Wolf v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., No. 21-35485, __ F.4th __, 2022 WL 3652966 (9th Cir. Aug. 25, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Gilman (6th Cir.), Ikuta and Miller)

Employers provide all types of benefits to their employees, and most of us focus on the big-ticket ones: health and retirement. However, employers often provide other types of insurance as well, including accidental death insurance. At first glance, this kind of insurance may seem fairly straightforward, but because of the inherent ineffability of the word “accident,” it has been the subject of an inordinate amount of litigation. Much of that litigation has involved Life Insurance Company of North America, which has taken an aggressive position in its disputes with beneficiaries.

This case is no exception. Scott Wolf was insured by LINA under an ERISA-covered accidental death benefit plan when he died in a one-car collision. At the time, he was intoxicated and driving at high speed in the wrong direction down a one-way road. He hit a speed bump, lost control of his car, and flipped it into a submerged ditch. The medical examiner listed his cause of death as “Accident.”

LINA, however, did not agree. When Scott’s father, the beneficiary under the policy, submitted a claim for benefits, LINA informed him that Scott’s death was not in fact an “accident.” LINA stated that the policy only insured a “sudden, unforeseeable, external event that results, directly and independently of all other causes.” Scott’s death did not qualify because it was “a foreseeable outcome of his voluntary actions, and thus, the loss was not a result of a Covered Accident” as defined by the policy.

Specifically, LINA stated that, while it could not determine what Scott’s subjective state of mind was, a “reasonable person with a similar background” to Scott “would have viewed serious injury or death as highly likely to occur…it is reasonable to assume that a person of similar education and age-based experience would have understood that serious injury or even death would be highly likely to occur while operating a vehicle…with a BAC of 0.20% and speeding at 6.5 times over the legal speed limit, the wrong way down a road.”

Scott’s father unsuccessfully appealed to LINA, after which he filed this action against LINA under ERISA. The parties filed cross-motions with the district court, which acknowledged that Scott had engaged in “extremely reckless behavior.” However, the court granted summary judgment to Scott’s father, concluding that “a reasonable person would not have viewed [Scott’s fatal] injury as substantially certain to occur as a result of his actions, rendering his death accidental under the policy.” LINA appealed this decision to the Ninth Circuit.

The Ninth Circuit noted that the only issue on appeal – whether Scott’s death was an “accident” – was a narrow one, and that it was governed by the framework set forth in the court’s prior ruling in Padfield v. AIG Life Insurance Co., 290 F.3d 1121 (9th Cir. 2002). That framework consisted of an “overlapping subjective and objective inquiry” in which the court “first asks whether the insured subjectively lacked an expectation of death or injury. If so, the court asks whether the suppositions that underlay the insured’s expectation were reasonable, from the perspective of the insured… If the subjective expectation of the insured cannot be ascertained, the court asks whether a reasonable person, with background and characteristics similar to the insured, would have viewed the resulting injury or death as substantially certain to result from the insured’s conduct” (emphasis added).

Conducting the subjective inquiry first, the Ninth Circuit agreed with the district court that “there is insufficient evidence in the administrative record to determine Scott’s subjective expectation at the time he died.” As a result, the court moved on to the objective inquiry, “which is where the crux of the parties’ disagreement lies.”

Here, LINA shifted gears. Rather than argue, as it had in its denial letters and to the district court, that Scott’s death was “substantially certain” under the Padfield test, LINA instead argued to the Ninth Circuit that “because the policy defines the term ‘accident’ as ‘a sudden, unforeseeable, external event,’ the district court should have asked whether Scott’s death was ‘reasonably foreseeable.’” In other words, LINA contended that its interpretation was not constrained by Padfield, despite its previous arguments, and that the court should instead only look to the policy language.

The Ninth Circuit was unimpressed by LINA’s change of tactics. The court observed, and LINA admitted, that LINA “never made this argument to the district court.” The court noted that it “generally do[es] not consider arguments raised for the first time on appeal,” and declined to do so in this case because “not only did LINA fail to raise the argument below, it also did not use that test when initially denying Wolf’s claim.” The court stated that allowing LINA to advance its new argument would “unduly prejudice” Mr. Wolf.

LINA contended that there was no prejudice and it had not created “a new reason for denial” because it had consistently quoted the policy language in its correspondence. However, the court determined that the difference between the test LINA actually used (whether the death was “substantially certain” under Padfield) and its new proposed test (whether the death was “reasonably foreseeable”) was significant because the new test was “a far broader standard.” Indeed, the court explained that the two definitions “are at opposite poles” because the first definition asks “whether the victim could reasonably have expected to escape the injury,” whereas the second asks “whether the victim could reasonably have expected to suffer the injury.”

Having dispatched LINA’s new argument, the Ninth Circuit returned to the second part of the Padfield inquiry. The appellate court agreed with the district court that while Scott “undoubtedly engaged in reckless conduct, the record does not show that his death was ‘substantially certain’ to result from that conduct.” The court distinguished LINA’s authorities on this point by noting that they involved deferential review of claim denials under the abuse of discretion standard of review, while the standard of review in this case was the stricter de novo standard. Indeed, “the two circuits that have considered this question de novo both held that the drunk-driving deaths at issue were accidents.”

Ultimately, the Ninth Circuit conceded there was “no doubt” that “drunk driving is ill-advised, dangerous, and easily avoidable.” However, “many accidents, if not most, involve an element of negligence or even recklessness on the part of the insured.” Even then, death is still “a statistical rarity.” Thus, “the record before us does not show that Scott’s particular act of drunk driving was substantially certain to result in his death. The district court therefore correctly determined that Scott’s death was an ‘accident’ and thus covered[.]”

Finally, the court had some advice for LINA and other insurers. The court observed that the term “accident” was “an inherently difficult concept to fully capture,” and suggested that if insurers wanted to avoid “conflicting bodies of caselaw that deal with obscure issues of contractual interpretation,” it could do so by writing better policies. “The solution for insurance companies like [LINA] is simple: add an express exclusion in policies covering accidental injuries for driving while under the influence of alcohol, or for any other risky activity that the company wishes to exclude.”

Judge Ikuta wrote a brief concurrence, in which she stated that ordinarily a court should look to the “explicit language” of a benefit plan in order to effectuate “the clear intent of the parties.” In this case, that would likely mean ignoring Padfield – which has traditionally been used only where the relevant policy failed to define “accident” – and applying the “reasonably foreseeable” test proposed by LINA. However, Judge Ikuta was compelled to rule against LINA, and apply Padfield, because LINA “forfeited its argument that the insurance policy’s own definition of ‘accident’ applies.”

Plaintiff was represented by Kantor & Kantor attorneys Glenn Kantor, Sally Mermelstein, Sarah J. Demers, and Stacy Monahan Tucker.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Third Circuit

Berkelhammer v. Automatic Data Processing, Inc., No. 20-5696 (ES) (JRA), 2022 WL 3593975 (D.N.J. Aug. 23, 2022) (Judge Esther Salas). Plaintiffs Beth Berkelhammer and Naomi Ruiz, plan participants and beneficiaries, commenced a putative breach of fiduciary duty and prohibited transaction class action against Automatic Data Processing, Inc., ADP TotalSource Group, Inc., and the administrative committee of the ADP TotalSource Retirement Savings Plan. Defendants moved to dismiss. The motion was granted in part and denied in part. Among things typically challenged in these types of ERISA class actions like excessive fees and underperforming funds, this suit also alleged something novel – that defendants permitted its third-party administrator, Voya Institutional Plan Services, LLC, through its affiliate Voya Financial Advisors, Inc., “to use plan participant data to market and sell non-Plan investment products to participants.” This was allowed, plaintiffs asserted, because defendants “had a separate and conflicting business arrangement with Voya.” Essentially, as alleged in the complaint, defendants and Voya were cross-selling to one another, scratching each other’s backs and profiting to the detriment of participants. This original aspect of plaintiff’s complaint was in fact the area in which they encountered pleading problems. Although the court was satisfied that plaintiffs sufficiently alleged the remainder of their claims, and had standing to bring their suit, plaintiffs’ failure to “offer a single case supporting their fiduciary breach claim” with regard to the data use and confidential information was deeply problematic to the court. In fact, the court stated that a plan’s recordkeeper should have certain personal information on plan participants. “If anything, it might be imprudent not to disclose that information to Voya as recordkeeper.” Nor could plaintiffs allege to the court’s satisfaction sufficient facts explaining “what processes were flawed with respect to permitting Voya…to use plan participant data for non-plan purposes.” Finally, the court stated that plaintiffs needed to “outline the conduct of comparable fiduciaries in like situations” for the court to compare and draw inferences. The court thus dismissed, without prejudice, the breach of fiduciary duty claim regarding the data. Additionally, plaintiffs were found not to have adequately alleged a prohibited transaction claim regarding this same issue because plan participant data is not the same as plan assets. Again, dismissal was without prejudice, and the court expressly left open the possibility that “Plaintiffs may plausibly plead that plan participant data, when collected and aggregated, can be used as something of value to benefit the Plan and participants of the Plan.”

Sixth Circuit

Parker v. GKN N. Am. Servs., No. 21-12468, 2022 WL 3702072 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 26, 2022) (Judge Sean F. Cox). Retirement plan participants commenced a putative class action lawsuit claiming that defendants GKN North America Services, Inc., its board of directors, and its benefit committee breached their fiduciary duties of prudence, loyalty, and to monitor to plan participants and beneficiaries, causing them financial harm, by failing to investigate or select lower-cost investment options, by retaining imprudent investments within the plan, and by charging excessive fees. Defendants moved to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Separately, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce moved for leave to participate as amicus curiae. The court first addressed the Chamber of Commerce’s motion. The court stated that the Chamber of Commerce’s motion “and its accompanying proposed brief simply rehash arguments already made by the parties and summarize case outcomes from other jurisdictions irrelevant to this case.” Accordingly, the court denied the Chamber’s motion. Turning to the motion to dismiss, the court first addressed plaintiffs’ breach of prudence claim. Defendants argued that the complaint failed to state a claim because its focus was not on the process of the plan administration, but instead improperly centered on the outcome of fund performance with the benefit of hindsight. The court disagreed and ultimately concluded that plaintiffs adequately alleged imprudence with regard to the failure to investigate or select lower-cost alternative investments and regarding imprudent plan investments. However, the imprudence claim regarding the excessive recordkeeping fees was found to lack sufficient apples-to-apples benchmarks specifying the services provided for the fees charged and was accordingly determined to be insufficient. Plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty claim was likewise found to be deficient. “Without the required allegations of fiduciary self-dealing, it is not reasonable for the Court to find a breach of fiduciary duty under the duty of loyalty theory.” Finally, because it had concluded that plaintiffs sufficiently stated an imprudence claim, the court allowed the derivative failure to monitor claim to proceed.

Seventh Circuit

Laabs v. Faith Techs., No. 20-C-1534, 2022 WL 3594054 (E.D. Wis. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge William C. Griesbach). A participant in the Faith Technologies, Inc. 401(k) Retirement Plan brought this putative class action against Faith Technologies, its board of directors, and 30 Doe defendants challenging their process administering the plan and selecting and maintaining funds with high costs. Plaintiff originally asserted five claims in her complaint – (1) breaches of prudence and loyalty regarding excessive recordkeeping and administrative fees; (2) breaches of prudence and loyalty regarding excessive management fees; (3) failure to monitor co-fiduciaries in regard to the plan’s recordkeeping and administrative fees; (4) failure to monitor regarding the management fees; and (5) engaging in prohibited transactions. Defendants moved to dismiss. On September 30, 2021, the Magistrate Judge issued a report and recommendation granting in part and denying in part defendants’ motion to dismiss. Specifically, the report recommended the court grant defendants’ motion regarding excessive recordkeeping and administrative fees (counts 1 and 4), as well as dismiss the prohibited party-in-interest transaction claim and the claims for breaches of duty of loyalty, but in all other respects deny the motion. The parties each filed objections to the Magistrate’s report. The court stayed the case pending the Supreme Court’s decision in Hughes v. Northwestern. After the Hughes stay was lifted, the court in this order resolved each of the parties’ objections. As defendants’ arguments relied heavily on the Seventh Circuit’s decision in the Hughes case, which was overturned by the Supreme Court, their objections to the report were considerably weakened. First, neither party objected to the portion of the report that dismissed the breach of loyalty and prohibited transaction claims. Thus, the court adopted the report as to those claims. Plaintiff did however object to the portion of the report having to do with her claims of prudence and monitoring pertaining to the high-cost funds and stable value investments, disclosure of revenue-sharing, and investment services. In its analysis, the court found that as currently pled it could infer defendants had acted imprudently in the ways outlined in the complaint, and defendants’ arguments in favor of dismissal were “factual questions…inappropriate at the pleading stage.” Therefore, the court found plaintiff appropriately stated these claims, and defendants’ motion to dismiss was only granted with respect to the claims plaintiff did not object to.

O’Driscoll v. Plexus Corp., No. 20-C-1065, 2022 WL 3600824 (E.D. Wis. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge William C. Griesbach). This case presented an interesting contrast to the Laabs decision by the same judge summarized above. As in Laabs, defendants’ motion to dismiss this putative breach of fiduciary duty class action was also stayed pending the Supreme Court’s decision in Hughes. Drawing the opposite conclusion from Laabs, Judge Griesbach in this decision granted defendants’ (Plexus Corp., the company’s board of directors, and Doe individuals) motion. The court ultimately found that plaintiff lacked Article III standing for her breach of duty of prudence claim and that her complaint did not allege “she suffered any concrete injury-in-fact.” Despite plaintiff’s request that the court focus on defendants’ fiduciary process rather than the outcome, the court was adamant that “the outcome is relevant to whether Plaintiff suffered a harm.” Furthermore, the court stated that defendants are not required to disclose information about revenue-sharing arrangements under Seventh Circuit precedent and accordingly dismissed that claim. The court also held the breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty claim was not sufficiently distinct from the already dismissed duty of prudence claim. Finally, the derivative failure to monitor claim failed was dismissed because plaintiff failed to state an underlying duty of prudence claim.

Nohara v. Prevea Clinic, Inc., No. 20-C-1079, 2022 WL 3601567 (E.D. Wis. Aug. 23, 2022) (Judge William C. Griesbach). This action is the third of four decisions this week from Judge Griesbach ruling on motions to dismiss putative breach of fiduciary duty class actions stayed awaiting the Supreme Court’s ruling in Hughes. Here plaintiffs are participants of the Prevea Clinic, Inc. 401(k) and Retirement Plan who have sued Prevea and its board of directors for failing to review the plan’s investment portfolio and for retaining underperforming and excessively costly funds. Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty claims, leaving them with breach of fiduciary duty of prudence and failure to monitor claims. The court dismissed plaintiffs’ claim pertaining to defendants’ failure to disclose fees charged to the Plan for the same reasons given in the O’Driscoll decision, namely Seventh Circuit precedent does not require ERISA fiduciaries to disclose this information. In all other respects, the court denied the motion to dismiss, concluding that under the standards outlined in Hughes, plaintiffs had plausibly alleged breaches of prudence. Plaintiffs’ derivative failure to monitor claims will thus also proceed. The decision ended with the court accepting as true plaintiffs’ allegations that the board of directors are fiduciaries. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss was granted in small part and otherwise denied as outlined above.

