Stewart v. Hartford Life and Accident Insurance Company
Filing
109
MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by Judge Karon O Bowdre on 5/6/2021. (JLC)
FILED
2021 May-06 PM 02:13
U.S. DISTRICT COURT
N.D. OF ALABAMA
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA
SOUTHERN DIVISION
CAROL H. STEWART,
Plaintiff,
v.
HARTFORD LIFE & ACCIDENT
INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant.
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Case No. 2:17-CV-01423-KOB
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Carol Stewart, like many American workers, participated in an employee-benefit
plan that her former employer, the law firm of Burr & Forman, LLP, sponsors. Defendant
Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Company administers claims and pays benefits under the
plan, and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) governs the plan. The
Hartford plan provides several benefits for disabled plan participants, including long-term
disability insurance and waiver-of-premium benefits for its life insurance policy. This ERISA
case involves Ms. Stewart’s attempts to secure those benefits.
In 2007, Ms. Stewart’s physician diagnosed her with Parkinson’s disease. At that time,
Burr & Forman sponsored a disability insurance policy for its employees insured by the Sun Life
Assurance Company of Canada. In 2009, Sun Life began paying Ms. Stewart partial long-term
disability benefits under its disability policy. In 2010, Burr & Forman terminated the Sun Life
disability policy and transitioned both disability and life insurance policies to Hartford. And
finally, in 2012, two important events occurred: Sun Life began paying Ms. Stewart total longterm disability benefits under its disability policy; at the same time, Ms. Stewart filed claims for
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total long-term disability benefits and for life-waiver-of-premium benefits under the Hartford
disability and life policies. Hartford denied both claims. Those denials led to this case.
Nine years later, this ERISA case—which Ms. Stewart filed in 2017—has finally reached
the judgment stage, and the parties have filed their cross-motions for judgment on the pleadings
after engaging in extra-record discovery (see doc. 61; 83). But Ms. Stewart hotly contests the
facts of this case, so she has also filed a so-called “Motion to Strike and/or Evidentiary
Objection.” This case now comes before the court on those three motions.
As discussed more fully in this Opinion, the court concludes that Hartford properly gave
Ms. Stewart a full and fair review of both her long-term disability and waiver-of-life-premium
claims and acted within its discretion in denying those claims. Accordingly, the court will DENY
Ms. Stewart’s motion for judgment (doc. 96), will GRANT Hartford’s motion for judgment
(doc. 95), and will enter judgment for Hartford. And because Hartford properly presented the
extra-record evidence in this case—or, at least because Ms. Stewart did not properly challenge
that evidence—the court will DENY Ms. Stewart’s motion to strike (doc. 103).
I.
Ms. Stewart’s Motion to Strike / Evidentiary Objections
For sake of clarity, the court will begin its analysis with Ms. Stewart’s “Motion to Strike
and/or Evidentiary Objections” (doc. 103). This presentation allows the court to resolve the
disputed factual issues before it sets out its factual narrative, which in turn promotes
transparency in that the court will actually consider all facts set out in the narrative in making its
ruling on the motions for judgment.
Before addressing the arguments Ms. Stewart raises in her filing, the court notes here that
she had no authority under which to submit that filing. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f),
which governs motions to strike, allows the court to “strike from a pleading an insufficient
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defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.” (Emphasis added). But
because briefs are not “pleadings” for the purposes of Rule 12(f), courts in this Circuit generally
do not entertain motions to strike briefs. See, e.g., Jordan v. Cobb Cnty., 227 F. Supp. 2d 1322,
1346 (N.D. Ga. 2001) (“Rule 12(f) applies only to matters within the pleadings”); Eubanks v.
Henry Cnty., No. 1:11-CV-3969-AJB, 2013 WL 11971258, at *1 (N.D. Ga. June 20, 2013) (“a
motion to strike a brief in response is inappropriate and should be denied”). Ms. Stewart
maintains, however, that she only submitted the filing as a “motion to strike” because she
“prepared [it] as an Evidentiary Objection to some of Hartford’s alleged facts, but the Court’s
ECF menu did not provide an option to file the document in this manner.” (Doc. 107 at 1).
But Ms. Stewart did not have the authority to submit a separate “evidentiary objection” in
this case, either. Ms. Stewart asks this court to sustain her evidentiary objections because
Hartford included “inadmissible evidence” in its Statements of Undisputed Facts. (Doc. 103 at
1). And courts generally do allow a party challenging the admissibility of evidence to file an
objection to that evidence. See, e.g., Jordan, 227 F. Supp. 2d at 1346 (“[t]he proper method for
challenging the admissibility of evidence in an affidavit is to file a notice of objection to the
challenged testimony, not a motion to strike”) (citations omitted). But the Federal Rules of
Evidence and their admissibility provisions do not apply to ERISA cases. See, e.g., Herman v.
Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 508 F. App’x 923, 928 (11th Cir. 2013) (Table) (“[t]he Federal
Rules of Evidence…do not apply to an ERISA administrator’s benefits determination, and
[courts] review the entire administrative record…”) (quoting Black v. Long Term Disability Ins.,
582 F.3d 738, 746 n.3 (7th Cir. 2009)).
Instead, in ERISA cases courts consider “the facts known to the administrator at the time
the decision was made.” Glazer v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 524 F.3d 1241, 1246 (11th
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Cir. 2008) (quoting Jett v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala., 890 F.2d 1137, 1139 (11th Cir.
1989)). See also Alexandra H. v. Oxford Health Ins. Inc. Freedom Access Plan, 833 F.3d 1299,
1312 (11th Cir. 2016) (“[i]t is well established that in reviewing a denial of ERISA benefits, the
relevant evidence is limited to the record before the administrator at the time the decision was
made”) (emphasis added). And nowhere in her evidentiary objection does Ms. Stewart claim that
Hartford supported its arguments with facts not known to the administrator at the time it made its
decision. (See doc. 103). Instead, she makes frivolous and dilatory objections to statements in
Hartford’s brief and to its interrogatory responses. And as to the evidence in this case, she merely
quarrels with the conclusions Hartford draws from that evidence and the interpretations it gives
to that evidence. But this court provided Ms. Stewart an avenue to challenge Hartford’s
interpretations of the record: in her Response brief allowed by Appendix II to this court’s ERISA
Order (doc. 25 at 13, 16). That Order explicitly states that “[a]ll material facts set forth in the
statement requirement of the moving party will be deemed to be admitted…unless controverted
by the response of the party opposing [judgment].” (Doc. 25 at 16) (emphasis added).
Accordingly, the court concludes that it has no obligation to entertain Ms. Stewart’s
“evidentiary objections” and agrees with Hartford that the filing constitutes nothing more than a
“blatant attempt to avoid the already extended page limitation for Reply Briefs in this case.”
(Doc. 106 at 2) (emphasis in original). But because Ms. Stewart’s objections also fail on their
merits, the court, out of an abundance of caution and to give Ms. Stewart the benefit of the doubt,
will explain those reasons.
Ms. Stewart brings three primary challenges in her filing: (1) she challenges the
“Introduction and Headings” in Hartford’s brief on its motion for judgment (doc. 95-1); (2) she
brings a variety of challenges to Hartford’s interrogatory responses (doc. 95-2; 95-3); and (3) she
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brings a litany of arguments on the merits of this case that she has characterized as “evidentiary
objections.” (See doc. 103 at 2–11). The court will address each of these challenges in turn.
A.
Introduction and Headings
Ms. Stewart first challenges the introduction in Hartford’s “Memorandum of Law in
Support of its Motion for Judgment” (doc. 95-1 at 1) and the headings Hartford included in its
“Statement of Undisputed Facts” in that filing (doc. 95-1 at 10, 11, 15, 16, 19). Appendix II of
this court’s standard ERISA Order requires a brief on a motion for judgment to “begin with a
statement of allegedly undisputed relevant material facts set out in separately numbered
paragraphs.” (Doc. 25 at 15) (emphasis omitted). According to Ms. Stewart, Hartford violated
Appendix II because it opened its brief with a one-page introduction and included argumentative
headings in its Statement of Undisputed Facts. (Doc. 103 at 1–2). Hartford responds that it “[did]
not read Appendix II to forbid the inclusion of a brief introduction.” (Doc. 106 at 6).
The court agrees with Hartford and will not disregard Hartford’s introduction or the
headings in its Statement of Undisputed Facts. Hartford included its introduction and headings
on numbered pages; Hartford used its page allocation as it saw fit and in compliance with
Appendix II. It did not, for example, use the introduction as a mechanism to make merits
arguments outside of Appendix II’s page limitations. Unfortunately, it appears to the court that
Ms. Stewart, on the other hand, included her objection to Hartford’s introduction and headings to
disguise the true purpose of her pleading: an effort to make additional merits arguments outside
of the briefing allowed by Appendix II and this court’s Briefing Schedule. (Doc. 25 at 17; doc.
86). This groundless argument fails.
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B.
Interrogatories
Ms. Stewart next brings a variety of challenges to Hartford’s interrogatory responses
(doc. 95-2; 95-3). This court allowed limited extra-record discovery in this case, mainly in the
form of interrogatories and requests for production from Ms. Stewart to Hartford. (See doc. 61;
83). Ms. Stewart claims that Hartford failed to adequately answer all of her interrogatories,
made improper objections to those interrogatories, and failed to properly verify the
interrogatories pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b) and 28 U.S.C. § 1726. (Doc. 103 at 13, 19).
These objections fail as well.
As to Ms. Stewart’s complaints regarding the adequacy of Hartford’s answers and
objections to her interrogatories, this court has already held that she failed to properly “discuss”
her concerns with Hartford pursuant to this court’s ERISA Order. (Doc. 90 at 2). This court
found that Ms. Stewart engaged only in insufficient “wars of words between opposing counsel.”
