Harrison v. Envision Mgmt. Holding, No. 22-1098, __ F. 4th __, 2023 WL 1830446 (10th Cir. Feb. 9, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Bacharach, Briscoe, and Murphy)

Once again, arbitration is the topic of this week’s notable decision. ERISA plaintiffs have had a string of successes lately in their efforts to keep claims out of arbitration and in federal court, and this case is no exception.

The underlying merits of this suit involve an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) that was formed in 2017 by the board of directors and owners of Envision Management Holding, Inc., a privately-held shell company that owns Envision Management, LLC, a company that provides diagnostic imaging. Together, the companies employ around 1,000 individuals, among whom was the plaintiff, Robert Harrison, who was employed by Envision for four years until 2020. As a result, he was an “eligible employee” and a participant in the ESOP.

Mr. Harrison’s suit alleges that the owners of Envision created the ESOP so that they could sell 100% of their stock in the privately-held companies for $163.7 million, while maintaining control over the companies through side agreements with the trustee that they selected for the ESOP. He further alleges that because the ESOP did not have enough money to purchase the stock, it borrowed $103,537,461 from the owners and an additional $50,822,524 from the company at an interest rate of 12%. What’s more, the trustees approved a sale of the stock in which the ESOP paid two different share prices for the same stock, buying the majority of stock at $1,770 per share and a significant but smaller amount of stock at $1,404 per share.

The suit claims that there was no sensible reason for the ESOP to pay two different prices for the stock, especially given that the company’s articles of incorporation indicated that there was only one class of stock and that it was set at par value. Mr. Harrison also claims that just a few weeks after the initial ESOP purchase of the stock, it was valued at $349 per share. Finally, he claims that the company used the contributions slated for the participant accounts to pay down the $154.4 million debt. In other words, Mr. Harrison alleges that the sellers, with the assistance of the trustee, financially benefited by selling the company to the ESOP for significantly more than it was worth, while maintaining control over the company. His suit seeks plan-wide relief on behalf of the ESOP.

Several months after the suit was filed, the defendants sought to compel arbitration and stay the court proceedings under a provision in the ESOP plan document entitled “ERISA Arbitration and Class Action Waiver.” Mr. Harrison opposed, arguing that enforcing the provision would impose a severe limitation on the substantive relief afforded under ERISA. The district court agreed, concluding that the arbitration provision conflicts with ERISA, and accordingly denied the motion to compel arbitration and to stay.

The Tenth Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision. The court began by acknowledging the Federal Arbitration Act’s “liberal federal policy favoring arbitration agreements.” The court also noted that arbitration agreements are contracts and therefore no party can be forced to arbitrate if they have not previously agreed to submit to arbitration.

Of most relevance here, the court noted that the Supreme Court has recognized an “effective vindication” exception to compelled arbitration, under which the “key question is whether ‘the prospective litigant effectively may vindicate its statutory cause of action in the arbitral forum.’” If not, the litigant cannot be forced to arbitrate a claim. However, the Tenth Circuit also pointed out that, although the Supreme Court has recognized this exception on numerous occasions, “it has, to date, declined to actually apply the exception to any case before it.”

With these background principles in mind, the court turned to the parties’ arguments with respect to the applicability of the “effective vindication” exception. The defendants argued that the exception did not apply because the arbitration clause did not preclude the availability of all relief in this suit, and that the Department of Labor could file suit seeking plan-wide relief. The Department of Labor, which had filed an amicus brief in support of Mr. Harrison, disagreed, noting that Mr. Harrison had brought claims as permitted under ERISA Section 502(a)(2) in a representative capacity on behalf of the plan, seeking to recover losses to the plan and to replace the trustee. Likewise, Mr. Harrison argued that the ESOP’s arbitration clause “impermissibly restricts remedies and abridges substantive rights” by precluding these expressly authorized plan-wide remedies.

To resolve this disagreement, the court identified the ERISA remedies being sought by Mr. Harrison in order to determine whether the arbitration provision would prevent him from obtaining them in arbitration. The court specifically looked to the section of the complaint helpfully entitled “PLAINTIFF SEEKS PLAN-WIDE RELIEF,” which set forth six causes of action, each with claims for relief. 

The first two claims were for prohibited transactions, one seeking appropriate relief under ERISA Section 409 against plan fiduciaries and the other seeking equitable relief, including disgorgement of profits, against the non-fiduciary sellers. The third count was a claim for imprudence and disloyalty against the trustee and ESOP committee defendants for failure to investigate the terms of the ESOP transaction, as well as the financial projections and assumptions, which sought relief under ERISA Sections 502(a)(2), (a)(3) and 409(a). The fourth count was a claim for imprudence and disloyalty against the board of directors for failing to properly oversee the trustee, which sought the same type of relief under the same provisions as the third count. The fifth count was a claim for co-fiduciary liability under ERISA Section 405 against the board of directors, which sought to hold them liable for the ESOP’s losses. Finally, the sixth count alleged fiduciary breaches against all the defendants for adopting self-serving indemnification agreements, and sought to void those agreements.

Thus, the court noted that four of the six counts sought relief under ERISA Sections 502(a)(2) (and 409) and 502(a)(3). And, the court pointed out, the Supreme Court has long recognized that relief under Section 409, as enforced through Section 502(a)(2), provides remedies for the plan, even in the context of a defined contribution plan.

The court next reviewed the terms of the ESOP’s arbitration provision, concluding that the terms of the provision encompassed Mr. Harrison’s claims and expressly provided that such claims must be brought in an “individual capacity and not in a representative capacity or on a class, collective or group basis.” The court found the representative capacity provision more problematic than the prohibition on class actions, noting that the Supreme Court has blessed the latter. The court did not, however, decide the arbitration issue on that basis.

Instead, the court looked to the second sentence of the plan’s arbitration provision, which specified that the “Claimant may not seek or receive any remedy which has the purpose or effect of providing additional benefits or monetary or other relief to any Eligible employee, Participant or Beneficiary other than the Claimant.” In the court’s view, this clause prevented Mr. Harrison from obtaining in arbitration some of the forms of relief that he sought under Section 502(a)(2), including the recovery of plan losses, some of the declaratory and injunctive relief he sought, and disgorgement of profits. This was confirmed, in the court’s view, by the third sentence of the arbitration provision, which specified that claimants asserting claims under Sections 502(a)(2) and 409(a) could only recover their own losses or a pro-rated share of the plan’s losses or other relief that does not include any additional relief. Because the arbitration provision was written in a manner intended to foreclose the plan-wide relief that Mr. Harrison sought, the Tenth Circuit “conclude[d] that the effective vindication exception applies in this case.”

The court found its conclusion bolstered by the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Smith v. Board of Directors of Triad Manufacturing, Inc., 13 F. 4th 613 (7th Cir. 2021), “a case with strikingly similar facts and claims.” (Your ERISA Watch covered the Smith decision in its September 15, 2021 issue.) In Smith, the Seventh Circuit concluded that a similar arbitration provision with a ban on representative actions and plan-wide remedies was unenforceable because “what the statute permits, the plan precludes.” The Tenth Circuit concluded that the same was true in this case.

Having so concluded, the court turned to and rejected each of the defendants’ remaining arguments for compelling arbitration. The court found that defendants’ argument that arbitration was required because ERISA requires that fiduciaries to act in accordance with plan terms flew in the face of the “effective vindication” exception that it had just addressed and found applicable.

The court likewise rejected the contention that its ruling meant that arbitration provisions of this type could never be enforced with respect to ERISA plans, noting that it would not bar arbitration in a case where an ERISA plaintiff was asserting a claim unique to that plaintiff.

The defendants next argued that the Supreme Court’s pro-arbitration decision in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis, 138 S. Ct. 1612 (2018), required arbitration because ERISA did not contain a clearly expressed intention to override the Federal Arbitration Act. The Tenth Circuit, however, pointed out that Epic did not involve the “effective vindication” exception and, in any event, supported, rather than undercut, the application of the exception in a case such as Harrison where the arbitration provision eliminated substantive forms of relief afforded to a plaintiff under a federal statute. For similar reasons, the court rejected defendants’ argument that the arbitration agreement had essentially waived remedies, finding that arbitration agreements can waive procedure but not substantive remedies.

As a final matter, the Tenth Circuit rejected defendants’ contention that the arbitration provision would not preclude plan-wide relief because the Department of Labor could seek such relief. The court wisely pointed out that “nothing in the statute requires the Secretary of the DOL to file any such suit, and it is unreasonable to assume that the DOL is capable of policing every employer-sponsored benefit plan in the country.”

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Seventh Circuit

Probst v. Eli Lilly & Co., No. 1:22-cv-01106-JMS-MKK, 2023 WL 1782611 (S.D. Ind. Feb. 3, 2023) (Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson). Plaintiff Jennifer Probst, a participant of a mega defined contribution plan with over $8 billion in assets, the Lilly Employee 401(k) Plan, brought suit individually and on behalf of a putative class of plan participants and beneficiaries against her employer, the Eli Lilly & Co., the company’s board of directors, and the plan’s advisory and benefit committees for breaches of fiduciary duties of prudence, loyalty, and monitoring. In her complaint, Ms. Probst alleged that the Lilly defendants imprudently paid excessive amounts in recordkeeping and administrative fees, both directly and via revenue sharing, that the co-fiduciaries failed to adequately monitor the other fiduciaries and failed to regularly solicit bids or negotiate for lower fees, and that Eli Lilly & Co. engaged in a prohibited transaction, breaching its duty of loyalty, by paying itself millions of dollars in fees in addition to what the plan was paying to its administrator, essentially paying twice for the same services, enriching the company to the detriment of plan participants. Defendants moved to dismiss. At the outset of this lengthy decision, the court noted that, under Seventh Circuit precedent, it is only required to accept some of Ms. Probst’s allegations as true. “While the Court is cognizant of its general duty to accept Ms. Probst’s allegations as true when considering Lilly’s Motion to Dismiss, it is not required to accept legal conclusions or allegations that are conclusory or implausible.” In the end, most of her allegations were not viewed by the court in a favorable light, as the court perceived them to be conclusory, cherry-picked, and implausible. Although courts dismissing putative ERISA pension fee class actions are quick to point out that evaluating the sufficiency of the claims within them is a context-specific endeavor, this decision, while longer than some, read as materially indistinguishable from some of its companions. Here, as in most of these recent dismissals, the court focused on the differences among the comparators cited in Ms. Probst’s complaint to draw the conclusion that the higher costs paid by the plan were a reflection of the additional and differing services it was receiving, not a reflection of imprudence. The court held that failing to regularly solicit bids, paying for the services of two plan administrators, and engaging in revenue sharing did not violate ERISA, and allegations concerning these matters did not create an inference of any fiduciary wrongdoing. Accordingly, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss, dismissing Ms. Probst’s individual claims with prejudice, and her class claims without prejudice.

Ninth Circuit

Beldock v. Microsoft Corp., No. C22-1082JLR, 2023 WL 1798171 (W.D. Wash. Feb. 7, 2023) (Judge James L. Robart). In this putative class action, three former employees of the Microsoft Corporation, participants in the Microsoft Corporation Savings Plus 401(k) Plan, allege the plan’s fiduciaries breached their duties to participants by investing in and retaining a suite of ten BlackRock LifePath Index target date funds despite the suite’s history of significant underperformance. Accordingly, plaintiffs allege these target date funds, which were the default investment option in the plan, were imprudent investments and that the fiduciaries employed a “fundamentally irrational decision-making process” by adding and maintaining them. In their complaint, plaintiffs noted that 24% of the Microsoft 401(k) “Plan’s assets totaling approximately $34.48 billion” were invested in the challenged target date funds. Defendants moved to dismiss. First, they challenged the standing of one of the named plaintiffs, Justin Beldock. All three of the named plaintiffs were invested in the suite of target date funds, but each was invested in a different glide path based on age. Defendants argued that Mr. Beldock could not personally show a concrete injury necessary to confer him with standing because the retirement vintage he invested in performed well throughout the relevant time period. The court agreed. It stated that a plaintiff can only seek plan-wide relief and sue on behalf of a plan if he or she is able to demonstrate individual Article III standing, and that plaintiffs’ contrary and more expansive view of “statutory standing” was therefore off target. The court further expressed that plaintiffs could not explain how Mr. Beldock was harmed, as his investment performed well, even when it was part of a complete suite which on the whole performed poorly. Thus, the court dismissed Mr. Beldock from the action for lack of standing. Defendants next argued that plaintiffs could not state a viable claim of imprudence because defendants had justifiable reasons for selecting the BlackRock target date funds. Defendants’ arguments were again persuasive to the court. It held that the allegations within plaintiffs’ complaint, even when assumed true, did not lead to an inference of any fiduciary breach. Although the fiduciaries could have selected other investment options, their actions here to invest in and not divest from the BlackRock suite was not per se inconsistent with their obligations to the plan and its participants under ERISA. Plaintiffs, the court wrote, “allege no facts…that would ‘tend to exclude the possibility’ that Defendants had reasons to retain the BlackRock TDFs that were consistent with their fiduciary duties.” The court thus granted defendants’ motion to dismiss the breach of duty of prudence claim. And it did the same for plaintiffs’ breach of duty of loyalty claim. There, it stated that plaintiffs’ complaint was even less plausible because they made no allegations that defendants “acted with intent to benefit themselves or a third party.” Finally, without sufficient allegations of these underlying fiduciary breaches, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ dependent claims of monitoring and co-fiduciary breaches. For these reasons, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss. Plaintiffs, however, were granted leave to amend their complaint to address the deficiencies identified by the court.

