Schuyler v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada, No. 23-498, __ F.4th __, 2025 WL 2349010 (2d Cir. Aug. 14, 2025) (Before Circuit Judges Livingston, Chin, and Robinson)

ERISA generally does not prohibit employees from waiving welfare benefits to which they might otherwise be entitled. However, the courts will often examine such waivers closely given ERISA’s stated purpose of protecting employees and their right to benefits. As a result, the issue of whether a waiver should be enforced is one that arises quite often, and can lead to diverging opinions, as evidenced by this week’s notable decision.

The plaintiff was Kristen Schuyler, who worked at Benco, a dental supply company. In 2015 she fell and suffered a traumatic brain injury. Schuyler was able to keep working at Benco for several years, but the symptoms from her injury grew worse over time, and as a result she was forced to take medical leave in May of 2019. She filed a claim shortly thereafter under Benco’s employee long-term disability (LTD) benefit plan, which was insured by defendant Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada. Sun Life denied Schuyler’s claim in October of 2019.

Meanwhile, Schuyler and Benco decided to part ways. Schuyler entered into a Separation Agreement and Release with Benco in December of 2019. The agreement stated that it was between Schuyler and Benco, as well as its “officers, directors, trustees, shareholders, partners, parents, subsidiaries, and any related or affiliated entities, employees, agents, attorneys, representatives, successors, assigns, and parties-in-interest[.]”

In the agreement Schuyler released and discharged “Benco and any and all of its parents, subsidiaries, related or affiliated entities…of and from any and all known and unknown actions…arising out of or in any way connected with Employee’s employment with Benco…including, but not limited to, any and all matters arising out or in any way connected with Employee’s employment with Benco…including, but not limited to, any alleged violation of [a series of statutes, including ERISA][.]”

In exchange, Benco made a severance payment of $25,000 to Schuyler.

Before entering into this agreement, Schuyler contacted Benco to clarify what it meant and how it would affect her claim for LTD benefits. In one communication Schuyler asked whether, if she appealed the LTD denial, she would be eligible for employment with Benco again. Benco’s attorney responded, “[T]he decision as to whether to appeal the Sun Life Denial is yours and yours alone. Sun Life is a separate and independent third-party entity in charge of LTD.”

In a second communication, Schuyler asked Benco to cooperate with any requests from Sun Life or the Social Security Administration regarding her claims for benefits, and to agree that the release “will not affect [her] ability to appeal the SunLife LTD claim nor file SSDI.”

Benco’s counsel responded that Benco would agree to cooperate and supply any requested information. Counsel added that Benco was “solely a conduit and/or provider of documentary information. Benco does not make any decisions relative to the SunLife Long Term Disability and/or SSDI which is a governmental determination…I am sure your lawyer told you this as part of his/her advice to you, but this agreement should have absolutely no effect on your ability to appeal your LTD or to file for SSDI.”

In January of 2020, Schuyler completed her LTD appeal with Sun Life. In August of 2020, Sun Life upheld its denial.

Schuyler sued. In an amended answer, Sun Life contended for the first time that Schuyler had waived any legal claims for LTD benefits pursuant to her agreement with Benco. The parties litigated the issue on cross-motions for summary judgment, after which the district court ruled in Sun Life’s favor, holding that Schuyler’s release in the severance agreement was knowing and voluntary. The court further ruled that the agreement, even though it was with Benco, applied to Sun Life as well, concluding that Sun Life was “an ‘affiliated’ or ‘related’ entity” or a “party-in-interest” under the contract. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in our March 15, 2023 edition.)

Schuyler appealed, represented by Kantor & Kantor. Schuyler asserted two arguments: (1) she did not knowingly and voluntarily release her claims against Sun Life; and (2) the agreement with Benco did not bar her claims against Sun Life.

The Second Circuit determined that it did not need to reach the second issue because it ruled in Schuyler’s favor on the first issue, holding that “the undisputed evidence establishes as a matter of law that Schuyler did not knowingly and voluntarily release her ERISA claims against Sun Life.”

The court began its discussion by noting that while employees can waive ERISA claims, “a waiver of an ERISA claim ‘is subject to closer scrutiny than a waiver of general contract claims’” because “individuals releasing ERISA claims ‘are relinquishing a right that ERISA indicates a strong congressional purpose of preserving.’” As a result, courts will only uphold a waiver under a “totality of the circumstances inquiry.” This inquiry involves consideration of a number of factors, many of which were outlined by the court previously in Laniok v. Advisory Comm. of Brainerd Mfg. Co. Pension Plan, 935 F.2d 1360 (2d Cir. 1991).

The Second Circuit’s inquiry compelled it to agree with Schuyler: “The undisputed evidence that the only counterparty to the Agreement expressly communicated to Schuyler that she would not be waiving her LTD claim by signing the Agreement, and that Schuyler understood that to be true, weighs heavily against the conclusion that Schuyler voluntarily waived her ERISA claims against Sun Life.”

The court emphasized that Benco’s counsel had informed Schuyler that Sun Life was “a separate and independent third-party entity in charge of LTD,” that “Benco does not make any decisions relative to SunLife Long Term Disability,” and “this agreement should have absolutely no effect on your ability to appeal your LTD[.]”

Sun Life contended that these communications were irrelevant because they only related to Schuyler’s ability to appeal Sun Life’s denial through the insurer’s internal review process, and made no representations regarding her right to file a subsequent lawsuit. However, the Second Circuit noted that the agreement included within the scope of its waiver all “claims…contracts, agreements [and] promises,” which meant that Sun Life could not meaningfully distinguish between internal appeals and lawsuits. “Either the Agreement released Schuyler’s LTD claim altogether, in which case Schuyler could neither appeal it administratively with Sun Life nor pursue it in court, or it didn’t, in which case she could do both.”

In short, “the undisputed evidence of Schuyler’s reasonable understanding when she executed the Agreement, formed in reliance on the undisputed clear assurances from the counterparty’s (Benco’s) legal counsel, demonstrates as a matter of law that, regardless of the proper legal interpretation of the Agreement, she did not knowingly waive her LTD claim against Sun Life when she signed the Agreement.”

The Second Circuit also addressed two other arguments made by Sun Life. First, Sun Life argued that Benco’s assurances were irrelevant because it could not override the clarity of the severance agreement. While the court acknowledged that such an argument “might be persuasive” if the issue was whether Schuyler “knowingly and voluntarily entered into the Agreement with Benco, or whether she knowingly and voluntarily waived her ERISA claims against Benco.” However, the question presented was “whether Schuyler knowingly and voluntarily waived her ERISA claim as to Sun Life.” The answer to this question was no “because Sun Life is neither a party to nor expressly mentioned anywhere in the Agreement.”

Sun Life argued that it was a released party because the agreement defined released parties as including Benco’s “related or affiliated entities” and “agents.” However, the Second Circuit was not convinced. Sun Life was “clearly distinct from and independent of Benco,” as reaffirmed by Benco’s counsel, and “there is arguably insufficient evidence that Benco exercises control over Sun Life’s administration of the LTD Plan to render Sun Life an ‘agent’ of Benco.”

The Second Circuit acknowledged that some district courts have held that employee benefit plans are “affiliates” and/or “related entities” under various release agreements. However, the court stressed that although such contractual interpretations “are thorny,” in this case “the question is not what the release in the Agreement means. The question is whether, notwithstanding Benco’s express assurance to Schuyler that the Release Provision did not extend to Sun Life, the Release Provision by its plain terms so clearly extends to Sun Life as to create a genuine dispute as to whether Schuyler knowingly and voluntarily relinquished her LTD claim against Sun Life. We conclude that it does not.”

The second argument by Sun Life related to the other Laniok factors. The court ruled that these factors do not “significantly move the needle in Sun Life’s direction.” The court admitted that Schuyler had significant education and business experience, had time to review the severance agreement, received legal advice, and participated in negotiating the agreement. However, none of these factors “would have undermined Schuyler’s confidence that she was not releasing her LTD claim against Sun Life.”

Furthermore, the court noted that one of the factors – the consideration paid by Benco for Schuyler’s release – weighed in her favor. After all, Schuyler’s potential LTD benefit payout was significant, and thus “it is unlikely that Schuyler would have knowingly relinquished her potential rights to these benefits for only $25,000.” Indeed, “[t]he fact that Benco, and only Benco, paid the agreed-upon severance payment to Schuyler reinforces the inference that Schuyler understood the Agreement to release only Schuyler’s claims against Benco and not any claims against Sun Life.”

As a result, the Second Circuit ruled that no reasonable jury “could conclude that Schuyler actually believed that she was waiving her claim for LTD benefits from Sun Life when she signed the agreement,” and thus she “didn’t knowingly and voluntarily waive her right to pursue her LTD against Sun Life.” The court therefore reversed the judgment below and remanded for further proceedings.

The panel was not unanimous, however. Chief Judge Debra Ann Livingston penned a dissent in which she criticized the majority for focusing on Schuyler’s “professed misunderstanding of an email exchange she had with Benco’s counsel prior to signing the Agreement” instead of on “the [Laniok] factors we ordinarily consider in cases like this[.]”

Judge Livingston concluded that the Laniok factors weighed against Schuyler because (a) Schuyler was “indisputably well-educated and has substantial practical business experience,” (b) she had 20 days to review the agreement, (c) Schuyler negotiated the terms of the agreement, (d) the release provision “is clear” because Sun Life was a “related or affiliated entity,” (e) she had an attorney review the agreement, and (f) the amount she received – $25,000 – was not insignificant because at the time she signed the agreement her LTD claim had been denied and thus there was no assurance that she would prevail.

Judge Livingston acknowledged Benco’s “assurances,” but emphasized that they were not repeated in the agreement. Furthermore, “There is a stark distinction between administratively appealing the denial of benefits with an insurance provider and filing a federal lawsuit under ERISA.” Thus, Judge Livingston concluded that Schuyler could waive one but not the other.

In short, Judge Livingston rejected “Schuyler’s self-serving and uncorroborated claim that she misunderstood” the scope of the agreement. “Every Laniok factor – as well as the totality of the circumstances, fairly considered – indicates Schuyler knew exactly the bargain she was making. I would therefore affirm the judgment in all respects.”

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

Attorneys’ Fees

Fourth Circuit

Kelly v. Altria Client Services, LLC, No. 3:23-cv-725-HEH, 2025 WL 2313210 (E.D. Va. Aug. 11, 2025) (Judge Henry E. Hudson). On March 26, 2025, the court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants Altria Client Service, LLC, the Altria deferred profit sharing plan for salaried employees, and Fidelity Workplace Services LLC in this individual ERISA suit brought by plaintiff Richard D. Kelly. (Your ERISA Watch covered that ruling in our April 2, 2025 edition.) The present motion before the court was one for attorneys’ fees filed by those same defendants. The Altria defendants requested an award of $124,045 while Fidelity separately requested an award of $98,090. In perhaps a first-of-its-kind post-Cunningham ruling (see Cunningham v. Cornell Univ., 145 S. Ct. 1020 (2025)), the district court awarded the defendants attorneys’ fees under Section 502(g)(1) specifically in order to “chill future plaintiffs from bringing (meritless) ERISA claims.” It is worth noting that the court had not found Mr. Kelly’s claims so meritless as to warrant dismissal at the pleadings. The court had instead allowed most of his causes of action to proceed, had allowed discovery into his allegations, and had ruled on summary judgment. Nevertheless, applying logic derived from the plaintiff-friendly Cunningham ruling (a decision clarifying the pleading requirements for prohibited transaction claims), the court concluded that a fee award was supported under the circumstances present in this lawsuit. The primary reason the court gave as its justification to award defendants attorneys’ fees was the fact that Mr. Kelly “neglected” to review and authenticate the transcripts of his phone calls with Fidelity. The court agreed with defendants that “a majority of this prolonged litigation could have been avoided” if Mr. Kelly had done so. Although the court recognized that Mr. Kelly did not have access to at least one of the call transcripts, it stated that this fact did not excuse his denial of the authenticity of the two transcripts he did have access to. Accordingly, the court said, “Plaintiff bears some culpability in unnecessarily protracting the length of litigation because he had access to the recordings of the November 2 calls prior to initiating the suit and he affirmed the transcripts’ accuracy in the earlier administrative appeal.” Other reasons the court chose to exercise its discretion to award defendants fees included the undisputed fact that Mr. Kelly could afford to pay a fee award and its opinion that cost shifting here will serve to deter similar illegitimate claims from being brought. Having decided to award attorneys’ fees, the court segued to assessing the amounts requested. It began with the Altria defendants. As an initial matter the court noted that Mr. Kelly’s action was only worth a few hundred thousand dollars in total and that the Altria defendants’ fee request alone amounts to nearly half of all of Mr. Kelly’s requested relief. Accordingly, the court sliced away at the fee amount. It took off $10,000 from the requested total that was tacked on for preparing the fee petition. It then deducted a further $29,455 for clerical work, work done on issues on which Altria was unsuccessful, and for time entries related to communication on motions to seal. In addition to these deductions, the court further reduced the requested amount by an additional 10% overall based on the Altria defendants’ degree of success. After applying these adjustments, the court awarded the Altria defendants a total of $76,131 in attorneys’ fees. The court then moved on to Fidelity’s fee request. Fidelity failed to provide an itemized list detailing the work done on the case. As a result, the court found that it could not award Fidelity attorneys’ fees in this order. However, the court gave Fidelity leave to renew its motion for attorneys’ fees “to file more particularized documentation,” presumably so that the court can award it fees too. Thus, Mr. Kelly will be on the hook for tens of thousands dollars – possibly over a hundred thousand – in attorneys’ fees to the parties he sued all because the court did not like his case and does not wish to see more like it.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