(Doc. 90 at 2) (quoting doc. 29 at 2–3). Additionally, this court noted that Ms. Stewart sent a
letter to Hartford objecting to its discovery responses on May 12, 2020 and had no further
communication with Hartford regarding those responses until a status conference that this court
held in this case on August 26, 2020. (Doc. 90 at 2).
Accordingly, the court will reject Ms. Stewart’s arguments as to the adequacy of
Hartford’s discovery responses for the same reason it did in its September 9, 2020 Order (doc.
90): Ms. Stewart waived those arguments by choosing not to timely file a motion to compel and
by failing to comply with this court’s ERISA order. See, e.g., 5C Arthur R. Miller, Mary Kay
Kane & A. Benjamin Spencer, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1380 n.6 (3d ed. 2020)
(motion to strike discovery-related matter inappropriate; party moving to strike should have
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raised those issues through a discovery motion) (citing Bd. of Educ. of Evanston Twp. High Sch.
Dist. No. 202 v. Admiral Heating & Ventilation, Inc., 94 F.R.D. 300, 304 (N.D. Ill. 1982)).
Ms. Stewart’s argument that Hartford failed to properly verify its interrogatory responses
likewise lacks merit. Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b)(1)(B) and 33(b)(3), an officer or agent of a
corporation must answer interrogatories “under oath.” And under 28 U.S.C. § 1746(2), a person
making any sworn declaration pursuant to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure must
“substantially” follow its form:
“I declare (or certify, verify, or state) under penalty of perjury that the foregoing
is true and correct. Executed on (date). (Signature).”
(Emphasis added). Erik Solem and Andrew Dahl, Hartford’s agents for the purpose of
responding to Ms. Stewart’s interrogatories, verified their interrogatory responses in the
following manner:
I, (Erik Solem/Andrew Dahl), declare under penalty of perjury under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1746, that the answers to Interrogatories above are true and accurate to the best
of my knowledge and belief based upon my personal knowledge and/or upon my
review of business records.
(Doc. 95-2 at 10; 95-3 at 7). The court concludes that Hartford properly verified its interrogatory
responses. This court has previously rejected an argument similar to Ms. Stewart’s. See Barclay
v. First Nat’l Bank of Talladega, --- F. Supp. 3d ----, ----, 2016 WL 1270519, at *3 (N.D. Ala.
2016) (Bowdre, J.). In Barclay, this court pointed out that a statement subject to § 1746 must
only “be in ‘substantially’” the statutory form, “not exactly” the statutory form. --- F. Supp. 3d at
----, 2016 WL 1270519 at *3 (emphasis in original). And this court held that a declaration is
“substantially” in the statutory form if the declarant made it “under the penalty of perjury.” Id.
Because Messrs. Solem and Dahl verified their interrogatory responses under penalty of
perjury, this court finds that those responses meet the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b) and
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28 U.S.C. § 1746. Accordingly, it will consider Hartford’s interrogatory responses in ruling on
the motions for judgment.
C.
Remaining Arguments
As the court alluded to above, the remainder of Ms. Stewart’s filing consists of arguments
on the merits of this case thinly disguised as “evidentiary objections.” Particularly, Ms. Stewart’s
arguments go to the merits of Hartford’s denial of her claim for life-waiver-of-premium (LWOP)
benefits. Ms. Stewart argues, for example, that Hartford had no authority to have her examined
and to continue its review of her LWOP claim after Hartford approved it on her first appeal (doc.
103 at 2, 6); that Hartford reached an erroneous conclusion as to her ability to work based on the
medical evidence in this case (doc. 103 at 4–5, 9); that Hartford did not provide all of her
medical records to its independent medical reviewers (doc. 103 at 9–11); and that it set forth an
erroneous summary of Ms. Stewart’s medical records (doc. 103 at 8). Ms. Stewart also objects—
in a conclusory manner and without citations to the record—to Footnote 5 in Hartford’s brief
(doc. 103 at 8).
All of these arguments go to the merits of this case. Ms. Stewart seems to concede as
much: in her “Reply in Support” of her filing, she argues that she would suffer prejudice if she
did not respond to Hartford’s “interpretations” of the facts and that her filing was a “measured,
allowed response to correct the record.” (Doc. 107 at 2). While Ms. Stewart’s filing was certainly
measured, it was not allowed. As the court explained above, it has no obligation to consider Ms.
Stewart’s “evidentiary objections” at all, and especially when its “evidentiary objections” are
really arguments on the merits. The court already provided Ms. Stewart a vehicle through which
to make merits arguments: the briefs governed by Appendix II of this court’s ERISA Order. The
court also allowed the parties’ briefs to exceed the usual page limit. (Doc. 94; 100).
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Accordingly, the court will DENY Ms. Stewart’s “Motion to Strike and/or Evidentiary
Objections” (doc. 103) in its entirety. But out of an abundance of caution and to again give Ms.
Stewart the benefit of the doubt—and because Hartford filed a brief in Reply to Ms. Stewart’s
filing—the court will, where applicable, consider the merits arguments Ms. Stewart raises in her
filing.
II.
Factual and Procedural Background
Having addressed Ms. Stewart’s evidentiary objections, the court will now set out the
relevant facts of this case. Ms. Stewart claims that Hartford wrongly denied both her claim for
long-term disability (LTD) benefits under its Disability Policy and her claim for life-waiver-ofpremium (LWOP) benefits under its Life Policy. Because Hartford reviewed these claims largely
independently of each other, the court will set out the facts of Hartford’s review of Ms. Stewart’s
LTD and LWOP claims separately and respectively.
As the court explained above, courts in ERISA cases may only consider “the facts known
to the administrator at the time the decision was made.” Glazer v. Reliance Standard Life Ins.
Co., 524 F.3d 1241, 1246 (11th Cir. 2008) (quoting Jett v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala., 890
F.2d 1137, 1139 (11th Cir. 1989)). And courts generally limit their review to the administrative
record when reviewing an administrator’s decision to deny benefits. Williamson v. Travelport,
LP, 953 F.3d 1278, 1289 (11th Cir. 2020). But because the court allowed limited discovery in
this case (see docs. 61; 83), the court will consider some evidence outside of the administrative
record that the administrator otherwise knew when it made its decision. Accordingly, the court
will cite to documents in the administrative record as (AR at ___). 1 It will cite to documents
1
The administrative record in this case is contained in ECF documents 32 and 33.
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outside of the administrative in its usual manner: by setting forth the location of the fact in the
ECF docket of this case; i.e., as (doc. __ at __).
For the sake of convenience, the court will note here that both the Disability Policy and
the Life Policy gave Hartford “full discretion and authority to determine eligibility for benefits
and to construe and interpret all terms provisions of The Policy.” (AR at 19 (Disability Policy);
67 (Life Policy)). Second, under both the disability and life policies, Hartford required that “[a]ll
[Proof of Loss] submitted [be] satisfactory to Us.” (AR at 17 (Disability Policy); 66 (Life
Policy)). And finally, both the disability and life policies listed Burr & Forman LLP as the
Employer/Plan Sponsor, Policyholder, and Plan Administrator. (AR at 7, 32 (Disability Policy);
55, 83 (Life Policy)).
A.
Long-Term Disability Claim
Ms. Stewart began working for the law firm of Burr & Forman, LLP (Burr) in 1983 as an
associate attorney and became an equity partner in Burr in 1990. (AR at 1111). In 2007, Burr
opened a disability insurance policy with the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada. (AR at
127). After a 2007 diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, Ms. Stewart claimed and began receiving
partial LTD benefits for her Parkinson’s disease under the Sun Life disability policy in 2009.
(AR at 135, 127).
On September 30, 2010, Burr terminated the Sun Life disability policy. (AR at 123). Burr
then opened a Disability Policy with Hartford—the policy at issue in this case—effective
October 1, 2010. (AR at 7). Ms. Stewart worked her last day for Burr on March 31, 2012; on
April 1, 2021, Sun Life began paying her total LTD benefits for her Parkinson’s disease under its
disability policy. (AR at 127).
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Ms. Stewart began the application process for LTD benefits for her Parkinson’s disease
under Hartford’s Disability Policy on April 17, 2012, when her attending physician, Dr. David
Standaert, filled out the “Attending Physician’s Statement of Disability” as required by the
Disability Policy’s benefits application. (AR at 651–52). Ms. Stewart then submitted her portion
of the Disability Policy’s application on June 29, 2012 (AR at 650); on July 26, 2012, Burr
submitted its portion of the application. (AR at 642).
Hartford acknowledged initial receipt of Ms. Stewart’s LTD claim on August 3, 2012 but
noted that it needed more information to evaluate her claim, including additional medical records
from Dr. Standaert. (AR at 212). On September 12, 2012, Hartford again informed Ms. Stewart
that it had yet to receive her medical records from Dr. Standaert and requested her help in
obtaining that information. (AR at 191).
On September 24, 2012, Hartford informed Ms. Stewart of its denial of her LTD claim.
In a letter authored by Ability Analyst Vanessa Balogh (AR at 187–90), Hartford noted that it
denied her claim based on the following exclusion in the Disability Policy:
If You are receiving or are eligible for benefits for a Disability under a prior
disability plan that:
1)
2)
was sponsored by Your Employer; and
was terminated before the Effective Date of The Policy;
no benefits will be payable for the Disability under The Policy.
(AR at 16). Hartford relied on this exclusion in denying Ms. Stewart’s LTD claim because she
was “continuing to receive total disability benefits [for her Parkinson’s disease] from Sun Life
Financial through [her] coverage with the policyholder, Burr & Forman, LLP.” (AR at 189).
