Kmatz v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

232 F. App'x 451
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 2007
Docket06-3826
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 232 F. App'x 451 (Kmatz v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) 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
Kmatz v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 232 F. App'x 451 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

On behalf of himself and his son’s estate, Joseph E. Kmatz urges us to hold that he, not Jennifer Gaines (the one-time wife of his son), is the beneficiary of his son’s life-insurance policy. Faced with cross motions for summary judgment and faced with a beneficiary designation form that the decedent did not change after the dissolution of his marriage, the district court determined that Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife) properly paid the decedent’s life insurance benefits to Jennifer Gaines. We affirm.

I.

Joseph M. Kmatz, the decedent, worked as an aircraft mechanic for ABX Air in Wilmington, Ohio. He enrolled in the company’s employee-benefit program, which included life-insurance and accidental-death-insurance policies issued by Met-Life.

The plan administrator is Airborne Freight Corporation, which (along with the plan’s claims administrator, the insurance companies “and other Plan fiduciaries”) possesses “full and absolute discretionary authority to administer and interpret the terms of the Plan and to determine eligibility for and entitlement to Plan benefits. Benefits under [the] Plan [are] paid only if the Plan Administrator, or its delegate, decides in its discretion that the applicant is entitled to them.” JA 144.

“In the event of [a participant’s] death,” the summary plan description explains that the participant’s “beneficiary will be paid [the participant’s] Life Insurance benefit.” JA 128. The plan description defines a “beneficiary” as “the person or persons you name to receive your Life Insurance benefit in the event of your death,” and instructs plan participants to “complete the beneficiary section of your Group Insurance Enrollment form and return it to the Benefits section of Human Resources to assure that Life Insurance benefits are paid in accordance with your wishes.” JA 129. The plan description also informs participants that they may change their “beneficiary designation at any time.” Id. If a participant fails to name a beneficiary in the first instance or if the named beneficiary predeceases the participant, MetLife will pay the benefits “in the following order of priority: 1. Your spouse; 2. Your child(ren) equally; 3. Your parent(s) equally; 4. Your brother(s) and sister(s) equally; 5. Your estate.” Id.

On November 13, 1999, Kmatz married defendant Jennifer Gaines. Soon after the wedding, he executed a two-page “Group Insurance Enrollment/Change Form” designating Gaines as the beneficiary of his life-insurance and aeeidental-death-insur *454 anee policies. He also enrolled Gaines as a dependent in his health-insurance plan. After six months of marriage, the couple separated. Kmatz and Gaines executed a separation and property agreement that purported to be the “full and complete settlement of all spousal support and property rights between the parties.” JA 26. The agreement did not mention life-insurance benefits. A Clinton County (Ohio) magistrate granted the couple’s petition for a dissolution of their marriage shortly thereafter.

On August 25, 2000, Kmatz executed a new “Group Insurance Enrollment/Change Form,” this time canceling his ex-wife’s health coverage under the company’s health insurance plan. JA 331. He did not, however, name a new life-insurance or accidental-death-insurance beneficiary; he left that portion of the form blank.

Kmatz died intestate on August 24, 2003. After his death, MetLife owed $64,000 in group life insurance benefits and $64,000 in accidental death benefits to his beneficiary. On August 30, Gaines filled out a “Beneficiary’s Life Insurance Claim Statement,” seeking her ex-husband’s benefits under the plan. JA 164. In a cover letter dated October 27 and accompanied by Gaines’ claim documents, ABX Air benefits coordinator Julie Ake notified MetLife that it had received Gaines’ claim and that “[t]he latest beneficiary listed [on Kmatz’s group enrollment form] was his ex-wife, Jennifer Kmatz (Gaines) [who] was listed as the beneficiary on 12/01/99.” JA 163. Ake noted that “Kmatz dropped his ex-wife from his insurancef;] however he did not change his beneficiary.” Id. MetLife approved the claim on November 7, paying $128,394.52.

On December 3, an attorney representing Kmatz’s parents sent a letter to Met-Life stating that, under Ohio law, any designation of an ex-spouse as a life-insurance beneficiary is revoked if the couple has divorced or obtained a dissolution. The living spouse, the letter explained, is treated as having predeceased the insured spouse. See Ohio Rev.Code § 5815.33. Relying on this law, the attorney maintained that Kmatz’s parents—not his ex-wife—had “the sole right to receive payments as the beneficiaries” of Kmatz’s insurance policy. JA 151; see also JA 129 (plan description indicates that parents become beneficiaries if the insured has neither a spouse nor children).

In a letter dated December 11, MetLife responded to Kmatz’s parents, informing them that ERISA, not state law, governed the insurance plan and that MetLife “must administer claims in accordance with the documents and instruments governing the plan.” JA 148. “The Plan provides that benefits are payable to the beneficiary named by the participant on a proper form,” the letter continued, and “[t]he latest designation of beneficiary contained in Joseph Kmatz’s records ... names Jennifer Kmatz as the sole beneficiary of the benefits.” Id.

On June 29, 2004, Kmatz’s father filed this lawsuit in federal district court on behalf of himself and his son’s estate. As pertinent here, the amended complaint stated claims for (1) breach of contract against MetLife and (2) breach of fiduciary duty against ABX, Airborne and MetLife, see 29 U.S.C. §§ 1104, 1105. Faced with cross motions for summary judgment on these two claims, the court granted both Gaines’ and the companies’ motions and denied the estate’s motion.

II.

When a plan empowers administrators with “a dear grant of discretion to determine benefits or interpret the plan,” Wulf v. Quantum Chem. Corp., 26 F.3d 1368, *455 1373 (6th Cir.1994), judicial review of the exercise of that discretion is limited—limited to deciding whether the administrator’s decision was arbitrary and capricious, Perez v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 150 F.3d 550, 555 (6th Cir.1998). Because this plan says that the administrators possess “full and absolute discretionary authority to administer and interpret the terms of the Plan and to determine eligibility for and entitlement to Plan benefits,” JA 144, we must apply this “highly deferential standard of review” here, Shelby Co. Health Care Corp. v. So. Council of Indus. Workers Health & Welfare Trust Fund,

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Bluebook (online)
232 F. App'x 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kmatz-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-ca6-2007.