Fonseca v. Standard Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 29, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-01242
StatusUnknown

This text of Fonseca v. Standard Insurance Company (Fonseca v. Standard Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fonseca v. Standard Insurance Company, (E.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

LUCY FONSECA CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO: 20-1242

STANDARD INSURANCE CO. SECTION: "A" (5)

ORDER AND REASONS

Plaintiff, Lucy Fonseca (“Fonseca”), brought this action against Defendant, Standard Insurance Co. (“Standard”), for benefits payable under a long-term disability (“LTD”) plan (“the Plan”) sponsored by her former employer, Zachry Holdings, Inc. Fonseca contends that she is disabled from her own occupation as an insulator/insulation worker, a physically demanding construction industry job, and further that she is totally disabled and unable to work in any occupation. Fonseca’s claimed disabilities are psoriatic arthritis, alopecia, photosensitivity, fibromyalgia, depression, anxiety, and migraine headaches. Standard denied Fonseca’s application for LTD benefits after finding that some of her conditions were subject to the Plan’s pre-existing condition exclusion and that others were non-disabling. It is undisputed that the Plan constitutes an employee welfare benefit plan and that this case is governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1001, et seq. On September 23, 2020, the Court granted the parties’ joint motion to submit the case for decision based on the administrative record and to vacate the scheduling order and trial date. (Rec. Doc. 11, Order). The parties have stipulated that the review of Standard’s benefits decision will be limited to consideration of the evidence in the administrative record, which consists of 2081 pages (Rec. Doc. 16), and their memoranda. I. According to Standard, the effective date of Fonseca’s LTD coverage was October 1, 2017, based on a hire date of September 14, 2016. Because Fonseca’s onset date of disability was June 8, 2018, which was less than 12 months after the LTD effective date of October 1, 2017 as determined by Standard, 1 Fonseca had to clear the Plan’s Preexisting Condition

exclusion.2 The exclusion uses a 90-day “lookback” period starting from the LTD effective date— the applicable lookback period in this case would be July 3, 2017 to September 30, 2017, if October 1, 2017 is the correct LTD effective date. The specific condition for which Fonseca sought LTD benefits was psoriatic arthritis. (STND 2020-00839-001056). After reviewing Fonseca’s medical records, Standard determined that Fonseca had received treatment for psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, lupus, depression, alopecia areata and fatigue during the 90-day

1 The applicable eligibility waiting period for LTD coverage is the first day of the calendar month following 1 continuous year as a Member. (STND 2020-00839-000006). Thus, if Fonseca was hired on September 14, 2016 and became a Member as of that date, then the first day of the calendar month following 1 continuous year as a Member would be October 1, 2017.

2 The Plan’s Preexisting Condition exclusion states:

You are not covered for a Disability caused or contributed to by a Preexisting Condition or medical or surgical treatment of a Preexisting Condition unless, on the date you become Disabled, you have been continuously insured under the Group Policy for 12 months.

Preexisting Condition means a mental or physical condition:

a. For which you have done any of the following:

i. Consulted a physician or other licensed medical professional; ii Received medical treatment, services or advice; iii. Undergone diagnostic procedures, including self-administered procedures; iv. Taken prescribed drugs or medications;

b. Which, as a result of any medical examination, was discovered or suspected;

at any time during the 90-day period just before the date your insurance becomes effective.

(STND 2020-00839-000066). period before her insurance became effective. Therefore, psoriatic arthritis was a preexisting condition under the Plan for which LTD benefits were excluded and the claim was denied. (STND 2020-00839-000806). Fonseca, through counsel, appealed the denial citing a new set of symptoms and new diagnoses around the time that she stopped working in June 2018. (STND 2020-00839-000903). According to her attorney, the disabling conditions most responsible for

Fonseca’s inability to work were actually the new conditions of fibromyalgia, plantar fasciitis, major depression, high blood pressure, polyarthralgia, and anxiety. (STND 2020-00839-000902). Also, certain medications that Fonseca began taking after the lookback period were drowsiness- inducing. (STND 2020-00839-000903). As part of the administrative review of the initial decision, Standard had Fonseca’s medical file reviewed by a physician consultant who is board-certified in rheumatology. (STND 2020-00839-000813). Standard upheld its initial determination that psoriatic arthritis was a preexisting condition. (STND 2020-00839-000813). Standard also found that the conditions of psoriasis, anthralgia/fibromyalgia, alopecia, and photosensitivity were preexisting conditions. (Id.).

The consulting physician had determined that Fonseca had been seen and treated for psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, alopecia, and photosensitivity during the lookback period. (Id.). The chart notes showed that Fonseca had reported arthralgias, specifically pain in her fingers, wrists, and hips during that period (Id.). Essentially the symptoms associated with the fibromyalgia diagnosis were the same as those reported during the lookback period. (STND 2020-00839-000814). Because the fibromyalgia diagnosis was based largely on the same symptoms for which Fonseca was treated during the lookback period, it was also determined to be a preexisting condition. (Id.). Simply describing reported symptoms by a new name or being prescribed new medications for those symptoms did not remove the condition from the preexisting condition exclusion. (Id.). Standard did agree, however, that migraine headaches, depression, plantar fasciitis, and high blood pressure were not excludable as preexisting conditions. (STND 2020-00839-000813). But high blood pressure and plantar fasciitis were not discussed in the medical records until October 1, 2018, which was after Fonseca’s LTD coverage had ended.3 (STND 2020-00839- 000815). Therefore, those conditions could only be considered if it were established that they

prevented Fonseca from working as of the time that she ceased working. (Id.). Standard’s Administrative Review Unit then returned Fonseca’s file for further consideration of whether she would be entitled to LTD benefits based on her condition of migraine headaches.4 (STND 2020- 00839-000816). Standard denied Fonseca’s claim for disability due to migraine headaches. (STND 2020- 00839-000802). Standard explained that there was insufficient medical documentation from which to conclude that Fonseca had any limitations or restrictions from migraine headaches such that they would prevent her from performing the Material Duties of her Own Occupation with reasonable continuity.5 (Id.). Standard noted that while migraines had been mentioned in some of

3 Fonseca has not alleged in her complaint that she is disabled due to either high blood pressure or plantar fasciitis.

4 The remand letter also states that the file was being returned for further investigation of depression as a potentially disabling condition that was not preexisting. (STND 2020-00839- 000809, 816). But elsewhere in the letter depression was mentioned as a condition reported to the medical providers during the lookback period. (STND 2020-00839-000811, 814). Standard called Fonseca’s counsel to explain that the file was actually being reviewed to consider migraine headaches only. (STND 2020-00839-000879).

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Fonseca v. Standard Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fonseca-v-standard-insurance-company-laed-2021.