By facsimile dated November 8, 2012, Ms. Stewart appealed Hartford’s denial of her
LTD claim. (AR at 753–64). In her appeal, Ms. Stewart advanced contractual interpretation
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arguments and concluded that because Sun Life continued to pay her benefits, the policy had not
been “terminated” as required by the exclusion. (AR at 763). She also argued that the exclusion
contained certain undefined terms that did not apply to the Sun Life disability policy and that
because the Hartford Disability Policy specifically defined “Disability,” the Sun Life disability
policy could not have been paying her LTD benefits under the Hartford Disability Policy’s
definition of “Disability.” (AR at 763).
Hartford informed Ms. Stewart by letter dated November 19, 2012 of its decision on
appeal to uphold its denial of her LTD claim. (AR at 180–81). Appeal Specialist Edna Golych
explained the reasoning behind Hartford’s decision:
Information received from Sun Life Financial noted that your benefit effective
date was 6/30/09. You received partial disability benefits through 3/31/12 and a
total disability monthly benefit of $21,000 since then. The Sun Life policy issued
to Burr & Forman, LLP cancelled effective 9/30/10. The Hartford Life and
Accident Insurance Company policy issued to Burr & Foreman LLP [sic] became
effective 10/1/10. As you were and are receiving LTD benefits under the prior
carrier, Sun Life Financial, you are not eligible for LTD benefits under The
Hartford policy.
(AR at 181). Hartford then suggested that Ms. Stewart seek a refund of her LTD premiums and
informed her of her suit rights under ERISA. (AR at 181).
B.
Life Waiver of Premium Claim
The Hartford Life Policy includes life-waiver-of-premium (LWOP) benefits, under which
Hartford waives the life insurance premiums of “Disabled” insureds. (AR at 60). For purposes of
the LWOP provision, the Hartford Life Policy defines “Disabled” as follows:
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Disabled: What does Disabled mean?
Disabled means You are prevented by injury or sickness from doing any work for
which You are qualified by:
1) Education;
2) Training; or
3) Experience.
***
(AR at 60). Because the court must necessarily engage in a fact-intensive analysis of the facts
underlying Hartford’s decision to deny Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim, the court will recount those
facts at some length.
Ms. Stewart began the application process for LWOP benefits on July 2, 2012 when she
submitted her portion of the LWOP application. (AR at 1613–15). She listed Parkinson’s disease
as the medical condition underlying her claim. She noted that she stopped working because of
the “debilitating and progressive” nature of her symptoms, which had progressed to the “point
[that she could] no longer practice law.” She stated that her condition had altered the way she
performed her job, namely that she “became less effective and efficient—[she] had to make
adjustments and took reductions in compensation.” Finally, she remarked that the mental and
physical effects of her Parkinson’s prevented her from performing “mental analysis, writing,
researching, [and] advising clients on important matters.” (AR at 1614).
Burr submitted its portion of Ms. Stewart’s LWOP application by letter dated July 30,
2012; on August 1, 2012, Hartford informed Ms. Stewart of its initial receipt of her application.
(AR at 258; 1111). By form letter dated August 20, 2012, Hartford requested additional
information from Dr. Standaert regarding Ms. Stewart’s Parkinson’s disease in relation to her
LTD claim. Dr. David Standaert, MD, PhD, treated Ms. Stewart and served as her attending
physician during the pendency of her claims for both LTD and LWOP benefits. Dr. Standaert has
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a board certification in neurology and specializes in Parkinson’s disease and movement
disorders, an area in which he has practiced for over 20 years. (AR at 1023). Dr. Standaert
responded to Hartford’s request by letter dated August 23, 2012. In that letter, he noted that Ms.
Stewart could sit two hours per day; stand half an hour per day; and walk one hour per day. He
also opined that Ms. Stewart could participate in “vocation rehabilitation services,” which the
form defined as “worksite accommodations, identifying alternative work and or retraining
assistance.” (AR at 813).
In its initial review of her LWOP claim, Hartford also relied on the April 17, 2012
Attending Physician’s Statement Dr. Standaert submitted with Ms. Stewart’s LTD application.
(AR at 255). In the April 17, 2012 Attending Physician’s Statement, Dr. Standaert noted that Ms.
Stewart exhibited slowness, tremor, fatigue, rigidity, and bradykinesia. (AR at 651). He opined
that she had the ability to lift or carry 1 to 10 pounds “occasionally,” which the Statement
defined as 1-33% of the day. Additionally, he concluded that she could sit two hours at a time,
stand for half an hour at a time, and walk for half an hour at time. Finally, he determined that she
could never bend at the waist, never kneel or crouch, could occasionally drive, could
occasionally reach at and below waist or desk level, and could never finger or handle. (AR at
652). And as to the duration of Ms. Stewart’s Parkinson’s, Dr. Standaert finally noted the
“permanent” and “incurable” nature of the disease and pointed out that it would “worsen with
time.” (AR at 652).
By letter dated October 1, 2012, Ability Analyst Vanessa Balogh informed Ms. Stewart
that Hartford had denied her LWOP claim. (AR at 252–57). Although Hartford concluded that
Ms. Stewart did not meet the LWOP provision’s definition of “Disability,” Ms. Balogh
misquoted that definition. She stated that the definition required Ms. Stewart to be “prevented by
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injury or sickness from doing any work for which You are or could become qualified by
education, training or experience.” (AR at 256) (emphasis added). The words “or could become”
do not appear in the actual definition of “Disabled” in the LWOP provision. (See AR at 60). In
any event, Ms. Balogh explained that Hartford relied on Dr. Standaert’s statements of April 17,
2012 and August 23, 2012 in denying her claim. Based on Ms. Stewart’s abilities as
communicated by Dr. Standaert’s statements, Hartford concluded that Ms. Stewart was not
“Disabled” and denied her LWOP claim. Hartford reasoned that although Ms. Stewart’s
condition may have prevented her from working as an equity partner, it did not prevent her
“from performing any work.” (AR at 256).
Ms. Stewart appealed Hartford’s denial by letter dated October 10, 2012. (AR at 1083–
85). In her letter, Ms. Stewart pointed out that Ms. Balogh misquoted the definition of
“Disabled” and disagreed with Hartford’s conclusion that the LWOP provision’s definition of
“Disabled” required her to show that she was incapable of performing any work—as opposed to
only the work of an equity partner. (AR at 1084).
Hartford received more of Ms. Stewart’s medical records from Dr. Standaert on October
5, 2012; accordingly, it did not consider those records before it issued its October 1, 2012 denial.
(AR at 786–96). Those records consist of notes entered by Dr. Standaert regarding his visits with
and treatment of Ms. Stewart between July 23, 2010 and March 30, 2012. On Ms. Stewart’s July
23, 2010 visit, Dr. Standaert noted that Ms. Stewart reported increased tremor, slowness and
stiffness. He opined that “although the magnitude of [worsening of symptoms] is modest, they
are concerning for worsening disability.” (AR at 795). On the February 11, 2011 visit, Dr.
Standaert noted “moderate to marked slowing of finger movements on the left” and increased
stiffness and rigidity in Ms. Stewart’s left leg. (AR at 793). Dr. Standaert did not note any
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significant changes in Ms. Stewart’s condition on her September 23, 2011 visit, but noted that
she reported fatigue and difficulties with concentration at work. (AR at 791). On Ms. Stewart’s
January 20, 2012 visit, Dr. Standaert noted worsening of her symptoms, both physical and
cognitive. Ms. Stewart reported to him that she had “increased difficulty with concentration,
particularly when trying to perform multiple tasks[, which had] reached a point of causing
serious problems at work with difficulty completing tasks in a timely fashion.” (AR at 789).
Importantly, he concluded that “the severity of her symptoms at this point make it impossible for
her to continue in her occupation as an attorney, and I concur with the decision to seek disability
and retirement at this point.” (AR at 790). Finally, on her March 30, 2012 visit, Dr. Standaert
noted that Ms. Stewart reported new tremor in her left upper extremity at rest but no recent
cognitive decline. Ms. Stewart also reported to Dr. Standaert that she had the ability to
“[perform] all activities of daily living independently and [to drive] safely.” (AR at 787).
Hartford assigned Ms. Stewart’s appeal to Appeal Specialist Edna Golych. (AR at 171).
Ms. Golych ordered an independent physician review of Ms. Stewart’s claim and medical
records. (AR at 169). Dr. Uzma Sharif, MD, board certified in neurology, reviewed Ms.
Stewart’s medical records. (AR at 745). Dr. Sharif provided the review through the University
Disability Consortium, a third-party independent medical review vendor. Dr. Sharif review Dr.
Standaert’s Attending Physician’s Statements of April 17, 2012 and August 23, 2012 and his
visit notes from July 23, 2010 to March 30, 2012. (AR at 745). Dr. Sharif reported that she spoke
with Dr. Standaert on November 27, 2012 and that Ms. Stewart had reported to him worsening of
both her motor and cognitive symptoms. Dr. Sharif concluded that Ms. Stewart should have the
following physical limitations from March 31, 2012: sitting 4–6 hours per day, walking and
standing half an hour to an hour per day, and not carrying over 10 pounds. She also suggested
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that Ms. Stewart should limit her fine motor skills due to impaired motor coordination and limit
her driving due to slowed cognitive processing concerns. She noted that “[f]ormal cognitive
testing could…help in determining the driving limitations” but that because “Parkinson’s is a
chronic irreversible disease, she will most likely continue to be more limited in most physical
and cognitive activities depending on her overall rate of decline.” As to Ms. Stewart’s ability to
work, Dr. Sharif concluded that Ms. Stewart could “work somewhere where she does not have
the stress of deadlines but has open ended tasks that she can do at her comfort level.” But Dr.
Sharif pointed out that Ms. Stewart had not had any formal neuropsychological testing done. (AR
at 748).