First Circuit

Erban v. Tufts Med. Center Physicians Org., Inc., No. 22-cv-11193-PBS, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2025 WL 2319055 (D. Mass. Aug. 12, 2025) (Judge Patti B. Saris). Plaintiff Lisa Erban is the widow of Dr. John Erban, an oncologist and hematologist who worked for over three decades with Tufts Medical Center. Dr. Erban’s career ended abruptly on August 14, 2019 after he went to the emergency room and was diagnosed with a malignant and highly aggressive brain tumor. He underwent surgery the next day and then took leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act. Dr. Erban’s illness prevented him from returning to his work. Because of this, Tufts terminated him on February 12, 2020. Sadly, Dr. Erban died from his illness on September 2, 2020, at the age of 65. This fiduciary breach lawsuit under ERISA stems from the denial of $801,000 worth of basic and supplemental life insurance benefits under Tufts’ policy with Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Company. Ms. Erban sued three defendants: her husband’s employer, Tufts Medical Center Physicians Organization, Inc., the named plan administrator, Tufts Medical Center Physicians Organization, and Tufts’ Director of Human Resources, Nicholas Martin, with whom the Erbans communicated about Dr. Erban’s benefits. Ms. Erban asserts two fiduciary breach claims under Section 502(a)(3). She advances two theories regarding defendants’ breach of fiduciary duty. First, she argues that they failed to inform her and her husband of the option to continue coverage under both the basic and supplemental life insurance policies by continuing premium payments to Hartford under the Continuation and Sickness or Injury provisions of the plan. Second, she alleges that defendants failed to adequately explain the conversion processes for converting the basic and supplemental life insurance policies to an individual policy under the conversion provision. Ms. Erban contends that she detrimentally relied on defendants’ omissions and material misrepresentations, entitling her to equitable estoppel. For relief, she seeks surcharge damages in the full amount of the policies, and relies on the Supreme Court’s decision in CIGNA Corp. v. Amara. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, which the court ruled on in this decision. First, the court considered whether Ms. Erban showed that defendants acted as fiduciaries of the plan. It found she did. As an initial matter, it was undisputed that Tufts, as the named plan administrator, is a fiduciary of the plan. The court therefore focused on the contested question of whether Mr. Martin acted as a fiduciary. The court held that based on the record “no reasonable jury could find that Martin was acting in a purely ministerial capacity. Martin, as director of Tufts’ HR department, affirmatively assumed the role of guiding the Erbans through the benefits preservation process. He invited the Erbans to direct questions about Dr. Erban’s benefits to him and responded to detailed inquiries about the preservation of life insurance coverage. He provided forms, explained options, and made representations about what would happen when Dr. Erban’s employment ended.” This was particularly true as Mr. Martin was aware of Dr. Erban’s illness and his cognitive impairments. Given this knowledge and his role as the family’s point of contact for benefits communication and advice, the court concluded that Mr. Martin functioned as a fiduciary. Next, the court broke apart the two theories of fiduciary breach. It began with the continuation theory. Ms. Erban contended that defendants breached their fiduciary duties under ERISA by failing to inform her that she could continue her husband’s life insurance coverage after he stopped working due to illness because the plan allowed for continuation of coverage, even after termination under the Sickness or Injury provision, so long as premiums continued to be paid. The court agreed with Ms. Erban’s reading of the relevant provisions and determined that the plan unambiguously permits continuation of coverage for twelve months from the last day worked due to illness, regardless of whether an employee has been terminated. Moreover, the court agreed with Ms. Erban that because Mr. Martin never informed her and her husband “of the continuation option, including when Lisa Erban specifically asked Martin if she could ‘just private pay’ their current life insurance plan, Defendants breached their fiduciary duty to provide accurate and complete information.” Accordingly, the court entered judgment in favor of plaintiff on the continuation claim. The court then turned to the conversion claim as to the basic life insurance coverage. The record makes clear that Mr. Martin provided the family with written information conveying the conversion right, the conversion form, and the deadline to complete it. Because defendants provided the Erbans with accurate written materials informing them about conversion with regard to the basic life insurance policy, the court determined that defendants did not breach their duty in this regard. The court therefore entered summary judgment in favor of defendants with respect to the conversion claim for the basic life insurance. By contrast, the court entered judgment in favor of Ms. Erban as to the conversion claim for the supplemental life insurance policy as the undisputed facts demonstrate that defendants never clearly communicated to Ms. Erban either the existence of the supplemental life insurance or the need to convert that policy as well. Finally, the court pulled out its metaphorical machete to cut through the thorny issue of surcharge damages. The court wrote, “[t]he First Circuit has not addressed whether surcharge damages are available under § 502(a)(3), and other circuit courts are divided on the issue. The circuits that recognize surcharge as a form of relief under § 502(a)(3) rely on the Supreme Court’s decision in CIGNA Corp. v. Amara, 563 U.S. 421 (2011).” The court here also relied on Amara, which has never been overturned, to conclude that surcharge is an available form of equitable relief under (a)(3). Accordingly, the court held that Section 502(a)(3) permits ERISA plaintiffs to seek surcharge against a fiduciary and thus denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment on this point. For these reasons, Ms. Erban successfully convinced the court that defendants breached their fiduciary duties to her and her late husband regarding the continuation and supplemental life insurance conversion claims, and that surcharge damages in the full amount of the policies is available to her to remedy this harm. The court ended its decision by ordering the parties to brief the amount of damages to be awarded as equitable relief, so that the court may determine the appropriate amount.

Fourth Circuit

McDonald v. Laboratory Corp. of Am. Holdings, No. 1:22-CV-680, 2025 WL 2325016 (M.D.N.C. Aug. 12, 2025) (Judge Loretta C. Biggs). Plaintiff Damian McDonald sued defendant Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings (“LabCorp”) on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated alleging that LabCorp breached its fiduciary duty of prudence under ERISA by failing to control costs and selecting imprudent investments options in its retirement savings plan. The court held a bench trial on the matter over three days last May. This decision constitutes the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court ultimately concluded that the class failed to meet its burden to establish that LabCorp breached its duty of prudence. The court found “that LabCorp engaged in a prudent process in managing its recordkeeping fees and monitoring the Plan’s investment shares.” Accordingly, the court ruled in favor of LabCorp and against plaintiffs in this decision. Among other shortcomings, the court concluded that the trial testimony of plaintiff’s experts, Al Otto and Ty Minnich, were of “limited probative value” and “not persuasive to this Court.” In particular, the court viewed both experts as offering “sweeping statements about the price tendencies of recordkeeping fees,” and relying “on approximations, generalities, and personal examples rather than basing [their] conclusions on demonstrable data.” In contrast, the court found the testimony of defendant’s expert, Steven Gissiner, probative and persuasive, and more grounded in concrete formulations particular and specific to this case. The court then explained that in its view the record clearly demonstrated that LabCorp followed standard industry practices in overseeing the plan by taking actions like conducting benchmarking studies, hiring outside advisory firms, and meeting regularly to discuss recordkeeping and investment decisions. The court disagreed with plaintiffs that LabCorp fell short in its duties by failing to seek competitive bids for service providers. Instead, the court agreed with Mr. Gissiner that “there are other reasonable, appropriate methods to assess [fee] reasonableness” other than requests for proposals (“RFPs”). Mr. Gissiner testified that “the notion that you have to conduct an RFP to assess and determine whether fees are reasonable is…very much an outdated viewpoint of the market.” The court further highlighted the fact that LabCorp engaged in negotiations with its recordkeeper, Fidelity, twice during the class period following benchmarking studies. Thus, the court found that plaintiffs failed to prove that LabCorp breached its duty of prudence regarding the recordkeeping fee allegations. Moreover, the court determined that plaintiffs also could not establish damages and prove that the plan suffered losses due to the purported excessive recordkeeping fees. The bad news kept coming for plaintiffs when the court addressed their share class claims. There the court held that during the relevant period the committee adopted the lower-cost share classes. But the court stated that even assuming plaintiffs proved that LabCorp breached its duty of prudence, they again could not prove damages because their expert, Mr. Otto, based his damages calculation purely on his own experience. “The evidence presented by Plaintiffs’ – that the Plan lost millions because of alleged imprudent investment decisions – was not credible, and Plaintiffs failed to prove that the damage calculations are anything more than pure speculation.” Thus, the court ruled entirely in LabCorp’s favor and concluded that it acted prudently in its role as plan fiduciary.

Fifth Circuit

Cina v. Cemex, Inc., No. 4:23-cv-00117, 2025 WL 2294331 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 8, 2025) (Magistrate Judge Andrew M. Edison). Plaintiff James Cina is a participant in the Cemex, Inc. Savings Plan. Mr. Cina brings this putative class action against Cemex, Inc. on behalf of the more than 9,000 Cemex employees who participated in the plan at any time between January 3, 2017 and the present alleging that Cemex violated its fiduciary duties under ERISA by failing to monitor, negotiate, or reduce the amount of direct and indirect compensation paid to the plan’s recordkeeper, Fidelity Investments International. Cemex moved to dismiss the case. It argued that Mr. Cina based his claims on pure speculation and unsupported statements, and that he failed to offer meaningful benchmarks against which to compare the challenged costs. In this decision the court disagreed and denied the motion to dismiss. As an initial matter, the court noted that the Fifth Circuit is not among the circuit courts that have adopted a “meaningful benchmark” pleading standard in ERISA fiduciary breach cases. Nevertheless, even assuming that a plaintiff must meet this standard to state a plausible fiduciary breach claim, the court concluded that Mr. Cina had done so here by comparing the fees the Cemex Savings Plan paid to two other plans which had selected the same services, were similar in terms of asset size and their number of participants, and had also employed Fidelity as their recordkeeper. The court found that these two plans offered like-for-like comparisons to the Cemex plan and provided strong support for the allegations that Cemex failed in its fiduciary obligations. Accordingly, the court concluded that the allegations here were “more robust than in other cases where district courts granted motions to dismiss breach of fiduciary duty claims for failure to provide meaningful benchmarks.” Moreover, the court disagreed with Cemex that Mr. Cina’s failure to allege a specific amount of indirect fees Fidelity received through float compensation and revenue sharing amounted to a fatal flaw mandating dismissal. To the contrary, it held that because Mr. Cina does not have access to these figures, he does not need to plead details about them, particularly as his complaint when read as a whole tells a plausible and compelling story from which fiduciary misconduct can be inferred. In sum, the court found that Mr. Cina “painted a picture that supports a plausible inference that Cemex imprudently allowed the Plan to pay an unreasonable amount in recordkeeping fees to Fidelity.” As a result, the court determined that Mr. Cima stated plausible claims and so denied Cemex’s motion to dismiss.

Seventh Circuit

Case v. Generac Power Sys., Inc., No. 21-cv-1100-pp, 2025 WL 2336859 (E.D. Wis. Aug. 13, 2025) (Judge Pamela Pepper). Plaintiff Dereck Case sued Great Power Systems, Inc. and the benefit committee of its 401(k) plan on behalf of himself and a class of similarly situated individuals alleging that defendants breached their fiduciary duties of prudence and monitoring under ERISA by failing to control plan costs. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. They advanced four arguments in favor of dismissal: “(1) the comparator plans identified in the complaint are not sufficiently comparable in size and assets to the defendants’ plan to create a meaningful benchmark of reasonable fees; (2) the plaintiff uses the plan’s average fees over eight years as a benchmark, without acknowledging that the plan’s fees decreased significantly during that period; (3) the complaint compares only a subset of fees charged by the comparator plans to the total fees charged by the defendants’ plan; and (4) the defendant did not err by failing to conduct competitive bidding for RKA services because there is no requirement to do so under ERISA.” The court was persuaded by defendants’ arguments and granted their motion, dismissing the case with prejudice. In particular, the court agreed with defendants that it is not possible to infer they paid excessive recordkeeping fees based on plaintiff’s allegations because his complaint compared defendants’ average fees over the class period to annual fees correlating with specific years for each of the comparator plans. The court therefore felt that these comparisons did not create a meaningful benchmark, and without a meaningful benchmark Mr. Case’s allegations of fiduciary misconduct were not plausible. The court then explained that it would dismiss the case with prejudice because the operative complaint was Mr. Case’s fourth version, meaning he had already had several opportunities to fine-tune his pleadings.

Class Actions

Eighth Circuit

Kloss v. Argent Trust Co., No. 23-301 (DWF/SGE), 2025 WL 2374070 (D. Minn. Aug. 15, 2025) (Judge Donovan W. Frank). Plaintiff Jessica Kloss, as a representative of a class of similarly situated individuals, and on behalf of the TPI Hospitality, Inc. Employee Stock Ownership Plan, moved for preliminary approval of class action settlement under Rule 23. The court granted Ms. Kloss’s motion without any unnecessary hassle or embellishment. The decision was so bare that even the terms of the agreed-upon settlement were not discussed. Instead, the court stated simply that for preliminary purposes it found the settlement to fall within the range of reasonableness and to be “fair, reasonable, and adequate, subject to further consideration at the Fairness Hearing.” The court then quickly gave preliminary certification to the proposed settlement class of participants and beneficiaries of the plan during the relevant period, and for settlement purposes appointed Ms. Kloss as class representative, and the law firms Feinberg Jackson Worthman & Wasow LLP and Nichols Kaster, PLLP as class counsel. The appointment of Simpluris as settlement administrator was also approved by the court. The court set the fairness hearing for November 21, 2025, and instructed class members that any objections must be filed 21 days before that date. It then approved the form and substance of the proposed class notice and noted that defendants sent the required Class Action Fairness Act notice. Finally, class counsel was advised that their application for attorneys’ fees, expenses, and class representative service award should be filed no later than 45 days prior to the date of the fairness hearing. Thus, with no fuss and no muss, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion and preliminarily blessed the settlement.

Disability Benefit Claims

Fifth Circuit

Bellace v. Hartford Life & Accident Co., No. 3:24-CV-00136-K, 2025 WL 2345157 (N.D. Tex. Aug. 13, 2025) (Judge Ed Kinkeade). Plaintiff Kimberly Bellace is a 34-year-old former mechanical engineer who was approved for long-term disability benefits by the insurer of her employer’s disability benefit plan, Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company, after she underwent spinal surgery in July of 2016. This action stems from Hartford’s termination of Ms. Bellace’s disability benefits in May of 2020, when Hartford concluded that despite her pains Ms. Bellace could nonetheless work six-hour days in a sedentary role with modest limitations, and therefore could earn 60% of her pre-disability earnings, such that she no longer qualified for benefits under the policy. Ms. Bellace challenges that decision in this lawsuit. Before the court were the parties’ cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record under Rule 52. The court concluded in this decision, applying de novo review of the administrative record, that Ms. Bellace could not establish by a preponderance of the evidence that her spinal conditions prevented her from working in any reasonable occupation for which she was fitted due to illness or injury as required by the policy. The court took particular note of the fact that two independent physicians assessed that despite Ms. Bellace’s pain she could perform sedentary work with some modest accommodations. Conversely, the court viewed the contradictory opinion of Ms. Bellace’s orthopedic surgeon skeptically, writing that his “assertions about Ms. Bellace’s pain-related limitations [are] conclusory rather than well-supported.” The court thus afforded the surgeon’s assessment of Ms. Bellace’s condition little weight. Moreover, the court highlighted the fact that Ms. Bellace’s pain management specialist did not opine that Ms. Bellace was unable to work. The court therefore found that as of the date of the termination Ms. Bellace could find work in an occupation she is reasonably qualified to perform with her education and background and that she could perform regular, albeit part-time work, despite her medical conditions. Therefore, the court agreed with Hartford that as of May 2020, Ms. Bellace was ineligible for continued coverage under the policy. Accordingly, the court entered judgment in favor of Hartford.

Sixth Circuit

Engweiler v. Howmet Aerospace Inc., No. 1:24-cv-975, 2025 WL 2318464 (W.D. Mich. Aug. 12, 2025) (Judge Hala Y. Jarbou). Plaintiff Adam Engweiler filed this action against Howmet Aerospace, Inc. under ERISA Section 502(a)(1)(B) in response to the termination of his long-term disability benefits in December 2023 under the “any gainful occupation” definition of disability for beneficiaries out of work for longer than twenty-four months. Before his back pain worsened to the point that he felt he could no longer work a full-time job, Mr. Engweiler was employed as an engineer at Howmet. But in 2021 he stopped working after his spinal problems intensified and a surgical intervention failed to alleviate his symptoms. Interestingly, just months before Mr. Engweiler’s disability benefits were terminated, the Social Security Administration deemed him disabled from all occupations for which he was qualified, including sedentary ones. Perhaps recognizing the sensitivity of this timing, the administrator of Howmet’s disability plan, Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company, acknowledged in the denial letter sent to Mr. Engweiler that he was recently awarded Social Security disability benefits, but noted that the Social Security Administration has different criteria from its own and is required to give full deference to his treating physicians. By contrast, Hartford relied on the opinions of the doctor who performed an independent examination on Mr. Engweiler as well as the opinions of its own file-reviewing doctor, which were premised in part on that examination. Relying on these opinions over the opinions of Mr. Engweiler’s doctors, Hartford concluded that Mr. Engweiler could perform certain sedentary occupations for which he was reasonably suited. Mr. Engweiler challenged that decision in this action and moved for judgment on the administrative record. In this order the court found that Hartford did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in terminating Mr. Engweiler’s benefits. It therefore denied his motion for judgment and dismissed the case. The court held that Hartford had considered all of the medical evidence before it and reached a conclusion supported by that evidence. It said that “[n]either during the administrative process nor in his briefing in this Court does Engweiler point to any evidence of his disability that Hartford completely ignored.” Rather, the court found that Hartford could point to substantial evidence in the medical record in support of its decision, and therefore concluded that it was reasonable for Hartford to regard the opinions of Mr. Engweiler’s treating providers as less convincing than the opinions of its own reviewing doctors. Furthermore, the court determined that Hartford had offered clear explanations as to why “it found its contract physicians’ assessments of the functional limitations imposed by Engweiler’s back pain more credible than those of his medical providers.” Finally, the court held that Hartford’s termination of Mr. Engweiler’s benefits so shortly after the Social Security Administration ruled in his favor was not capricious because Hartford devoted considerable time in its denial letter explaining why it did not regard the SSA’s conclusions as decisive. For these reasons, the court found that Hartford’s decision was reasonable, supported by substantial evidence, and not marred by any indicia of arbitrariness. The court therefore denied Mr. Engweiler’s motion for judgment on the administrative record and ordered that the action be dismissed.

