For the second week in a row, no case stood out as the case of the week. Nevertheless, there were still many interesting rulings, including two decisions concluding that ERISA did not preempt healthcare provider claims, and one decision (Rizzo) that includes a colorful example of the hazards of “Reply All.” (This is a family publication, so you’ll have to click through to find out for yourself what the email said.)

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

Attorneys’ Fees

Third Circuit

Rizzo v. First Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 3:17-cv-745-PGS-DEA, 2023 WL 6923494 (D.N.J. Oct. 18, 2023) (Judge Peter G. Sheridan). In this case the court found that defendant First Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company arbitrarily and capriciously denied life insurance benefits to plaintiff Jody Rizzo. Reliance Standard appealed to the Third Circuit, which affirmed the grant of summary judgment to Ms. Rizzo and awarded her $79,050 in attorney’s fees and $302.79 in costs in connection with the appeal. Ms. Rizzo and her counsel, attorney Gregory Heizler, then moved for attorney’s fees and costs for the work expended on the district court litigation. Mr. Heizler sought $125,800 in fees and $3,279.88 in costs. To begin, the court stated that the litigation had been “particularly adversarial” and noted behavior by plaintiff’s counsel, including a lurid email, that was “antithetical to the professional standards of our practice and common courtesy.” Nevertheless, the court concluded that fees were justified. It wrote, “the deterrent effects of this decision will serve to discourage Reliance Standard from arbitrarily and capriciously denying a Waiver of Premium application where medical information is available for its review prior to making a benefit determination,” and that “other members of the pension plan will benefit from Reliance Standard’s consideration of medical information prior to determination of its Waiver of Premium decisions, and this decision might deter other insurers from engaging in similar arbitrary and capricious conduct in the future.” The court also expressed that it was not inclined to “deprive a widow of such an award,” especially under these circumstances, where she achieved success on the merits both in the district court and again on appeal. Having established that a fee award is appropriate, the court then turned to assessing the reasonableness of the hourly rate and hours requested. Mr. Heizler sought an hourly rate of $500 per hour, the same rate he was awarded in the Third Circuit’s fee decision. The court found this requested rate eminently reasonable and in line with comparable legal services in the geographic area, “[g]iven the information supplied to the Court – along with a review of the previous cases.” Moreover, the court concluded that the 251.6 hours of work spent on litigation in the district court was reasonable, not inflated, and appropriately documented. Accordingly, the court awarded the full amount of attorney’s fees sought, totaling $125,800. The court then considered an appropriate award of costs. Counsel sought $3,279.88 in costs for reimbursement of travel expenses, filing fees, service of process, record search costs, photocopies, and postage. However, as the court noted, in the revised time sheet counsel submitted $855.13 worth of costs that were not accounted for. Therefore, the court deducted this amount and awarded plaintiff’s counsel $2,424.75 in costs. Finally, the court denied Mr. Heizler’s request for interest on his attorney’s fee award. It stated that it could find no case law supporting this concept, and was unsure how it would even go about calculating interest on such an award.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Sixth Circuit

Washington v. Lenzy Family Inst., No. 1:21-cv-1102, 2023 WL 6879788 (N.D. Ohio Oct. 18, 2023) (Judge Meehan Brennan). The core allegations in this action stem from an employer’s failure to remit employee premiums deducted from paychecks to the insurance provider of the company’s ERISA-governed healthcare plan. Plaintiff Leonard Washington sued his former employer, Lenzy Family Institute, Inc., along with its board of directors and its executive director, in connection with this failure, which resulted in the plan’s termination and the Washington family losing their health insurance coverage. Even after the plan was terminated, Lenzy Family Institute continued to deduct premium payments from their employees’ paychecks, and failed to inform them that they had lost their health insurance coverage. Mr. Washington also maintains that defendants never provided him with documentation required under ERISA, including plan documents, the summary plan description, and annual funding notices. Due to his loss of health insurance coverage, Mr. Washington and his family were unable to receive medical care and to procure their prescription medications. Based on defendants’ actions relating to the healthcare plan, Mr. Washington asserted causes of action under ERISA for breach of fiduciary duties, as well as a claim seeking statutory penalties for failure to comply with ERISA’s disclosure and notification requirements. Additionally, Mr. Washington brought two state law causes of action against defendants, one for violation of an Ohio state wage law and another for promissory estoppel. Defendants have not appeared in this litigation. The clerk of the court previously entered a default, and Mr. Washington subsequently moved for default judgment. In this decision his motion for default judgment was denied without prejudice thanks to issues regarding damages and ERISA preemption. First, the court held that Mr. Washington established by his allegations that he is entitled to penalties under ERISA Section 1132(c)(1)(A) for defendants’ failure to provide plan documents as required under Section 1021(f). However, the court was not only unclear about the appropriate start and end dates to apply for the purposes of statutory penalties, but also stated that it required additional information and briefing on reasons why it should use its discretionary power to award Mr. Washington damages at all, and assuming it should, in what amount. Mr. Washington encountered similar problems with his fiduciary breach claims. Again, the court found that Mr. Washington’s allegations entitle him to relief for his breach of fiduciary duty claims asserted under Section 502(a)(3). It held that defendants breached their fiduciary responsibilities by failing to remit the healthcare payments deducted from their employees to the plan and that they misrepresented to Mr. Washington that the money taken out of his paycheck would provide him with health insurance when this turned out not to be the case. Yet, once again, Mr. Washington ran “into hurdles with damages.” The court instructed him to refile his motion with information needed in order to establish what remedies he is seeking for these breaches and to cite supporting caselaw demonstrating that these remedies constitute “appropriate equitable relief” under Section 1132(a)(3)(B). Finally, as alluded to above, the court requested additional information about Mr. Washington’s state law causes of action, specifically addressing whether either of his claims are either completely or expressly preempted by ERISA. For the forgoing reasons, the court denied the motion for default judgment, and Mr. Washington was given time to refile his motion to address all the concerns raised by the court in this order.

Eleventh Circuit

Su v. CSX Transportation, Inc., No. 3:22-cv-849-MMH-JBT, 2023 WL 6940242 (M.D. Fla. Oct. 11, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Joel B. Toomey). Magistrate Judge Toomey issued this report and recommendation recommending the court deny the motion of defendants – CSX Transportation, Inc., CSX Pension Plan, Merged UTU Pension Plan, Greenbrier Frozen Union Pension Plan, the CSX Corporation Master Pension Trust, and the plans’ administrative and investment committees – to dismiss Acting Secretary of Labor Julie A. Su’s complaint alleging breaches of fiduciary duties and prohibited transactions under ERISA. Broadly, the Secretary has alleged that defendants used an opaque and unreasonable system to calculate plan fees which “was not appropriately designed to reflect the Company’s expenses or reasonable cost for services provided,” and seeks in this action “a complete reversal” of the $1,323,744.00 in fees the CSX defendants billed for the years 2016-2020. Defendants argued that the complaint fails to state a claim because they were not acting as fiduciaries with regard to the payment for administrative services and expenses, and because the Secretary “effectively concedes that the Plans paid no more than reasonable compensation for the services they received.” Magistrate Toomey was not persuaded by either argument. He pointed out that the complaint demonstrated the ways in which defendants exercised control over plan assets and fees and that this management, as alleged, plausibly demonstrates that defendants were acting as fiduciaries with respect to the allegations of wrongdoing. Furthermore, the Magistrate held that the complaint sets forth its claims in such a way that the court can reasonably infer that defendants are liable for the breaches and misconduct alleged. Contrary to defendants’ position, the Magistrate Judge concluded the complaint does not concede the fees were reasonable, rather the allegations make clear that plaintiff views the compensation paid as excessive and in violation of ERISA. “Moreover, Plaintiff has pleaded that Defendants did not comply with the Plan documents. Thus, even if the Plan documents said one thing, Plaintiff alleges that the reality was different.” Accordingly, the Magistrate found that the allegations in the complaint were nonfrivolous, plausible, and satisfied notice pleading. He therefore recommended the motion to dismiss be entirely denied.

ERISA Preemption

Third Circuit

Prime Healthcare Servs.-Lower Bucks, LLC v. Cigna Health & Life Ins. Co., No. 23-1313, 2023 WL 6927330 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 19, 2023) (Judge Anita B. Brody). Plaintiff Prime Healthcare Services is a group of hospitals in Pennsylvania. The hospitals allege that Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company and Cigna Healthcare of Pennsylvania, Inc. have failed to fully reimburse costs of emergency services provided to hundreds of patients insured under Cigna benefit plans. Plaintiff brought a lawsuit in state court asserting state law claims of breach of implied-in-law contract, breach of contract, promissory estoppel, quantum meruit, unjust enrichment, and conversion against the Cigna defendants. The complaint expressly states that Prime Healthcare will “remove any claims from the list once it is ‘able to confirm that the claims are governed by self-funded ERISA plans.” Plaintiff attests that it does not wish to state any cause of action under ERISA. Despite clearly attempting to avoid ERISA preemption issues and asserting only state law causes of action, Prime’s complaint was nevertheless removed by the Cigna defendants to federal court on the grounds that ERISA completely preempts at least some of the claims in the complaint. Prime Healthcare moved for remand. The court agreed with Prime that it is the “master of its complaint,” and that it may choose to plead its claims only on the basis of state law and avoid asserting ERISA claims. Upon analyzing the causes of action under the two-prong Davila preemption test, the court was satisfied that neither prong was met here. It concluded that the hospitals could not have brought claims under ERISA and that their state law causes of action implicate independent legal duties. The court agreed with plaintiff that Cigna’s obligations do not arise under the terms of any ERISA plan and that its duties instead are “owed to Prime under an implied-in-law contract to provide emergency services, under an express contract to pay for post-stabilization services, as well as under state law principles of promissory estoppel, quantum meruit and unjust enrichment, and conversion.” In sum, the court stated that Cigna’s duties “would exist whether or not an ERISA plan existed,” and thus are not dependent on any ERISA plan or its terms. Accordingly, the court granted the motion to remand. However, because it could not definitively conclude that Cigna’s decision to remove the case was objectively unreasonable, the court denied Prime’s request for an award of attorney’s fees and costs in connection with the removal to federal court.

Fifth Circuit

Baytown Med. Center, LP v. UnitedHealthcare Ins. Co., No. 1:23-CV-00142, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2023 WL 6939177 (E.D. Tex. Oct. 18, 2023) (Judge Michael J. Truncale). An out-of-network hospital, plaintiff Baytown Medical Center, LP, sued UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company in state court under the Texas Insurance Code for failure to pay the usual and customary rate as reimbursement for emergency care it provided to an insured patient. Baytown Medical was paid only $1,764.49 of the $13,811.91 medical costs, and believes this rate of reimbursement is far lower than the usual and customary rate UnitedHealthcare is required to pay under Texas law. UnitedHealthcare removed the case to federal court, arguing that the hospital’s claim is preempted by ERISA. In response, Baytown Medical maintained that its state law claim is not subject to either complete or conflict preemption, and moved to remand the action back to state court. The motion to remand was granted in this order. Although the court found that the first prong of the two-prong Davila preemption test was satisfied because Baytown Medical was assigned benefits by the patient and therefore had derivative standing to assert a claim under ERISA, the court held that the second prong was not met. Specifically, the court concluded that the claim under the Texas Insurance Code implicates an independent legal duty as it does not require a benefit determination under plan terms and because the claim involves the rate of payment rather than the right to payment. Therefore, the court held that the claim against UnitedHealthcare is not completely preempted by ERISA and federal jurisdiction does not exist. As a result, the court remanded the case back to Texas state court.

