Alison Butter v. Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company and Metrowest Jewish Day School Disability Plan

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 22, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-11499
StatusUnknown

This text of Alison Butter v. Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company and Metrowest Jewish Day School Disability Plan (Alison Butter v. Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company and Metrowest Jewish Day School Disability Plan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alison Butter v. Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company and Metrowest Jewish Day School Disability Plan, (D. Mass. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

_______________________________________ ) ALISON BUTTER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 24-11499-MJJ ) HARTFORD LIFE AND ACCIDENT ) INSURANCE COMPANY, and ) METROWEST JEWISH DAY SCHOOL ) DISABILITY PLAN ) ) Defendant. ) _______________________________________)

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

January 22, 2026

JOUN, D.J.

Plaintiff Alison Butter (“Ms. Butter”) brings this action against Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company (“Hartford”) and Metrowest Jewish Day School Disability Plan (together, “Defendants”) under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., alleging that Defendants improperly denied her long-term disability benefits. The parties have each moved for Summary Judgment. [Doc. Nos. 36, 38]. For the reasons below, both motions are DENIED. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. The Policy Metrowest Jewish Day School (“Metrowest”) hired Ms. Butter as a Director of Student Support or Student Success Coordinator. [Doc No. 31-2 at 944; Doc. No. 31-5 at 109]. Metrowest offers employees long term disability insurance coverage pursuant to a group policy (the “Policy”) issued by Hartford. [Doc. No. 31-7 at 115]. The Policy provides long-term disability benefits (“LTD benefits”) if claimants prove a continuing disability that lasts through the Policy’s Elimination period and beyond. [Id. at 120; 129]. The Policy provides the following

definition for “Disability or Disabled”: Disability or Disabled means You are prevented from performing one or more of the Essential Duties of: (1) Your Occupation during the Elimination Period; (2) Your Occupation, for the 2 year(s) following the Elimination Period, and as a result Your Current Monthly earnings are less than 80% of Your Indexed Pre-disability Earnings; and (3) after that, Any Occupation.

[Id. at 129 (emphasis omitted)]. In other words, during the Elimination Period and the first 24 months following it, Disabled means “You are prevented from performing one or more of the Essential Duties of Your Occupation. [Id. at 125, 129]. After benefits are paid for 24 months, the definition of Disability changes to the “Any Occupation” standard. [Id. at 129]. “Specifically, “Your Occupation” means the claimant’s occupation “as it is recognized in the general workplace. Your Occupation does not mean the specific job You are performing for a specific employer or at a specific location.” [Id. at 132]. An “Essential Duty” is a duty that “1) is substantial, not incidental; 2) is fundamental or inherent to the occupation; and 3) cannot be reasonably omitted or changed.” [Id.]. A claimant’s ability to work the number of hours in her regularly scheduled workweek is an Essential Duty, but it is not an Essential Duty to work more than 45 hours a week. [Id.]. The Policy also contains the following stipulation as to Hartford’s discretion: “We have full discretion and authority to determine eligibility for benefits and to construe and interpret all terms and provisions of The Policy. This provision applies where the interpretation of The Policy is governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA).” [Id. at 128]. B. Initial Claim For Benefits Ms. Butter stopped working on March 26, 2021. [Doc. No. 31-2 at 944; Doc. No. 31-5 at

152]. She submitted a claim for disability benefits stating she suffered from “leg pain, neck pain, overall body pain, and fatigue.” [Doc. No. 31-5 at 152]. Ms. Butter described her occupational duties as “creat[ing] support schedules for staff and students, public school liaison, mentor services, work with parents etc…” [Id. at 151]. In addition to her claim form, Ms. Butter submitted an Attending Physician Statement dated September 16, 2021, from Dr. Susan R. Gordon, her primary care physician. [Id. at 159–161]. Dr. Gordon listed a confirmed diagnosis of “mild bilateral osteoarth[r]itis, complex ovarian cyst” and a description of symptoms of “bilateral leg paresthesia/pain, cervical radiculopathy, fibromyalgia, chronic pelvic congestion and pelvic pain, Raynaud’s anemia of chronic dse.” [Id. at 159, 161]. Dr. Gordon also determined that Ms. Butter was unable to work and completely unable to sit, stand, or walk

