Orzechowski v. Boeing Co. Non-Union Long-Term Disability Plan, Plan Number 625

856 F.3d 686, 2017 WL 1947883, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 8348
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2017
Docket14-55919
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 856 F.3d 686 (Orzechowski v. Boeing Co. Non-Union Long-Term Disability Plan, Plan Number 625) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orzechowski v. Boeing Co. Non-Union Long-Term Disability Plan, Plan Number 625, 856 F.3d 686, 2017 WL 1947883, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 8348 (9th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

BYBEE, Circuit Judge:

Talana Orzechowski challenges Aetna Life Insurance Company’s (Aetna) decision to terminate her long-term disability benefits under a plan created by her employer, The Boeing Company (Boeing). Under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), we may review a denial of benefits. Where a plan grants discretion to an administrator to determine benefits, we ordinarily review for abuse of discretion. By statute, however, California has voided such provisions conferring discretionary authority to ERISA plan administrators such as Aetna. Cal. Ins. Code § 10110.6(a). The district court held that California’s statute did not apply to Boeing’s plan and upheld Aetna’s denial of benefits to Orzechowski. We disagree and hold that § 10110.6(a) applies here. We reverse the district court’s judgment and remand the case to the district court to review Aetna’s decision de novo.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Boeing’s ERISA Plan

The lawsuit arises from Aetna’s termination of Orzechowski’s benefits under a health and welfare benefits plan that Boeing offers to its non-union employees (the Plan), which is governed by ERISA. The principal plan document is The Boeing Company Master Welfare Plan (Master Plan). This document provides general information about the various benefit plans Boeing offers, but does not detail the various benefits payable through the Plan. The *689 Master Plan has a broad grant of discretionary authority, which has been delegated to a service representative, Aetna. 1 This grant includes the power to “determine all questions that may arise including all. questions relating to the eligibility of Employees and Dependents to participate in the Plan and amount of benefits to which any Participant or Dependent may become entitled.”

The Master Plan incorporates by reference various component benefit programs and the applicable Governing Documents describing the entitlement to benefits under those programs. One such benefit program is The Boeing Company Non-Union Long-Term Disability Plan (PN 625) at issue in this case. The Summary Plan Description, a Governing Document, is a description of the plan which the Plan Administrator is required to provide under ERISA. 29 U.S.C. § 1022. Boeing’s Summary Plan Description explains that insured employees are eligible for long-term benefits when they become disabled. For the first 24 months, “disabled” is defined as the employee’s inability to perform “the material duties of [the employee’s] own occupation” due to an injury or illness. (Emphasis added). After 24 months, disability is redefined so that an employee is disabled if she is “unable to work at any reasonable occupation for which [she] may be fitted by training, education, or experience.” (Emphasis added). There are exclusions or limitations on the payment of long-term benefits. Relevant here, the long-term benefits plan covers conditions for a maximum of 24 months if the “primary cause” of the disability is “mental illness.”

Aetna issued two documents, a policy and a certificate, which fund the disability benefits and are Governing Documents incorporated into the Master Plan. 2 Through the Aetna Life Insurance Company Group Life and Accident and Health Insurance Policy No. 000707 (Policy) issued to Boeing, Aetna agreed to fund and administer long-term disability benefits to employees insured under the Boeing plan. The Policy includes a grant of discretionary authority to Aetna to “review all denied claims,” “determine whether and to what extent employees and beneficiaries are entitled to benefits,” and “construe any disputed or doubtful terms of the policy.” The Policy further specifies that “Aetna shall be deemed to have properly exercised such authority unless Aetna abuses its discretion by acting arbitrarily and capriciously.”

B. Orzechowski Becomes Disabled

Talana Orzechowski worked at Boeing until February 27, 2009. In 2004, she was diagnosed with fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome. In January and February 2009, Orzechowski began suffering memory problems and increases in fatigue. Orzechowski suffered from a number of serious symptoms of largely unknown cause, including fatigue, loss of motor control, spinal and joint pain, and loss of cognitivé functioning. Some of the symp *690 toms appeared to be psychological in nature, including depression, obsessive compulsions, and suicidal thoughts. Other symptoms were more typical of physical illness, such as profuse sweating,, muscle and nerve pains, and lung weakness. She also suffered from a wide range of other physical ailments, including fatigue, headaches,- tiredness, extended periods of sleeping, asthma, decreasing muscle tone, and nausea.

Orzechowski saw numerous doctors to attempt to diagnose and address these issues. In February 2009, Orzechowski applied for short-term disability benefits under Boeing’s employee benefits plan, which Aetna approved for the maximum duration of six months (26 weeks), until July 28, 2009. Aetna then completed a long-term disability review, and approved long-term disability benefits under the “own occupation” definition of disability effective July 29, 2009. This benefits period would run through July 28, 2011.

In 2010, Aetna informed Orzechowski that the definition of disability would change from the “own occupation” to “any reasonable occupation” standard after her current benefit period ended. Aetna requested documentation to support her disability claim under the new standard.

Aetna received substantial medical records prepared by Orzechowski’s physicians. It then sent Orzechowski’s file to two physicians to review, a psychiatrist and a neurologist. Neither examined her. The psychiatrist agreed with Orzechow-ski’s physicians that she could perform no work, including “even simple, routine and repetitive work duties reliably and safely.” His conclusion was based on her psychiatric impairments, and the report noted that “potential physical impairment [was] outside the scope of [his] expertise.” The neurologist acknowledged her extensive diagnoses, including “chronic fatigue, mood disorder, adrenal disorder and inflammatory polyarthropathy,” and her symptoms of “fatigue, depression, memory impairment ... loss of motor strength [and] deteriorating motor and cognitive skills,” but he, however, concluded she had “[n]o functional limitations” on her ability to work and that she “can likely perform own occupation (light)” with “[n]o limitations or restrictions.” Based on these reports, Aetna denied Orzechowski’s claim.

In a response to Aetna’s reviewers, Or-zechowski’s own treating physician wrote a letter formally disagreeing:

It is concerning to me that a simple common sense review of the multiple historic findings detailed thoroughly in my monthly hour long evaluations of the patient would make it quite clear that this patient is not able to perform any level of work.

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Bluebook (online)
856 F.3d 686, 2017 WL 1947883, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 8348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orzechowski-v-boeing-co-non-union-long-term-disability-plan-plan-number-ca9-2017.