In re Sutter Health ERISA Litig., No. 1:20-cv-01007-JLT, 2023 WL 1868865 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 9, 2023) (Judge Jennifer L. Thurston). Former and current participants of the Sutter Health 403(b) Savings Plan, on behalf of the Plan and a class of its participants and beneficiaries, have sued the plan’s fiduciaries for mismanagement, which they claim constitutes breaches of the fiduciaries’ duties under ERISA. Plaintiffs brought their action under ERISA Sections 409 and 502. They allege that defendants violated their duties of prudence and loyalty by selecting and maintaining the Fidelity Freedom fund suite, a group of costly, actively-managed target date funds, along with three other challenged investment options with poor performance histories, “instead of offering more prudent alternative investments when such prudent investments were readily available.” They claim the cost of the funds at issue were not justified by their low returns, and that it was therefore improper for defendants to maintain these investment options in the plan. Plaintiffs further allege that defendants breached their fiduciary obligations by allowing and failing to eliminate unreasonable fees charged for the plan’s administration. According to their complaint, the plan’s total cost during the relevant period ranged from 0.56% to 0.64% of the net assets of the plan (with the plan’s assets totaling approximately $3.7 billion.) Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of standing and for insufficiently pleaded claims. In addition, defendants moved to strike plaintiffs’ jury demand. In this decision, the court denied in full defendants’ motion to dismiss, but granted their motion to strike. To start, the court declined to take judicial notice of “the more than 600 documents submitted” by defendants in their motion to dismiss. “Indeed, Defendants refer to these documents in their Motion almost exclusively to support their factual arguments contesting Plaintiffs’ claims, though as far as the Court could tell, none of the documents clearly disprove Plaintiffs’ factual allegations. However, the defense fails to cite specifically any particular portion of the documents to show that the plaintiffs’ allegations are untenable. The Court declines to cull through the 600 pages to find the factual nuggets that support the defendants’ motion.” Next, the court turned to evaluating whether plaintiffs have Article III standing to bring their class action. The court adopted, for the purpose of analyzing defendants’ challenge to plaintiffs’ jurisdiction, plaintiffs’ view of standing, understanding standing in the context of class actions to be satisfied when, as here, plaintiffs are suing on behalf of the plan even when they are not personally invested in each and every one of the challenged funds at issue. However, the court did note “that whether the named Plaintiffs may ultimately bring ERISA claims in a representative capacity on behalf of all Plan participants, is a question of class certification – rather than standing – which is not before the Court at this time.” The decision then addressed whether plaintiffs sufficiently stated plausible claims upon which relief could be granted. The court concluded they had. It expressed that an ERISA breach of fiduciary duty complaint need not contain factual allegations expressly referring to a “fiduciary’s knowledge, methods, or investigations at the relevant times” in order to state a viable claim challenging the fiduciaries’ management process. This is so, the court outlined, because plaintiffs lack these specific details at the pleading stage. Usually, at this stage of litigation, this information is within the “exclusive possession of the breaching fiduciary.” Defendants’ contrary positions, the court said, “largely misstate Plaintiffs’ claims or delve into factual disputes.” For these reasons, the court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss, making this decision a refreshing counterpart to many recent court orders taking the opposite route, including the Beldock case discussed above. This decision ended with the court granting defendants’ motion to strike plaintiffs’ jury request. The court held that the nature of the action here would have been historically handled by the courts of equity. Thus, it agreed with defendants that plaintiffs do not have the right to a jury trial in this matter.

Class Actions

Third Circuit

Moon v. E.I. duPont de Nemours & Co., No. 19-cv-1856-SB, 2023 WL 1765565 (D. Del. Feb. 3, 2023) (Circuit Judge Bibas, sitting by designation). Retiree M.P. Moon filed this class action against his former employer DuPont, alleging that the company breached its fiduciary duty under ERISA to inform its employees that they were eligible for retirement benefits. DuPont denies that it violated its obligations under ERISA. However, despite the parties’ differing positions, the parties engaged in mediation and reached a settlement. They then brought the settlement, totaling $7 million, before the court for review. In a previous order, the court granted preliminary approval of the settlement, and found the settlement class certifiable under Rule 23. In this order, the settlement was granted final approval by the court which found it “fair, reasonable, and adequate for the whole class,” and the product of informed arms-length negotiations following the production of 20,000 pages of materials during discovery. Class counsel’s requested recovery of one-third of the total amount of recovery for fees, plus approximately $40,000 in expenses and $15,000 for the cost of administering the settlement, were also approved by the court which found the amounts reasonable, “unremarkable,” and adequate compensation for experienced ERISA practitioners. Finally, the court approved the requested $25,000 for a class representative incentive award, with the court commending Mr. Moon for his diligent and active job in participating and achieving an excellent result for the class, including both the substantial monetary and non-monetary relief.

Seventh Circuit

Berceanu v. UMR, Inc., No. 19-cv-568-wmc, 2023 WL 1927693 (W.D. Wis. Feb. 10, 2023) (Judge William M. Conley). In this decision, a district court decertified a class of health plan participants who were denied coverage for residential treatment for mental health and substance abuse disorders, and upheld the named plaintiffs’ denial of benefits, determining that defendant UMR, Inc.’s level-of-care guidelines need not define “medically necessary” as generally accepted standards of healthcare for the purpose of treating illness. To begin, the court addressed standing. Although the court agreed with plaintiffs that they suffered concrete injuries in fact traceable to UMR’s denials, the court stated that plaintiffs, at least on a class-wide basis, could not satisfy redressability. The court did not feel that reprocessing the denied claims for past residential mental healthcare treatment would necessarily redress the injuries of all of the members of the class, especially those whose particular health circumstances have changed or never paid out of pocket for their treatments. “[T]he evidence of record shows already that whether plaintiffs and class members could obtain effective relief from reprocessing, and thereby establishing standing, will require an individual, fact intensive injury and vary substantially among class members.” Accordingly, the court stated that plaintiffs could no longer satisfy Rule 23’s commonality requirement due to the particularized nature of each person’s circumstances, and so decertified the class. Nevertheless, the court was satisfied that the named plaintiffs had Article III standing, and so the second half of the decision focused on analyzing their denials under deferential review. As alluded to above, the court disregarded plaintiffs’ criticism of the guidelines. “These critiques of the guidelines are either contrary to the guidelines themselves, or they amount to disagreements over wording or level of detail insufficient to create an actual, factual conflict between the guidelines and generally accepted standards.” This was true, the court went on to say, because “UMR’s level-of-care guidelines are ultimately applied by experts with extensive experience in behavioral health…who obviously knew how to make level-of-care determinations and what patient-specific factors should be considered.” The court characterized plaintiffs’ action as hoping to define medically necessary in the mental healthcare context in a way that “would have resulted in better care for patients.” But the court wrote that under arbitrary and capricious review, it did not have the power to make that happen. “[T]his court is simply not empowered to disregard UMR’s interpretation of medical necessity…in favor of something ‘better’… Rather, UMR is entitled to deference under an abuse-of-discretion standard in interpreting…plan language.” Thus, the court found that UMR’s denials were based on reasonable interpretations of the plans and accordingly granted summary judgment in its favor.

Disability Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Haddad v. SMG Long Term Disability Plan, No. 21-16175, __ F. App’x __, 2023 WL 1879464 (9th Cir. Feb. 10, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges McKeown, Bybee, and Bumatay). Plaintiff-appellant Fadi Haddad is disabled and receiving long-term disability benefits from an ERISA disability plan insured by Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company. Although Hartford approved Mr. Haddad’s claim for disability benefits, it has offset his benefit amount by the amount he received in an earlier personal injury settlement from Hilton Hotels. Hartford relied on the terms of the policy which allows disability benefits payments to be offset by “any payments that are made to You… pursuant to any… portion of a settlement of judgment, minus associated costs, of a lawsuit that represents or compensates for Your loss of earnings.” Mr. Haddad sued Hartford under ERISA, challenging its use of this offset. The district court entered judgment in favor of Hartford and Mr. Haddad appealed. In this decision, the Ninth Circuit affirmed. To begin, the court of appeals held that its ruling in Saltarelli v. Bob Baker Group Medical Trust, 35 F.3d 382 (9th Cir. 1994), which holds that coverage exclusions and limitations be “clear, plain, and conspicuous,” was inapplicable to this matter pertaining to offsets. The difference between limitations/exclusions and offsets, the circuit court wrote, is that while limitations and exclusions “carve out areas from the scope of an insurance policy’s coverage,” offsets instead “reduce the total amount owed for covered claims.” Offsets then, the court held, are not subject to the same requirements that exclusions and limitations are under Saltarelli. Therefore, the Ninth Circuit stated that it was not improper for the explanation of offsets to be hidden within the terms of the policy. The Ninth Circuit went on to say that this was especially true here because the terms of the policy governing offsets “is unambiguous.” Next, the court of appeals explained why it disagreed with Mr. Haddad’s argument that the settlement could not be offset from his disability benefit because it was unrelated to his current disability. Again, relying on the policy terms, the Ninth Circuit said this was not a problem because the “Plan does not limit offsets to settlements for ‘related’ injuries.” Regarding Hartford’s apportionment of the entire non-cost portion of the settlement as lost wages, the appeals court stated that the onus was on Mr. Haddad to explain the amount of the settlement attributable to the lost wages and his failure to do so, again under the policy’s language, allowed Hartford to “assume the entire sum to be for loss of income.” Finally, the court held that Hartford had provided the policy terms in full to Mr. Haddad, as it issued Mr. Haddad’s employer with certificates of insurance which explained the offset provisions, which the Ninth Circuit said was “enough to show the terms of the LTD Plan.” Thus, the lower court’s judgment was affirmed.

Eleventh Circuit

Allen v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., No. 2:18-cv-69-JES-KCD, 2023 WL 1781509 (M.D. Fla. Feb. 6, 2023) (Judge John E. Steele). Plaintiff Dr. Marcus Allen sued First Unum Life Insurance Company, Provident Life and Casualty Insurance Company, and Unum Group after the long-term disability benefits he was receiving pursuant to both individual policies and a group disability insurance policy were terminated. Dr. Allen argued in this complaint that his vision issues were disabling to his career as a diagnostic radiologist, and that he was therefore unable to practice in his field of medicine. Because Dr. Allen was covered under both individual and group policies, he asserted claims under both state law and ERISA. Dr. Allen’s breach of contract claim was tried before a jury last March. The jury returned a verdict finding in favor of the insurance companies, agreeing with them that a preponderance of the medical evidence supported their conclusion that Dr. Allen was no longer totally disabled within the meaning of the four individual policies. In this second portion of the case pertaining to Dr. Allen’s ERISA claim, the Unum defendants moved for summary judgment based on issue preclusion. Unum found success for a second time in this lawsuit, as its motion was granted by the court in this order. The court determined that the specific issued decided by the jury – “whether Dr. Allen was disabled because he was unable to perform the substantial and material duties of his own occupation as a diagnostic radiologist as of the date his disability benefits were terminated” – was a substantially identical issue to the one at stake here. Thus, the court stated that the jury’s verdict establishing that Dr. Allen was not totally disabled from performing the duties of his occupation precluded his ERISA claims on the same topic. In sum, the court agreed with the insurance providers’ assertion that the jury’s determination would be “necessarily, irreconcilably, and impermissibly” contradicted by the court if it were to conclude during the ERISA portion of the litigation that Dr. Allen was incapable of working in any gainful occupation for which he was qualified. Accordingly, the court held that Dr. Allen’s ERISA disability case was barred by issue preclusion, as the issue of whether Dr. Allen was totally disabled was actually litigated and determined during the jury trial, and that it could not “decide the issue anew.”

ERISA Preemption

Sixth Circuit

McKee Foods Corp. v. State, No. 1:21-cv-279, 2023 WL 1768321 (E.D. Tenn. Feb. 3, 2023) (Judge Charles E. Atchley Jr.). A fiduciary and sponsor of an ERISA-governed self-funded health plan, McKee Foods, brought this lawsuit against an out-of-network pharmacy, defendant Thrifty Med, and the State of Tennessee seeking a declaration from the court that a Tennessee law addressing prescription drug programs is preempted by ERISA and that the legislation itself does not require McKee Foods to include Thrifty Med in its network of pharmacies. Additionally, McKee Foods requested that the court issue an order enjoining Thrifty Med from pursuing legal action attempting to require McKee Foods to include it in the pharmacy network. While the case was ongoing, the Governor of Tennessee signed into law new legislation that amended Tennessee’s Any Willing Pharmacy and Anti-Steering statutes, specifically expanding them to include ERISA-governed plans, including self-insured ones like McKee’s. The new legislation further creates “a new structural scheme for preferred and nonpreferred pharmacy networks.” Following the enactment of the new amendments to the Tennessee pharmacy legislation, the State of Tennessee moved to dismiss McKee’s lawsuit for lack of jurisdiction. The court held oral argument on the topic last November, and in this order granted the motion to dismiss, agreeing that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the action. The court agreed with the state that the passage and ratification of the updated legislation “effectively [nullified] the actual controversy that supported the origination of this case.” Accordingly, the court concluded that the alleged harm McKee faced when it brought suit has now been removed.

Life Insurance & AD&D Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Staropoli v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., No. 21-2500, __ F. App’x __, 2023 WL 1793884 (3d Cir. Feb. 7, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Jordan, Scirica, and Rendell). Appellant Susan Staropoli, an executive of JPMorgan Chase, elected life insurance for her then-husband Charles Staropoli as part of her employee benefits package, with their children as the beneficiaries. Later, when the Staropolis divorced, Mr. Staropoli became ineligible for coverage under the language of the plan, which allowed for coverage only of spouses, not ex-spouses. Ms. Staropoli, unaware of this fact, reenrolled Mr. Staropoli in the policy after the divorce and increased the coverage amount by $250,000. She then went on to pay more than $2,000 in premiums for the coverage. Mr. Staropoli died a few years later, after which Ms. Staropoli submitted a claim for benefits to MetLife. Her claim was denied thanks to the language disallowing ex-spouses for coverage. Following an unsuccessful administrative appeal, Ms. Staropoli commenced legal action suing MetLife and JPMorgan Chase for benefits and breaches of fiduciary duties under ERISA. Ms. Staropoli focused on the plan’s incontestability clause and argued that MetLife could not deny her coverage as it had been accepting her premiums on the upgraded coverage for more than twos years. Ms. Staropoli’s lawsuit was dismissed at the pleading stage for failure to state a claim. The district court held that the benefits executive of the plan, not JPMorgan, was responsible for plan administration and thus JPMorgan was an improper defendant. It also dismissed Ms. Staropoli’s Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim for benefits as the unambiguous plan language made Mr. Staropoli ineligible for coverage, and under deferential review MetLife’s interpretation of that language was reasonable. Finally, the district court decided that Ms. Staropoli had failed to state a claim for breach of fiduciary duties against MetLife, holding that Ms. Staropoli’s reliance on defendants’ representations, which included accepting premiums and listing Mr. Staropoli as a covered dependent on statements, was not reasonable. Because defendants sent Ms. Staropoli official disclosures informing her that ex-spouses were not eligible as dependents and because Ms. Staropoli certified that she was responsible for understanding and following the policy’s rules, the court concluded that she could not state a viable claim for a breach of a fiduciary duty. Following the dismissal, Ms. Staropoli filed a second amended complaint, asserting a new breach of fiduciary duty claim against the benefits executive. The new breach of fiduciary duty claim would also be unsuccessful. The district court granted summary judgment to the new defendants, concluding that they had not breached any duty “either through omission or misrepresentation.” Ms. Staropoli then appealed. “Finding no error” in the district court’s rejection of Ms. Staropoli’s claims, the Third Circuit affirmed. The court of appeals agreed with the lower court that Ms. Staropoli did not have a viable claim for benefits given the clear language of the policy which did not permit the elected coverage following the divorce. Furthermore, the circuit court rejected Ms. Staropoli’s arguments that a breach of fiduciary duty could occur through omissions. It also held that it was not reasonable for Ms. Staropoli to be misled into inaccurately believing the coverage on her ex-husband was viable regardless of defendants’ actions. Lastly, the Third Circuit stated that because Ms. Staropoli’s underlying ERISA violations were not viable, her claim for equitable estoppel was also appropriately dismissed.