Medical Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Colin D. v. Morgan Stanley Med. Plan, No. 20-CV-9120-LTS-GWG, 2023 WL 6849130 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 17, 2023) (Judge Laura Taylor Swain). A father and son, plaintiffs Joseph and Colin D., sued their ERISA-governed healthcare plan, the Morgan Stanley Medical Plan, and its administrators, Optum Group LLC and United Behavioral Health, Inc., after Colin’s stay at a residential treatment center for the treatment of mental health disorders was denied by defendants. Plaintiffs asserted causes of action under ERISA seeking payment of benefits under the plan, and also alleging violations of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. The parties both moved for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ claims. As an initial matter, the court needed to resolve the parties’ dispute over the appropriate standard of review. Although the two sides agreed that the plan grants discretionary authority to the United defendants, plaintiffs argued that defendants violated the Department of Labor’s claims handling regulations by violating minimum notice standards, and thus defendants are not entitled to deference. They claimed that defendants’ denial letters did not explain which specific plan provisions or Optum Level of Care Guidelines criteria were applied in making the benefit determinations and that the letters never specifically discussed medical necessity. The court agreed with plaintiffs that the letters failed to reference specific plan provisions upon which the denials were based, and that this “regulatory violation was [not] inadvertent or harmless.” Thus, the court determined that plaintiffs were entitled to de novo review of the denial of benefits. However, the court did not grant either party summary judgment on the Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim for denial of benefits. Instead, it identified conflicting evidence in the medical record that created genuine issues of material fact as to whether the treatment at the residential facility was medically necessary as defined by the plan. The court expressed that to make such a determination it would need to weigh various opinions of medical professionals, which “is outside the scope of the Court’s authority in a traditional summary judgment posture.” Given these material disputed factual issues, the court declined to award summary judgment to either party, and held off ruling on the claim for benefits until after it can hold a bench trial on the administrative record. The court then moved on to the Parity Act violation claims. Plaintiffs maintained that the plan violated the Parity Act in two ways, one by providing reimbursement for travel and lodging expenses for medical and surgical treatments, but not for mental health treatments, and two by using guidelines outside of the plan (the “Optum Guidelines”) only for mental health treatment and not for other kinds of analogous medical treatment at skilled nursing facilities. The court started with the travel expenses claim. It ultimately concluded that plaintiffs failed to identify an analogous medical/surgical treatment in the same classification as their residential mental healthcare treatment, because the plan only provides for travel and lodging reimbursement “when using an in-network facility.” The mental health benefits for which plaintiffs seek coverage were out-of-network, meaning the benefits could not be compared to in-network medical or surgical treatment. Accordingly, the court granted judgment in favor of defendants on this claim. It did so for plaintiffs’ other Parity Act claim as well. There, the court held that the use of the Optum Guidelines was not a violation because the plan uses another set of comparable guidelines, the MCG Guidelines, for skilled nursing facilities. Although not identical to one another, the court concluded that these two sets of guidelines “do not impose materially different limitations on treatment claims for residential mental health facilities as opposed to skilled nursing facilities.” Therefore, the court found that plaintiffs did not carry their burden of proving a Parity Act violation, and entered summary judgment in favor of defendants on both Parity Act claims.

Pension Benefit Claims

First Circuit

Tseng v. Welch Foods Inc., No. 1:20-cv-11486-GAO, 2023 WL 6847039 (D. Mass. Oct. 17, 2023) (Judge George A. O’Toole, Jr.). In 2019, defendant Welch Foods Inc. reduced its Pension Restoration “top-hat” Plan’s accrual interest rate from 9.5% to 4%, changing the rate for the first time since the plan’s inception in 1997. That decision consequently lowered the amount of annual benefits provided under the plan to its participants. A group of those participants challenged the interest rate change through the plan’s administrative appeals process, and then, after the decision was upheld on appeal, commenced this lawsuit. They claim that the reduction in accrual interest rate violated the plan terms, which offer “lifetime” benefits. In this action they sought a court order overturning the interest rate change. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Before resolving the parties’ dispute, the court settled on the appropriate review standard. As the plan grants its administrator discretionary authority, the court concluded that arbitrary and capricious review was the applicable standard for the summary judgment motions. Under deferential review, and upon consulting the terms of the plan, the court held that the Welch defendants were able to adjust the rate as they saw fit. “The fact that the rate was not adjusted for many years does not establish that the rate could not, under the Plan documents, ever be adjusted. The Plan plainly provides otherwise. Adjusting the annual accrual to a more conservative 4 percent, though disadvantageous to the participants, was a decision plainly authorized by the explicit language of the Plan.” Based on these findings, the court concluded that it was not an abuse of discretion to lower the accrual interest rate of the top-hat plan, and as a result, the court granted judgment in favor of the defendants.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Fifth Circuit

Hall v. Fraternal Order of Police, No. 22-1823, 2023 WL 6847363 (E.D. La. Oct. 17, 2023) (Judge Jay C. Zainey). Plaintiff Sonya Hall, on behalf of herself and the estate of her late husband, officer Mark Hall, brought this lawsuit against the Fraternal Order of Police, Crescent City Lodge No. 2, Reliance Standard Insurance Company, and Federal Insurance Company alleging state law causes of action on the basis that she has not received life insurance benefits under a policy belonging to Mr. Hall. Defendant Federal Insurance Company moved to dismiss the single claim against it for breach of contract pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). It argued that ERISA governs the plan at issue and that Ms. Hall’s breach of contract claim alleged in her complaint is completely preempted by ERISA. Moreover, Federal Insurance Co. claimed that Ms. Hall cannot allege a cause of action under ERISA and she failed to exhaust administrative remedies prior to commencing this action. Before reaching any decision on defendant’s grounds for dismissal, the court first settled the issue of whether the policy at issue is governed by ERISA, and, by extension, whether it has federal subject matter jurisdiction in this litigation. It answered both queries in the affirmative. The court was satisfied that the plan exists, that it does not fall under ERISA’s safe harbor provision because the employer contributes to the plan, and that the plan meets ERISA’s definition of an employee benefit plan, as it is an insurance plan offered by an employer to employees to provide benefits to those employees in the event of death or dismemberment. Accordingly, the court found the policy qualifies as an ERISA-governed plan, and therefore moved on to consider the issue of preemption. Here, the court held that ERISA undoubtedly preempts the bad faith breach of contract claim for failure to pay plan benefits. “Such a claim clearly falls within the parameters of Section 1132(a)(1)(B), and within the standards set forth in Davila and Ellis. Therefore, the state law claim set forth by Hall is completely preempted by ERISA.” Accordingly, the motion to dismiss was granted as to the preemption of the breach of contract claim. However, the court concluded that leave should be given to Ms. Hall to amend her complaint and replead her claim against Federal Insurance Company as a claim for benefits under ERISA. It also informed Ms. Hall that she should include facts about exhausting administrative remedies within her amended complaint, or advance arguments why she did not or could not have exhausted remedies prior to filing her lawsuit. Thus, the motion to dismiss was denied to the extent that Federal argued that Ms. Hall failed to state a claim under ERISA and failed to exhaust the administrative process. Consequently, Ms. Hall was given these instructions by the court and granted leave to amend her complaint in this manner.

Seventh Circuit

Taylor v. BW Wings Mgmt., No. 1:22-CV-0106-HAB-SLC, 2023 WL 6847030 (N.D. Ind. Oct. 17, 2023) (Judge Holly A. Brady). Plaintiff Nick Taylor is an employee of BW Wings Management, LLC. He, his wife, and their minor child, Z.T., were all covered under BW Wings Management LLC Employee Benefit Plan, an ERISA-governed welfare plan, when Ms. Taylor was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer. On July 29, 2020, Ms. Taylor was scheduled for surgery related to her cancer diagnosis. However, right before the surgery was scheduled to take place, the co-owner of BW Wings informed the family “that Ms. Taylor’s and Z.T.’s health insurance was improperly implemented under the Plan outside the open enrollment period and the health insurance for Mrs. Taylor and Z.T. under the Plan would end” immediately. So, Ms. Taylor and her son had their health insurance under the plan retroactively cancelled, and because she no longer had health insurance and could not afford to pay the cost of the surgery without insurance, Ms. Taylor was forced to cancel and postpone her medically necessary surgery. In this action the Taylors have sued the company for interference with their health benefits under ERISA Section 510, and levied state law claims for promissory estoppel, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, constructive fraud, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. BW Wings moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state an ERISA Section 510 claim, and moved to dismiss the state law claims as preempted by ERISA Section 514(a). Defendant’s motion was denied in this order. The court found the complaint plausibly alleges facts to sketch a viable Section 510 claim under ERISA and that it could infer defendants took away the beneficiaries’ coverage to avoid paying for costly surgery. “The complaint need not lay out all the facts that must eventually be proved to prevail at trial – that is what discovery is for.” The court was clear that the Taylor family need not prove their entitlement to benefits at this stage of the proceedings. “Rather, taking the allegations as true, the Taylors have pled they were entitled to dependent benefits under an ERISA plan…they were granted benefits under an ERISA plan, and those benefits were rescinded by the Defendant to prevent paying for Mrs. Taylor’s surgery.” The factual disputes are for a later stage of litigation, the court stressed, and stated that it was persuaded the family alleged sufficient facts to infer a plausible Section 510 claim. Turning to ERISA preemption, the court held that the conflict preemption argument “is not properly raised in a motion to dismiss,” as it is an affirmative defense. Thus, the court declined to dismiss the family’s complaint.

Ninth Circuit

Warren v. The Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co., No. 2:23-cv-00601-GMN-EJY, 2023 WL 6850193 (D. Nev. Oct. 16, 2023) (Judge Gloria M. Navarro). In a brief decision, the court granted defendant The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company’s motion to dismiss plaintiff Allanna Warren’s lawsuit for failure to state a claim. Ms. Warren asserted state law causes of action against Lincoln in a single-paragraph complaint alleging a conspiracy between the Las Vegas Police and Lincoln for racial profiling, discrimination, and misuse of medical information. Although somewhat unclear, the lawsuit also stems from an improper denial of ERISA-governed disability benefits, and possibly seeks a court order granting disability benefits. Lincoln therefore argued the state law causes of action are preempted by ERISA. The court ultimately could not reach a definitive finding on the issue of ERISA preemption given the “limited allegations” in the complaint. Nevertheless, the court was sure that Ms. Warren’s complaint as currently pled was insufficient to infer the wrongdoing alleged, stating that “it currently consists of nothing more than the ‘unadorned, the-defendant-unlawfully-harmed-me accusation.’” Accordingly, the motion to dismiss was granted, and Ms. Warren was given 21 days to file an amended complaint to address and remedy its current deficiencies.

Standard of Review

Fifth Circuit

Stout v. Smith Int’l, No. 6:22-CV-06036, 2023 WL 6882790 (W.D. La. Oct. 18, 2023) (Judge Terry A. Doughty). Plaintiff Charles Robert Stout commenced this action against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”) and Smith International, Inc. seeking a court order reinstating his terminated long-term disability benefits. In this order the court examined whether MetLife has discretionary authority under the plan, and by extension what the appropriate standard of review of the denial ought to be when it comes time to decide the ultimate merits issues of the disability benefits decision. As a preliminary matter, the court found that there was no genuine issue of material fact about whether MetLife is a fiduciary under the long-term disability plan. The terms of the plan unambiguously vest MetLife with the authority to deny or approve submitted claims, verify claimants’ continuing disabilities, and conduct appeals of any initial denials it may make. The court held that the authority to carry out these tasks clearly establish MetLife is a fiduciary under ERISA. The tricker issue was whether the plan language, which does not expressly invoke the phrase “discretionary authority,” nevertheless vests MetLife with such authority. In order to answer this question, the court wrote that it was required to “look to ‘the breadth of the administrators’ power.’” The plain language of the plan “holds that benefits terminate when a claimant is no longer disabled and MetLife has specific authority to verify whether claimants do, in fact, remain disabled.” This language was understood by the court as granting MetLife with discretionary authority to terminate a claimant’s benefits when he or she cannot prove their continuing disability. Accordingly, the court explained that the defendants are entitled to a deferential standard of review and therefore granted judgment to them on this issue.