After receiving Dr. Sharif’s report, Ms. Golych concluded that “[b]ased on the
progression of [Ms. Stewart’s] disease and her present limitations it is reasonable that she would
not be able to perform even at a part-time level on a consistent basis….The appeal decision is to
reverse the denial.” (AR at 168). On December 12, 2012, Anna K. Davis entered an “Appeal
Specialist Recommendation” in Ms. Stewart’s claim file. (AR at 165). Ms. Davis noted that
although Dr. Sharif’s report showed that Ms. Stewart had cognitive processing issues, Dr.
Sharif’s report also stated that Ms. Stewart had not received formal neuropsychological testing to
determine the extent of those issues. Ms. Davis pointed out that Hartford had not ordered
neuropsychological testing during the appeal because such testing would not allow Hartford to
determine Ms. Stewart’s cognitive functionality from her last day of work through the LWOP
waiting period. Accordingly, Ms. Davis noted that “functionality is not clear, but appears to be
limited…[f]urther clarification of [Ms. Stewart’s] current functionality appears likely to be
needed.” (AR at 165). On December 21, 2012, Examiner Monique J. Marr directed that Hartford
approve Ms. Stewart’s claim, but—consistent with the recommendation of Ms. Davis—noted
17
that the Life Policy had the “right of exam” and accordingly instructed that Hartford have Ms.
Stewart sit for neuropsychological testing. (AR at 165).
Hartford informed Ms. Stewart of its decision to reverse its denial of LWOP benefits by
letter dated December 5, 2012 and informed her that her claim file had been returned to the
“Sacramento Disability Claim Office for further handling.” (AR at 246). In a second letter dated
December 28, 2012, Hartford informed Ms. Stewart that it would waive her premiums effective
December 31, 2012 and set out its position regarding her LWOP benefits going forward. (AR at
244–45). Specifically, it informed her that
Periodically we will be requesting updated medical information from you to
verify your continued disability, and consequently your continued eligibility for
the Waiver of Premium benefit. We will be reviewing your claim to clarify your
cognitive limitations and will notify you of any additional information we need to
complete that review.
(AR at 245). Ms. Balogh, one of Hartford’s Ability Analysts, entered Hartford’s approval of Ms.
Stewart’s claim in her claim file on December 28, 2012. Ms. Balogh noted that based on Dr.
Sharif’s report, Hartford concluded that Ms. Stewart had part-time “work ability physically,
however [Ms. Stewart] has had slowed cognitive processing and [due to] the progression of her
disease and present limitations, it is reasonable that [Ms. Stewart] is not able to perform work”
on a part-time basis consistently. (AR at 163–64) (emphasis added).
On January 3, 2013, Ms. Balogh formally referred Ms. Stewart’s claim for
neuropsychological testing. (AR at 162–63). Hartford obtained the testing through PsyBar, a
third-party testing vendor, and requested a neuropsychologist to test Ms. Stewart located within a
60-minute drive of Birmingham, Alabama. (AR at 120, 160–63). By letter dated January 30,
2013, Hartford confirmed Ms. Stewart’s appointment for neuropsychological testing with Dr.
Nick DeFilippis, Ph.D., a board-certified neuropsychologist. The letter informed Ms. Stewart
18
that Dr. DeFilippis would perform the testing in the meeting room of the Redmont Hotel in
Birmingham. The letter also set out Hartford’s authority to perform the testing under the Life
Policy:
When Premiums are Waived: When will premiums be waived?
If We approve Waiver of Premium, We will notify You of the date We will begin
to waive premium. In any case, We will not waive premiums for the first 9
month(s) You are Disabled. We have the right to:
1) require Proof of Loss that You are Disabled; and
2) have You examined at reasonable intervals during the first 2 years after
receiving initial Proof of Loss, but not more than once a year after that.
If You fail to submit any required Proof of Loss or refuse to be examined as
required by Us, the Waiver of Premium ceases.
(AR at 240).
Dr. DeFilippis performed Ms. Stewart’s neuropsychological testing on March 8, 2013.
His report to Hartford consisted of two documents: (1) a Behavioral Functional Evaluation Form
(BFE), which stated that it was “[t]o be completed by the Attending Physician,” but which Dr.
DeFilippis—not Dr. Standaert, Ms. Stewart’s attending physician—completed and signed; and
(2) a Neuropsychological Independent Evaluation (IME). (AR at 1037–52). The BFE form
contained a list of brief conclusions Dr. DeFilippis drew based on his testing of Ms. Stewart,
while the IME contained a longer description of the testing and his conclusions.
In the BFE, Dr. DeFilippis concluded that Ms. Stewart had full cognitive ability in all
areas except two: (1) her ability to “[influence] people in their opinions, attitudes, and
judgments,” an area in which Dr. DeFilippis concluded that Ms. Stewart had “moderate ability;”
or, 84–67% of the day; and (2) her ability to “[p]erform effectively under stress,” an area in
which Dr. DeFilippis also concluded that Ms. Stewart retained “moderate ability.” (AR at 1052).
In his IME, Dr. DeFilippis first noted that he had reviewed Dr. Standaert’s visit notes from July
19
23, 2010 to March 20, 2012 and the August 20, 2012 Attending Physician’s Statement prepared
by Dr. Standaert for Hartford. (AR at 1037–38). Dr. DeFilippis then recounted the answers Ms.
Stewart gave in her interview with him. Importantly, Dr. DeFilippis asked Ms. Stewart about her
typical daily activities. Ms. Stewart reported to Dr. DeFilippis that she used a computer; served
on the advisory board of a charitable organization in Birmingham; served on a committee of the
Alabama State Bar that met twice yearly; served on a committee of the Birmingham Bar
Association that met once a month; served on Burr & Forman’s charitable contribution
committee, which met once every two months; prepared meals; handled some financial matters;
shopped and spent time with friends; and travelled. She also reported that she enjoyed craft work
but noted that such work had become more difficult because of her condition. Finally, she
reported that she could drive with medication and could take care of chores around the house and
most of her personal dressing and grooming; but noted that she had some trouble washing her
hair, fastening buttons, shaving and putting on earrings. (AR at 1040–41).
Dr. DeFilippis also asked Ms. Stewart to describe her “work issues.” She answered that
she feared making errors; that she took a long time to complete work; that she felt that she would
not be able to meet deadlines as an attorney; that she sometimes could not function physically at
all because of her symptoms and that stress increased her symptoms; that she felt that she could
be at work 40 hours per week but would not be productive. She reported that she did not have
any difficulty relating to people; that she did not think she could work as an attorney because she
feared making a mistake and because she needed people to check her work; that she had trouble
typing; and that her tremors led to a lack of confidence. (AR at 1041).
Finally, as to the symptoms of her Parkinson’s, Ms. Stewart reported to Dr. DeFilippis
that she suffered tremors on her left side that she controlled with medications; that she suffered
20
from intermittent muscle pains; that she noticed a softening in her voice; that she had become
slower in getting things done; and that she suffered from a scattered ability to focus. She reported
that she could write legibly but small; and that it took her longer to write. (AR at 1039).
Dr. DeFilippis then performed a battery of neuropsychological tests on Ms. Stewart,
including an intelligence test, a memory test, a reading comprehension test, and ability tests. Dr.
DeFilippis reached the following conclusions regarding Ms. Stewart: he concluded that she “put
forth good effort during the cognitive testing and showed no evidence of a tendency to
exaggerate her problems.” He noted that she showed evidence “of some mild and inconsistently
displayed difficulty in the areas of focusing and processing speed.” (AR at 1048). He reported
that she had “intact problem-solving abilities” and opined that she “should be able to multitask
and cope with difficult problem-solving tasks,” but noted that she reported that she felt
“somewhat disorganized” in completing such tasks. He reported that she did well on memory
testing but found “some signs of a mild attention issue … that could affect memory on
occasion.” He narrated that Ms. Stewart’s speech was “a bit slower than expected, but still in the
average range in terms of fluency;” he also found that Ms. Stewart had a “mild visual motor
impairment” and noted that she was “quite slowed motorically, particularly with her left hand”
and that she walked slowly and reported a gait disturbance. Finally, he reported that she read
well and fluently; he also reported that she had a mild level of depression regarding her
Parkinson’s disease; that stress exacerbated her condition; and that she strove “to avoid errors in
settings where she is being evaluated by others.” (AR at 1049).
Dr. DeFilippis gave the following report to Hartford regarding Ms. Stewart’s ability to
work: he opined that she would have trouble typing; would be slow in writing and that she would
take twice as long to write and type; that her “mild and inconsistently displayed attention issues”
21
would cause her to be “somewhat forgetful at times,” so that she would have to take notes in
these situations, leading to increased slowness; that she would be less confident in presentations
to others due to stress-induced tremors; and that he did not find “clear evidence that she would
be disorganized in problem solving, but [that] she likely would take longer to complete work that
requires focusing on several areas of information at the same time.” He estimated that it would
take Ms. Stewart “between twenty-five percent and fifty percent more time to complete such
tasks.” Finally, he reached the ultimate conclusion that Ms. Stewart “likely has a belief that she
is less capable from a cognitive standpoint than she actually is,” but that he found problems
“related to mild processing speed issues and motor coordination…along with mild attention
issues that are affecting her capabilities.” (AR at 1050).
Between Hartford’s approval of Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim in December 2012 and her
tests with Dr. DeFilippis in March 2013, Hartford assigned her LWOP claim to Examiner Ian
Hardy of Atlanta. (AR at 158). The parties differ regarding the significance of Hartford’s
assignment of Mr. Hardy to Ms. Stewart’s claim. According to Hartford, it undertook a claims
administration reorganization between December 2012 and March 2013 under which it assigned
all LWOP claims to a dedicated LWOP team in Georgia. Mr. Hardy took part in this routine
reorganization and Hartford assigned him to Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim. (Doc. 95-3 at 4). But
Ms. Stewart claims—based on reports Mr. Hardy made in his performance reviews—that
Hartford directed Mr. Hardy to deny LWOP claims regardless of the merit of those claims. (Doc.