Ninth Circuit

Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Kowalski, No. 21-cv-06469-RS, 2023 WL 1769261 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 3, 2023) (Judge Richard Seeborg). Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company brought this interpleader action to determine the proper beneficiary of an ERISA-governed life insurance policy after two individuals submitted claims for benefits. Those two individuals, defendants Haili Kowalski and Marilyne Valois, each filed cross-claims against the other. Ms. Valois believes she is the proper beneficiary of decedent Marc Kowalski’s policy, while Ms. Kowalski believes her minor son is entitled to the proceeds. Ms. Valois is the named beneficiary of the plan. Ms. Kowalski, however, is Mr. Kowalski’s ex-wife, and she asserts that the terms of their divorce decree, which she claims is a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (“QDRO”), required Mr. Kowalski to maintain a life insurance policy with the couple’s minor son as the sole beneficiary. Thus, Ms. Kowalski submitted a claim for benefits on behalf of the son. In the alternative, Ms. Kowalski additionally argued that Ms. Valois exerted undue influence over Mr. Kowalski and that she was improperly named the beneficiary. In addition to her claim seeking declaratory judgment in her favor, Ms. Kowalski also brought a cross-claim for relief for conversion. Ms. Valois’s cross-claim seeks judgment that she is entitled to the life insurance benefits as the named beneficiary, along with judgment finding the divorce decree to not be a QDRO. Ms. Valois moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss Ms. Kowalski’s cross-claims. Ms. Valois provided three grounds for dismissal; (1) the divorce decree is not a QDRO; the alternative theory of undue influence was insufficiently pled; and (3) the conversion claim is preempted by ERISA. In addition to moving for dismissal, Ms. Valois also moved to strike portions of Ms. Kowalski’s cross-claims, which she alleged were an attack on her character. The motion to dismiss was granted in part, and the motion to strike was denied. First, the court stated that resolution of whether the decree is a QDRO is not properly addressed at the pleading stage nor a ground for dismissal. Although the court would not decide the issue, it nevertheless stressed that “it appears likely the [legal separation agreement] is a QDRO, and Kowalski has thus stated a claim upon which relief can be granted.” However, the court agreed with Ms. Valois that Ms. Kowalski failed to state a claim for her alternative assertion that Ms. Valois exerted undue influence over Mr. Kowalski. Not only did the court find the claim speculative, but it also held that the claim failed “to identify the manner in which Valois allegedly exerted undue influence,” or include information upon which to infer that Mr. Kowalski was susceptible to any undue influence when he made the designation naming Ms. Valois. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss the alternative claim of undue influence was granted. Lastly, the court addressed whether the claim for conversion was preempted by ERISA. Given the expansive reach of ERISA’s preemption, as well as Ms. Kowalski’s failure to “justify why this general prohibition should not apply,” the court agreed with Ms. Valois that Ms. Kowalski had failed to state a claim for conversion and so granted the motion to dismiss it. Finally, insofar as the motion to dismiss was granted, dismissal was without prejudice. 

Medical Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Henkel of Am., Inc. v. ReliaStar Life Ins. Co., No. 3:18-cv-965 (JAM), 2023 WL 1801923 (D. Conn. Feb. 7, 2023) (Judge Jeffrey Alker Meyer). A chemical manufacturer, plaintiff Henkel of America, provides a self-funded healthcare plan for its employees. To help protect its self-insured plan from huge losses, Henkel has stop-loss insurance provided by defendant ReliaStar Life Insurance Company. And helping to run the plan is a pharmacy benefits manager, defendant Express Scripts Inc., whose job it is to process employees’ prescription drug claims. This suit arises from two of the plan participants’ use of “ultra-expensive prescription drugs.” Henkel sued ReliaStar and Express Scripts, arguing that Express Scripts wrongly approved the costly prescriptions, and ReliaStar improperly refused to pay for the $50 million they cost. Against ReliaStar, Henkel asserted state law claims of breach of insurance contract, violations of a Connecticut insurance law, and a claim for violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act. As for Express Scripts, Henkel asserted claims of breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. All three parties moved for summary judgment. In this order the court denied Express Scripts’ motion and granted in part and denied in part both ReliaStar’s and Henkel’s respective motions. Beginning with Express Scripts’ summary judgment motion, the court held that genuine issues of material fact about whether Express Scripts was right to approve the costly medications existed which preclude granting summary judgment at this juncture, especially as a reasonable factfinder could find that Express Scripts was wrong to go ahead and approve the cost of the drugs. The court then moved on to addressing Henkel’s summary judgment motion wherein it sought judgment that Express Scripts is a fiduciary of the healthcare plan, and judgment about the standard of review governing Express Scripts’ decisions. On the first point, the court articulated that “with one uncontested exception,” a factfinder could determine that Express Scripts ‘duties were purely ministerial and that it was accordingly not a fiduciary under ERISA. The one exception had to do with the only adverse benefits determination that Express Scripts made for one of the medications. In this instance, the court stated that Express Scripts was undoubtedly a fiduciary exercising discretionary authority. Thus, regarding the one medication that Express Scripts rejected coverage of initially prior to approving, the court held that it was a fiduciary. For the other five medications, Express Scripts’ fiduciary status remained undetermined as a matter of law. The court then evaluated the appropriate review standard. Here the court agreed with Henkel that deferential review applies given the plan’s discretionary clause. Thus, the court stated that the jury or factfinder should review the approval of the drugs under arbitrary and capricious review, meaning so “long as Henkel did not abuse its discretion in approving the drugs, then ReliaStar must pay, even if approval was not the absolute best decision.” Finally, ReliaStar’s summary judgment motion was granted in part to the extent that it challenged some of Henkel’s claims as redundant. However, in most other respects, its motion was denied, as once again the court concluded there were genuine disputes of material fact appropriate for resolution following a trial.

Pension Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Munger v. Intel Corp., No. 3:22-cv-00263-HZ, 2023 WL 1796430 (D. Or. Feb. 6, 2023) (Judge Marco A. Hernandez). In November 2021, defendant Tracy Lampron Cloud was convicted of second-degree murder in connection with the death of her husband Philip Cloud. The judge in that case sentenced Ms. Cloud to life in prison. Following Ms. Cloud’s conviction and sentencing, plaintiff Ruth Ann Munger filed this ERISA action, individually and in her capacity as representative of the Estate of Philip Cloud, seeking payments of Mr. Cloud’s retirement and pension plan benefits as his secondary beneficiary on the basis that Ms. Cloud is Mr. Cloud’s “slayer” under Oregon’s slayer statue and therefore not entitled to any benefits despite being the named primary beneficiary. Ms. Cloud for her part maintains that she was wrongfully convicted of murdering her husband, and therefore opposes payment of the retirement funds to Mr. Cloud’s estate. Ms. Cloud, who is appealing the judgment in the criminal case, has moved to dismiss this lawsuit, or in the alternative to put it in abeyance. Her motion was granted in this order to the extent that the court stayed the matter, pending resolution of Ms. Cloud’s appeal of her criminal conviction. The court expressed that it has the authority and discretion to permit a stay of this federal case pending resolution of the state case, as ERISA claims for benefits are not under exclusion federal jurisdiction and therefore not barred by the Ninth Circuit’s Colorado River doctrine. Furthermore, the court concluded that a stay was warranted, as “the desirability of avoiding piecemeal litigation is particularly relevant here because a decision by this Court regarding entitlement to the Plan benefits would, as a matter of law, require a determination whether Cloud is a slayer under federal common law. The resolution of that determination would require the Court to evaluate whether Cloud feloniously and intentionally killed Philip Cloud.” For these reasons, the court felt a stay was appropriate.

Plan Status

Third Circuit

Kotok v. A360 Media, LLC, No. 22-4159 (SDW) (JRA), 2023 WL 1860595 (D.N.J. Feb. 9, 2023) (Judge Susan D. Wigenton). In February 2022, A360 Media, LLC acquired Bauer Media Group USA, LLC. Shortly after the acquisition, plaintiff Steven Kotok, the CEO and president of Bauer Media, was informed by A360’s president “that his employment would be terminated without cause effective March 31, 2022.” Shortly before the termination was set to go into effect, A360 gave Mr. Kotok a proposed separation agreement. This proposed agreement did not include the severance benefits that were included in the employee agreement Mr. Kotok signed when he was hired by Bauer Media Group. Accordingly, Mr. Kotok found A360’s proposed severance benefits package to be a material breach of his employment agreement, and so notified A360 in writing that he was terminating his employment per the terms of his employment agreement for breach of obligations of the terms of the agreement. Mr. Kotok’s last day of employment was March 31, 2022, the date named by A360. Defendants, A360 and Bauer Media, have not paid Mr. Kotok the severance benefits outlined in the employment agreement. On May 18, 2022, Mr. Kotok took legal action, suing defendants in state court in New Jersey asserting state law claims of breach of contract and violation of New Jersey’s wage act. Defendants removed the suit to federal court based on federal question jurisdiction and diversity jurisdiction. Defendants subsequently moved to dismiss. The companies argued that Mr. Kotok’s state law claims are preempted by ERISA, as provisions outlining the severance benefits in the employment agreement constitute an employee benefit plan under ERISA. The court agreed. “The Agreement states that the employing ‘Company,’ A360, agreed to pay Plaintiff, as the intended beneficiary ‘Employee,’ specific benefits upon his termination, and outlined the timeline and procedures for providing those benefits. Thus, it falls within the broad definition of an ERISA employee benefit plan.” The court emphasized that “the payment of severance benefits was not triggered automatically – the plan required A360 to determine whether Plaintiff is entitled to them by assessing the circumstances of his termination and whether he meets all of the criteria for eligibility detailed in the plan.” Given these facts, the court concluded that the employment agreement was an ERISA plan, and that Mr. Kotok’s state law claims, which naturally relate to and rely upon the terms of the agreement, are expressly preempted by ERISA. The court also held that Mr. Kotok’s breach of contract claim seeking payment of severance benefits was preempted because he could have brought the claim as a claim for benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B). Having established the claims were preempted by ERISA, the court granted the motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). Nevertheless, the court permitted Mr. Kotok to replead his complaint to assert new causes of action under ERISA.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Second Circuit

Liberty Wellness Chiropractic v. Empire HealthChoice HMO Inc., No. 21 civ. 2132 (CM), 2023 WL 1927828 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 10, 2023) (Judge Colleen McMahon). A chiropractic practice, plaintiff Liberty Wellness Chiropractic, brought this suit against Empire HealthChoice HMO, Inc. for improperly denying and in some instances improperly underpaying claims for covered services provided to plan participants, which it alleges caused total monetary damage of more than $1 million. The provider asserted claims under ERISA and state law, including tortious interference, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment. Empire moved to dismiss, challenging the sufficiency of plaintiff’s claims. The court converted Empire’s motion into one for summary judgment. It stated that it could not analyze a submitted claims chart Empire included in its motion, which “presents substantial factual information about the 1842 claims listed in Plaintiff’s claims list that is highly relevant to whether this case can go forward,” without converting the motion to dismiss into one for summary judgment. However, before ruling on summary judgment, the court granted Liberty Wellness 120 days to conduct discovery into the governing healthcare plans, including whether any of the plans include anti-assignment provisions that would affect its standing or whether they contain time limitations making the lawsuit untimely. It further instructed plaintiffs to scrutinize the contents of the aforementioned claims chart, so that it could have the “opportunity to oppose the motion for summary judgment by identifying, on a claim by claim basis, whether it contests Defendants’ assertion that any particular claim should be dismissed from this action.” Finally, the court directed plaintiff to conduct discovery on the topic of exhaustion. The decision also took the opportunity to clarify that plaintiff’s state law claims, insofar as they relate to ERISA-governed plans, are preempted by ERISA. After the discovery window is closed, the court stated that it would then consider the merits of each of the party’s positions.

Provider Claims

Fifth Circuit

Diagnostic Affiliates of Northeast Houston v. Aetna, No. 2:22-CV-00127, 2023 WL 1772197 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 1, 2023) (Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos). Plaintiff Diagnostic Affiliates of Northeast Houston, LLC, sued a group of Aetna health insurance defendants, along with employer-sponsored healthcare plans administered by the Aetna defendants, for failure to reimburse charges for COVID-19 diagnostic tests the lab provided to insured patients throughout the pandemic. Diagnostic Affiliates brought claims under the CARES Act and the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, as well as asserting several related state law claims. According to the decision, the provider did not assert claims under ERISA. Defendants moved to dismiss both for lack of personal jurisdiction and for failure to state claims. Regarding jurisdiction, the court granted the motion in part and denied in part. It held that Diagnostic Affiliates met its burden of demonstrating general personal jurisdiction over defendants Aetna Better Health of Texas, Inc., Aetna Health Inc., and First Health Life & Health Insurance Company. However, six other Aetna entities were dismissed from the case, as were all of the employer plans, as the court concluded the provider had not satisfied pleading requirements to support personal jurisdiction of these defendants. Specifically, the court ruled that plaintiff could not use ERISA as a “tacitly-acknowledged national minimum contacts test” for the purposes of determining personal jurisdiction. The court then segued to analyzing whether the lab sufficiently stated its claims. Drawing the same conclusion as many other district courts, the court began by finding that the Families First Coronavirus Response Act and the CARES Act do not include an implied private right of action to sue to enforce their terms. Thus, Diagnostic Affiliates’ federal causes of action were dismissed by the court. Left with only the state law causes of action, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over them, which it felt was appropriate given the early stage of the case. Accordingly, the case was dismissed without prejudice.