Glick v. ThedaCare Inc., No. 20-C-1236, 2022 WL 3682863 (E.D. Wis. Aug. 25, 2022) (Judge William C. Griesbach). This case is the last of the quartet of Judge Griesbach rulings in breach of fiduciary duty class actions stayed pending Hughes. In this suit, plaintiff Joseph B. Glick, a participant of the ThedaCare, Inc. Retirement and 403(b) Savings Plan, brought a proposed class action against ThedaCare Inc. and its board of directors in connection with the plan’s excessive fees and imprudently low net returns. In this decision, the court granted in part the motion to dismiss. As a preliminary matter, the court addressed Mr. Glick’s standing under Article III. To begin, the court stressed that this plan is a defined contribution and not a defined benefit plan, and therefore defendants’ reliance on the Supreme Court’s decision in Thole was misplaced. “Plaintiff has a ‘concrete stake’ in the lawsuit because if Plaintiffs wins his suit, he alleges that his account balance will be greater based on excessive fees and expenses returned to his individual account by Defendants.” Thus, the court concluded Mr. Glick had sufficiently alleged an injury in fact conferring him with standing to assert his claims. However, like its other three decisions this week the court dismissed Mr. Glick’s breach of fiduciary duty claim related to defendants’ failure to disclose revenue sharing information with participants. The court also dismissed the breach of duty of loyalty claims, deciding they were based on the same allegations as the duty of prudence claims and better understood as imprudence claims than as allegations of “disloyal acts.” The remainder of the claims were found to be properly pled, and the court concluded a person reading the complaint could plausibly infer imprudence and failure to monitor in the manner alleged.

Disability Benefit Claims

Fourth Circuit

Foggie v. Am. Nat’l Red Cross Long Term Disability Plan, No. 1:21-cv-0001 (PTG/JFA), 2022 WL 3580745 (E.D. Va. Aug. 18, 2022) (Judge Patricia Tolliver Giles). Plaintiff Rhea Foggie has been disabled since February 2006 from several long-standing musculoskeletal and chronic pain disorders. Ms. Foggie received long-term disability benefits from her ERISA-governed plan from the onset of her disability until December 2018, when her benefits were terminated. Ms. Foggie, in her suit asserting claims under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and (a)(3), argued that the only substantive change that occurred within that time was that her plan’s claim administrator switched from MetLife to Liberty Life Assurance Company of Boston. Defendants argued, to the contrary, that the record was replete with evidence demonstrating that Ms. Foggie’s conditions had improved. Liberty further expressed that in addition there was new evidence which it considered. This consisted of reviews of the record performed by six physicians Liberty hired, and an analysis of Ms. Foggie’s transferrable skills done by a vocational consultant, also hired by Liberty. In addition to disagreeing with the denial, Ms. Foggie also asserted that Liberty failed to provide her with a full and fair review thanks to the denial letter’s use of generic language and its failure to inform her how to perfect her claim. The parties each moved for summary judgment and debated the appropriate standard of review. As a preliminary matter, the court found abuse of discretion review applicable given the plan’s amendment in 2018 which granted the claim administrator discretionary authority. Under this deferential standard, the court agreed with Liberty that substantial evidence supported its decision and that the denial letters were in compliance with ERISA and adequately put Ms. Foggie on notice of why her claim was denied and how she could improve her claim. Thus, the court denied Ms. Foggie’s motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment in favor of defendants.

Rupprecht v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 1:21-cv-01260 (AJT/JFA), 2022 WL 3702086 (E.D. Va. Aug. 26, 2022) (Judge Anthony J. Trenga). Plaintiff Walter Rupprecht’s long-term disability benefits were terminated after 24 months when his policy switched from a definition of disability in which an individual had to be unable to perform his or her own occupation to disability defined as a participant being unable to perform any occupation. Defendant Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company informed Mr. Rupprecht that he no longer met the plan requirements for continued benefits past 24 months and he was able to perform sedentary work positions. According to Mr. Rupprecht’s complaint, Reliance Standard’s denial letter failed “to specify why Plaintiff was being denied benefits and (claimed) the vocational review was flatly contradicted by the submitted opinions of (his) treating physicians and did not explain to him what information would be needed on appeal to ‘perfect the decision’ as required under law.” The parties each moved for summary judgment. The court began its analysis by determining whether Mr. Rupprecht had exhausted his administrative remedies before filing suit. Mr. Rupprecht asserted that Reliance Standard’s failure to decide his appeal within the allotted 45-day period under ERISA should constitute exhaustion. Reliance countered that it had invoked a 45-day extension and was awaiting the results of an Independent Medical Examination before issuing its final decision. Thus, Reliance argued, Mr. Rupprecht’s failure to attend that evaluation and his decision to pursue relief under Section 502(a) of ERISA amounted to failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The court sided with Mr. Rupprecht, stressing that under the relevant provision a claim administrator can only extend the 45-day decision window under “special circumstances.” The court further stated that Reliance did not provide adequate notice to Mr. Rupprecht for an extension. Accordingly, the court held that Mr. Rupprecht’s suit was not time-barred. Next, the court scrutinized the parties’ differing positions on the applicable standard of review. Mr. Rupprecht argued that de novo review was appropriate here as Reliance declined to issue a decision within the appeal window. Reliance maintained that the plan’s discretionary authority clause should trigger abuse of discretion review. Again, admonishing Reliance for its conduct during the administrative appeal, the court sided with Mr. Rupprecht, holding that it would apply de novo standard to its review. The court went on to hold that Mr. Rupprecht’s claim has been “deemed denied” by Reliance’s failure to issue a decision, and the court turned to reviewing the application for disability benefits on its merits. That review too was favorable to Mr. Rupprecht. Based on the medical evidence and the opinions of Mr. Rupprecht’s treating physicians, the court concluded that “Plaintiff qualified as Totally Disabled…Plaintiff provided ample evidence to Reliance…Reliance, on the other hand, relies on a nurse’s evaluation of the medical records that is flatly inconsistent with and contradicted by the treating physician’s opinions.” The decision ended with the court granting summary judgment in favor of Mr. Rupprecht and awarding him back benefits as well as reinstating his disability benefits going forward. The court also requested Mr. Rupprecht submit briefing in support of an award of attorneys’ fees and costs.

Fifth Circuit

Khan v. AT&T Umbrella Benefit Plan No. 3, No. 3:21-CV-1367-S, 2022 WL 3650632 (N.D. Tex. Aug. 23, 2022) (Judge Karen Gren Scholer). Plaintiff Imran Khan sued the AT&T Umbrella Benefit Plan No. 3 after his claims for short-term and long-term disability benefits were denied. Mr. Khan has been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis and suffers from pain associated with the disease. However, this subjective measure of the severity of his illness put him at a disadvantage for obtaining benefits. Even Mr. Khan’s own physicians, who supported a finding that he was disabled, admitted that objective evidence including “imaging and (pain) specialists are not finding much pathology to correlate to his severity of pain.” It was this shortcoming, a lack of objective evidence supporting the disabling pain, which the plan’s administrator, Sedgwick Claims Management Services, utilized in order to deny the claims. The Plan and Mr. Khan each moved for summary judgment. In his motion, Mr. Khan argued that the denials were an abuse of discretion because defendant failed to fairly consider his complaints of pain and declined to reconsider his claims after he submitted additional evidence to the record. For its part, the Plan argued that its denials were not arbitrary and capricious because its reviewing physicians had considered Mr. Khan’s complaints of pain, and substantial evidence within the record did not corroborate the self-reported pain or functional limitations. The Plan further stated that its refusal to consider the additional evidence Mr. Khan submitted was not an abuse of discretion because the documents were submitted after it had issued its final denials. The court sided with the Plan. “While it is an abuse of discretion to ignore a claimant’s subjective complaints of pain, the administrative record here does not support Plaintiff’s contention that Defendant did so.” Thus, the court agreed that under the terms of the plans, defendant’s denials were reasonable. Furthermore, the court did not feel that the Plan’s refusal to consider the evidence Mr. Khan submitted to the report to be an abuse of discretion as Mr. Khan had already exhausted his internal appeals and the submission of evidence only one month before Mr. Khan commenced his suit “did not give Defendant the ‘fair opportunity’ to reconsider its decision.” The court concluded by stating the evidence itself would not even have bolstered Mr. Khan’s claim or have changed the outcome. For these reasons, the court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant.

Eighth Circuit

Foss v. Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 20-cv-2449 (WMW/TNL), 2022 WL 3579749 (D. Minn. Aug. 19, 2022) (Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright). Plaintiff Caroline Foss sought a court order overturning her denial of long-term disability benefits. Ms. Foss has been diagnosed with several overlapping mental health disorders, including ADHD, anxiety, and major depressive disorder. By the time Ms. Foss applied for disability benefits in 2019, her symptoms included gastrointestinal problems, sleep disturbances, an inability to perform self-care, memory loss, severe anxiety, and “at least one breakdown resulting in an emergency room visit.” Ms. Foss’s application for benefits was denied by her insurer, defendant Standard Insurance Company. Standard concluded that per the terms of the plan, Ms. Foss needed to demonstrate that her disability precludes her from performing her same category of job with any employer, and in Standard’s view Ms. Foss’s disability was directly tied to her current employer. Although Foss’s particular work situation might be causing her stress, “her medical records do not provide clinical evidence of symptoms so severe as to impair her ability to work for all employers.” In the court’s arbitrary and capricious review of the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, it found that a reasonable person could draw the same conclusion as Standard, and the denial was therefore not an abuse of discretion. As such, the court awarded summary judgment to Standard and denied Ms. Foss’s summary judgment motion.

Ninth Circuit

Smith v. Pitney Bowes, Inc., No. 6:21-cv-1422-MC, 2022 WL 3577036 (D. Or. Aug. 19, 2022) (Judge Michael J. McShane). Plaintiff Stan Smith has been disabled a long time, nearly three decades, and he has been receiving disability benefits throughout. Mr. Smith continues to receive disability benefits. That is not the dispute among the parties in this suit. Rather, the parties dispute whether the amount of disability benefits being paid to Mr. Smith is proper. Mr. Smith argues that his 1993 election for the plan’s buy-up option for benefits totaling 66.6% of his pay should be honored, and defendant Pitney Bowes Inc. has therefore been inappropriately paying him benefits equaling only 50% of his salary. Since the 1990s communication between the parties has been sporadic, and the court concluded that the unusual fact pattern presented here meant both that the claim was not untimely, and that Pitney Bowes did not significantly fail its duties under ERISA through inexcusable ongoing procedural errors. In resolving the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment under abuse of discretion review, the court acknowledged the novelty of issues here but ultimately concluded that defendant’s interpretation of the plan was reasonable and supported by the record. The company concluded that Mr. Smith’s disability onset date was December 30, 1993, and he was therefore ineligible for the higher valued benefits. Accordingly, defendant’s motion for summary judgment was granted, and plaintiff’s motion for judgment was denied.

Eleventh Circuit

Brewer v. Unum Grp. Corp., No. 1:21-cv-694-CLM, __ F. Supp. 3d __, 2022 WL 3593133 (N.D. Ala. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge Corey L. Maze). Brewer v. Unum Grp. Corp., No. 1:21-cv-694-CLM, 2022 WL 3643490 (N.D. Ala. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge Corey L. Maze). There were two orders this week in this action alleging the wrongful denial of long-term disability benefits to plaintiff Robin Brewer. In the first, the court adjudged Ms. Brewer’s motion for partial summary judgment. Ms. Brewer argued that the failure of defendants Unum Group Corporation and Unum Life Insurance Company of America to issue a ruling on her claim during the administrative review process within the 45-day window allowed by ERISA’s claims-procedural regulation should strip Unum of its discretionary authority. Unum countered that it had triggered an extension to the 45-day timeframe thanks to a “special circumstance.” Unum further argued that even if the court were to conclude that its decision was untimely, such a conclusion should not automatically remove its entitlement to deferential review. The court rejected each of these arguments presented by Unum. First, the court held that “a circumstance cannot be special if it is common or expected during the appeals process.” Here, Unum’s “special circumstance” was a need for Ms. Brewer to review and respond to new information, which the court decided was not an “unexpected or out of the ordinary” circumstance warranting an extension to an insurer’s decision-making time limitation under ERISA. Furthermore, Unum’s failure to issue a timely decision “was not a de-minimis violation” in the eyes of the court, especially because Unum failed to demonstrate that the violation was “for good cause or due to matters beyond the control of the plan.” Thus, the court found that Unum failed to exercise discretionary authority when it denied the claim after she had filed her lawsuit, and therefore granted Ms. Brewer’s motion for partial summary judgment on thew de novo standard of review. The court then issued its second decision in the case in which it resolved the parties’ discovery dispute. Ms. Brewer moved for discovery of 11 interrogatories, 21 requests for production, and 5 depositions on three topics: (1) the completeness of the administrative record, (2) Unum’s compliance with internal procedures and fiduciary duties, and (3) bias and conflicts of interest among those involved with the administration of her claim for benefits. Having decided that its review would be de novo, the court stated that its only role will be deciding whether Unum’s decision was wrong and if so to reverse it. “To prevail, Brewer must prove that she was qualified for long-term disability benefits under her plan.” In order to do this, the court stated she will need her complete administrative record. Therefore, discovery into facts which relate to her qualification for benefits under the plan should be permitted, the court held, even under de novo review. Thus, this portion of her discovery motion was granted. However, the court also stressed a balance in permitting discovery. Discovery that the court felt would not strengthen Ms. Brewer’s claim included everything under the broad categories of “compliance, conflicts, and bias.” “Discovery into whether Unum complied with internal procedures and fiduciary obligations doesn’t help answer whether Brewer was entitled to LTD benefits.” The motion was therefore granted in part and denied in part, and the court ordered Unum to produce all its non-privileged documents that bear on Ms. Brewer’s entitlement to benefits that are not currently part of the administrative record.

Discovery

Sixth Circuit

Winders v. Standard Ins. Co., No. 2:22-cv-155, 2022 WL 3654894 (S.D. Ohio Aug. 25, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Elizabeth A. Preston Deavers). Plaintiff Kenneth D. Winders filed a motion for discovery in this Section 502(a)(1)(B) action regarding terminated long-term disability benefits. Defendant Standard Insurance Company opposed the motion. Mr. Winders made three arguments in favor of discovery. First, in his most adventurous argument, Mr. Winders contended that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in the capital punishment case of the Boston Marathon bomber, United States v. Tsarnaev, 142 S. Ct. 1024 (2022), abrogated the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Wilkins v. Baptist Healthcare System, Inc., 150 F.3d at 619, regarding discovery in ERISA cases. In reply, Standard argued that “Tsarnaev did not abrogate Wilkins because a ‘trial court’s discretion to conduct voir dire in a high-profile criminal death penalty case is simply not related to substantive adjudication of ERISA cases under the careful balancing intended by Congress in enacting ERISA.” The court agreed with Standard and would not grant discovery on this basis. Second, Mr. Winders argued that Standard’s conflict of interest as the entity that both decides and pays claims should entitle him to discovery on said conflict. Although the court agreed that Standard has a structural conflict of interest, it found that Mr. Winders’ conflict argument failed to establish a pattern of bias or explain how the discovery would prove that bias affected Standard’s ultimate decision-making. The court thus denied discovery on this basis as well. Finally, Mr. Winders asserted that discovery is appropriate because he has demanded a jury trial. Standard countered that there is no right to a jury trial in ERISA cases, and the jury demand should therefore be stricken, and discovery should not be granted on this ground. The court was not willing to strike the jury demand without Standard filing a separate motion addressing the issue formally. However, the court disagreed with Mr. Winders that discovery “is permitted in the present case simply because (he has) made a jury demand.” For the reasons stated above, the court denied the discovery motion.

Ninth Circuit

S.L. v. Premera Blue Cross, No. C18-1308-RSL, 2022 WL 3586998 (W.D. Wash. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge Robert S. Lasnik). Plaintiffs are a family challenging Premera Blue Cross’s denial of a preauthorization request for the son’s coverage for his treatment of his mental health disorders at a residential treatment center, Catalyst, under the Amazon Corporate LLC Group Health and Welfare Plan. The denial will eventually be reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard. Before that can happen, the parties must go through discovery on the topic of Premera’s conflict of interest and how that conflict affected its benefits determination. On August 17, 2020, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of documents “related to defendants’ adoption and utilization of the InterQual criteria for claims processing.” Plaintiffs have now moved to compel deposition of Premera on this same topic. Defendants opposed the motion and reiterated their position from their opposition to plaintiffs’ previous motion to compel, namely that the topics “do not go to the conflict of interest, …are too broad, and (they) have already produced all information (they have) on the topics.” Each of these arguments was rejected by the court. “Premera claims that deposition would not reveal any new information relevant to plaintiff’s requests. However, plaintiff need not take Premera’s word for it – he is entitled to a deposition.” The motion to compel discovery was accordingly granted.