McIntyre v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., No. 1:22-CV-265-KAC-CHS, 2025 WL 2375389 (E.D. Tenn. Aug. 15, 2025) (Judge Katherine A Crytzer). Before the court was plaintiff Brooke McIntyre’s objections to Magistrate Judge Christopher H. Steger’s report and recommendation recommending the court grant judgment on the administrative record in favor of defendants First Unum Life Insurance Company and Unum Group Corp. in this ERISA action challenging Unum’s denial of Ms. McIntyre’s claims for long-term disability and life insurance without premiums benefits. Ms. McIntyre applied for these benefits after she began experiencing post-concussion symptoms related to a 2020 car accident. The Magistrate Judge concluded that defendants considered the totality of the medical evidence and correctly concluded that it did not support a finding of disability under the policies because there was evidence of improvement in the medical records which demonstrated that Ms. McIntyre was not continuously disabled throughout the 180-day elimination period. The court overruled Ms. McIntyre’s objections to the report, adopted it in full, and granted judgment in favor of the Unum defendants in this decision. Contrary to Ms. McIntyre’s assertions, the court found that the report correctly concluded that defendants fulfilled their fiduciary obligations to provide a full and fair review of Ms. McIntyre’s claim and that Ms. McIntyre could not show that she was continuously disabled throughout the elimination period based on the objective medical evidence presented. The court therefore overruled her objections and, as the Magistrate Judge recommended, affirmed Unum’s denial of benefits.

Ninth Circuit

Black v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 22-cv-04378-AMO, 2025 WL 2337091 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 13, 2025) (Judge Araceli Martínez-Olguín). On January 29, 2020, plaintiff Leslie Black fell, injured her neck, shoulder, and collarbone, and hit her head. She then initiated a claim for short-term disability benefits with Unum Life Insurance Company of America, which Unum approved. When the short-term disability benefits were ending, Unum commenced an investigation into Ms. Black’s long-term disability eligibility. Because Ms. Black’s claimed disability arose within the first year of her coverage under the policy, Unum evaluated whether the claimed disabling conditions were excluded, either in whole or in part, under the policy’s pre-existing conditions limitation. It found they were and denied Ms. Black’s claim for benefits. After exhausting her administrative remedies, Ms. Black sued Unum under ERISA to challenge its adverse determination. The parties each moved for judgment in their favor under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. The court issued judgment in favor of Unum in this decision. It concluded that Ms. Black’s disabling conditions were diagnosed and treated during the look-back period and that she took prescribed medicines for these issues. During the relevant period, the court noted that Ms. Black was diagnosed with cervical radiculopathy, left shoulder adhesive capsulitis, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, scoliosis, and chronic pain, stiffness, and weakness of the shoulder and neck. The court further found that the disability for which Ms. Black seeks benefits was “‘caused by, contributed to by, or result[ed] from’ these pre-existing conditions. The effect of these conditions on Blac’’s neck and shoulder cannot be dismissed ‘as merely related to the injury’ she suffered as a result of the fall in January 2020. Rather, they are a ‘substantial catalyst’ for the exacerbation and recurrence of conditions she has suffered from during the relevant look back periods and even decades prior. These conditions therefore substantially contributed to the neck and shoulder issues that ground Black’s LTD claim.” Accordingly, the court determined that “the record establishes, more likely than not, that those conditions would have persisted even if she had not suffered a fall in January 2020” and as a result Unum appropriately declined to award long-term disability benefits under the plan based on the policy’s pre-existing conditions limitation. For these reasons, the court granted Unum’s motion for judgment and denied Ms. Black’s motion for judgment.

Eleventh Circuit

Walker v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., No. 24-13066, __ F. App’x __, 2025 WL 2327989 (11th Cir. Aug. 13, 2025) (Before Circuit Judges Lagoa, Abudu, and Anderson). Plaintiff-appellant Alana Walker filed an appeal with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals after the district court concluded that defendant Life Insurance Company of North America’s (“LINA”) decision to terminate her long-term disability benefits was not de novo wrong and granted judgment on the administrative record in its favor. “On appeal, Walker argues that the district court erred because she had presented objective evidence of her disability and the district court discounted that evidence, that the opinions of the consulting doctors were insufficient to undermine the evidence she presented of her disability, that there are no jobs in the national economy that she could perform that would meet the salary requirements set in the policy, and that the award of Social Security benefits was persuasive evidence of disability.” The court of appeals rejected each of these arguments in turn in this unpublished per curiam decision. First, the court of appeals stated that the district court did not commit clear error when it found LINA’s assessment of Ms. Walker’s disability more persuasive than Ms. Walker’s doctors and the results of her functional capacity exam. The Eleventh Circuit noted that the three physicians hired by LINA examined all of Ms. Walker’s medical records thoroughly, explained the reasons they drew the conclusions they did, and relied on the results of the independent medical exam LINA conducted which conflicted with the results of the functional capacity exam. And while all of LINA’s consulting doctors recognized that Ms. Walker’s physical conditions subject her to some restrictions, the court of appeals determined that the district court acted appropriately in finding that these restrictions would not preclude Ms. Walker from performing the sedentary job of a financial manager, a job LINA’s vocational expert identified as one that Ms. Walker could perform. Speaking of that position, the appeals court further determined that the lower court had not erred when it found that Ms. Walker was qualified for this job and that it met the requirements set out in the policy. Finally, the Eleventh Circuit held that the district court provided sound and cogent reasons for discounting the persuasiveness of the Social Security Administration’s decision. On these grounds the court of appeals affirmed the district court’s decision.

ERISA Preemption

Seventh Circuit

Northwestern Memorial Healthcare v. Anthem Blue Cross of Cal., No. 1:24-CV-02941, 2025 WL 2306814 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 11, 2025) (Judge Edmond E. Chang). When plaintiff Northwestern Memorial Healthcare received payments that were roughly half the amount it billed to Anthem Blue Cross of California for medical treatment it provided to nine Blue Cross-insured patients, Northwestern Memorial sued Anthem. In its lawsuit the provider claims that Anthem breached their implied contract and unjustly benefitted from the care Northwestern provided to these patients. Anthem moved to dismiss the action for failure to state a claim for relief. The court granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss. Before assessing the implied contract and quantum meruit claims, the court addressed the threshold issue of ERISA preemption. It concluded that Northwestern’s state law claims do not require the court to interpret the terms of the health insurance plans. The court reasoned that before Northwestern Memorial “treated the nine Anthem patients, Northwestern sought pre-authorization from Anthem for all of the planned care. And Anthem provided that authorization, thereby confirming that all of the expected treatment was medically necessary and covered by the patients’ Anthem health insurance plans. That means that there is no remaining question about whether the provided treatment was within the scope of the patients’ insurance plans. That question has already been answered by the parties’ conduct – at least as alleged by Northwestern and as the premise of its specific claims. Thus, there is no need for the Court to independently dig into the Anthem plans’ terms to make a determination about treatment coverage. So deciding Northwestern’s state-law claims would not require interpretation or application of the terms of the ERISA plans.” Based on this rationale that preauthorization resolved the medical necessity question and removed the need to examine plan terms, the court concluded that the two state law claims do not relate to ERISA and are therefore not preempted by the federal statute. However, Northwestern was not entirely out of the woods after the court came to this conclusion. The court still needed to assess the two state law claims. Ultimately, it concluded that Northwestern’s breach of implied contract claim could not survive because Northwestern Memorial already had a pre-existing contractual duty to treat Anthem’s patients. That being said, the court denied Anthem’s motion to dismiss the quantum meruit claim. Regarding that claim, the court found that there was no written contract directly between the parties and that the complaint plausibly lays out the ways that Northwestern conferred several benefits upon Anthem. As a result, the court ordered discovery to commence as to the quantum meruit claim. 

Ninth Circuit

Beach Dist. Surgery Center v. Computacenter U.S. Inc., No. CV 25-5221-E, 2025 WL 2294329 (C.D. Cal. Aug. 8, 2025) (Magistrate Judge Charles F. Eick). Plaintiff Beach District Surgery Center is a medical provider in Los Angeles, California. On May 7, 2025, the surgery center filed a complaint in California state court against the plan administrator of an ERISA-governed health plan, defendant Computacenter U.S. Inc., alleging claims of negligent misrepresentation and promissory estoppel after the plan made a payment of just $2,260.48 on a bill for $61,760.00, which it alleges was not in keeping with telephonic promises made regarding the rate of payment for the medical services it rendered. Defendant removed the action, asserting that ERISA completely preempts the state law causes of action. Beach District Surgery Center disagreed and filed a motion to remand its action back to state court. The court granted the motion to remand in this decision. It concluded that plaintiff’s action was on all fours with the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Marin General Hosp. v. Modesto & Empire Traction Co., 581 F.3d 941 (9th Cir. 2009). “The present case is legally indistinguishable from the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Marin. There, as here, the plaintiff pled only state law claims arising from the defendant’s alleged telephonic promise regarding the rate to be paid for medical services rendered by the plaintiff to a patient covered by an ERISA plan. In ruling that complete preemption did not apply, the Marin Court reasoned that, under the first prong of the Davila test, that plaintiff’s state law claims could not have been brought under ERISA because such claims arose ‘out of the telephone conversation’ and were based on an ‘alleged oral contract’ between the plaintiff and the defendant. The Marin Court also reasoned that, under the second prong of the Davila test, the plaintiff’s claims were based on an ‘independent’ legal duty under state law arising out of the same telephone conversation.” The court therefore concluded that the reasoning in Marin applied neatly here and required the same finding. Accordingly, the court agreed with plaintiff that its action must be remanded to state court.

Pension Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Nilsen v. Teachers Ins. and Annuity Association of Am., No. 24-cv-08306-BLF, 2025 WL 2337123 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 13, 2025) (Judge Beth Labson Freeman). Plaintiff Karina Nilsen sued Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (“TIAA”), College Retirement Equities Fund (“CREF”), and TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc. (collectively, “TIAA-CREF”), along with her late husband Robert Moffat’s ex-wife Ruth Taka, seeking to recover past and future benefits under two annuity contracts obtained by Mr. Moffat pursuant to an ERISA pension plan maintained by his former employer, Stanford University. The benefits that Ms. Nilsen believes she is entitled to are being paid to Ms. Taka, who was married to Mr. Moffat at the time of his retirement from Stanford in 1993, and is the named beneficiary of the joint and survivor benefits. Ms. Nilsen maintains that her husband received a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (“QDRO”) in 2010 wherein the state court designated her as the alternate payee of the annuities at issue. Ms. Nilsen argues that Ms. Taka waived all rights to the annuity contracts when she and Mr. Moffat divorced. In her complaint, Ms. Nilsen asserts three causes of action: a claim for benefits and clarification of rights, a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, and a claim for declaratory relief. The TIAA-CREF defendants moved to dismiss all three claims. First, TIAA-CREF argued that Ms. Nilsen’s claim for benefits and clarification of rights under Section 502(a)(1)(B) is foreclosed by the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Carmona v. Carmona, 603 F.3d 1041 (9th Cir. 2010). In Carmona the Ninth Circuit held that “the surviving spouse benefits irrevocably vest in the current spouse when the plan participant retires.” The court agreed with defendants that it is clear on the face of the complaint that Mr. Moffat and Ms. Taka were married on the annuity start date, making her the surviving spouse entitled to the qualified joint and survivor annuity benefits at issue. Moreover, the complaint does not allege that Ms. Taka waived her entitlement to the joint and survivor annuity benefits in writing before the annuity start date. As for the QDRO issued after Mr. Moffat’s retirement, the court again agreed with TIAA-CREF that under Carmona “a QDRO issued after the participant’s retirement may not alter or assign the surviving spouse’s interest to a subsequent spouse.” Accordingly, the court granted the motion to dismiss the first cause of action. The court also dismissed the breach of fiduciary duty claim under ERISA, reasoning that because Ms. Nilsen is not the payee of the annuities, she “is a stranger to the annuity contracts and thus is not owed any fiduciary duties by TIAA-CREF.” Finally, the court dismissed the derivative claim seeking declaratory relief. For these reasons, the court granted the motion to dismiss. It ended its decision by clarifying that the dismissal was without leave to amend, as the Ninth Circuit’s holding in Carmona makes it impossible for Ms. Nilsen to amend her pleading to allege a viable ERISA claim grounded in TIAA-CREF’s failure to pay her the annuity benefits.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Second Circuit

East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery, LLC v. Cigna Health & Life Ins. Co., Nos. 25 Civ. 1686 and 25 Civ. 255 (PAE), 2025 WL 2371537 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 14, 2025) (Judge Paul A. Engelmayer). This decision ruled on parallel motions to dismiss in two related healthcare cases. The first action was filed by Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company against East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery, LLC, a New-Jersey based medical practice that specializes in post-mastectomy breast reconstruction surgery. In its lawsuit Cigna alleges that the provider has engaged in fraudulent billing practices which include fee forgiveness, fraudulent claim bundling, duplicative billing for claims, and billing for services that are medically unnecessary. Cigna maintains that its internal investigation of East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery’s billing practices has revealed the provider’s allegedly unlawful actions have caused at least $8,564,795.58 in losses to Cigna and the Cigna Plans between January 1, 2025 to the present. Cigna brings claims under both ERISA and state law. The second action was filed by East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery along with Marcella Livolsi, a participant in a Cigna-administered ERISA healthcare plan who received breast reconstruction surgery at East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery’s facility. These parties sued both Cigna and the health insurance intermediary Multiplan, Inc. asserting claims under ERISA, the federal No Surprises Act, and under state law. As noted, the parties each moved for dismissal of the other’s lawsuit. The court granted in part and denied in part the provider’s motion to dismiss Cigna’s complaint and granted in full Cigna and Multiplan’s motions to dismiss East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery and Ms. Livolsi’s action. The court tackled the motion to dismiss the Cigna case first. As an initial matter, the court found that Cigna has standing to bring its ERISA claim for equitable relief as well as its state law causes of action because it alleges not only that the ERISA plans were harmed, but that it was harmed directly by the provider’s allegedly fraudulent billing practices. The court then discussed whether to dismiss any of the causes of action for failure to state a claim. It declined to dismiss the claim under ERISA. The court determined that Cigna plausibly pleads it is an ERISA fiduciary for each of the plans at issue and that the provider’s alleged fee forgiving practices are in violation of the terms of the plans. Moreover, the court determined that Cigna is seeking appropriate equitable relief under Section 502(a)(3) and that its complaint properly pleads each element required to pursue this relief. In addition to denying the motion to dismiss the ERISA claim, the court also denied the motion to dismiss the fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and unjust enrichment claims. The court concluded that the complaint meets Rule 9(b)’s heightened pleading standard for fraud claims, and that the unjust enrichment claim can go ahead for now as an alternative theory. However, the court granted the provider’s motion to dismiss Cigna’s conversion, Connecticut General Theft Act, and Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act claims, as well as a claim under the Declaratory Judgment Act. The court then turned to Cigna and Multiplan’s motions to dismiss Ms. Livolsi and East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery’s complaint. To begin, the court agreed with Cigna that although Ms. Livolsi framed her ERISA claim as a breach of fiduciary duty claim, the relief she seeks, namely restitution, is not truly equitable in nature. “Thus, despite Livolsi’s efforts to ‘couch the nature of her claim in equitable terms to allow relief under§ 502(a)(3),’ the ‘gravamen of this action remains a claim for monetary compensation and that, above all else, dictates the relief available.’” Having determined that the relief Ms. Livolsi sought was unavailable under Section 502(a)(3), the court dismissed the claim. It then dismissed East Coast Advanced Plastic Surgery’s claims under the No Surprises Act. Quite simply, the court held that the No Surprises Act contains no private right of action, either express or implied, to enforce independent dispute resolution awards. Further, the court stated that the provider’s request for a declaration that Cigna violated the No Surprises Act was also not viable because the Declaratory Judgment Act does not provide an independent cause of action. Finally, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ state law causes of action. For these reasons, the court granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss the Cigna action and granted in whole the motion to dismiss the provider’s lawsuit. Every claim that was dismissed was dismissed without prejudice.

