Mead v. ReliaStar Life Insurance

755 F. Supp. 2d 515, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134086, 2010 WL 5151332
CourtDistrict Court, D. Vermont
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
DocketCase 2:05-cv-332
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 755 F. Supp. 2d 515 (Mead v. ReliaStar Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mead v. ReliaStar Life Insurance, 755 F. Supp. 2d 515, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134086, 2010 WL 5151332 (D. Vt. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion and Order

WILLIAM K. SESSIONS, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Susan Mead has sued Defendant ReliaStar Life Insurance Company (“ReliaStar Life”) for failure to pay long-term disability (“LTD”) benefits. She seeks a declaration that she is entitled to LTD benefits under her former employer’s policy, plus interest, costs and attorney’s fees. On the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, Mead’s Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 85, is granted in part; ReliaStar Life’s Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 88, is denied; the matter is remanded to the plan administrator for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Background

The following facts are undisputed, except where noted, and are taken from the record of the plan administrator’s proceedings, as well as former proceedings in this Court.

A. The Claimant

Mead worked for ReliaStar Financial Corp. (“ReliaStar Financial”) from August 1978 to December 31, 2000. R. at 2486. At the time she ceased working for ReliaStar Financial at age 50, she held an executive position as a Vice President of Strategic Marketing under a written employment contract dated November 20, 1999, entitled Management Employment Agreement *518 (“MEA”). R. at 395^08. According to her job description, the overall purpose of her position was to “oversee [ ] and develop [ ] the internal and external communications and community relations programs of the company.” R. at 349. To that end, she was required to

[d]evelop and execute an integrated strategy for communicating enterprise strategies, plans, objectives, programs, activities and announcements to various internal and external audiences [; d]e-sign [] and implement [] public relations and advertising programs to enhance the company’s image and identity within the industry and community [; and sjelect [ ], train [ ], motivate [ ] and direct [] staff to accomplish the objectives of the various eommunications/community relations programs.

Id. The job description noted that it covered the principal duties of the job, but was not intended to provide details concerning the accomplishment of these tasks. Id.

Mead stated that her position reported to the CEO of ReliaStar Financial, and that she served on the boards of key subsidiaries located in Minneapolis, Seattle, and Jericho, New York. R. at 2863-64. Her job involved participating in meetings for a substantial part of her day, extensive work at a computer, and frequent air travel. R. at 230, 2863. Her work day frequently extended beyond eight hours. R. at 202-03. The parties agree that Mead’s position was essentially a sedentary occupation, that allowed her some flexibility to change her position and to stand up for brief periods during the course of her work day. R. at 230, 2931.

During 2000, ReliaStar Financial entered into a plan of merger with ING Groep, N.V. (“ING”), a financial services company located in the Netherlands. On December 31, 2002, ReliaStar Financial was merged into Lion Connecticut Holdings, Inc. (“Lion Connecticut”). Lion Connecticut became a wholly-owned subsidiary of ING America Insurance Holdings, Inc., which ING then acquired.

Mead’s MEA was intended to protect her in the event of a change of control at ReliaStar Financial. It provided for payments to her following a change of control if her employment was terminated, and entitled her to participate in any health, disability or life insurance plan as though she continued to be an executive of the company for three years following her termination or until her sixty-fifth birthday, whichever occurred earlier.

In connection with the corporate acquisition of ReliaStar Financial, Mead exercised her option to stop working for the company as of the end of 2000, and to receive payment under the terms of the MEA. She received a lump sum payment of $819,783.33 in 2001 under the MEA, as well as additional sums as deferred compensation or bonuses. R. at 524. Mead’s total compensation in 2000 was $283,734.38, reflecting a salary of $192,450.00 plus a bonus of $91,284.38. R. at 508.

B. The Long Term Disability Policy

ReliaStar Life Insurance Company (“ReliaStar Life”) issued a Group Policy (“the Plan”) to ReliaStar Financial to provide LTD insurance to its employees. As an employee, Mead was covered under the Plan, and according to the terms of her employment agreement her coverage continued for three years following the termination of her employment. According to the Plan, in order to qualify for LTD benefits a covered individual must

be insured on the date you become disabled and the condition causing your disability is not excluded from coverage!;] be insured on the date the benefit *519 waiting period begins[;] send written notice of the disability within one year of the date you become disabled[; and] ... be receiving regular and appropriate care and treatment intended to aid your recovery and your return to work. Regular and appropriate care and treatment means supervised care or treatment by a doctor for the sickness or accidental injury causing your disability.
R. at 15. “Total Disability” is defined as
[1) ] until you have qualified for monthly income benefits for 24 months, you are unable to do the essential duties of your own occupation, due to sickness or accidental injury[;2) ] after you have qualified for monthly income benefits for 24 months, you are unable to work at any occupation you are or could reasonably become qualified to do by education, training or experience.

R. at 23. The Plan also specifies a “Benefit Waiting Period” of twenty-six weeks, “the length of time you must be continuously disabled before you qualify to receive any benefits.... The benefit waiting period begins on the first day you see a doctor and he or she states in writing that you are disabled because of sickness or accidental injury.” R. at 15.

The Plan’s Schedule of Benefits provided that for Total Disability an individual would ordinarily be covered under a Base Plan which provided a Monthly Income Benefit of “[t]he lesser of 40% of your Basic Monthly Earnings or $15,000.00, minus Other Income.” R. at 12. Basic Monthly Earnings was defined as “salary or wage you receive for work done for the Policyholder.” Id. Basic Monthly Earnings included bonuses “for those employees with a written bonus agreement that is specifically based on sales of ReliaStar Financial ... products and/or products of a ReliaStar Financial ... subsidiary,” but did not include, among other things, incentive compensation. 1 Id. According to the Plan, “Other Income” includes among other things federal and state social security and disability benefits, “[s]alary continuance benefits provided through your employer; and “[s]alary, commission, bonus or any other income you earn from any work while receiving benefits, except as explained for Residual Disability or the Rehabilitative Work Benefit;” and “voluntarily selected” early retirement benefits. R. at 15-16.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
755 F. Supp. 2d 515, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134086, 2010 WL 5151332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-v-reliastar-life-insurance-vtd-2010.