bankruptcy and various discovery disputes. First, the court examined a “Joint Motion to Dismiss” filed by DSM and Savage, seeking to dismiss Savage Poultry and the VIP 401k Plan from the case with prejudice due to the bankruptcy stay. The court quickly denied this motion on procedural grounds because DSM and Savage “do not have standing to seek dismissal of the other defendants.” The court noted that Savage Poultry itself had only requested a stay, not dismissal. DSM and Savage contended that the plan was not a “true party” because it was a retirement plan, but the court disagreed, explaining that retirement plans are often proper defendants in ERISA actions. Thus, the claims against Savage Poultry and the plan remained stayed, not dismissed. Regarding the discovery issues, the court granted Trader’s motion to extend the discovery deadline for a deposition of a Merrill Lynch representative, and partially granted defendants’ motions to extend the discovery deadline. The court engaged in some finger-wagging on this issue, noting that “the parties do not appear to have strictly complied with the Court’s Local Rules requiring conference of counsel before seeking extensions of time.” Indeed, the parties’ filings were “ridden with errors and typos reflecting that the respective author took little to no time to contemplate whether the filing was appropriate or helpful, also contain competing and repetitive accusations of bad faith against opposing counsel.” The court ordered the attorneys to behave in the future or “the Court will consider appropriate sanctions to deter such behavior in the future.” Finally, the court addressed a discovery dispute concerning questions about damages, restitution, and attorney’s fees which arose during Trader’s deposition. The court found that the attorney-client privilege does not extend to billing records and expense reports, but the relevance of such information was questioned. The court concluded that Trader’s fee agreement with her counsel was not relevant to establishing liability on her ERISA claims and declined to order that her deposition be reconvened for this purpose. As for damages and restitution, the court noted that it did not have the deposition transcript and “the dispute has not been adequately raised in the parties’ joint status reports… To the extent any dispute remains, counsel are directed to the Court’s informal discovery dispute procedure.”

Fifth Circuit

Hawkins v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., No. 3:26-CV-00026, 2026 WL 1862614 (S.D. Tex. June 18, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Andrew M. Edison). Patrick Sean Hawkins was employed by Wells Fargo Bank and was a participant in the bank’s ERISA-governed short-term disability benefit plan. Hawkins alleges that in 2024 he became unable to perform his job duties due to severe work-related stress, anxiety, and symptoms associated with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. He submitted a claim to the plan’s administrator, Lincoln National Life Insurance Company, but Lincoln denied it, contending that the medical evidence did not support a disabling impairment as of the claimed date. Hawkins thus brought this pro se action against Wells Fargo, the plan, and Lincoln, alleging two claims for relief. Count 1 is for wrongful denial of benefits under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), while Count 2 is under ERISA § 502(a)(3), which provides for “appropriate equitable relief.” Hawkins pleaded Count 2 as an alternative claim, “which he asserts only ‘to the extent the Court determines that relief under § 502(a)(1)(B) is unavailable, incomplete, or inadequate.’” Defendants filed a motion to dismiss Count 2, arguing that Hawkins’ claim for equitable relief was duplicative of his claim for benefits in Count 1. The motion was assigned to a magistrate judge, who recommended in this ruling that defendants’ motion be granted. The court relied on Fifth Circuit authority, which “has explained that ‘a claimant whose injury creates a cause of action under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B) may not proceed with a claim under ERISA § 502(a)(3).’” The court stated that § 502(a)(3) is a “catchall” provision meant to offer equitable relief for injuries not adequately remedied by other sections of ERISA. Because Hawkins’ alleged injury – a wrongful denial of benefits – could be addressed under § 502(a)(1)(B), he could not simultaneously pursue a claim under § 502(a)(3). Hawkins argued that his § 502(a)(3) claim was not duplicative because it sought unique equitable remedies, such as a surcharge against fiduciaries and injunctive relief for compliance with ERISA’s procedural requirements. The court was unconvinced, finding that these remedies essentially sought the same outcome as the § 502(a)(1)(B) claim: “the value of his benefits.” The court emphasized that it “must focus on the substance of the relief sought and the allegations pleaded, not on the label used.” The court further rejected Hawkins’ argument that his claim was valid because it was pleaded in the alternative: “True, alternative pleading is allowed in most civil cases. But ERISA is different. Section [502](a)(3) is a catch-all provision.” The court thus recommended that because Hawkins’ alleged injuries could be addressed through his claim under § 502(a)(1)(B), his § 502(a)(3) claim should be dismissed.