Third Circuit

Genesis Lab. Management LLC v. United Healthcare Services, Inc., No. 21cv12 057 (EP) (JSA), 2025 WL 2308528 (D.N.J. Aug. 11, 2025) (Judge Evelyn Padin). Plaintiff Genesis Laboratory Management LLC filed this action against defendants United HealthCare Services, Inc. and Oxford Health Plans, Inc. for alleged failure to fully reimburse it for COVID-19 testing and other medical services it provided to defendants’ insureds, plan members, and beneficiaries. Genesis’s complaint alleged claims under ERISA and state law, including contract claims, tort claims, and claims alleging violations of New Jersey’s insurance regulating statutes. Defendants moved to dismiss. The court granted their motion in part and denied it in part, dismissing all state law claims and allowing the ERISA claims to proceed only as to plans from United members whose assignments of benefits were effective at the time the lawsuit commenced. Genesis moved for reconsideration. In this brief decision the court denied its motion, concluding that it failed to set forth a valid basis for reconsideration. First, the court declined to reverse its finding that assignments of benefits executed after the commencement of litigation cannot retroactively confer standing under ERISA. The court stated that Genesis offered no controlling decision of law that it had overlooked nor any intervening change in controlling law in support of its arguments, and instead was using its motion for reconsideration as a vehicle to recapitulate arguments the court already considered and rejected before rendering its decision. Next, the court refused to disturb its previous findings as to the state law causes of action. Again, the court was of the opinion that Genesis failed to “show more than a disagreement with the Court’s decision.” Finally, the court exercised its discretion to decline to enter partial final judgment as to the dismissed claims. Accordingly, the court denied Genesis’s motion and the status quo in the case remained unchanged.

In re: JC USA. v. H.I.G. Capital Management LLC, No. 23-10585 (JKS), 2025 WL 2354184 (D. Del. Aug. 13, 2025) (Judge J. Kate Stickles). Plaintiffs in this action are former employees of the weight loss company Jenny Craig. In May of 2023, Jenny Craig closed all of its locations and subsequently filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Its workers were not warned about the mass layoff beforehand. The workers allege that in addition to having no advance warning of their layoffs, they were not paid outstanding wages and benefits for their last pay period and their employer did not reserve enough cash to pay these outstanding amounts. Additionally, plaintiffs contend that Jenny Craig’s private equity owner, H.I.G. Capital Management, LLC, failed to provide them with COBRA notices and breached their contract as to their medical insurance benefits. These employment problems, and more, led the frustrated former employees to sue H.I.G. Capital Management. Defendant responded to the lawsuit by moving to dismiss. In this order the court granted the motion to dismiss, but allowed leave for plaintiffs to amend their complaint. One overarching problem the court identified was the complaint’s failure to adequately plead that H.I.G. Capital Management was their employer. As the court noted, all of plaintiffs’ causes of action are premised on an employer-employee relationship. However, the court noted that plaintiffs may be able to overcome this deficiency by amending their complaint. The court then pulled apart further problems with each of plaintiffs’ causes of action. First, the court found that the complaint does not plausibly allege a claim under the WARN Act as it fails to allege that H.I.G. ordered any layoff or termination. The court next dismissed the labor violation and wage claims for failure to plead sufficient factual support. Turning to the COBRA notice claim, the court found that plaintiffs failed to allege that H.I.G. was the plan administrator. Finally, the court determined that plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim regarding the medical insurance benefits was completely preempted by ERISA. The court wrote, “[t]he Complaint alleges H.I.G. breached the employment contract it had with the Plaintiffs because it made deductions from the Plaintiffs’ monthly paychecks and subsequently failed to provide continued health insurance. The case law makes clear that state law cause of action based on such allegations are pre-empted by ERISA. The Court will therefore grant the Motion to Dismiss as to the breach of contract claim.” Despite identifying a myriad of issues with the complaint as is, the court nevertheless disagreed with H.I.G. Capital Management that there are no additional facts which could save the complaint. Therefore, the court granted plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint to try and remedy the issues identified in this decision.

Seventh Circuit

Cella v. Lilly USA, LLC, No. 1:24-cv-00814-TWP-MKK, 2025 WL 2314732 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 11, 2025) (Judge Tanya Walton Pratt). Plaintiff Daniel Cella initiated this lawsuit in May of 2024 after he was terminated from Lilly USA LLC. In his complaint Mr. Cella asserted two causes of action. Count I sought to recover benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, while count II alleged that Lilly interfered with his benefit rights under Section 510 of ERISA. Lilly and the Lilly Severance Plan timely moved to dismiss the interference claim but neglected to file an answer to the claim for benefits. Despite having never filed an answer to count I, the case proceeded and the parties continued to litigate. They engaged in discovery, and on February 11, 2025, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss count II. The parties then filed a joint notice requesting the case be set for a bench trial on the Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim. Then, on May 13, 2025, Mr. Cella filed a motion for entry of default against defendants for failure to defend against count I. Defendants responded by filing a motion for leave to file an answer to count I and an opposition to Mr. Cella’s motion for entry of default. They argued that their failure to timely file an answer to count I was because the paralegal assigned to the case did not enter the deadline in counsel’s calendar. While certainly not ideal, the court determined that defendants’ failure to timely file an answer to count I was the result of excusable neglect. The court noted that Mr. Cella was not prejudiced by the omission, that the failure had no impact on the proceedings as the parties carried on litigating the case as if count I was still in dispute, and that the cited reason for the mistake appears to be “mere negligence rather than Defendant’s willful disregard of the Court’s deadlines.” Finally, the court found no evidence that Lilly or the plan acted in bad faith. Thus, the court concluded that the error was harmless and excusable, and that it does not justify entering default against defendants. Accordingly, the court wished to resolve the case on the merits. It therefore granted defendants’ motion for leave and denied as moot Mr. Cella’s motion for entry of default.

Platt v. Sodexo, S.A., No. 23-55737, __ F.4th __, 2025 WL 2203415 (9th Cir. Aug. 4, 2025); Avecilla v. Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., No. 23-55725, __ F. App’x __, 2025 WL 2206153 (9th Cir. Aug. 4, 2025) (Before Circuit Judges Friedland and Desai, and District Judge Karen E. Schreier)

In these two cases the Ninth Circuit, like so many circuit courts before it, tackled the interplay between arbitration and ERISA. Both appeals addressed the same issues, and rather than write two nearly identical decisions, the court elected to issue a longer published opinion in Platt while referencing that ruling in a shorter companion memorandum in Avecilla. As a result, in order to simplify things, we’ll limit our analysis to the Platt decision.

The plaintiff was Robert Platt, an employee of Sodexo, Inc., the food services and facilities management company. He filed suit against Sodexo, alleging that its imposition of a monthly tobacco surcharge on his employee health insurance premiums violated ERISA. He brought class action claims under two provisions. First, Platt alleged that the plan violated § 502(a)(3) because it failed to provide a “reasonable alternative standard” for plan participants to avoid paying the surcharge, and did not provide notice of such a standard. Second, Platt asserted a class claim under § 502(a)(1)(B) for violating the plan in implementing the tobacco surcharge. Finally, Platt alleged a breach of fiduciary duty claim under § 502(a)(2) on behalf of the plan.

Sodexo moved to compel arbitration based on a provision that it had unilaterally added to the plan in 2021. The district court denied Sodexo’s motion on two grounds. First, it ruled that the plan did not allow Sodexo to unilaterally add the arbitration provision. Second, it ruled that Platt, who had become a plan participant in 2016, i.e., before the amendment, had never agreed to arbitration. In so ruling the district court dodged other arguments made by Platt, which included that the plan’s arbitration agreement was unenforceable because it violated the effective vindication doctrine and because parts of it were unconscionable. (Your ERISA Watch covered the district court’s ruling in our August 2, 2023 edition.)

Sodexo appealed. The Ninth Circuit agreed with some of the district court’s rulings, and disagreed with others, but the result was largely a win for Platt and his fellow employees.

First, the Ninth Circuit noted that in order to compel arbitration, there must be a valid agreement between the parties in which both sides consent to arbitration. Sodexo argued that consent was unnecessary because ERISA allows plan administrators the freedom to amend plans as they wish, including the addition of arbitration provisions. However, the Ninth Circuit ruled that ERISA does not address arbitration and thus refused to interpret ERISA in a way that would displace ordinary arbitration rules, including the necessity of consent.

Because consent was required, the Ninth Circuit next asked who the relevant consenting parties were. For Platt’s claims under § 502(a)(1)(B) and § 502(a)(3), the court ruled that Platt was the relevant party. After all, Platt had alleged that he and other plan participants had been forced to pay an illegal fee because of the plan’s unlawful tobacco surcharge provision, and thus they had been harmed and were required to give consent to arbitration.

The court further ruled that Platt had not agreed to arbitration. Sodexo contended that because Platt continued participating in the plan after Sodexo added the arbitration provision, Platt had effectively consented to the provision. However, Platt did not recall receiving notice of a 2021 summary of material modifications explaining the amendment, and Sodexo could not produce the email it claimed it had sent to Platt which included a copy of that summary. The best Sodexo could do was produce an email to Platt in 2022 which included a hyperlink to the new summary plan description which included the arbitration provision. However, the provision was buried on page 153 of a 170-page document.

The court ruled that these communications “did not provide sufficient notice of the arbitration provision… It is unreasonable to expect that Platt would notice a new arbitration provision hidden in a lengthy document.” Furthermore, “the 2022 email contained no express language that Sodexo was adding the new arbitration provision or that his continued participation in the Plan constituted consent or agreement to the new provision.” Even if Sodexo’s communications had been satisfactory, the court ruled there still was insufficient notice to establish consent. There was no evidence that Platt had given “some indication of assent to the contract.” As a result, “the arbitration provision is unenforceable as to his § 502(a)(1)(B) and § 502(a)(3) claims.”

The court’s analysis differed when it came to Platt’s § 502(a)(2) claim, however. On that claim, the court concluded that the plan was the relevant consenting party, not Platt. This was because Platt brought this claim in a representative capacity on behalf of the plan. In his claim he sought redress on behalf of the plan for losses the plan incurred from Sodexo’s alleged fiduciary breaches and for profits that Sodexo improperly obtained using plan assets. The court easily found that the plan had consented to arbitration: “Because the terms of the Plan expressly cede broad authority to Sodexo to amend its terms, a reasonable person would believe that the Plan consented to the arbitration provision that was added by Sodexo.”

However, Sodexo was not out of the woods. Platt argued that even if the plan consented to the arbitration provision, it was still invalid under the effective vindication doctrine. The court agreed. The Ninth Circuit noted that § 502(a)(2) authorizes plan participants to bring actions for relief on behalf of the plan. However, the plan’s arbitration provision contained a representative action waiver “which expressly precludes Platt from bringing claims in a representative capacity on the Plan’s behalf.” Because this provision precluded Platt from obtaining plan-wide relief explicitly authorized by ERISA, it prevented him from “effectively vindicating” his rights under ERISA, and thus it was unenforceable. The Ninth Circuit added that this conclusion was consistent with the decisions of other circuit courts which had applied the effective vindication doctrine. (For further background on the doctrine, feel free to read Your ERISA Watch’s analyses of similar decisions from the Sixth, Seventh, and Tenth Circuits.)

The Ninth Circuit also ruled that Platt’s unconscionability arguments were viable. Sodexo contended that those arguments were rooted in California state law, and thus could not be used in an ERISA case, which of course is governed by federal law. However, the Ninth Circuit agreed with Platt that his unconscionability arguments were federal in nature. After all, the Federal Arbitration Act allows “generally applicable contract defenses, such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability” to invalidate arbitration agreements. Thus, Platt was free to allege such defenses under federal common law, “borrowing from state law where appropriate, and guided by the policies expressed in ERISA and other federal labor laws.” The court did not opine as to whether any of the provisions identified by Platt were unconscionable or not, or whether the unlawful representative action waiver could be severed from the rest of the arbitration provision, leaving that to the district court for further consideration.

As a result, the Ninth Circuit concluded that (a) “no arbitration agreement exists between Platt and Sodexo for the ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B) and § 502(a)(3) claims because Platt did not consent to arbitration,” (b) “a valid arbitration agreement may exist between the Plan and Sodexo for the ERISA § 502(a)(2) claim because the Plan consented,” (c) “Platt may raise unconscionability defenses to arbitration under federal common law,” and (d) “the representative action waiver in the arbitration agreement violates the effective vindication doctrine.” Having affirmed in part and reversed in part, the Ninth Circuit thus remanded the case to the district court to sort out the issues with its new instructions.

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

Attorneys’ Fees

First Circuit

Jackson v. New England Biolabs, Inc., No. 23-12208-RGS, 2025 WL 2256261 (D. Mass. Aug. 7, 2025) (Judge Richard G. Stearns). Plaintiffs Melissa Jackson and Marta Meda filed this class action against New England Biolabs, Inc. and the other fiduciaries of the company’s employee stock ownership plan, alleging that defendants violated ERISA in the valuation of the company’s stock and through a 2019 amendment that set new methods for establishing the price paid for New England Biolabs stock which allegedly did not reflect the stock’s fair market value. On April 3, 2024, the court “dismissed the claims challenging the 2019 amendment and allowed the claims challenging the valuation to proceed.” The court then directed the parties to begin mediation. In April of 2025, the parties reached a formal settlement agreement, agreeing to a settlement fund worth $7,150,000. The court preliminarily approved the terms of the settlement and scheduled a fairness hearing for August 6, 2025. Before the court here was plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees, costs, expenses, and service awards to the two class representatives. In this order the court granted the fee motion, but awarded fees that were lower than what plaintiffs requested. The court tackled the motion for attorneys’ fees first. Plaintiffs’ counsel sought an award of attorneys’ fees equivalent to 25% of the settlement fund, approximately $1,787,500. The court determined that “a fee of 20% of the settlement fund [i]s a reasonable percentage, translating into an award of $1,430,000.” The court took time to recognize the complexity of this litigation and the substantial benefit counsel achieved for the class. It also stated that it wished to encourage efforts to bring cases to a prompt and just conclusion through successful mediation. Nevertheless, the court determined that there were certain factors present which offset these positives, including its dismissal of the claims relating to the 2019 amendment and the fact that no formal discovery took place. It concluded these factors warranted a slight downward adjustment of the fee request, hence the decision to adjust the common-fund award down to 20%. The court then assessed plaintiffs’ request for reimbursement of $17,445.31 in litigation expenses and $5,356 in settlement administration expenses. The court awarded these requested amounts in full, as it found them reasonable and appropriately documented. Finally, the court discussed the motion for class representative service awards. Ms. Jackson and Ms. Meda requested service award payments of $20,000 each. The court awarded them $15,000 each instead. It applauded plaintiffs for the risks they undertook bringing this action and for the time and effort they each spent representing the class. However, the court found that because neither sat for a deposition or participated in any formal discovery, a slight downward adjustment was appropriate, and more in line with other awards granted in the First Circuit. For these reasons, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees, expenses, and class representative service awards, but not in the full amounts plaintiffs had hoped for.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Ninth Circuit

