Eva E. O'COnnOr Larry M. O'COnnOr v. Central Virginia U.F.C.W. And Subscribing Employers Welfare Fund

945 F.2d 799, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 22696, 1991 WL 191413
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 1991
Docket90-2170
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 945 F.2d 799 (Eva E. O'COnnOr Larry M. O'COnnOr v. Central Virginia U.F.C.W. And Subscribing Employers Welfare Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eva E. O'COnnOr Larry M. O'COnnOr v. Central Virginia U.F.C.W. And Subscribing Employers Welfare Fund, 945 F.2d 799, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 22696, 1991 WL 191413 (4th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:

We address here a question of some importance for the administration of employee health benefit funds. The case arises out of the denial of plaintiffs’ claim for in-home custodial care benefits by the trustees of defendant Central Virginia Fund under its ERISA employee welfare benefit plan. The district court ordered the Central Virginia Fund to provide “in-home nursing care” for plaintiff Eva Elaine O’Connor at a level “commensurate with her immediate medical needs.” The questions raised by the parties with respect to this order require that we remand the case.

I.

Eva O’Connor’s husband Larry O’Con-nor, also a plaintiff, is an employee of Super Fresh, Inc. and a participant in the *800 benefit plan of the defendant Central Virginia Fund. Eva O’Connor is a beneficiary of the Plan. The Plan and the Fund are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. The Fund exists pursuant to collective bargaining agreements between Super Fresh, Inc. and its employees. It is administered by a Board of Trustees which consists of two management and two union representatives.

In January 1984, Eva O’Connor suffered a debilitating stroke resulting in paralysis of the right side of her body and severely affecting her speech. In 1985, she suffered a grand mal seizure. Mrs. O’Connor wears a brace on her right leg and knee and a supporting sling on her right arm and requires daily doses of medications to control her seizure activity and high blood pressure. In addition, she is generally confined to bed or a wheelchair and cannot dress, eat or attend the bathroom without assistance.

As a result of her condition, Mrs. O’Con-nor needs 24-hour care. After some training, Mrs. O’Connor’s family was able to care for her themselves following the stroke until 1985 when she suffered the seizure. From October 1, 1985 until June 1987, a registered graduate nurse cared for Eva O’Connor for eight hours a day, four days a week. The Central Virginia Fund paid for the nurse’s services. At other times, Mrs. O’Connor’s family continued to care for her.

After June 1987, Mrs. O’Connor was cared for by a home health aide under the supervision of a registered nurse. The change from a nurse to a home health aide came at the initiative of the Central Virginia Fund. Because the Fund does not retain a medical staff to evaluate claims, it contracts for those services with United Healthcare, Inc. (“CARE”), described as “an independent, non-profit organization established to carry out studies of health care needs of individuals” and to make recommendations with respect to their care and treatment. (Fact. Stipulation 11). In January 1987, the Fund requested that CARE reevaluate Eva O’Connor's case. In March 1987, CARE recommended that a home health aide working under the supervision of a registered nurse could care for Mrs. O’Connor.

The Fund paid for the home health care aide for approximately eighteen months even though the services of the aide were allegedly not an allowable expenditure under the Plan. In a May 21, 1987 letter to CARE, the Fund explained:

[t]his plan does not normally pay for any custodial care and home health care generally is limited to services performed by “trained nurses.” But as the home health aide will assist with range of motion exercises and other limited medical treatment on a daily basis and due to the decision by the Board of Trustees to make exceptions in the Plan based on your recommendation, we could continue to reimburse this family for these services utilizing their Major Medical benefit, (emphasis in original).

A series of evaluations followed the change from a nurse to a home health aide. Both Mrs. O’Connor’s family physician and surgeon recommended that she have an attendant or companion at home. In March 1988, Mrs. O’Connor was assessed, under CARE’s instructions, by Upjohn Healthcare Services, which concluded that keeping Mrs. O’Connor at home with a home health aide and providing periodic supervision by a registered nurse was preferable to moving her to a nursing home.

In June 1988, the Claims Committee of the Central Virginia Fund again reviewed the claims of Eva O’Connor. The trustees solicited medical advice from CARE, which advised that Mrs. O’Connor’s physical and emotional state required that she not be left alone. Dr. Lynette Green-Mack, who evaluated Mrs. O’Connor for CARE, concluded that she needed a companion to stay with her during the day when her husband was unavailable. CARE also advised that the care of a companion in the O’Connor ease was considered custodial in nature. On December 16,1988, the trustees decided that as of January 1, 1989, benefits for a home heqjth care aide would no longer be provided because such purely custodial *801 charges were not covered pursuant to the terms of the Plan. The trustees, however, did offer to fund such nursing or therapy services that Mrs. O’Connor required.

The O’Connors filed suit in state court seeking among other things reimbursement for the expense of hiring an in-home aide and a declaration of benefits. The case was removed and tried before a federal district court which found that the Central Virginia Fund “has unreasonably and arbitrarily and capriciously denied Mrs. O’Con-nor nursing care benefits under the terms of the Plan or as modified by the managers thereof.” The district court ordered the Fund “to provide the O’Connors with in-home nursing care ... at a level commensurate with her immediate medical needs.”

From this judgment, the Central Virginia Fund appeals.

II.

Appellant Central Virginia Fund argues that the trustees’ determination that the full time care required by Mrs. O’Con-nor was purely custodial in nature, and thus not a covered benefit, was a reasonable one. We agree that the trustees acted in accord with their discretionary authority in interpreting the Plan to cover medical services but not custodial care and that their conclusion that Mrs. O’Connor does not need full time skilled medical care is a supportable one. However, because we find the district court’s order to be ambiguous, we remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

The parties all agree that the trustees have discretionary authority under the trust agreement and that their decision “will not be disturbed if reasonable.” Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 111, 109 S.Ct. 948, 954, 103 L.Ed.2d 80 (1989). The trust agreement provides:

The Trustees, subject to the provisions of Article II and subject to any applicable provisions of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, shall have the absolute discretion to determine who shall be Eligible Employees, the nature, type, character, and amount of benefits to be provided, and the medium (i.e., self insurance, insurance contract, medical or hospital service contract, maintenance of medical and hospital facilities or otherwise) by which such benefits shall be provided.

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Bluebook (online)
945 F.2d 799, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 22696, 1991 WL 191413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eva-e-oconnor-larry-m-oconnor-v-central-virginia-ufcw-and-ca4-1991.