Kimberly Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co of N. Am.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 2018
Docket17-1233
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kimberly Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co of N. Am. (Kimberly Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co of N. Am.) 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
Kimberly Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co of N. Am., (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0166n.06

No. 17-1233

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

KIMBERLY J. GUEST-MARCOTTE, ) FILED ) Mar 30, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellant, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ) LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH ) ON APPEAL FROM THE AMERICA; METALDYNE SALARY ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT CONTINUATION PLAN; METALDYNE ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN POWERTRAIN COMPONENTS, INC.; SHORT ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN TERM DISABILITY INCOME PLAN OF ) METALDYNE, LLC, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. ) )

BEFORE: NORRIS, ROGERS, and THAPAR, Circuit Judges.

ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Kimberly Guest-Marcotte suffers from Ehlers-Danlos

Syndrome Type III, a hereditary disease characterized by loose connective tissue and frequent

joint dislocations and subluxations. In June 2013, she applied for short-term disability benefits

due to the chronic pain and fatigue caused by her disease. The administrator of her disability

plan, Life Insurance Company of North America (“LINA”), denied her claim without exercising

its right to have Guest-Marcotte physically examined by one of its doctors. Because Guest-

Marcotte suffers from an objectively verifiable disease which is medically known to cause

chronic pain, and which Guest-Marcotte’s doctors have repeatedly concluded to be disabling, No. 17-1233 Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., et al.

LINA’s refusal to conduct a physical examination of Guest-Marcotte rendered its denial arbitrary

and capricious.

I.

Guest-Marcotte is forty-two years old. From 2005 until her termination in November

2013, she was employed as an insurance risk manager by Metaldyne, LLC, a designer and

supplier of metal engine components. As a Metaldyne employee, she was covered by

Metaldyne’s Salary Continuation Plan (the “Plan”).1 Under the terms of the Plan, covered

employees are entitled to receive short-term disability benefits (“STD benefits”) equal to their

base salary for up to 26 weeks “during an approved disability absence.” The Plan defines

“disabled” as follows:

You are considered Disabled if, solely because of a covered Injury or Sickness, you are:  Unable to perform the material duties of your Regular Occupation; and  Unable to earn 80% or more of your Covered Earnings from working in your Regular Occupation.

The Plan further states that the employee “must provide the claims administrator, at [the

employee’s] own expense, satisfactory proof of Disability before benefits will be paid.”

The Plan designates Metaldyne, LLC as the plan administrator, and provides Metaldyne

in this role with authority to “make rulings, interpret the Plan, prescribe procedures, gather

needed information, . . . and generally do all other things which need to be handled in

administering the Plan.” Defendant LINA is the Plan’s claims administrator. The Plan grants

1 For reasons not entirely clear, the Plan itself is not part of the record in this case. Instead, the record contains only a summary description of the Plan, which the parties have each treated as if it were the relevant plan document. Therefore, all references in this opinion to the terms of the Plan are to the terms of the summary plan description. The record also contains two other documents, one entitled “Short Term Disability Income Plan of Metaldyne, LLC,” and the other “Short Term Disability Income Plan for the Employees of Metaldyne, LLC.” These documents are not at issue in this case. -2- No. 17-1233 Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., et al.

LINA the authority to “require a medical examination, at its own expense and as often as [it]

may reasonable require.”

Guest-Marcotte has experienced joint pain since childhood. In early 2012, her primary

care physician, Dr. Phillip Kadaj, diagnosed her with EDS Type III. EDS Type III is a

hereditary disorder that causes loose and weakened connective tissue. Common symptoms

include hyperflexible and unstable joints, and EDS Type III is medically known to cause

frequent joint dislocations and subluxations as well as chronic pain and fatigue.

Dr. Kadaj initially referred Guest-Marcotte to a rheumatologist. When she returned to

see Dr. Kadaj on May 7, 2013, she reported neck pain with radiation to the top of her head and

back, hotness and numbness from her shoulder to her elbow, and weakness in her upper

extremities. Dr. Kadaj again determined that she had EDS Type III and referred her to an EDS

specialist in Chicago, Dr. Bradley Tinkle.

Dr. Tinkle is a clinical geneticist and a recognized expert on EDS, and he has authored

several books on EDS and given numerous speeches and presentations on the topic.

He examined Guest-Marcotte on May 22, 2013. His notes from that visit indicate she reported

pain in her lower back, neck, knees, and throughout her legs, along with multiple dislocations of

her hips, ribs and shoulders, and subluxations of her knees and ankles. She also complained that

she was having trouble sleeping, which caused her chronic fatigue, and that she was experiencing

tingling and numbness in her legs. Dr. Tinkle diagnosed her with EDS Type III, as well as

polyarticular joint pain, temporomandibular joint-pain dysfunction syndrome, and fatigue. In

addition, a cervical spine MRI showed disc degeneration of C3-C4,2 C4-C5, and C5-C6, as well

as herniation of C4-C5 resulting in “moderate central canal stenosis.” Dr. Tinkle recommended

2 C3-C4 refers to the intervertebral disc between the C3 and C4 vertebrae. -3- No. 17-1233 Guest-Marcotte v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., et al.

that Guest-Marcotte begin physical therapy, work on her posture, start taking an anti-

inflammatory medication, and apply for short-term disability benefits “in order to rest, obtain the

[suggested] multiple consultations, and to start the recommended therapies.”

Guest-Marcotte took Dr. Tinkle’s advice and applied for STD benefits on June 6, 2013.

In support of her application, Dr. Tinkle submitted a Medical Request Form indicating that her

primary diagnosis was EDS and that the specific factors impacting her return to work were

“multiple joint pains,” “cervical disc degeneration,” “poor sleep,” and “chronic fatigue.” He

imposed the following work restrictions: (1) “avoid repetitive stress”; (2) “no lifting, pushing,

[or] pulling” five pounds or more; and (3) she would have to be able to take “frequent breaks.”

He opined that Guest-Marcotte would be able to return to work if these restrictions could be

accommodated.

Dr. Kadaj also submitted a Medical Request Form listing Guest-Marcotte’s primary

diagnosis as EDS, and stating that the specific factors impacting her return to work were limited

functional capacity and chronic pain. He imposed work limitations of: (1) no sitting prolonged

periods; (2) no standing prolonged periods; (3) no lifting more than ten pounds; and (4) no

pushing or pulling. Dr. Kadaj opined that she could not return to work even with

accommodations because her pain was “severe/limiting” and it was not reasonable for her to sit

more than two hours at her job.

LINA made its initial decision to deny benefits on August 2, 2013. The record shows

that LINA assigned Nurse Case Manager Sarah Drudy and physician reviewer Dr. Paul D.

Seiferth, MD to review Guest-Marcotte’s file. Drudy observed that the medical evidence on file

“[did] not demonstrate a functional loss beyond incur [sic].” She also noted that, although

Guest-Marcotte was diagnosed with EDS, her physical exam findings were “unremarkable.” Dr.

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