Today's column
discusses
Burroughs v. Bellsouth Telecommunications Inc.,
2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52815. (June
14).
Burroughs is a tour de force expose
of how the ERISA law has been interpreted by the
courts in a manner that thoroughly betrays
Congress' intent to protect promised benefits.
U.S. District
Judge William Acker Jr., a frequent critic of
the ERISA law, held nothing back in his
criticism of Bellsouth and its claims
administrator, Broadspire Inc. Although a
magistrate judge had recommended that benefits
be denied, Acker overruled that recommendation
and ordered benefits paid.
The court began
its discussion with an examination of the
standard of review applicable to the claim.
Ridiculing the notion of the arbitrary and
capricious standard of review, the court
explained:
''In [Firestone
Tire & Rubber Co. v.]
Bruch,
[489 U.S. 101 (1989)] the Supreme Court
established the still controversial idea that an
ERISA plan document can give discretion to an
ERISA fiduciary both to interpret the plan and
to rule on the merits of a particular claim, and
thereby render the fiduciary's decision
invulnerable to judicial review except upon a
finding by a court that the fiduciary abused his
discretion.
Although, in
theory, the plan document is thought of as a
contract between the employer (the plan sponsor)
and the employee, it never is truly the product
of arms-length negotiation between the settlor
and the cestui que trust. The employee has no
say-so in fashioning the coverage or the claims
procedure. Yet, the beneficiary is deemed to
have granted to his ERISA trustee the right to
be less than loyal to him. In actuality, the
funding party, whether an insurance company or a
self-insured employer, is always
self-interested. That self-interest is absorbed
by, or is adopted by, the agents and claims
administrators of the sponsor. Their loyalty is
to the party who pays them.
Nonetheless, the
court explained precedent bound it. Therefore,
following
Brown v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Alabama
Inc., 898 F.2d 1556 (11th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals 1990), cert. denied,
498 U.S. 1040 (1991), the court explained that
its job was to first examine the claim
determination to see if it was tainted by
self-interest. If so, the court must next decide
what deference, if any, to give the decision.
Inherent in those findings is that the court
must examine the reasonableness both of the
claim presented and of the benefit
determination.
After poring
through the claim record, the court could find
''no evidence by which BST [Bellsouth
Telecommunications] can honestly argue that it
has proven by a preponderance of the evidence
that its denial decision was not tainted by
self-interest.'' Nor was such an argument even
made, although the court acknowledged that
Bellsouth claimed it honestly believed Burroughs
was capable of working. Rejecting that defense,
the court stated, ''If BST sincerely holds such
a belief, it is guilty of self-delusion.''
Turning back to
Brown,
the court explained that ruling ''was doing
nothing but accommodating to reality. It was
recognizing the obvious, namely, that in the
real world of ERISA decision-making, the
deciders are always affected by self-interest.''
Dispelling the
notion that the court was biased against BST
based on prior rulings, Acker characterized
himself as ''an equal opportunity critic of
ERISA decision-making.''
The court then
turned to the issue of how to assess the degree
of deference to be accorded. Finding not a
single case in which a court fixed a numerical
degree of deference, the court determined that
BST's ''conflict-of-interest was and is so
glaring and so overwhelming that it pervaded and
corrupted its decision. On a scale of 1 to 100,
the degree of deference due BST's decision is
zero.'' Indeed, the court expressed its belief
that the proper approach under
Brown
should be:
''[W]hen an LTD
beneficiary presents evidence from a treating
physician upon which it would be just as
reasonable to find the claimant disabled as it
would be to find him not disabled, he would have
met his prima facie burden under
Brown,
whereupon the burden would shift to the
conflicted decision-maker to prove that his
decision was not influenced in the slightest
degree by his self-interest, something virtually
impossible to do. Under such circumstances, if
the decision-maker fails, he loses.''
Accordingly,
because the insurer offered no proof that
Burroughs's claim was frivolous, the court had
no basis for inferring the claim denial was free
of the taint of conflict. Indeed, the court
explained that the plaintiff presented
substantial and credible medical evidence of a
complete inability to work. Her claim hinged on
professional medical opinion, even though
disputed and even though involving competing
diagnoses of serious physical and mental
conditions. The professional opinions she
offered were, in this court's opinion, less
likely to be tainted than those supplied by BST.
