Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D. v. John R. Kenefick Briggs and Morgan, Pa Ge Group Life Assurance Company, Formerly Known as Phoenix American Insurance Company, Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D. v. John R. Kenefick Briggs and Morgan, Pa v. Ge Group Life Assurance Company, Formerly Known as Phoenix American Insurance Company

484 F.3d 519, 40 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1876, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8174
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 2007
Docket05-3974
StatusPublished

This text of 484 F.3d 519 (Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D. v. John R. Kenefick Briggs and Morgan, Pa Ge Group Life Assurance Company, Formerly Known as Phoenix American Insurance Company, Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D. v. John R. Kenefick Briggs and Morgan, Pa v. Ge Group Life Assurance Company, Formerly Known as Phoenix American Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D. v. John R. Kenefick Briggs and Morgan, Pa Ge Group Life Assurance Company, Formerly Known as Phoenix American Insurance Company, Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D. v. John R. Kenefick Briggs and Morgan, Pa v. Ge Group Life Assurance Company, Formerly Known as Phoenix American Insurance Company, 484 F.3d 519, 40 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1876, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8174 (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

484 F.3d 519

Bradley J. HILLSTROM, M.D., Appellant,
v.
John R. KENEFICK; Briggs and Morgan, PA; GE Group Life Assurance Company, formerly known as Phoenix American Insurance Company, Appellees.
Bradley J. Hillstrom, M.D., Appellee,
v.
John R. Kenefick; Briggs and Morgan, PA, Appellants,
v.
GE Group Life Assurance Company, formerly known as Phoenix American Insurance Company, Appellee.

No. 05-3974.

No. 05-3975.

United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.

Submitted: September 28, 2006.

Filed: April 9, 2007.

Paula Weseman Theisen, argued, Minneapolis, MN (Jeffrey M. Thompson, on the brief), for appellant/cross-appellee.

Michael R. Cunningham, argued, Minneapolis, MN (John M. Nichols and Abigail S. Crouse, on the brief), for Briggs & Morgan and Kenefick.

Joshua Bachrach, argued, Philadelphia, PA, for GE Group Life.

Before WOLLMAN, BOWMAN, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

Bradley J. Hillstrom; John R. Kenefick and the law firm of Briggs and Morgan, P.A. (collectively, Kenefick); and GE Group Life Assurance Company (GEGLAC) are all parties having various roles in this appeal. Hillstrom and Kenefick, as appellant and cross-appellant, challenge decisions of the District Court1 in this convoluted case that has its basis in Hillstrom's claim for long-term disability benefits. We affirm.

I.

Hillstrom is a physiatrist (a physician specializing in physical medicine or physical therapy) who is seeking long-term disability benefits under a policy issued by Phoenix American Life Insurance Company to an entity called Rehab One, Inc.2 That policy is an employee benefit plan governed by ERISA.3 GEGLAC is defending the suit as Phoenix's successor in interest. Kenefick is an attorney and a shareholder in Briggs and Morgan. Kenefick represented Hillstrom in his initial attempt to collect disability benefits from Phoenix.

On April 1, 1989, Hillstrom and Rehab One, of which Hillstrom was part owner, executed a document captioned "Employment Agreement." Pursuant to that agreement, Rehab One employed Hillstrom as chief executive officer. Hillstrom's compensation was limited to stock options in Rehab One "until such time, if ever, that [Rehab One] agrees, in its sole discretion, to provide additional compensation." Employment Agreement pt. III. Hillstrom's duties were detailed in an exhibit attached to the agreement, and he was to "commit such time and effort as is reasonably required for discharge of his responsibilities under [the] Agreement." Id. pt. I.

Rehab One purchased a group long-term disability policy from Phoenix with an effective date of January 1, 1994, covering Rehab One's active full-time non-union officer employees whose earnings exceeded $35,000. The eligible employees were not listed by name in the policy, which was cancelled in 1997 as Rehab One went out of business.

On January 7, 1994, Rehab One and HCA Partners, L.L.C., entered into a "Management Agreement." According to this agreement, HCA was a Wyoming limited liability company formed to provide "directorship and management services to Rehab One" through HCA's principals: Bradley Hillstrom, Scott D. Hillstrom (Bradley's brother), and John E. Clark, M.D. Management Agreement at 1. According to the agreement, the HCA principals were all "directors and/or officers of Rehab One and . . . responsible for its general management." Id. The parties agreed that the HCA principals would "perform all general management services" for Rehab One, except for those furnished by Rehab One's president. Id. But the capacities in which the HCA principals were to serve were not specified by the agreement. In return for the services of HCA and its principals, Rehab One was to pay HCA a "Management Fee" of $1,200,000 annually ($100,000 per month), but the agreement did not say how the fee was to be divided among the HCA principals — if at all. Id. at 2. The Management Fee was "the entire consideration for all services to be rendered by HCA and/or by the HCA Principals, except that in addition to the Management Fee [Scott] Hillstrom shall be a payroll employee of Rehab One and shall receive a monthly salary of $8,333.33." Id. (emphasis added). The 1989 Employment Agreement between Rehab One and Hillstrom individually was not mentioned in the Management Agreement.

On January 16, 1995, Hillstrom fell while snowboarding and hit his head and back. The next day, an MRI of Hillstrom's brain was read as normal, notwithstanding the severe headaches he was experiencing. By his own admission, Hillstrom started self-medicating with alcohol and Vicodin, a prescription narcotic pain reliever. This continued until April 19, 1996, when he began inpatient treatment for chemical dependence. After treatment, Hillstrom continued to complain of neurological difficulties, including memory problems and difficulty concentrating, and a psychiatrist declared him disabled as of the date of the snowboarding accident. It was about this time that Hillstrom retained Kenefick to represent him in his claims for long-term disability benefits. Kenefick prepared a claim for the Phoenix benefits and submitted it on October 17, 1996.

There followed over the months a course of correspondence regarding Phoenix's review of Hillstrom's claim. Generally, the issues included the source and amount of Hillstrom's income for his work for Rehab One; whether Hillstrom was under the regular care of a physician during the claimed period of disability, as the policy required; whether the alleged disability was the result of substance abuse; and the onset date of the alleged disability. Phoenix also sought the assistance of financial consultant Coopers & Lybrand, who determined that Hillstrom had no insurable income under the long-term disability policy issued to Rehab One. On January 22, 1998, Phoenix sent a letter to Kenefick noting that Phoenix had yet to receive a response from Kenefick "regarding the employment, financial, medical and Other Income documentation previously requested." Letter from Murphy (Phoenix) to Kenefick (Briggs and Morgan) of Jan. 22, 1998. That letter said, "Based upon the information made available to us, Dr. Hillstrom has not provided the required Proof of Eligibility, Proof of Disability and Proof of Loss as defined under this plan in order to qualify for payment of benefits. . . ." Id. On several occasions after that, Kenefick submitted to Phoenix additional information on behalf of Hillstrom's claim. Phoenix responded employing the language of denial quoted above. Kenefick filed an appeal in February 1999, which Phoenix denied by letter dated May 17, 1999: "[T]he reasons for our denial of the claim have not changed and are as set forth in our prior correspondence." Letter from Kelleher (Phoenix) to Kenefick (Briggs and Morgan) of May 17, 1999.

In April 2004, Hillstrom filed suit against Kenefick in Minnesota state court claiming legal malpractice for, among other things, Kenefick's failure to correctly identify the applicable statute of limitations for mounting a court challenge to Phoenix's denial of benefits.

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484 F.3d 519, 40 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1876, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-j-hillstrom-md-v-john-r-kenefick-briggs-and-morgan-pa-ge-ca8-2007.