Ninth Circuit

Saloojas, Inc. v. CIGNA Healthcare of Cal., No. 22-cv-03270-CRB, 2023 WL 1768117 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 3, 2023) (Judge Charles R. Breyer). The standoff between health insurance companies and healthcare providers of COVID-19 diagnostic testing services continues. This action was brought by one such provider, plaintiff Saloojas, Inc., against CIGNA Healthcare of California. In it, Saloojas alleges that Cigna failed to comply with the CARES Act and California’s state COVID emergency bill, SB 510, by intentionally disregarding their reimbursement requirements and provisions entitling providers of COVID tests full reimbursement. Saloojas asserted claims under ERISA, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), the CARES Act, and California’s Unfair Competition Law. On October 6, 2022, the court granted CIGNA’s motion to dismiss Saloojas’ complaint. (Your ERISA Watch covered that decision in its October 12, 2022 edition.) There, the court held that the CARES Act does not provide a private right of action for healthcare providers. It also determined that Saloojas could not sue under ERISA for benefits as it did not have assignments of benefits and thus lacked standing. Finally, the court concluded that the provider did not meet the heighted pleading requirements for its allegations of fraud and racketeering. Following dismissal, Saloojas amended its complaint, renewing its previous ERISA, RICO, and California Unfair Competition claims and adding an additional claim of insurance bad faith and fraud. Once again, CIGNA moved to dismiss. CIGNA’s motion to dismiss was granted for a second time in this order, this time without leave to amend. The court reiterated its previous findings, holding that none of the deficiencies it outlined in Saloojas’ original complaint were sufficiently rectified in the amended complaint. Additionally, Saloojas’ new bad faith claim was also dismissed, as adding it impermissibly exceeded the scope of the leave to amend. However, the court stated that even if the bad faith claim had not exceeded the scope of leave to amend, it would also have been dismissed for failure to state a claim. Thus, once again, the entirety of Saloojas’ action seeking reimbursement of government-mandated COVID tests it provided was dismissed.

Retaliation Claims

Sixth Circuit

Hrdlicka v. General Motors, LLC, No. 22-1328, __ F. 4th __, 2023 WL 1794255 (6th Cir. Feb. 7, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Siler, Gilman, and Nalbandian). Last March, a district court in the Eastern District of Michigan granted summary judgment in favor of defendant General Motors in this wrongful termination and retaliation lawsuit brought by former employee plaintiff Haley Hrdlicka. (You can read a summary of that decision in Your ERISA Watch’s April 6, 2022 issue.) Ms. Hrdlicka appealed. In this decision, the Sixth Circuit affirmed the judgment of the district court under de novo review, agreeing that General Motors fired Ms. Hrdlicka for the non-discriminatory reason of excessive absenteeism. The Sixth Circuit pointed to the fact “that Hrdlicka was never diagnosed with any medical condition until after her termination…and she never sought medical help for any symptoms or conditions from which she was suffering while employed” as support that Ms. Hrdlicka was not discriminated against due to any disability. The medical condition at issue was a brain tumor which was diagnosed and surgically removed immediately following Ms. Hrdlicka’s firing, and it was her assertion that the effects of the tumor were the cause of her tardiness and declining job performance at the end of her time working for General Motors. Ms. Hrdlicka maintained that she had been complaining to people at work that she was experiencing symptoms of depression and feeling generally unwell. These arguments were ultimately unpersuasive on appeal. The Sixth Circuit did not agree with Ms. Hrdlicka that General Motors was sufficiently on notice that Ms. Hrdlicka was suffering from a disability. Specifically, in relation to Ms. Hrdlicka’s ERISA Section 510 retaliation claim, the court of appeals again focused on the fact that Ms. Hrdlicka’s diagnosis was post-termination and therefore was not a motivating fact for General Motors at the time it made its decision to terminate her employment. The Sixth Circuit concluded, “Hrdlicka’s post-termination diagnoses of serious health conditions are indeed unfortunate, but, for the reasons discussed above, they do not create a genuine dispute of material fact that would justify denying General Motors’s motion for summary judgment. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.”

Subrogation/Reimbursement Claims

Third Circuit

McWilliams v. Geisinger Health Plan, No. 4:20-CV-01236, 2023 WL 1819164 (M.D. Pa. Feb. 8, 2023) (Judge Matthew W. Brann). Plaintiff Kaylee McWilliams sued her health insurance plan, the Geisinger Health Plan, and its subrogation agent, Socrates, Inc., demanding defendants return the money she paid to them under protest after they put a lien on a personal injury recovery she received in their effort to enforce the plan’s Group Subscription Certificate and its subrogation clause. Defendants previously moved to dismiss Ms. McWilliams’ ERISA action. On November 16, 2022, the court converted that motion to one for summary judgment and granted it, “dismissing all claims except McWilliams’ demand for monetary damages contain in Count VII.” Defendants subsequently moved for summary judgment on the final remaining cause of action. Their motion was granted by the court in this order. The court rejected Ms. McWilliams’ argument that it had previously erred by not applying the common-fund doctrine. Ms. McWilliams stated the common-fund doctrine applies differently to cases involving liens rather than class actions. “The Court disagrees with her distinction on how the common-fund doctrine applies in the class-action context as opposed to the lien context. The doctrine is a way to compensate attorneys for recovering money for third parties who did not financially contribute to the attorneys’ efforts to litigate the case. That can be accomplished through awarding fees from a class recovery or by reducing a lien on a plaintiff’s recovery in favor of a third party who did not financially contribute to obtaining the recovery.” Ms. McWilliams’ second argument fared no better. There she argued that defendants violated ERISA by failing to identify the J.M. Smucker Master Health Plan, rather than the Group Subscription Certificate, as the basis of their reimbursement demand. She argued that the Certificate’s terms expressly state that they control in this matter and that defendants therefore violated ERISA by failing to cite the health plan as the legal basis for their reimbursement arguments. The court reiterated that it had previously addressed and rejected these arguments in its opinion last November. Nevertheless, it rejected them again here, stating that there is no inconsistency between the Certificate and the Master Health Plan. “When a party’s rights are expressed in multiple documents – as is the case here – there is no inconsistency when one document grants a party more rights than the other. Indeed, such a conclusion would be a novel definition of the term ‘inconsistency.’” Moreover, the court held that defendants did not violate ERISA Section 503(1) by not identifying the plan provision upon which they relied because this was not a case of an adverse benefit determination. “Having addressed all of McWilliams’ arguments,” the court granted defendants’ summary judgment motion on Ms. McWilliams’ final remaining claim.

Laidig v. GreatBanc Trust Co., No. 22-cv-1296, 2023 WL 1319624 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 31, 2023) (Judge Mary M. Rowland)

At first blush, employee stock ownership plans (“ESOPs”) sound like a great deal for employees. ESOPs can make companies more democratic, by giving employees equity, and they often have financial advantages, such as deferred compensation and favorable tax treatment.

However, these plans often are not what they seem. Equity can be a mirage, because employees rarely get voting rights with their shares, and they have no realistic influence over how the company is managed. Furthermore, a significant part of employees’ compensation is wrapped up in one asset – company stock – which leaves them vulnerable to ill-timed market swings.

Perhaps most importantly, ESOPs are vulnerable to abuse. ERISA requires employers and administrators to fulfill fiduciary obligations when conducting ESOP transactions, including the duty to ensure that “adequate consideration” is paid/received for the company stock. However, many employers – especially in privately held companies where it is easier to conceal the details of transactions – try to skirt ERISA’s rules in order to take financial advantage. A classic example is a company that is performing poorly, so its owners try to cut their losses by selling the company stock to the ESOP at an inflated price. In doing so, the owners are able to cash out at a substantial markup and saddle the employees with the losses.

Because of these problems, lawsuits under ERISA challenging ESOP administration have been on the rise. This week’s notable decision is yet another example. The plaintiffs are employees of Vi-Jon, LLC, a health and beauty care company, who are participants in an ESOP established by Vi-Jon. They initiated this putative class action on behalf of the plan against (1) Berkshire Fund, a private equity investment firm which owned the majority of Vi-Jon stock prior to the ESOP transaction, (2) GreatBanc Trust Company, the plan trustee responsible for authorizing and negotiating the ESOP transaction, and (3) John Brunner, the previous controlling shareholder of Vi-Jon.

Plaintiffs contended that these defendants caused and participated in a prohibited transaction under ERISA by selling 100% of the Vi-Jon stock to the plan at an inflated stock valuation. Plaintiffs allege that Berkshire acquired a majority stake in Vi-Jon in 2006, but by 2020 was anxious to sell Vi-Jon. At the time Vi-Jon was one of Berkshire’s top-five longest-held investments without an impending deal. Berkshire had been attempting to sell the company for its desired price of $400 million, but could not do so because of Vi-Jon’s high debt load and a lack of pricing flexibility.

Things changed in 2020, however. One of Vi-Jon’s products is hand sanitizer, which provided the company a surge in profits as demand skyrocketed at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic when there were few competitors. Plaintiffs alleged that this profit surge was temporary, and that defendants knew this surge would be temporary as more competitors entered the space.

Plaintiffs alleged that defendants took this opportunity to dump Vi-Jon’s stock at the price they wanted by a new method – selling it to the ESOP. In doing so, defendants could “create the buyer (the Plan) on their own terms and choose the agent that would sit on the other side of the table (GreatBanc).” Plaintiffs alleged that defendants colluded in artificially and knowingly inflating the price of the stock, which saddled the new employee participants of the plan with unsustainable debt. Plaintiffs further alleged that the ESOP’s financial condition and debt load is so dire that “Plan participants will not fully own the company until well after its youngest employees pass retirement age.”

After plaintiffs filed suit, defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which was the subject of this decision. Defendants first argued that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring their action. The court rejected this argument, holding that plaintiffs, who expressly pled concrete pecuniary harm to their shares in the ESOP resulting from the overvaluation of the sale price, adequately stated an injury conferring them with Article III standing.

The court then turned to the merits of the action, which were also challenged by defendants. The court concluded that plaintiffs had adequately stated a claim that GreatBanc engaged in a prohibited transaction under ERISA Section 409. In doing so, the court rejected GreatBanc’s “single argument – that Plaintiffs speculate that the company was overvalued but do not state a cognizable loss redressable under Section 409.” The court deemed this argument to be “essentially a repackaging of its standing arguments and has no merit.” Plaintiffs’ allegations “raise an inference that the company was overvalued and that GreatBanc, as the Plan fiduciary, is liable for any losses as a result.”

As for Berkshire and Brunner, plaintiffs alleged that they violated ERISA Section 502(a)(3) through their knowing participation in the prohibited transaction. The court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss this claim as well. The court noted that Berkshire “had three members on Vi-Jon’s board, and thus, had direct control of the ESOP valuation process,” and that Brunner “also sat on the Vi-Jon board and had similar control and knowledge of the valuation process.” As a result, Plaintiffs had properly stated breach of fiduciary duty claims against them.

As for remedies, the court also rejected defendants’ argument that plaintiffs could not obtain equitable relief, holding that plaintiffs had properly demanded rescission and disgorgement of ill-gotten gains as allowed under ERISA. The court also found that plaintiffs had adequately “traced” those gains under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure’s lenient pleading standards.

The court did grant defendants’ motion to dismiss a portion of the Section 502(a)(3) claim. The court noted that plaintiffs sought a declaration that defendants had engaged in a prohibited transaction. However, declaratory relief is only appropriate if “threatened injury is certainly impending, or there is a substantial risk that the harm will occur.” Plaintiffs’ allegations, on the other hand, “are requests for the Court to declare violations of a transaction that already occurred, which is not appropriate.” Plaintiffs’ “vague and non-specific” request for “other equitable relief” beyond disgorgement and recission was also dismissed. These were minor successes for defendants, however, as plaintiffs notched a significant victory to open their litigation.