Eleventh Circuit

Davis v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co., No. 6:23-cv-57-ACA, 2023 WL 6849438 (N.D. Ala. Oct. 17, 2023) (Judge Annemarie Carney Axon). Plaintiff Laura Davis and defendant United of Omaha Life Insurance Company agreed to bifurcate this disability benefits action into two phases. In the first and present phase, the parties each moved for partial summary judgment as to the standard of review the court should use in evaluating the disability termination decision. Ms. Davis argued that United of Omaha did not provide her with an opportunity to respond to an amended report or that report’s new evidence for denial before issuing its final appeal determination, which she asserts is in violation of ERISA’s claims handling procedure regulations. As a result of this violation, Ms. Davis maintained that United of Omaha “forfeited as a matter of law entitlement to deferential review standard.” In response, United of Omaha argued that this violation was de minimis because the amended report at issue only corrected an identified typo in the original report, meaning that there was no new grounds or evidence that Ms. Davis was unable to respond to. United of Omaha thus contended that the arbitrary and capricious standard of review applies because the plan grants it discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits. The court agreed with defendant that “even if United of Omaha violated ERISA’s regulations, the violation was de minimus.” It stated that Ms. Davis did not suffer harm or prejudice by not receiving an opportunity to respond to the amended report, because she was able to respond to the original report, which was nearly identical. Therefore, the court felt that under the circumstances, United of Omaha demonstrated that the claims procedure violation “was for good cause and part of the ongoing, good faith exchange of information with Ms. Davis.” Accordingly, the court denied Ms. Davis’ motion. Instead, the court held that it would stick with the Eleventh Circuit’s unique six-step framework for evaluating ERISA plan benefit denials, evaluating first if the decision was de novo wrong and then, assuming that it was, progressing to an analysis of the denial under deferential review. The court also declined to depart from this framework by skipping the first de novo review step of the Eleventh Circuit’s framework and proceeding directly to the following five steps applicable to arbitrary and capricious review, which it understood defendant to be requesting in its motion. As a result, the court also denied United of Omaha’s partial summary judgment motion to establish an arbitrary and capricious review standard.

This was a slow week in the courts. Out of the handful of ERISA decisions, none stood out as the case of the week. But, as always, we have summarized each one 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

Ninth Circuit

Hormel Foods Corp. Hourly Emps’ Pension Plan v. Perez, No. 1:22-cv-00879-JLT-EPG, 2023 WL 6626121 (E.D. Cal. Oct. 11, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Erica P. Grosjean). This action centers around rather unusual circumstances. Plaintiff Hormel Foods Corporation Hourly Employees’ Pension Plan, along with the Hormel Foods Corporation, commenced this lawsuit against a woman to whom they mistakenly paid plan benefits. That woman, defendant Marie E. Perez, shares the same name as a former Hormel employee. As the complaint outlines, Hormel sent a form to Ms. Perez, believing she was the plan participant of the same name, informing her that she was entitled to an approximately $20,000 lump-sum cash payment, and that to receive the payment she needed to sign the document, certify that she was the person named above, attest that “I am not currently employed by Hormel Foods or an affiliate of Hormel foods,” and provide the last four digits of her social security number. Ms. Perez signed the form, including the last four digits of her own social security number and her telephone number, and returned the form to Hormel. She was then paid the lump sum payment. Hormel later realized its mistake and asked Ms. Perez to return the money. When she refused to do so, the company and the plan commenced this action, bringing ERISA breach of fiduciary duty claims asserted under Section 502(a)(2) and (a)(3) against her. Hormel Foods has since moved for a default judgment under Rule 55(b)(2) on the Section 502(a)(2) claim. Its motion was denied by the court in this order. Although fiduciary status is often a tricky issue in the ERISA contest, the court here did not particularly struggle to conclude that Ms. Perez does not qualify as a fiduciary. “Defendant was not an employee of Hormel. She was never designated as a fiduciary of the Plan. She was not informed of any responsibilities, obligations, or duties imposed upon her by the Plan. She did not have control over any assets in the plan. The form sent to her did not indicate that she was a fiduciary, inform her of any duties related to the Plan, or ask her to undertake any responsibilities by returning the form.” The court was not persuaded by Hormel that by returning the form and keeping the payment, Ms. Perez became a fiduciary under the plan. Instead, it came to the opposite conclusion: “a defendant does not become a fiduciary under the statute by simply retaining funds mistakenly deposited in her account.” Thus, even assuming the allegations in the complaint are true, the court held that Hormel cannot state a claim against Ms. Perez for breach of fiduciary duty under Section 502(a)(2). Thus, the court denied Hormel’s motion for default judgment and dismissed the case in its entirety for failure to state a claim.

Class Actions

Second Circuit

Lutz v. Kaleida Health, No. 1:18-CV-01112 EAW, 2023 WL 6617737 (W.D.N.Y. Oct. 11, 2023) (Judge Elizabeth A. Wolford). In this putative ERISA class action, plaintiffs have appealed Magistrate Judge Jeremiah J. McCarthy’s order granting defendants’ motions to strike the report and rebuttal report of their expert witness, James M. Garber. Plaintiffs argued that the Magistrate’s determination that the entire report and rebuttal should be stricken in their entirety as unreliable is contrary to Second Circuit precedent which cautions against striking entire witness reports “when the unreliable portion of an opinion can easily be distinguished from testimony that could help the jury,” adding that “it may be an abuse of discretion to throw the good out with the bad.” Here, however, the court agreed with Magistrate McCarthy that the witness report was all bad. It seconded the Magistrate’s finding “that the errors in Garber’s analysis were so significant that they rendered the entirety of his reports unreliable and inadmissible.” Moreover, the court found the scale and “magnitude” of Mr. Garber’s flaws to be of such great degree, and so fundamental, that they rendered the entirety of his report unusable and defective. “In other words…the pervasive errors made by Garber were so significant – and cast such a pall on his overall reliability – that it was not appropriate to attempt to parse out any unproblematic aspects of his opinions.” The court thus found that the Magistrate’s order was fully consistent with the Second Circuit precedent plaintiffs cited as undermining the reasonableness of the Magistrate’s decision. Accordingly, the court found no abuse of discretion in the Magistrate’s decision and concurred that Mr. Garber’s analysis rendered his report inadmissible. Plaintiffs’ appeal was therefore denied.

Ninth Circuit

Mills v. Molina Healthcare, Inc., No. 2:22-cv-01813-SB-GJS, 2023 WL 6538381 (C.D. Cal. Sep. 27, 2023) (Judge Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.). A certified class of participants of the Molina Salary Savings Plan claim in this action that their former employer, Molina Healthcare, Inc., the plan’s former investment advisor, flexPATH Strategies, LLC, the plan’s investment committee, and the Molina board of directors violated their fiduciary duties of prudence, loyalty, and monitoring, and engaged in prohibited transactions by selecting a suite of flexPATH target date funds as the plan’s default investment options despite these funds being untested and ultimately proving to be inferior and more expensive when compared to other target date funds available. Plaintiffs allege that the decision to include these funds in the plan was motivated by self-interest, that the individuals who advocated for their implementation in the plan were financially incentivized to do so, and that defendants were not acting in compliance with the plan’s investment policy statement either when they selected the funds or when they evaluated their performance over time. Eventually the plan replaced flexPATH as the investment advisor. The new company selected by the plan recommended the removal of the flexPATH funds given the costs of the revenue sharing to flexPATH and concerns that there was “a significant conflict of interest” present. According to plaintiffs’ experts, the flexPATH target date funds were nothing more than BlackRock’s target date funds, dressed up with an additional layer of fees. Their damages expert calculates that the plan’s assets would have increased by as much as $26.7 million during the relevant period if the plan had used other target date funds instead of the flexPATH funds. Defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims. Their motion was mostly denied by the court, with a couple of narrow exceptions as applied to three subparts of plaintiffs’ prohibited transaction claim asserted against flexPATH. For the most part, the court found that the record contained evidence from which a reasonable factfinder could find for plaintiffs. In particular, the court highlighted evidence that “raises questions about the adequacy of [defendants’] decision-making process.” This evidence included, among other things, a document purporting to be minutes of the meeting when flexPATH was selected to serve as the plans’ fiduciary and the flexPATH funds were implemented as the default investment options. The document’s metadata revealed that it was in fact created many years later, after defendants became concerned about the flexPATH funds and their potential liability under ERISA. On the voluminous record before it, the court listed many issues of genuine fact as to whether defendants breached their duties of loyalty, prudence, and monitoring, and therefore denied their motion for summary judgment entirely on the breach of fiduciary duty claims. However, the court granted, in part, defendant flexPATH’s motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ prohibited transaction claim. It granted the motion for the claims against flexPATH asserted under Sections 1106(a)(1)(A), (a)(1)(C), and (b)(3), holding that plaintiffs’ claims did not fit the criteria of these subsections. It did not, however, dismiss the prohibited transaction claims asserted against flexPATH under Sections 1106(a)(1)(D), (b)(2), or (b)(8), nor did the court dismiss any of the prohibited transaction claims brought against the Molina defendants. Thus, most of plaintiffs’ claims remain following the court’s decision here, and all of the genuine issues of fact identified by the court in this order remain for it to decide following a bench trial.

Disability Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Reynolds v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., No. C21-1424 TSZ, 2023 WL 6541328 (W.D. Wash. Oct. 6, 2023) (Judge Thomas S. Zilly). Plaintiff Lucy Reynolds commenced this lawsuit against Life Insurance Company of North America (“LINA”) to challenge its denial of her claim for long-term disability benefits under an ERISA-governed policy. Ms. Reynolds has been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, migraine headache, hypothyroidism, asthma, depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Ms. Reynolds leaned heavily on the decision of the Social Security Administration approving her claim for Social Security disability benefits, in which the SSA determined that Ms. Reynolds’ conditions “significantly limit [her] ability to perform work activities on a regular and continuing basis,” and that she is “unable to perform any past relevant work.” The parties filed cross-motions for judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. They agreed on de novo review as the appropriate review standard. The court ruled in this decision that Ms. Reynolds was entitled to judgment in her favor and payment of benefits under both the 24-month “own occupation” and subsequent “any occupation” standards of the disability policy. It wrote, “LINA’s correspondence with Plaintiff…demonstrates that LINA approved Plaintiff’s claim for STD benefits because Plaintiff satisfied the terms of the Policy. Because the Policy required Plaintiff to meet the same definition of disabled to receive the first 24 months of LTD benefits, LINA’s approval of Plaintiff’s claim for STD benefits must be construed as a determination that Plaintiff was disabled as defined by the Policy for the purposes of the first 24 months of LTD benefits. Thus, LINA incorrectly denied Plaintiff’s claim for LTD benefits.” With regard to the long-term disability benefits after 24 months, the court was persuaded that Ms. Reynolds’ medical conditions have not improved, and she continues to suffer from ongoing disabling illnesses. It also found that although the SSA’s disability finding is “not dispositive,” it was nevertheless convincing evidence that Ms. Reynolds’ numerous impairments leave her unable to perform the duties of “any occupation.” For these reasons, Ms. Reynolds met her burden of establishing entitlement to benefits, and the court ordered LINA to pay her long-term disability benefits to date, and to continue paying them until the policy’s maximum benefit duration absent a showing that she is no longer disabled within the meaning of the policy should there be some improvement in her medical conditions.

