Turna v. Mayo Clinic

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedApril 16, 2019
Docket0:18-cv-00547
StatusUnknown

This text of Turna v. Mayo Clinic (Turna v. Mayo Clinic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turna v. Mayo Clinic, (mnd 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Tarlochan S. Turna, M.D., File No. 18-cv-00547 (ECT/HB)

Plaintiff,

v. OPINION AND ORDER

Mayo Clinic,

Defendant.

Emily Lacy Marshall, Tim Louris, M. William O’Brien, Miller O’Brien Jensen, P.A., Minneapolis, MN for plaintiff Tarlochan S. Turna.

Andrew J. Holly, Caitlin L. D. Hull, Dorsey & Whitney, LLP, Minneapolis, MN for defendant Mayo Clinic.

In this ERISA lawsuit, plaintiff Dr. Tarlochan S. Turna seeks to recover long-term disability benefits under an employee welfare benefit plan (the “Plan”) sponsored and administered by defendant Mayo Clinic. This case is not about whether Dr. Turna is disabled. The Parties agree Dr. Turna is totally disabled, and the Plan has paid him a monthly long-term disability benefit since September 2016. This case is about the amount of benefits Dr. Turna should receive. Under the Plan, benefits are determined by reference to a claimant’s “annual salary” at the time his disability begins. Dr. Turna says the Plan has underpaid him benefits based on an arbitrarily low determination of his pre-disability annual salary. Mayo says that its determination of Dr. Turna’s annual salary and the resulting amount of his benefits under the plan are reasonable. The Parties have filed competing summary-judgment motions. Should its summary-judgment motion be denied, Mayo alternatively seeks remand of Dr. Turna’s claim. The Parties’ summary-judgment motions will be denied, and the claim will be remanded to the administrator for further

consideration consistent with this opinion and order. I1 A Dr. Turna worked as a “full-time physician” at the Mayo Clinic Health System in Cannon Falls, Minnesota. Compl. ¶¶ 8, 15 [ECF No. 1]. Dr. Turna provided services in

the hospital and in the emergency room. Id. ¶ 17; AR 156. He began working at the Cannon Falls Hospital in 2002, though it appears the hospital was not part of the Mayo Clinic Health System at that time. AR 597 (physician employment agreement dated March 11, 2002, identifying the employer as “Cannon Falls Hospital District, a Minnesota municipal corporation”). Dr. Turna says his Mayo employment began in 2006. AR 201.

The administrative record and summary-judgment submissions establish—and the Parties

1 The facts in this section are taken from the Complaint, Answer, and documents in the administrative record of Dr. Turna’s benefit claim and, unless noted otherwise, are undisputed. The Parties did not jointly file the entire administrative record. Instead, Dr. Turna and Mayo each separately filed a subset of documents from the record that each considers relevant to the pending motions. See Marshall Decl. ¶ 2, Ex. 1 [ECF No. 28] (filed by Dr. Turna); Danielson Decl. ¶ 3, Ex. B [ECF No. 19] (filed by Mayo). Many documents were filed by both Parties; some documents were filed by only one Party or the other. Regardless, the Parties’ administrative-record submissions share identical pagination (appearing in the lower right corner of each document beginning with the prefix “MAYO”). Therefore, and in the interests of convenience and efficiency, citations to documents from the administrative record will appear in this Opinion and Order with the prefix “AR” and reference to the page number, simply as “AR __,” regardless of filer. agree—that Dr. Turna worked long hours before becoming disabled. See, e.g., Compl. ¶ 24; Answer ¶ 24 [ECF No. 5]. On the advice of his treating physicians, Dr. Turna reduced his work schedule

significantly in March 2016 because of adverse health effects from Parkinson’s Disease. Compl. ¶ 33; Answer ¶ 33. As a result, Dr. Turna qualified for and began receiving short-term disability benefits effective March 14, 2016. Compl. ¶ 34; Answer ¶ 34. In a letter to Dr. Turna dated July 21, 2016, Mayo Senior Claims Adjuster Nancy M. Ehlke described his short-term disability benefits simply as a continuation of his “full salary” and

advised Dr. Turna that, if he remained disabled through a twenty-six-week qualifying (or “elimination”) period, then he would qualify for long-term disability benefits under the Plan effective September 12, 2016. AR 208. Along with her letter, Ehlke enclosed a form application for long-term disability benefits and asked Dr. Turna to “please complete this form and return it in the enclosed envelope.” Id.

Like its short-term disability benefit plan, the Mayo long-term disability benefit plan ties the amount of benefits to a claimant’s “annual salary.” Compl. ¶ 12, Ex. A at 12; see also Answer ¶ 12 (admitting that copy of Plan attached to Complaint as Exhibit A was “in effect when Plaintiff’s disability commenced in March of 2016”). The key term of the Plan that describes how Dr. Turna’s long-term disability benefit amount would be determined

reads in relevant part as follows: Amount of Benefit. For the purpose of determining the amount of long term disability income benefits . . . the Plan uses your annual salary. Annual salary means your basic salary at the time your disability begins and the Elimination Period commences (based on your regularly scheduled hours) and does not include bonuses, incentive pay, commissions, overtime pay, shift pay or other extra compensation. The Monthly Benefit you are eligible to receive is based on 84% of your annual salary at the time your disability commences.

Compl. Ex. A at 12 (emphasis added). B Dr. Turna completed the application for long-term disability benefits and signed it August 9, 2016. AR 207. Along with the application, Dr. Turna submitted a letter to Mayo raising what he described as a “significant discrepancy” between his compensation and the amount of short-term disability benefits he was receiving. AR 201. Dr. Turna’s letter presages the central issue in this case. Dr. Turna wrote that he believed his short-term disability benefits were “deficient” because the administrator had “seriously undervalued [his] actual pay history.” AR 202. Dr. Turna explained that he was raising the issue “in the hope of avoiding the confusion over [his] proper rate of pay that plagued [his] short term disability.” AR 201. Dr. Turna made several points in his letter to substantiate his position that his short-term disability benefits had been underpaid. He wrote that he “was scheduled a

minimum of 2,080 hours per year for the last three years . . . covering both the Emergency Department and the Hospital at the same time.” AR 201. He represented that his annual compensation “has been substantially above $400,000 for the last four years” and that this figure “never explicitly contained any Bonus Pay, Commissions, or Overtime Pay,” items excluded from the computation of annual salary under the Plan. AR 201–02; Compl. Ex.

A at 12. Dr. Turna asserted that a July 1, 2015 change in pay model was intended to facilitate the creation of “safe practices” and was not “intended to be a pay cut.” AR 202. In fact, Dr. Turna wrote, the change led to an increase in his hours “as [he] was asked to cover additional shifts generated by the change.” Id. Dr. Turna asserted that a letter he

had received on April 12, 2016—the month after his short-term disability benefits commenced—setting his “total compensation” at $301,566 “was a mistake” because it “did not take [his] regularly scheduled Emergency Department hours into consideration.” Id. He believed that the short-term disability plan administrator had “undervalued [his] actual pay history” by relying on this document. Id. Dr. Turna wrote that his “regular baseline

Annual Salary should be in the neighborhood of $398K or higher.” 2 Id. After receiving Dr. Turna’s application for long-term disability benefits and his accompanying letter, Ehlke looked into the issues Dr. Turna raised concerning the calculation of his benefits. AR 59.

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