ERISA Preemption

Third Circuit

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of N.J. v. Speech & Language Ctr., No. 22-1748 (MAS) (DEA), 2022 WL 3588105 (D.N.J. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge Michael A. Shipp). Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey has sued a speech therapy service provider and the speech pathologist who owns and operates it for alleged fraudulent healthcare billing. Blue Cross claims in its complaint that it has overpaid defendants by approximately $6.5 million. Blue Cross brought its suit in state court in 2014 alleging violations of the New Jersey Insurance Fraud Protection Act, and claims for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and negligent misrepresentation, among others. In 2019 the parties reached a settlement agreement, but defendants refused to honor the settlement and make the obligatory payments. Blue Cross again went to state court to enforce its rights, and the court ruled in favor of Blue Cross once again. However, defendants removed the case to federal court in March of this year alleging federal question jurisdiction. Blue Cross moved to remand, arguing that “the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, and the removal was untimely.” The court agreed. To begin, the court expressed that ERISA does not preempt the state law causes of action. “It is settled law that insurers can bring state law fraud claims against healthcare providers in state court without being preempted by ERISA.” Because resolution of the claims doesn’t require interpretation of any ERISA plan, the court was satisfied that preemption doesn’t apply. Moreover, the court concurred with Blue Cross’s untimeliness argument, stating that “removal was about eight years too late.” Thus, the court found remand to be appropriate and granted Blue Cross’s motion.

Fifth Circuit

Clayton v. Elite Rest. Partners, No. 4:22-CV-00312, 2022 WL 3581393 (E.D. Tex. Aug. 19, 2022) (Judge Amos L. Mazzant). On June 25, 2020, LaTrecia Clayton was diagnosed with cancer. She died five days later, on June 30, 2020. According to plaintiffs, treatment during that brief window of time may well have prevented her death, or at least prolonged her life. However, Ms. Clayton was without health coverage because her employer, IHOP, rehired her after its COVID closures and failed to reinstate her previous healthcare coverage despite promising Ms. Clayton that it would do so. Plaintiffs are Aaliyah Clayton and Paul Clayton, representatives of LaTrecia Clayton’s estate. They sued IHOP, Elite Restaurant Partners, and related entities in state court alleging claims of negligence, fraud in the inducement, intentional misrepresentation, and wrongful death. Defendants removed the case to federal court pursuant to federal question jurisdiction. They argued plaintiffs’ claims are completely preempted by ERISA. Plaintiffs disagreed and moved to remand the case. In this decision, the court granted the motion to remand. Examining the suit under the two-prong Davila complete preemption test, the court concluded that plaintiffs could not satisfy the first prong as they lack standing to have brought a claim under ERISA Section 502. “Since the Fifth Circuit does not recognize non-enumerated parties as having standing to sue under § 1132(a), Plaintiffs here must satisfy one of the two enumerated classes…or have been assigned benefits by a member of the enumerated classes.” As plaintiffs were neither participants nor beneficiaries and were not assigned benefits to receive derivative standing, the court held they do not have the ability to sue under ERISA, and the claims were therefore not completely preempted, making remand appropriate.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Eleventh Circuit

Landa v. Aon Corp. Excess Benefit Plan, No. 22-cv-21091-BLOOM/Otazo-Reyes, 2022 WL 3594916 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 22, 2022) (Judge Beth Bloom). Plaintiff Michael Landa commenced this action seeking recovery of benefits under the Aon Corporation Excess Benefit Plan (“the Plan”) pursuant to Section 502(a)(1)(B). At the time Mr. Landa filed suit, the Plan had issued a suspension notice informing Mr. Landa that his benefits were indefinitely suspended. This notice did not inform Mr. Landa of his rights under ERISA or the Plan’s 90-day window to reach an adverse benefits determination. In fact, by the date the suit was filed, the Plan had neither commenced payment of Mr. Landa’s benefits nor denied his claim for benefits. Regardless, after this lawsuit began, the Plan issued a “Forfeiture Notice” to Mr. Landa, and subsequently moved to dismiss the claim for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The Plan also moved for an award of attorney’s fees pursuant to Section 1132(g). Mr. Landa opposed both motions. He argued that the court should deem him to have exhausted administrative remedies because he had no path open to him other than pursuing legal action thanks to the Plan’s actions and non-compliance, meaning he had no meaningful access to administrative review. Mr. Landa further stressed that he properly stated a claim to recover benefits. Lastly, Mr. Landa urged the court not to award attorney’s fees to the Plan. In its decision, the court referred to Eleventh Circuit precedent in Perrino v. S. Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 209 F.3d 1309, 1315 (11th Cir. 2000), which holds in relevant part that the Eleventh Circuit only recognizes two exceptions for failure to exhaust: “(1) when resort to administrative remedies would be futile or the remedy inadequate, or (2) where a claimant is denied meaningful access to the administrative review scheme in place.” Perrino “make[s] clear that the exhaustion requirement for ERISA claims should not be excused for technical violations of ERISA regulations that do not deny plaintiffs meaningful access to an administrative remedy procedure through which they may receive an adequate remedy.” In examining the particulars of this case and applying Perrino, the court agreed with the Plan that its failure to comply with ERISA’s 90-day decision-making time frame was the type of technical violation that did not meaningfully deny Mr. Landa with access to an administrative appeals process, and therefore does not fall within one of the two exceptions to exhaustion outlined in Perrino. Accordingly, the court granted the motion to dismiss for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Nevertheless, the court agreed with Mr. Landa that an award of attorney’s fees would be antithetical to ERISA’s guiding purposes, and not warranted given the good faith in which the case was brought, especially considering the Plan’s failure to formally deny Mr. Landa’s claim for benefits within the required timeframe. Finally, the court’s dismissal was without prejudice.

Medical Benefit Claims

Tenth Circuit

Anne M. v. United Behavioral Health, No. 2:18-cv-808, 2022 WL 3576275 (D. Utah Aug. 19, 2022) (Judge Howard C. Nielson, Jr.). In this action, as is the case in many ERISA healthcare suits challenging denials of benefits for young people receiving residential treatment, the particulars are distressing. Plaintiff is a beneficiary of the Motion Picture Industry Health Plan who suffers from severe depression and post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from a history of sexual abuse. Plaintiff’s mental health problems were so severe that she was “hospitalized at least six different times over the course of three years for depression (and) suicidality.” Help did come for plaintiff in the form of her nearly two-year-long stay at Uinta Academy, during which plaintiff “made improvements.” Despite the benefits of her treatment, defendant United Behavioral Health only paid for a small duration of the stay. Claims for benefits beyond those covered in the initial period were denied for not being medically necessary under the plan. United asserted that per the plan language and its Optum “Level of Care Guidelines” residential treatment is not appropriate for long-term care and there is a “reasonable expectation that services will improve the member’s presenting problems within a reasonable period of time.” In this suit plaintiff and her parents challenged the denials under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and brought a claim for violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. The parties each moved for summary judgment. The court began its discussion by addressing the appropriate standard of review. Although the plan grants discretion to United, the court agreed with plaintiffs that de novo review should apply because “United failed to ‘substantially comply’ with ERISA’s regulatory procedures” by issuing its denial 182 days after it received plaintiffs’ appeal. Then the court turned to addressing the denial, which asserted that plaintiff’s treatment at Uinta was not medically necessary and she could have been treated at a lower outpatient level of care. The court understood the plan language and Optum’s guidelines to mean that “long-term care is not the goal of residential treatment – to the contrary, a member is ineligible for continued service if his or her ‘condition is unchanging.’” In the eyes of the court, only short-term residential treatment care is covered under the plan. Thus, because proper care for plaintiff, the care that resulted in improvement for her disorders, took a long time it could not be deemed “acute stabilization” and was accordingly not covered under the contract terms of her ERISA plan. “Instead, this contract covers such care only if it is provided through outpatient treatment.” The court therefore concluded that the denials were proper and granted summary judgment to United. As for the Parity Act violation, the court found none. Under the terms of the plan, both medical residential inpatient nursing care and mental health residential inpatient level care imposed substantially similar requirements for coverage, and “both sets of guidelines make clear that long-term treatment will not be covered at this level of care.” Accordingly, the court granted summary judgment in favor of United on the second claim as well.

Pension Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Metaxas v. Gateway Bank F.S.B., No. 20-cv-01184-EMC, 2022 WL 3702099 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 26, 2022) (Judge Edward M. Chen). Plaintiff Poppi Metaxas sued her former employer, Gateway Bank F.S.B., and the Gateway Bank Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan, seeking relief under Sections 502(a)(1)(B) and (a)(3) of ERISA. Ms. Metaxas worked as the Bank’s CEO and president before she became disabled due to ovarian cancer and migraine headaches. During her tenure with the Bank, Ms. Metaxas committed bank fraud, and in 2015, five years after leaving the bank, she pled guilty to federal conspiracy to commit bank fraud and was sentenced to a year-and-a-half in jail. Ms. Metaxas was not terminated or in any other way punished by the bank for her unlawful actions, and she voluntarily resigned from her position due to her illnesses. Ms. Metaxas’s claims for disability and termination benefits, which she made in 2013, were tolled as the criminal case against Ms. Metaxas was pending at the time. Following the criminal conviction, Ms. Metaxas’s claims were denied by defendants and the denials were upheld during the administrative appeal. Defendants concluded that Ms. Metaxas’s criminal actions did not “deserve award through” the plan, that she had not reached retirement age, that her employment status had changed making her ineligible for benefits, and she was not disabled as defined by the plan. On administrative appeal, defendants added that Ms. Metaxas was not qualified for benefits because she was terminated for cause. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment. In addition, defendants moved to strike evidence from Ms. Metaxas that extended beyond the administrative record. The court in this ruling granted in part and denied in part each party’s summary judgment motion, denied the motion to strike, and remanded to defendants “for reconsideration of Plaintiff’s eligibility for termination benefits consistent with this decision.” Weighing the conflict of interest presented by the unusual circumstances of the suit, the court applied some skepticism to the decisions made and concluded that defendants abused their discretion in two ways with regard to the termination benefits: “(1) the Initial Claim Committee lacked authority to change Ms. Metaxas’s employment status to render her ineligible for termination benefits pursuant to (the) Plan…and (2) the Appeal Committee erred in determining Plaintiff was ‘terminated for cause’ rather, she voluntarily resigned from her position.” Furthermore, the court stressed that the committees had violated ERISA regulations by changing their rationale for denying the claims in the middle of the appeals process, depriving Ms. Metaxas of a full and fair review. Accordingly, the court granted Ms. Metaxas’s motion for summary judgment on her claim for termination benefits and ordered defendants to reconsider the claim for those benefits. However, the court came to the opposite conclusion with regard to the disability benefits, concluding that substantial evidence within the record supported the denial. Thus, the court found that defendants’ decision to deny disability benefits was not arbitrary and capricious. Accordingly, the court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants regarding the disability benefit claim. Finally, the court held that Ms. Metaxas’s claim for equitable relief under Section 502(a)(3) “fails as a matter of law,” because the plan at issue is a top-hat plan and is therefore exempt from ERISA’s fiduciary duty obligations. Summary judgment was granted to defendants on this claim as well.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Fourth Circuit

Gifford v. Burton, No. 2:21-cv-00669, 2022 WL 3702266 (S.D.W.V. Aug. 26, 2022) (Judge Joseph R. Goodwin). Plaintiff Sara Gifford was the sole beneficiary of her late husband’s 401(k) retirement plan which he received through his employment with defendant Walmart. However, a few months before his death, Mr. Gifford, without his wife’s consent, but with the help of defendant Hall Financial Advisors, LLC, requested and received a distribution of all of the funds from his Walmart 401(k) and deposited the funds into an IRA. Mr. Gifford then named his daughter, defendant Emma Gifford, as a 90% beneficiary to said IRA, leaving his wife as a beneficiary of the remaining 10%. In her suit, Ms. Gifford brought ERISA claims against all defendants alleging that spousal consent was required before Mr. Gifford could withdraw his pension funds and move them into an IRA. Additionally, Ms. Gifford asserted a negligence claim against Walmart and Hall Financial, and a claim of constructive trust against Emma Gifford. Walmart and Hall Financial moved to dismiss. They argued that ERISA does not require spousal consent for Mr. Gifford’s actions outlined above. Defendant Hall Financial additionally moved for judgment on the pleadings. Finally, because Ms. Gifford’s responses to their motions were tardy, defendants moved the court to strike the responses. All of the motions were granted. First, the court granted the motion to strike Ms. Gifford’s untimely responses because she failed to even acknowledge her tardiness, let alone assert good cause or plead excusable neglect for the lateness. Next, in a direct statement the court held that “because Plaintiff’s misunderstanding of the law is the entire basis of this lawsuit, I dismiss the Complaint in its entirety.” As the Walmart 401(k) plan was determined by the court to be both a profit-sharing and stock bonus defined contribution plan rather than a qualified joint and survivor annuity, the court concluded it is not subject to the provisions of Section 412, meaning Mr. Gifford did not need spousal consent to take the distribution under ERISA. Accordingly, Ms. Gifford failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, and the court dismissed the complaint.

Eleventh Circuit

Martinez v. Miami Children’s Health Sys., No. 21-cv-22700, 2022 WL 3577084 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 19, 2022) (Judge Beth Bloom). Plaintiff Eddy Martinez brought this action against his former employer, Miami Children’s Hospital System Inc., and the company’s severance plan, challenging defendants’ denial of his claim for severance benefits. The hospital asserted counterclaims against Mr. Martinez. The first of these counterclaims sought a declaration of the court pursuant to Section 502(a)(3)(B) that its decision to deny severance was proper. Mr. Martinez sought dismissal of this particular counterclaim under Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, arguing that it was redundant of his claim for benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B). The court agreed and granted the motion. The court wrote that “the relief (the hospital) seeks is a declaration interpreting the Plan in a manner that denies Martinez the right to severance benefits, which is in effect, the converse of the relief sought by Martinez. Thus, a resolution of Martinez’s ERISA claim (for benefits) would also resolve the issues raised in Count I of the Counterclaim.”

D.C. Circuit

Serv. Emps. Int’l Union Nat’l Indus. Pension Fund v. UPMC McKeesport, No. 22-cv-249 (TSC/GMH), 2022 WL 3644808 (D.D.C. Aug. 24, 2022) (Magistrate Judge G. Michael Harvey). Plaintiff Service Employees International Union National Industry Pension Fund and its board of trustees filed this delinquent contribution ERISA suit against a hospital, UPMC McKeesport, after it failed to make its required pension contributions under the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. Defendant moved to stay. Its motion derived from a complaint it filed (hours before this action was filed) for declaratory judgment in the Western District of Pennsylvania against the Fund and the Union. That case sought a declaration that the hospital doesn’t owe any additional payments to the Fund. That declaratory judgment action, “the cornerstone of UPMC’s arguments in favor of pausing this case,” was dismissed. Accordingly, “the difficulty of litigating two concurrent lawsuits in separate jurisdictions” no longer exists and resolution of the ERISA claims here therefore no longer presents a risk of inconsistent rulings in concurrent actions. For these reasons, the motion to stay was denied.

