Mary Sargent v. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 29, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-11500
StatusUnknown

This text of Mary Sargent v. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (Mary Sargent v. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Sargent v. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, (D. Mass. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

_______________________________________ ) MARY SARGENT, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Civil Action No. v. ) 24-11500-BEM ) SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY ) OF CANADA, ) ) Defendant. ) _______________________________________)

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON PARTIES’ CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT MURPHY, J. Plaintiff Mary Sargent brings this action against Defendant Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada’s (“Sun Life”) pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). Sargent seeks reinstatement of her long-term disability (“LTD”) benefits. Before the Court are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons below, the Court will grant Defendant’s motion for summary judgment and deny Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. I. Background A. Factual Background Sargent was employed as a Senior Director of New Business Development for Philips North America LLC (“Phillips”) until December 31, 2018. Dkt. 50-8 at 649.1 Sargent ceased

1 The Court notes that it granted permission to the parties to omit statements of facts in their memoranda in support of their motions for summary judgment. Dkt. 34. Because the record spans more than 6,500 pages, the Court provides only an abbreviated overview here, with additional facts included in the analysis as needed. working due to significant pain, fatigue, a lack of endurance, and cognitive limitations stemming from a non-work-related shoulder injury, which she says caused shoulder pain, neck and head pain, and nerve pains later diagnosed as fibromyalgia, bilateral occipital neuralgia, dysthymia, cervical degenerative disc disease, temporomandibular dysfunction, and trigeminal neuralgia. See, e.g.,

Dkt. 50-9 at 598; Dkt. 50-8 at 657; Dkt. 50-5 at 36, 102. Phillips maintained a Group Insurance Policy (the “Plan”) through Sun Life, which provided disability benefits for eligible employees.2 Dkt. 50-7 at 404–35. The Plan defines “Disability” and “Disabled” as follows. For the first twenty-four months following a 180-day “Elimination Period,” a claimant is considered “Totally Disabled” if she is “unable to perform one or more of the Material and Substantial duties of [her] Regular Occupation.” Dkt. 50-7 at 408, 412, 416. After this initial twenty-four-month period, the definition narrows eligibility: to remain entitled for LTD benefits, a claimant must then demonstrate that she “is unable to perform with reasonable continuity any Gainful Occupation for which [she is] or could become reasonably qualified for by education, training and experience.”

Id. at 416. The Plan defines “Gainful Occupation” as “employment that is, or can be expected, to provide” an income of at least fifty percent of the claimant’s prior monthly earnings. Id. at 407, 412. A claimant bears the burden of demonstrating eligibility for benefits, which requires submitting proof, defined as “any medical, financial, or other information that [Sun Life] require[s] to make a claim determination,” id. at 415, including “evidence demonstrating the disability,” which “should include at least Hospital records, Physician records, psychiatric records, x-rays, narrative reports, or lab, toxicology or other diagnostic testing materials as appropriate for the

2 There is no dispute that Sargent was an eligible employee under the Plan. disabling condition,” id. at 426. Under the Plan, Sun Life is responsible for determining Plan participants’ eligibility for benefits under the Plan. Id. at 426–28, 432. After receiving short-term disability benefits from Sun Life under the Plan, Sargent timely submitted her application for LTD benefits on July 5, 2019, which included a statement from her

attending physician, Dr. Douglas Black, that Sargent should not drive or work and that “sitting exacerbate[s] pain.” Dkt. 50-8 at 645–74. On July 26, 2019, Sun Life approved LTD benefits, effective July 9, 2019. Dkt. 50-6 at 239. On September 26, 2019, Sargent’s application for disability benefits through a private policy was approved. Dkt. 50-2 at 13–14. Sargent also applied for and received Social Security Administration (“SSA”) benefits beginning on June 28, 2021, retroactive to June 2019.3 Dkt. 50-8 at 640; Dkt. 50-9 at 35. The SSA determination included a doctor’s conclusion that “[d]ue to a combination of pain, inattention, cognitive slowing and issues with executive function, [Sargent] will not be able to maintain a pace for two hour periods and will have an unreasonable number of interruptions to pace.” Dkt. 50-2 at 202.

On January 26, 2021, Sun Life provided Sargent with a six-month notice stating that, effective July 8, 2021, she would hit the twenty-four month mark of receiving benefits—the point at which the Plan’s eligibility definition narrows—and thus would continue to qualify for benefits only if she remained unable to “perform the duties of any gainful occupation, based on her education, training, or experience.” Dkt. 50-6 at 275–77 (emphasis in original); see also Dkt. 50-7 at 416 (defining eligibility after twenty-four months as “unable to perform with reasonable

3 Later, Sun Life determined that the Social Security benefits earned by Sargent during the internal review process from July 8, 2021, to September 28, 2022, constituted income that should have offset her monthly benefit amounts. Dkt. 50-10 at 15–17. continuity any Gainful Occupation for which [she is] or could become reasonably qualified for by education, training and experience”). From 2019 to 2022, Sun Life continued to gather additional records to complete periodic reviews of Sargent’s eligibility, see, e.g., Dkt. 50-6 at 241 (discussing periodic reviews for eligibility), and to assess Sargent’s eligibility under the new requirements.4 During this time,

Sargent and her healthcare providers regularly kept Sun Life informed of her treatment status and ongoing medical status, e.g., Dkt. 50-9 at 110–11 (April 29, 2020 memorandum memorializing a call between Sun Life case manager and Sargent); Dkt. 50-2 at 379–86 (October 13, 2020 report by Dr. Kaaren Bekken); Dkt. 50-7 at 108–16 (June 18, 2021 report by Dr. Bekken); Dkt. 50-5 at 107–10 (medical records from a March 1, 2022 visit with Dr. Hsinlin Thomas Cheng); Dkt. 50-5 at 101–06 (Residual Function Capacity form completed by Dr. Andrew Rosen on May 12, 2022); Dkt. 50-5 at 46–57 (Residual Function Capacity form completed by Dr. John J. Marchese on June 29, 2022), and Sun Life retained independent doctors to review Sargent’s file and conduct independent evaluations of Sargent, e.g., Dkt. 50-10 at 27–31 (August 20, 2020 report by

Dr. Saima Khalid); Dkt. 50-6 at 559–60 (December 29, 2020 report by Clinical Social Worker Bonnie Schafer); Dkt. 50-10 at 59–62 (January 14, 2021 report by Dr. Michael Chilungu); Dkt. 50-9 at 106–07 (February 18, 2021 addendum to report by Dr. Khalid); Dkt. 50-9 at 116–18 (February 3, 2021 addendum to report by Dr. Chilungu); Dkt. 50-10 at 36–44 (September 16, 2021 report by Dr. David Miller); Dkt. 50-10 at 19–21 (October 25, 2021 addendum to report by Dr. Miller); Dkt. 50-5 at 162–76 (March 19, 2022 report by Dr. Malissa Kraft); Dkt. 50-6 at 234–35 (March 30, 2022 addendum to report by Dr. Kraft); Dkt. 50-5 at 65–72 (June 23, 2022 addendum

4 During this time, Sun Life continued paying Sargent LTD benefits under a reservation of rights. See Dkt. 50-5 at 78. to report by Dr. Chilungu); Dkt. 50-5 at 28–39 (July 28, 2022 report by Dr. Steven Winkel); id. at 4–6 (August 31, 2022 addendum to report by Dr. Winkel); Dkt. 50-3 at 958–61 (September 23, 2022 report by Vocational Rehabilitation Consultant Cristi Calloway). Ultimately, Sun Life’s reviewing doctors and consultants concluded that Sargent could

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