Diane G. Melech v. Life Insurance Company of North America

739 F.3d 663, 57 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1800, 2014 WL 31276, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 2014
Docket12-14999
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 739 F.3d 663 (Diane G. Melech v. Life Insurance Company of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diane G. Melech v. Life Insurance Company of North America, 739 F.3d 663, 57 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1800, 2014 WL 31276, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 176 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinions

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

I. A.

Diane Melech is the beneficiary of an employee welfare benefit plan provided by her.employer Hertz. The plan includes a disability insurance policy (the “Policy”) issued and administered by the Life Insurance Company of North America (“LINA”). LINA’s administration of the Policy is governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 88 Stat. 829, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461. Melech stopped working at Hertz in May 2007, when her treating orthopedist took her off work on account of his diagnoses of degenerative disc disease in her cervical spine and tendonitis in her right shoulder.1 Melech submitted a claim for long-term disability benefits under the Policy in October 2007. At LINA’s direction, she also applied for Social Security Disability Income (“SSDI”) that same month.

LINA denied Melech’s claim in November 2007, while her SSDI application was still pending before the Social Security Administration (“SSA”). Melech appealed the denial of her claim through LINA’s administrative process. Meanwhile, in December 2007, the SSA asked Melech to visit two new physicians for an independent assessment of her condition. The SSA granted Melech’s application for disability benefits in February 2008, and Me-lech so informed LINA. LINA then went on to deny two consecutive administrative appeals without considering or even asking Melech for the SSA’s decision, the two [666]*666SSA physicians’ assessments, or any other evidence before the SSA.

B.

Melech brought this ERISA action in October 2010, claiming that LINA violated the Policy’s terms and ERISA’s requirements — in part because LINA ignored the SSA process and the information it generated. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of LINA because it concluded that LINA’s ultimate decision to deny benefits under the Policy was correct based on the administrative record in LINA’s possession at the time it made its decision — a record that did not contain any information related to Melech’s SSDI application. Melech now appeals to this court.

Today, we do not judge the propriety of LINA’s ultimate decision to deny Melech’s claim for benefits under the Policy because we hold that LINA had an obligation to consider the evidence presented to the SSA. Thus, because LINA did not have this evidence when it denied her last appeal — and in fact could not have had that evidence when it initially denied her claim — we vacate the District Court’s judgment and remand the case with instructions to remand Melech’s claim to LINA for its consideration of the evidence presented to the SSA.

II.

The crux of our holding lies in the relationship between LINA’s claim-evaluation process and the parallel SSA process. LINA’s Policy effectively requires claimants who apply for benefits under the Policy to also apply for disability benefits from the SSA. LINA is then allowed to reduce the benefits it pays, if any, to account for a claimant’s receipt of these SSA benefits. At the outset, we presume that LINA’s interactions with all claimants are the same: LINA shepherds them into the SSA process in anticipation of the possibility that it might have to pay benefits. But a divergence arises in LINA’s interest in its claimants’ SSA applications in cases where LINA finishes its evaluation of the claim before the SSA reaches a decision on the SSDI application. The SSA deduction only remains relevant to LINA if LINA decides that the claimant is eligible for benefits under the Policy. In these situations, LINA exercises its rights under the Policy to insert itself into the SSA process in an attempt to influence the outcome to protect LINA’s SSDI deduction. Conversely, in Melech’s case, LINA initially sent her to the SSA but then decided that she was not eligible for benefits under the Policy. Because it no longer needed to protect its SSDI deduction, LINA ignored the status of Melech’s SSDI application and the SSA’s eventual decision to award benefits.

Importantly, the SSA process produces more than just a final sum of money — it also may produce additional evidence that is relevant to the claimant’s physical condition and vocational capacity. The question we address in part C below is whether LINA is free to selectively use the results of the SSA process only to the extent that it serves LINA’s interest to do so. We begin by first explaining in detail the Policy terms that relate to LINA’s rights to monitor and participate in the SSA process when it has a financial stake in the outcome. Then, we turn to LINA’s disregard for the SSA process when it does not have any skin in the game, which we illustrate by explaining LINA’s evaluation of Me-lech’s claim.

A.

To receive long-term disability benefits under the Policy, a claimant has the bur[667]*667den of producing evidence to show that she can no longer perform the material duties of her “Regular Occupation” as a result of injury or sickness and cannot otherwise earn 80 percent of her previous earnings. To continue receiving benefits after twenty-four months, the claimant must show that she cannot perform any occupation that she “is, or may reasonably become, qualified [for] based on education, training or experience” and cannot earn 60 percent of her previous earnings. Record, no. 112-2, at 118. If a claimant meets this burden of proof, LINA is obligated to pay disability benefits in proportion to the claimant’s salary at the time she became disabled.

These benefits paid out under the Policy are subject to a deduction for the amount of “Other Income Benefits” that the claimant receives because of her disability. Other Income Benefits includes Social Security Disability Income (“SSDI”) that the claimant actually receives, or is “assumed to receive.” By default, if the claimant is not actually receiving other benefits, LINA will nonetheless “assume the [claimant] ... [is] receiving benefits for which they are eligible” and will “reduce the [claimant’s] Disability Benefits by the amount of Other Income Benefits it estimates are payable to the [claimant].” Record, no. 112-2, at 126. According to LINA’s claims manual, it uses a spreadsheet tool to determine claimants’ eligibility for SSDI and to estimate the amount that the SSA would award. The spreadsheet itself is not part of the record before us, but we note that the eligibility determination and estimate of “assumed” benefits requires LINA to step into the SSA’s shoes to determine what medical and vocational evidence would be available to the SSA and then evaluate that evidence using the SSA’s separate rules for granting disability benefits.2

The need to deduct “assumed” SSDI only comes into play in those cases where LINA decides to pay benefits under the Policy, but the claimant has not yet been awarded SSDI — either because the SSA has not reached a final determination or because the claimant did not apply in the first place. If the claimant did not apply, LINA may immediately deduct assumed SSDI from its payments to the claimant. If the SSA is still considering the claimant’s application, LINA will delay the assumed-benefits deduction until the SSA process has run its course, so long as the claimant promises to reimburse LINA for any “overpaid” benefits in the event that the she later receives retroactive SSDI that overlaps with LINA’s payments under the Policy.

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Bluebook (online)
739 F.3d 663, 57 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1800, 2014 WL 31276, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diane-g-melech-v-life-insurance-company-of-north-america-ca11-2014.