67-4 at 35).
In any event, Mr. Hardy reviewed Dr. DeFilippis’s BFE and IME form and recommended
that Hartford terminate Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim. (AR at 158–59). Mr. Hardy concluded,
based on Dr. DeFilippis’s reports, that Ms. Stewart retained “full to moderate functionality to
22
perform work” despite “some deficits in fine motor coordination and in attention.” (AR at 159).
Manager Joe Simeone of Sacramento agreed with Mr. Hardy’s termination recommendation.
(AR at 159). Mr. Simeone clarified that Hartford based its previous award of LWOP benefits on
Dr. Sharif’s report, which “noted cognitive processing issues.” However, Mr. Simeone pointed
out that Ms. Stewart had not had any formal neuropsychological testing done. Accordingly, the
results of Dr. DeFilippis’s testing clarified her cognitive limitations and demonstrated that she
“ha[d] full to moderate ability to perform varied activities (including performing repetitive or
short cycled work, performing effectively under stress, and being consistent and reliable).” (AR
at 159).
In an April 10, 2013 letter authored by Mr. Hardy, Hartford informed Ms. Stewart of its
decision to terminate her LWOP benefits. (AR at 235–39). Mr. Hardy explained that based on
the conclusions Dr. DeFilippis drew from his testing of Ms. Stewart, Hartford had concluded that
Ms. Stewart “[had] the functionality to perform work;” accordingly, it determined that she did
not meet the Life Policy’s definition of “disabled.” (AR at 238).
Ms. Stewart appealed Hartford’s termination of her LWOP benefits in a detailed letter
dated October 4, 2013. (AR at 972–1019). Ms. Stewart—through counsel—made a variety of
arguments against Hartford’s decision to terminate her LWOP benefits, but only several of those
arguments have relevance to this action. Relevant here, Ms. Stewart argued (1) that Hartford did
not have the authority to order Dr. DeFilippis’s neuropsychological testing or to terminate her
LWOP based on the results of that testing; (2) similarly, that Hartford had no authority to
terminate her LWOP benefits after the decision of Appeal Analyst Edna Golych awarding her
benefits; (3) that Hartford improperly applied the “any occupation” standard to the definition of
“disability” in the Life Policy; and (4) that Dr. DeFilippis improperly filled out the BFE form,
23
which stated that it was to be completed by the examinee’s attending physician, because Dr.
DeFilippis was not Ms. Stewart’s attending physician. (AR at 972–73).
In response to Ms. Stewart’s appeal, Appeal Specialist Marsha Macko ordered a “comorbid medical review” of Ms. Stewart’s claim file by both a neurologist and a
neuropsychologist. (AR at 154). Ms. Macko requested that the reviewing neurologist contact Dr.
Standaert. Ms. Macko noted that she would include all medical evidence in Ms. Stewart’s LTD
and LWOP claim files for the reviewers, with the exception of three documents: (1) she would
not include Dr. DeFilippis’s BFE form because of Ms. Stewart’s complaint that Dr. DeFilippis
was not her attending physician, and the form was intended for completion by her attending
physician; (2) she would not include Dr. Uzma Sharif’s report (completed after Ms. Stewart’s
first appeal) because Dr. Sharif did not examine Ms. Stewart; and (3) she would not include Ms.
Stewart’s job description, because whether Ms. Stewart could perform the duties of an equity
partner attorney bore no relevance to whether she could perform “any work” as contemplated by
the Life Policy’s definition of “disabled.” (AR at 154).
The reviewing neuropsychologist and neurologist submitted their reports to Hartford on
October 31, 2013. (AR at 925; 931). The reviewing neuropsychologist, Dr. Christopher
Contardo, Ph.D., board certified in neuropsychology, reviewed Dr. Standaert’s visit notes and the
IME prepared by Dr. DeFilippis. (AR at 923). Dr. Contardo also discussed the case with the
reviewing neurologist, Dr. Andrew Gordon, MD., board certified in psychiatry and neurology.
(AR at 923; 931). Dr. Contardo concluded, based on his review of Ms. Stewart’s case, that Ms.
Stewart retained the cognitive capacity to perform “full time work that does not require higherlevel, complex organization and cognitive skills” and deferred to his co-reviewer, Dr. Gordon,
for an analysis of Ms. Stewart’s physical capabilities. (AR at 924).
24
Dr. Gordon, the reviewing neurologist, considered Dr. Standaert’s visit notes in support
of his opinion. (AR at 928). Although Dr. Gordon could not establish telephonic contact with Dr.
Standaert, Dr. Gordon faxed Dr. Standaert a list of questions, to which Dr. Standaert faxed a
response to Dr. Gordon. (AR at 929). In his fax to Dr. Gordon, Dr. Standaert described his
treatment of Ms. Stewart and the progression of her Parkinson’s disease; he informed Dr. Gordon
that Ms. Stewart’s “most troublesome symptoms exemplify the ‘non-motor’ symptoms of the
disease that are increasing[ly] recognized as a major source of disability and reduced quality of
life….fatigue was an early and dominant feature of her disorder…neither the cognitive nor the
motor symptoms are optimally managed.” (AR at 1024). As to Ms. Stewart’s ability to work, Dr.
Standaert provided the following opinion to Dr. Gordon:
With respect of the specific issue of disability, I think it is important to recognize
that her career has been as an attorney practicing courtroom law, an environment
very intolerant of fatigue or mental or physical slowness. Despite my best efforts
over six years, I do not think she is capable of continuing her former occupation.
Although she has been a leader in the field in the past, I would not feel
comfortable having her represent me in a critical legal matter in her present state;
the probability of an error from fatigue or mental slowness in this setting is simply
too high.
Legal practice aside, I think she unquestionably qualifies as having disability
under the more ordinary terms of the ADA. In addition to the cognitive
symptoms, she has impaired balance with the risk of falling, impaired use of her
hands with inability to write, and rigidity, all of which make self-care difficult or
impossible much of the time.
(AR at 1024).
Based on his review of the records he received from Dr. Standaert, Dr. Gordon concluded
that Ms. Stewart demonstrated “some difficulty with gait, strength in the left upper extremity and
mild cognitive difficulties.” (AR at 929). As to Ms. Stewart’s ability to work, Dr. Gordon opined
that Ms. Stewart retained the physical capability to perform “full time sedentary work” within
25
certain restrictions, namely: (1) Ms. Stewart could not work from unprotected heights; (2) she
could not lift or carry more than 40 pounds occasionally or more than 25 pounds frequently; and
(3) she could not walk or stand for more than 30 minutes per hour or more than a combined total
of two hours per day. Additionally, Dr. Gordon recommended that Ms. Stewart “should be
permitted two 15-minute breaks given the difficulties she may encounter during the work day
due to” the impairments caused by her Parkinson’s disease. (AR at 930).
Based on the reports of Drs. Contardo and Gordon, Ms. Macko recommended that
Hartford uphold Mr. Hardy’s termination of Ms. Stewart’s LWOP benefits. (AR at 144–46). Ms.
Macko informed Ms. Stewart of Hartford’s final decision to deny her LWOP benefits by letter
dated November 21, 2013. (AR at 223–29). Ms. Macko first pointed out that although Hartford
awarded Ms. Stewart LWOP benefits based on Dr. Sharif’s independent review, Dr. Sharif
actually did conclude that Ms. Stewart had the physical ability to work somewhere where “she
did not have the stress of deadlines; where she could perform open-ended tasks at her own
comfort level and where she did not have to perform fine motor manipulation.” (AR at 225).
Accordingly, Hartford concluded that Dr. Sharif’s report supported a finding that Ms. Stewart
was not “Disabled” for purposes of the LWOP provision.
Next, Ms. Macko responded to Ms. Stewart’s concerns regarding Dr. DeFilippis’s BFE.
Ms. Macko acknowledged that Dr. DeFilippis erroneously filled out the form because he was not
Ms. Stewart’s attending physician; accordingly, Hartford did not take the contents of that form
into consideration on appeal. (AR at 226–27). However, Hartford did consider the results of Dr.
DeFilippis’s tests, which led it to the conclusion that Ms. Stewart retained the cognitive ability to
perform some work. (AR at 227). In particular, Ms. Macko noted that “the most compelling
information with regard[] to Ms. Stewart’s ability to perform any work (including part time work
26
activities) is [her] self-reported functionality as was given to Dr. DeFilippis on March 13, 2013.”
(AR at 227) (emphasis added). Ms. Macko pointed out that Ms. Stewart reported to Dr.
DeFilippis that she could serve on the boards of charitable organizations, use a computer, drive a
motor vehicle, handle financial matters, write legibly but slowly, travel, perform chores around
the house, prepare meals, and engage in other activities of daily living. (AR at 227).
Hartford also relied on the reports of Drs. Contardo and Gordon in reaching its
conclusion that Ms. Stewart did not meet the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled.” (AR at 227–
28). Additionally—and importantly—Ms. Macko pointed out that Hartford did not dispute that
Ms. Stewart could no longer “perform the essential duties of an attorney.” But, Ms. Macko
noted, “the definition of Disabled contained in the Group Life Waiver of Premium policy is
specific to any occupation and is not limited to the duties of an Attorney.” (AR at 229). Ms.
Macko further pointed out that Hartford interpreted the term “any work” in the Life Policy’s
definition of “Disabled” to mean “work that can be performed on a full time or part time basis,
for remuneration or on a volunteer basis. Any work is not limited to the essential duties of an
Attorney nor is it limited to a position with Burr & Forman LLP only.” (AR at 226).