Statute of Limitations

Eleventh Circuit

Bakos v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 22-11131, __ F. App’x __, 2022 WL 3696648 (11th Cir. Aug. 25, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Wilson, Rosenbaum, Anderson). Plaintiff-appellant Angela Bakos appealed the district court’s decision to dismiss her ERISA disability benefits suit as time-barred based on her plan’s three-year statute of limitations. Despite the fact that defendant Unum Life Insurance Company of America did not specify any deadlines within the denial letters they sent to Ms. Bakos, the final denial letter did include a statement that “Bakos could request – free of charge – any documents, records, and information relevant to her claim for benefits.” Within those documents, had Ms. Bakos requested them, was information regarding the plan’s provision giving participants three years within which to bring a suit under Section 502(a) of ERISA. The district court concluded that Unum’s failure to provide “explicit notice” of the time limitation did not merit equitable tolling. Additionally, the district court held that Ms. Bakos’s arguments about actual knowledge were inapplicable because she brought a Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim for benefits and not a breach of fiduciary duty claim. In this unpublished Eleventh Circuit decision, without wasting any words, the court of appeals agreed with the district court’s dismissal and its position that Unum’s actions complied with ERISA, and that the three-year statute was enforceable making Ms. Bakos’s suit untimely. Referring to its own precedent in Pacific Harbor Capital v. Barnett Bank, 252 F.3d 1246, 1252 (11th Cir. 2001), the Eleventh Circuit reiterated its stance that there is no equitable tolling “when the plaintiffs had notice sufficient to prompt them to investigate and that, had they done so diligently, they would have discovered the basis for their claims.” Accordingly, the lower court’s order dismissing the case was affirmed.

Batal-Sholler v. Batal, No. 2:21-cv-00376-NT, 2022 WL 3357492 (D. Me. Aug. 15, 2022) (Judge Nancy Torresen).

As a general rule, the purpose of Your ERISA Watch is to summarize decisions to keep our readers abreast of developments in ERISA cases across the country without them having to read the ins and outs of every last decision for themselves. As we have said here before, we do that work so you don’t have to. However, the particulars of this case are unusually engaging and read as though they were plot points straight from the hit HBO show “Succession.” This may just be that atypical case where we encourage you to go ahead and read the whole thing yourself. A summary simply cannot quite capture the power struggle, the wicked stepmother, the absentee father, the abusive workplace, or the secret backhanded deals, to their fullest.

In broad strokes the story goes as follows: plaintiff Nancy Batal-Sholler had worked for her father Ed’s insurance company, the “Agency,” since the 1980s. Beginning in the 1990s promises were made to Nancy that she would take over the company. In 2002, it looked like that change in ownership was about to happen, until Ed had an about-face and declined to retire and hand over the company. Meanwhile, Ed and his wife, defendant Marilyn Batal, Nancy’s stepmother, had Nancy misclassified as an independent contractor at the company to deprive her of overtime pay and from participating in the Agency’s ERISA retirement plan, which was administered by Ed and then later by Marilyn.

Nancy did not learn about the plan or her independent contractor status until 2017. When she did, her relationship with the family soured. After forcing the company’s hand and changing her classification to an employee, her father, stepmother, and the Agency transferred their real estate into a trust to shield assets from Nancy, and then went behind her back and sold the company to a third party, stealing Nancy’s client list. In 2018, Nancy sued her father in state court and received a judgment against him.

Almost immediately after this, Ed died, Marilyn liquidated the ERISA retirement plan and transferred the assets to the trust, and then as representative of Ed’s estate filed a motion to vacate the judgment in the state court case alleging Nancy had committed fraud. The state court vacated that order, and the trust and Marilyn sold their properties to shell companies.

In 2021 Nancy filed this suit against Marilyn, the Agency, the Trust, and the plan in federal court. In her complaint Nancy brought state law claims, RICO claims, and ERISA claims (which included a Section 510 claim, a claim for benefits, a breach of fiduciary duty claim, and a claim for equitable relief). Defendants moved to dismiss. The district court granted the motion in part and denied it in part.

The court granted the motion to dismiss the RICO claims, finding Nancy failed to allege a plausible pattern of racketeering activity. Additionally, the court granted the motion to dismiss Marilyn as a defendant in her capacity as representative of Ed’s estate but not in her individual capacity, which was more a matter of semantics than anything else. Furthermore, the court granted the plan’s motion to dismiss.

In all other respects, and with respect to all the ERISA claims, the motion to dismiss was denied. In particular, the court rejected defendants’ argument that Nancy lacked standing to sue as she was not a participant in the plan. The court stated that Nancy’s claims were rooted in the plausible idea that she would have been a plan participant but for defendants’ actions, which conferred her with standing. Finally, the court stated that the ERISA claims as currently pled were sufficient to withstand merits challenges at the motion to dismiss stage.

Although this case may not present the usual meaty ERISA issues we typically highlight in our case of the week, we rarely encounter a decision that is as much of a beach read as this case. Stay tuned for further installments in this fascinating potboiler.

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

Attorneys’ Fees

Sixth Circuit

Perkins v. General Motors, No. 4:16-CV-14465-TGB-MKM, 2022 WL 3370769 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 16, 2022) (Judge Terrence G. Berg). On January 26, 2022, the court issued an opinion and order in this case granting in part and denying in part each party’s cross-motion for summary judgment. The court granted judgment to plaintiff (the estate of Charles Fraley) against GM for a COBRA violation and awarded statutory penalty damages in the amount of $1,300. Subsequently, the court ordered plaintiff to provide documentation for any damages sustained as a result of lack of health coverage during the relevant period and to move for attorney’s fees and costs. Plaintiff was late in responding to the court’s orders and in filing motions. Before the court were several of these tardy motions. Plaintiff moved for a new trial and to amend judgment, as well as for attorney’s fees and costs, an order of compliance, and to substitute a party. All the motions with the exception of the motion to substitute party (stemming from the representative of the estate’s death) were denied. Not only were the motions found to be untimely, but the court also denied them on their merits as well. To begin, the court concluded the motion to amend made no argument of mistake or fraud justifying relief under Rule 60 or any claim of error of law or manifest injustice that would justify relief under Rule 59(e). The court also declined to award further damages, as the estate was unable to prove that Charles Fraley incurred any medical expenses during the relevant time when he was without coverage. The motion for fees and costs was also found to be insufficiently detailed on the number of hours worked, the reasonableness of the requested hourly rate, and seemingly in all other respects. As this was only a partial victory, the motion was filed late, and the motion itself was threadbare, the court denied the motion. The case was thus closed.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Third Circuit

Grelis v. The Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co., No. 15-5224, 2022 WL 3357449 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 12, 2022) (Judge Wendy Beetlestone). Kalan v. The Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co., No. 14-5216, 2022 WL 3350358 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 12, 2022) (Judge Wendy Beetlestone). This week’s installment of the John Koresko fallout suits brings you two more decisions in cases brought against The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company in front of Judge Beetlestone. The court’s rulings in the two cases were identical. In the first suit, plaintiffs are Howard Grelis and Howard Grelis, M.D., Inc.; in the second, plaintiffs are Harvey and Deborah Kalan, and Harvey A. Kalan, M.D. Inc. Plaintiffs in both suits lost money in their life insurance policies through Mr. Koresko’s scheme, and both asserted claims against Lincoln under ERISA Sections 502(a)(2) and (3), as well as claims for RICO violations, and common law claims of fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, knowing participation in a breach of fiduciary duty, breach of the obligation of good faith, and negligence. Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment on their ERISA claims. Lincoln cross-moved for summary judgment on all of plaintiffs’ claims. First, the court addressed the ERISA claims, in which plaintiffs argued that Lincoln acted as a fiduciary when it issued a policy loan in 2009 and when it changed the owner of the policy in 2010. Lincoln argued that it should be granted summary judgment in its favor on the ERISA claims because the claims are untimely, the actions at issue were ministerial and therefore cannot give rise of fiduciary status, and the actions were not the proximate cause of injuries plaintiffs sustained. The court stated that it could not determine based on the parties’ current briefing whether the ERISA claims are time-barred, and therefore concluded Lincoln failed to meet its burden to prove the claims were untimely. The court also rejected Lincoln’s ministerial acts argument and held that regardless of the importance of a task, if Lincoln is found to have issued the loan or changed the policy ownership at the request of someone who did not have authority to take these acts, it will be deemed a fiduciary for its role in those actions. Finally, the court rejected Lincoln’s causation argument, holding the complaints as pled sufficiently illustrate their chains to connect Lincoln’s actions to the resulting injuries. Nevertheless, plaintiffs were not granted summary judgment on their Section 502(a)(2) claims as the court felt genuine issues of material fact preclude it from awarding summary judgment at this stage. As for the Section 502(a)(3) claims, the court awarded summary judgment in favor of Lincoln. The court stated that plaintiffs failed to include evidence to demonstrate that Lincoln knew of Koresko’s fiduciary breaches or explain what prohibited transaction Lincoln allegedly engaged in, and without these necessary elements their claim failed. As for the RICO claims, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Lincoln, concluding that plaintiffs’ claims were substantively deficient. Finally, Lincoln’s motion for judgment on the common law claims was denied because the court could not ascertain whether Pennsylvania or California law applies.

Mator v. Wesco Distribution, Inc., No. 2:21-CV-00403-MJH, 2022 WL 3566108 (W.D. Pa. Aug. 18, 2022) (Judge Marilyn J. Horan). Plaintiffs Robert and Nancy Mator on behalf of themselves and on a class-wide basis as participants of the Wesco Distribution Inc. Retirement Savings Plan asserted claims of breach of fiduciary duty of prudence and failure to monitor against Wesco Distribution Inc., the plan’s investment committee, and Doe defendants. Plaintiffs challenged defendants’ administration of the plan. They alleged that defendants breached their duties by offering retail rather than institutional share classes and through the excessive direct and indirect fees charged to participants for the plan’s recordkeeping services provided by Wells Fargo. For the third time, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint. Plaintiffs attempted to address pleading deficiencies the court had previously pointed to, namely lack of specificity of the services provided and a lack of appropriate comparators or benchmarks for the challenged fees and investments. In plaintiffs’ view, their amended complaint “thoroughly sets forth factual allegations about the type, scope, and caliber of services provided to the Plan.” Plaintiffs are naturally at a disadvantage pre-discovery, and as the non-moving party the court is required to construe the complaint in their favor. Nevertheless, in the eyes of the court the complaint could not be seen as plausible, even under favorable and flattering candlelight. In quoting the Supreme Court’s Hughes decision, the court found the second amended complaint to be a “meritless goat.” Without more details, the court was simply unwilling to allow plaintiffs to engage “in a speculative fishing expedition without a plausible factual basis.” The complaint, the court felt, simply did not satisfy either the Twombly/Iqbal or the Sweda pleading standard. Thus, the claims were both dismissed, and further amendment, the court concluded, would be futile.

Ninth Circuit

Diaz v. Westco Chemicals, Inc., No. 2:20-cv-02070-ODW (AGRx), 2022 WL 3566817 (C.D. Cal. Aug. 19, 2022) (Judge Otis D. Wright, II). Plaintiffs Merry Russitti Diaz and Kater Perez brought a breach of fiduciary duty suit against Westco Chemicals, Inc. and its owners on behalf of a certified class for harm they suffered as defined benefit pension plan participants stemming from Westco’s mismanagement of the plan. The breaches and damages mainly stem from the plan’s previous third-party administrator and his failed attempt to freeze the plan in 2010. Because the proper steps were not taken to actually freeze the plan and because the then plan administrator had caused other operational flaws including failure to comply with IRC codes for its favorable tax status, Westco retained a new administrator and engaged a benefits law firm to help fix the problems. Westco eventually took steps to properly fund the plan and by September 2021, the plan’s Adjusted Funding Target Attainment Percentage was over 95%, and the plan is no longer at risk of defaulting on its obligations with the plan sufficiently funded to pay the present value of all participants’ accrued benefits. It should be noted, however, that the statement of facts outlined both in the decision and summarized above are Westco’s. That’s because the court began its decision by reprimanding plaintiffs’ Statement of Genuine Disputes for failing to address Westco’s assertions in their Statement of Uncontroverted Facts and Conclusions of Law, and thus in the court’s eye plaintiffs’ statement did not meet the requirements or instructions outlined in the Central District of California’s local rules. Having run through the story of the wrongdoing, the court turned to defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The court in this order concluded plaintiffs lack standing under the Supreme Court’s test in Thole. “To the extent any of Westco’s prior breaches and operational errors with respect to the Plan placed the Plan at any risk of default, those errors have been corrected such that they no longer pose any such risk. In short, Westco’s undisputed evidence demonstrated that the plan is not currently at risk of any sort of default.” Given the court’s conclusion that plaintiffs lack standing, summary judgment was granted to defendants. Finally, in addressing plaintiffs’ argument challenging the plan’s failure to provide meaningful benchmarks for their accrual rate (0.1%), the court stated that a plan’s failure to provide meaningful benchmarks results in a plan losing its tax-favored status but does not “provide a participant with a civil cause of action.” Even accepting plaintiffs’ argument that the plan language expressly requires “the employer must ensure that the benefit formula…provide(s) meaningful benefits within the meaning of Code Section 401(a)(26),” the court stated that the argument fails here because it is based on individual injuries, not plan-wide injuries which plaintiffs sought in their complaint. “At the risk of stating the obvious, the Plan’s failure to pay more money to Plaintiffs did not harm the Plan…it harmed Plaintiffs as individuals.” For this reason too the court found summary judgment in Westco’s favor to be appropriate.

Disability Benefit Claims

Fourth Circuit

Shaw v. United Mut. of Omaha Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 21-1818, __ F. App’x __, 2022 WL 3369525 (4th Cir. Aug. 16, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Gregory, Niemeyer, and Traxler). Appellant Paramount Shaw appealed the district court’s decision in which United Mutual of Omaha Life Insurance Company was granted judgment on the pleadings in this disability suit. The district court determined that under abuse of discretion review, United’s denial of the claim was reasonable given its request to Mr. Shaw for further medical documentation that was never provided. The policy expressly states that failure to provide supporting information upon request is grounds for invalidating a claim. On appeal the Fourth Circuit agreed with United’s decision and with the lower court. “The Policy’s requirement that the claimant prove his disability is appropriate.” Specifically, the Fourth Circuit stated that “plan administrators may not impose unreasonable requests for medical evidence,” but the scope of the request in this instance was not relevant given Mr. Shaw’s silence at the time and failure to “object to the requests and (to) assert any basis for his failure to respond.” Furthermore, given the lack of evidence from Mr. Shaw about a history of biased decisions, the Fourth Circuit was unconvinced that United’s conflict of interest factored into Mr. Shaw’s denial. For these reasons, the court affirmed.

Gilbert v. Principal Life Ins. Co., No. TDC-21-0128, 2022 WL 3369537 (D. Md. Aug. 16, 2022) (Judge Theodore D. Chuang). Plaintiff Sharon Gilbert is a biostatistician who became disabled in 2018, suffering from headaches, fevers, chills, fatigue, chest pain, joint pain, numbness, and stomach problems. She was diagnosed with Lyme disease and received long-term antibiotic treatment from a physician specializing in this treatment. Ms. Gilbert received long-term disability benefits through her ERISA-governed plan administered by defendant Principal Life Insurance Company. After 24 months, Principal ended Ms. Gilbert’s benefits, asserting the plan’s 24-month limitation period for mental health disorders and what the plan defined as “special conditions” which included headaches of several kinds, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and several musculoskeletal disorders. Having exhausted an administrative appeal, Ms. Gilbert brought this suit for benefits. Ms. Gilbert argued that the medical evidence supported her diagnosis of Lyme disease and proved that she qualifies for disability benefits under her plan’s requirements and is unable to perform the duties of her occupation. She also argued that her award of Social Security disability benefits for Lyme disease should weigh in her favor. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The court reviewed the denial under the de novo standard, and articulated that Ms. Gilbert had the burden to prove she is disabled under the plan. Physicians had mixed opinions about whether Ms. Gilbert had Lyme disease, and one diagnostic test for Lyme disease was inconclusive at best. Principal’s reviewers not only rejected Ms. Gilbert’s Lyme disease diagnosis, but also found her subjective symptoms to likely be psychosomatic. In arguing for judgment in its favor, Principal stated that the record contradicts a diagnosis of Lyme disease and Ms. Gilbert’s symptoms are instead caused by “somatic symptom disorder,” and thus Ms. Gilbert’s benefits were properly terminated after the policy’s 24-month limitation period for mental health and special conditions. The court in its review of the administrative record determined that the evidence in support of a diagnosis of Lyme disease was “exceedingly limited. Here eight different physicians offered opinions that reject or are inconsistent with the position that Gilbert’s symptoms and disability were attributable to Lyme disease…significantly, three treating physicians who were selected by Gilbert.” The Social Security Administration’s different conclusion did not alter the court’s opinion. Furthermore, the court agreed with Principal that “Gilbert’s symptoms and disability were caused at least in part by (somatic symptom disorder),” as well as by other conditions that fall within the plan’s definition of special conditions. Having reached this conclusion, the court agreed with Principal that Ms. Gilbert is no longer eligible for long-term disability benefits under her plan, and accordingly granted summary judgment against Gilbert in favor of Principal.