Provider Claims

Second Circuit

Rowe Plastic Surgery of N.J., LLC v. Aetna Health & Life Ins. Co., No. 22-CV-4755 (MKB), 2026 WL 1847285 (E.D.N.Y. June 26, 2026) (Judge Margo K. Brodie). Rowe Plastic Surgery of New Jersey, LLC and its principal, Dr. Norman Maurice Rowe, are frequent litigants, and this is one of their many lawsuits against Aetna Health and Life Insurance Company. (The court noted that plaintiffs had filed “approximately thirty nearly identical lawsuits in the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York alleging that Aetna breached an oral agreement to pay for a surgery”). This dispute is based on Aetna’s allegedly “late, reduced, and unreasonable payment” for a bilateral breast reduction surgery performed in 2021 on a patient insured by Aetna. Plaintiffs contend that they sought and obtained a network exception from Aetna and relied on a representation of reimbursement at the 90th percentile of reasonable and customary rates. However, Aetna paid $90,844.28, which was “far below” the 90th percentile. Plaintiffs filed this action in New York state court asserting claims for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, unjust enrichment, and violation of New York’s Prompt Pay Law. Aetna removed the case to federal court based on ERISA preemption, after which plaintiffs filed an amended complaint including claims of fraud, fraud by omission, and fraudulent inducement. Aetna filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that plaintiffs improperly added new claims without court permission, the fraud claims failed to state a claim, and ERISA preempted plaintiffs’ claims. The court agreed with Aetna that plaintiffs’ new complaint exceeded the scope of the court’s leave to amend by adding new claims of fraud and fraud by omission without seeking permission. Although these claims were based on the same underlying facts as the fraudulent inducement claim, they were not authorized by the court’s previous order. The court also agreed that ERISA preempted plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs contended that the complaint “pleads a classic rate-of-payment, not right-to-payment, dispute,” but the court disagreed. The court found that the claims were inseparable from the patient’s ERISA-governed plan because the alleged misrepresentations and network exceptions were tied to the plan’s terms. The court further found that plaintiffs’ claims were directed at rectifying a wrongful denial of benefits under an ERISA-regulated plan. The court also rejected plaintiffs’ argument that Aetna’s pre-surgery representations and network exceptions created an independent legal duty outside the ERISA plan. According to the court, the call transcript between plaintiffs and Aetna did not support an independent promise to reimburse at a specific rate, and the network exception did not provide a specific reimbursement rate. Thus, plaintiffs’ claims were centered on the plan and ERISA preempted them. The court therefore granted Aetna’s motion to dismiss.

Retaliation Claims

Fifth Circuit

Salazar v. Lockheed Martin Corp., No. 4:25-CV-1364-P, 2026 WL 1800303 (N.D. Tex. June 12, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Jeffrey L. Cureton). Marc Gabriel Salazar was employed by Lockheed Martin Corporation from 2016 until 2022. Salazar is unhappy about how his employment ended and has filed this pro se action against Lockheed alleging the following claims: (1) interference in violation of the Family Medical and Leave Act (FMLA); (2) retaliation in violation of the FMLA; (3) wrongful termination; (4) breach of contract/seniority rights; (5) interference in violation of ERISA; and (6) negligent misrepresentation. The operative pleading is Salazar’s third amended complaint, which Lockheed moved to dismiss. Meanwhile, Salazar moved for leave to file a fourth amended complaint. The motions were referred to the assigned magistrate judge, who issued this report and recommendation. The magistrate ruled that Salazar’s FMLA claims for interference and retaliation were time-barred by the two-year statute of limitations, as he filed the lawsuit nearly three years after his termination. Furthermore, the magistrate noted that FMLA violations must be “willful” in order to support a cause of action, and Salazar’s allegations “are consistent with a negligent, not a willful, violation of the FMLA.” Next, the magistrate determined that Salazar failed to state a claim for ERISA interference because he did not allege “specific discriminatory intent” by Lockheed to interfere with his benefits. The magistrate noted that “a global reading” of Salazar’s complaint “shows that Plaintiff is alleging that he was wrongfully terminated for taking FMLA, not for the purpose of interfering with his ERISA benefits.” Salazar’s allegations regarding how Lockheed incorrectly documented his seniority, which affected his benefits, were insufficient because “more than simply alleging an employer acted to deprive an employee of benefits is required” to state a claim for ERISA interference. In any event, Salazar’s ERISA claim was time-barred by the two-year statute of limitations because he was aware of the alleged interference at the time of his termination in 2022. Salazar’s remaining claims fared no better. The magistrate concluded that Salazar’s wrongful termination claim was not viable because “there is no common law cause of action for workplace discrimination or retaliation” and Salazar did not identify a statutory or constitutional violation. He also could not sue for breach of contract because he did not allege the existence of a valid contract. Salazar relied on “the CBA and company policies, which constitute a contract,” so the magistrate construed his claim as arising under the Labor Management Relations Act. However, Salazar did not allege that he had exhausted any grievance procedures, or that his union had breached any duty of fair representation. The magistrate also rejected Salazar’s negligent misrepresentation claim, noting that this claim was absent in his proposed fourth amended complaint, which the magistrate interpreted as abandonment. Finally, the magistrate considered Salazar’s pro se status and his request to file a fourth amended complaint, but concluded that “Plaintiff has already been given the opportunity to file three amended complaints,” and his proposed complaint “suffer[s] from the same defects as set forth above.” As a result, the magistrate concluded that amendment would be futile. He recommended that Lockheed’s motion to dismiss be granted with prejudice and that Salazar’s motion to amend be denied.