The court then
suggested that if it was misreading
Brown,
the only alternative would be to examine all
of the evidence de novo. Under that approach,
Burroughs would also prevail. Although the court
questioned the propriety of using Rule 56 to
decide the case on summary judgment, it
acknowledged the use of that procedure in most
ERISA cases, and pointed out, ''To conduct
full-scale trials of ERISA benefits claims would
change the ERISA landscape forever, perhaps for
the better.'' Examining the evidence, the court
found that Burroughs consistently presented
strong evidentiary support for her claim only to
be met with a myriad changing reasons for the
denial. Summarizing, the court noted:
''BST's in-house
medical evidence was, of course, credible in the
eyes of the one paying for it. The BST
correspondence, external and internal, reveals
inquisitorial skepticism of the ''cost
containment'' variety. All of the participants
in the denial decision were so self-interested
as to call into question, if not to annihilate,
their expressions of opinion. Under ERISA, the
ethics of the benefits decision-maker do not
require recusal when the decision-maker is self
interested, but
Brown
recognizes that a self-interested claims
administrator runs the risk of automatic
reversal if his self interest is detected by the
reviewing court.
The court also
criticized BST's claims evaluators for
misperceiving their role ''as defenders of BST''
rather than ''fair and open-minded claims
administrators.'' Finally, although the court
explained it was not bound by the Social
Security finding awarding Burroughs benefits,
the court also found no reason to disagree with
that finding; and ruled that ''[o]nly BST's
self-interest can explain BST's disagreement
with it.''
Accordingly, the
court reversed the denial and awarded benefits.
Acker has been a
frequent and persistent critic of the ERISA law.
In an article published in the Cumberland Law
Review in 1999, he wrote:
''Occasionally, a
statute comes along that is so poorly
contemplated by the draftspersons that it cannot
be saved by judicial interpretation, innovation,
or manipulation. It becomes a litigant's
plaything and a judge's nightmare. ERISA falls
into this category. In
Florence
Nightingale Nursing Service, Inc. v. Blue Cross
and Blue Shield [832 F. Supp. 1456
(N.D. Ala. 1993), aff'd, 41 F.2d 1476 (11th Cir.
1995)] I started my opinion with these three
sentences:
'A hyperbolic wag
is reputed to have said that ERISA stands for
''Everything Ridiculous Imagined Since Adam.''
This court does not take so dim a view of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.
Instead, this court is willing to believe that
ERISA has lurking somewhere in it a redeeming
feature. [832 F.Supp. at 1457].'
''Since writing
Florence
Nightingale, I have changed my mind.
ERISA is beyond redemption. No matter how hard
the courts have tried, and they have not tried
hard enough, they have not been able to
elucidate ERISA in ways that will accomplish the
purposes Congress claimed to have in mind. For
more than ten years, I have consistently and
constantly criticized ERISA, and I feel no
compunction in lifting passages from my prior
opinions as I write this article. I cannot
plagiarize myself.'' Acker, ''Can the Courts
Rescue ERISA,'' 29 Cumb.L.Rev. 285, 285-86
(1999).
Although the
language in the
Burroughs
decision is unusually harsh for a
judicial opinion, the court's frustration
appears to have reached its breaking point. The
ERISA law has, as Acker points out, resulted in
absurd decisions that have no legitimate
rationale. Acker clearly points his finger at
what he believes to be the culprit: the Supreme
Court's ruling in
Firestone v.
Bruch, 489 U.S. 101 (1989), which
gave insurers license to place language in their
policies that would trigger a standard of review
that makes ERISA decisions virtually
unreviewable and allows claim administrators
bent on refusing payment to act with virtual
impunity.
While Acker may be
one of the few remaining judicial critics of the
ERISA law, after the recent death of Judge
Edward Becker of the 3d Circuit who authored the
opinion in the
Firestone
case that was overturned by the
Supreme Court ruling, and who also excoriated
the ERISA law in
DeFelice v.
Aetna U.S. Healthcare, 346 F.3d 442
(3d Cir. 2003), other voices have joined the
chorus. Recently, a highly regarded ERISA
scholar, Professor John Langbein of the Yale Law
School, authored an article entitled ''Trust Law
as Regulatory Law: The Unum/Provident Scandal
and Judicial Review of Benefit Denials under
ERISA'' (available at www.ssrn.com, to be
published in the Northwestern Law Review in
2007).
In his recent
article, Langbein continues the criticism of the
Firestone
opinion that he first authored in
''The Supreme Court Flunks Trusts,'' 1990
S.Ct.Rev. 207 and maintains that while Unum has
been singled out for its conduct, the courts'
interpretation of the ERISA law has given all
claim administrators license to engage in
similar misconduct. In addition to
Firestone,
which he contends was wrongly
decided, Langbein blames a misuse of trust law,
an improper application of administrative law
procedures to the litigation of ERISA disputes,
and a succession of opinions authored by the 7th
Circuit refusing to acknowledge the conflict
under which plan administrators determine
claims. While Acker's view in the
Burroughs
case may be extreme, as the academic
analysis performed by Langbein corroborates, the
points he makes are thoughtful and, more
importantly, irrefutable.