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

Attorneys’ Fees

Ninth Circuit

Lundstrom v. Young, No. 18-cv-2856-GPC, 2023 WL 1120867 (S.D. Cal. Jan. 27, 2023) (Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel). In this action, plaintiff Brian Lundstrom sued his ex-wife, defendant Carla Young, along with his former employer and his 401(k) Plan, challenging the validity of a court-issued qualified domestic relations order (“QDRO”) which granted 100% of the 401(k) assets to Ms. Young and a court-issued stock domestic relations order (“DRO”) which transferred stock options under Mr. Lundstrom’s stock incentive plan to Ms. Young. Although Mr. Lundstrom maintained that he was not notified about the QDRO or the stock DRO, this would prove to be untrue. Ultimately, the court would rule that the claims against Ms. Young were little more than an attempt by Mr. Lundstrom “to revisit rulings made by the Texas courts.” On October 27, 2022, the court issued an order dismissing Carla Young from this action. (Your ERISA Watch covered that decision in the November 2, 2022 issue.) In that order the court held that Mr. Lundstrom’s ERISA and state law claims against his ex-wife were barred by collateral estoppel as they “necessarily relied on arguments that were considered and rejected by Texas state courts.” Ms. Young has since moved for an award of attorneys’ fees under ERISA’s fee and costs-shifting provision, Section 1132(g). First, the court held that Ms. Young’s motion for fees and costs was timely because interim awards of attorneys’ fees under ERISA are allowed in the Ninth Circuit. Next, the court concluded that Ms. Young’s success in this lawsuit was not “trivial” or “purely procedural,” and she accordingly achieved success on the merits to make her eligible for attorneys’ fees under Section 502(g)(1). Thus, the court moved to evaluating whether a fee award was justified under the Ninth Circuit’s Hummell factors. The court concluded it was. First, the court stated that Mr. Lundstrom’s action was carried out in bad faith, as he was rehashing a dispute already brought and rejected in Texas state court. The court also found that Mr. Lundstrom can satisfy a fee award and thus the second factor too weighed in favor of awarding fees. Regarding deterrence, the court wrote that “[a]n attorneys’ fee award in this action would deter an ex-spouse from challenging the validity of a state court order in federal court on superficial ERISA grounds. Although Plaintiff’s action is not the typical ERISA action brought against a plan administrator, the Court finds this type of action is worth deterring…The Court rejects the use of ERISA as a means for ex-spouses to drag each other through endless litigation in federal court at great expense to all involved.” This favor thus also weighed in favor of granting Ms. Young fees. The only factor the court decided weighed against a fee award was the fourth Hummell factor pertaining to whether an award of fees would benefit other plan participants or whether the action involves a significant legal question. Neither scenario, the court concluded, was applicable here. Finally, because the court did not rule in Mr. Lundstrom’s favor on any issue relating to Ms. Young, the court found that Ms. Young had the greater relative success on the merits. Considering all these factors, the court found that a fee award was warranted. However, Ms. Young’s requested fee award of $135,234.20 for a total of 263.32 hours of work performed was reduced by the court “by 50% to reflect the degree of success Defendant Young has achieved throughout the course of this litigation.” Despite the fact that the court dismissed all of the claims against Ms. Young, it highlighted the fact that many of her arguments raised throughout the course of litigation were not successful or relevant to her ultimate victory on the grounds of collateral estoppel. Consequently, the court concluded that a fee award of $67,617.10 was appropriate. Finally, the court granted Ms. Young’s request for recovery of $1,246.58 in costs.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Third Circuit

Wright v. Elton Corp., No. C. A. 17-286, 2023 WL 1112022 (D. Del. Jan. 25, 2023) (Judge Joseph F. Batallion). This case involves a pension plan that was established as a trust in 1947 by Mary Chichester duPont to provide pensions to her employees and to the employees of her children and grandchildren. The suit, like the trust itself, has a long and complicated history. But, by the time it was tried in a four-day bench trial before Judge Batallion in April of 2022, plaintiff T. Kimberly Williams, a former employee of one of the grandchildren and a plan participant, was the one remaining plaintiff in the case. Among other things, the court held that the pension plan is covered by ERISA, and that the current and former trustees and the duPont grandchildren breached their fiduciary duties by failing to operate the plan in compliance with ERISA, which caused the plan to become severely underfunded. The court wrote that the trustees and the duPont employers “breached their fiduciary duties by “failing to comply with funding, vesting, notice and other requirements of ERISA.” The court found the trustees and duPont employers liable both for the plan underfunding and for failing to provide proper notices to potential beneficiaries. The court fully credited the testimony of the plaintiff’s expert, noting that he was well qualified to determine the funding liability of a defined benefit pension plan, his conclusions were based on actuarial sciences and reliable, and his testimony was uncontroverted because the defendants chose not to put on their own expert. The court credited the expert’s testimony that the plan’s estimated current funding needs were $38 million and the plan, at the time of the trial, only had $2.7 million in assets. The court found that the defendants’ criticism of the expert’s opinion as being based on incomplete evidence was a problem of their own making in failing to keep complete employment records and failing to bring the plan into compliance with ERISA. The court held that his “report and conclusions can be used as a starting point,” and the “database [he] built can be used as a base for future plan administration by an appointed independent fiduciary to finally administer the plan in accordance with ERISA.” With that in mind, the court ordered the appointment of a special master, to be paid by the current trustee, First Republic, who is tasked, among other things, with retaining a qualified trustee to replace First Republic, identifying and notifying all potential plan participants about the plan, and calculating an adequate funding figure. Ms. Williams is represented in this matter by Your ERISA Watch editor, Elizabeth Hopkins and Susan Meter of Kantor & Kantor.

Eighth Circuit

Schave v. CentraCare Health Sys., No. 22-cv-1555 (WMW/LIB), 2023 WL 1071606 (D. Minn. Jan. 27, 2023) (Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright). Plaintiff Angi Schave commenced this putative class action against her employer CentraCare Health System, the CentraCare board of directors, and the other fiduciaries of two defined contribution plans offered by the company, CentraCare’s 403(b) and 401(k) plans, for breaches of fiduciary duties. Ms. Schave alleged that defendants’ administrative and monitoring processes were in violation of ERISA in several ways. Specifically, Ms. Schave alleged that defendants failed to invest in an available cheaper institutional share class instead of an otherwise identical but costlier retail share class, that defendants invested in funds that charged excessively high management fees, that defendants failed to replace high-cost underperforming funds with similar lower cost funds with better performance histories, and that defendants engaged in improper revenue sharing practices. “As a result of these alleged breaches of fiduciary duties, Schave maintains, Defendants are liable under ERISA,  29 U.S.C. §§ 1105(a), 1109(a) and 1132(a)(2).” Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of Article III standing and for failure to state a claim. As a preliminary matter, the court denied the motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of constitutional standing. The court held that under Eighth Circuit precedent participants of ERISA defined contribution plans have “standing to challenge an entire retirement plan, even if the plaintiff did not enroll in all of the challenged investment options.” The court then addressed defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. The motion was granted in part and denied in part. First, the court denied the motion to dismiss Ms. Schave’s breach of fiduciary duty claims predicated on defendants’ failure to select a lower cost share class. The court stated that it could plausibly infer from Ms. Schave’s complaint that a lower cost institutional share class was available to defendants and their failure to invest in that class, to the detriment of the plan participants, could potentially be a breach of a fiduciary duty. However, the remainder of the breach of fiduciary duty claims based on fees, investment performance, and improper revenue sharing were dismissed by the court. It held that Ms. Schave did not offer appropriate comparisons adequately comprised of actively managed funds with similar investment strategies and risk profiles. Without these like-for-like comparisons, the court could not infer that the plans’ fees were excessively high, that the challenged funds performed poorly, or that the revenue sharing was in and of itself inappropriate. Accordingly, defendants were largely successful in their motion to dismiss. Lastly, the court denied Ms. Schave’s informal request for leave to amend.

Disability Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Hocheiser v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., No. 21-1533, __ F. App’x __, 2023 WL 1267070 (3d Cir. Jan. 31, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Ambro, Restrepo, and Fuentes). Plaintiff-appellant David Hocheiser appealed a district court order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant Liberty Mutual Insurance Company in this ERISA long-term disability benefits action. On appeal, the Third Circuit affirmed the holdings of the lower court, agreeing with the district court that Liberty Mutual’s denial was supported by substantial evidence in the administrative record. Given the discretionary clause granting Liberty Mutual authority to determine benefits eligibility, the court of appeals also upheld the district court’s application of the arbitrary and capricious review standard. Ultimately, the appeals court concluded that Mr. Hocheiser did not meet his burden of proving that he was disabled from performing sedentary work. Even without an independent medical examination, the Third Circuit held, “there was ample evidence in the record to deny benefits.” Finally, because multiple physicians found Mr. Hocheiser capable of performing sedentary work, the Third Circuit agreed with the district court that under the applicable deferential review “Liberty Mutual appropriately exercised its discretion and that Liberty Mutual’s denial of LTD benefits was supported by the evidence.” As a result, the Third Circuit affirmed the district court’s order.

Fourth Circuit

Zahariev v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., No. 22-1209, __ F. App’x __, 2023 WL 1519520 (4th Cir. Feb. 3, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Wynn, Rushing, and Keenan). Plaintiff-appellant Kiril Zahariev sued Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Company seeking reinstatement of long-term disability benefits. Shortly after the complaint was filed, a meditator was appointed to assist the parties to reach a settlement. A settlement was reached, Mr. Zahariev cashed his settlement check, and the parties jointly filed a stipulation of dismissal with prejudice. Several months later, in early 2021, Mr. Zahariev moved to reopen the case and set aside the previous judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). He argued that the case should be reopened because the mediator pressured him into settling by heavily insinuating that not settling would lead to further intrusive surveillance conducted by Hartford. Additionally, Mr. Zahariev argued that Hartford submitted fraudulent responses during discovery which infected the mediation process. “Specifically, he asserted that Hartford’s supplemental discovery responses included items ‘inadvertently’ left out of its initial responses and falsely stated that ‘there are no written performance evaluations of the vendors.’” The court recommended denying Mr. Zahariev’s Rule 60(b) motion both on the merits and as untimely. Mr. Zahariev appealed that decision, and the Fourth Circuit vacated and remanded, concluding that the district court failed to consider the discovery fraud issue. On remand, the district court addressed and rejected the discovery fraud issue. Mr. Zahariev again appealed. This time, the Fourth Circuit affirmed. In this order, the appeals court concluded that because Mr. Zahariev had knowledge of both the mediator’s alleged improper conduct and Hartford’s alleged discovery fraud, but chose to cash his settlement and dismiss the case, “he has failed to show extortionary or exceptional circumstances meriting Rule 60(b) relief. Moreover, even if we believed that extortionary or exceptional circumstances exist, the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding to the contrary.” As a result, Mr. Zahariev was unable to overcome the high bar to reopen a settled case. Finally, Mr. Zahariev’s assertion of judicial bias based on an adverse judicial ruling was swiftly concluded by the Fourth Circuit to be without merit. Accordingly, the district court’s order was affirmed.

ERISA Preemption

Tenth Circuit

Huff v. BP Corp. N. Am., No. 22-CV-00044-GKF-SH, 2023 WL 1433908 (N.D. Okla. Feb. 1, 2023) (Judge Gregory K. Frizzell). In 2021, plaintiff Roland Huff filed a lawsuit against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company alleging two state law claims, breach of contract and bad faith, challenging the sharp increase in the premiums of his group life insurance policy administered by MetLife and sponsored by BP Corporation. That case was dismissed on October 25, 2021. The court held that the plan is an employee benefit plan governed by ERISA, that the state law claims related to the plan and were thus preempted by ERISA, and that Mr. Huff could not state an ERISA claim against MetLife. A summary of that decision is available in Your ERISA Watch’s November 3, 2021 newsletter. Rather than file an amended complaint, Mr. Huff filed a new lawsuit, this time against his former employer, BP, again alleging state law claims. BP moved to dismiss. Its motion was granted by the court, which reaffirmed its earlier holdings in the first lawsuit that the plan is governed by ERISA and the state law claims are preempted. Mr. Huff subsequently moved for reconsideration. He argued the plan is not governed by ERISA because it falls under ERISA’s safe harbor provision and because the life insurance policy is a conversion policy no longer subject to ERISA. Despite Mr. Huff’s untimeliness in moving for reconsideration, the court courteously addressed each of his arguments. Ultimately, the result was unchanged. The court disagreed with Mr. Huff’s position that the policy fell under the safe harbor provision. To the contrary, the court noted that Mr. Huff’s life insurance policy was part of broad company-provided basic life and accidental death and dismemberment coverage to which BP contributed premiums, and that BP took other actions including determining eligibility for coverage, directing the start and end dates of converge, and selecting the insurer. The court also reaffirmed its stance that because the plan is established by an employer for the purpose of providing benefits to participants and beneficiaries it is an EIRSA plan. The court also addressed Mr. Huff’s conversion argument. While the court acknowledged that there is a Circuit split over the issue of whether ERISA applies to a conversion policy after the conversion, the court explained that resolution of that issue was irrelevant here because the plan expressly provides, “you cannot convert your GUL coverage to individual coverage.” Thus, pursuant to plan language, conversion could not and did not occur. Finally, the court found no clear error in its prior analysis that the state law claims were preempted by ERISA as they could not be resolved without reliance on the plan and therefore naturally relate to the ERISA plan. For these reasons, the court denied Mr. Huff’s motion for reconsideration.

Life Insurance & AD&D Benefit Claims

Fifth Circuit

Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Robles, No. C. A. 4:21-CV-00714, 2023 WL 1437710 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 1, 2023) (Judge George C. Hanks, Jr.). Metropolitan Life Insurance Company commenced this interpleader action to determine the proper beneficiary of decedent John Robles’s life insurance policy. The two defendants were Mr. Robles’s ex-wife, Carolyn Bell, and his wife at the time of his death, Anna Lisa Robles. Following a bench trial in the case, the court issued this order comprised of its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court concluded that Mr. Robles’s change of beneficiary form designating his wife Anna as the beneficiary of his life insurance benefits was invalid and void as it directly conflicted with the express language of a Qualified Domestic Relations Order between Mr. Robles and Ms. Bell. Accordingly, the court held that “Ms. Bell is the sole beneficiary designated in the Policy and is entitled to receive the life insurance benefits at issue in this interpleader action for the benefit of the children that she shared with Mr. Robles.”

Medical Benefit Claims

Eighth Circuit

BCBSM, Inc. v. GS Labs., No. 22-cv-513 (ECT/DJF), 2023 WL 1110453 (D. Minn. Jan. 30, 2023) (Judge Eric C. Tostrud). Faced with mounting costs of covering COVID-19 diagnostic testing, Blue Cross took to the courts in cases like this one where it alleges that defendant GS Labs is a “pandemic profiteer” charging excessively high prices for faulty and superfluous tests. In this lawsuit and in others like it, Blue Cross and other insurance companies have ceased making payments to labs which the insurance companies feel charge too much for COVID tests and have sued those providers for alleged misconduct seeking millions of dollars in damages and recoupment of payments. In response, GS Labs avers that its tests were important, medically necessary, high-quality, and mandated by the government’s COVID-19 policies. GS Labs argues that it provided diagnostic COVID tests to over 300,000 Minnesotans and that it did not require payment from those individuals directly. GS Labs answered Blue Cross’s complaint by asserting 21 counterclaims against the insurance company under the CARES Act, ERISA, the Lanham Act, the Sherman Act, and Minnesota state law. Blue Cross moved to dismiss, testing the sufficiency of the claims pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Its motion was largely granted. To begin, the court dismissed GS Labs’ CARES Act claim, holding, as many other district courts have held, that the CARES Act does not provide for an express private right of action for healthcare providers. “Binding precedent today counsels caution in implying causes of action and directs that the focus be on statutory intent. The determination that § 3202 creates no private right of action is more faithful to the modern, controlling approach.” The court further held that Section 6001 of the FFCRA and Sections 3201 and 3202 of the CARES Act “do not say their COVID-testing-coverage requirements ‘amend’ or are incorporated by reference in non-ERISA health insurance policies or plans.” However, this was not the conclusion the court reached regarding ERISA plans. With respect to ERISA plans, the court ruled that FFCRA’s coverage requirement is included in ERISA and that the coverage-without-cost-sharing requirement of the CARES Act is therefore subject to ERISA Section 502(a)(1)(B) claims. Additionally, the court stated that the CARES Act requires, absent a negotiated rate between the insurance company and the provider, that an insurance company “shall reimburse the provider the in an amount that equals the cash price for such service as listed by the provider on a public internet website.” GS Labs’ ERISA claim for benefits was thus allowed to proceed. However, its equitable relief ERISA claim under Section 502(a)(3) was dismissed, as Eighth Circuit precedent does not convey to providers the right to sue for equitable relief. GS Labs was also allowed to proceed with its promissory estoppel claim as it met the pleading requirements by including an email dated March 31, 2021, from Blue Cross promising to pay GS Labs at the prices posted on its website as required by the CARES Act. The remainder of GS Labs’ counterclaims were dismissed for various reasons, including all of its antitrust claims which the court noted were economically implausible. Your ERISA Watch will continue to cover these disputes between insurance companies and healthcare providers over reimbursement of COVID-19 healthcare as they play out in the courts. Curious readers should stay tuned for further developments.

