Weissman v. First Unum Life Insurance

44 F. Supp. 2d 512, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4590, 1999 WL 198798
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 1, 1999
Docket98 Civ. 2458(CLB)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 F. Supp. 2d 512 (Weissman v. First Unum Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weissman v. First Unum Life Insurance, 44 F. Supp. 2d 512, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4590, 1999 WL 198798 (S.D.N.Y. 1999).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT & CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

BRIEANT, District Judge.

This ERISA case was tried to the Court without a jury on January 26, 1999, at which time the Court reserved decision. The Court sets forth below its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law following the trial.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The Parties

Plaintiff Jeffrey Weissman is a severely disabled, brain damaged person. His disability is the result of a devastating injury received in a motorcycle accident approximately six years ago. Before the accident, Mr. Weissman was a securities broker with A.R. Baron & Co., Inc. (“Baron”) and before that a broker with D.H. Blair.

Defendant First UNUM Life Insurance Company (“First UNUM”) is an insurance company that issued disability policy number 456138 to Baron (the “Policy”) under an employee disability plan governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. (“ERISA”). First UNUM is also the plan administrator. Mr. Weissman, as an employee of Baron, was listed as covered by the Policy at the time of his accident. The Pleadings

Mr. Weissman seeks review pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132 of a termination of disability benefits being paid by First UNUM, the plan administrator and disability insurer. Plaintiff asks this Court to set aside the decision of First UNUM as plan administrator, and plaintiff seeks money damages for nonpayment of benefits from First UNUM as disability insurer. First UNUM requests that the Court uphold the decision to deny benefits and by counterclaim seeks damages in the amount of all benefits paid to plaintiff under the Policy.

Issuance of the Policy and Payment of Benefits

Baron applied to First UNUM for a comprehensive group insurance policy in March of 1993. The written application reported Weissman, along with others, as an employee eligible for benefits under the Policy and reported his annual income as two million dollars. First UNUM issued the Policy effective May 1, 1993. The Policy provided that if an insured became totally disabled within the meaning of the Policy, the insurance company would pay monthly benefits equal to the lesser of 60% of the insured’s basic monthly earnings or the amount of the maximum monthly benefit shown in the policy specifications.

On August 21, 1993, Mr. Weissman was in a motorcycle accident that left him severely disabled from brain damage. Mr. *515 Weissman submitted a Long Term Disability Claim (the “Claim”), dated October 10, 1993, asserting that he was totally disabled. First UNUM accepted Mr. Weiss-man’s Claim and after the Policy’s 90-day waiting period elapsed, began paying monthly benefits to Mr. Weissman in the amount of the maximum monthly benefit shown in the policy specifications, i.e., $35,-000. First UNUM continued to pay full monthly benefits to Mr. Weissman until March 24,' 1998, at which time the total paid under the Policy was $2,011,600.

First UNUM’s Investigation and Quasi-Administrative Decision

First UNUM became aware of the possibility that the amounts Weissman and Baron had reported as income in the Policy application were obtained by Weissman through illegal or fraudulent means sometime in April 1997, when it received a Forbes magazine article about Baron. First UNUM then began gathering information regarding Baron and Mr. Weiss-man as part of an investigation into the validity of Mr. Weissman’s disability Claim. At the end of the investigation, First UNUM had compiled the following information:

In May 1997, the New York District Attorney’s Office filed in’ New York Supreme Court, New York County, an indictment against Baron and 13 individual defendants, all of whom were former employees of Baron (the “Baron Indictment”). Mr. Weissman was not included or even mentioned in the Baron Indictment or any other indictment. On December 17, 1997, the SIPC Trustee for Baron (the “Baron Trustee”) pled the corporation guilty to one count of the indictment, charging that Baron was a criminal enterprise. At the plea allocution, the Baron Trustee, who had no direct knowledge, did not mention Mr. Weissman and stated that “not all employees of A.R. Baron engaged in or assisted in the fraudulent activities of [the codefendants].” Twelve of the thirteen individual • defendants pled guilty and one was convicted after trial.

A First UNUM investigator wrote an email indicating that he had spoken with an unidentified New York County “District Attorney,” probably not the actual District Attorney, Mr.' Morgenthau, but likely an Assistant District Attorney (“ADA”). The ADA told him that all of Baron’s assets were obtained by fraud and that Baron was formed to “line the pockets of its executives and employees at the expense of unsuspecting members of the investing public.” The e-mail also states, without identifying the source, that Mr. Weissman would have been indicted but for his medical problems.

Trial testimony in the state court of a former Baron employee, Mr. Orkin, indicates that Mr. Orkin was taught fraudulent sales practices by his superiors, including Mr. Weissman, while employed at D.H. Blair. According to Mr. Orkin’s testimony, Mr. Weissman was responsible at Baron for supervising and training employees in sales and corporate finance, handling certain relationships with clearing firms, and actual sales. The testimony does not include any specific bad acts by Mr. Weiss-man or any description of Mr. Weissman’s general conduct at Baron. First UNUSl also ’ interviewed a representative of the Baron Trustee. That representative stated that Mr. Weissman came from D.H. Blair, a legitimate concern; that 90 percent of Baron’s illegal activities occurred in 1994 and 1995, long after Mr. Weissman became disabled; and that “many of the daily transactions [at Baron] were routine brokerage transactions.”

Mr. Weissman signed a consent order with the SEC on September 9, 1996 (the “Consent Order”) in which he neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s findings:

In anticipation of the institution of these administrative proceedings, the respondents [including Mr. Weissman] have submitted Offers of Settlement (“Offers”) to the Commission, which the Commission has determined to accept. *516 Solely for the purpose of these proceedings and any other proceeding brought by or on behalf of the Commission, or to which the Commission is a party, and without admitting or denying the findings contained herein, the Respondents, by their Offers, consent to the findings and the imposition of the remedial sanctions set forth below.

SEC Consent Order, In the Matter of Jeffrey Weissman and Martin Weissman, Admin.Proc. No. 3-9072S, 1996 WL 508775 (SEC Sept. 9, 1996). The SEC contended that through stock manipulations, Mr. Weissman violated, and aided and abetted the violation of, several federal securities laws. The only specific findings of misconduct in the Consent Order are that Mr. Weissman manipulated the common stock of Health Professionals, Inc. (“HPI”) during three periods, (1) October 28 to November 12, 1991, while at D.H.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F. Supp. 2d 512, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4590, 1999 WL 198798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weissman-v-first-unum-life-insurance-nysd-1999.