Watts v. Organogenesis, Inc.

30 F. Supp. 2d 101, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19515, 1998 WL 865565
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 7, 1998
DocketCivil Action 98-11439-MEL
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. Supp. 2d 101 (Watts v. Organogenesis, Inc.) 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
Watts v. Organogenesis, Inc., 30 F. Supp. 2d 101, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19515, 1998 WL 865565 (D. Mass. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND DECISION

LASKER, District Judge.

On February 23, 1998, Kimberlee Anne Watts suffered a serious spinal cord injury in an automobile accident. She sustained a C-4/C-5 subluxation causing C^4 quadriplegia. As a result, she is unable to move all four extremities, and unable to control her bladder and bowel. At the time of the accident, Watts was employed by the defendant Orga-nogenesis, Inc. and was a participant in that company’s Health Benefits Plan, which is governed by ERISA. The employer and the plan, along with the company hired to administer claims, and the employer’s and the plan’s insurance company, are all defendants in this action for certain health care services claimed by the plaintiff since her accident. Watts moves for a preliminary injunction ordering coverage of those services.

*103 I.

Following emergency surgery at the Lawrence General Hospital, Watts was transferred to Boston Medical Center (“BMC”), where she was an in-patient until her discharge on July 20,1998. Since then, she and her two young children have lived with her parents, Julian and Lee Ann Center, in the parents’ home in Andover, Massachusetts. Watts and her husband are presently in the ■ process of divorce, and he provides no financial support to her or her children.

In addition to her quadriplegia, Watts suffers from a condition unique among patients with her level of spinal cord injury (“SCI”) known as autonomic dysreflexia (“dysrefle-xia”). Dysreflexia is an abnormal response to a problem or stimulus in the body below the point of an SCI. The condition is most likely to occur if an SCI is at or above the 6th thoracic vertebra, which Watts’ injury is. In layperson’s terms, dysreflexia occurs when there is a stimulus to the body below the level of the injury and the intended message cannot get to the brain through the normal route because it is interrupted by the injury. In an effort to apprize the brain that something painful or otherwise stimulating is going on, the impulse takes an alternative route, through the sympathetic chain, which is part of the autonomic nervous system. This in turn causes a rise in blood pressure that will steadily worsen until the stimulus is eliminated. Ordinarily, a dysreflexie response is triggered by something that someone not suffering from quadriplegia would sense as pain; as is discussed more fully below, Watts’ condition appears to be triggered by an unusually large variety of even the most modest of stimuli.

Watts’ case of dysreflexia is particularly severe, both in terms of frequency of attacks and the extreme levels to which her blood pressure rises. During her hospitalization at BMC, Watts experienced many dysreflexia attacks or “episodes”. Since her discharge to home, she has suffered, on average, one to four such attacks per day.

Around the time of her discharge from the hospital, Watts, her parents, and staff at BMC arranged for the home services of a nurse because it was felt that a nurse was medically required for Watts’ bowel and bladder care regimen and to monitor and control her episodes of dysreflexia. Through its administrator, the defendant health benefit plan took the position that Watts was not covered for such services. Watts and her parents, however, contracted with a home health care agency for 40 hours of nursing care spread over the weekdays, and approximately two hours of nursing services per weekend day.' As Watts herself has not been able to afford the nursing services received since discharge, her parents have paid for it. As of the issuance of this opinion, the total bill for nursing services is- expected to be approximately $20,000.

In July, 1998, in response to the benefit plan’s refusal to cover the nursing services, Watts filed this suit on her claim for ERISA benefits. The defendants are: her former employer, Organogenesis, Inc.; the health benefits plan, the Organogensis, Inc. Health Benefits Plan (the “Plan”); and the claims services company hired by the Plan to administer claims, Medical Claims Service, Inc. Organogensis and the Plan then brought third party defendant General American Life Insurance Company into the case. Watts seeks, inter alia, a preliminary injunction ordering the defendants to cover her for 16 hours of home nursing services per day, seven days per week.

Because of the complexity of both the construction of the written policy (the “plan document”) and the medical facts involved, additional briefing and further development of the record was required. An evidentiary hearing on the medical issues was held on October 27, 1998, and proposed findings of fact were solicited. Watts’ motion for a preliminary injunction is now ready for disposition. For reasons stated below, it is granted.

II.

The defendants oppose the injunction on a number of grounds going to Watts’ likelihood of success on the merits, including Watts’ *104 undisputed failure to exhaust the procedural steps prescribed in the plan document, as well as on the basis of various exclusions specified in the plan document. They contend that the proper standard of review of the denial of benefits in this case is the more deferential “arbitrary and capricious” standard, as opposed to de novo review.

Watts counters that her particular circumstances call for an exception to the exhaustion rule, and that a proper reading of the plan document establishes that the exclusions relied upon by defendants are irrelevant to her claim. She argues further that even if the exclusions must be considered, none actually applies to justify denial in her case. She does not comment on the appropriate standard of review. Watts also claims, of course, to have met her burden with respect to all of the standard requirements for a preliminary injunction.

While Watts misconstrues the plan document, she is indeed correct on all other significant points. The issue of the appropriate standard of review need not be labored over, as the result here is the same under either the de novo or the “arbitrary and capricious” standard. The denial of the benefits sought by Watts was unreasonable, and not supported by substantial evidence.

Exhaustion of Procedural Requirements

Defendants’ threshold argument is that Watts has failed to exhaust her administrative remedies, i.e., the Plan’s internal procedures. In particular, defendants contend that under the exhaustion rule faced by ERISA plaintiffs, Watts was required to have fully pursued her claim for services through the various stages of internal administrative review prescribed by the Plan before commencing litigation. It is undisputed that she has not done so. Watts acknowledges the general rule, but points out that the requirement is lifted when the ordinary procedural course would be futile or inadequate. See Turner v. Fallon Comm. Health Plan, Inc., 127 F.3d 196, 200 (1st Cir.1997); DePina v. General Dynamics Corp., 674 F.Supp. 46, 49-50 (D.Mass.1987). Reliance on this exception to the rule is indeed appropriate in this case.

An ERISA plan’s procedural requirements need not be exhausted when they are inadequate. Id.

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Related

Turner v. Fallon Community Health Plan, Inc.
127 F.3d 196 (First Circuit, 1997)
DePina v. General Dynamics Corp.
674 F. Supp. 46 (D. Massachusetts, 1987)
McLean Hospital Corp. v. Lasher
819 F. Supp. 110 (D. Massachusetts, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Supp. 2d 101, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19515, 1998 WL 865565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-organogenesis-inc-mad-1998.