Pension Benefit Claims

Second Circuit

Fitzsimons v. N.Y.C. Dist. Council of Carpenters & Joiners of Am., No. 21 Civ. 11151 (AT), 2023 WL 1069808 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 27, 2023) (Judge Analisa Torres). A retired union member, Peter Fitzsimons, along with his wife and adult children, sued the New York City District Council of Carpenters and Joiners of America union along with its pension and welfare funds under ERISA and the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (“LMDRA”) after the family’s pension payments and healthcare benefits were stripped following a union trial which found Mr. Fitzsimons had been improperly performing managerial and inspector work for a contributing employer, disqualifying him from benefits. In this action the Fitzsimons family asserted claims under Sections 502(a)(3) and 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA and Sections 411(a), 412, and 529 of LMRDA. The union and fund defendants moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Their motion was granted in this order. To begin, the court speedily dismissed the ERISA breach of fiduciary duty claim, writing, “[t]he complaint does not contain sufficient factual allegations to state a claim for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA…Plaintiffs’ conclusory allegations are insufficient to state a claim.” Plaintiffs’ claim for pension benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B) was dismissed as untimely. The court upheld the pension plan’s one-year statute of limitation within which to sue and held that plaintiffs failed to sue within the allotted window. Although plaintiffs’ claim for healthcare benefits was not dismissed as untimely, the court nevertheless found the claim failed on the merits. Under arbitrary and capricious review, the court found defendants’ interpretation of plan language about disqualifying employment to be on its face reasonable and not erroneous as a matter of law. Finally, plaintiffs’ LMRDA violations were dismissed as the court concluded that Mr. Fitzsimons was afforded a full and fair union trial and that he therefore did not state a valid claim. Accordingly, the entire complaint was dismissed.

Statutory Penalties

Sixth Circuit

Higgins v. The Lincoln Elec. Co., No. 5:22-cv-88-BJB, 2023 WL 1072016 (W.D. Ky. Jan. 27, 2023) (Judge Benjamin Beaton). In July 2017, plaintiff Jerry Higgins was given a benefit statement from his employer, defendant The Lincoln Electric Company, informing him that he was eligible for $92,260.80 in total long-term disability benefits under the company’s ERISA-governed policy issued by defendant MetLife. Mr. Higgins became disabled the following month. While his claim for benefits was approved, he was informed that he would only receive $60,000. Several years later, in January 2022, Mr. Higgins, then represented by legal counsel, requested the administrative record from MetLife and demanded payment of the greater benefit amount listed in the July 2017 benefit statement. MetLife informed Mr. Higgins that he should submit his requests to his employer. Mr. Higgins did so, and his employer promptly sent him back to MetLife. This lawsuit followed. Defendant MetLife moved for dismissal. Mr. Higgins asserted two claims against MetLife, both pursuant to ERISA § 502(c), for failing to provide Mr. Higgins requested plan information and for failing to respond to his claim for increased benefits. In its motion, MetLife argued that it cannot be held liable for penalties under § 1132(c) because The Lincoln Electric Company is the named plan administrator and under Sixth Circuit precedent only the plan administrator, and not the claims administrator, is covered under the statute. The court agreed, writing, “claim administration is not the same thing as plan administration. The statute and precedent make this plain…And the statutory section under which Higgins sued covers the latter rather than the former.” Accordingly, even accepting all Mr. Higgins’s allegations as true and drawing reasonable inferences in his favor, the court held that Mr. Higgins could not assert § 502(c) claims against MetLife. Thus, MetLife’s motion to dismiss was granted.

Venue

Eleventh Circuit

Worldwide Aircraft Servs. v. Anthem Ins. Cos., No. 8:21-cv-456-CEH-AAS, 2023 WL 1069811 (M.D. Fla. Jan. 27, 2023) (Judge Charlene Edwards Honeywell). In this action, a plan participant, represented by an attorney-in-fact, is suing Anthem Insurance Companies, Inc. under ERISA Section 502(a)(1)(B) for under-reimbursement of medically necessary air ambulance services arising from a medical emergency that occurred while the participant was on vacation in Florida. Defendant moved to dismiss for improper venue pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(3). Anthem was able to persuade the court that venue in Florida was improper under ERISA’s venue provision, § 1132(e)(2), because it cannot be “found” in Florida and the plan participant is a resident of Indiana. Anthem submitted evidence to the court that it is an Indiana corporation, not authorized to do business in Florida, without any offices or building in Florida, not paying Florida taxes, not advertising in Florida, and without a Florida telephone number or mailing address. Although plaintiff was able to point to a Florida building showing the name “Anthem” on it, the court agreed with Anthem that this building beloved to a corporate subsidiary of Anthem and was therefore a separate business which had nothing to do with the named defendant here. Nevertheless, while the court determined venue to be improper in the Middle District of Florida, the court determined that the interests of justice favored transferring the case to the district where it should have been brought, the Southern District of Indiana. Accordingly, the case was transferred, and it will proceed going forward in the Southern District of Indiana.

Wit v. United Behavioral Health, No. 20-17363, __ F.4th __, 2023 WL 411441 (9th Cir. Jan. 26, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Christen and Forrest, and District Judge Michael M. Anello)

In the March 30, 2022 edition of Your ERISA Watch, we examined the Ninth Circuit’s prior decision in this case, issued on March 22, 2022. We found it notable that despite the case’s long history – which includes numerous extensive orders by the district court on a variety of issues, including class certification, a ten-day bench trial, a finding that defendant United engaged in “pervasive and long-standing violations of ERISA,” and attorneys’ fees of more than $20 million – the Ninth Circuit cursorily reversed in a breezy eight-page non-precedential memorandum disposition.

Plaintiffs, a class of benefit plan participants who had alleged that United violated ERISA by denying their mental health and substance use disorder claims under medical necessity guidelines that were inconsistent with plan requirements, were understandably miffed. They filed a petition for rehearing and rehearing en banc, and numerous amici curiae weighed in as well.

In this decision the Ninth Circuit responded by withdrawing its 2022 memorandum disposition, replacing it with a new published opinion, and denying as moot the petition for rehearing and the amicus motions. The new opinion addresses the issues on appeal more thoroughly, but the result is not what the plaintiffs had hoped.

As in its prior decision, the Ninth Circuit first tackled standing. United argued that the plaintiffs “did not suffer concrete injuries” and “did not show proof of benefits denied,” and thus were not harmed by United’s guidelines. The court disagreed, holding that the plaintiffs had suffered a concrete injury because United’s alleged misadministration of their claims “presents a material risk to their interest in fair adjudication of their entitlement to their contractual benefits. Plaintiffs need not have demonstrated that they were, or will be, entitled to benefits to allege a concrete injury.”

The court also found that the plaintiffs’ injuries were “particularized because the Guidelines are applied to the contractual benefits afforded to each individual class member” and “fairly traceable” to United because plaintiffs’ interest in the proper interpretation of their benefits was connected to United’s improper conduct.

That was the end of the good news for the plaintiffs, however, as the Ninth Circuit moved on to the district court’s class certification order. In last year’s decision, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s ruling on this issue, holding that the plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary claim “is capable of being resolved on a class-wide basis.” The court also found that the plaintiffs’ denial of benefits claim “avoided the individualized nature of the benefits remedy available under § 1132(a)(1)(B) by seeking ‘reprocessing.’” The court dodged the issue of whether the reprocessing remedy sought by the plaintiffs “overextended Rule 23 in violation of the Rules Enabling Act.”

Judge Forrest objected to this evasion in her concurrence last year, and in the new opinion the rest of the court agreed with her and squarely addressed this issue. The court observed that the plaintiffs had attempted to avoid the problem of “numerous individualized questions” for each benefit claim by seeking a uniform remedy, i.e., the “reprocessing” of their benefit claims by United. However, the court found that this strategy violated the Rules Enabling Act, which provides that procedural rules “shall not abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right.”

Specifically, the Ninth Circuit stated that ERISA’s benefit claim provision (29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B)) only provides a right to “recover benefits or to enforce or clarify rights under the plan.” Thus, reprocessing, which entails “a remand to the administrator for reevaluation” is not a proper remedy under this provision, and is only “a means to the ultimate remedy,” i.e., the payment of benefits. As a result, the court ruled that the district court violated the Rules Enabling Act by creating a substantive right not authorized in ERISA: “The district court abused its discretion in accepting the erroneous legal view that reprocessing is itself a remedy…independent from the express statutory remedies that Congress created, justifying class treatment.”

The court further ruled that reprocessing was not an available remedy under ERISA’s equitable relief provision (29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)) for two reasons. First, the court stated that plaintiffs are not allowed to repackage their benefit claims as equitable claims, and second, the district court “did not explain or refer to precedent showing how a ‘reprocessing’ remedy constitutes relief that was typically available in equity.”

Next, the court addressed the merits of plaintiffs’ argument, and the result was the same as in last year’s ruling. Because the parties agreed that the standard of review was abuse of discretion, United’s decisions could only be overturned if they were “unreasonable.” The court emphasized that the benefit plans at issue “exclude coverage for treatment inconsistent with GASC [generally accepted standards of care] or otherwise condition treatment on consistency with GASC.” However, while this provision “mandates that a treatment be consistent with GASC as a starting point, it does not compel [United] to cover all treatment that is consistent with GASC. Nor does the exclusion – or any other provision in the Plans – require United to develop Guidelines that mirror GASC.” As a result, United’s interpretation of the plans was not unreasonable. The Ninth Circuit further ruled that the district court’s findings regarding United’s conflict of interest did not change this result.

Finally, the Ninth Circuit examined United’s exhaustion argument, another issue it ducked in last year’s decision. The court ruled in United’s favor on this as well. United contended that the district court erred by excusing unnamed class members from showing that they had complied with the plan’s contractual requirement that they exhaust all appeals before filing suit. The Ninth Circuit agreed, ruling that “application of judicially created exhaustion exceptions would conflict with the written terms of the plan.” Furthermore, the district court’s ruling once again violated the Rules Enabling Act because, “by excusing all absent class members’ failure to exhaust, the district court abridged [United’s] affirmative defense of failure to exhaust and expanded many absent class members’ right to seek judicial remedies.”

After all this, what remains of the plaintiffs’ lawsuit? The Ninth Circuit concluded that the plaintiffs “have Article III standing to bring their breach of fiduciary duty and improper denial of benefits claims,” and that the district court “did not err in certifying three classes to pursue the fiduciary duty claim.” However, the court also ruled that the plaintiffs’ class-wide reprocessing remedy was improper because it violated the Rules Enabling Act. It also ruled that United’s guidelines do not violate the requirements of the benefit plans. Plus, the court’s exhaustion ruling will require a reformulation of the classes in the action. As a result, while the case is not dead, the path forward back in the district court will be tricky.

Or, the plaintiffs could petition the Ninth Circuit for rehearing once again, which seems likely. Stay tuned to Your ERISA Watch to find out.

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

Arbitration

Third Circuit

Burnett v. Prudent Fiduciary Servs., No. C. A. 22-270-RGA-JLH, 2023 WL 387586 (D. Del. Jan. 25, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Jennifer L. Hall). In this putative class action, participants of the Western Global Airlines, Inc. Employee Stock Ownership Plan (“ESOP”) allege breaches of fiduciary duties in connection with a transaction selling stock to the ESOP at what plaintiffs allege was an inflated stock valuation. Plaintiffs’ complaint seeks plan-wide relief seeking to hold defendants liable for the losses resulting from the ESOP transaction and to disgorge any profits made through the plan assets. Additionally, plaintiffs seek removal of the plan trustee and other changes among the plan’s fiduciaries, “as well as certain other equitable and declaratory relief.” Defendants moved to compel arbitration and to either stay proceedings or dismiss the case pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act. Plaintiffs opposed. They argued that the arbitration provision at issue contains a clause which bans them from seeking plan-wide relief, and because that portion of the arbitration provision is both invalid and not severable, defendants’ motion should be denied. Magistrate Judge Hall agreed. “The ERISA statute gives plan beneficiaries the right to sue on behalf of plan and recover plan-wide damages for a breach of fiduciary duty… But what the statue provides, the arbitration provision takes away… The arbitration provision thus eliminates a right to pursue a remedy provided by a federal statute.” Finally, the magistrate agreed with plaintiffs that the provision’s express language saying that the invalid provision cannot be severed meant that the court could not enforce the arbitration provision at all. Accordingly, Magistrate Judge Hall recommended that defendants’ motion be denied.