Discovery

Eighth Circuit

Radle v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 4:21-CV-01039-NAB, 2022 WL 3355730 (E.D. Mo. Aug. 15, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Nannette A. Baker). After plaintiff Michael Radle’s long-term disability benefits were terminated under his plan’s 24-month limitation for disabilities caused by mental illnesses, Mr. Radle sued Unum Life Insurance Company for wrongful denial of disability benefits under Section 502(a)(1)(B), and in the alternative for breach of fiduciary duty under Section 502(a)(2). Mr. Radle argues in his complaint that his disabling post-concussion syndrome is a physical diagnosis not subject to the plan’s limitation. Mr. Radle moved for discovery and argued that he is entitled to discovery on both his causes of action because discovery is necessary for breach of fiduciary duty claims, and procedural irregularities and Unum’s conflict of interest establish good cause for discovery beyond the administrative record on his claim for benefits. Mr. Radle sought the following discovery: (1) information regarding Unum’s claim handling instructions, procedures, and manuals; (2) deposition of the Unum claims reviewer who oversaw Mr. Radle’s claim; (3) written discovery identifying Unum’s reviewing physicians and vocational experts who weighed in on Mr. Radle’s claim; (4) depositions of those identified individuals; and (5) compensation guidelines for medical reviewers as well as information on how bonuses are awarded. In this order the court granted Mr. Radle’s discovery motion. The court agreed that discovery in this instance is warranted because Mr. Radle showed good cause, and this action “would benefit from consideration of facts likely outside the administrative record.”

Life Insurance & AD&D Benefit Claims

Sixth Circuit

Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Mowery, No. 2:21-cv-168, 2022 WL 3369539 (S.D. Ohio Aug. 16, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Chelsey M. Vascura). MetLife commenced this interpleader action to determine the proper beneficiary for approximately $50,000 in life insurance benefits from the plan of the late Brian Ogershok. Before his death, Mr. Ogershok had designated defendant Patricia Mowery as his beneficiary, claiming that she was his domestic partner. However, Mr. Ogershok was still married to defendant Kimberly Ogershok, both at the time when he made his designation and at the time of his death. Mr. Ogershok had also named his two children as co-equal contingent beneficiaries. Ms. Ogershok was never designated as a beneficiary at the time of Mr. Ogershok’s death. However, in the end only Ms. Ogershok seemed to want the money. Ms. Mowery never appeared in the case and also failed to meet the plan’s definition of domestic partner. Additionally, the children signed waivers of their interest in favor of awarding the benefits to their mother. In this order the court granted Ms. Ogershok’s motion to enter judgment in her favor, finding that under these strange circumstances “payment of Plan benefits to Ms. Ogershok (is) appropriate.”

Ninth Circuit

Stolte v. Securian Life Ins. Co., No. 21-cv-07735-DMR, 2022 WL 3357839 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 15, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Donna M. Ryu). Plaintiff Shannon Stolte is the beneficiary of a life insurance plan of her late husband. Ms. Stolte sued Securian Life Insurance Company under Section 502(a)(1)(B) after her claim for the $710,000 life insurance benefits was denied. The story of the denial is a rather interesting one. It begins with her husband leaving his job at Allstate. Mr. Stolte resigned on Friday, January 22, 2021, and proceeded to work the rest of the day. The following Monday, January 25, 2021, Allstate sent Mr. Stolte a conversion notice which stated that Mr. Stolte’s voluntary separation date was Saturday, January 23, 2021. The notice also informed the family that the conversion window for changing the policy to an individual life insurance policy was 31 days. Our story unfortunately ends 32 days later, on February 24, 2021, the day Mr. Stolte died. This strange fairytale-like timing of Mr. Stolte’s death, coming one day past the window wherein he would have been entitled to a death benefit regardless of conversion, was of course the grounds for the denial. Reading the plan language simply and technically, Securian denied the claim, and on these same grounds moved to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). In granting the motion to dismiss, the court agreed with Securian’s reading of the plan and its eligibility requirements. “As of January 23, 2021, (Mr. Stolte) was no longer an employee and thus did not meet Element 1 of the Plan’s eligibility provision…he then had 31 days to convert his group policy to an individual policy, but he did not do so. He died more than 31 days after his eligibility for insurance coverage terminated. For these reasons, Plaintiff is not entitled to a death benefit. As harsh and unlucky as this result may be, no plausible reading of the FAC and the Plan documents can support a different result.” Accordingly, the denial was found to be correct, and Ms. Stolte’s Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim was determined to be illegally insufficient. As to amendment, the court rejected Ms. Stolte’s request to amend her Section 502 claim for benefits, as amendment would be futile, but granted Ms. Stolte’s request to state a Section 503 full and fair review claim should she wish to do so.

Pension Benefit Claims

Fifth Circuit

Pedersen v. Kinder Morgan Inc., No. 4:21-CV-03590, 2022 WL 3356414 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 12, 2022) (Judge Keith P. Ellison). A series of four corporate mergers resulted in changes to and diminished benefits under the Kinder Morgan Retirement Plan, which plan participants in this suit are challenging under ERISA on behalf of themselves and a putative class of other current and former employees and participants. Plaintiffs asserted claims under Section 502(a)(1)(B) and 502(a)(3). They allege (1) the changes to the plan violate ERISA’s anti-cutback provision, (2) the summary plan description failed to alert participants of the decreased benefits in a manner that participants could understand, (3) defendants’ interpretation of the plan was in breach of their fiduciary duties, and (4) the actuarial assumptions used violate ERISA Section 204(c)(3)’s requirements. Defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings. Defendants’ motion was granted in part and denied in part. First, the court addressed whether plaintiffs could assert claims under both Section 502(a)(1)(B) and Section 502(a)(3). The answer for the most part was yes, as only Section 502(a)(3) allows the court to amend the plan which plaintiffs allege is in violation of ERISA provisions. There was however a single claim plaintiffs asserted under Section 502(a)(3) that the court understood to be properly pled under Section 502(a)(1)(B) because it requires the court to interpret rather than amend the plan’s benefits calculation method. Therefore, the court granted defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings on this claim. Additionally, the court granted defendant Kinder Morgan Inc.’s motion for judgment on the pleadings for the Section 502(a)(1)(B) and the breach of fiduciary duty claims brought against it, as it did not have administrative control of the plan and did not exercise any discretionary authority or control with respect to the benefit denials. In all other respects, defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings was denied.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

Sixth Circuit

Carte v. American Elec. Power Serv. Corp., No. 2:21-cv-5651, 2022 WL 3447315 (S.D. Ohio Aug. 16, 2022) (Judge Michael H. Watson). In 2001, defendant American Electric Power Service Corporation converted its traditional defined benefit plan into a cash-balance plan. This transition created a wear-away period for the plan’s participants during which time the employees’ pension benefits stopped growing until their hypothetical account balance under the plan’s methodology equaled the value of the benefit they had previously earned under the old defined benefit plan. Plaintiffs are plan participants who have asserted claims against American Electric and the Plan as a putative class action. Plaintiffs asserted age discrimination claims under ERISA and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, a violation of ERISA Section 204(b)(1) for backloading, claims for insufficient notice under ERISA Sections 204(h) and 102(a), a claim for breach of fiduciary duty under Section 404(a), and a claim for withholding documents under Section 502(c)(1)(B). Defendants moved to dismiss. The court in this order granted the motion and dismissed the claims without prejudice. First, plaintiffs voluntarily abandoned their claims for breach of fiduciary duty and withholding of documents. Next, the court examined the age discrimination claims. Under ERISA’s age discrimination provision, the plan would be in violation if an employee’s benefit accrual ceases, or the rate is reduced. The court expressed that under Sixth Circuit precedent “benefit accrual refers to the employer’s contribution to the plan, and therefore any difference in output as a result of time and compound interest does not violate” the provision. The court did not agree with plaintiffs that the wear-away period caused by the transition to the cash-balance plan alters this precedent or that their net benefit accrual was reduced or ceased in violation of Section 204(b)(1)(H)(i). In addition, the court found the allegations of age discrimination to be “short on specifics” and therefore unable to cross the threshold from possible to plausible. With regard to the backloading claim, the court agreed with defendants that the plan amendment means only the new plan formula (that of the cash-balance plan) is relevant to determining whether a backloading violation took place. In this case it meant the court would only consider the formula of the cash balance plan, “and considering only that plan, there is no violation.” Finally, the court concluded that the complaint’s allegations regarding insufficient notice were also unadorned and lacking in specificity.

Seventh Circuit

Dean v. Nat’l Prod. Workers Union Severance Tr. Plan, No. 21-1872, __ F. 4th __, 2022 WL  3355075 (7th Cir. Aug. 15, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Manion and Jackson-Akiwumi). Participants in two multi-employer plans, the National Production Workers Union (“NPWU”) 401(k) Plan and the NPWU Severance Trust Plan, on behalf of themselves and putative class of similarly situated participants sued the plans, the plans’ board of trustees, and the plan administrator, James Meltreger, when defendants refused to have the plans rollover from NPWU to plaintiffs’ newly elected bargaining representative, the Teamsters. In their suit, plaintiffs sought the rollover of their accounts to the Teamsters’ plans and alleged defendants breached their fiduciary duties by not allowing rollover, by causing the plans to pay excessive administrative fees, and by failing to disclose conflicts the plans had caused by NPWU employees on their payroll who were paid high salaries and expenses and thus financially motivated to deny the rollover request. Plaintiffs also brought a claim against Meltreger for failing to provide information upon request that they were entitled to under Sections 102, 104, and 105 of ERISA, including a summary plan description for the 401(k) Plan, “which simply did not exist.” Plaintiffs’ action was dismissed in the district court for failure to state a claim. The district court held that the Plan terms did not require rollover, and the complaint failed to sufficiently allege claims of fiduciary breach. On appeal the Seventh Circuit affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for further proceedings. The court of appeals began its discussion by evaluating plaintiffs’ demand for rollover of assets asserted under Sections 502(a)(1)(B) or as a claim for equitable relief under Section 502(a)(3). Agreeing with the district court, the Seventh Circuit concluded that neither provision provided an avenue for the relief requested by plaintiffs. The court held that plaintiffs could not state a claim to enforce their rights under the plan under Section 502(a)(1)(B) because the plan terms did not require rollover. Nor could plaintiffs state a claim under the catch-all provision Section 502(a)(3), because plaintiffs failed to allege any ERISA provision that the terms of the plan expressly violate. Next, the Seventh Circuit concluded that defendants’ failure to amend the plans to allow rollovers after the bargaining representative changed was not a breach of fiduciary duty. The Seventh Circuit also agreed that plaintiffs failed to state a claim against the board of trustees and the plans’ administrator under the severance plan by paying what plaintiffs believed were excessive administrative expenses and accounting fees. The appeals court’s agreement with the lower court ended here. Plaintiffs, the Seventh Circuit concluded, had indeed stated claims that (1) defendants breached their fiduciary duties as to the severance plan by giving a $20,000 raise each to one of the trustees and to Meltreger; (2) defendants failed to timely provide them with annual pension benefits statements for several years, and (3) Meltreger did not timely provide them with a summary plan description for the 401(k) Plan. Accordingly, the lower court’s dismissal of these claims was overturned, and the appeals court remanded to the district court for further proceedings.

Provider Claims

Third Circuit

Gotham City Orthopedics, LLC v. United Healthcare Ins. Co., No. 2:21-cv-09056 (BRM) (ESK), 2022 WL 3500416 (D.N.J. Aug. 18, 2022) (Judge Brian R. Martinotti). Plaintiffs Gotham City Orthopedics, LLC and Dr. Sean Lager, M.D. have sued United Healthcare Insurance Company and related entities under ERISA, asserting claims for benefits, a breach of fiduciary duty claim, and a claim for failure to provide plan documents, as well as claims under state law in an attempt to recoup $2.8 million in unpaid out-of-network medical services they provided to United insureds. Plaintiffs brought this lawsuit on behalf of 31 patients under 32 healthcare plans, 27 of which are ERISA-governed healthcare plans with 21 of those ERISA-governed plans containing benefit anti-assignment provisions. Defendants moved to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). They argued that dismissal is warranted for several reasons. First, they argued that the anti-assignment provisions are valid and not waived, and thus preclude plaintiffs from claiming derivative standing for those plans. The court agreed and concluded that plaintiffs lack standing for the 21 ERISA plans containing the prohibitions on assignments of benefits. United’s motion as it pertained to these plans was accordingly granted. However, United’s merits arguments in favor of dismissing the claims for benefits and the fiduciary breach claim for the remaining 11 ERISA plans were not persuasive to the court. The court found the complaint sufficiently “met the low plausibility threshold” and appropriately outlines how “United improperly denied or underpaid claims submitted by Plaintiffs for certain medically necessary services that should have been covered under the Plans.” The complaint, the court went on to state, also adequately alleges a uniform practice of wrongfully denying medically necessary claims on “unsupported and erroneous” bases which can reasonably lead the court to conclude that United breached its fiduciary duties. However, the court did dismiss the claim for failure to provide documents with prejudice because United was not the plan administrator for any of the plans; instead, it is listed as the “claims administrator.” Finally, the court concluded that plaintiffs may not bring claims for the non-ERISA plans which also include anti-assignment provisions, and thus dismissed the claims related to these claims as well. Having reached this conclusion, the court stated that it “need not reach the arguments concerning whether the non-ERISA claims are preempted or whether they sufficiently state a claim.” For these reasons, the motion to dismiss was granted in part and denied in part.

Retaliation Claims

Fifth Circuit

Dials v. Phillips 66 Co., No. 21-1660, 2022 WL 3368042 (E.D. La. Aug. 16, 2022) (Judge Barry W. Ashe). Plaintiff Keith Dials brought a retaliation and discrimination suit against his former employer, Phillips 66 Company, after he was fired on what he claims were pretextual grounds following complaints he filed with the company’s HR department for discriminatory conduct that went uninvestigated. Mr. Dials is 56 years old and worked as an industrial maintenance professional for over three decades. He was replaced at the company by a man nearly 20 years younger than him who had no prior maintenance experience. Mr. Dials alleges that in just two years’ time nearly two dozen employees over the age of 40 were terminated at the company. After filing his suit, Mr. Dials requested leave to amend his complaint to assert a claim under Section 510 of ERISA. The Magistrate Judge in the case granted Mr. Dials’ motion. Phillips 66 requested the court review and reverse the Magistrate’s decision insofar as it granted Mr. Dials leave to add a claim under ERISA Section 510. Phillips 66 argued that the proposed Section 510 claim is time-barred under Fifth Circuit precedent which holds that a Section 510 claim is an assertion that an employee was subject to employment discrimination, and analogous state-law limitations periods for wrongful termination or retaliation therefore apply, which under Louisiana’s Civil Code is limited to a one-year prescriptive period. The court was persuaded by this argument. As the prescriptive period runs from the day the injury is sustained, and Mr. Dials filed his suit more than one year after his termination, the court found that his amendment to add the Section 510 claim was futile because the claim was untimely, and that the Magistrate Judge therefore erred in permitting Mr. Dials to add this claim. Accordingly, defendant’s motion was granted, and the court reversed the Magistrate’s decision.