ERISA Preemption

Eleventh Circuit

S. Broward Hosp. Dist. v. Elap Servs., No. 20-61007-CIV-SINGHAL/VALLE, 2023 WL 6547748 (S.D. Fla. Sep. 30, 2023) (Judge Raag Singhal). A nonprofit hospital system, plaintiff South Broward Hospital District d/b/a Memorial Healthcare System, brought this putative class action against defendants ELAP Services, LLC and Group and Pension Administrators, Inc. alleging defendants engaged in systematic practices designed to underpay hospital services. According to information gleaned through the discovery process, plaintiff estimates that it has incurred $2 million in damages as a result of defendants’ allegedly flawed reimbursement formulas. Plaintiff challenged these actions under Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act and under common law unjust enrichment. Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that the claims relating to underpayment and inaccurate appeals are preempted by ERISA, and that plaintiff’s other claims fail because their billing practices are fair, do not result in consumer harm, have not caused the hospital system any damages, and have not conferred any direct benefit onto them. The court granted the motion for summary judgment in this order. Although the court was skeptical of defendants’ arguments that their actions did not constitute deceptive or unfair practices and that the actions did not cause damages to plaintiff, it nevertheless agreed that plaintiff failed to demonstrate consumer harm. Thus, the court entered judgment in favor of defendants on the state law claim for deceptive trade practices. The court also faulted plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim. It concluded that Memorial Healthcare failed to present evidence that there was any direct benefit conferred to defendants. However, defendants’ ERISA preemption arguments were unsuccessful. The court disagreed with defendants that plaintiff’s claims in any way related to or relied upon ERISA plans. Instead, it agreed with plaintiff, which is a non-ERISA entity, that its allegations were based on the challenged metrics and billing formulas which exist outside the ERISA plans and plan language. Nevertheless, although the claims were not found to be ERISA-preempted, as discussed above, the court identified other shortcomings in the state law claims and therefore granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. 

Pension Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Munger v. Intel Corp., No. 3:22-cv-00263-HZ, 2023 WL 6540052 (D. Or. Oct. 5, 2023) (Judge Marco A. Hernandez). Plaintiff Ruth Ann Munger, individually and in her capacity as the representative of the estate of Philip Cloud, filed this ERISA action seeking payment of Mr. Cloud’s life insurance benefits to the estate. Ms. Munger argued that the named beneficiary of the plans, Mr. Cloud’s widow, defendant Tracy Lampron Cloud, has been convicted of second degree murder, and is therefore not entitled to any plan benefits under both Oregon’s state slayer statute and federal common law. The court previously granted Ms. Munger’s partial motion for summary judgment in which she requested that the court estop Ms. Cloud from relitigating the question of whether she murdered her husband. Ms. Munger subsequently moved for summary judgment requesting distribution of the ERISA plan benefits to the estate. In response to Ms. Munger’s summary judgment motion, Ms. Cloud filed a cross-motion for summary judgment and additionally moved for leave to file a counterclaim alleging that Ms. Munger and the Intel defendants breached a global settlement agreement that she claims the parties entered into during state court proceedings. In this order the court granted Ms. Munger’s summary judgment motion and denied Ms. Cloud’s motions. It held that under either Oregon, California, or federal law, Ms. Munger has established that Ms. Cloud is a slayer and therefore not entitled to recover benefits. Under the unambiguous terms of the plans, the court determined that the estate is entitled to benefits of the 401(k) and the retirement contribution plan, and that no person or entity is entitled to benefits under the minimum pension plan, the retiree medical plan, and the retirement medical account plan. As for Ms. Cloud’s request for leave to assert her counterclaim, the court not only found that Ms. Cloud unduly delayed in asserting a counterclaim, but also concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to enforce the settlement agreement that the state court had rescinded.

Cloud v. The Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Player Ret. Plan, No. 22-10710, __ F. 4th __, 2023 WL 6533182 (5th Cir. Oct. 6, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Willett, Engelhardt, and Oldham)

In a stunning upset, the Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Player Retirement Plan obtained a last-minute victory in this longstanding disability lawsuit by former NFL running back Michael Cloud, who suffers from a debilitating neurological impairment.

After retiring from an seven-year NFL career during which he suffered numerous concussions, Mr. Cloud was awarded the lowest level of disability benefits under the NFL Plan in 2010. Following an award of Social Security disability benefits, he sought and was awarded a higher level of total and permanent disability benefits in 2014. Two years later, he sought but was denied the highest level of benefits under the Plan, which requires a claimant to show that he either became disabled within a year of retiring from the NFL or as a result of one or more concussions during his NFL career. Only 30 former players have ever been awarded these benefits, despite the well-documented prevalence of traumatic brain injuries stemming from concussions suffered by football players.  

In the June 29, 2022 edition of Your ERISA Watch, we reported on the scathing opinion of Judge Karen Gren Scholer faulting the Board of Trustees and other fiduciaries of the NFL Plan for how they handle the disability claims of former players such as Mr. Cloud. After allowing significant discovery and conducting a multi-day bench trial, both of which are extremely rare in ERISA benefit suits, the judge awarded Mr. Cloud the highest level of benefits, concluding that he had not been afforded a full and fair review of his claim for these benefits, and had proved that he was entitled to them. The district court faulted the Board, among other things, for failing to clearly identify the reasons for the denial, failing to consider all the evidence submitted with Mr. Cloud’s claim, giving deference to the denial by the original decisionmakers, deciding Mr. Cloud’s appeal along with one hundred others during a ten-minute pre-meeting, without review of hundreds or thousands of pages of documents in each claim file, and failing to refer Mr. Cloud for an examination by a neutral physician, which the district court determined was required by the Plan. 

None of this mattered much to the Fifth Circuit, which reversed the district court and ordered the court to enter judgment in favor of the Plan. The court of appeals began with the standard of review applicable to the Board’s denial. Because the Plan granted discretion to the Board, the Fifth Circuit applied abuse of discretion review to the Board’s decision, as had the district court. But unlike the district court, the appeals court found that the Board’s denial was reasonable and thus had to be affirmed under this standard because Mr. Cloud “could not and did not demonstrate changed circumstances” as required under the Plan to obtain a higher level of benefits.

The court of appeals noted that Mr. Cloud did not attempt to make a showing of changed circumstances when he appealed the initial denial of these benefits to the Board, but instead simply argued for a waiver of that requirement. Although Mr. Cloud pointed to evidence of changed circumstances – including a newly submitted doctor’s report from 2012, new or at least worsening symptoms or disabilities, and testimony about worsening behavioral problems from Mr. Cloud’s ex-wife – the court of appeals concluded that he waived these arguments by failing to raise them with the Board and because the evidence supporting them was not in the claims record and so could not be a basis for concluding that the Board abused its discretion in denying benefits.

The court of appeals likewise rejected Mr. Cloud’s argument that the Board was precluded from relying on the lack of proof with regard to changed circumstances because the Board “has never adhered to a defined or uniform interpretation of ‘changed circumstances.’” Although the Fifth Circuit found “some superficial merit to this argument,” it nevertheless concluded that the Board’s varying interpretations were “not significant, and Cloud does not show how he can meet the standard for ‘changed circumstances’ under any of those definitions anyway.” Moreover, despite the “bleak picture” in the record of how the Board conducts appeals, the Fifth Circuit found that the definition the Board ultimately settled on in the litigation was reasonable and fair given what it termed the ”absolute discretion” granted to the Board under the terms of the Plan. Thus, although the court of appeals “shar[ed] the district court’s unease with a daunting system that seems stacked against ex-NFLers,” it nevertheless concluded that the Board “did not abuse its discretion in denying reclassification due to Cloud’s failure to show ‘changed circumstances.’”

The Fifth Circuit then turned to whether remand to the plan administrator for full and fair review was the appropriate remedy. The court concluded that it was not because a remand would be a “useless formality” given the lack of any “clear and convincing evidence” of changed circumstances.

The court of appeals thus ended where it began, concluding that “[a]lthough the NFL Plan’s review board may well have denied Cloud a full and fair review, and although Cloud is probably entitled to the highest level of disability pay,” he was not entitled to receive those benefits because he had failed to show changed circumstances between his 2014 claim and his 2016 claim. Twice, the Fifth Circuit “commend[ed]” the district court for “expos[ing] the disturbing lack of safeguards to ensure fair and meaningful review of disability claims brought by former players who suffered incapacitating on-the-field injuries, including severe head trauma” and for “chronicling a lopsided system aggressively stacked against disabled players.” But instead of holding the Plan accountable for these shocking shortcomings by its fiduciaries, only the disabled player was made to pay the price of his surely less blameworthy failures. Indeed, given this unfair system, the Fifth Circuit was undoubtedly right that a remand would be a useless formality. What was not a useless exercise was the district court’s decision giving Mr. Cloud the full and fair review he had been denied by the Plan and granting him the benefits to which it was obvious he was entitled when given a level playing field and a fair shot.            

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

Arbitration

Second Circuit

Duke v. Luxottica U.S. Holdings Corp., No. 21-CV-06072 (JMA) (AYS), 2023 WL 6385389 (E.D.N.Y. Sep. 30, 2023) (Judge Joan M. Azrack). Plaintiff Janet Duke, on behalf of a putative class of participants and beneficiaries of the Luxottica Group Pension Plan, commenced this action against the plan’s fiduciaries for breaches of their duties under ERISA. She alleged that defendants have relied on outdated and unreasonable mortality assumptions in calculating benefits which has led to reduced pension payments under the plan. Defendants responded to the complaint by moving to compel arbitration, or in the alternative, to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim. The court began its decision with defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of Article III standing. Defendants’ subject matter jurisdiction challenge was split into two parts. First, defendants raised a facial challenge to Ms. Duke’s standing to pursue claims for losses to the Plan under ERISA Sections 409 and 502(a)(2). They argued that Ms. Duke cannot maintain these claims thanks to the Supreme Court’s precedent in Thole v. U.S. Bank N.A., 140 S. Ct. 1615 (2020). The court agreed with defendants “that Thole controls and mandates dismissal of her claims brought under §§ 409(a) and 502(a)(2),” given that this case also involves a defined benefit plan. It went on to explain that the benefits Ms. Duke receives in her joint and survivor annuity are “not tied to the value of the plan” meaning she cannot show recovery to the plan, which is the only form of recovery available under these subsections of ERISA. Thus, like the plaintiffs in Thole, the court found that Ms. Duke lacks Article III standing to assert these claims, and therefore granted the motion to dismiss them. The court then turned to defendants’ second challenge to Ms. Duke’s subject matter jurisdiction wherein they argued that Ms. Duke lacks Article III standing to pursue the rest of her claims because, they contended, her monthly benefit would actually be lower if the plan used the longevity charts and actuarial assumptions she argues should be employed. This argument, the court found, was premised on a question of fact, not properly resolved when considering a motion to dismiss. As a result, this aspect of defendants’ motion to dismiss was denied. The court then moved on to consider defendants’ motion to compel arbitration. It concluded that the arbitration provision was valid, enforceable, and that Ms. Duke’s ERISA claims fall within its scope. The court rejected Ms. Duke’s argument that the provision could not be enforced due to the agreement’s class action waiver provision. Here, the court found that because it “dismissed Plaintiff’s claims under § 502(a)(2) for lack of standing,” concerns around the fact the arbitration agreement takes away a statutory right to plan wide relief do not apply or need to be considered in this instance. Consequently, the court granted the motion to compel arbitration on all remaining claims and stayed the case pending arbitration. The decision did not address defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).