Attorneys’ Fees

Ninth Circuit

Robinson v. American Int’l Grp., No. 2:21-cv-00749-MEMF-MRWx, 2023 WL 375939 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 24, 2023) (Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong). Last September, the court issued an order granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiff Ian Robinson in this action challenging a denial of a claim for death benefits under an Accidental Death and Dismemberment Policy. Mr. Robinson subsequently filed a motion for an award of attorneys’ fees, costs, final judgment, and interest. To begin, the parties agreed that attorneys’ fees in the amount of $133,125 and costs in the amount of $2,735.25 were appropriate. Without any objection on the part of the defendant, the court granted the motion to award fees and costs in those amounts. Next, it was undisputed that the benefit claim amounted to $236,000, and defendant was found liable by the court for that amount. Most of the decision’s focus was directed on the primary dispute between the parties – the amount of prejudgment interest. Mr. Robinson argued that historically high inflation deprived him of a period of high growth and favorable returns had he been able to invest the benefit at the time when he filed the claim. Accordingly, Mr. Robinson sought the interest rate prescribed by California’s Civil Code in the amount of 10% per annum from the date of the breach of fiduciary duty. In contrast, defendants argued in favor of the 4.5% interest rate set under 28 U.S.C. § 1961. The court held that Mr. Robinson failed to demonstrate that he would have invested the benefit the manner outlined in his motion. Thus, the court concluded that the equities did not demonstrate the need in this case to award the greater interest rate. The court awarded prejudgment interest calculated at the rate of 4.66% per annum. Finally, the court declined to award compound interest. It stated that prejudgment interest is a form of compensation, not a penalty, and the court’s discretion is whether to award prejudgment interest, not whether the court “elects compound or simple interest.” Awarding compound interest, the court concluded, would be tantamount to imposing a penalty, “a request that the Court cannot accommodate.” Therefore, the court awarded simple interest. Using the established interest rate, the court awarded prejudgment interest of $29,738.72. For these reasons, Mr. Robinson’s motion was granted, as modified by the judge, and judgment was ordered in the amounts described above.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

First Circuit

Erban v. Tufts Med. Ctr. Physicians Org., No. 22-11193-PBS, 2023 WL 363588 (D. Mass. Jan. 23, 2023) (Judge Patti B. Saris). In 2019, Dr. John Erban, an oncologist at Tufts Medical Center, was given a terminal diagnosis when test results revealed a malignant tumor. In the year between the date of his diagnosis and his death in September 2020, Dr. Erban suffered from cognitive impairments. After her husband’s death, widow Lisa Erban applied for life insurance benefits as the named beneficiary. Her claims for both basic and supplemental life insurance benefits were denied because the policies had lapsed when they were not converted to individual policies. Ms. Erban then brought this action under ERISA Section 502(a)(3) alleging that Tufts Medical Center Physicians Organization and its director of human resources, Nicolas Martin, breached their fiduciary duties by failing to instruct Ms. Erban to continue paying premiums, and failing to inform her about the deadline to convert her husband’s life insurance plans. Defendants moved to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). In this order the court denied the motion “on the grounds Plaintiff Lisa Erban has stated a plausible claim that Defendants breached their fiduciary duty in light of their knowledge of Dr. Erban’s impaired cognitive ability and that Nicolas Martin, an employee and Human Resources Director, acted as a fiduciary.” The court went on to stress that because defendants were aware of Dr. Erban’s illness, they had an affirmative obligation to inform the Erbans and provide them with accurate and complete material information on their benefit status and options to continue coverage. As the court wrote, “the HR staff knew that the Erbans’ main focus was to ‘assure continuance of active status’ of his life insurance policy,” accordingly, they had a fiduciary duty “to do more than simply not misinform.”

Turner v. Schneider Elec. Holdings, No. 20-11006-NMG, 2023 WL 387592 (D. Mass. Jan. 24, 2023) (Judge Nathaniel M. Gorton). Participants of the Schneider Electric 401(k) Plan initiated a putative class action against the plan, Schneider Electric, the plan’s benefits and investments committees, and the plan’s investment manager, Aon Hewitt Investment Consulting, Inc., for breaches of fiduciary duties of prudence, loyalty, and to monitor after Aon Hewitt replaced existing plan investment options with its own set of proprietary investment trusts. According to plaintiffs, the plan’s decision to invest in these Aon Hewitt trusts resulted in major losses to participants’ retirement savings through underperformance and unreasonably high associated management and recordkeeping fees. Defendants moved for summary judgment. The court first addressed plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claim arising from the selection of the Aon Trusts. Defendants argued that plaintiffs failed to prove that the plan suffered any losses from the selection and retention of the Aon Trusts. They stated that, to the contrary, thanks to profit earned on separate investments, the plan actually accrued a gain of $27 million during the relevant time period. Plaintiffs pushed back on the concept that a fiduciary is able “to reduce its liability by profit earned on separate investments.” The court held that “combining gains and losses is permissible in the negligence context,” and accordingly found that plaintiffs failed to prove as a matter of law that the selection of the Aon Trusts was imprudent or disloyal. As this was the only claim asserted against defendant Aon Hewitt, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Aon Hewitt and dismissed it from the action. The remaining defendants were granted summary judgment on this claim alone and were not dismissed. Plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claims of imprudence and monitoring related to the fees were found to have genuine issues of material fact precluding summary judgment.

Eighth Circuit

Riley v. Olin Corp., No. 4:21-cv-01328-SRC, 2023 WL 371872 (E.D. Mo. Jan. 24, 2023) (Judge Stephen R. Clark). Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8 requires that, in order to state a claim for relief, a pleading must contain “a short and plain statement of the claim showing the pleader is entitled to relief.” However, in the context of ERISA breach of fiduciary duty putative class actions, short and plain statements no longer suffice under precedents set by many of the circuit courts. Rather, specificity, detail, and sufficiently similar comparators have become the keys to unlocking the courthouse door past pleading. And unless complaints are sufficiently festooned with these extras, courts are becoming more and more unwilling to find their allegations of wrongdoing plausible. Such was the case here. Last summer, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint, which alleged that the fiduciaries of their ERISA retirement plan failed to adequately monitor the plan’s fees, improperly maintained underperforming funds, and failed to prudently select investment options. At the time, the court held that plaintiffs’ complaint did not plausibly state an inferential case that defendants’ actions as fiduciaries of the Olin Corporation retirement plan were imprudent or that their process was flawed. Following the court’s dismissal, plaintiffs moved for leave to amend their complaint. The court denied their motion on futility grounds in this decision. Specifically, the court expressed that plaintiffs’ updated comparisons of the challenged fees and funds were inapposite and thus not meaningful benchmarks with which to compare and contrast. Funds costing more or performing worse than other available options the court stated, “does not, in and of itself, an ERISA violation make.” The court concluded that while courts may not resolve factual questions on the pleadings, they may, and under Eight Circuit precedent must, “analyze whether a meaningful benchmark exists at the motion-to-dismiss phase.” Here, the court found meaningful benchmarks were not provided. Accordingly, the court held the amended complaint failed to address or rectify the deficiencies it previously identified and for this reason denied plaintiffs’ motion to amend.

Class Actions

Second Circuit

Garthwait v. Eversource Energy Serv. Co., No. 3:20-CV-00902 (JCH), 2023 WL 371036 (D. Conn. Jan. 24, 2023) (Judge Janet C. Hall). On December 7, 2022, the court issued an order in this breach of fiduciary duty class action allowing plaintiffs to proceed with some of their ERISA claims before a jury. Your ERISA Watch summarized that decision in its December 14,2022 issue. Following that order, defendants moved for a certificate of appealability and to stay the proceedings. In their motion, defendants argued that neither ERISA nor the Seventh Amendment provide a jury trial right and orders about the availability of jury trials “are often certified for interlocutory appeal.” The court disagreed, writing, “[c]ontrary to defendants’ argument, however, courts in this Circuit have denied motions for certificates of appealability regarding the jury trial right in ERISA cases.” And, although the court recognized that whether ERISA cases are tried in front of a jury is an important issue without consensus, the court stated that it is not a “controlling” issue. Furthermore, the court pointed out that selecting a jury would require minimum time and impact for what will surely be a “multi-week trial (whether before a jury, the court, or both.)” Meanwhile, allowing appeal of this interlocutory order would be a substantial time drain protracting the litigation. On balance, the court found there was significant downside to granting defendants’ request. Accordingly, it denied the motion to issue a certificate of appealability.

Disability Benefit Claims

Eighth Circuit

Elias v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 21-cv-1813 (WMW/TNL), 2023 WL 375649 (D. Minn. Jan. 24, 2023) (Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright). Plaintiff Bijan Elias brought this action under ERISA against Unum Life Insurance Company of America after Unum terminated his long-term disability benefits. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment and agreed that the plan’s discretionary clause triggered deferential review. Mr. Elias offered several reasons why he believed Unum’s termination of benefits constituted an abuse of discretion. First, Mr. Elias maintained that Unum selectively picked from the medical record to support its desired result and ignored evidence of Elias’s disability. The court disagreed. As this was primarily an instance of differing conclusions between medical professionals, the court concluded it was not an abuse of discretion for Unum to disagree with Mr. Elias’s treating doctors so long as it offered reasonable explanations for drawing different conclusions. As the court felt Unum had done so here, it held that a reasonable person could have reached Unum’s conclusions and therefore concluded that Unum did not abuse its discretion by ignoring favorable evidence of disability. Next, Mr. Elias argued that Unum failed to demonstrate substantial evidence of an improvement in his condition from the date of its approval of disability benefits in 2008 to the date when it terminated the benefits in 2021. The court again disagreed, pointing to evidence of improvement in Mr. Elias’s conditions between 2016 and 2021 that affected the benefits determination. Mr. Elias also argued that Unum failed to consider the combined effects of his multiple physical and mental health conditions. Again, the court disagreed, as it viewed Unum’s review as holistic. Regarding Mr. Elias’s argument that Unum unreasonably relied on a paper review, the court expressed that an in-person review may have been stronger or more desirable but was not strictly necessary. Mr. Elias also contended that Unum acted arbitrarily and capriciously by failing to review his appeal fully and fairly by not proving him with the opportunity to review and respond to the reviewing doctor’s reports in violation of the 2018 Department of Labor regulation. The court stated that the 2018 regulation’s rights did not apply to claims filed before 2018. However, this aspect of the court’s ruling was at odds with last week’s notable decision from the Seventh Circuit, Zall v. Standard Ins. Co., which found that the 2018 regulation should be applied if the benefit termination occurred after 2018. Finally, Mr. Elias argued that Unum had a history of biased claims administration that the court should consider in its decision-making. However, the court stated that it would not consider Unum’s history of bias because “Unum’s period of biased claims administration ended before 2003.” Accordingly, the court affirmed Unum’s decision and granted its motion for summary judgment. Mr. Elias’s cross-motion for summary judgment was denied. 

Ninth Circuit

Connor v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 21-15034, __ F. App’x __, 2023 WL 417903 (9th Cir. Jan. 26, 2023) (Before Circuit Judges Bybee, Callahan, and Collins). In a straightforward and brief unpublished decision, the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court judgment awarding plaintiff Caroline Connor long-term disability benefits and attorney’s fees. Defendant Unum Life Insurance Company of America was unable to persuade the appeals court that the district court abused its discretion in concluding that Ms. Connor is disabled and was a full-time active employee eligible for benefits under the plan. Relying on the unambiguous plan language, the court of appeals agreed with the lower court that active employment was defined as “working at least 30 hours per week,” and although the term “full-time” was not expressly defined, it was a reasonable interpretation of the plan to read the 30-hour minimum required for active employment as setting the hourly minimum for full-time work. In fact, the Ninth Circuit wrote, “it would be odd to read the eligibility provision as expressly specifying a particular numerical standard for weekly work, only to then implicitly override that numerical standard by the additional use of a general and undefined term.” The court also stated that it found no clear error in the district court’s determination that Ms. Connor worked at least 30 hours per week. Finally, because the Ninth Circuit affirmed the judgment on the merits in favor of Ms. Connor, it also upheld the award of attorney’s fees pursuant to Section 502(g)(1). Here, no “special circumstances would render such an award unjust.”

ERISA Preemption

Third Circuit

Johnson & Johnson Health Care Sys. v. Save on SP, LLC, No. 22-2632, 2023 WL 415092 (D.N.J. Jan. 25, 2023) (Judge John Michael Vazquez). Plaintiff Johnson & Johnson Health Care Systems Inc. administers a financial assistance program to help patients afford out-of-pocket costs for some of Johnson & Johnson pharmaceutical’s most costly medications, including its biologics. As part of the program’s eligibility criteria, prospective patients wishing to enroll must agree to the program’s terms and conditions which include, among other things, an agreement not to utilize any other coupon or engage in any other savings program. In this lawsuit, plaintiff alleges that defendant Save on SP, LLC and its cost-savings program have artificially reclassified some of Johnson & Johnson’s medications as non-essential in order to raise the co-pay costs for participants of healthcare plans taking these drugs. This was allegedly part of a scheme to pressure patients, including those enrolled in Johnson & Johnson’s payment assistance program, to enroll in Save on SP’s savings program to avoid the exorbitant out-of-pocket costs. Thus, Johnson & Johnson Health alleges that defendant Save on SP knowingly operates its program in violation of the terms and conditions of Johnson & Johnson’s program and is financially depleting the Johnson & Johnson payment assistance program, to the economic benefit of defendant and its partners. Save on SP moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim. It argued that plaintiff’s tortious interference and deceptive trade practice claims are preempted by ERISA. The court disagreed. “Granting relief to Plaintiff on either claim would not require plan administrators to make any plan changes,” as the claims here “do not mandate certain payments or impose any new rules on plan administrators.” Given this, the court stated that the claims do not undermine ERISA’s objective of facilitating uniform plan administration and procedures and were therefore not connected to any ERISA plan for the purposes of preemption. Furthermore, the court emphasized that the claims do not reference or rely on the terms of any ERISA plan because the Save on SP program applies to both ERISA and non-ERISA plans and the court will not need to interpret the meaning of any plan provision to rule on the claims. In addition to finding that ERISA did not preempt the claims, the court also found that Johnson & Johnson adequately stated its claims and had constitutional standing to assert them. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss was denied.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Second Circuit

Israel v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 21-CV-4335 (GHW) (JLC), 2023 WL 491039 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 27, 2023) (Magistrate Judge James L. Cott). Plaintiff Jessica Israel brought suit under ERISA against Unum Life Insurance Company after Unum denied her claims for long-term disability benefits and a waiver of her life insurance premium. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. At issue was whether Ms. Israel exhausted her administrative remedies before taking legal action. Ms. Israel argued that the written letter she submitted challenging the long-term disability benefit determination constituted an appeal under the guidelines provided by Unum. Conversely, Unum stated that Ms. Israel never formally appealed either benefit determination and she therefore lacks a legal basis to challenge the terminations. The court found for each party in part. Pertaining to the long-term disability appeal, the court agreed with Ms. Israel that she had properly taken the steps to appeal. Furthermore, any lack of clarity on the issue, the court stated, should be weighed in favor of Ms. Israel, as the onus is on Unum to comply with ERISA’s regulations. Additionally, the court found Unum’s review to be “ad hoc” and wrote that “Israel’s claim could alternatively be deemed exhausted on the grounds that Unum’s extra-regulatory review of her submissions following the initial May 15 Determination triggered exhaustion of Israel’s claim.” Thus, Ms. Israel’s long-term disability claim was deemed exhausted, and she was granted summary judgment on this issue. The court remanded to Unum for a full and fair review of the long-term disability benefit claim. This remedy was determined appropriate in this case because “the crux of this matter is not substantive but procedural.” Finally, the court held that Ms. Israel failed to exhaust her claim pertaining to her waiver of premium benefit, as “[n]othing in the record suggests that Israel…attempted to appeal the May 21 decision with respect to WOP benefits.” Accordingly, summary judgment was granted in favor of Unum with respect to this claim.