Severance Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Raphaely v. Gartner Inc., No. 20-cv-06166-DMR, 2022 WL 3445942 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 17, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Donna M. Ryu). Plaintiff Dorth Raphaely was terminated after about 10 months working for defendant Gartner, Inc as the company Group Vice President for Content Strategy. Mr. Raphaely sued Gartner as well as its ERISA severance plan and the plan’s committee. Mr. Raphaely was denied severance benefits under the plan because defendants determined that Mr. Raphaely was terminated for poor performance rendering him ineligible for benefits under the plan. In support of its position, Gartner pointed to an employee survey in which employees at the company stressed their dissatisfaction with Mr. Raphaely’s job performance. The court described the results of the survey as follows: “the comments about Raphaely are uniformly negative and he is the only individual who is repeatedly criticized by name.” In his suit, Mr. Raphaely asserted two causes of action: a claim for benefits and a claim for breach of fiduciary duty. The parties each moved for summary judgment. In this order the court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on both counts. To begin, the court stated that the appropriate review standard for the Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim was abuse of discretion given that the plan unambiguously confers discretionary authority to defendants. Although the parties agreed that a conflict of interest exists, the court weighed the conflict only minimally as Mr. Raphaely was unable to support a higher level of skepticism without evidence of malice or a history of improper denials. Additionally, the court was satisfied that defendants were able to prove that Mr. Raphaely was terminated for performance issues, and therefore concluded the denial was entirely reasonable. As for the breach of fiduciary duty claim, the court concluded that there was no evidence within Mr. Raphaely’s complaint to support the alleged breach and no genuine issue of material fact precluded awarding summary judgment in favor of defendants.

Withdrawal Liability & Unpaid Contributions

Second Circuit

N.Y. State Nurses Ass’n Benefits Fund v. The Nyack Hosp., No. 20-378, __ F. 4th __, 2022 WL 3569296 (2d Cir. Aug. 19, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Carney and Nardini, and District Judge Liman). The parties cross-appealed the district court’s order granting in part and denying part each of their positions about the scope of an audit that plaintiff The New York State Nurses Association Benefit Fund sought of defendant Nyack Hospital’s payroll and wage records. On appeal the Fund argued that the scope of the order, in which the court concluded that the Fund had the authority to inspect only the payroll records for all hospital employees identified as nurses but not the records of the other employees, was too narrow. Arguing the opposite, Nyack Hospital argued the decision’s interpretations of the scope of the audit authority was overly broad. The Second Circuit in this order agreed with the Fund, and thus reversed in part the district court’s decision to the extent it granted summary judgment in favor of Nyack Hospital. “We hold that the audit sought by the Fund was authorized by the Trust Agreement, and that the Hospital did not present evidence that the audit constituted a breach of the Fund’s fiduciary duty under ERISA. Accordingly, the audit was within the scope of the Fund trustees’ authority under the Supreme Court’s decision in Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. Central Transport, Inc., 472 U.S. 559 (1985).” In Central States, the court concluded that an audit power that gives trustees the ability to inspect the pertinent records of each employer for all their employees was “entirely reasonable in light of ERISA’s policies.” The court of appeals here applied this precedent, and thus concluded that the Fund is entitled to audit the records of all employees, regardless of whether Nyack Hospital identified them as members of the collective bargaining unit, so that the Fund may determine for itself whether they should have been classified as beneficiaries of the plan. This was especially true, the Second Circuit held, because Nyack Hospital “agreed to give the Trustees broad authority to interpret their audit authority,” under the terms of the Trust Agreement. This broad ability to require participating employers “to submit to contractually permitted audits,” the court stated, also went for employees beyond those classified as nurses, and the lower court’s decision in this regard was therefore found to be in error and accordingly reversed. Circuit Judge Carney dissented in part with the majority’s opinion. To Judge Carney, her colleagues’ interpretation of the audit authority was in fact too broad. She pointed to the demand’s inclusion of the Hospital’s executive team and its engineering staff “who were not even arguably covered by the CBA, nor remotely eligible to participant in the benefits plan,” and found inclusion of these individuals to be unreasonable. Although Judge Carney joined the majority in concluding the district court correctly “denied the Hospital’s motion to limit the audit records of NYSNA members who had enrolled in the Plan,” diverging from the majority, she expressed that she would “rule that the district court did not abuse its discretion or otherwise err when it entered an order restricting the audit to review of the records of the registered professional nurses employed by the Hospital.” Accordingly, in resolving the parties’ squabble over the scope of the audit power, Judge Carney concluded that district court’s decision was just right.

Stewart v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., No. 21-11919, __ F.4th __, 2022 WL 3221296 (11th Cir. Aug. 10, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Newsom, Tjoflat, and Hull).

Courts typically review ERISA benefit decisions under one of two standards: either de novo, i.e., with no deference to the benefit claim administrator, or for abuse of discretion, i.e., deferring to the administrator so long as its decision was reasonable. But ERISA practitioners often wonder: how much difference does the standard of review really make? Does it actually affect the way a judge decides a benefit case?

For the Eleventh Circuit in this week’s notable decision, it made a significant difference. The plaintiff was Carol Stewart, a prominent attorney in Birmingham, Alabama whose “professional accomplishments are impressive.” In 2007, she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. She submitted a claim to Sun Life, the insurer of her firm’s disability benefit plan, which began paying benefits.

In 2010, however, Ms. Stewart’s firm switched the administration of its plan from Sun Life to Hartford. The new Hartford policy insuring the plan contained an exclusion which stated that a plan participant was ineligible for benefits if she was receiving “benefits for a Disability under a prior disability plan that: 1) was sponsored by [her] Employer; and 2) was terminated before the Effective Date of The Policy.” Hartford concluded that because the Sun Life coverage had terminated before the Hartford coverage began, and Ms. Stewart was receiving benefits from Sun Life, the exclusion applied, and thus it denied her benefit claim.

Ms. Stewart sued, and the district court granted Hartford summary judgment. She appealed.

On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit applied its unique six-step test to determine if it should uphold Hartford’s decision. First, it asked whether the decision was wrong under a de novo standard of review. The court stated that it was “inclined to think that Stewart may have the better reading of the policy’s disability-insurance provision and that Hartford’s interpretation is de novo ‘wrong[.]’” The court disagreed with Hartford’s argument that “prior disability plan” referred to the old Sun Life policy, because plans are different from policies under ERISA. Furthermore, Hartford used the two terms in different ways in other policy provisions, and in its answer to Ms. Stewart’s complaint, which suggested that even Hartford did not think the terms should be interpreted interchangeably.

At this point the casual observer might be concerned about Hartford’s chances. However, as the Eleventh Circuit helpfully reminds us, “because this is an ERISA-benefits case, our analysis isn’t finished—there are still five steps to go.” The court observed that under step two, Hartford had been vested with discretionary authority by the policy, which meant that under step three, the court’s role was to determine if Hartford’s interpretation of the policy exclusion, even if it was “de novo wrong,” was nevertheless “reasonable.”

The Eleventh Circuit determined that it was: “Although it might not be the best reading of the policy exclusion, it was reasonable for Hartford to interpret the phrase ‘prior disability plan’ as referring to the Sun Life policy.” The court conceded that “different words are usually presumed to have different meanings,” but that interpretive canon “assumes a perfection of drafting that, as an empirical matter, is not often achieved.” Thus, citing the Oxford Dictionary of English, the court concluded that through “unfortunate imprecision, the words ‘plan’ and ‘policy’ can be interchangeable. The court concluded that “although we might have read the provision differently, we can’t say that Hartford’s interpretation was unreasonable.”

The Eleventh Circuit quickly disposed of the rest of the steps, which concerned whether Hartford had a conflict of interest and whether that conflict affected its decision, concluding that “Hartford had discretion to determine whether Stewart was eligible for benefits under its policy, and it exercised that discretion reasonably. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s decision rejecting Stewart’s claim to disability benefits.”

The court then addressed Ms. Stewart’s claim for a disability waiver of premium under her life insurance benefit plan, and upheld Hartford’s denial of that claim as well. The court found that “the record shows that Stewart could sit for a couple of hours, stand for half an hour, and walk for half an hour. It also shows that while Stewart suffered from mild cognitive impairment, she retained the ability to perform less demanding tasks that didn’t require high-level analytical or organizational ability.” Thus, the court determined that Hartford was not “de novo wrong” when it concluded that Ms. Stewart could “perform less demanding sedentary work,” even if that work was only part-time.

This case serves as a stark reminder of the uphill battle ERISA claimants face when confronted with the abuse of discretion standard of review. Ms. Stewart proved to a federal appellate court’s satisfaction that her claim administrator had misread the policy, but that wasn’t enough. It is no surprise that state legislatures across the country have increasingly reacted to cases like this by prohibiting insurers from including discretionary authority provisions in their policies.

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

Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Second Circuit

Krohnengold v. N.Y. Life Ins. Co., No. 21-CV-1778 (JMF), 2022 WL 3227812 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 9, 2022) (Judge Jesse M. Furman). Participants of two 401(k) plans sponsored by New York Life Insurance Company filed this putative class action against New York Life and its investment committee, alleging defendants “breached their fiduciary duties, engaged in prohibited transactions, and violated ERISA’s anti-inurement provision.” Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that the plans’ stable value fund default investment option and their inclusion of proprietary funds was improper given the challenged funds’ comparative underperformance and high costs. In their complaint, plaintiffs asserted that defendants’ mismanagement caused the plans to lose over $930 million. Defendants moved to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). In this order, the court granted in part and denied in part the motion. The court agreed with defendants that four of the seven named plaintiffs lacked standing to bring their claims pertaining to the default investment option, because defendants were able to prove that those plaintiffs affirmatively selected to invest in the default investment option. Thus, the court dismissed, without prejudice, the claims of those four plaintiffs with respect to the default investment option. The remaining three plaintiffs’ contributions were instead automatically invested in the plan’s default investment option, conferring them with constitutional standing. Next, the court addressed whether plaintiffs adequately stated claims under Rule 12(b)(6) for breach of fiduciary duties, self-dealing, prohibited transactions, failure to monitor co-fiduciaries, and for a violation of ERISA Section 403(c)(1), the anti-inurement provision. While the court mostly found plaintiffs stated valid claims, the court dismissed plaintiffs’ claims with regard to the default investment option, finding they were time-barred because the plaintiffs who had standing to challenge the investment were defaulted into it more than six years prior to joining the lawsuit. The court also held that plaintiffs failed to plausibly allege a fiduciary duty claim based on one of their nine challenged proprietary funds because the allegations with respect to that one fund and its performance were determined to be too spare thus insufficient to state a claim. Finally, the court found the plaintiffs failed to state a plausible claim for violation of the anti-inurement provision. Second Circuit precedent holds that indirect benefits inuring to an employer are not sufficient to state a claim under Section 403(c)(1). As the complaint failed to allege more, including failing to allege any reversion or diversion of plan assets, the court held that plaintiffs did not plausibly state a claim under this provision. For all the claims that were dismissed, dismissal was without prejudice, and plaintiffs were granted leave to file an amended complaint to address the shortcomings.

Seventh Circuit

Placht v. Argent Trs. Co., No. 21 C 5783, 2022 WL 3226809 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 10, 2022) (Judge Ronald A. Guzmán). Plaintiff Carolyn Placht commenced this ERISA action individually and on behalf of a putative class of participants of the Symbria Inc. Employee Stock Ownership Plan in connection with the ESOP’s transaction in which all issued and outstanding shares of Symbria stock were purchased by the Plan and its Trust. Defendants are the ESOP’s trustee, Argent Trust Company, and the Selling Shareholders, which the court divided into two categories: the “management shareholders” and the “organizational shareholders.” In the transaction, the Plan paid $66.5 million for the Symbria shares “using the proceeds of a loan guaranteed by Symbria and a loan at 2.64% interest rate, from the Management Shareholders and Organizational Shareholders.” In her complaint, Ms. Placht asserted that the stock, which was not publicly traded, was revalued after the transaction as being worth between $7.8 million and $11 million. Therefore, Ms. Placht argued that defendants engaged in a prohibited transaction and breached their fiduciary duties failing to perform necessary due diligence in valuing the stock, by significantly overpaying for the stock, and by paying a control premium for Symbria without gaining control over the Board of Directors. Defendants filed three motions to dismiss. For all the motions, dismissal pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) was denied. The court, especially at this early stage of litigation, was satisfied that Ms. Placht alleged an injury in fact to confer her with standing. The court also denied defendant Argent Trust Company’s and the Management Shareholder defendants’ motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The complaint with regard to these defendants was found to be facially plausible, to properly allege these defendants were fiduciaries, and sufficiently allege breaches of fiduciary duties and a prohibited transaction. However, the court granted the Organizational Shareholders’ motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). For these defendants, the court was not satisfied that the complaint sufficiently alleged facts indicating that the Organizational Shareholders were in fact fiduciaries during the ESOP transaction. Ms. Placht’s allegations that these defendants had the authority to appoint and remove the Trustee of the plan (the Board of Directors), because each was permitted to appoint a single board member, were not enough for the court to reasonably infer the Organization Shareholders were fiduciaries with discretionary authority or discretionary responsibilities, especially because these defendants were not themselves members of the board. The dismissal of the claims against the Organizational Shareholder defendants was granted without prejudice.

Class Actions

Fourth Circuit

Blenko v. Cabell Huntington Hosp., No. 3:21-0315, 2022 WL 3229968 (S.D.W.V. Aug. 10, 2022) (Judge Robert C. Chambers). The parties reached a settlement agreement totaling $5,694,500 in this class action pertaining to defendant Cabell Huntington Hospital, Inc.’s decision to curtail or terminate retiree health benefits. The parties jointly moved to certify a class for settlement purposes, approve the proposed class notice, primarily approve the settlement, and set the date for the fairness hearing. In this order the court did just that. First, the court examined the proposed class of 211 non-union retirees of Cabell Huntington Hospital whose healthcare benefits were reduced or cut under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. Under Rule 23(a) the court was satisfied that the class is sufficiently numerous, defendant’s termination of the retirement medical benefits constitutes a common fact and creates common legal issues among the class, the named plaintiffs are typical of the other class members and were affected in the same way suffering the same injuries, and plaintiffs and their counsel (Sam B. Petsonk of Petsonk PLLC and Bren Pomponio and Laura Davidson of Mountain State Justice, Inc.) will adequately and fairly protect the class’s interests. Under Rule 23(b)(3) the court was convinced that “the class wide settlement provides a uniform resolution to the common claims in this matter regarding the same healthcare benefit plan.” For these reasons, the court granted the motion to certify class. Next, the court preliminarily approved of the settlement, finding it fair, reasonable, and adequate, and the product of informed arm’s length negotiations, which properly factored in the risk factors for each of the parties in continued litigation. The court also found the proposed attorneys’ fees of $994,900 (20% of the recovery) to be reasonable, especially as it means a recovery of nearly $19,000 for each class member. Finally, the court determined the proposed form of class notice (two rounds of individualized documents sent by U.S. Mail) to properly inform the class members of the essential information of the case and settlement and give each member the opportunity to appear at the hearing and to be excluded from the class should they choose. Thus, the motions before the court were granted and a date for the final approval hearing was set.

