BARNES v. UNUM LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedNovember 12, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-00280
StatusUnknown

This text of BARNES v. UNUM LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA (BARNES v. UNUM LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BARNES v. UNUM LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA, (D. Me. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

DISTRICT OF MAINE

LORI BARNES, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 2:23-cv-00280-LEW ) UNUM LIFE INSURANCE ) COMPANY OF AMERICA, ) ) Defendant. )

DECISION AND ORDER The matter is before the Court on competing motions for judgment on the administrative record. Pl.’s Mot. for J. on the Admin. R. (ECF No. 26); Def.’s Mot. for J. on the Record for Judicial Review (ECF No. 27). Plaintiff Lori Barnes contends in this action that Defendant Unum Life Insurance Company wrongfully discontinued her long- term disability benefits. Unum contends Barnes failed to persuade Unum’s agents and consultants of her disability like she had done for the preceding twenty years. BACKGROUND1 Lori Barnes formerly worked for Unum as an executive account manager. She started working for Unum in 1996 and continued to work until pain and radiculopathy symptoms secondary to childhood scoliosis, degenerative disc disease, a 1992 lumbar laminectomy, a 1993 L5/S1 disc surgery, S1 nerve root impingement, and a 2002

1 The background facts are drawn from the parties’ factual statements and the underlying record. discectomy at L5/S1 proved too much for her to manage in the workplace. Fortunately for Barnes, she had elected to participate in Unum’s Long-Term Disability Plan, which Unum

both administers and funds. To qualify for benefits under the Plan, Barnes needs to demonstrate, both initially and on a continuing basis, that her medical condition prevents her from performing her regular occupation.2 As an executive account manager, Barnes’s regular occupation required her to, among other things, frequently stand, sit, and lift up to 10 (or 203) pounds, as well as undertake frequent work-related, overnight travel to serve clients. When Unum’s agents

and consultants first considered Barnes’s claim for benefits, and for nearly 20 years thereafter in the context of periodic claim-review process, they continuously found that Barnes’s condition prevented her from performing her occupation, even after Unum first revised the requirements by concluding that the occupation required only sedentary exertional effort. In principle, this consistent history of approving Barnes’s coverage under

the Plan related to Barnes’s inability to endure prolonged sitting due to back and leg pain. Unum’s consultants and physicians were not only consistent in their appraisal of Barnes’s condition, but went so far as to opine that they did not anticipate that Barnes

2 The Plan also provided that after 24 months of benefits Barnes would need to demonstrate that her medical condition still prevented her from performing any gainful occupation for which she was reasonably fitted by education, training, or experience. Unum has continuously reviewed the file to evaluate Barnes’s ability to perform the occupation she preformed at Unum, and I do likewise.

3 When Barnes first obtained disability benefits from Unum, her peers who reviewed her claim agreed that her position imposed “light” exertional demands involving lifting up to 20 pounds. Years later, as the narrative will explain, Unum gradually revised this assessment and redefined Barnes’s former occupation as a sedentary occupation involving lifting of no more than 10 pounds. would ever return to work due to the limitations imposed by and the permanence of her condition. Unum accepted these assurances, characterizing Barnes’s limitation in terms of

her inability to have “sustained capacity” due to chronic pain. Pl.’s App’x ¶ 74 (ECF No. 26-1). From 2013 through 2020, Unum even stopped collecting updated medical records from Barnes.4 However, before taking this casual approach, Unum tasked one of its vocational consultants with the job of revisiting Barnes’s job demands in terms of the light- versus-sedentary exertional capacity. The vocational consultant did so, basically by assessing that the position was most consistent with the position of “manager sales

account,” as defined in the Dictionary of Occupational Titles. LTD 319 (ECF No. 12-2). Although the consultant stated that the exertional requirement was sedentary as generally performed in the national economy, she separately observed that Barnes’s occupation also required frequent traveling. LTD 318. She did not address whether the demands of frequent travel involve light or sedentary exertion or prolonged sitting, standing, or

walking. In August 2022, Unum requested that it be provided with an updated attending physician statement. Acting through claims specialist Andrew Hart, Unum sent Barnes’s primary care physician, Melanie Fitzsimmons, MD, a letter stating that it needed the physician’s input on a new “short-term disability claim” filed by Barnes. This had no basis

in fact in terms of there being any new claim, let alone a claim for short-term disability.

4 In 2021, Barnes underwent another spinal surgery, this time involving her cervical spine. Neither party contends that Barnes’s entitlement to LTD benefits depends on the condition of her cervical spine. LTD 841 (ECF No. 12-4). Hart also requested that Barnes provide Unum with a written update of her condition, which she did.

Unum asserts that it is material to the case that Barnes reported in her written update that she is able to care for herself, does not need assistance with her daily activities (such as they are), and does not need an assistive device to walk. Def.’s App’x ¶ 12 (ECF No. 27-1). Unum also asserts that it is material that it was able to determine on its own that Barnes has a social media presence, donated to a fundraiser, likely has ridden in a boat at some point in time, and socialized with others. Id. ¶ 14.

Unum also emphasizes that Barnes reported to Dr. Fitzsimmons during an October 2022 regularly scheduled wellness visit, that she was working out regularly (30 minutes, 4 days per week) on core strengthening and did some walking. Also, at another routine wellness visit, Barnes denied experiencing fatigue, weakness, swelling, numbness or tingling at that time, but stated she was tired more than half of her days. Def.’s App’x ¶

17; Pl.’s Response to Def.’s App’x ¶ 17 (ECF No. 37-1). In the lead-up to its 2022 review decision, Unum once more tasked one of its vocational consultants, Carrie Cousins, with the job of revisiting and potentially reassessing the vocational requirements of Barnes’s job. The instructions provided to Cousins requested that she include a statement that the job allows a worker to change

position, something that was not noted by the last consultant who reviewed the vocational requirements. Cousins’s new analysis reiterated that the occupation required exertion involving no more than 10 pounds, keeping the occupation in the sedentary column, but as requested she added that the occupation now allows for a regular change of position from sitting to standing to accommodate pain. Def.’s App’x ¶ 15. Cousins continued to acknowledge that the occupation required frequent sitting and travel, but Cousins did not

address whether the exertional demands of frequent travel require prolonged sitting without changing position, or whether travel is itself necessarily a sedentary rather than a light endeavor. Instead, Cousins appears to have overlooked the matter, as Cousins observed only that the ability to change position would occur “in [the] work area,” but did not mention anything about changing positions in a car or on an airplane. Pl.’s App’x ¶ 106. In due course, Dr. Fitzsimmons provided Unum with an attending physician

statement. In the statement, Dr. Fitzsimmons responded to the question of whether Barnes was able to perform a list of occupational demands, which list mirrored the sedentary classification and also included frequent sitting and travel, but Dr. Fitzsimmons did not address the position change modifications authored by Cousins. LTD 1026 (ECF No.

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