Finally, the court will note here that the Social Security Administration found that Ms.
Stewart became “disabled” for its purposes on April 1, 2012. (AR at 560). Ms. Macko noted that
the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled” is more stringent than that of the SSA. (AR at 229). In
any event, Ms. Stewart does not argue in this case that Hartford improperly ignored the findings
of the SSA, which has its own definition of “disabled.”
In sum, Hartford concluded that Ms. Stewart retained the ability to “perform at least part
time, modified, sedentary level work activities which do not require higher level cognitive
function.” (AR at 229). And, Hartford pointed out, because Ms. Stewart “[was] able to perform
27
any work,” it did not consider her “to be Disabled under the Group Life Waiver of Premium
policy.” (AR at 229). Hartford then informed Ms. Stewart that its decision was final and binding
and that she had exhausted all of her administrative remedies. (AR at 229).
C.
Procedural History
After Hartford’s final denial of her claims for LTD and LWOP benefits, Ms. Stewart filed
this ERISA action on August 22, 2017. (Doc. 1). She brought causes of action for LTD and
LWOP benefits owed and for injunctive relief under § 502(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C.
§ 1132(a)(1)(B) (Counts One and Three); and for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA
§ 502(a)(3), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3) (Count Two). (Doc. 1 at 77–80). This court then dismissed
Ms. Stewart’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty (Count Two), leaving only her claim for
benefits owed (Count One) and for injunctive relief (Count Three) under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B).
(Docs. 38; 39). And as the court pointed out above, it allowed Ms. Stewart to engage in limited
extra-record discovery as to the role of Ian Hardy in denying Ms. Stewart’s claim and as to
Hartford’s authority to have Ms. Stewart tested. (Doc. 61; 83). Hartford (doc. 95) and Ms.
Stewart (doc. 96) have filed cross-motions for judgment, which are now ripe for the court’s
review.
III.
Standard of Review
In her motion for judgment, Ms. Stewart raises two primary issues: (1) whether Hartford
gave her a full and fair administrative review and properly followed its claims procedures as
required by ERISA; and (2) whether Hartford properly denied her claims for LTD and LWOP
benefits. The court will explain the standards applicable to these arguments in order.
28
A.
Full and Fair Administrative Review
ERISA requires claims administrators—like Hartford here—to provide claimants with a
“full and fair” administrative review. 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2). In the words of the Eleventh Circuit,
“an administrator’s decision to deny benefits must be based on a complete administrative record
that is the product of a fair claim-evaluation process.” Melech v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 739 F.3d
663, 676 (11th Cir. 2014).
Two independent but related corollaries flow from the requirement that a claims
administrator provide a claimant with a full and fair administrative review of her claim. First, the
claims administrator must compile a “complete and accurate” administrative record. Williamson
v. Travelport, LP, 953 F.3d 1278, 1290 (11th Cir. 2020). And the Eleventh Circuit has cautioned
that because a “complete record is a ‘predicate’ to [a court’s] substantive review of a claim,”
district courts should not consider dispositive motions regarding the ultimate benefits decision
until the administrator properly certifies the record or until “the parties stipulate to a complete
record.” Williamson, 953 F.3d at 1290 (quoting Melech, 739 F.3d at 673). In other words, the
“claimant must have a reasonable opportunity to contest whether that record is complete.”
Williamson, 953 F.3d at 1289. If a court determines that the administrator has not compiled a
complete record, then the court should remand to the administrator and should not rule on
dispositive motions. Melech, 739 F.3d at 676 (citing Levinson v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co.,
245 F.3d 1321, 1330 (11th Cir. 2001)).
And second, the administrator must follow reasonable claims procedures, as set out in 29
C.F.R. § 2560.503–1, in making its benefits determination. Perrino v. S. Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 209
F.3d 1309, 1316 (11th Cir. 2000); Otero v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., 226 F. Supp. 3d 1242,
1260 (N.D. Ala. 2017). These regulations impose “minimum requirements for benefit claims
29
procedures.” Otero, 226 F. Supp. 3d at 1260. Under 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(l), a court will
deem a claimant’s administrative remedies exhausted if the administrator fails “to establish or
follow claims procedures consistent with the requirements of” the regulations. This court has
held that when a claims administrator that has discretion to interpret the terms of the plan and to
make benefits determinations under the plan fails to issue a decision within the time period
established by ERISA regulations, a reviewing federal court will apply a de novo standard of
review to the administrator’s ultimate benefits determination. Otero, 226 F. Supp. 3d at 1265–66.
And other courts have held that a plan administrator’s failure to comply with any of the
regulations set forth in 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1 requires a federal court reviewing the benefits
determination to apply a de novo standard of review to that determination. McConnell v. Am.
Gen. Life Ins. Co., 434 F. Supp. 3d 1285, 1289 (S.D. Ala. 2020); Halo v. Yale Health Plan, 819
F.3d 42, 50–58 (2d Cir. 2016).
Courts review the administrator’s compliance with the “full and fair review” requirement
de novo, as such compliance presents a question of law to which the court owes the administrator
no deference. Boysen v. Ill. Tool Works Inc. Separation Pay Plan, 767 F. App’x 799, 806 (11th
Cir. 2019) (citing Capone v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 592 F.3d 1189, 1199–1200 (11th Cir. 2010)).
B.
Benefits Determination
ERISA itself does not establish a judicial standard of review for benefits determinations.
Blankenship v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 644 F.3d 1350, 1354 (11th Cir. 2011) (citing Firestone Tire
& Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 109 (1989)). Accordingly, the Eleventh Circuit has
developed—based on the decision of the Supreme Court in Firestone—a six-step framework
under which courts review an administrator’s benefits determination. Blankenship, 644 F.3d at
1354. The framework goes like this:
30
(1) Apply the de novo standard to determine whether the claim administrator’s
benefits-denial decision is “wrong” (i.e., the court disagrees with the
administrator’s decision); if it is not, then end the inquiry and affirm the decision.
(2) If the administrator’s decision is “de novo wrong,” then determine whether he
was vested with discretion in reviewing claims; if not, end judicial inquiry and
reverse the decision.
(3) If the administrator’s decision is “de novo wrong” and he was vested with
discretion in reviewing claims, then determine whether “reasonable” grounds
supported it (hence, review his decision under the more deferential arbitrary and
capricious standard).
(4) If no reasonable grounds exist, then end the inquiry and reverse the
administrator’s decision; if reasonable grounds do exist, then determine if [the
administrator] operated under a conflict of interest.
(5) If [] no conflict, then end the inquiry and affirm the decision.
(6) If [] a conflict, the conflict should merely be a factor for the court to take into
account when determining whether an administrator’s decision was arbitrary and
capricious.
Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355 (citing Capone v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 592 F.2d 1189, 1195 (11th
Cir. 2010) and modifying review framework to reflect the United States Supreme Court’s
decision in Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn, 554 U.S. 105, 117 (2008)).
In this case, both the Disability Policy and the Life Policy vested Hartford with discretion
in making benefits-eligibility determinations. (AR at 19 (Disability Policy); 67 (Life Policy)).
Accordingly, as long as Hartford—the claims administrator—properly exercised that discretion
in compliance with ERISA, the court must review its denial decisions deferentially regardless of
whether the court finds those decisions de novo wrong. And because Hartford operated under a
conflict of interest in denying Ms. Stewart’s claim for LWOP benefits, the court must take
Hartford’s conflict into account as a factor when determining whether Hartford acted arbitrarily
and capriciously in denying Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim. Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355.
31
IV.
Analysis
Ms. Stewart challenges both Hartford’s compliance with ERISA’s “full and fair review”
requirement and its ultimate decision to deny her LTD and LWOP benefits. The court will
address Ms. Stewart’s arguments in turn.
A.
Full and Fair Review
Ms. Stewart argues that Hartford denied her a full and fair administrative review of both
her LTD and LWOP claims. Regarding her LTD claim, Ms. Stewart presents a laundry list of
ERISA regulations that she claims Hartford violated in reviewing her claim. And as to her
LWOP claim, Ms. Stewart argues that Hartford did not compile a complete administrative record
and lacked procedural authority to order her neuropsychological testing and to overturn the
decision of Ms. Golych awarding her benefits. Because of these failures, Ms. Stewart argues, the
court should not review Hartford’s ultimate benefits decisions deferentially. (See doc. 102 at 19).
The court will address the LTD and LWOP claims in turn.
i.
LTD Claim
Ms. Stewart submits a long list of ERISA regulations that she claims Hartford violated,
thereby infringing her right to an administrative full and fair review of her claim for LTD
benefits. At the outset, though, the court notes that Ms. Stewart provided this list of regulations
for the first time in her reply brief on her motion for judgment and did not cite them in her initial
brief. (See doc. 97; doc. 102 at 21–22). As this court has repeatedly held, “new arguments are
improper if presented for the first time in a reply brief.” Dates v. Frank Norton, LLC, 190 F.
Supp. 3d 1037, 1040 (N.D. Ala. 2016) (citing Herring v. Sec’y, Dept. of Corr., 397 F.3d 1338,
1342 (11th Cir. 2005)). This court accordingly has no obligation to consider Ms. Stewart’s
arguments regarding Hartford’s compliance with ERISA regulations in denying her LTD claim.
32
But because Ms. Stewart’s arguments also fail on the merits, the court will explain those reasons
anyway for completeness.
Ms. Stewart first argues that Hartford’s Ability Analyst untimely rendered a decision to
deny her LTD benefits under 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(f)(3), which requires the administrator to
render a decision within 45 days of “receipt of the claim by the plan.” Hartford acknowledged
initial receipt of Ms. Stewart’s claim on July 20, 2012. (AR at 139). Hartford—through Ms.
Balogh—denied Ms. Stewart’s LTD claim on September 24, 2012, 59 days later. (AR at 187).
