Elliott v. Metro Life Ins Co

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 2006
Docket05-6633
StatusUnpublished

This text of Elliott v. Metro Life Ins Co (Elliott v. Metro Life Ins Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Metro Life Ins Co, (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 06a0844n.06 Filed: November 15, 2006

No. 05-6633

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

PATRICIA ELLIOTT, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) On Appeal from the United States ) District Court for the Eastern METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ) District of Kentucky ) Defendant-Appellee, )

Before: BOGGS, Chief Judge; DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge; and MILLS, District Judge.*

BOGGS, Chief Judge. This case presents the questions of whether an ERISA plan’s

determination to deny benefits was arbitrary and capricious and, if it was, what remedy this court

should order. Patricia Elliott submitted a claim for long-term disability benefits to the administrator

of her employer’s employee benefit plan, Metropolitan Life (“MetLife”). MetLife denied Elliott’s

claim. Thereafter, Elliott brought this ERISA action, based on the administrative record, against

MetLife for wrongful denial of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). MetLife moved for

judgment affirming its decision to deny benefits and Elliott moved for reversal. Holding that

* The Honorable Richard Mills, Senior United States District Judge for the Central District of Illinois, sitting by designation. No. 05-6633

MetLife’s determination to deny benefits was not “arbitrary and capricious,” the district court

granted MetLife’s motion and denied Elliott’s motion. Elliott appealed to this court.

Because we conclude that MetLife’s decision was arbitrary and capricious, we vacate the

judgment of the district court. The record does not support the conclusion that MetLife’s denial of

Elliott’s claim was the result of a deliberative, principled reasoning process. We cannot say,

however, that Elliott is clearly entitled to long-term disability benefits. Consequently, we remand

to the district court with instructions to remand to Metlife for a full and fair review consistent with

this opinion.

I

Elliott was injured severely in a car accident in 1989. At that time, she suffered significant

fractures of her second and third cervical vertebrae. Soon after, she underwent stabilization and

spinal surgery, which involved the placement of metallic wires in her neck. In 1993, Elliott began

working for Great American Financial Resources and joined the company’s employee benefit plan,

which MetLife administers.

In October 2002, Elliott began experiencing renewed pain related to the 1989 accident,

including radiating shoulder pain, numbness, and burning sensations. She saw several physicians,

beginning with Dr. Charles Kuntz of the University of Cincinnati’s Mayfield Clinic. In early 2003,

Elliott began receiving short-term disability benefits, after Dr. Kuntz submitted a form to Great

American certifying that she could not perform work of any kind. While on short-term disability in

early 2003, Elliott visited several physicians and had numerous studies conducted. None could

explain with precision why Elliott’s symptoms had reemerged.

-2- No. 05-6633

In May 2003, Dr. Kuntz referred Elliott to Dr. Alex Schneider at Aring Neurology at the

University of Cincinnati. Dr. Schneider conducted an initial electromyogram and found “no signs

of motor or myelopathic symptoms.” However, he also made findings “consistent with a central

cord-like syndrome.” In addition, Dr. Schneider wrote: “She is better than she was six months ago,

but continued to have some chronic pain and anxiety related to this.” Dr. Schneider recommended,

among other things, Elavil (a psychoactive prescription drug often prescribed for depression), a C-

collar (used to stabilize the neck), physical therapy, and a re-evaluation in three months.

Dr. Schneider saw Elliott again in August 2003. He made no significant new findings at that

visit, except to note: “since starting the Elavil, she has done quite better [sic]. She states she is

moving around better and her neck pain is better.” However, Dr. Schneider did report that she “has

some weakness and numbness when she is up too long, particularly in her legs and feet.” Dr.

Schneider increased her prescription, ordered more physical therapy, and recommended a return visit

in three months, a date that coincides with Elliott’s most recent MRI.

In September 2003, Elliott began the long-term disability claims process. Her claim was

denied on December 1, 2003, in a letter from MetLife. In the letter, MetLife recounts the plan’s

terms and restates technical medical terms from Elliott’s doctors’ reports. Then, without reasoning,

the letter concludes: “The medial [sic] documentation does not support a condition of a severity that

would prevent you from working.”

On December 9, 2003, Elliott sent a letter to MetLife appealing the decision. In the letter,

Elliott wrote that her “condition has improved since the increase of [her] Elavil” prescription. She

-3- No. 05-6633

also wrote that “if I stand, sit, bend, walk, or sit up straight for too long, I require pain medication.”

Ibid. Describing her physical abilities, she wrote that “I have improved in motor skills since therapy

and can tend to my daily needs without assistance. I can do some housework most days but am

restricted to light duty (dusting, dishwasher, straightening, etc.. [sic]).”

Elliott also included a letter from Dr. Schneider, dated December 9, 2003. In the letter, he

described Elliott’s condition as “chronic weakness and numbness that is exacerbated when she is

standing for any length of time.” Dr. Schneider also recounted Elliott’s last MRI, dated November

24, 2003, which showed “surgical changes along with mild to moderate diskogenic disease and

degenerative changes.” There was “no clear syringomyelia,”1 although “metallic artifact limits the

parenchymal visualization.”2 Following that discussion, Dr. Schneider specified particular

limitations on Elliott’s ability to work. He wrote:

It is my opinion that her work is limited due to her chronic pain syndrome and spinal cord injury that is exacerbated by spending any length of time on her feet or sitting in a single position for any length of time. She should not do any lifting. She should not be crouching into small spaces or doing any repetitive motion type of work. She should not do any work that requires reaching above her head. It is my opinion that her chronic neurologic condition causes her significant disability. This condition is chronic and will likely worsen in the future. Furthermore, she may require further surgical intervention as she develops further arthritic changes.

1 Syringomyelia is “a slowly progressive syndrome of cavitation in the central segments of the spinal cord, generally in the cervical region.” DORLAND ’S ILLUSTRATED MEDICAL DICTIONARY 1841 (2003). 2 This portion of Dr. Schneider’s letter indicates that metallic artifacts from Elliott’s 1989 surgery limit his ability to see, using the test methods employed, the functional parts of the relevant portion of her spinal cord.

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In response to Elliott’s appeal, MetLife engaged Dr. Robert Menotti to review Elliott’s

file. The record indicates that MetLife sent Elliott’s file to Dr. Menotti on February 25, 2004,

and that he completed his review the next day. In the review, Dr. Menotti recounted Elliott’s

medical history. Although Dr. Menotti conceded that Dr. Schneider’s statement “appears to be . .

.

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