Life Insurance & AD&D Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Igo v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Can., No. 1:22-cv-91, 2023 WL 406195 (S.D. Ohio Jan. 25, 2023) (Judge Timothy S. Black). Plaintiff Patrick Igo brought an ERISA lawsuit seeking the full amount of life insurance benefits his late husband, Dr. Marcos Estrada Gomez, elected and paid premiums on. Mr. Igo’s claim for benefits was paid at a lower rate because the plan’s administrator and insurance company, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, found that Dr. Estrada Gomez had not included an evidence of insurability form with his option to increase his coverage. In his complaint, Mr. Igo argued that an evidence of insurability form was not required as part of the election form and Dr. Estrada Gomez therefore met all the necessary conditions for receipt of his full elected benefits. Defendants Sun Life and Benefit Advisors Services Group, LLC moved to dismiss. Their motion was denied, as it was not only untimely, but also because the court disagreed with their assertion that Mr. Igo’s complaint impermissibly engaged in group pleading of the defendants. The court stated that the complaint adequately alleges that the defendants all had a hand in administering the plan and in making benefit determinations, and that the complaint sufficiently puts the defendants on notice of the allegations against them. Thus, the motion to dismiss was denied. Finally, the court granted Mr. Igo’s motion to voluntarily dismiss defendant Bon Secours Mercy Health, Dr. Estrada Gomez’s former employer, as Mercy Health reached a settlement with Mr. Igo.

Ninth Circuit

Wilcox v. Dearborn Ins. Co., No. 2:21-cv-04605-JLS (JCx), 2023 WL 424256 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 26, 2023) (Judge Josephine L. Staton). Plaintiff Kevin Wilcox brought this action against Dearborn Insurance Company challenging its denial of waiver of premium due to disability on his life insurance policy. Mr. Wilcox, who has a diagnosis of HIV, argued that his physical, psychological, and neurological symptoms have rendered him totally disabled from any occupation and that he should therefore qualify for the waiver of premium. The parties moved for judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. The court reviewed the medical record de novo, emphasizing that the burden of proof of disability lay with Mr. Wilcox. Mr. Wilcox issued a statement expressing “that he’s not been able to drive since 2013, that his spouse quit his job to take care of him full time in 2014 due to his cognitive decline…that he has lost control of his bowels and bladder, that he has frequent falls from peripheral neuropathy and has ‘pain at a level 6 of 10 on most days,’ and that he also has severe outbreaks of psoriasis.” Notwithstanding Mr. Wilcox’s complaints within his personal statement and throughout litigation and his submission of a voluminous medical record that both pre- and post-dated the date that Dearborn discontinued plaintiff’s life insurance premium waiver, the court held that Mr. Wilcox did not adequately support his position with contemporaneous office notes and treatment records. Accordingly, the court held that Mr. Wilcox failed to meet the definition of totally disabled and upheld Dearborn’s decision to discontinue his life insurance premium waiver. Thus, judgment was entered in favor of Dearborn.

Medical Benefit Claims

Third Circuit

Tamburrino v. United HealthCare Ins. Co., No. 21-12766 (SDW)(ESK), 2023 WL 416157 (D.N.J. Jan. 26, 2023) (Judge Susan D. Wigenton). A surgeon and a covered patient have brought a putative class action challenging United Healthcare Insurance Company’s uniform claim practice of denying coverage for the cost of assistant or co-surgeons for women undergoing post-mastectomy reconstructive breast surgery. Plaintiffs asserted causes of action under ERISA Sections 502(a)(1)(B) and 502(a)(3), seeking payment of benefits along with other equitable relief including reprocessing and an injunctive order changing United’s practice. United moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claims pursuant to Section 502(a)(3). It argued that plaintiffs’ claims for breaches of fiduciary duties were duplicative of their claims for benefits. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argued that their fiduciary breach claims are distinct from their claim for benefits. Specifically, plaintiffs asserted that United breached its duty of loyalty and violated the Women’s Health and Cancer Rights Act, a law specifically designed to ensure breast cancer patients have access to reconstructive plastic surgery. In this order the court sided with United. The court viewed plaintiffs’ breach of duty of loyalty claims to be conclusory and to fall short of alleging facts which could support a conclusion that United acted to benefit itself. Regarding plaintiffs’ claims that United violated the Women’s Health and Cancer Rights Act, the court held that the Act does not specify the level of coverage that must be provided, and so interpreted the law to allow for United’s actions alleged here. Thus, the court concluded plaintiffs did not sufficiently allege a violation of the Act to warrant equitable relief under Section 502(a)(3). Accordingly, United’s motion to dismiss the breach of fiduciary duty claims asserted against it was granted. Dismissal of these claims was with prejudice.

Fourth Circuit

L.L. v. MedCost Benefits Servs., No. 1:21-cv-00265-MR, 2023 WL 362391 (W.D.N.C. Jan. 23, 2023) (Judge Martin Reidmger). A mother and her minor child sued MedCost Benefit Services and the Mountain Area Health Education Center Medical and Dental Care Plan in a two-count ERISA complaint. Plaintiffs sought both recovery of medical benefits for the cost of a stay at a residential treatment facility under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and equitable relief under Section 502(a)(3) for violating the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. Defendants moved for dismissal pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). To begin, the court denied MedCost’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ claim for recovery of benefits. “L.L. alleges the existence of an ERISA-governed plan, and alleges that E.R. was a beneficiary of the plan. She goes on to identify the provision of the Plan that she contends entitles E.R. to coverage; she specifically alleges that the Plan covers medically necessary treatment at residential facilities…L.L. alleged that the treatment at (the facility at issue) was medically necessary, and that (it) was not an excluded facility.” A plaintiff, the court held, need not plead more to plausibly allege an ERISA medical benefits claim. However, the court held that the injury of plaintiffs’ Section 502(a)(3) claim was not distinct from the injury of their claim for benefits. Thus, the court found “equitable relief pursuant to § 1132(a)(3) is not appropriate.” Plaintiffs’ second claim was accordingly dismissed. Defendants’ motion was thus granted in part and denied in part. Finally, plaintiffs were ordered to show cause as to why they should be allowed to proceed under pseudonyms.

Provider Claims

Fifth Circuit

Bailey v. Avis Budget Grp., No. 11-22-1647, 2023 WL 375371 (S.D. Tex. Jan. 23, 2023) (Judge Lynn N. Hughes). A healthcare provider, Jason Bailey, and a covered plan participant, Michelle Fairley, sued Avis Budget Group, Inc., and Aetna Life Insurance Co. under ERISA Section 502(a)(1)(B) challenging the amount the healthcare plan paid for medically necessary breast reconstruction surgery following a mastectomy. Defendants moved to dismiss plaintiff Jason Bailey for lack of standing. Defendants provided the court with a copy of the plan which includes a valid and unambiguous anti-assignment provision. Given the evidence provided by defendants and the fact that plaintiffs did not file a response, the court granted the motion and dismissed Jason Bailey’s claims in the case. Accordingly, the action will remain with Ms. Fairley as the plaintiff.

Seventh Circuit

Advanced Physical Med. of Yorkville v. Cigna Healthcare of Ill. Inc., No. 22-cv-1581, 2023 WL 358575 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 23, 2023) (Judge Jorge L. Alonso). Healthcare provider Advanced Physical Medicine of Yorkville sued Cigna Health Management Inc. after one of its patients, Zachary Jump, was denied reimbursement for therapeutic services it provided to him. In this action, Advanced Physical sought recovery of plan benefits as well as statutory penalties for failure to provide plan documents upon request. Cigna moved to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Cigna attached a copy of the plan to its motion and argued that in light of the plan’s unambiguous anti-assignment provision the provider could not proceed on its ERISA claims. The court agreed and held the benefits are not assignable. “Similarly, Plaintiff’s contention that it is a beneficiary because it was Jump’s authorized representative lacks a basis in law. An ERISA beneficiary is someone ‘entitled to a benefit’ under a plan…not someone authorized to vindicate another’s right to benefits.” Mr. Jump, the court stated, is the proper beneficiary under the plan and is thus “the real party-in-interest.” Furthermore, the court held that a claim for failure to provide plan documents needs to be asserted against the plan administrator, which the plan states is Starbucks not Cigna. As a result, the court dismissed both causes of action for failure to state a claim, and did so with prejudice, concluding, “repleading would be futile.”

Eleventh Circuit

Surgery Ctr. of Viera v. Cigna Health & Life Ins. Co., No. 6:22-cv-393-JA-LHP, 2023 WL 375556 (M.D. Fla. Jan. 24, 2023) (Judge John Antoon II). Plaintiff Surgery Center of Viera, LLC, sued Cigna Health & Life Insurance Company after a claim it submitted for reimbursement of a pre-approved surgery performed on an insured patient was paid at an amount well below the billed charge, allegedly in violation of a repricing agreement between the parties. In its complaint, Surgery Center of Viera asserted three causes of action: breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and quantum meruit. Cigna moved to dismiss the complaint. Cigna argued that the complaint “constitutes an impermissible ‘shotgun pleading,’” and that the state law claims are preempted by ERISA. The court agreed with Cigna on both points. The court reprimanded plaintiff for interweaving necessary facts among legal conclusions and premature arguments. “The result is not a ‘short and plain statement of the claim’…but a frustrating thicket of roughhewn prose in which Cigna – and the Court – are forced to forage for morsels of relevant information.” Along with taking issue with the pleading’s prose and generally finding that the complaint did not satisfy Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8, the court also found ERISA preempts the state law claims as those claims have “a connection with or reference to an ERISA plan,” and there is no way to determine what amount the provider should be paid without consulting that plan. For these reasons, the court granted the motion and dismissed the complaint.

Retaliation Claims

Sixth Circuit

Schramm v. Neenah Paper Mich., Inc., No. 2:22-cv-00047, 2023 WL 415592 (W.D. Mich. Jan. 25, 2023) (Magistrate Judge Maarten Vermaat). Magistrate Judge Vermaat issued this report and recommendation recommending the court grant in part and deny in part defendant Neenah Paper Michigan, Inc.’s motion to dismiss this wrongful termination and retaliation action under ERISA’s whistleblower provision. Plaintiff Thomas Schramm alleged that his employer took retaliatory actions against him after he reported a chemical spill of 2,000 gallons of bleach at the plant where he worked to the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy. As pertains to ERISA, Mr. Schramm brought a Section 510 claim alleging he was fired in retaliation for attempting to exercise his rights under the company’s health insurance plan. Defendant argued that Mr. Schramm argued only that he was “working through his Union to clarify and secure his rights under Neenah’s health insurance plan,” that this allegation is not sufficient to demonstrate that he was exercising a right under the plan, and therefore it is not an activity protected under ERISA. The Magistrate Judge agreed, concluding that Mr. Schramm did not sufficiently state a claim alleging he was terminated due to his use of an employee benefit and thus recommended Mr. Schramm’s ERISA claim be dismissed.

Severance Benefit Claims

Fifth Circuit

Dunn v. Southwest Airlines Co., No. 3:21-CV-1393-X, 2023 WL 360246 (N.D. Tex. Jan. 23, 2023) (Judge Brantley Starr). In May 2020, plaintiff Lafe Dunn, a pilot employed by Southwest Airlines, went on sick leave to enter a substance abuse treatment program to address mental health problems. Just days after he took his sick leave, on June 1, 2020, Southwest created a voluntary separation program in response to the COVID pandemic which would provide severance payments to those interested in voluntarily resigning. Mr. Dunn was interested in taking this deal and applied to participate. The plan stated that Southwest offered this program to “Pilots on active status at Southwest as of June 1, 2020.” Mr. Dunn’s claim for benefits was denied by the board of trustees who interpreted the undefined term “active status” as excluding pilots who were on leave of absence from work as of June 1, 2020. Accordingly, Mr. Dunn’s benefit application was denied, despite oral promises and assurances from Mr. Dunn’s superiors that he would certainly qualify. After an unsuccessful internal appeal, Mr. Dunn brought this lawsuit in which he alleged two causes of action: wrongful denial of benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and breach of fiduciary duty under Section 502(a)(3). The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on both counts. First, the court granted summary judgment to Southwest on Mr. Dunn’s benefit claim. The court determined the plain meaning of the word “inactive,” defined as “’being out of use’ or ‘not performing or available for duties,’” supported the board’s decision to deny benefits. Mr. Dunn argued that considering an employee on sick leave as being inactive is problematic for several reasons, not least because the employee could “fall in and out of insurance coverage as that employee fell in and out of ‘active employment.’” The court stated that because the board reasonably believed Mr. Dunn’s absence from work for medical reasons would last at least six months, Mr. Dunn’s arguments and concerns were irrelevant to the present situation. Thus, under abuse of discretion review, the decision was upheld. Next, the court denied both parties’ motions for summary judgment on the breach of fiduciary duty claim. The court disagreed with Southwest that Mr. Dunn’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty was duplicative of his claim for benefits. Not only were the facts distinct for each claim, but the court also stated that its decision to grant summary judgment to Southwest on the claim for benefits meant that there was “no predicate claim of which his § 1132(a)(3) claim could be duplicative.” However, Mr. Dunn was also unable to convince the court that he was entitled to summary judgment on the breach of fiduciary duty claim. Thus, Mr. Dunn’s summary judgment motion was denied, and Southwest’s cross-motion for summary judgment was granted in part and denied in part.