But in its letter of August 3, Hartford informed Ms. Stewart that it needed more information to
complete Ms. Stewart’s claim, including medical records from Dr. Standaert. (AR at 212). And
on September 12, 2012, Hartford informed Ms. Stewart that it still needed information from Sun
Life Financial regarding Ms. Stewart’s benefits under its policy and additional information from
Dr. Standaert. (AR at 191).
Under 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(f)(4), the 45-day decision period is tolled if the
administrator cannot make a benefits-eligibility decision “due to a claimant’s failure to submit
information necessary to decide a claim.” As explained above, Hartford notified Ms. Stewart
twice that it needed additional information from her to decide her claim: once on August 3, 2012
(AR at 212) and again on September 12, 2012. (AR at 191). In both letters, Hartford explicitly
requested Ms. Stewart’s assistance in obtaining the necessary information in order “to avoid any
delays in processing your claim for benefits.” (AR at 191; 212). Accordingly, the court finds that
Hartford properly tolled the 45-day time limit under 29 C.F.R. § 2560–503.1(f)(4) until at least
September 12, 2012. Hartford then timely issued a benefits determination 12 days later, on
September 24, 2012. So Ms. Stewart’s timeliness argument fails.
33
Ms. Stewart next argues that both the Ability Analyst Vanessa Balogh on initial review
and the Appeal Specialist Edna Golych failed to state a specific reason for their denials as
required by 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(g)(i). But both Ms. Golych and Ms. Balogh did provide the
specific reason for their denials: that Ms. Stewart was receiving benefits for the claimed
disability—her Parkinson’s disease—from a prior disability plan that was sponsored by her
employer. (AR at 180–81; 187–90). That Ms. Stewart disagreed with the specific reason for the
denial of her claim does not mean that Ms. Balogh and Ms. Golych did not provide a specific
reason. Additionally, this Circuit has held that notifications of adverse benefits determinations
must only “substantially comply” with the ERISA regulations. Blair v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 569
F. App’x 827, 831 (11th Cir. 2014) (citing Perrino v. S. Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 209 F.3d 1309,
1317–18 (11th Cir. 2000); Counts v. Gen. Life Ins. Co., 111 F.3d 105, 108 (11th Cir. 1997)). A
letter “substantially complies” with ERISA regulation where “the letter taken as a whole
supplied the plaintiff with a statement of reasons that, under the circumstances of the case,
permitted a sufficiently clear understanding of the administrator’s position to permit effective
review.” Blair, 569 F. App’x at 831 (quoting Counts, 111 F.3d at 108) (internal alterations
omitted). And both Ms. Golych and Ms. Balogh clearly set forth Hartford’s position and the
exclusion upon which it relied in denying her LTD benefits.
Ms. Stewart argues that Ability Analyst Vanessa Balogh failed to “reveal the time limits
applicable to Hartford in the procedures on appeal” under 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(g)(iv). That
section requires a notification of an adverse benefit determination to describe “the plan’s review
procedures and the time limits applicable to such procedures.” But the letter did advise Ms.
Stewart that she had 180 days to appeal the decision. (AR at 189). So, Ms. Stewart apparently
complains that the denial letter did not state that ERISA required Hartford to render a decision on
34
appeal within 45 days after receiving her appeal. (AR at 35). Hartford, however, did render a
decision within 45 days of Ms. Stewart’s appeal: Hartford rendered its decision on appeal 11
days after receipt of her appeal. (AR at 753–64; 180). Because Hartford afforded Ms. Stewart an
“effective administrative review” of her claim, this court will not refuse to review Hartford’s
decision deferentially because of any alleged technical noncompliance with the ERISA
regulations. See Perrino v. S. Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 209 F.3d 1309, 1318 (11th Cir. 2000).
Ms. Stewart argues that Appeal Specialist Edna Golych “failed to disclose the terms of
the Plan or Policy she relied on, specifically the definition of ‘Disability,’ set forth in the policy”
in violation of 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(g)(ii). Again, Ms. Golych did specifically set forth the
policy term she relied on in denying Ms. Stewart’s claim: the exclusion applicable if the claimant
is receiving disability benefits for the claimed disability under a prior employer-sponsored
disability plan. (AR at 180–81). Neither Hartford nor Ms. Stewart disputed the definition of
“Disability” or whether Ms. Stewart was “Disabled” for the purposes of the LTD policy, so this
argument fails.
Ms. Stewart argues that Hartford failed to produce documents relevant to her claim as
required by 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(h)(2)(iii), (4), and (m)(8). The administrative record shows
otherwise. Hartford produced Ms. Stewart’s entire LTD and LWOP claim files to her and to her
attorneys on multiple occasions. (AR at 179; 142–43; 149).
Ms. Stewart argues that Appeal Specialist Edna Golych failed to consider the issues Ms.
Stewart raised in her appeal in violation of 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(h)(2)–(4). In her appeal, Ms.
Stewart made a variety of contractual interpretation arguments but primarily argued that because
she was still receiving benefits under the Sun Life policy, it was not a “prior plan” that had been
“terminated.” (AR at 763).
35
But Ms. Golych did address Ms. Stewart’s argument: Ms. Golych made clear that
Hartford interpreted the “prior disability plan” exclusion to preclude its payment of benefits
when the claimant continued to receive employer-sponsored LTD benefits from a “prior carrier.”
(AR at 181). Again: that Ms. Stewart disagreed with the Hartford’s decision on appeal does not
mean that Hartford violated ERISA in making that decision.
Ms. Stewart claims that “Hartford failed to ensure that its claims procedures and any
limitation on benefits it intended to enforce were set forth in the Summary Plan Description” as
required by 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(b). But the SPD requirements apply the to “plan
administrator.” W.A. Griffin, MD v. Aetna Health Inc., 740 F. App’x 169, 170 (11th Cir. 2018)
(citing 29 U.S.C. § 1024(b)(4)). And the plan documents in this case show that Burr & Forman
acted as the “plan administrator;” accordingly, Burr—not Hartford—bore responsibility for
compliance with the SPD requirements. (AR at 7; 32).
Finally, Ms. Stewart argues that Hartford “failed to adopt and maintain claims procedures
processes and safeguards to insure consistent application of the Plan provisions” in violation of
29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–1(b)(5) and “failed to advise Plaintiff of any internal rule, guideline
protocol, or other similar criterion it relied upon” in violation of 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503–
1(g)(v)(A) and (j)(5)(i). But Ms. Stewart does not specific how Hartford “failed to adopt and
maintain claims procedures processes and safeguards” or how Hartford “failed to advise” her “of
any internal rule, guideline protocol, or similar criterion” it relied upon. And the court found
above that Hartford’s denial letters “substantially complied” with the ERISA regulations. See
Perrino v. S. Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 209 F.3d 1309, 1318 (11th Cir. 2000). Accordingly, these
conclusory arguments fail.
36
Because all of Ms. Stewart’s arguments regarding Hartford’s compliance with the ERISA
regulations in denying her LTD claim lack merit, the court will not apply a de novo standard of
review to the merits of Hartford’s LTD determination.
ii.
LWOP Claim
Ms. Stewart also argues that Hartford denied her a full and fair administrative review of
her LWOP claim. She argues (1) that the administrative record remains incomplete because it
does not contain authority for Hartford to have Ms. Stewart tested; and (2) that Hartford did not
have the authority to overturn the decision of appeal specialist Edna Golych awarding her
benefits. Both arguments fail.
When this court granted Ms. Stewart supplemental discovery on January 9, 2019, it
ordered Hartford to disclose to Ms. Stewart the authority under which it ordered her
neuropsychological testing. (Doc. 56 at 8–9). This court noted that “Hartford’s approval letter to
Ms. Stewart mentions its authority to periodically ‘verify’ her continued disability and its
intention to review her claim to ‘clarify’ her current cognitive limitations.” (Doc. 56 at 8)
(emphasis in original). But this court expressed concern that “the administrative record does not
clearly articulate the difference, if any, between those two authorizations, nor does it adequately
specify under which authorization Hartford ultimately decided to deny Ms. Stewart’s [LWOP]
claim.” (Doc. 56 at 8).
In its discovery responses, Hartford pointed Ms. Stewart and the court to two separate
policy provisions under which it ordered Ms. Stewart’s testing. (Doc. 95-2 at 7–8). Hartford
specifically included the first of these provisions in its letter notifying Ms. Stewart of her testing
appointment with Dr. DeFilippis:
37
When Premiums are Waived: When will premiums be waived?
If We approve Waiver of Premium, We will notify You of the date We will begin
to waive premium. In any case, We will not waive premiums for the first 9
month(s) You are Disabled. We have the right to:
1) require Proof of Loss that You are Disabled; and
2) have You examined at reasonable intervals during the first 2 years after
receiving initial Proof of Loss, but not more than once a year after that.
If You fail to submit any required Proof of Loss or refuse to be examined as
required by Us, then Waiver of Premium ceases.
(AR at 242–43; 60) (emphasis added). Hartford also referenced a “Physical Examination and
Autopsy” provision, which provides as follows:
Physical Examination and Autopsy: Can we have a claimant examined or
request an autopsy?
While a claim is pending We have the right at Our expense:
1) to have the person who has a loss examined by a Physician when and as often
as We reasonably require; and
2) to have an autopsy performed in case of death where it is not forbidden by law.
(AR at 66). The bulk of Ms. Stewart’s argument regards this so-called “autopsy provision.” Ms.
Stewart argues, for example, that Hartford never notified Ms. Stewart of its reliance on the
autopsy provision when it ordered her testing; additionally, she points out that her claim was no
longer “pending” as required by the autopsy provision after Ms. Balogh awarded her benefits on
December 28, 2012.