Fifth Circuit

Blackmon v. Zachary Holdings, Inc., No. SA-20-CV-00988-ESC, 2022 WL 3142362 (W.D. Tex. Aug. 5, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Elizabeth S. Chestney). Following a fairness hearing that took place in July, the court in this order granted final approval of a class action settlement. The class, defined as participants and beneficiaries of the Zachary Holdings, Inc. 401(k) Retirement Savings Plan during the class period, was found to satisfy the requirements of Rules 23(a) and (b)(1). Specifically, the court held that the class is sufficiently numerous, that common questions of law exist for the class as a whole, the claims of the class representatives are typical of the class, the class representatives adequately represented the interest of the class, and prosecution of separate actions would run the risk of inconsistent adjudications establishing incompatible requirements of conduct for the defendants. Thus, the court granted final approval to the class, and appointed Mr. Blackmon, Mr. Rozelle, Mr. Myers, and Mr. Munson as class representatives, and Capozzi Adler, P.C. and Miller Shah LLP as class counsel. Additionally, the court was satisfied that the class received proper notice of the settlement, the fairness hearing, and plaintiffs’ applications for attorneys’ fees, costs, and incentive awards. The amount of the settlement, $1,875,000, was found to be fair, reasonable, and adequate, and the result of an informed arm’s-length negotiation made in good faith. Allocation of the settlement was determined to be appropriate and reasonable. Finally, the court concluded that the requirements of the Class Action Fairness Act were all met. Accordingly, the causes of action in the suit were dismissed with prejudice in accordance with the releases and covenants not to sue outlined in the agreement, and the court entered final approval of the settlement.

Sixth Circuit

Green v. FCA U.S. LLC, No. 20-13079, 2022 WL 3153777 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge George Caram Steeh). This class action suit was brought by plaintiffs Gabriel Green and Valerie Hall-Green against their former employer FCA U.S. LLC and alleged that FCA failed to provide them and other similarly situated individuals with adequate notice of their rights under COBRA to continued health care coverage. The COBRA notices they did receive, they alleged, were not written in a manner that could be understood by the average plan participate in violation of ERISA. The parties engaged in mediation, reached a settlement totaling $600,000, and received the court’s preliminary approval of their proposed settlement. Notice of the proposed settlement was mailed to the 27,000 class members, reaching 98% of them. In this order, the court granted final approval of the class action settlement, and awarded attorneys’ fees, costs, and incentive awards. First, the court concluded that the class satisfies the requirements of Rule 23(a) and (b)(3). As nothing has changed since the court granted preliminary class certification, the court did not hesitate to grant final class certification. The court also concluded the settlement itself was fair, reasonable, and adequate. Turning to the award of class representative incentive awards, the court expressed its hesitancy at awarding the requested $5,000 to each of the two named plaintiffs. Because the remaining class members are expected to receive a net payment of only $10.40 each, the court decided that an award of $1,000 to each of the named plaintiffs more fairly aligns their interests with those of the rest of the class, while still adequately compensating them for their time and effort. The court did not, however, reduce the requested $200,000 in attorneys’ fees, representing one third of the total settlement, nor the $6,549 in litigation costs. The court was satisfied that plaintiffs’ counsel, who took the case on a contingent fee basis, demonstrated skill and expertise warranting the full award of the requested fees. As for the costs, which consisted of the mediator’s fee, filing fee, and service fees, the court found that they were reasonable and sufficiently documented.

Ninth Circuit

Draney v. Westco Chemicals, Inc., No. 2:19-cv-01405-ODW (AGRx), 2022 WL 3227849 (C.D. Cal. Aug. 10, 2022) (Judge Otis D. Wright, II). In this order the court denied the parties’ amended motion for preliminary approval of a $500,000 settlement and certification of class in this case pertaining to breaches of fiduciary duties and other violations of ERISA in connection with the Westco Chemicals Inc. 401(k) Plan. In denying the motion the court homed in on a perceived central problem – the proposal lacks a way to provide class members the option of opting out of the class, and the “non-opt-out nature of the settlement generates due process concerns.” To begin, the court expressed in strong tones that the class as proposed without the opportunity for members to opt out does not satisfy the requirements of Rule 23(b)(3), and certification under Rule 23(b)(1) or (b)(2) is not appropriate given the individualized monetary nature of the settlement as opposed to monetary relief for the plan as a whole. The court was not persuaded by plaintiffs’ argument that class certification under 23(b)(1) is appropriate because it prevents the risk of multiple judgments creating incompatible standards of conduct for defendants. “The risk of establishing incompatible standards of conduct refers to more than the chance that one individual’s claim might have precedential effect on another individual’s claim.” To the court, the incompatible standards of conduct principle refers instead to a situation where different rulings from different courts “impair the opposing party’s ability to pursue a uniform continuing course of conduct.” Ordering a party to pay monetary damages to one plan participant but not to another does not create such a conflict, and not all class actions “are categorically appropriate for Rule 23(b)(1)(A) certification.” In the next section of the decision, the court expressed its concerns over requiring class members to accept the settlement because “an individual employee whose account lost tens of thousands of dollars over the years might not be satisfied with a settlement that is around 30% lower than what the employee might have obtained individually.” Finding that the current non-opt out class fails “to comport with both the Rules and constitutional dues process,” the court rejected the settlement and denied the motion for preliminary approval.

Discovery

Seventh Circuit

Walsh v. Alight Sols., No. 21-3290, __ F. 4th __, 2022 WL 3334450 (7th Cir. Aug. 12, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Easterbrook, Rovner, and Brennan). The U.S. Department of Labor opened an investigation of defendant Alight Solutions, one of the country’s top third-party plan administrators, after discovering cybersecurity breaches at the company which resulted in unauthorized distributions of plan assets. The Department is looking into whether Alight failed to report, disclose, and restore those unauthorized distributions. As part of the Department’s investigation, it issued an administrative subpoena. Although Alight has produced some of the documents in relation to the subpoena, it has objected to much of the subpoena’s requests. In the district court, the Department’s motion to enforce the subpoena was granted, with some modifications. Alight appealed that decision, arguing that the Department lacks the authority to investigate it as it is not a fiduciary under ERISA. Alight argued the Department also lacks the authority to investigate cybersecurity breaches in general. Alight further argued that the subpoena’s demands are unduly burdensome and compliance with the subpoena would take “thousands of hours of work.” Finally, Alight argued that the district court erred when it denied Alight’s request for a protective order on certain documents it considers sensitive. The Seventh Circuit rejected Alight’s arguments and affirmed the position of the lower court. In reaching that decision, the Seventh Circuit was disinclined to issue a ruling that would undermine the Department’s “regulatory oversight.” It stated that Alight’s interpretation of the Department’s investigatory powers as being limited only to fiduciaries would create a loophole through which fiduciaries could “avoid liability altogether by outsourcing recordkeeping and administrative functions to non-fiduciary third-parties.” Accordingly, the appeals court agreed with the lower court that DOL has the power to investigate these cybersecurity breaches, whether or not a violation has occurred, and whether or not Alight is a fiduciary under ERISA with respect to those breaches. In response to Alight’s arguments over what it finds to be the overly burdensome and indefinite nature of the subpoena, the court expressed that the subpoena’s terms are clear, not indefinite, that Alight did not argue the documents lack reasonable relevancy to the investigation, and that Alight failed to provide necessary detail to support its burden argument. With regard to the thousands of hours of work Alight believes compliance will require, the court stated that if it were to believe Alight’s estimate, compliance would be “an admittedly cumbersome task,” but then theorized that “Alight’s estimates may be high because it increased its own burden of production by redacting many documents it produced – a practice the district court later disallowed.” In the order’s final section, the Seventh Circuit concluded the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Alight’s request for a protective order and the lower court’s logic in favor of transparency under the guidance of the Freedom of Information Act was not in error. Though the Seventh Circuit agreed with Alight that the information in question is sensitive, it found Alight failed to show how disclosure to the Department “would result in the information being revealed to a third party.” Finally, the Seventh Circuit stressed that “the Department’s cybersecurity investigation directly implicates this information.” For these reasons, Alight’s appeal was unsuccessful.

Ninth Circuit

L.D. v. United Behavioral Health, No. 20-cv-02254-YGR (JCS), 2022 WL 3139520 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 5, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Joseph C. Spero). Plaintiffs are participants in ERISA-governed healthcare plans insured and administered by defendants UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company and United Behavioral Health who brought this putative class action asserting claims under ERISA and RICO. In their complaint, plaintiffs allege that United utilized defendant MultiPlan, Inc., a cost-management company, to fraudulently reprice and reduce claims they pay to providers, specifically out-of-network behavioral health providers. The parties have filed joint discovery and supplemental discovery letters in which they outlined their privilege disputes. A hearing on plaintiffs’ motion to compel was held, and in this order the court ruled on legal issues related to the disagreement over privilege both for documents United sought to “claw back” and documents that United withheld. The parties disputed whether United properly sought to retrieve these documents under attorney-client privilege, or whether the fiduciary exception applies to the documents requiring the court to come to the opposite conclusion. Plaintiffs characterized the documents United sought to claw back as not seeking or supplying legal advice, arguing instead that “they are primarily for the purpose of giving or receiving business advice.” Plaintiffs objected to United’s assertion “that the process of underpaying claims does not implicate plan administration or their fiduciary duties.” United argued that the documents at issue avoid the fiduciary exception because they discuss the possibility of litigation. In response, plaintiffs stressed that the heart of the litigation centers around allegations of fraudulent underpayments and the programs “that are the basis for United’s privilege assertions are the subject of their RICO claims and fall under the crime-fraud exception to attorney-client privilege,” and none of the documents “were prepared specifically for litigation.” With regard to the privilege logs of the withheld documents, plaintiffs felt the assertions of privilege were lacking required details and descriptions. In plaintiffs view, United was using pretextual attorney-client privilege claims “to shield business discussions from discovery.” Plaintiffs also claimed that documents were mislabeled and misrepresented as privileged. The court for its part agreed that the privilege logs were insufficient for it “to determine, even on a general level, the type of legal advice being sought,” and the generic term “strategic legal planning” used by United was wanting. The court quoted itself from its earlier Wit decision, stating, “in the class action context…an approach that focuses too heavily on litigation exposure without requiring a showing that advise was actually sought for defensive purposes undermines the principles that the fiduciary exception is designed to protect.” Recognizing that “virtually any policy or guideline may, at some point, be the subject of litigation” the court was unwilling to allow United to invoke the possibility of litigation as a way to avoid the fiduciary exception altogether. Thus, the court ordered United to review all the documents in dispute, produce all non-privileged documents under the court’s issued guidance, and produce new privilege log and supplemental declarations in support of privilege for the documents it still believes to be properly withheld. The court also reviewed the clawback documents, and with a few minor exceptions concluded that they could not properly be withheld on the basis of privilege.

Ninth Circuit

Zimmerman v. The Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 21-cv-03346-YGR (TSH), 2022 WL 3223980 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 10, 2022) (Magistrate Judge Thomas S. Hixson). Federal law of privilege and state laws of privilege are often at odds. So “what is a litigant supposed to do when a given document is not privileged under federal law and thus seems to be discoverable with respect to the federal claims, but is privileged under state law and thus seems to be nondiscoverable as to the state claims,” which is the situation in this case. What indeed? In this decision, the court found its answer under Ninth Circuit law: because defendant The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America conceded that the information in dispute (communications between Guardian’s in-house counsel and its claims department) is relevant to both the federal ERISA claims as well as the state law claims, “federal privilege law – and only federal privilege law – applies.” Holding otherwise would create a impractical and paradoxical situation in which documents are “both privileged and nonprivileged at the same time in the same lawsuit.” Thus, the fiduciary exception to attorney-client privilege compelled the court to order Guardian to produce the disputed communications in unredacted form.

ERISA Preemption

Ninth Circuit

Wagoner v. First Fleet Inc., No. CV-22-00990-PHX-JAT, 2022 WL 3213266 (D. Ariz. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge James A. Teilborg). Plaintiff Gary L. Wagoner is a chiropractor who has been assigned benefits from a patient covered under an ERISA-governed healthcare plan. Mr. Wagoner sued the insurance company First Fleet Inc. in state court asserting state law claims of breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and a violation of Arizona insurance law seeking payment for medical services provided. The case was removed to the District of Arizona. First Fleet has now moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim, arguing the state law causes of action are preempted by ERISA. The court granted the motion and agreed with First Fleet that the claims relate to and affect the administration of the ERISA-governed plan. Despite finding the claims preempted, the court granted Mr. Wagoner leave to amend his complaint to replead his claims under ERISA. Additionally, First Fleet moved to strike Mr. Wagoner’s responsive briefing, which referenced settlement negotiations. The court denied the motion to strike given the Ninth Circuit’s preference in favor of public records, and the lack of any compelling reasons to seal the information from the record. However, the court agreed with First Fleet that the settlement negotiations could not be a part of its consideration of the merits of the motion to dismiss and clarified that it did not consider the negotiations in that capacity.

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies

Eleventh Circuit

Baker v. Am. Teleconferencing Servs., No. 1:22-CV-30-TWT, 2022 WL 3212335 (N.D. Ga. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge Thomas W. Thrash, Jr.). Plaintiffs are employees of defendant Premiere Global Services, Inc. who were involuntarily laid off last September. Plaintiffs brought this ERISA suit seeking among other things payment of severance benefits they assert they were eligible for and entitled to upon termination. The Premiere defendants moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ claim for benefits. Plaintiffs requested that the court find defendants’ motion to dismiss moot. Both motions were granted in part and denied in part. Arguing in favor of dismissal, defendants stated that plaintiffs’ claim for unpaid severance benefits was premature for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Plaintiffs, arguing in favor of their motion, attached a letter from the HR Resources Officer of Premiere explaining that defendants “construed a settlement demand letter sent by Plaintiff’s counsel as initiating the administrative claims process for severance benefits,” and which went on to conclude that all but one of the named plaintiffs “are entitled to severance benefits.” Despite receiving an extension of time to respond to plaintiff’s motion, the Premiere Defendants never responded. Thus, the court concluded that the motion to dismiss was moot with respect to each of the named plaintiffs apart from Paula Reese, the only named plaintiff not found to be entitled to severance benefits in the HR representative’s letter. Because it is clear that Ms. Reese has not fully exhausted her administrative appeals process, the motion to dismiss was granted regarding Ms. Reese. The court did, however, allow Ms. Reese leave to amend her complaint to plead exhaustion, should she wish to do so.

Medical Benefit Claims

Ninth Circuit

Doe v. Blue Shield of Cal., No. 21-cv-02138-RS, 2022 WL 3155158 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge Richard Seeborg). Plaintiff John Doe sued Blue Shield of California under ERISA seeking payment of benefits for his daughter’s stay at an in-network residential treatment center, Avalon Hills, for care of her eating disorder which was denied by the insurer as not “medically necessary.” In this order, the court concluded that the denial of benefits for Ms. Doe at the program for her stay beyond the four-week period that Blue Shield paid for was an abuse of discretion. Before Ms. Doe’s stay at Avalon Hills, she had been treated in intensive outpatient, partial hospitalization, and inpatient hospitalization settings, and had experienced suicidal and other self-harm thoughts. Her providers at Avalon Hills upon speaking with Blue Shield expressed that Ms. Doe required continued care at the inpatient treatment level because she could not at the time “manage the most basic person need, eating” and “left to herself, (Ms. Doe) would return to restrictive eating.” Ms. Doe’s treating nurse practitioner outlined the potential dangers of reducing Ms. Doe’s care at the time and stated that “there is a high likelihood of relapse with potential associated morbidity and/or mortality.” Despite this, Blue Shield’s denial letter expressly stated that Ms. Doe was “not a danger to (herself) or others.” In outlining why the denial was an abuse of discretion, the court began by stating that the denial letter was inappropriately “barebones,” as it failed to discuss or reference the medical records and “provided no basis for its conclusion such that Jane was ‘not a danger’ to herself or others and that Jane was ‘cooperative’ in her treatment.” The court saw the denial letter as little more than “a recitation of conclusions, with next to no information about how it arrived at those conclusions.” Beyond the problems with the denial letter, the court also objected to Blue Shield ignoring and failing to have a dialogue with the opinions of Ms. Doe’s treating providers. The record, the court stated, appeared to contradict the denial letter, because as described above the providers believed that Ms. Doe was potentially in danger at lower levels of care. Blue Shield seemed also to ignore Ms. Doe’s past medical history including her stays at other inpatient and outpatient programs. Finally, the court’s decision addressed Blue Shield’s conflict of interest which it viewed as “draped over this entire landscape of errors and omissions.” Given that conflict, the court weighed the fundamental problems within the denial “even more heavily.” For these reasons, the court granted judgment in favor of plaintiff for the period of time assessed in Blue Shield’s denial and remanded to Blue Shield for determination of benefits for the remaining period of Ms. Doe’s stay that was paid for out of pocket. Plaintiff was represented in this suit by our colleague Elizabeth Green at Kantor & Kantor.