Wit v. United Behavioral Health, No. 14-cv-02346-JCS, 2025 WL 2227681 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 5, 2025) (Magistrate Judge Joseph C. Spero). Readers of Your ERISA Watch, even casual ones, are likely at least somewhat familiar with this long-running class action alleging that United Behavioral Health violated ERISA through its design and implementation of its own internal mental health guidelines that plaintiffs claim were unreasonable and inconsistent with generally accepted standards of medical care. For those of you who aren’t familiar with this case, suffice it to say that both sides have had their victories and defeats over the past 11 years. Indeed, both sides experienced some success and some failure in this most recent decision too, which was issued on remand following the Ninth Circuit’s fourth ruling in this matter. As the district court presented it, there were two issues to address on remand: (1) identifying any surviving aspect of the breach of fiduciary duty claim that was not based on the district court’s erroneous interpretations of the plans, and (2) assuming some part of the fiduciary breach claim survives, answering the threshold question of whether the fiduciary duty claim is subject to the exhaustion requirement. The parties each presented their own “all-or-nothing positions” on these two issues. Plaintiffs asserted that the court had not relied on any misinterpretation of the plan in support of its judgment on the breach of fiduciary duty claim, and therefore the claim survives the Ninth Circuit’s decision in its entirety. Plaintiffs also argued that exhaustion is not required for fiduciary breach claims. United Behavioral Health asserted that the fiduciary breach claim is essentially identical to the denial of benefits claims and thus the court is required to enter judgment in its favor on the claim. Further, United Behavioral Health argued that plaintiffs were required to exhaust administrative remedies before bringing their fiduciary breach claim. The court found that both sides’ positions on the question of what exactly survives of the fiduciary breach claim “deviate from the Panel’s holdings in Wit III and Wit IV.” The court stressed that while it had “no doubt that the Panel reversed [its] judgment on the breach of fiduciary duty as to at least some portion of that claim,” it was nevertheless unpersuaded by United’s argument that it was required to enter judgment in its favor on the whole of the claim. It noted that the panel could have adopted United Behavioral Health’s position in Wit III and Wit IV and instructed the court to enter judgment on the fiduciary breach claim, as it did with to the denial of benefits claim, but it did not do so. Thus, the court was left to parse what exactly of the fiduciary breach claim survived. It found its answer by splitting the claim into two distinct types of breach of fiduciary duty: a breach claim based on the application of the guidelines to the class members’ claims and a breach of the duty of loyalty and care based on the separate conduct of adopting the guidelines in the first place, which was done in order to serve its own financial self-interest. The court additionally clarified that it had recognized in its summary judgment order that plaintiffs “satisfied the harm element of their breach of fiduciary duty claim based on two kinds of harm: ‘the denial of their rights to Guidelines that were developed for their benefit and to a fair adjudication of their claims.’” Reading the Ninth Circuit’s decisions closely, the court came to the conclusion that “because the breach of fiduciary duty claim based on failure to adhere to plan terms implicates the application of the Guidelines to class members’ individual claims for benefits, that portion of the breach of fiduciary duty claim is intertwined with the error that the Panel found required reversal as to the denial of benefits claim. Therefore, the Court finds that the judgment it entered on the breach of fiduciary duty claim has been reversed with respect to the alleged breach based on failure to adhere to plan terms. On the other hand, the Court’s findings as to the breach of the duty of care and the duty of loyalty are not intertwined with the erroneous interpretation of the Plans identified by the Panel and therefore, the Court’s judgment on the breach of fiduciary duty claim survives to the extent that it is based on those theories.” The court then discussed whether the fiduciary duty claim is subject to the exhaustion requirement. It agreed with plaintiffs that it is not. The court stated, “Plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claim is based on ‘willful and systematic’ conduct, namely, adoption of Guidelines – ostensibly to implement the plans’ common [generally accepted standards of care] precondition – that were overly restrictive and put profits before the interests of plan beneficiaries. This conduct affected plan beneficiaries across-the-board and violated statutory requirements of ERISA, namely, the duties of loyalty and care under 29 U.S.C. §§ 29 USC § 1104(a)(1)(A) & (B).” Based on this understanding, the court found that the portion of the fiduciary breach claim that survived Wit III and Wit IV is a statutory claim for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA, and not a disguised claim for benefits that would be subject to exhaustion. In the alternative, the court also concluded that the exhaustion of the surviving portion of the breach of fiduciary duty claim is excused based on its finding of futility. It wrote, “exhaustion would have been futile because [defendant’s] administrative appeal process required that the same Guidelines be applied to the appeal as were used to deny benefits. In other words, Plaintiffs who pursued administrative remedies under the plan would not have been able to challenge the conduct upon which the breach of the duties of loyalty and care are based, namely, [United Behavioral Health’s] adoption of Guidelines based on its own financial interest and not solely in the interest of plan participants.” For these reasons, although neither party came out entirely victorious here, plaintiffs at least maintain their fiduciary breach claim in some form and no longer have the issue of exhaustion hanging over their heads. The decision concluded with the court ordering the parties to meet and confer regarding next steps in this case. Thus, while we observers might be at our wits’ end with this case, Wit itself is still not at an end.

Tenth Circuit

Middleton v. Amentum Parent Holdings, LLC, No. 23-CV-2456-EFM-BGS, 2025 WL 2229959 (D. Kan. Aug. 5, 2025) (Judge Eric F. Melgren). Plaintiffs Jay Middleton and George A. Lawrence bring this putative class action on behalf of themselves, a proposed class, and the Amentum 401(k) Retirement Plan and the DynCorp International Savings Plan alleging that the fiduciaries of the two retirement plans have breached their duties of prudence, loyalty, and monitoring, engaged in prohibited transactions, and violated ERISA’s anti-inurement provision. Plaintiffs’ allegations fall into two categories: one addressing the use of forfeited employer contributions, and the other pertaining to the selection and retention of costly and poorly performing investment options. Defendants moved to dismiss, asserting plaintiffs failed to state a claim. In this decision the court dismissed the forfeiture claims, but basically let the investment claims proceed. Contrary to defendants’ arguments, the court found that for the most part the complaint plausibly alleges “that Defendants (1) failed to utilize the lowest-cost share class versions of several of the funds offered by the Plan; (2) failed to replace certain T. Rowe Price mutual funds with substantially identical, but much less expensive, collective investment trust (‘CIT’) versions of the same funds; (3) selected and retained high-cost, single asset investment options that were more expensive than substantially similar alternative options; and (4) failed to replace index funds with less expensive versions of funds that track the same index.” The court was mostly satisfied that plaintiffs compared the challenged investment options to benchmarks that were similar in terms of investment strategy, design, and risk. The one exception to this holding involved the actively managed funds versus the passively managed funds. The court agreed with defendants that “actively managed funds cannot be meaningfully compared to the passively managed funds because they are fundamentally different.” Accordingly, the court granted the motion to dismiss this small subset of investment claims, but otherwise concluded that the claim was adequate. The forfeiture causes of action were a different story. The court rejected these claims across the board. Although it determined that plaintiffs were alleging fiduciary acts relating to the use of the forfeited funds, it nevertheless concluded that the use of the forfeitures satisfies ERISA’s fiduciary mandates, plaintiffs cannot create a new benefit for themselves out of thin air, and the claims “flout established law.” The court accordingly dismissed the fiduciary breach claims as they relate to the use of the forfeited contributions. As for the prohibited transaction claims, the court found that using the forfeited funds as a substitute for future employer contributions could not constitute a prohibited transaction because the funds remained in the plan, the plans remained funded, and the plan participants suffered no harm. Finally, the court brushed aside the notion that the defendants benefitted from their chosen use of the forfeitures, stressing instead that the participants continued to receive the benefits. The allegations plaintiffs made in their complaint, the court found, therefore could not state a claim that defendants violated ERISA’s anti-inurement provision. For these reasons, the court dismissed all claims relating to the defendants’ use of forfeitures. Finally, the court denied plaintiffs’ request for leave to amend their complaint, stating they did not “indicate how they would remedy any deficiencies and instead appear to seek an advisory ruling by the Court as to the shortcomings in their allegations.” Thus, as explained above, defendants’ motion to dismiss was granted in part and denied in part, and plaintiffs were left with their investment claims only.

Discovery

Third Circuit

Choi v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 24-06338-JKS-AME, 2025 WL 2234903 (D.N.J. Aug. 6, 2025) (Magistrate Judge Andre M. Espinosa). Plaintiff Katie Choi filed this action under Section 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA to challenge Unum Life Insurance Company of America’s decision to terminate her long-term disability benefits in the summer of 2023. Before the court here was Ms. Choi’s motion to compel discovery wherein she sought broad production relating to Unum’s conflict of interest in the handling of her disability claim. “Among other things, the discovery requests seek to explore Unum’s compensation and performance evaluations of those benefits specialists, directors, and other individuals involved in her LTD benefits claim review; financial metrics, recovery and claim closing targets, and other claims administration data Unum maintains; and information concerning the file-reviewing physicians’ other work for Unum, in particular, their record of involvement with claims that are denied. Plaintiff also wishes to depose the Unum disability benefit specialist who denied her claim for LTD benefits, the director who oversaw that denial, and Dr. Greenstein.” The court was antagonistic to Ms. Choi’s discovery requests. She asserted that there was reasonable suspicion of Unum’s misconduct in the handling of her claim because Unum has a long and persistent history of biased claims administration, employs systems designed to promote its financial goals over fair evaluation of claims, and has an established pattern of exclusively relying on the opinions of its retained physicians. The court rejected each of these contentions in turn. To begin, the court held that Ms. Choi’s reliance on Unum’s longstanding practice of administering claims in an improper manner fell short of demonstrating that there was misconduct specifically in the administration of her claim. Moreover, the court conveyed that it viewed her “conclusions about persistent and systemic misconduct [as] wildly speculative” and “insufficient to permit conflict of interest discovery.” Similarly, the court rejected Ms. Choi’s claim that Unum maintains denial targets and improperly prioritizes profits by encouraging claims denials. Rather, the court saw Unum’s tracking of claims resolution data as unremarkable given its business model. And again, the court stressed that Ms. Choi could not concretely tie these accusations of misconduct to the denial of her own claim. Finally, the court considered Ms. Choi’s assertion that Unum employs a company-wide practice of deciding claims by exclusively relying on the opinions of the medical professionals it hires. The court noted that this argument was rooted in the administrative record of Ms. Choi’s claim, but stated that “the trouble with permitting discovery based on Plaintiff’s critique of the soundness of Dr. Greenstein’s report is that it appears to go to the merits of her ERISA claim, not to any alleged bias or conflict of interest that impacted Unum’s denial of Plaintiff’s claim for LTD benefits.” In sum, the court stressed that opening extra-record discovery in ERISA cases should be done only in very limited circumstances, and here Ms. Choi could not persuasively link some indication of bias or misconduct to the adverse outcome of her claim in a manner that justified granting her discovery requests. Accordingly, the court denied Ms. Choi’s motion to compel discovery.

ERISA Preemption

Sixth Circuit

Laurel Hill Management Services, Inc. v. La-Z-Boy Inc., No. 24-13230, 2025 WL 2231041 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 4, 2025) (Judge David M. Lawson). Plaintiffs are several medical providers that sued La-Z Boy, Inc. in California state court after La-Z Boy’s self-funded ERISA health benefit plan paid less than $1,600 toward their submitted claims totaling more than $342,000 for medical services they provided to a patient who was a beneficiary of the plan. As detailed in their complaint, plaintiffs allege that during pre-service communications with plan representatives they were assured that after the patient paid a $1,100 deductible, services would be covered at the usual and customary rate. Plaintiffs maintain that the amount they were paid came nowhere near usual and customary reimbursement rates. As a result, they initiated legal proceedings in state court asserting claims of negligent misrepresentation and promissory estoppel. Defendant removed the case to federal court on the ground that the state law claims are preempted by ERISA. The case was subsequently transferred to the Eastern District of Michigan. La-Z Boy then filed a motion to dismiss the state law claims, arguing they are expressly preempted by Section 514(a) of ERISA. Because the court agreed that the claims relate to La-Z Boy’s ERISA-governed welfare plan, the court granted the motion to dismiss and dismissed the action with prejudice. The court took note of the fact that the Sixth Circuit has repeatedly held that negligent representation, promissory estoppel, and breach of contract claims based on allegedly underpaid or unpaid benefits “are ‘at the very heart of issues within the scope of ERISA’s exclusive regulation,’ thus warranting preemption.” In essence, the court concluded that the providers’ claims that they were misled about the amounts and rates of payments they could expect for the medical care they provided to the beneficiary necessarily related to the medical benefit plan because “defendant could have no other obligation to pay for the cost of medical care for the employee otherwise.” The providers’ state law claims, the court found, come at the very heart of issues exclusively within the scope of ERISA and are therefore clearly preempted. In particular, the court noted that plaintiffs fail to allege the existence of any standalone agreement “but rather focus their grievance on the rate and method of calculating payment under the plan.” Accordingly, based on the allegations in the complaint, the court was left with “the inescapable conclusion” that plaintiffs’ causes of action conflict with ERISA, relate to the ERISA plan, and are preempted by ERISA. The court therefore ordered that the complaint be dismissed with prejudice.

Life Insurance & AD&D Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Daus v. Janover LLC Cafeteria Plan, No. 19-CV-6341, 2025 WL 2229929; Daus v. Janover LLC Cafeteria Plan, No. 19-CV-6341, 2025 WL 2229928 (E.D.N.Y. Aug. 5, 2025) (Judge Frederic Block). Plaintiff Paul Daus has been a public accountant since 1996. From 2011 until 2016 Mr. Daus worked for Janover, LLC as a senior tax manager. He lost that position after he became disabled from a medical condition and was terminated. Following his termination from Janover Mr. Daus filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) alleging disability discrimination and retaliation by his employer. On January 9, 2018, Mr. Daus, along with his counsel, participated in an EEOC mediation session with Janover during which the parties signed a settlement agreement wherein Janover paid Mr. Daus a small sum in exchange for a general release. That release expressly provided that Mr. Daus was executing the release on his own behalf and behalf of his heirs, executors, successors and beneficiaries, and that he waived all claims for alleged lost wages and benefits, including claims under ERISA. The settlement agreement also provided that Mr. Daus could consider the agreement for 21 days and that he had 7 days to revoke it after signing. Mr. Daus did not do so, and he was paid the agreed-upon amount. Later, Mr. Daus lost his life insurance coverage under Janover’s group policy. He alleges that Janover failed to notify him that he had the right to convert his coverage under the group policy to an individual policy, for which no premiums would be due because he was totally disabled. Mr. Daus, along with his wife, Traci Daus, then initiated this litigation against Janover asserting breach of fiduciary claims under ERISA in connection with the lost life insurance benefits. Janover and the Dauses cross-moved for summary judgment. On April 22, 2025, the court issued its summary judgment decision. The central question before the court was whether plaintiffs’ claims under ERISA were waived in the EEOC settlement agreement. The court found they were. Accordingly, the court granted Janover’s motion for summary judgment and denied plaintiffs’ motion. To get there, the court considered the Second Circuit’s six Laniok-Bormann factors to determine the knowledge and voluntariness of the waiver. First, the court concluded that Mr. Daus, a savvy senior tax manager, had the requisite sophistication and business experience to enter into the contract knowingly. Second, the court found that the amount of time he had to review the agreement, coupled with the period he had after the agreement to revoke it, meant that Mr. Daus signed the agreement only after giving it due consideration. Third, the court agreed with Janover that Mr. Daus and his counsel played at least some role in negotiating and deciding the terms of the agreement. Fourth, the court concluded that the terms of the agreement were clear and specific, and that these terms expressly announced that Mr. Daus agreed to waive claims under ERISA. Fifth, there was no question that Mr. Daus was represented by legal counsel. The only factor that complicated the picture somewhat was the sixth and final one – whether the consideration given in exchange for the waiver exceeded employee benefits to which the employee was already entitled by contract or law. Here, there was no question that the settlement payment was meager relative to the right of the couple to $500,000 in life insurance benefits at no premium cost. Nevertheless, the court determined that this factor did not strongly disfavor enforcement when considered in tandem with the others. Thus, the court held that Mr. Daus knowingly and voluntarily waived ERISA claims against Janover. The court then took a moment to consider Mr. Daus’s most substantial argument against enforcement – that on the day of the mediation he was in serious pain, recovering from spinal surgeries, and that his doctor had changed his prescription medication just one day before. Although the court acknowledged that Mr. Daus recounted serious pain, stress, and discomfort on the day of the settlement, even accepting this account, it simply felt that the proffered evidence was insufficient to overcome the presumption of his competency because the symptoms he described are “not of the sort that suggests he was unable to willingly and voluntarily enter into the Settlement Agreement.” Finally, the court agreed with Janover that Traci Daus’s claims would ultimately fail as well as they were encompassed by the waiver. For these reasons, the court found that all of the couple’s ERISA claims were validly encompassed by the EEOC settlement agreement provisions that released Janover from liability from all claims under ERISA in connection with Mr. Daus’s termination. Thus, the court entered judgment in favor of Janover. Plaintiffs responded to the court’s summary judgment decision with a motion for reconsideration. They additionally requested that the court seal the summary judgment decision, or alternatively, to redact portions of it pertaining to the EEOC settlement amount and Mr. Daus’s private health information. The court this week denied the motion for reconsideration, granted the motion to redact portions of the summary judgment decision, and reissued the summary judgment order in its redacted form. The crux of plaintiffs’ motion for consideration was an argument that Traci Daus has independent standing to maintain the claims at issue by virtue of her status as the intended beneficiary of the policy. “Plaintiffs argue, even if Paul Daus waived claims against the Defendants under ERISA, the Court must permit the case to proceed because his wife’s status as his beneficiary entitles her to bring the identical ERISA claims herself.” The court disagreed with plaintiffs on this point. The court found the cases plaintiffs relied on in support of their argument distinguishable as “[b]oth cases… surfaced a concern that employers may be able to dodge ERISA liability where a plaintiff’s lack of standing flowed from the employer’s own misrepresentations.” In the present action, there is no allegation that defendants’ fraudulent misrepresentations caused Ms. Daus to voluntarily relinquish her beneficiary status, rather the scenario here is one “in which a beneficiary seeks to assert standing to pursue ERISA claims derived from her spouse’s status as a plan participant, which has long since ended and has no reasonable possibility of revival.” Accordingly, the court maintained its prior view that Ms. Daus is without standing to pursue the claims set forth in the complaint. The court thus denied the motion for reconsideration. Finally, the court concluded that while sealing the entirety of the summary judgment decision would be inappropriate, limited redactions to address plaintiffs’ privacy concerns around Mr. Daus’s medical information and the precise amount paid under the terms of the EEOC settlement agreement are justified. As a result, the court granted the motion to seal in part and reissued its summary judgment decision to reflect these changes.