Severance Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Foley v. Wells Fargo & Co., No. 25-CV-04795-EMC, 2026 WL 1805741 (N.D. Cal. June 23, 2026) (Judge Edward M. Chen). Terence Foley was a senior systems quality assurance analyst at Wells Fargo & Company. He contends in this action that because of a change in his work location he is entitled to benefits under Wells Fargo’s ERISA-governed severance plan. Foley worked remotely from his home in Union City, California but in September of 2024 he was informed that he would need to return to Wells Fargo’s office in Concord, California, which he claimed was more than 40 miles away. Wells Fargo denied his claim, determining that the distance was 33.1 miles, based on a computer-based mapping tool (Bing Maps API). This difference was crucial because the plan only paid benefits for a “qualifying event,” which included a “substantial position change,” which in turn included “a change to an Employee’s current position…that results in [e.g.] [a] change in work location beyond a Reasonable Commute Distance,” defined as “40 miles one way, using a mapping resource for this information, as determined by the Participating Employer.” Foley appealed the decision, arguing that the actual commute exceeded 40 miles, but Wells denied the appeal, maintaining that the shortest driving distance did not exceed 40 miles. Foley thus filed this action, asserting four claims for relief: (1) recovery of employee benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), (2) inadequate notice and reasons for denial in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2), (3) failure to establish and maintain reasonable claims procedures in violation of 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(b), and (4) failure to provide specific reasons for denial in violation of 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(3). The case proceeded to cross-motions for judgment. Wells Fargo argued, and Foley “essentially concede[d],” that his last three claims should be dismissed because they were not independent remedial bases. Thus, “the only question for the Court is whether Mr. Foley should prevail on his first cause of action under § 1132(a)(1)(B) – i.e., is he entitled to severance benefits because the change to his job resulted in a ‘Reasonable Commute Distance’ that exceeded 40 miles?” The court applied the abuse of discretion standard of review because the severance plan unambiguously provided discretion to the plan administrator. Foley argued for de novo review, citing procedural violations, but the court found no wholesale and flagrant violations of procedural requirements that would warrant such a shift. The court noted that Wells Fargo provided sufficient information about the mapping tool it used, and ruled that the lack of specific route documentation did not constitute a procedural violation. In applying abuse of discretion review, the court acknowledged Wells Fargo’s conflict of interest, but noted that “there do not appear to be any real procedural irregularities or violations,” and “there is no real indication that Wells’s actions here were in fact dictated or influenced by self-interest. There is no evidence, e.g., of malice, self-dealing, or a parsimonious claims-granting history.” The only possibly relevant irregularity was a difference in the language between the 2025 and 2026 summary plan descriptions, but the 2026 SPD was not in the record, did not govern Foley’s claim, and in any event there was “no clear inconsistency” between the two SPDs. Thus, the court’s review was “at best slightly informed” by Wells Fargo’s structural conflict of interest. As for the central merits question, Foley argued that “‘commute’ cannot simply mean distance but must also take into account, in particular, time.” However, the court found that Wells Fargo’s interpretation of “Reasonable Commute Distance” as the shortest driving distance was reasonable and consistent with the plan’s terms, which defined “commute” as “measured in miles.” The court emphasized that using the shortest driving distance was “perfectly logical” because such a standard “was objective and amenable to uniform and consistent application, free from subjective judgments and ever-changing variables.” As a result, the court concluded that Wells Fargo did not abuse its discretion in denying Foley’s claim for severance benefits.

