Foss v. Standard Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedAugust 19, 2022
Docket0:20-cv-02449
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Foss v. Standard Insurance Company, (mnd 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Caroline Foss, Case No. 20-cv-2449 (WMW/TNL)

Plaintiff, ORDER v.

Standard Insurance Company,

Defendant.

Before the Court are cross-motions for summary judgment. (Dkts. 28, 32.) For the reasons addressed below, the Court denies Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and grants Defendant’s motion for summary judgment. BACKGROUND Plaintiff Caroline Foss is a 37-year-old resident of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, who worked as the Assistant Director of Annual and Leadership Giving at Boston College. Defendant Standard Insurance Company (Standard) is the insurance company that issued Boston College’s long-term disability (LTD) insurance policy (the Policy) and adjudicates LTD benefits claims made by employees under the Policy. An employee in Foss’s employment class who has a disability or is disabled is defined by the Policy as: (1) . . . being unable due to sickness, bodily injury, or pregnancy to perform with reasonable continuity the Material Duties of your Normal Occupation; or (2) working, but due to sickness, bodily injury, or pregnancy being unable to earn 80% or more of your Increasing Monthly Wage Base. “Normal Occupation” is defined as “any employment, business, trade, or profession that involves Material Duties of the same general character as the type of occupation you are regularly performing for your Employer when Disability begins.” Under the terms of the Policy, when determining a claimant’s “Normal Occupation,” Standard may evaluate the way an employee “perform[ed] [her] job for [her] Employer” as well as “the way this type of occupation is generally performed.” The Policy defines “Material Duties” as “the

essential tasks, functions and operations, and the skills, abilities, knowledge, training and experience, generally required by employers from those engaged in a particular occupation that cannot be reasonably modified or omitted.” The Policy expressly provides that Standard has discretionary authority to determine whether employees insured by the Policy are entitled to benefits thereunder.

On December 11, 2019, Foss applied to Standard for LTD benefits. Foss was 34 years old at that time. Foss represented in her application that the illnesses that contributed to her inability to work at her occupation were depression and anxiety, both of which she first noticed on June 3, 2019. Foss explained in her LTD application that she believed her illnesses were caused by stress and burnout, and she listed the following symptoms: “muscel [sic] aches, digestive upset, memory loss, fatigue, insomnia, emotional

dysregulation.” In support of her application, Foss submitted an attending physician statement completed by Nurse Practitioner Jackie Raymond. Nurse Raymond reported that Foss’s primary diagnosis was anxiety and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and Foss’s secondary diagnosis was depression. Nurse Raymond reported that Foss’s other symptoms and diagnoses included “lack of enjoyment/interest, new memory loss, muscle

aches, fatigue.” In the assessment section of the form, Nurse Raymond recommended that Foss stop working on December 31, 2019, explaining that that Foss was “already not working,” using her sick and vacation time to take time off work, and “will need to remain out of work.” According to Nurse Raymond, the planned course of treatment was counseling and prescribed ADHD medication, which Nurse Raymond identified. Nurse

Raymond stated that Foss needed long-term therapy. Standard received some of Foss’s medical records, including a June 14, 2019 progress note from Jennifer Schwartz, MD; a psychological evaluation conducted by George D. Bozicas, Ph.D.; a behavioral health diagnostic evaluation conducted by Christopher J. Griffith, LICSW; chiropractic treatment records from Terry Anelons; and

other medical records from Foss’s visits with Nurse Raymond. In the June 14, 2019 progress note, Dr. Schwartz indicated that Foss was seeing a therapist who had “informally diagnosed [Foss] with [Major Depressive Disorder] secondary to acute stress/burnout versus adjustment disorder.” Dr. Schwartz wrote that Foss felt her issues were caused by her job and that Foss preferred to manage symptoms

without medications. Dr. Schwartz reported that Foss had a breakdown and since then had “been struggling with significant memory issues, insomnia, anxiety and fatigue.” Dr. Schwartz noted that Foss “has been unable to complete [activities of daily life] and husband has been having to hold her up at times, dress her, drive to/from work.” Dr. Schwartz wrote that Foss occasionally had “fits of screaming and crying,” and had experienced gastrointestinal issues because of the stress. But Foss did not have thoughts of self-harm. Foss had previously tried the anti-anxiety medication Ativan but had

experienced negative side effects. Foss reported to Dr. Schwartz that medical marijuana “helps a lot” and requested a medical prescription for marijuana. Dr. Schwartz also wrote that Foss had recently visited an emergency room seeking help. Foss appears to have agreed to Dr. Schwartz’s recommendation that Foss continue seeing her therapist, but Foss declined Dr. Schwartz’s recommendation to establish care with a psychiatrist who could

prescribe Foss medication. In a November 18, 2019 ADHD Evaluation Report on Foss, Dr. Bozicas outlined his testing and concluded that the “test results supported the DSM-V diagnoses of ADHD, Predominantly Inattentive Presentation, Major Depressive Disorder and Generalized Anxiety Disorder.” Given Foss’s ADHD and her levels of anxiety and depression,

Dr. Bozicas wrote, “she might well benefit from ADHD medication at this time.” On November 22, 2019, Nurse Raymond conducted a comprehensive physical examination of Foss. During the examination, Foss reported that nearly every day she was “bothered by little interest or pleasure in doing things” and “bothered by feeling down, depressed or hopeless.” Nurse Raymond reported that Foss was experiencing fatigue,

change in weight, nausea/vomiting, change in bowl habits, urgent urination, new memory loss, anxiety, depression, and lack of enjoyment/interest. Nurse Raymond prescribed Concerta to treat Foss’s ADHD. Nurse Raymond wrote that Foss was burned out and had experienced a breakdown, after which Foss went on a six-month leave from work. Foss was seeing a therapist and used medical marijuana for insomnia and migraines. On December 11, 2019, Foss saw Nurse Raymond for an office visit to follow up

on “ADHD and anxiety and depression and other concerns as well as long term disability paperwork.” Foss reported that the ADHD medication seemed to be working because she was sleeping better, was less anxious and felt more focused. Nurse Raymond’s notes reflect that Foss had been experiencing nausea and diarrhea because of anxiety, but that those symptoms were slowly getting better. Nurse Raymond wrote that Foss would wake

up at night to urinate only to realize she did not actually need to urinate, which Foss believed was a symptom of her anxiety. Nurse Raymond also reported musculoskeletal issues that Foss was successfully treating through chiropractic care. At Foss’s request, Nurse Raymond referred Foss for a consultation with a therapist at Nurse Raymond’s healthcare facility. Although Foss declined medications for anxiety and depression during

the appointment, Foss indicated that she might consider them in the future. On December 18, 2019, Foss saw Griffith for a behavioral health diagnostic evaluation, which the medical records describe as a psychiatric diagnostic interview exam. Griffith listed Foss’s diagnoses as ADHD (predominantly inattentive type), anxiety, depression, and intractable migraine without aura and without status migrainosus. Griffith

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