Attorneys’ Fees

Second Circuit

Maddaloni v. Pension Tr. Fund of the Pension, No. 19-cv-3146 (RPK) (ST), 2023 WL 6457756 (E.D.N.Y. Oct. 4, 2023) (Judge Rachel P. Kovner). Plaintiff Mark Maddaloni sued the Pension Trust Fund of the Pension, Hospitalization and Benefit Plan of the Electrical Industry and its board of trustees, seeking judicial review of defendants’ denial of his application for disability pension benefits. On January 3, 2023, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Mr. Maddaloni. Mr. Maddaloni then moved for an award of attorneys’ fees. In a report and recommendation issued on September 1, 2023, Magistrate Judge Tiscione recommended that the court award Mr. Maddaloni attorneys’ fees in the amount of $153,661.15. The parties each filed objections to the Magistrate’s report. In this order, the court adopted the report in part and awarded Mr. Maddaloni attorneys’ fees totaling $120,560.47. The court reduced the hourly rates set by Magistrate Tiscione, which ranged from $250 per hour to $600 per hour, and altered these amounts to a range of $250 per hour to $420 per hour instead. It found these slightly lower hourly rates were more appropriate for similar work in the Eastern District of New York. However, the court did not alter the report’s recommendation that the hours be reduced overall by 33% as neither party objected to this aspect of the Magistrate’s report. The court did diverge from the report by determining that the attorneys should be compensated for the hours they spent on their fee application, and therefore added these hours to its lodestar calculation. Applying these new metrics, the court was left with its total fee award of $120,560.47, which it then ordered defendants to pay.

Seventh Circuit

Zall v. Standard Ins. Co., No. 21-cv-19-slc, 2023 WL 6388781 (W.D. Wis. Sep. 29, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Stephen L. Crocker). After finding success on appeal to the Seventh Circuit, plaintiff Eric Zall ultimately won his action against Standard Life Insurance Company seeking reinstatement of his long-term disability benefits. Now, Mr. Zall seeks an award of attorneys’ fees and costs under Section 502(g)(1). He requested an award of $69,907.50 in attorneys’ fees and $3,402.22 in costs. The court awarded Mr. Zall fees and costs, agreeing that he was entitled to a fee award under ERISA given his success on the merits, but reduced the requested amounts. To begin, the court rejected Standard’s argument that Mr. Zall was not eligible for fees because his victory in the Seventh Circuit was “procedural.” To the contrary, the court found “Zall’s success in establishing that Standard failed to afford him a full and fair review by violating an ERISA rule was as much as ‘merits issue’ as his ultimate right to benefits under the plan.” This was all the more true, the court pointed out, because Standard reversed its decision and reinstated Mr. Zall’s long-term disability benefits. Not only was the court satisfied that Mr. Zall met the threshold requirement of success on the merits, but it also found that an award of fees and costs was appropriate here under the Seventh Circuit’s five-factor test, especially given that a fee award here “may deter Standard from similar errors in the future, which will confer a benefit on plan participants.” Nevertheless, when determining the appropriate amount of fees the court altered the lodestar by exercising its discretion to apply an overall 40% reduction to the fees sought. The court did not disturb the rates sought by the attorneys, ranging from $550 per hour for the most senior attorney on the case to $100 an hour for a law school clerk, nor the number of hours for the work expended during litigation. The rates requested, the court found, were in line with or even “lower than the rates they command in the Wisconsin market from paying clients for similar work.” The court also found that the hours counsel submitted “were reasonably expended on this case,” and properly documented. However, because Mr. Zall ultimately succeeded on appeal based on “his regulatory argument,” which was not the primary focus of his arguments and legal theory presented in the district court, the court held that “it is accurate and fair to describe Zall’s success, as measured against the time spent, as partial, such that a reduction in the lodestar is warranted.” Therefore, the court applied the 40% reduction and awarded Mr. Zall’s attorneys a fee award of $41,944.50. Finally, the court reduced the requested costs from $3,402.22 to $907. The remaining $2,495.22 in costs requested were determined to be unrecoverable under 28 U.S.C. § 1920.

Tenth Circuit

D.K. v. United Behavioral Health & Alcatel-Lucent Med. Expense Plan for Active Mgmt. Emps., No. 2:17-CV-01328-DAK, 2023 WL 6444258 (D. Utah Oct. 3, 2023) (Judge Dale A. Kimball). On June 22, 2021, the court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs of this mental healthcare benefits action and subsequently awarded them prejudgment interest, attorneys’ fees, and costs. United Behavioral Health, along with the other defendants of this action, appealed both the court’s summary judgment and fee decisions. On appeal, the Tenth Circuit affirmed both the district court’s grant of plaintiffs’ motion for judgment and its order of benefits, interest, costs, and fees. Your ERISA Watch summarized the Tenth Circuit’s decision and featured it as our case of the week in our May 24, 2023 edition. And, as we’ve been covering here, the impact of the D.K. ruling has been felt reverberating throughout district courts in the Tenth Circuit, leading to many more favorable outcomes for ERISA healthcare plaintiffs thanks to the circuit court’s holding that fiduciaries are required to engage in meaningful dialogues with ERISA claimants and their healthcare providers. Now plaintiffs have moved for an award of appellate attorney fees pursuant to ERISA Section 502(g)(1). Plaintiffs requested a fee award totaling $85,950. The court granted in part plaintiffs’ motion, ordering defendants to pay attorneys’ fees totaling $67,475. As a preliminary matter, the court rejected defendants’ notion that the court lacks jurisdiction to issue an award of appeal-related attorneys’ fees. To the contrary, the court stated that under Section 502(g) it has “broad discretion in awarding attorney’s fees in connection with trial court litigation and appellate litigation.” Furthermore, the court was once again satisfied that factors weighed in favor of awarding attorneys’ fees to plaintiffs because defendants abused their discretion in denying D.K.’s claim, they have the ability to satisfy a fee award, awarding fees could deter defendants and other ERISA fiduciaries from acting in a similar manner in the future, and an award of fees here “will have a beneficial effect in this area of the law and benefit plan participants and beneficiaries.” Moreover, the court emphasized that plaintiffs prevailed in their defense of the appeal and ultimately succeeded in reversing the healthcare claims denials. However, despite holding that plaintiffs are entitled to a fee award, the court did exercise its discretion to reduce the amount requested. As far as the hours billed, the court only reduced 3.2 of the 232.3 hours billed. These 3.2 hours were for time attorney Brian King spent discussing plaintiffs’ severance agreement, which is not subject to this lawsuit. The remaining 229.1 billed hours were found to be reasonable and therefore were not disturbed by the court. But the court did reduce the hourly rates requested. Attorney Brian King sought an hourly rate of $600 per hour and associate attorney Tara Peterson sought an hourly rate of $300 per hour. The court lowered these amounts to those it had previously determined to be reasonable in its first fee decision. Those rates were $450 per hour for Mr. King and $250 per hour for Ms. Peterson. Multiplying these hourly rates by the hours spent, the court was left with its ultimate lodestar of $67,475, which it then awarded to plaintiffs and ordered defendants to pay.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

Antoine v. Marsh & McLennan Cos., No. 22 Civ. 6637 (JPC), 2023 WL 6386005 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 30, 2023) (Judge John P. Cronan). Participants of the Marsh & McLennan Companies Savings and Investment 401(k) Plan, individually and on behalf of the plan, have sued Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc., its board of trustees, and its benefit, investment, and administrative committees and individual board and committee members for breaches of fiduciary duties. Plaintiffs allege that defendants selected and retained an imprudent suit of ten BlackRock LifePath Index Funds which resulted in low investment returns. In addition, plaintiffs also challenge the selection and retention of another fund, the Mercer Emerging Markets Fund, which they claim also underperformed comparators. They allege this Fund was selected by defendants because of its affiliation with Marsh & McLennan. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedures 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). The court granted defendants’ motion in this decision. It held that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring claims regarding the Mercer Fund because they did not personally invest in it. Accordingly, the court found that it lacked jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claims to the extent they were premised on the selection and retention of the Mercer Fund. As for the BlackRock target date funds, the court found that “Plaintiffs’ claims of underperformance miss the mark.” Given the fact that prudent fiduciaries need to be focused on long-term outcomes of investments, the court found that plaintiffs’ short-term indications of underperformance were insufficient to infer a breach, particularly as snapshots of other periods of time indicated that the challenged suite of funds was performing at or above the levels of comparators. Thus, “the underperformance alleged here, in the absence of additional indicia of imprudent decision-making, does not demonstrate dramatic enough underperformance to justify an inference of imprudence.” And, as the court found the underlying imprudence claim insufficient, it also dismissed the derivative failure to monitor and knowing breach of trust claims. Therefore, the entirety of plaintiffs’ complaint was dismissed. The decision ended with the court granting plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint to resolve the pleading deficiencies identified in this order.

Third Circuit

Volz v. General Motors, LLC, No. 22-cv-3471, 2023 WL 6521002 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 5, 2023) (Judge Chad F. Kenney). Plaintiff Wade Volz began working for General Motors, LLC in 1999. At that time, he enrolled himself and his then wife, decedent Tina Volz, in GM’s ERISA-governed benefit plans, including its life insurance plan. From 1999 until Ms. Volz’s death in late 2020, GM automatically deducted premium payments from Mr. Volz’s paycheck for Ms. Volz’s life insurance coverage. Under the terms of the plan, however, only spouses are considered dependents eligible to retain coverage. The plan states that coverage needs to be converted to an individual policy within 31 days of a divorce. Mr. and Ms. Volz divorced in 2013. Mr. Volz maintains that he notified GM’s HR representative, and by extension the company, of his divorce in 2013. He was informed at the time that he could maintain insurance benefits for Ms. Volz. He elected to terminate her health and dental insurance, but to continue her life insurance coverage. He says that at no point in time did GM advise him that he needed to convert the life insurance policy. Instead, he continued to make the required premium payments up until Ms. Volz’s death. In this breach of fiduciary duty action, Mr. Volz asserts that he would have submitted the required conversion or portability application on the life insurance policy had he been properly informed at the time of his divorce. He did not learn that Ms. Volz’s eligibility for coverage had ended until after he applied for benefits under the plan following her death in January 2021. Following an unsuccessful administrative appeal of the denied claim Mr. Volz commenced this action against GM alleging a claim for breach of fiduciary duty under Section 502(a)(3). The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The court entered judgment in favor of GM, siding with it on three key issues: (1) Mr. Volz could not establish the required elements for a breach of fiduciary duty claim under ERISA; (2) his claim was barred by ERISA’s six-year statute of limitations; and (3) Mr. Volz knowingly and voluntarily signed a separation and release agreement and thus waived his ERISA claims against GM. Starting with the elements of a breach of fiduciary duty claim, the court found that Mr. Volz “cannot show that Defendants breached a fiduciary duty or that any alleged misrepresentation was material.” It held that GM administered the claim according to the terms of the plan and that it was unreasonable for Mr. Volz to rely on the 2013 misrepresentation and continued premium deductions because he was in possession of the plan document and it was his “duty to inform himself of the details of the plan, including coverage, and he failed to do so.” Next, the court agreed with GM that the claim was untimely as the “date of the last action” occurred in 2013 when the misrepresentation was made to Mr. Volz. Thus, the court found that Mr. Volz was required “to have filed his Complaint in 2019,” notably before Ms. Volz’s death. Because he filed his complaint in 2022, the court held that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations, despite acknowledging that Mr. Volz did not have actual knowledge of the breach “until his claim was rejected in January 2021.” Finally, the court brushed aside Mr. Volz’s arguments why the separation and release waiver he signed with GM was not valid. Instead, the court concluded that the language of the waiver was clear and specific, Mr. Volz had a 45-day window to review the document, the agreement instructs signees to seek counsel prior to agreeing to its terms, and Mr. Volz received a lump sum payment and health benefits in exchange for the release. The court was satisfied that the totality of these circumstances supported the proposition that Mr. Volz knew or should have known that he was waiving all claims, including his breach of fiduciary duty ERISA claim here. Accordingly, the court sided with GM on all three matters and thus granted its motion for summary judgment and denied Mr. Volz’s cross-motion for summary judgment.