Fourth Circuit

New v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 1:24-00212, 2025 WL 2263007 (S.D.W.V. Aug. 7, 2025) (Judge David A. Faber). Before his death on June 29, 2023, Troy New was on total disability workers’ compensation and leave from his employment as a continuous miner operator with Cleveland-Cliffs Princeton Coal, Inc. Troy had injured himself the year before on April 1, 2022, and had been receiving workers’ compensation benefits ever since. Through his employment with Cleveland-Cliffs Troy was a participant of a basic group life and accidental death and dismemberment policy. His son, plaintiff Tyler Dwayne New, was the beneficiary of the policy. However, following his father’s death, Tyler was denied benefits under the plan by the policy’s insurer, MetLife. MetLife explained in the denial letter that the policy only continues to cover employees on leave for six months, “[t]he Policy does not allow coverage to continue while an employee is not actively at work due to injury or sickness for a period greater than six months.” After MetLife affirmed its decision on appeal, Tyler New brought this lawsuit. In his complaint, Tyler alleges a single claim for wrongful denial of benefits against MetLife under Section 502(a)(1)(B). The parties filed competing motions for summary judgment. In this order the court granted MetLife’s motion for summary judgment and denied plaintiff’s motion. It is undisputed that Troy New never received written notice of his right to convert the group plan into an individual one and that Cleveland-Cliffs continued to pay premiums for his coverage until his death. Tyler New argued, in support of his summary judgment motion, that the failure to provide notice of the right to convert the group policy to an individual policy resulted in his father failing to have life insurance at the time of his death. Alternatively, Tyler argued that the coverage never lapsed in the first place. MetLife countered that Tyler’s claim regarding his father’s entitlement to written notice of his right to convert the policy should be brought as a breach of fiduciary duty claim, not as a claim for benefits. Moreover, MetLife contended that under the plain and unambiguous language of the plan, the coverage had lapsed, and the court must defer to its reasonable interpretation of the policy under arbitrary and capricious review. The court first considered the threshold question of whether the coverage lapsed under the terms of the policy. It found that it had. Contrary to Tyler New’s arguments, the court determined that the relevant provision stating that coverage can only be extended for “up to six months” is unambiguous. Additionally, the court disagreed with Tyler that Cleveland-Cliffs was prohibited from terminating his father’s life insurance coverage while he collected workers’ compensation benefits under West Virginia law. The law Tyler pointed to, the court found, applies only to health insurance, not life insurance policies. Having determined that the coverage had indeed lapsed, the court turned to Tyler’s claim that he is entitled to the life insurance benefits because MetLife was required to send written notice to his father about his conversion rights. The court agreed with MetLife that this claim should have been brought as a fiduciary breach claim, rather than as a claim for benefits. But even assuming that MetLife owed a duty to provide a written notice of the right to convert, the court concluded that there was no evidence that MetLife knew Troy’s employment had ended under the terms of the policy, which is the triggering event for any potential notice requirement. Accordingly, the court determined that there were no genuine issues of material fact as to whether MetLife breached its fiduciary duty to Mr. New. The court therefore entered judgment in favor of MetLife. Finally, in a last note at the end of the decision, the court afforded Tyler the opportunity, should he wish to, to amend his complaint to assert a fiduciary breach claim against Cleveland-Cliffs relating to its failure to provide his father written notice of the right to convert.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Emsurgcare v. Oxford Health Insurance, Inc., No. 2:24-cv-04612-SVW, 2025 WL 2206114 (C.D. Cal. Jul. 31, 2025) (Judge Stephen V. Wilson). This lawsuit arises from an emergency colectomy surgery performed on a patient in 2021 to treat his life-threatening appendicitis. The two surgeons who performed the surgery, Drs. Feiz and Rim, initiated this ERISA action seeking to challenge benefit determinations made under an ERISA insurance plan administered and insured by defendant Oxford Health Insurance. In the case of Dr. Feiz’s claim for reimbursement, Oxford denied the claim outright and paid nothing. In Dr. Rim’s case, Oxford paid $2,691.36 of the $71,500 he billed. The court held a bench trial in this action on July 15, 2025. In this decision the court provided its findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment in part for both parties. Before the court analyzed whether Oxford’s denials of the surgeons’ claims violated ERISA, it determined what standard of review to apply. As an initial matter, the court noted that the plan unambiguously confers discretion on Oxford such that the court must apply an abuse of discretion standard absent wholesale or flagrant violations of the procedural requirements of ERISA. Nevertheless, the court agreed with the providers that defendant “committed numerous procedural violations when adjudicating both Dr. Feiz and Dr. Rim’s claims.” These included its failure to engage in a meaningful dialogue, its failure to provide specific reasons for denying the claims, its failure to provide Dr. Feiz with adequate opportunity to respond to its stated rationale for denying his appeal, its changing rationales for denial, and its failure to adequately respond to Dr. Feiz’s request for documents it relied on when denying his claim. Nonetheless, the court viewed these failings as not “serious enough to justify de novo review,” and instead caused the court merely to temper its abuse of discretion analysis. Further supporting the need to apply skepticism to the denials was Oxford’s conflict of interest in the case, particularly regarding Dr. Feiz’s claim. The court concluded there were “multiple reasons to find that a conflict of interest impacted Defendant’s decision to deny Dr. Feiz’s claim,” such as the fact it never asked Dr. Feiz to correct the operative report by providing his signature, as well as its decision to not consider the signed operative report once Dr. Feiz provided it on appeal. Moreover, the court observed that Oxford paid the facility where the surgeons performed the colectomy. In a telling statement, the court wrote, “[t]his partial payment raises serious questions about Defendant’s justification for denying Dr. Feiz’s claim. By reimbursing the Hospital for services related to the same colectomy, Defendant effectively acknowledged that the procedure occurred. Yet in denying Dr. Feiz’s claim, Defendant cited an allegedly deficient operative report as grounds for being unable to ‘verify the validity and accuracy of the service provided.’ Those two positions cannot be squared. Either the colectomy happened, or it did not.” Thus, while not determinative in and of itself, the court found that Oxford’s conflict of interest affected its decision-making and that it needed to be taken into account. The court then turned to the dispositive questions: whether Oxford abused its discretion in denying Dr. Feiz’s claim in full and whether it abused its discretion when it denied Dr. Rim’s claim in part? The court gave different answers for each claim. It tackled Dr. Feiz’s claim first. The court concluded that with regard to Dr. Feiz Oxford acted arbitrarily and capriciously by denying his claim on the basis that the signature on his operative report was not proper. “Put simply, Defendant’s decision to deny Dr. Feiz’s claim and subsequent appeal was ‘implausible.’ Review of the administrative record shows that Defendant did not actually hold concerns about the validity and accuracy of Plaintiff’s colectomy, but rather used the lack of proper signature on Dr. Feiz’s operative report as a pretext to deny benefits. Denial of benefits on such a basis is an abuse of discretion.” Accordingly, the court entered judgment in favor of plaintiffs on Dr. Feiz’s ERISA claim and remanded to Oxford for proper adjudication and payment of his claim according to the terms of the plan. Conversely, the court held that Oxford did not abuse its discretion when it paid only a small fraction of Dr. Rim’s claim for reimbursement. For one thing, the court agreed with Oxford that Dr. Rim failed to exhaust the internal administrative appeal procedures before appearing in court. Even putting that issue aside, the court ultimately concluded that Oxford acted reasonably in executing the terms of the plan and calculating the rate of reimbursement. “Certainly, $2,691.36 is a very small portion of the $71,500 billed. But it appears to nonetheless fall within the terms of the Plan. The Plan simply requires that Defendant pay ‘an amount permitted by law.’ Plaintiffs have not identified any law that does not permit Defendant to pay Dr. Rim $2,691.36 of his $71,500 billed. Given that Plaintiffs hold the burden of proof in this case, this is a fatal deficiency.” As a result, the court entered judgment in favor of Oxford with respect to Dr. Rim’s claim.

Pension Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Oakman v. International United Automobile Aerospace and Agricultural Workers, No. 1:23-CV-00026-GNS-HBB, 2025 WL 2242764 (W.D. Ky. Aug. 6, 2025) (Judge Greg N. Stivers). Plaintiff Gary Oakman brought this action against the General Motors Hourly Rate Employees Pension Plan, and its administrator, Fidelity Investments, after he was denied credited years of service under the plan for the six years he worked for American Sunroof Corporation before the company merged with General Motors in 1995. Mr. Oakman sought judicial review of the pension committee’s decision to deny him these additional benefits, bringing a single cause of action for recovery of denied benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B). The plan moved for judgment on the administrative record. Mr. Oakman responded and filed a cross-motion for judgment on the administrative record, although importantly, his motion was filed late pursuant to the court’s scheduling orders. The court addressed the parties’ motions in this decision. As an initial matter, the court applied the arbitrary and capricious standard of review as both parties agreed that the plan grants GM and the pension committee discretionary authority to make benefit decisions. The court noted that the plan contains two seemingly contradictory provisions. “First, Article III, Section 1(a)(1) sets forth the main provision for determining years of credited service, stating that ‘[c]redited service shall be computed for each calendar year for each employee on the basis of total hours compensated by any plant or Division of General Motors LLC during such calendar year while the employee has unbroken seniority.’ Second, Article III, Section 1(k) states that ‘Notwithstanding any other Section of this Article III, . . . the employee’s credited service for the period prior to January 1, 1996[,] shall not be less than the employee’s seniority as of December 31, 1995.’” The Plan argued that its determination not to credit the years of service at American Sunroof Corp, was supported by the plain language of the plan. The court disagreed. “In the current case, it is clear that The Plan’s interpretation of the determination of benefits was not ‘the result of a deliberate, principled reasoning process’ because its decision expressly contradicts the terms of The Plan. The Plan bases its decision on the language of Section 1(a)(1) without acknowledging that Section 1(k) begins with ‘[n]otwithstanding any other Section of this Article III . . . .’” The use of the word “notwithstanding” the court determined, makes clear that the language of Section 1(k) overrides the calculation of credited services under Section 1(a)(1), because “Section (1)(k) applies ‘without prevention or obstruction’ by any other provision of Article III.” As a result, the court determined that Mr. Oakman is entitled to a calculation of credited service consistent with his seniority status, and there is no dispute that Mr. Oakman’s date of seniority was September 27, 1989, or the date of his initial employment with American Sunroof. Accordingly, the court held that the plan’s decision to deny Mr. Oakman’s request for additional benefits was arbitrary and capricious because it did not comport with the clear language of the plan. The court therefore denied the plan’s motion for judgment on the administrative record. However, the court did not enter judgment in favor of Mr. Oakman, despite its determination that he should be entitled to credited service under the plan equal to his seniority status. The court concluded that it could not enter judgment in favor of Mr. Oakman because he not only failed to file a timely dispositive motion for judgment on the administrative record, but also failed to provide any explanation why the deadline could not have been met. The court therefore “reluctantly” decided that Mr. Oakman’s cross-motion for judgment had to be denied as untimely and that his claims against the plan and Fidelity must be dismissed.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Sixth Circuit

R.S. v. Medical Mutual Servs., LLC, No. 1:23-cv-01127, 2025 WL 2195363 (N.D. Ohio Aug. 1, 2025) (Judge David A. Ruiz). Plaintiff R.S. sued her health benefit plan, defendant Case Western Reserve University Benefits Plan, its administrator, defendant Case Western Reserve University, and its third-party administrator, defendant Medical Mutual Services, LLC, on behalf of herself and her son, I.R., to challenge defendants’ denial of the family’s claim for I.R.’s residential mental health treatment at a facility in Utah. R.S.’s complaint raises three causes of action: (1) a claim for recovery of benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B); (2) a claim for equitable relief based on an alleged violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (“MHPAEA”) under Section 502(a)(3); and (3) a claim for statutory penalties under Sections 502(a)(1)(A) and (c). Defendants Case Western Reserve University and Case Western Reserve University Benefits Plan moved to dismiss the second cause of action. Defendant Medical Mutual Services moved for partial judgement on the pleadings regarding R.S.’s second and third causes of action. Plaintiff opposed both motions. In this order the court denied the motions as they pertain to count two and granted Medical Mutual Services’ motion as to count three. The court began with the MHPAEA violation claim. It disagreed with defendants that the 502(a)(3) claim was duplicative of the claim for benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B). The court held that plaintiff is permitted to plead the two claims in the alternative, and noted that although they both revolve around the denial of benefits they present distinct theories and focus on distinct remedies. “In Count I, Plaintiff pleaded that the terms of the Plan were wrongly applied to her claim, resulting in a wrongful denial of benefits. In Count II, Plaintiff makes a different allegation – the Plan as written violates the MHPAEA. This claim asserts that even if the terms of the Plan are found to have been correctly applied to her benefits claims, foreclosing recovery under Count I, Plaintiff still has a case against Defendants. So, while Defendants are correct that it would be improper for Plaintiff to also allege that the terms of the Plan were improperly applied under § 1132(a)(3), that is not what Plaintiff has pleaded. The difference between the two claims is that Plaintiff is bringing the MHPAEA claim to challenge the plan as written, not as applied.” Further, R.S. can only possibly amend the terms of the plan through an equitable claim, as the Supreme Court has made clear that the terms of an ERISA plan cannot be changed under Section 502(a)(1)(B). At this stage of the proceedings, the court determined that it is simply too early to determine whether R.S.’s injury can be remedied under Section 502(a)(1)(B). The court therefore denied both motions seeking dismissal of count two. The court then discussed Medical Mutual Services’ motion for judgment on the statutory penalties claim. Put simply, the court agreed with Medical Mutual Services that it cannot be liable to R.S. for unanswered document requests because it is not the administrator of the plan. Therefore, the court granted Medical Mutual Services’ motion for judgment on the pleadings as to this claim against it.

