John Duda v. Standard Insurance Co

649 F. App'x 230
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 2016
Docket15-2302
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 649 F. App'x 230 (John Duda v. Standard Insurance Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Duda v. Standard Insurance Co, 649 F. App'x 230 (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION *

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Dr. John Duda, an orthopedic surgeon and co-owner of Northwest Orthopaedic Specialists, LLC (“Northwest”), was denied disability benefits under both a group policy (the “Group Policy”) issued by Standard Insurance Company (“Standard”) and two personal insurance policies (the “Personal Policies”) issued by Lincoln National Life Insurance Company (“Lincoln”). Thereafter, Duda sued Lincoln for breach of contract and bad faith under Pennsylvania law, and Duda, along with Northwest and Northwest’s co-owner, Dr. Donald Leatherwood II, sued Standard under sections 502(a)(1)(B) and 502(a)(3) of the Employment Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). After cross-motions for summary judgment, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania granted summary judgment on all counts against all of the plaintiffs and in favor of the two insurance companies. Duda, Leatherwood, and Northwest (collectively, the “Appellants”) now appeal. For the reasons that follow, we will affirm.

I. Background

Duda and Leatherwood formed Northwest on March 27, 1998, each as a 50% owner of that orthopedic practice. The same day, Duda formed John Duda, M.D., P.C. (“Duda PC”), a separate entity through which he conducted independent medical evaluations (“IMEs”) and provided expert medical testimony. Duda is the president and sole member of Duda PC, which shares office space and employees with Northwest. In every year from 2001 to 2011, Duda’s wages and other income from Duda PC greatly exceeded his partnership income from Northwest.

Much of the disagreement in this case is grounded in Duda’s occupational duties prior to the alleged onset of his disability on August 10, 2007. As an orthopedic surgeon, Duda performed both open surgery (invasive procedures including total joint replacement surgery), and non-open procedures (involving minimally invasive surgical techniques, including arthroscopic surgery). His occupational duties also included in-office visits with patients, which involved patient consultations and non-surgical procedures such as joint aspirations, orthopedic injections, fracture treatments, and castings.

On March 5, 2009, Duda filed disability claims under both the Group. Policy with Standard and the Personal Policies with Lincoln. He claimed that his disability *232 began on August 10, 2007, but was caused by a wrist injury that occurred in “Spring 2000” when he fell into an excavation ditch and onto his outstretched hand. 1 (JA 1658; see also JA 2791.)

A. The Standard Claim

In order to qualify for either total or partial disability benefits under the Group Policy, Duda was required to prove not just that he was “Disabled” during the benefit period itself, but also that he was continuously Disabled during a preliminary “Benefit Waiting Period.” (JA 1808-09; see also JA 1832 (stating “Benefit Waiting Period” to mean “the period you must be continuously Disabled before [long-term disability] Benefits become payable”).) The defined period was 180 days. Duda could qualify as “Disabled” by showing that, “as a result of Physical Disease[ or] Injury,” he was “unable to perform with reasonable continuity the Material Duties” of his “Own Occupation” (total disability) or he was unable to earn his “Own Occupation Income Level” (partial disability). (JA 1809.) To prove Disability, he was required to file a “Proof of Loss,” which the Group Policy defined to mean “satisfactory written proof that you are Disabled and entitled to [long-term disability] Benefits.” (JA 1827 (emphasis added).) The Group Policy did not, however, define what constitutes “satisfactory written proof.”

In the disability claim forms that Duda sent to Standard, he provided proof that Leatherwood, acting as his attending physician, had diagnosed him with “Scapholu-nate Dissociation” — or so-called “SLAC[] wrist” — on his dominant right hand and had represented that Duda should stop working in or around “08/2006.” 2 (JA 1658.) Duda also stated that, since the start of his disability, he had been “unable to perform total j[oin]t replacement [and] other open procedures,” but that he continued to see “office patients” and perform arthroscopic surgery. (Id.) Upon Standard’s request for records of Leather-wood’s treatment of Duda, Leatherwood drafted a March 24, 2009 letter explaining that he had treated Duda “on a periodic basis” over the “last eight years” but “ha[d] not kept detailed formal records” because all such treatment was conducted merely as a professional courtesy to his business partner. (JA 1247.)

After Standard conducted further examination of the claim, its claim administrator informed Duda that it was denying his claim for benefits under the Group Policy. Then, during Duda’s appeal of that determination, the Standard employee who was reviewing the claim requested copies of “all of [Duda’s] medical records from at least January 1, 2006 through the present” that would be relevant to document the claimed disability. (JA 1592.) In a reply letter, Duda responded that, as an orthopedic surgeon, he “ha[d] been self treating for many years” and “ha[d] not kept any records documenting treatment.” (JA 1210). By letter dated November 6, 2009, Standard notified Duda that it was denying his appeal.

*233 B. The Lincoln Claims

Lincoln is the successor insurer on the Personal Policies — comprised of Policy No. 000528000A 3 and Policy No. 000664107. Both Personal Policies cover total disability and residual disability. In the claim forms he sent to Lincoln, Duda described himself as “PARTIALLY disabled” as of August 10, 2007 (JA 2791 (original emphasis)); although he stated that he was “no longer able to perform total joint replacement or open corrective surgery,” he acknowledged that he continued to work “40+” hours per week since the date of his disability (JA 2793), continued to “[s]ee patients in [his] office,” and was “still doing non-open arthroscopic surgery” (JA 2791), As with the Standard claim, Leath-erwood filled out a statement as Duda’s Attending Physician, diagnosing Duda with “Scapho-Lunate Dissociation” and “SLAC [] Wrist (Scapho-Lunate Advanced Collapse).” (JA 2794.)

Although Duda had claimed to be only partially disabled, Lincoln apparently considered his eligibility for both total and residual disability benefits. It denied Duda’s claims as they pertained to total disability, told him that it was “unable to approve Residual Disability benefits at this time,” and requested additional medical, financial, and billing information so that it could make a final determination with respect to residual disability benefits. (JA 2831.) During Duda’s appeal of the denial of his total disability claims, and after Lincoln made several more requests for additional information to analyze Duda’s eligibility for residual disability benefits, Duda’s counsel told Lincoln that Duda would not submit any of the requested information because, he intended to focus “exclusively” on the total disability claims.

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649 F. App'x 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-duda-v-standard-insurance-co-ca3-2016.