Sixth Circuit

Principal Life Ins. Co. v. Howard-Kembitzky, No. 2:22-cv-3421, 2023 WL 6392446 (S.D. Ohio Oct. 2, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Chelsey M. Vascura). Principal Life Insurance Company commenced this interpleader action to determine the proper beneficiary of ERISA-governed life insurance proceeds for decedent Francis Joseph Kembitzky, III. One of the two potential beneficiaries, defendant Denise Howard-Kembitzky, Mr. Kembitzky’s surviving spouse, filed a counterclaim against Principal Life for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. In her counterclaim, Ms. Howard-Kembitzky contends that Principal breached its fiduciary duties by incorrectly advising her and her late husband “that no updated beneficiary form would be necessary for Denise to receive Francis’s life insurance proceeds.” Principal Life moved to dismiss the counterclaim for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). In this decision the court denied Principal’s motion to dismiss the counterclaim. Holding that Ms. Howard-Kembitzky sufficiently alleged that Principal Life acted in a fiduciary capacity by answering the couple’s questions regarding the beneficiary designation and that Ms. Howard-Kembitzky and Mr. Kembitzky reasonably relied on Principal Life’s misrepresentations, the court concluded that Ms. Howard-Kembitzky adequately stated a claim for relief. Finally, the court held that Ms. Howard-Kembitzky was not bringing a repackaged benefits claim. Rather, the court agreed with Ms. Howard-Kembitzky that Principal Life’s alleged misrepresentations prevented her from becoming entitled to benefits, meaning this claim is appropriately brought as a fiduciary breach claim under Section 502(a)(3). For these reasons, the court denied Principal Life’s motion to dismiss the counterclaim.

Seventh Circuit

Baumeister v. Exelon Corp., No. 21-cv-6505, 2023 WL 6388064 (N.D. Ill. Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge Robert Blakey). Participants of The Exelon Corporation Employee Savings 401(k) Plan on behalf of themselves and a putative class of similarly situated individuals have sued Exelon, its oversight and investment committees, and its board of directors for violations of ERISA including breaches of fiduciary duties and prohibited transactions in connection with a suite of underperforming proprietary target date, U.S. equity, international equity, and fixed income funds, as well as high-cost administrative and recordkeeping services. According to the complaint, the proprietary funds were costly, in terms of fees, and underperformed funds with similar investment goals and strategies. Plaintiffs allege that these funds served the interests of Exelon at their expense. In addition, plaintiffs challenged defendants’ choice of recordkeeper and service provider and alleged that the plan’s arrangements with its recordkeepers were overly costly and that the true costs were not disclosed to the participants. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. The court granted the motion to dismiss in this decision. It agreed with defendants that plaintiffs failed to offer sound comparators for the fees and funds and that it could not infer from the complaint that their actions were breaches of fiduciary duties or prohibited transactions. It went on to express that the underperformance data plaintiffs provided did not in and of itself give rise to a reasonable inference of imprudence for many of the funds, as the court noted that these funds were mostly in “the middle of the pack.” Regarding the recordkeeping and administrative expenses of the plan, the court wrote “Plaintiffs have failed to allege that their proposed comparators offered the same services as the Plan at a lower price per participant.” Finally, the court concluded that plaintiffs’ duty of loyalty claims “merely recast their duty of prudence claims,” and that plaintiffs’ views of what constitute prohibited transactions under ERISA was “nonsensical,” because these were essential services for the plan. Based on the foregoing, the court entirely granted the motion to dismiss, but did so without prejudice, allowing plaintiffs the opportunity to amend.

Eleventh Circuit

Gamache v. Hogue, No. 1:19-CV-21 (LAG), 2023 WL 6444275 (M.D. Ga. Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge Leslie A. Gardner). Former employees of Technical Associates of Georgia, Inc. (“TAG”) and participants of the TAG Employee Stock Ownership Plan (“ESOP”) have sued a series of company executives, administrative committee members, and other plan fiduciaries for engaging in prohibited transactions and for breaching fiduciary duties under ERISA. Specifically, plaintiffs allege that a series of loan refinancing, stock transactions, and asset transfers that took place in 2011 changed the stock ownership share in the plan, caused losses to the plan, and were fraudulently concealed from the non-fiduciary participants of the plan. In this action they seek various forms of relief, including voiding the prohibited transactions, disgorgement of profits from the transactions, removal of defendants as plan fiduciaries, and a constructive trust over the proceeds from the transactions at issue. Defendants moved for summary judgment. In response, plaintiffs moved for partial summary judgment. The court began its discussion by addressing defendants’ summary judgment motion. Defendants presented three grounds for summary judgment. First, they argued that plaintiffs’ claims are time-barred. Second, they argued that the executives who received stock shares through the transactions were not acting in fiduciary capacities at the time. Third, they argued that ERISA does not govern plaintiffs’ claims, and that even if it did govern their claims those claims fail on their merits because the transactions at issue do not constitute prohibited transactions under ERISA. To begin, the court agreed with plaintiffs that there is a genuine issue of material fact about whether their claims are timely given the evidence they presented indicating that defendants actively sought to conceal their actions and hide pertinent details about the 2011 transactions from plan participants. Thus, the court denied defendants’ summary judgment motion based on the timeliness of the claims. Next, the court held that there are genuine issues of material fact about whether the defendants were acting in their fiduciary capacities in relation to the challenged transactions. The court also identified genuine issues of material fact as to whether the loan primarily benefited the participants and beneficiaries of the ESOP and whether defendants caused the ESOP to engage in transactions which constituted improper transfers of plan assets to parties in interest. Last, the court stated that “each of the Defendants was a party to the transaction and was extensively involved,” and that it was therefore likely that defendants had the requisite knowledge to establish the breaches alleged. Accordingly, the court entirely denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment, and so moved on to plaintiffs’ partial motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs sought summary judgment in their favor that defendants engaged in a prohibited transaction in violation of ERISA Section 406(b)(3). They also moved for judgment holding that defendants’ Section 408(b)(3) exemption defense fails as a matter of law as to their 406(b)(3) claim. Finally, plaintiffs sought a declaration from the court that “all Defendants’ ‘affirmative defenses’ other than their exemption and statute of repose defenses fail as a matter of law because they are not affirmative defenses.” First, the court once again held that there exist genuine issues of material fact as to the fiduciary element of the 406(b)(3) claim which preclude awarding summary judgment. Second, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for judgment “solely to the extent that Defendants seek to assert the ERISA § 408(b)(3) exemption defense to a prohibited transaction pursuant to ERISA § 406(b)(3), [as] such defense fails as a matter of law.” Last, the court declined to enter summary judgment on defendants’ mislabeled defenses. Thus, other than its grant of summary judgment to plaintiffs on the one narrow issue pertaining to defendants’ prohibited transaction exemption defense, the court denied plaintiffs’ partial motion for summary judgment too.

Disability Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Quigley v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 22-CV-5906 (JPO), 2023 WL 6387021 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge J. Paul Oetken). Plaintiff James Quigley commenced this ERISA action against Unum Life Insurance Company of America for wrongful denial of long-term disability and waiver of life insurance premium benefits. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment with the court. In this order the court denied both motions, concluding that genuine issues of material facts exist which preclude awarding summary judgment to either party. Instead, the court decided that it will conduct a bench trial on the papers to resolve all material factual disputes. As an initial matter, the court agreed with Mr. Quigley that the appropriate review standard in this case is de novo. The court based this decision both on the plan language and on Unum’s own position up until now that it “does not dispute application of de novo review in this case.” Adopting a more deferential review standard now, the court held, would prejudice Mr. Quigley as he had proceeded under the assumption that the review standard was a settled matter and thus was not given the opportunity to conduct discovery into any potential conflicts of interest. However, even under de novo review, the court ultimately concluded that neither party is entitled to summary judgment because there are genuine issues of material fact over Mr. Quigley’s occupation and what duties are properly considered part of his occupation, as well as “dueling facts and medical opinions on whether Quigley’s conditions rise to the level of disability under Unum’s plans.” Given that a reasonable fact finder could reasonably adopt either party’s position on these issues, the court found that at this stage these disputes between the parties are over material facts making resolution on cross-motions for summary judgment inappropriate.

Third Circuit

Breen v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 22-3688, 2023 WL 6396051 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 2, 2023) (Judge Chad F. Kenney). Plaintiff Lisa Breen commenced this ERISA action seeking judicial review of defendant Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company’s decision to terminate her long-term disability benefits which she was receiving for focal epilepsy, seizures, and resulting cognitive impairments. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Before the court could rule on the benefits claim, it needed to settle the appropriate review standard. The parties agreed that the policy grants Reliance Standard discretion. However, Ms. Breen argued that Reliance Standard committed procedural violations by failing to explain its disagreements with her treating health care and vocational professionals and the differing conclusion of the Social Security Administration. While the court agreed that defendant’s explanations of disagreement were “vague” it did not find this flaw to constitute a “severe procedural violation” necessary to alter the standard of review to de novo. Accordingly, the court stuck with the deferential arbitrary and capricious review standard, and proceeded to its analysis of the benefit termination decision. In the end, the court concluded that a reasonable person could agree with Reliance Standard’s conclusion that Ms. Breen could perform certain sedentary jobs and that she therefore no longer qualified for disability benefits under the “any occupation” standard. The court did not fault Reliance Standard for favoring the opinions of its reviewing doctors over those of Ms. Breen’s treating doctors. Nor did it take issue with Reliance’s disregard of Ms. Breen’s self-reported symptoms, including her seizure log. Furthermore, the court stressed that Reliance Standard was not required to order Ms. Breen to undergo an independent medical examination, and that its decision not to was not an abuse of discretion. As for defendant’s “boilerplate reasoning for disagreeing with the Social Security Administration’s determination,” the court stated that nearly identical language had been upheld in the Third Circuit, meaning it does not in and of itself establish that the decision was arbitrary and capricious. Finally, the court found that Reliance was allowed to not give weight to a vocational assessment that Ms. Breen provided as part of her appeal. Based on the foregoing, the court found that defendant had not abused its discretion in terminating Ms. Breen’s long-term disability benefits, and that to “hold otherwise would require this Court to substitute its judgment for that of the Defendant, which is impermissible.” Thus, summary judgment was granted in favor of Reliance Standard.

Eleventh Circuit

Johnson v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 1:21-cv-02900-SDG, 2023 WL 6379609 (N.D. Ga. Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge Steven D. Grimberg). Plaintiff Cheriese D. Johnson sued Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company seeking judicial review of its denial of her claim for long-term disability benefits. The parties cross-moved for judgment under the arbitrary and capricious review standard. There was no dispute among the parties that Ms. Johnson is totally disabled from a rare autoimmune disorder called scleroderma. Their dispute instead centered on whether Ms. Johnson’s claim was properly denied under the plan’s pre-existing conditions exclusion. Ms. Johnson argued that she was not diagnosed with scleroderma until after the look-back period had ended. On the other hand, Reliance Standard maintained that Ms. Johnson, despite not yet being diagnosed, was receiving treatments and seeing doctors during the look-back period covered by the exclusion and that this treatment was for symptoms attributable to her yet to be diagnosed autoimmune disease. Under deferential review, the court was left with “the inescapable conclusion that Reliance Standard’s benefits determination was supported by reasonable grounds.” It held that the exclusion does not require a diagnosis to have been made in order to apply, but instead requires that a claimant be treated during the look-back period for the illness that caused the total disability. The court was satisfied that these circumstances applied here, and that the exclusion was appropriately relied upon to deny benefits. Despite voicing sympathy for Ms. Johnson and her situation, the court found that Reliance’s denial was neither arbitrary nor capricious and that “it was entirely consistent with an Eleventh Circuit case interpreting the exact same policy language.” Accordingly, the court granted Reliance Standard’s summary judgment motion and denied Ms. Johnson’s motion for judgment.