Tenth Circuit

Ian C. v. United Healthcare Ins., Co., No. 2:19-cv-474, 2022 WL 3279860 (D. Utah Aug. 11, 2022) (Judge Howard C. Nielson, Jr.). Plaintiffs Ian C. and A.C. sued United Healthcare Insurance seeking benefits for mental health and substance abuse disorder treatment at a residential treatment center. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on the claim for benefits. To begin, the court addressed the appropriate standard of review. Concluding that United substantially complied with ERISA’s requirements in its denial letters, and because of the plan’s discretionary clause, the court reviewed the denial under the deferential arbitrary and capricious standard. For several reasons, the court was convinced that the denial was not an abuse of discretion. First, the court held that the record contradicts plaintiffs’ argument that the denial only addressed A.C.’s mental health disorders and not A.C.’s substance abuse. Contrary to plaintiffs’ assertion, United had substantial evidence that A.C.’s substance abuse had improved by the time of the denial, and United’s reviewer expressly noted A.C.’s substance abuse during the review. Next, the court found that substantial evidence within the record supported United’s conclusion that A.C.’s treatment was not medically necessary as defined by the plan and United’s guidelines of “generally accepted standards of medical practice.” Nor did the court find that United disregarded the opinions of A.C.’s treating providers or failed to engage in a meaningful dialogue with those providers. To the court, the record indicated the opposite. Finally, the court was satisfied that United appropriately articulated how it applied the plan terms and the medical guidelines it utilized in the denial letters it sent to plaintiffs. Thus, the court granted summary judgment in favor of United and denied summary judgment to plaintiffs.

Pleading Issues & Procedure

First Circuit

Diaz v. MCS Life Ins. Co., No. 21-1376 (ADC), 2022 WL 3227806 (D.P.R. Aug. 10, 2022) (Judge Aida M. Delgado-Colon). Plaintiffs are a family who had health insurance through a plan provided by Pep Boys, the employer of the father, plaintiff Carlos M. Suarez Diaz. One of the plaintiffs, Karelis Suarez-Colon, Carlos’s daughter, was diagnosed with a cancerous tumor in her head which required surgery. Before the surgery could take place, Carlos was informed that his insurance coverage was cancelled. Eventually all the members of the family except for Karelis had their insurance coverage reactivated, meaning her surgery had to be postponed. After Carlos obtained another health plan for his daughter, the surgery eventually took place. Plaintiffs commenced this suit in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico Court of First Instance, asserting claims of contractual and tort damages under Puerto Rico law. Defendants removed the case to federal court, claiming the causes of action asserted in the complaint are preempted by ERISA. Plaintiffs never appeared before the federal district court. Defendants have now moved to dismiss. Agreeing that the claims are preempted by ERISA and given the fact that the motions to dismiss were unopposed, the court granted the motions. In particular, the court found that the plan is governed by ERISA and the state law claims naturally relate to the plan and its administration. Additionally, the court agreed with defendant Pep Boys that the complaint fails to address whether plaintiffs failed to exhaust administrative remedies prior to filing suit, and also fails to allege that exhaustion would have been futile. Finally, the court expressed that even reading the complaint in plaintiffs’ favor it could not find that plaintiffs stated a plausible claim under ERISA against defendant MCS Life Insurance Company. For these reasons the complaint was dismissed. Dismissal was without prejudice.

Fifth Circuit

Theriot v. Bldg. Trades United Pension Tr. Fund, No. 18-10250, 2022 WL 3214451 (E.D. La. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge Lance M. Africk). In this suit plaintiff Deborah Theriot sued The Building Trades United Pension Trust Fund after the fund refused to honor her mother’s request to convert her pension payments from monthly installments to a lump-sum shortly before her death. After giving Ms. Theriot an opportunity to address defendant’s arguments in favor of dismissing her Section 510 retaliation claim, the court in this order granted defendant’s motion and dismissed the claim with prejudice. The court stated that it could not discern an appropriate basis for monetary equitable relief with respect to the retaliation claim, and thus agreed with defendants that Ms. Theriot had failed properly state a claim upon which relief could be granted under Rule 12(b)(6).

Seventh Circuit

Walsh v. Fensler, No. 22 C 1030, 2022 WL 3154182 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge Elaine E. Bucklo). Secretary of Labor Martin J. Walsh brought this suit against fiduciaries of the United Employee Benefit Fund Trust for breaches of their duties and participating in prohibited transactions by using Fund assets inappropriately and in a self-dealing manner, resulting in losses to the Fund. Defendants moved to dismiss in three motions before the court. Secretary Walsh moved to strike the affirmative defenses of two of the non-moving defendants. In this order the court denied all the motions to dismiss and granted the motion to strike. To begin, the court held that it has sufficient subject matter jurisdiction over the case. The court rejected defendants’ arguments that the Fund at issue is excluded from ERISA’s definition of a multi-employer welfare arrangement on the basis that it was established pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement. In fact, the court stated that the complaint makes clear that although the Fund “holds itself out as a voluntary employees’ beneficiary association trust under a collectively bargained, multi-employer plan,” the Fund in fact operates as a multi-employer plan comprising ERISA-governed participating plans. The court went on to express that the complaint sufficiently alleges that defendants are functional fiduciaries who had knowledge of the wrongdoing alleged. Finally, the court concluded that under the Twombly/Iqbal pleading standard, the Secretary’s complaint adequately states actionable ERISA claims. As for the Secretary’s motion to strike the affirmative defenses, the court concluded that the Secretary’s actions were timely filed under the limitation periods that defendants cited, and agreed with the Secretary that defendants’ contention that superseding/intervening causes caused the losses to the Fund was not an affirmative defense at all, but instead a merits argument. For these reasons, the motions to dismiss were denied and the motion to strike was granted.

Ninth Circuit

Raya v. Barka, No. 19-cv-2295-WQH-AHG, 2022 WL 3161680 (S.D. Cal. Aug. 8, 2022) (Judge William Q. Hayes). In July, Your ERISA Watch summarized the court’s decision in this case denying plaintiff Robert Raya’s motion for reconsideration in which Mr. Raya argued that he was a plan participant with standing to sue under ERISA. Mr. Raya moved for a second time for the court to reconsider its earlier position. Once again, the court held that the existence of a plan amendment executed in 2008 excludes Mr. Raya from the class of employees eligible for participation in the plan, and that no new evidence or manifest injustice compels it to overturn its summary judgment order in favor of defendant.

Eleventh Circuit

Perras v. The Coca-Cola Co. of N. Am., No. 21-13908, __ F. App’x __, 2022 WL 3269970 (11th Cir. Aug. 11, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Wilson, Brasher, and Anderson). In a summary judgment ruling, the district court entered judgment in favor of the Coca-Cola Company on pro se plaintiff/appellant David Perras’s Section 502(a)(3) breach of fiduciary duty claim. Mr. Perras argued that the Coca-Cola Company fraudulently represented that Mr. Perras was no longer entitled to long-term disability benefits due to an administrative error. In front of the district court and on appeal, Mr. Perras argued that under the terms of the plan he was entitled to continued benefits and sought relief from the judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(3). The district court in its order “concluded that Perras had provided ‘nothing’ in support of the fraud allegations” and denied his motion for relief from the judgment. On appeal, Mr. Perras sought to overturn that ruling, and claimed that relief from judgment was warranted under Rule 60(a) because he failed to upload several exhibits into the district court record which he claimed proved that he was entitled to benefits. The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the lower court’s decision because Mr. Perras failed to raise this clerical mistake issue with the court, and because the court had not abused its discretion. The Eleventh Circuit agreed with the district court that none of Mr. Perras’s arguments proved that Coca-Cola’s explanation of what had occurred was fraudulent or that its explanation “prevented Perras from fully presenting his case.”

Remedies

Tenth Circuit

Jonathan Z. v. Oxford Health Plans, No. 2:18-cv-00383-JNP-JCB, 2022 WL 3227909 (D. Utah Aug. 9, 2022) (Judge Jill N. Parrish). On July 7, the court ruled on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment in this suit for mental health care benefits. As Your ERISA Watch summarized at the time, the court found the denial of benefits was not de novo wrong and granted summary judgment in favor of defendant Oxford Health Plans on the Section 502(a)(1)(B) claim. However, the court also concluded that the plan was in violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act by applying more stringent qualifications for coverage of mental health care than for analogous physical medical care. That decision ended with the court ordering the parties to submit supplemental briefing on equitable relief related to those violations. The parties did so, and in this order the court weighed in on their arguments. Although the court recognized the difficulties plaintiffs face obtaining relief from Parity Act violations, and the fact that Congress’s intent in passing the Parity Act was to address discriminatory practices in plan design and achieving parity between mental health and physical/surgical healthcare, the court ultimately concluded that the “basic legal principles regarding standing and mootness prohibit the court from entering a declaratory judgment here.” At the end of the day, plaintiffs could not overcome their lack of Article III standing. The court concluded that plaintiffs did not sustain a concrete injury as a result of the violations because the two portions of the Plan that were not in compliance with the Parity Act “did not control Oxford’s decision to deny benefits to Daniel Z.” Additionally, plaintiffs could not point to a credible threat of injury to establish standing for prospective relief either as plaintiff Jonathan Z. is no longer enrolled in any Oxford health plan, and plaintiff Daniel Z. is enrolled in a different Oxford health plan that is not subject to the violative language. For substantially the same reasons that plaintiffs could not establish standing for prospective relief, they also failed to prove that declaratory relief would settle the “controversy or determine any future rights or obligations.” Given these shortcomings, the court ultimately granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ Parity Act claims and denied plaintiffs’ motion.

Retaliation Claims

Fourth Circuit

Duvall v. Novant Health Inc., No. 3:19-CV-00624-DSC, 2022 WL 3331263 (W.D.N.C. Aug. 11, 2022) (Judge David S. Cayer). Stemming from his termination in 2018, plaintiff David Duvall brought three claims against his former employer, Novant Health: (1) a claim under Title VII; (2) a claim for wrongful termination under North Carolina law; and (3) an ERISA interference claim under Section 510. A trial took place, with the jury returning a verdict in favor of Mr. Duvall and awarding him $10 million in punitive damages for Novant’s Title VII and state law violations. The parties filed a series of post-trial motions. In this order the court addressed the ERISA claim, not decided during the jury trial, and adjusted Mr. Duvall’s monetary awards. As for the Section 510 claim, the court denied Mr. Duvall’s summary judgment motion. Mr. Duvall’s interference claim was based on a severance policy from 2013. Mr. Duvall was a participant in Novant’s severance plan, and under the 2013 version of the plan participants’ tenure factored into their resulting benefits. Mr. Duvall was fired only a few days before his fifth year at Novant. The 2013 policy included a significant fifth-year severance enhancement and Mr. Duvall argued that his termination prevented him from receiving those enhanced benefits. However, there was a fundamental flaw in Mr. Duvall’s argument. Novant was able to prove that it had in fact amended the plan in writing in 2015, and under the 2015 version tenure was immaterial to Mr. Duvall’s entitlement to severance benefits. “The fact that Plaintiff was covered under Defendant’s 2013 Policy does not entitle him to benefits when it was supplanted by the 2015 Policy. Plaintiff’s claim that Defendant acted unlawfully to deprive him of benefits is (thus) unsupported by the written terms of the 2015 Policy.” In addition to denying Mr. Duvall’s ERISA claim, the court also reduced the award of putative damages from the $10 million awarded by the jury to the $300,000 cap under Title VII, finding Mr. Duvall had not met the heightened standards for an award of punitive damages under North Carolina law. Finally, the court awarded Mr. Duvall $3,666,561 in backpay and $1,078,066 in front pay, concluding reinstatement would be inappropriate in this case given the parties’ hostility to one another.

Venue

Ninth Circuit

Fred G. v. Anthem Blue Cross Life & Health Ins. Co., No. 22-cv-01259-RS, 2022 WL 3227127 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 10, 2022) (Judge Richard Seeborg). Plaintiff Fred G. is a participant of the Directors Guild of America Producer Health Plan, who has sued the Plan and Anthem Blue Cross Life & Health Insurance Company for payment of claims for his son’s stay at a residential treatment center for mental health care and for breach of fiduciary duties. The Plan filed a motion to dismiss, or in the alternative, to transfer venue. Anthem remained neutral on the motion to transfer, not weighing in one way or another. In this order, the court granted the motion to transfer the case to the Central District of California, concluding that the Northern District of California is not a proper venue under ERISA Section 502(e), and the litigation has little connection with the Northern District of California. Specifically, the court held (1) that there was little evidence that the Plan “purposefully conducted activities in the Northern District,” (2) fewer than 1% of plan participants live in the Northern District of California, (3) the claim does not arise out of or result from the Plan’s “forum-related activities,” (4) plaintiff does not live in the Northern District, and (5) the absence of connection between the suit and the Northern District means the reasonableness prong of specific jurisdiction is not satisfied. Finding outright dismissal not warranted in this instance, especially because venue is proper for the other defendant in the case, Anthem, the court instead transferred venue for the case as a whole to the district in which the case should have been brought. Accordingly, the case will proceed in the Central District of California.

Withdrawal Liability & Unpaid Contributions

Sixth Circuit

Operating Engrs’ Local 324 Fringe Benefit Funds v. Rieth-Riley Constr. Co., No. 21-1229, __ F. 4th __, 2022 WL 3147929 (6th Cir. Aug. 8, 2022) (Before Circuit Judges Clay, Donald, and Nalbandian). Operating Engineers Local 324 Fringe Benefit Funds sued a construction contractor, Rieth-Riley Construction Company, under Section 515 of ERISA and Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act after the employer missed required contributions, seeking an order from the district court compelling an audit and requiring the employer to pay any delinquent contributions. In the district court, Rieth-Riley argued that the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because no live contract bound the parties after the collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between them had expired. Reith-Riley therefore argued that the National Labor Relations Board had exclusive jurisdiction to resolve the dispute. The Funds held the opposite opinion, arguing their claim was rooted in contract, not statute, as “the parties implicitly had agreed to revive the expired CBA…(and) even if they hadn’t…independent agreements continued to bind the parties.” Finally, the Funds expressed that in its view whether or not a live contract existed is a merits issue, not one that went to the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction. In the district court, Rieth-Riley’s arguments prevailed. The court agreed that the source of the contribution obligation was “an essential jurisdictional fact.” Since the CBA had expired and parties had not entered into a new contract, the lower court concluded that Rieth-Riley’s duty arose solely from its statutory status quo obligation found in the National Labor Relations Act. The court accordingly dismissed the case without prejudice. The Funds appealed to the Sixth Circuit. On appeal, the Sixth Circuit concluded that district court had erred in holding that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the case. Instead, the appeals court agreed with the Funds that the question of whether a live contract between the parties exists goes to the merits not jurisdiction. Accordingly, Rieth-Riley’s factual attack on the district court’s jurisdiction was reversed. “In the end, the Funds’ contract claims may fall flat for the reasons the district court gave,” but thanks to the Sixth Circuit, the end has not yet come.