Venue

Eighth Circuit

Delaney v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 4:26-CV-00039-ACL, 2026 WL 1832389 (E.D. Mo. June 24, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Abbie Crites-Leoni). George Delaney worked for Consolidated Edison, Inc. (ConEd) for approximately 40 years and was covered by a ConEd-sponsored group life insurance policy insured by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company with a face value of approximately $404,000. George died in 2016, and his ex-wife, Maura, died only eight days later. The plaintiff in this action, Andrew Delaney, is the son of George and Maura and contends that a New York court, at the time of his parents’ divorce, “issued a binding order dated October 8, 1985, awarding all of Mr. Delaney’s life insurance policies to Maura T. Delaney and directing that she be designated as beneficiary.” Nevertheless, Andrew alleges that only $192,792.91 was paid to Maura Delaney, while $211,207.09 was distributed to eight other individuals “based on a Con Edison beneficiary designation form.” Andrew filed this pro se action against MetLife and ConEd under ERISA, contending that “Defendants knew or should have known that the beneficiary form conflicted with a valid domestic relations order that had been judicially affirmed.” At issue in this order were Delaney’s two motions to proceed in forma pauperis, which were referred to the assigned magistrate judge. The court granted Delaney’s second motion (and denied the first as moot) and waived his filing fee. The court noted that Delaney was “an active litigant in many cases across the country,” but, “[l]iberally construing the allegations of the Complaint and assuming Plaintiff’s assertions as true that he has standing to bring this suit,” the court found that the case was properly brought under ERISA. However, the court flagged the issue of venue. The court stated that an ERISA action may be brought “where the plan is administered, where the breach took place, or where a defendant resides or may be found.” The court noted that the transactions at issue took place in New York, where George Delaney was employed and where the ERISA plan was administered, not in Missouri.  Therefore, the court issued an order to show cause why the case “should not be dismissed for lack of proper venue. Specifically, Plaintiff should inform the Court of all other litigation that has occurred on the current claims before the Court and provide case numbers and citations. This includes any Court proceedings concerning the administration of the estates of George and Maura Delaney, that occurred following their 2016 deaths, and any legal matters filed concerning the distribution of the life insurance proceeds at issue.”

Eleventh Circuit

Hughes v. Truist Bank, Inc., No. 1:25-CV-04667-SDG, 2026 WL 1849942 (N.D. Ga. June 26, 2026) (Judge Steven D. Grimberg). Anthony Hughes was employed by Truist Bank, Inc. and was a participant in its ERISA-governed accidental death and dismemberment (AD&D) benefit plan, which was insured by Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company. Hughes alleges that he elected the maximum AD&D coverage for his wife, amounting to ten times his annual salary, or $830,000. His wife died in May 2024, but Hughes only received half of the elected amount, or $415,000. He then brought this action against Truist and Hartford under ERISA seeking the remainder. The defendants could not agree on how to proceed. Truist filed a motion to transfer venue to the Western District of North Carolina based on a forum selection clause in the summary plan description (SPD), and while Hughes did not oppose this motion, Hartford did on the ground that it was not a signatory to the SPD. Instead, Hartford filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. The court declined to rule on Hartford’s motion, finding instead that transfer was appropriate. The court reasoned that forum-selection clauses are generally enforceable in federal courts, and the burden is on the party opposing the clause to demonstrate inconvenience. Because Hughes did not oppose the enforcement of the clause, the court found transfer appropriate. However, this decision “leaves open the question of how to handle Hughes’s claims against Hartford,” which objected to the transfer. The court applied the “closely related doctrine,” which allows a forum-selection clause to be enforced against non-signatories. Under the doctrine, “the party must be closely related to the dispute such that it becomes foreseeable that it will be bound.” The court determined that Hartford was “closely related” to the dispute because its interests were “sufficiently derivative of Truist’s interest” in avoiding the additional payment to Hughes. “After all, had Truist not contracted with Hartford…to issue the AD&D policy under the Plan, Hartford…would not have any connection to Hughes’s dispute with Truist.” Furthermore, it was foreseeable that Hartford would be bound by the forum-selection clause because the SPD included the certificate of insurance issued by Hartford, and its representatives signed the certificate. As a result, “the SPD’s forum-selection clause can be enforced against the non-signatories and this action should be transferred in full. The ‘interest of justice’ is better advanced by transferring all claims, rather than by dividing them between two district courts. Truist’s motion was thus granted, and Hartford’s was denied without prejudice.