Spry v. Eaton Corporation Long Term Disability

326 F. App'x 674
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2009
Docket08-1431
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 326 F. App'x 674 (Spry v. Eaton Corporation Long Term Disability) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spry v. Eaton Corporation Long Term Disability, 326 F. App'x 674 (4th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

Reversed and remanded by unpublished PER CURIAM opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

*675 PER CURIAM:

Eaton Corporation Long Term Disability Plan (“the Plan”) appeals a district court judgment against it in an action brought by Eva Spry alleging that the Plan wrongly terminated her long-term disability benefits. We reverse and remand for entry of judgment in favor of the Plan.

I.

Eaton Corporation is a multi-national company that offers both short-term and long-term disability benefits for many of its employees. It funds these plans and helps to administer them.

To be eligible to receive long-term disability (“LTD”) benefits under the Plan, a participant must show that she “cannot work due to an illness or injury,” that she has a “covered disability,” and that she is “under the continuous care of a physician who verifies, to the satisfaction of the Claims Administrator, that [she is] totally disabled.” J.A. 158. The Claims Administrator is a “third party administrator retained by Eaton to process and review disability claims and to rule on the first level appeals from denials of claims.” J.A. 136. Broadspire Services Incorporated (“Broadspire”) was the Plan’s Claims Administrator. The Plan also allows for a final appeal to Eaton as the Plan Administrator. For ease of reference, we will refer to the Claims Administrator and the Plan Administrator collectively as “the Administrator.”

As is relevant here, a claimant is considered to have a “covered disability,” if she is “totally and continuously unable to engage in any occupation or perform any work for compensation or profit for which [she is], or may become, reasonably well fitted by reason of education, training or experience.” J.A. 158. To determine whether a claimant has a covered disability, the Administrator evaluates objective evidence of the claimed disability, including

• Physical examination findings (functional impairments/capacity);
• Diagnostic tests results/imaging studies;
• Diagnosis;
• X-ray results;
• Observation of anatomical, physiological or psychological abnormalities; and
• Medications and/or treatment plan.

J.A. 162. For a claim that has been approved, the Plan requires continued periodic certification of the disability, which can include independent medical examinations, medical file and record reviews, and functional capacity tests.

Spry is a 62-year-old woman who resides in Manning, South Carolina. She began working for Eaton in 1980 and was a Plan participant. In early 2000, she began complaining of numbness in her hands. According to her primary care physician, Dr. Joseph Williams, an MRI of her cervical spine revealed the following:

Markedly severe spinal stenosis focally at C3-4 due to large osteophytes compressing the cervical cord as well as an accompanying disc protrusion that protrudes along with the osteophytes. Moderate to severe spinal stenosis also evident at C4-5 without disc herniation. Herniated disc is also present at C6-7 postero-rightward and impinging upon the exiting nerve root on the right and effacing the neural foramen.

J.A. 516. Spry consequently ceased working on March 20, 2000, and underwent surgery. Although she felt better after-wards, she was not ready to return to work by July 2000. Because her six-month waiting period for LTD benefits was coming to an end, she submitted an LTD benefits claim.

*676 In support of her claim, Dr. Joseph Williams and her other primary care physician, Dr. Brenda Williams, signed statements attesting that Spry suffered from cervical myelopathy and cervical spondylo-sis. The statements reported that Spry suffered weakness in her arms and shoulders, and hand tremors, and that she had difficulty walking. They affirmed that Spry was “[t]otally and [p]ermanently [disabled” and could not work even with restrictions. J.A. 588-89.

On August 23, 2000, her LTD benefits claim was approved. In late 2000, Spry also was awarded Social Security disability income benefits, having been determined by the government to be disabled as of March 17, 2000.

After the Administrator approved Spry’s LTD benefits claim, her eligibility to continue to receive LTD benefits was reviewed periodically, beginning in 2002. For the first review, Dr. Brenda Williams opined that Spry continued to be totally disabled and noted that Spry was “chronically in pain in the shoulders, arms, hands, [and] knees and is significantly anxious and depressed.” J.A. 537. The review resulted in Spry being approved for continued benefits.

The next review occurred in 2004 and also resulted in the continuation of Spry’s benefits. That review considered an opinion of Dr. Joseph Williams that Spry continued to be unable to work primarily as a result of her cervical problems. He noted that her diabetes also contributed to her disability. He reported limited motion in her neck and shoulders, decreased strength in her right hand, and pain in her shoulder and neck. He also noted that she suffered from headaches and balancing problems and from a “[m]arked limitation” from a “[m]ental/[n]ervous [i]mpairment.” J.A. 543.

The Administrator sent Spry’s records to two other physicians. Dr. Tamara Bowman, an internal medicine specialist, concluded, “[fjrom an internal medicine standpoint, there are insufficient objective clinical findings documented to support a level of functional impairment that would render [Spry] unable to perform any occupation.” J.A. 566. However, Dr. Jaime Wancier, a neurologist, found that Spry was totally disabled as of May 5, 2004. He stated:

The presence of continued complaints of pain in the neck down into the arms, decreased strength in the upper extremities, etc. are most likely related to chronic changes within the spinal cord secondary to the severe stenosis that the claimant had as reported in all of the x-rays. Most likely, the claimant sustained chronic changes within the spinal cord secondary to vascular compression. These changes are most likely chronic in nature, irreversible and most likely, permanent.

J.A. 563.

The next review of Spry’s claim began in 2005. Spry submitted a detailed statement documenting her continued problems as well as a statement from Dr. Joseph Williams noting his continued view that she was totally disabled. Dr. Williams also submitted his medical records through June 2005.

As with the prior review, the Administrator asked Dr. Bowman to review Spry’s records. Dr. Bowman concluded again that Spry was not totally disabled from an internal medicine standpoint and also noted that in the records she was provided “there is no documentation of a comprehensive neurologic, musculoskeletal, or joint examination.” J.A. 656. On that basis, Dr. Bowman stated that she could not “comment on any restrictions or limitations based on [Spry’s] history of cervical myelopathy.” J.A. 656.

*677 The Administrator then referred Spry to neurologist Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
326 F. App'x 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spry-v-eaton-corporation-long-term-disability-ca4-2009.