Bard v. Boston Shipping Ass'n

471 F.3d 229, 39 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2047, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 31137, 2006 WL 3717376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 2006
Docket06-1810
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 471 F.3d 229 (Bard v. Boston Shipping Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bard v. Boston Shipping Ass'n, 471 F.3d 229, 39 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2047, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 31137, 2006 WL 3717376 (1st Cir. 2006).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

This is an unusually complex denial of benefits case that arises under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461. The defendant is a multi-employer pension plan (“BSA-ILA” or “the Plan”), and at issue is a decision by its Board of Trustees (“the Board”) to deny disability benefits to a former employee, Paul Bard. The district court upheld this denial. We reverse and order an award of benefits.

In so doing, we do not reach Bard’s invitation to join those circuits holding that a plan’s ERISA violations will strip it of the deference its decisions otherwise enjoy. Rather, using a model of analysis previously employed by this circuit, we hold that Bard was prejudiced by the Plan’s numerous regulatory violations, and that on the particular facts here he is entitled to the remedy of an award of benefits.

I.

Bard worked as a crane operator on the Boston docks for some 30 years. On July 16, 2001, he was involved in a workplace accident. As Bard had a history of substance abuse and was working under a “last chance agreement,” he was subjected *231 to a post-accident drug test. He tested positive. His employment was accordingly terminated on July 23, 2001.

Bard sought medical treatment, and his doctors diagnosed him as suffering from a variety of psychological disorders that made him disabled and unable to work. 1 Before applying for disability benefits from the Plan, Bard applied for Social Security disability benefits on November 26, 2001. His Social Security claim was initially denied. However, on May 10, 2003, after a hearing at which Bard presented additional evidence, an ALJ issued a written opinion awarding Bard disability benefits on the basis that Bard had been suffering from a “severe” disability since July 22, 2001 — one day before Bard received his termination letter.

Armed with this finding, Bard applied for disability benefits from BSA-ILA. The troubled journey of that application is described below. 2

A. The Plan’s Structure and Documents

BSA-ILA is a multi-employer employee benefits plan, regulated by ERISA, and governed by a Board of Trustees composed of 14 members. Seven members are management trustees selected by the Boston Shipping Association, and seven are union trustees selected by the International Longshoremen’s Association. If the trustees deadlock on an issue, an “impartial umpire” selected by the trustees will cast the deciding vote. A plan provision declares that “[ejxcept as provided by ERISA, all decisions of the Board, including all those made in the interpretation and administration of the Plan, shall be conclusive, final and binding.”

For disability benefits, plan documents state that a claimant is eligible for these benefits if he, or she, is a “Participant who has completed fifteen ... Years of Service [and] becomes totally and permanently disabled.” The Plan also provides that “[t]he Board, upon competent medical evidence, shall be the sole judge of whether a Participant is disabled.” The word “Participant” is defined in the Plan to mean “an Employee who has met the requirements of eligibility to participate in the Plan.” “Employee” is in turn defined as “each individual who now, or hereafter is employed as a Longshoreman, Clerk, or Linehandler in the industry and is a member of the ILA and for whom an Employer is required to make contributions” to the Plan. Nothing in the Plan’s documents explicitly states that an applicant for disability benefits must have become disabled at a time when he was still employed.

The administrative record contains what appears to be the summary plan description (SPD). See 29 U.S.C. § 1022(a) (requiring an ERISA plan to provide information about the plan “written in a manner calculated to be understood by the average plan participant and ... sufficiently accurate and comprehensive to reasonably apprise such participants and beneficiaries of their rights and obligations under the plan”). That SPD states that “[t]o be eligible [for disability *232 benefits] you must: [ (1) ] Have completed 15 Years of Pension Service at the time you became disabled ... [and (2) ] Demonstrate to the Board by submission on approved forms of competent medical evidence that you are permanently and totally disabled.” Nothing in the SPD states that the claimant must have been disabled at a time when he was still employed. The SPD is dated April 1988, and there is no evidence that the Plan ever updated its SPD, or, if so, that any updated description was provided to Bard.

B. Bard’s First Benefits Application

Sometime between August and October of 2003, Bard notified BSA-ILA that he wanted to apply for disability benefits in accordance with the Plan’s provisions. Bard’s initial letter stated that he had been diagnosed with manic depression, “which the doctor felt was a chronic on going [sic] problem for many years,” and that the Social Security Administration had found him mentally disabled. The record does not reveal whether Bard provided any documentation along with this letter.

At its regular meeting on October 29, 2003, the Board determined that Bard was not eligible to apply for a disability pension. The Board’s minutes refer to a prior arbitration, dated July 15, 2002, which had rejected an application for disability benefits from a claimant named Gerard McLaughlin (the “McLaughlin arbitration”). The Board read the McLaughlin arbitration to mean that an individual who was no longer employed was ineligible to even apply for a disability pension. It also apparently interpreted this arbitration to mean that an employee is only eligible for benefits if he became totally and permanently disabled while still employed. We note that the Board had never amended the SPD to reflect these points, and Bard had no prior notice of the Board’s reading.

It is also not clear that this was the correct reading. The McLaughlin decision, which is in the record, relied heavily on minutes from a February 1993 Board meeting in which the Board apparently denied a claim from a former employee named Paul Cocchi (the “Cocchi claim”) because the “onset” of Cocchi’s disabling condition had occurred after Cocchi had left employment. Finding McLaughlin’s case indistinguishable from Cocchi’s, the arbitrator denied McLaughlin’s claim. Importantly, the decision specifically declined to extend itself to a situation where an employee “leaves employment because of the onset of a disabling condition that becomes total and permanent at a later date.” This nuance apparently went unnoticed by the Board, and it is unclear if Bard was ever given an opportunity to dispute the Board’s reading of the McLaughlin arbitration. 3

C. The First Denial and Bard’s Attempted Review

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471 F.3d 229, 39 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2047, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 31137, 2006 WL 3717376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bard-v-boston-shipping-assn-ca1-2006.