Discovery

Fourth Circuit

Taekman v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:22cv605, 2023 WL 6460377 (M.D.N.C. Oct. 4, 2023) (Magistrate Judge L. Patrick Auld). In this disability benefits action, plaintiff Dr. Jeffrey Taekman seeks to recover long-term disability benefits under his ERISA-governed plan offered by his former employer, Duke University Medical Center, and insured by Unum Life Insurance Company of America. Dr. Taekman moved to compel discovery and also moved for an extension of the discovery period. The court denied both motions in this decision. It emphasized that it has “limited ability to consider material outside the administrative record in adjudicating Plaintiff’s claim,” particularly because the de novo standard of review applied. Holding that there was no exceptional circumstance present in this instance where additional evidence outside the record will be necessary in order to conduct an adequate de novo review of the denial, the court concluded that it would only look at the evidence that was before defendants during the administrative claims process. Moreover, the court stressed, “Plaintiff has produced no evidence, despite multiple opportunities to do so, that the administrative record Defendant filed does not contain all materials Plaintiffs submitted and/or Defendant considered in its claim adjudication.” Based on the foregoing, the court denied Dr. Taekman’s motions.

Fifth Circuit

Pedersen v. Kinder Morgan, Inc., No. 4:21-CV-3590, 2023 WL 6441948 (S.D. Tex. Sep. 29, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Dena Hanovice Palermo). Plaintiffs in this pension benefits dispute have sued Kinder Morgan, Inc. and other plan fiduciaries over their interpretation of the retirement plan’s language regarding unreduced early retirement benefits. In a previous discovery order, the court directed defendants to produce documents drafted by Kinder Morgan’s benefits director which defendants claimed were protected under attorney-client privilege. Defendants sought reconsideration of that order, again maintaining that these documents are privileged and thus non-discoverable. This time, defendants’ arguments proved successful, leading the court to change its earlier position and grant the motion to reconsider pursuant to Rule 54(b). The court “previously found that the Memoranda were not protected by attorney-client privilege because the Memoranda were prepared by a non-lawyer, contained facts known to him and his proposed solutions under the Plan, were not addressed to anyone, and did not indicate on their face that they sought legal advice, incorporated legal advice, or provided legal advice.” Now, however, based on supplemental evidence submitted by defendants, the court concluded that the challenged documents were in fact protected by attorney-client privilege, as the benefits director has clarified that “he prepared the Memoranda at the sole direction of legal counsel for the sole purpose of securing legal advice or providing legal advice.” The court disagreed with plaintiffs that this assertion of privilege was conclusory and unconvincing. Thus, defendants’ motion was granted. Nevertheless, the court clarified to defendants that “the privilege does not protect disclosure of facts,” and directed counsel to ensure that plaintiffs have access to the underlying facts described in the Memoranda.

Sixth Circuit

Sweeney v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., No. 2:20-cv-1569, 2023 WL 6383453 (S.D. Ohio Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge James L. Graham). A group of current and former Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company employees who participate in its retirement savings plan have sued a series of related Nationwide defendants for breaches of fiduciary duties, prohibited transactions, and violations of ERISA’s anti-inurement provision in connection with their actions administering the retirement savings program. Defendants moved for summary judgment “five months before the close of discovery and nine months before the dispositive motion deadline.” In response to defendants’ motion, plaintiffs requested relief under Rule 56(d) to allow them to conduct further discovery prior to responding to the summary judgment motion. In this decision the court granted plaintiffs’ 56(d) motion and denied, without prejudice, defendants’ summary judgment motion. The court stated that plaintiffs did not delay discovery and have been diligent in their seeking of discovery. Conversely, it held that “Defendants have not timely complied with discovery requests.” As for whether the discovery plaintiffs are seeking is relevant and would have an impact on the court’s ruling on defendants’ summary judgment motion, the court concluded that it was because the information “is material evidence that the Plaintiffs can use to prove their claims against Defendants.” The court agreed with plaintiffs that the discovery they have requested is necessary to rebut defendants’ defenses, allegations, and assertions, and that the information plaintiffs may unearth through discovery “could be used as evidence and impact the ruling on the summary judgment motion.” In sum, the court was satisfied that plaintiffs met their burden to show that discovery is still needed for them to be able to properly respond to defendants’ summary judgment motion and that they are entitled to further time to conduct this discovery. For these reasons the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for relief under Rule 56(d).

ERISA Preemption

Second Circuit

Rosen v. UBS Fin. Servs., No. 22-cv-03880 (JLR), 2023 WL 6386919 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge Jennifer L. Rochon). Plaintiff Emily Rosen brought this state law action to recover damages related to an ERISA-governed life insurance policy, an ERISA-governed 401(k) plan, and a nonqualified deferred compensation plan belonging to her late domestic partner, decedent Erich Frank. Mr. Frank was diagnosed with colon cancer. His diagnosis prompted him to take steps to change his beneficiary designations on his life insurance and 401(k) plans and to name a beneficiary on his deferred compensation plan. He intended for Ms. Rosen to be the beneficiary of all three plans, and sent emails and made phone calls indicating this intent. His employer, UBS Financial Services Inc., and the administrator of the plans, Alight Solutions LLC, sent emails regarding Mr. Frank’s beneficiary designation desires. They then sent Mr. Frank beneficiary certification forms for him to complete in order to finalize the process and formalize his selection of Ms. Rosen as his beneficiary. There is no dispute that these forms were never completed or returned in the three days between when they were sent and Mr. Frank’s death. Following his death, probate court proceedings and three consolidated interpleader actions commenced. In the interpleader actions, the court granted in part and denied in part cross-motions for summary judgment, ruling that Mr. Frank’s mother remained the named beneficiary of the ERISA life insurance and 401(k) policies and was therefore entitled to the benefits, but that Ms. Rosen was entitled to benefits under a UBS resource management account. Shortly after the interpleader actions wrapped up, Ms. Rosen commenced this lawsuit in state court asserting claims of negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of good faith and fair dealing against UBS, Alight, and two individual fiduciary defendants. Defendants removed the action to federal court, and have since moved for summary judgment. They argued they are entitled to summary judgment on the state law claims seeking damages related to the 401(k) and life insurance plan because these claims are expressly preempted by ERISA. They additionally argued that they are entitled to summary judgment on the remaining claims related to the deferred compensation plan because Ms. Rosen lacks standing to sue for damages resulting in diminished inheritance under a will. The court agreed on both counts. With regard to Section 514(a) preemption, the court held that the state law claims relate to the ERISA-governed plans, expressly rely on their terms, seek damages equal to the amounts under the plans, and implicate core ERISA entities and functions. Accordingly, these state law claims, the court concluded, seek to rectify wrongful denial of benefits under ERISA-regulated plans, are not based on any independent legal duty, and are therefore expressly preempted by ERISA. In sum, the court found that this case represents a classic example of an attempt to side-step ERISA’s statutory mechanisms to challenge denial of benefits through state law causes of action, which is the exact thing Congress was cognizant of and wished to prevent when it designed ERISA’s preemption provisions. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment was thus granted.

Fifth Circuit

Springman v. Diamondback E&P LLC, No. PE:23-CV-00014-DC-DF, 2023 WL 6461246 (W.D. Tex. Oct. 4, 2023) (Magistrate Judge David B. Fannin). On October 10, 2019, while on the job working as a crude oil transport driver for defendant Pilot Travel Centers, LLC, plaintiff Jeff Springman became engulfed in toxic vapors and lost consciousness on top of an oil tank. This accident left Mr. Springman with “terminal physical injuries.” Mr. Springman commenced this action against his employer for negligence in connection with its lack of work safety procedures, including his exposure to hazardous and toxic chemicals without the appropriate safety equipment. He also claimed that Pilot failed to adequately train him about the dangers of exposure to these gases and chemicals. As relevant here, Mr. Springman also brought a negligence claim based on an allegation that the company has policies and procedures in place to prevent and discourage employees from receiving necessary medical care or treatment in the event of an injury stemming from such an exposure in the workplace. Stemming from this claim, Pilot removed the action to federal court. It maintained that “the inclusion of the claim for negligence in ‘having policies or procedures that prevented or discouraged employees from receiving reasonably necessary medical care and treatment’ relates to Pilot’s Work Injury Benefit Program,” which is an ERISA-governed plan. Thus, the employer alleged that this cause of action directly related to its ERISA-regulated benefits plan and is therefore preempted, creating federal jurisdiction. Mr. Springman moved to remand his action. The court denied the motion to remand. It held that Pilot timely removed the case to federal court and that the claim is preempted by ERISA as the “policies and procedures” the claim is challenging are terms of the ERISA-governed plan meaning the claim cannot be resolved without relying on and consulting the terms of the ERISA policy. Accordingly, the court concluded that both prongs of the Davila preemption test were satisfied, as Mr. Springman has standing and could have brought his claim under ERISA, and as the cause of action at issue does not implicate any independent legal duty. This was true, the court found, because “Plaintiff challenges the administration of the program, ‘inextricably linking’ his denied attempts to seek medical treatment to the terms of the Benefit Program.” The court therefore concluded that it has subject matter jurisdiction over this action and so denied the motion to transfer the case back to state court.

Eighth Circuit

Dames v. Mercy Health, No. 4:22-cv-01360-SEP, 2023 WL 6460299 (E.D. Mo. Sep. 30, 2023) (Judge Sarah E. Pitlyk). Plaintiffs are residents of the state of Missouri who were involved in car accidents and then sought and received emergency medical treatment in defendant Mercy Health hospitals. They allege in their state law action that defendants were required to submit medical bills to their health insurance providers, but rather than do this the hospitals sought payment directly from either the plaintiffs or their auto insurance providers. Plaintiffs allege that the hospitals engaged in this practice because the amounts they would have received from the health insurance plans would have been lower than the rates they charge patients directly. “That practice allowed Defendants to avoid receiving lower payments under the Provider Agreements and deprived Plaintiffs of the benefit of the bargain they were entitled to under their health insurance plans.” Basing their complaint on this alleged scheme, plaintiffs brought both individual and class claims against Mercy Health in Missouri state court. Defendants removed the action to the federal judicial system. Now plaintiffs have moved for remand. In this order the court granted the motion to remand the action back to state court. It found that remand was required because ERISA does not completely preempt their state law claims because the claims implicate independent legal duties and resolution of the claims is not dependent on the terms of the ERISA healthcare plans. Accordingly, the court held that defendants failed to meet their burden of establishing federal jurisdiction and remanded the action back to state court.

Medical Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

J.M. v. United Healthcare Ins., No. 21 Civ. 6958 (LGS), 2023 WL 6386900 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge Lorna G. Schofield). A father and his adolescent son, plaintiffs J.M. and M.M., sued United Healthcare Insurance Company and United Behavioral Health to challenge their denials of claims for M.M.’s stays at two residential treatment facilities for the treatment of mental health disorders. Plaintiffs asserted two claims: a claim for recovery of benefits, and a claim for violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. The parties filed competing motions for summary judgment. The court granted the United defendants’ motion for judgment and denied J.M. and M.M.’s summary judgment motion. Under the arbitrary and capricious review standard, which the court would not alter to de novo review after holding that “Defendants were not required to engage with the opinions of M.M.’s treating professionals,” the court concluded that substantial evidence supported defendants’ decision to deny the claims. Remarkably, the court downplayed M.M.’s suicidal ideation and the detailed descriptions he gave to his psychiatrist about “the actions he would proceed with” to follow through with his plans. Instead, the court wrote, “[w]hile some reports noted passive suicidal ideation, they did not indicate intent, plan or serious selfharm urges.” The court focused on the fact that M.M. took trips home during his two stays to see his family and even “took a two-week trip to Hawaii with his family” as indications that “M.M. could have managed his symptoms at a lower level of care with the support of his family.” Crediting the views of United’s reviewers, the court concluded that it was not arbitrary and capricious for United to deny the claims for M.M.’s treatments for failing to meet the plan’s definition of medical necessity. Accordingly, the court affirmed the denials. As for the Parity Act violation claim, the court found that plaintiffs lacked constitutional standing because defendants switched their reliance on the allegedly violative Optum Guidelines and ultimately affirmed the denial of benefits under a new tool called CASII, which plaintiffs did not allege violated the Parity Act. As a result, the court held, “[e]ven if the Optum Guidelines violated the Parity Act…that violation did not injure Plaintiffs because the ultimate denial of benefits was based on the CASII guidelines, which are not challenged.” For these reasons, plaintiffs were unsuccessful on both causes of action and United was granted judgment in its favor.