Provider Claims

Fifth Circuit

Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala., No. 24-10306, __ F. 4th __, 2025 WL 2268126 (5th Cir. Aug. 8, 2025) (Before Circuit Judges Smith, Higginson, and Douglas). Plaintiff-appellants in this ERISA action are fifty-six Texas emergency medicine physician groups. They filed suit against twenty-four Blue Cross Blue Shield-affiliated plans from outside of Texas alleging that the Blue Plans underpaid them for 290,000 claims for reimbursement. After a settlement with some of the defendants, more than 75% of the claims were dismissed. The district court later granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on the remaining claims. The district court identified five issues with plaintiffs’ claims: (1) the physician groups were not named in the assignments; (2) the assignments did not include a right to sue; (3) the assignments themselves were not produced; (4) the underlying plans contained valid anti-assignment clauses; and (5) the physician groups failed to exhaust administrative remedies under the applicable plans before filing suit. (Your ERISA Watch covered this decision in its January 17, 2024 edition.) Plaintiffs appealed. The Fifth Circuit revived nearly all of their claims in this decision, affirming the district court’s decision only as to the claims where no written assignment was produced. As to the remaining claims, the Fifth Circuit identified several issues that require further examination. First, the Fifth Circuit held that the lower court was wrong to dismiss the provider’s claims for lack of standing because the assignments were made to “health care providers” rather than naming the physician groups themselves. The court of appeals agreed with plaintiffs that the term “provider” is ambiguous and subject to two or more reasonable interpretations. At a minimum, the Fifth Circuit held that the lower court should have allowed the parties to introduce evidence of the intended scope of the assignments, and its grant of summary judgment was accordingly premature. Next, the Fifth Circuit rejected the district court’s holding that the assignments provided only a right to administrative relief rather than the right to seek legal relief. The appeals court stressed that the assignments assign “all rights.” It wrote, “there is no basis in the law for requiring that an assignment specifically state it provides a right to sue when it assigns ‘all rights.’ The district court erred in finding that claims assigning rights or insurance benefits did not assign a right to sue.” The Fifth Circuit then turned to the claims where the physician groups do not have written assignments. The court of appeals affirmed the dismissal of these claims and concluded that the district court acted reasonably in doing so. In addition to finding issues with the assignments, the district court had also dismissed claims where the underlying plans contained anti-assignment provisions. The Fifth Circuit reversed this basis for dismissal. It concluded that there were genuine issues and open questions about whether the Blue Plans were estopped from enforcing the anti-assignment clauses. It stated that the matter of estoppel “is a fact issue that the district court must determine as to each claim.” Finally, the Fifth Circuit held that the district court was too quick to dismiss claims for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. “At bottom, the Physician Groups argue that they made all possible efforts to obtain the underlying plans and understand alternative appeals processes, while still following the publicly available appeals process, but were not given copies of the plan. We have previously held that a claimant’s efforts, or lack thereof, to obtain the plan can be a key fact in finding whether the claimant has cleared the hurdle of ERISA exhaustion. At a minimum, there is a factual dispute as to whether the Physician Groups could have discovered the member appeals process without action by [Blue Cross], and whether it would have been reasonable to require the Physician Groups to undertake that separate process when they were already being partially paid by [the Blue Plans].” Based on the foregoing, the Fifth Circuit vacated summary judgment as to all claims except those with no written assignment in evidence. Accordingly, the physician groups’ action has been resurrected, and they may yet receive further compensation for some or all of the remaining claims at issue.

It was another slow-ish week in ERISA-land, so we have no notable decision to highlight. However, read on to learn more about how (1) a wrongful death claim prompted by an astronomical increase in the price of an asthma inhaler is not preempted by ERISA (Schmidtknecht v. OptumRx Inc.), (2) pharmacy benefit managers have temporarily stopped enforcement of Arkansas legislation attempting to rein them in (Express Scripts Inc. v. Richmond), and (3) moving to Mexico, although it sounds nice, can jeopardize your disability benefits (Archer v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am.). Of course, we have other cases as well involving various claims by plan participants, medical providers, and insurance companies for your reading pleasure.

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Eighth Circuit

Chirinian v. Travelers Companies, Inc., No. 24-cv-3956 (LMP/DTS), 2025 WL 2147271 (D. Minn. Jul. 29, 2025) (Judge Laura M. Provinzino). Plaintiff Charlie Chirinian filed this putative class action alleging that Travelers Companies Inc. and the administrative committee of its employer-sponsored healthcare plan are imposing a tobacco surcharge which is in violation of ERISA and the requirements of 29 C.F.R. § 2590.702(f)(4). In her first cause of action Ms. Chirinian asserts that defendants illegally surcharged her and other plan participants for their tobacco use in violation of ERISA’s nondiscrimination rule in 29 U.S.C. § 1182. Additionally, Ms. Chirinian alleges that Travelers breached its fiduciary duties to plan participants by “administering a Plan that does not conform with ERISA’s antidiscrimination provisions,” “acting on behalf of a party whose interests were averse to the interests of the Plan and the interests of its participants,” and “by failing to act prudently and diligently to review the terms of the Plan and related plan materials.” Her fiduciary breach claims are brought under Section 502(a)(2). Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. They argued that Ms. Chirinian lacks Article III standing to pursue her claims, her claims are entirely time-barred under the plan, and putting those issues aside, her complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. In this order the court granted in part and denied in part defendants’ motion to dismiss. The court addressed the threshold issue of standing first, and largely concluded that Ms. Chirinian has standing to press her claims, though not insofar as she seeks to pursue prospective injunctive relief. As a former plan participant, the court agreed with defendants that Ms. Chirinian cannot allege a real or imminent threat of ongoing or future harm based on the conduct regarding the tobacco surcharge. Moreover, because Ms. Chirinian personally lacks standing to seek prospective injunctive relief, the court concluded that she also could not seek such relief on behalf of the plan. More broadly, however, the court rejected defendants’ standing arguments. It concluded that Ms. Chirinian suffered a concrete harm when she was required to pay the tobacco surcharges that Travelers was allegedly not legally authorized to levy. This harm, the court added, is traceable to Traveler’s decision to levy the tobacco surcharge, and it can be redressed by a refund of money to the participants who were illegally charged. As a result, the court found that Ms. Chirinian has standing to pursue her action. Next, the court concluded that Ms. Chirinian’s claims are not time-barred. The plan’s limitation period requires that a participant bring a lawsuit within one year of the act or omission that gives rise to the claim. The court concluded that Travelers “acted” each time it imposed an allegedly unlawful tobacco surcharge on Ms. Chirinian. It then determined that, “Chirinian filed suit on October 17, 2024, meaning that Chirinian may challenge the tobacco surcharges imposed since October 17, 2023. Because Chirinian paid tobacco surcharges until August 3, 2024, she is not time-barred from challenging the tobacco surcharges Travelers levied on her from October 17, 2023, to August 3, 2024.” Having ruled on these threshold issues, the court proceeded to analyze the merits of Ms. Chirinian’s claims. It tackled the claim alleging violations of the antidiscrimination rules first. Ms. Chirinian asserts that Travelers’ tobacco cessation program fails to meet the requirements of 29 C.F.R. § 2590.702(f)(4) in three ways. First, she takes issue with the program’s timing restrictions and the fact that the individuals participating in the tobacco cessation program must enroll by March 31 of the plan year and complete the program by December 15 of that same plan year. The court did not agree that this provision was problematic. To the contrary, it found that the plan complies with 29 C.F.R. § 2590.702(f)(4)(i) because it offers participants the opportunity to qualify for the reward under the program at least once per year. The court stated that “ERISA requires nothing more of Travelers.” The court therefore rejected Ms. Chirinian’s first theory of how the program violates ERISA’s requirements. It rejected her second theory as well, wherein she argued that the plan materials do not disclose the availability of a legally compliant reasonable alternative standard. It noted that this argument was premised on Ms. Chirinian’s argument that Travelers failed to offer participants the full reward. But the court did not agree and found the complaint failed to plausibly allege as much. Ms. Chirinian had better luck with her third and final argument challenging the plan’s compliance with ERISA’s antidiscrimination rules. She alleges that the plan materials do not include a statement that recommendations of an individual’s personal physician will be accommodated as required by 29 C.F.R. § 2590.702(f)(4)(v). Taking a look at the plan, the court agreed. It therefore denied the motion to dismiss the antidiscrimination claim. “Because Chirinian has plausibly alleged that the Plan does not satisfy “all” of the requirements of 29 C.F.R. § 2590.702(f)(4), Chirinian has plausibly alleged that Travelers violated ERISA’s antidiscrimination rules by imposing a tobacco surcharge.” Finally, the court addressed the breach of fiduciary duty claims. The court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss these claims as it agreed with Travelers that Ms. Chirinian fails to plausibly allege that the plan suffered any losses as a result of the alleged breaches having to do with the tobacco surcharge. In fact, the court considered that the opposite was likely true – that the alleged breaches likely served to benefit the plan because the plan’s assets were increased by the allegedly unlawful tobacco surcharges. Based on the foregoing the court dismissed without prejudice the two fiduciary breach claims.

Disability Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Archer v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 2:23-cv-01128-LK, 2025 WL 2107491 (W.D. Wash. Jul. 28, 2025) (Judge Lauren King). Before the onset of her disability, plaintiff Pamela Archer was a nurse. Her employers included the U.S. Army during the first Gulf War, and later Providence Health & Services. In late 2012, Ms. Archer stopped working due to a combination of ailments. She began receiving long-term disability benefits under an ERISA-governed policy insured by Unum the following year. In October of 2019, Ms. Archer moved to Mexico. A year later she informed Unum of her living situation in response to a form the insurer sent her inquiring about her condition. Then a year and a half later, in April of 2022, Unum suspended Ms. Archer’s benefits. Unum informed Ms. Archer that her eligibility for benefits had ended in April 2020 after six months of her living in Mexico, because her policy contained an out-of-country provision which explains that benefits will stop if a claimant resides outside of the United States for a total period of 6 months in any given year. “Unum further notified Archer that its payment of benefits over a period when she was no longer eligible, i.e., between April 20, 2020 and April 27, 2022, resulted in an overpayment of $62,893.14 which Unum sought to recover.” Ms. Archer challenged the termination of her benefits. Following an unsuccessful administrative appeal she filed an action under ERISA alleging Unum wrongfully terminated her ongoing disability benefits and violated its fiduciary duties by failing to inform her of the international residency provision. Although Ms. Archer concedes that she did not comply with the policy’s U.S. residency requirement, she maintains that she was unable to do so because of travel challenges surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. Unum responded to Ms. Archer’s action by filing its own counterclaim for overpayment of benefits. The parties submitted competing motions for judgment on the record pursuant to Rule 52. Applying de novo review, the court found in favor of Unum regarding Ms. Archer’s claim for benefits and breach of fiduciary duty. To begin, the court determined that Unum lawfully terminated the benefits, because its decision was consistent with the unambiguous terms of the plan. As the policy required Ms. Archer to spend more than 50% of any 12-month period in the United States, it was clear to the court that there was no dispute Ms. Archer did not do so, and as such that she was in violation of a requirement for benefit eligibility under the policy. Furthermore, the court determined that it was not impossible for Ms. Archer to comply with the international residency provision because she was a U.S. citizen who could have traveled back to her home country at any time, even during the height of the COVID travel restrictions and lockdowns. Indeed, the court noted that the record clearly establishes that regardless of the pandemic it was Ms. Archer’s intent to make Mexico her primary residence for more than six months out of the year. Moreover, the court was unpersuaded that Ms. Archer could not safely fly during this time period, and noted that she did so, traveling throughout Mexico and even into the United States. For these reasons, the court declined to waive Ms. Archer’s noncompliance with the policy provision based on her assertion of impossibility, and found that Unum properly terminated her continuing benefits based on the plain language of the plan. The court then held that Unum’s failure to warn Ms. Archer about the international residency provision did not amount to a breach of fiduciary duty. “Even crediting Archer’s plausible but unsupported assertion that she was subjectively unaware of the international residency provision, she does not assert that Unum failed to provide her with the relevant Plan or Policy documents in the first instance. And the Policy language regarding when a beneficiary is considered to reside outside the United States is conspicuous, plain, and clear.” The court added that this was true for the overpayment provision in the plan as well and that she therefore had constructive notice of the relevant plan provisions. Additionally, the court disagreed with Ms. Archer that Unum’s 18-month delay in enforcement constituted a breach of fiduciary duty or that a delay could otherwise waive enforcement of a plan provision. Accordingly, the court found that Ms. Archer was not entitled to equitable relief based on a breach of fiduciary duty. The court thus entered judgment in favor of Unum on both of Ms. Archer’s claims. However, the court did not reach a decision on Unum’s counterclaim. Instead, it ordered supplemental briefing on the issue of the appropriate termination date and the meaning of the language regarding the timing of payment cessation. Until it has this briefing, the court deferred resolution of the overpayment claim and a decision on the amount of repayment Ms. Archer owes.

Tenth Circuit

Ramos v. Schlumberger Grp. Welfare Benefits Plan, No. 22-CV-0061-CVE-JFJ, 2025 WL 2098102 (N.D. Okla. Jul. 25, 2025) (Judge Claire V. Eagan). Plaintiff Ramon Ramos filed this action to challenge the denial of his claim for short-term disability benefits by the Schlumberger Group Welfare Benefit Plan. Mr. Ramos argued that he had documented psychiatric, neurological, and cognitive limitations that prevented him from working in his position as an environmental specialist. In an earlier order the court remanded the case for clarification of the plan administrator’s decision to deny plaintiff’s second voluntary appeal. The plan administrator issued the required clarification of its previous decision during the remand, although Mr. Ramos argued that it failed to do so within 30 days of the court’s ruling. The court reopened the case for new briefing on the merits of the ERISA claim, but rejected Mr. Ramos’ argument that the plan administrator’s decision on remand was untimely. The parties then filed their briefing on the merits of the plan administrator’s denial, and the court agreed that the ERISA claim was ready for adjudication. Accordingly, the court issued this decision, which constituted its final review of the adverse decision. As an initial matter, the court addressed the parties’ dispute over the applicable standard of review. The court determined that the proper standard of review was arbitrary and capricious as the plan clearly grants the administrator discretionary authority and because it found that the “alleged procedural irregularities in this case are not of the same type or severity that would warrant de novo review of plaintiff’s ERISA claim.” The court added that the errors Mr. Ramos cited as reasons to alter the standard of review have been “rejected in previous rulings by the Court or are substantive in nature, and the Court finds no reason to vary from the standard of review typically applicable to ERISA claims when the decision maker has the discretionary authority to make benefits determinations.” The court therefore assessed the denial under deferential review. Mr. Ramos argued that he produced a substantial amount of medical evidence that supported his symptoms. The plan responded that Mr. Ramos could not meet his burden to prove that its contrary interpretation of the medical evidence was an abuse of discretion and maintained that it was not required to defer to his treating physician’s findings that he had functional limitations that prevented him from working. The court first held that it was reasonable for the plan’s reviewing doctors to discount the results of plaintiff’s poor neurocognitive testing because they reasonably explained their position that he feigned an impairment and put an intentional lack of effort into the testing. Mr. Ramos next argued that there were problems with the plan’s independent medical examination of him. He noted that the plan administrator failed to provide the doctor performing the test with certain critical pieces of medical information. In addition, Mr. Ramos called into question how independent the independent medical examination was given Cigna’s role in setting up the exam and “dictat[ing] the focus” of it. The court, however, disagreed. It found the plan’s failure to provide the doctor with the relevant medical reports immaterial, harmless, and ultimately having “had no bearing on the results” of the test. The court was not persuaded by Mr. Ramos’ suggestion that the doctor’s findings would have been affected had he been provided with these documents. As to Cigna’s involvement in the independent medical examination, the court concluded that Mr. Ramos failed to demonstrate that Cigna “participated” in the exam “or directed” its outcome. Moreover, although the court acknowledged that it appeared to be unfair that Cigna set up the exam, it stated that Mr. Ramos could not show that it resulted in bias on the part of the doctor performing it, or that the results would have been different if the administrator did not directly set up the test. The court further rejected Mr. Ramos’ argument that the plan administrator disregarded the medical findings of his treating physicians as merely his own self-reporting of his symptoms. Rather, the court found that the plan administrator’s conclusion that the evidence did not support a finding of any functional limitation caused by mental impairments to be supported by substantial evidence. Finally, the court stipulated that in its view the parties’ dispute over the consideration of “objective medical evidence” had no bearing on the outcome of Mr. Ramos’ claim for benefits. Thus, based on the foregoing, the court concluded that the plan administrator had not acted arbitrarily or capriciously when it determined that the medical evidence did not establish that Mr. Ramos was disabled under the terms of the plan. The court therefore affirmed defendant’s decision to deny Mr. Ramos’ claim for short-term disability benefits.