during a typical day. [Id. at 161]. Finally, Dr. Gordon was “unable to determine” the expected duration of Ms. Butter’s restrictions or limitations but noted that Mr. Butter was looking for permanent disability. [Id.]. Ms. Butter also spoke with Hartford Senior Ability Analyst Susan H. Peterson and told her that she was only able to hold her head up for 18 to 20 minutes at a time before having severe pain. [Doc. No. 31-2 at 527]. According to Ms. Peterson’s report, Ms. Butter believed the neck surgery she had made things worse, Ms. Butter was recovering from surgery for an ovarian cyst, and Ms. Butter stopped working because it was getting too much for her body. [Id.]. On October 4, 2021, Hartford informed Ms. Butter that Hartford had approved her claim for long term disability benefits. [Doc. No. 31-2 at 557]. Such benefits became payable effective June 24, 2021, after conclusion of the 90-day Elimination Period. [Id.]. C. Medical Treatment 1. 2021

On November 8, 2021, Dr. Gordon documented that Ms. Butter’s mood was adversely affected by chronic pain but she was not depressed, that Ms. Butter continued to have severe neck pain, felt pain and numbness in her left leg more than her right leg, and that her weight loss appeared to have stabilized. [Doc. No. 31-3 at 19–20]. On November 28, 2021, Ms. Butter was involved in a motor vehicle accident, where she was rear-ended, resulting in increased pain in the neck and shoulder region and the lower back and buttock. [Doc. No. 31-4 at 53–54]. There were no reported fractures from CAT scans, but Ms. Butter reported ongoing pain. [Id. at 54]. On December 13, 2021, Ms. Butter was seen by Dr. Robert Friday who documented that Ms. Butter’s left leg pain was getting worse and her right foot was slowly worsening. [Doc. No. 31-4 at 226]. On December 29, 2021, Dr. Omar H. El Abd evaluated Ms. Butter and determined

she had bilateral C7 radicular pain, cervical facets arthropathy, and deconditioning. [Doc. No. 31-4 at 201]. Dr. Abd determined that if an MRI test was positive and the pain persisted, Ms. Butter should undergo therapeutic left C7 spinal nerve root block injections. [Id. at 202]. 2. 2022 Ms. Butter continued to see Dr. Abd roughly monthly in early 2022. See [Doc. No. 31-4 at 203–222]. In a January 2022 visit, Dr. Abd documented that Ms. Butter reported persistent pain, that Ms. Butter uses a cane and that heal, toe, and tandem walking was possible with assistance. [Id. at 203, 205]. Dr. Abd determined that for further management, Ms. Butter would undergo left C6-7 injections. [Id. at 206]. Ms. Butter was given two injections in February 2022 and on March 16, 2022, Physician Assistant Tracey J. Crossman reported “Right C6-7 facet joint intra-articular injection on 2/1/2022 with 70% temporary improvement of her symptoms X 3 weeks.” [Id. at 213]. The physical examination included notes about reduced bilateral neck rotation, pain on lateral bending, axial compression and neck rotation positive bilaterally. [Id. at 215]. Finally, the report stated that “[f]or further management, the patient will undergo Therapeutic Right C6-7 facet joint injections…” [Id. at 216].

On April 5, 2022, Ms. Butter saw Dr. Zacharia Isaac for an evaluation. [Doc. No. 31-3 at 1]. Dr. Isaac noted that Ms. Butter had some injections with his colleague, Dr. Abd, with some improvement and found no electrophysiologic evidence of peroneal neuropathy or L4-S1 radiculopathy on the left side. [Id. at 1, 6].

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Bluebook (online)
Alison Butter v. Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company and Metrowest Jewish Day School Disability Plan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alison-butter-v-hartford-life-and-accident-insurance-company-and-metrowest-mad-2026.