Pension Benefit Claims

First Circuit

Field v. Sheet Metal Workers’ Nat’l Pension Fund, No. 22-1824, __ F. 4th __, 2023 WL 6418639 (1st Cir. Oct. 3, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Barron, Lynch, and Howard). Plaintiff-appellant David A. Fields appealed a district court decision granting summary judgment in favor of the Sheet Metal Workers’ National Pension Fund in his suit seeking reinstatement of terminated disability pension benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B). The district court concluded that the fund had not abused its discretion in terminating the benefits based on its finding that Mr. Field had engaged in disqualifying “covered employment” as defined by the plan. On appeal, Mr. Field argued that the fund had not meaningfully engaged with evidence he submitted to the contrary and that this constituted an abuse of discretion. The First Circuit disagreed with Mr. Field in this decision and affirmed the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the fund. The court of appeals stressed that the fund was entitled to exercise its discretion when weighing conflicting evidence and interpreting the plan document, and that its conclusion that Mr. Field no longer qualified for benefits in this case was therefore not arbitrary and capricious. Accordingly, the First Circuit held that the defendants acted reasonably and that their decision to terminate benefits based on a conclusion that Mr. Field failed to maintain eligibility to receive the disability pension benefit was supported by substantial evidence.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Ninth Circuit

Cevasco v. Allegiant Travel Co., No. 2:22-cv-01741-JAD-DJA, 2023 WL 6464867 (D. Nev. Oct. 4, 2023) (Judge Jennifer A. Dorsey). On behalf of himself and a proposed class of participants of the Allegiant 401(k) Retirement Plan, plaintiff Robert Cevasco has sued Allegiant Travel Company for violating its fiduciary duties under ERISA. In his complaint Mr. Cevasco challenges Allegiant’s choice of actively managed default investment funds for the plan, its failure to select lower share class versions of these funds, and its use of two simultaneous recordkeepers for the plan, each of whom charged participants allegedly exorbitant fees, both directly and via revenue sharing. Allegiant moved to dismiss the fund-based claims pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), arguing that Mr. Cevasco lacks Article III standing to pursue these claims as he never personally invested in the funds at issue. The court denied the partial motion to dismiss in this decision. It held that because Mr. Cevasco has standing to pursue his fee-based claims, he also has standing to challenge the funds he did not invest in on behalf of absent class members. The court was clear that in the Ninth Circuit, the “class standing” approach Allegiant advocated has been explicitly rejected in favor of a “class certification” approach which “holds that once the named plaintiff demonstrates her individual standing to bring a claim, the standing inquiry is concluded and the court proceeds to consider whether Rule 23(a) prerequisites for class certification have been met.” Therefore, based on this precedent, the court held that the appropriate time for “comparative analysis between the theories of liability or claims applicable to” Mr. Cevasco, who did not personally invest in the challenged funds, and other unnamed participants who did, will be when it comes time to evaluating the adequacy and typicality requirements of Rule 23(a) as part of a future class certification motion. Thus, Mr. Cevasco’s breach of fiduciary duty claims based on theories of liability stemming from the funds were not dismissed by the court for lack of standing.

Dedicato Treatment Ctr. v. Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Cmty., No. 2:22-cv-04045-CAS-Ex, 2023 WL 6528735 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 2, 2023) (Judge Christina A. Snyder). A treatment center specializing in the treatment of substance abuse, plaintiff Dedicato Treatment Center, Inc. sued the sovereign nation of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community under state law to challenge the payments the Community made to it for care it provided to a patient insured under the Community’s self-funded healthcare plan, which the treatment facility claims were only a small fraction of the cost of care. The Community moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), and further moved for sanctions under Rule 11. The decision began with the motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court agreed with the community that the treatment center failed to establish diversity and federal question jurisdiction. With regard to diversity jurisdiction the court held that Indian tribes are not a “citizen” of a state that may be sued in diversity. As for federal question jurisdiction, the court wrote that “[r]egardless of whether or not Congress has authorized ERISA suits against tribes, plaintiff has made it clear that its ‘claims are contract claims, not ERISA claims.’ State law claims do not provide a basis for federal question jurisdiction.” Therefore, the court granted the Community’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Nevertheless, the court did not sanction plaintiff under Rule 11, stating that it was “not convinced that the filing of this suit was so clearly improper or unreasonable as to justify an award of sanctions.”

ABC Servs. Grp. v. Aetna Health & Life Ins. Co., No. 22-55631, __ F. App’x __, 2023 WL 6532648 (9th Cir. Oct. 6, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Graber, Mendoza, and Desai). In a succinct unpublished decision, the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court’s dismissal with prejudice of plaintiff ABC Services Group, Inc.’s ERISA healthcare benefit action. The Ninth Circuit agreed with the lower court that as a non-provider third party “second assignee” ABC Services lacked derivative standing to bring claims for benefits under ERISA. Although the court of appeals recognized the right of plan participants and beneficiaries to assign their claims to healthcare providers, it explained that healthcare providers cannot then reassign their patient’s claims to non-providers with “no relationship to the patients,” and that if they do so, that entity cannot then file those claims on behalf of patients. This is true, the Ninth Circuit clarified, “[b]ecause allowing this type of transaction ‘would be tantamount to transforming health benefit claims into a freely tradable commodity.’” Even setting aside ABC Services’ inability to sue, the court of appeals added that its complaint would fail, as it could not state its claims. “After years of litigation and multiple amended complaints, Plaintiff asserts near-identical, generalized allegations on information and belief against all Defendants. But the allegations do not identify any Defendant’s particular plan terms conferring a benefit on patients, nor do they specify any Defendant’s particular conduct in denying such a benefit.” For these reasons, the district court’s dismissal without leave to amend was affirmed in its entirety on appeal.

Tenth Circuit

T.C. v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., No. 4:22-cv-00042, 2023 WL 6377552 (D. Utah Sep. 29, 2023) (Judge David Nuffer). This lawsuit was originally filed by plaintiffs L.C., a plan beneficiary who was denied mental healthcare treatments, and her father, V.C., the plan participant. L.C. and V.C. asserted claims for recovery of benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act under Section 502(a)(3) against the Emergent Biosolutions Inc. Benefit Plan and its insurer Aetna Life Insurance Company. After this lawsuit was filed, V.C. sadly died. A new amended complaint was subsequently filed which again named L.C. as a plaintiff, and added two new plaintiffs, her mother, T.C., and her uncle, G.C., who is V.C.’s legal representative and trustee of her late father’s estate. Defendants moved to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil 12(b)(1), arguing that none of the three plaintiffs have constitutional standing to bring their claims and that plaintiffs T.C. and G.C. also lack statutory standing under ERISA. The court disagreed with defendants regarding plaintiffs G.C. and L.C., but agreed about plaintiff T.C. First, the court found that G.C. plausibly alleged that he has both Article III and statutory standing given the complaint’s assertions that he represents V.C.’s estate. Taking these factual allegations as true, the court was satisfied that G.C. is the appropriate substitute in this action for his late brother, and as there was no dispute that V.C. had standing to bring this lawsuit “dismissal of G.C.’s claims is not appropriate.” The court also held that L.C., as the beneficiary who was denied coverage, has standing to bring her ERISA action. Moreover, the court wrote, “Defendants have not cited any authority for the proposition that an ERISA beneficiary whose treatment coverage was denied lacks constitutional standing, and this court is not aware of any such authority.” However, the same was not true for T.C. Although T.C. is L.C.’s mother, the court stated that the complaint does not include any allegations to support an inference that L.C. was a plan participant or beneficiary, nor that she is in any way financially responsible for the costs of L.C.’s care. Accordingly, the court found the complaint lacking in required details about T.C.’s status under the plan or any plausible injury-in-fact, meaning that T.C. lacks both statutory and constitutional standing and therefore cannot bring her claims. Thus, T.C. was dismissed as a plaintiff in this action, leaving L.C. and G.C. as the two remaining plaintiffs.

Provider Claims

Third Circuit

Hudson Hosp. OpCo. v. Cigna Health & Life Ins. Co., No. 22-4964 (ES)(JBC), 2023 WL 6439893 (D.N.J. Oct. 3, 2023) (Judge Esther Salas). Three affiliated hospitals in New Jersey have sued Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company and related corporate entities under ERISA and state law seeking reimbursement of over $135 million in benefit claims as assignees of thousands of beneficiaries of Cigna-administered healthcare plans, including ERISA-governed plans. The Cigna defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. Their motion was granted by the court in this decision without prejudice. First, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ Section 502(a)(1)(B) claims for benefits, finding that “Plaintiffs do not point to, describe, or quote any language from the actual Cigna Plans that, they claim, entitle them to reimbursement for elective services on thousands of allegedly underpaid claims.” It agreed with Cigna that plaintiffs needed to sufficiently tie their claims for greater payments to specific plan terms and provisions, and that the hospitals failed to do so here. In order to state claims under Section 502(a)(1)(B), the court instructed plaintiffs that they will need to identify specific provisions of the plan that provide for the right to the benefits they seek. Second, the court dismissed plaintiff’s breach of fiduciary duty claims asserted under Section 502(a)(3). It held that all of the Section 502(a)(3) claims “derive from the allegation that Defendants underpaid them in violation of the relevant Plans – an allegation that…Plaintiffs have failed to properly plead. All of Plaintiffs’ claims for breach of fiduciary duty involve the Defendant not following Plan provisions or procedures, improperly making benefit determinations under the Plans, refusing to settle the benefit claims, violating the laws in their application of the Plan’s payment provisions, and misusing fund which allegedly should have been used to pay Plaintiffs’ benefits. But, as described above, Plaintiffs have not adequately alleged that Defendants violated any provision of the Plans or underpaid Plaintiffs under any specifically identified provision of the Plans. Thus, Plaintiffs’ § 502(a)(3) claims fail as well.” Finally, because the court dismissed the ERISA claims, it declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law causes of action.

Statute of Limitations

Sixth Circuit

Marshall v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., No. 22-cv-12218, 2023 WL 6388630 (E.D. Mich. Sep. 22, 2023) (Judge Shalina D. Kumar). Plaintiff David Marshall brought suit against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”) for breach of contract stemming from its denial of his claims for long-term disability benefits and continuation of life insurance benefits under two ERISA-governed plans. MetLife moved to dismiss Mr. Marshall’s suit as time-barred. It argued that Mr. Marshall was required to file suit within the plan’s three-year statute of limitations, and because he did not do so his action is untimely. Mr. Marshall responded that Michigan’s six-year limitations period for breach of contract actions applies and that his suit was timely filed. In addition, he argued that an insurance regulating state law, referred to as the “Michigan Rule,” renders the plan’s three-year statute of limitations period unenforceable because the Michigan Rule prohibits insurance contracts from contractually shortening limitations periods and voids any insurance contract clause, provision, or terms that do so. The court agreed with Mr. Marshall. It wrote that because “the Plan contractually shortened the limitations period by about three years, the Rule would render the Plan’s limitations periods unenforceable.” Moreover, the court held that the Michigan Rule is not preempted by ERISA because ERISA’s savings clause exempts the Michigan Rule as it is designed to regulate insurance. Thus, the court was satisfied that Mr. Marshall timely brought his suit within the application limitations period and therefore denied MetLife’s motion to dismiss.