ERISA Preemption

Seventh Circuit

Schmidtknecht v. OptumRx Inc., No. 25-CV-93, 2025 WL 2096866 (E.D. Wis. Jul. 25, 2025) (Judge Byron B. Conway). This wrongful death action arose after a young man, Cole Schmidtknecht, suffered a deadly asthma attack on January 15, 2024. Cole had suffered from asthma all his life. His asthma was treated with a prescribed inhaler that was covered through his insurance with United Healthcare. On January 10, 2024, Cole went to his local Walgreens pharmacy to refill his prescription. It was then that the pharmacist told him that his insurer no longer covered his inhaler and that his prescription would cost him $539.19. Cole only had enough money for his typical co-pay, which was less than $70. He had received no advanced warning of this coverage change, and Walgreens made no effort to assist him in obtaining an alternative covered treatment. Unable to afford the cost of the prescription, Cole left without his inhaler. Five days later, Cole experienced a severe asthma attack. By the time his roommate got him to the hospital, Cole was unconscious, pulseless, and blue. Cole was immediately put onto a ventilator, but sadly he did not recover. He was pronounced dead six days later. After their son’s death, Cole’s parents, Shanon and William, filed this wrongful death action against Optum Rx, Inc. and Walgreens. They allege that Optum Rx violated a Wisconsin law requiring that it give notice to Cole that his prescription would no longer be covered. Plaintiffs maintain that the pharmacy benefit manager chose to stop covering Cole’s prescribed inhaler not because of any legitimate medical reason, but based purely on its own financial incentives. Optum Rx moved to dismiss the family’s complaint. It argued that the wrongful death action is preempted by both Sections 514(a) and 502(a) of ERISA. The court disagreed and denied the motion to dismiss. At the outset, the court stated that plaintiffs are not attempting to assert a claim directly under the Wisconsin laws which regulate pharmacy benefit managers, but rather that they point to the state statutes “as establishing the duties that Optum Rx owed to the Cole and thus as a foundation for a wrongful death claim.” By contrast, the court found that the ERISA plan is not the foundation of the parents’ claim, nor a necessary component of it. “Optum Rx has not shown that the plaintiffs’ claim will require the court to cross the line into interpretation or application of the terms of the plan. Rather, in relation to the plaintiffs’ claim as pled in the amended complaint, the facts related to the plan appear to be undisputed, secondary, and superficial. The plan provides merely the context for the dispute akin to how a plan may provide the foundation for a fraud or misrepresentation claim.” The court emphasized that plaintiff’s theory of harm is not premised on Optum Rx’s denial of benefits, but instead focuses on an argument that the pharmacy benefit manager was negligent because it failed to give Cole notice that it would no longer be covering his medication and that his out-of-pocket costs would skyrocket as a result. This theory, the court determined, is not necessarily preempted by ERISA, given that “Optum Rx has failed to demonstrate that either ERISA or the plan documents address whether a participant is entitled to notice regarding changes to prescription drug benefits or the nature and extent of any such notice.” Accordingly the court concluded that the wrongful death claim may be viable in some form. As a result, the court denied Optum Rx’s motion seeking the claim’s dismissal.  

Eighth Circuit

Express Scripts Inc. v. Richmond, No. 4:25-CV-00520-BSM, 2025 WL 2111057 (E.D. Ark. Jul. 28, 2025) (Judge Brian S. Miller). A group of pharmacies and pharmacy benefit managers filed this action alleging that a new Arkansas law, Act 624, which restricts pharmacy benefit managers’ ability to own and operate pharmacies in the state, violates the Commerce Clause, the Privileges and Immunities Clause, the Supremacy Clause because it is preempted by TRICARE, ERISA, Medicare, the Bill of Attainder Clause, the Takings Clause, and the Equal Protection Clause. Plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction, enjoining Act 624 from taking effect on January 1, 2026. In this order the court granted the motion and blocked the law during the pendency of the case. The court concluded that Act 624 “likely violates the Commerce Clause and it is likely preempted by TRICARE.” With regard to the Commerce Clause, the court was inclined to agree with plaintiffs that the law overtly discriminates against them as out-of-state companies and that the state has failed to show that it has no other means to advance its interests. As for the federal TRICARE program which provides health insurance plans to service members of the U.S. armed forces, the court determined that it is likely the Act is both explicitly and impliedly preempted by the statute. It stated that Act 624 conflicts with TRICARE’s health care delivery provision because it prohibits pharmacies owned by pharmacy benefit managers “from delivering healthcare to Arkansas patients. This prohibition is inconsistent with the TRICARE program that has existing contracts with some of the plaintiffs.” Moreover, the court noted that Act 624 “frustrates the ‘stability,’ ‘uniform[ity],’ and ‘national’ character of TRICARE.” Although the court concluded that plaintiffs are likely to prevail on their Commerce Clause and TRICARE preemption claims, this sentiment did not carry over to all of plaintiffs’ claims. “Plaintiffs, however, are unlikely to prevail on their Privileges and Immunities, ERISA preemption, Medicare preemption, Bill of Attainder, Takings, and Equal Protection claims.” Examining ERISA preemption specifically, the court found that Act 624 does not have an impermissible connection with ERISA as it does not regulate the pharmacy benefit managers “in their capacity as employee benefit plan administrators. Rather, it merely regulates the requirements for obtaining a retail pharmacy license.” The court stated that the Arkansas regulation will certainly affect ERISA plans’ shopping decisions and have an indirect economic influence on the plans, but these downstream effects would “not bind plan administrators to any particular choice and thus function as a regulation of an ERISA plan itself.” In addition to ascertaining that plaintiffs are likely to prevail on two of their eight claims, the court also determined that the pharmacies and pharmacy benefit managers would suffer irreparable harm if a preliminary injunction were not issued because they face the threat of unrecoverable economic loss. Further, the court concluded that the balance of equities and public interest also favor plaintiffs and that no harm could come from enjoining the enforcement of an unconstitutional law. Accordingly, while not all of plaintiffs’ arguments were ultimately persuasive to the court, it nevertheless agreed with them that it is necessary to enjoin Arkansas Act 624 from taking effect.

Ninth Circuit

Stapleton v. United Healthcare Benefits Plan of CA, No. 1:25-cv-00351-SAB, 2025 WL 2142349 (E.D. Cal. Jul. 29, 2025) (Magistrate Judge Stanley A. Boone). Pro se plaintiff Jackie Stapleton sued United Healthcare Benefits Plan of California in the small claims division of California state court alleging that it owes her damages for its refusal to cover the full cost of her medically necessary ambulance ride which occurred on July 1, 2022. United removed the matter to federal court after it realized that the healthcare plan at issue is governed by ERISA. Arguing that the state law claims are completely preempted by ERISA Section 502(a) and that the court has federal question jurisdiction over this matter, United moved for dismissal of Ms. Stapleton’s complaint. Ms. Stapleton moved to remand her action. Magistrate Judge Stanley A. Boone issued this decision recommending that the court deny plaintiff’s motion to remand and grant United’s motion to dismiss with leave to amend. Both conclusions hinged on Judge Boone’s preemption analysis. Judge Boone viewed Ms. Stapleton’s action as one seeking to recover the cost of the ambulance bill that she believes should have been covered in full under the terms of her ERISA-governed health insurance plan. Thus, he agreed with United that this case is plainly about a denial of benefits, and that it therefore clearly could have been brought as a claim under Section 502(a)(1)(B). Furthermore, Ms. Stapleton’s challenge to United’s interpretation of the plan, and by extension its coverage determination, presents no independent legal duty divorced from ERISA. Because Judge Boone concluded that both prongs of the Davila preemption test are satisfied, he found that the state law claims at issue are completely preempted by ERISA and that removal under Section 502(a) was proper. It was therefore Judge Boone’s recommendation that the court deny the motion to remand. By the same token, the Magistrate concluded that dismissal of the preempted state law claims was appropriate and that United’s motion to dismiss should be granted. However, it was also Judge Boone’s opinion that Ms. Stapleton should be afforded the opportunity to amend her complaint to assert a new cause of action under ERISA. Accordingly, while he recommended that the court dismiss the complaint, he advised that it do so without prejudice and with leave to amend.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Cal. Spine & Neurosurgery Institute v. Zoetis, Inc., No. 24-cv-06528-NW, 2025 WL 2097481 (N.D. Cal. Jul. 25, 2025) (Judge Noël Wise). Plaintiff California Spine and Neurosurgery Institute filed this ERISA action against defendants Zoetis Inc., United Healthcare Services, Inc., and United Healthcare Insurance Company after the surgery center was reimbursed 2.1% of the billed costs for surgery services it provided to an insured patient. In its action, California Spine asserts two causes of action: (1) failure to pay ERISA plan benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and (2) breach of fiduciary duties of loyalty and due care in violation of Section 502(a)(3). Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. They argued that the provider is barred from suing under ERISA based on the plan’s anti-assignment provision, and that regardless the complaint fails to state claims for benefits or fiduciary breach. Moreover, defendants argued that United Healthcare Insurance Company is an improper party. The court addressed the anti-assignment provision first. Although as a general matter anti-assignment provisions in ERISA plans are valid and enforceable, the court emphasized that there are exceptions that render them unenforceable. Here, California Spine argued that United waived the anti-assignment provision. Plaintiff alleged that although United was aware during the administrative claims process that it was acting as its patient’s assignee it never asserted the assignment provision as the basis for the denial or even mentioned its existence. Under Ninth Circuit precedent, the court concluded that these facts were sufficient to allege that United waived its anti-assignment provision defense. Next, the court assessed whether California Spine adequately stated a claim for ERISA benefits. It concluded that it had as the complaint identifies the specific ERISA plan, and alleges that a United representative confirmed in advance of the surgery that the plan would cover the surgical services and that “co-insurance would be at 90% of usual and customary and the Provider’s co-insurance would be at 60% and not based on a Medicare Fee schedule.” Additionally, the court found plaintiff adequately stated a claim for breach of fiduciary duties by alleging “Defendants misrepresented coverage, misrepresented reimbursement rates, and issued deficient explanations of benefits.” Further, plaintiff asserted that these actions were not undertaken with the care of a prudent administrator and that it suffered damages as a result of United’s failure to honor the rates it quoted prior to the surgery, which it had relied on. Finally, the court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss United Healthcare Insurance Company as a defendant. The court noted that plaintiff pointed to an authorization for the surgical services that was issued by United Healthcare Insurance Company and alleges that both United defendants are third-party administrators of the plan. The court found these allegations sufficient to adequately plead a connection between United Healthcare Insurance Company and the conduct at issue in the case. For these reasons, the court denied the motion to dismiss.

Fifth Circuit

Columbia Medical Center of Plano Subsidiary, L.P., v. Anthem Blue Cross Life and Health Ins. Co., No. 4:24-cv-137, 2025 WL 2107996 (E.D. Tex. Jul. 28, 2025) (Judge Amos L. Mazzant). Plaintiffs in this action are hospitals in Texas that serve the Plano and Dallas metropolitan area. The hospitals entered into an agreement with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas which provided that they would treat patients with Blue Cross health plans and then be reimbursed for those treatments. Plaintiffs allege that they rendered medically necessary services to three patients with Blue Cross healthcare plans, that they submitted the claims to Blue Cross, and that Blue Cross rejected the claims and denied the appeals because preauthorization was purportedly not obtained prior to providing service. Blue Cross has currently not paid anything on the claims at issue. Accordingly, the hospitals filed this action seeking the payments. They assert claims under ERISA and contract law. Blue Cross moved to dismiss the claims. The court analyzed the ERISA claim first. Blue Cross urged the court to dismiss the ERISA claim pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), arguing that the providers failed to plausibly allege valid assignments of benefits which deprives them of standing to bring claims under ERISA. In response, the hospitals argued that the court should assess the issue of assignments pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The court found that “Defendant’s argument carries the day. Defendant’s Motion, as to Count I, must be analyzed under Rule 12(b)(1) because standing under ERISA invokes the Court’s subject matter jurisdiction.” The court then determined that Blue Cross’s attack on the assignments was factual. “Here, Defendant has launched a factual attack because it has challenged the underlying facts supporting the Complaint – whether the assignments exist at all – rather than merely challenging the allegations on their face.” Accordingly, the court expressed that plaintiffs needed to put forth evidence of valid and enforceable assignments of benefits from the patients rather than just allege their existence in order to survive the Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. As a result, the court dismissed the ERISA claim, but without prejudice. As for the contract claims, the court denied Blue Cross’s motion to dismiss finding that the complaint states plausible claims for relief and meets the elements to state its claims. Therefore, defendant’s motion to dismiss the contract claims pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) was denied. Should they choose to do so, plaintiffs were given leave to amend their complaint to address the deficiency in their allegations regarding the assignments. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss was granted in part without prejudice, and otherwise denied. 

Pleading Issues & Procedure

First Circuit

Turner v. Liberty Mutual Ret. Benefit Plan, No. 20-11530-FDS, 2025 WL 2108841 (D. Mass. Jul. 28, 2025) (Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV). Plaintiff Thomas Turner was hired by Safeco Insurance Company in 1980. He worked for Safeco for the next 28 years, until it was acquired by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company in 2008, at which time he became an employee of Liberty Mutual. At the center of this putative class action is Liberty Mutual’s calculation of cost-sharing obligations for post-retirement medical benefits, and its decisions regarding whether to credit workers’ pre-merger years of service with Safeco. Mr. Turner has always maintained that after the acquisition of Safeco by Liberty Mutual, he was repeatedly advised that he would receive cost-sharing credit for his retiree health benefits based on a calculation of his years of service with both Safeco and Liberty Mutual. However, when he retired in 2018, Liberty Mutual made him choose between his Safeco and Liberty Mutual benefits. Mr. Turner challenged this determination of his post-retirement medical benefits and argued that Liberty Mutual was required to credit his years of service to both Safeco and Liberty Mutual. When it did not do so, Mr. Turner turned to litigation. On August 14, 2020, he filed this action against the Liberty Mutual defendants on behalf of himself and others similarly situated. He asserted four causes of action which included a claim for determination of plan terms and clarification of benefits, a claim for equitable relief based on allegations of fiduciary breach, a claim alleging defendants failed to provide plan documents, and a claim for failure to disclose plan limitations. On summary judgment, the court concluded that Mr. Turner’s post-retirement medical benefit under the Liberty Mutual plan was not a vested benefit, and that the unambiguous terms of the plan did not provide cost-sharing credit for his year with Safeco. The court also granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on the failure to provide plan documents and failure to disclose plan limitations claims. Despite finding in favor of defendants on counts one, three, and four, the court denied their motion for summary judgment on the fiduciary breach claim for equitable relief. It found that there were triable issues of fact regarding precisely what representations Liberty Mutual had made to Mr. Turner concerning whether his years of service with Safeco would be credited to him for the purpose of calculating his cost-share obligations under the Liberty Mutual retiree health plan. As a result, litigation continued. Mr. Turner subsequently filed a motion for class certification. On July 15, 2024, the court denied the motion for certification on the ground that the proposed class was based in part on a newly asserted claim that Mr. Turner was denied benefits under both the Safeco and the Liberty Mutual plans. “The initial complaint had alleged that plaintiff was denied benefits under only the Liberty Mutual plan; according to the initial complaint, plaintiff’s benefits under the Liberty Mutual plan were to be calculated based on the credit that he accrued – that is, his total years of employment – at both Safeco and Liberty Mutual. However, it did not allege that plaintiff was entitled to and denied benefits under both plans.” Mr. Turner now seeks leave to amend his complaint to address the pleadings concerning the combined-benefits theory, based on an assertion that he was improperly denied both his grandfathered Safeco benefits and his earned Liberty Mutual benefits. The court denied Mr. Turner’s request for leave to amend in this decision. First, the court held that the motion was unduly and unjustifiably delayed as it was filed five years after Mr. Turner initially brought this action. In the time since, discovery has closed and the court has ruled on two summary judgment motions and a motion for class certification. The court held that “[s]uch a significant delay is alone sufficient to deny the motion.” In addition to the motion’s lack of timeliness, the court also determined that allowing Mr. Turner to amend his complaint at this juncture would impose substantial and unfair prejudice on the defendants. Even assuming without deciding that the amendment would not entail significant or extensive new discovery, the court said that “amendment would nevertheless be unfairly prejudicial, as it would likely meaningfully affect defendants’ litigation strategy.” Consequently, the court concluded that the combined delay and prejudice cautioned against granting the motion for leave to amend the complaint. For these reasons, the court denied the motion.