But the court concludes that the administrative record clearly shows Hartford’s authority
to have Ms. Stewart tested and its authority to terminate her benefits irrespective of the autopsy
provision. The “When Premiums are Waived” policy provision quoted above—upon which
Hartford notified Ms. Stewart of its reliance by letter dated January 24, 2013—allows Hartford to
examine claimants “at reasonable intervals during the first 2 years after receiving initial Proof of
38
Loss.” (AR at 60). And the Life Policy also put the burden on Ms. Stewart to show her continued
eligibility for benefits: the Life Policy required that “[a]ll [Proof of Loss] submitted [be]
satisfactory to Us.” (AR at 66). Courts have interpreted such “satisfactory to Us” language to
“put the onus squarely on the insured to provide ‘proof’ that he or she meets the eligibility
requirements.” Carr v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co. (USA), 703 F. App’x 733, 741 (11th Cir.
2017) (citing Glazer v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 524 F.3d 1241, 1247 (11th Cir. 2008)).
And, as Hartford points out, an administrator’s initial approval of benefits does not shift
the burden to the administrator to show that the insured’s condition changed upon its termination
of benefits. See, e.g., Doyle v. Liberty Life Assurance Co. of Boston, 542 F.3d 1352, 1361–62
(11th Cir. 2008) (administrator “had no obligation to explain” how insured’s condition had
changed where plan required participant to prove that she qualified for benefits); Lesser v.
Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 385 F. Supp. 3d 1356, 1368 (N.D. Ga. 2019) (burden remains
on plaintiff to show entitlement to ERISA benefits, even if administrator approves and then later
terminates benefits).
In sum, the Life Policy put the burden squarely on Ms. Stewart to show her entitlement to
LWOP benefits. The record shows that Hartford harbored questions about Ms. Stewart’s
cognitive limitations even after it granted her benefits, because Dr. Sharif’s report—upon which
Hartford relied when it granted her benefits—explicitly stated that Ms. Stewart had not had
formal neuropsychological testing done. (AR at 748; 165). In light of these concerns, Hartford
exercised its right to have Ms. Stewart examined under the “When Premiums are Waived”
provision of the Life Policy and notified Ms. Stewart of its reliance on this provision. (AR at
242–43). Assuming without deciding that Ms. Stewart’s initial LWOP application of July 2,
2012 constituted “initial Proof of Loss,” the “When Premiums are Waived” provision of the Life
39
Policy allowed Hartford to have Ms. Stewart examined “at reasonable intervals during the first 2
years” after it received that Proof of Loss. (AR at 1613–15).
Dr. DeFilippis’s examination of Ms. Stewart took place on March 8, 2013, well within
the two-year examination window allowed by the “When Premiums are Waived” provision of
the Life Policy. (AR at 1037). Hartford properly took these actions without regard to the autopsy
provision, so Ms. Stewart’s arguments regarding that provision fail. Hartford’s discovery
responses do not state that it relied only on the autopsy provision in having her examined, nor
does Hartford argue as such in its briefing. (See doc. 95-2 at 7–8). Instead, the Administrative
Record shows that Hartford relied on the “When Premiums are Waived” section of the Life
Policy to have Ms. Stewart examined. (AR at 240–43).
The court acknowledges that Hartford quickly terminated Ms. Stewart’s benefits after
granting them only a few months prior, and that Ms. Stewart’s condition likely had not changed
in the interim. But Hartford properly had Ms. Stewart examined under the terms of the Life
Policy and determined that she had not met her burden of proving her entitlement to benefits. It
had the authority under the policy to do so.
So, the court concludes that the administrative record in this case shows that the Life
Policy provided Hartford with the procedural authority to both (1) have Ms. Stewart examined;
and (2) to terminate her benefits without explaining how her condition had changed. Ms. Stewart
has had “a reasonable opportunity to contest whether [the administrative] record is complete”
and the court concludes that that record is now complete. See Williamson v. Travelport, LP, 953
F.3d 1278, 1289 (11th Cir. 2020). So, the court will proceed to the merits of the motions for
judgment and will now engage in the review set out in Blankenship v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 644
F.3d 1350, 1355 (11th Cir. 2011).
40
B.
Benefits Determination: LTD Claim
As explained above, Hartford denied Ms. Stewart’s claim for LTD benefits based on the
following exclusion in the Disability Policy:
If You are receiving or are eligible for benefits for a Disability under a prior
disability plan that:
1) was sponsored by Your Employer; and
2) was terminated before the Effective Date of The Policy;
No benefits will be payable for the Disability under The Policy.
(AR at 16). Ms. Stewart claims that Hartford erroneously denied her claim for LTD benefits
under this exclusion. The court disagrees and finds that Hartford’s decision to deny Ms.
Stewart’s claim under the exclusion was de novo correct, or at the very least not arbitrary and
capricious. Because Ms. Stewart does not argue that a conflict of interest tainted Hartford’s
decision to deny her LTD claim, the court will not pass the third step of the Blankenship
framework.
i.
Blankenship Step One: De Novo Review
Under the first step of the Blankenship framework, the court applies “the de novo
standard to determine whether the claim administrator’s benefits-denial decision is ‘wrong’ (i.e.,
the court disagrees with the administrator’s decision); if it is not, then [the court] end[s] the
inquiry and affirm[s] the decision.” Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355.
The parties advance contractual interpretation arguments regarding the exclusion, which
the court will refer to as the “Prior Plan Exclusion.” The burden generally falls on the insurer to
prove that a “specific policy exclusion applies to deny the insured benefits.” Horton v. Reliance
Standard Life Ins. Co., 141 F.3d 1038, 1040 (11th Cir. 1998) (citing Farley v. Benefit Tr. Life
Ins. Co., 979 F.2d 653, 658 (8th Cir. 1992)). Aside from this rule, the Eleventh Circuit has
41
pointed out that “ERISA is silent on matters of contract interpretation.” Dixon v. Life Ins. Co. of
N. Am., 389 F.3d 1179, 1183 (11th Cir. 2004).
When faced with silence from ERISA on a matter of its interpretation, “[c]ourts have the
authority to develop a body of federal common law to govern issues in ERISA actions not
covered by the act itself.” Horton, 141 F.3d at 1041 (quoting Kane v. Aetna Life Ins., 893 F.2d
1283, 1285 (11th Cir. 1990)). Federal courts interpreting ERISA contracts “may look to state law
as a model because of the states’ greater experience in interpreting insurance contracts and
resolving coverage disputes.” Horton, 141 F.3d at 1041. See also Bradshaw v. Reliance Standard
Life Ins. Co., 707 F. App’x 599, 607 (11th Cir. 2017) (looking to Florida law to interpret preexisting condition exclusion in ERISA-governed disability policy).
Finally, “[t]o decide whether a particular rule should become part of ERISA’s common
law, courts must examine whether the rule, if adopted, would further ERISA’s scheme and
goals.” Horton, 141 F.3d at 1041 (quoting Nachwalter v. Christie, 805 F.2d 956, 960 (11th Cir.
1986)). And “ERISA has two central goals: (1) protection of the interests of employees and their
beneficiaries in employee benefit plans, and (2) uniformity in the administration of employee
benefit plans.” Horton, 141 F.3d at 1041 (citing Smith v. Jefferson Pilot Life Ins. Co., 14 F.3d
562, 570–71 (11th Cir. 1994)).
Under Alabama law, “[w]hen analyzing an insurance policy, a court gives words used in
the policy their common, everyday meaning and interprets them as a reasonable person in the
insured’s position would have understood them.” St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Britt, 203
So. 3d 804, 811 (Ala. 2016) (quoting Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Ala. Gas Corp., 117 So. 3d
695, 700 (Ala. 2012)). After applying this standard, if the policy provision is “reasonably certain
in [its] meaning, [it is] not ambiguous as a matter of law” and the court should not apply rules of
42
construction. Britt, 203 So. 3d at 811. And a provision “is not made ambiguous by the fact that
the parties interpret the policy differently or disagree as to the meaning of a written provision in
a contract.” Britt, 203 So. 3d at 811. Additionally, “[a] court must not rewrite a policy so as to
include or exclude coverage that was not intended.” Britt, 203 So. 3d at 811.
And another Alabama rule of contract interpretation bears relevance to this case: under
Alabama law, courts should not “presume that the parties ‘make use of the words in their
contracts to which no meaning is attached by them.’” Black Diamond Dev., Inc. v. Thompson,
979 So. 2d 47, 51 (Ala. 2007) (quoting McGoldrick v. Lou Ana Foods, Inc., 649 So. 2d 455, 458
(La. Ct. App. 1994)). Courts presume “that every condition was intended to accomplish some
purpose” and should not presume “that idle provisions were inserted.” Thompson, 9 So. 2d at 51
(quoting Royal Ins. Co. of Am. v. Thomas, 879 So. 2d 1144, 1154 (Ala. 2003)).
And finally, if a court finds a policy term ambiguous and “if all other rules of contract
construction fail to resolve the ambiguity, then, under the rule of contra proferentem, any
ambiguity must be construed against the drafter of the contract.” Homes of Legend, Inc. v.
McCollough, 776 So. 2d 741, 746 (Ala. 2000) (citing Lackey v. Cent. Bank of the S., 710 So. 2d
419, 422 (Ala. 1998)).
Hartford interprets the Prior Plan Exclusion to preclude its payment of benefits to a
claimant who is receiving benefits for the claimed disability from any prior employer-sponsored
disability insurance policy or from any prior carrier that provided coverage under an employersponsored disability insurance policy. Ms. Stewart, on the other hand, primarily argues that Burr
has had one continuous disability plan and that only the insurance company funding and insuring
the plan changed. Because she obtained her Sun Life benefits under the Burr disability plan and
because Hartford insures that same plan, Ms. Stewart maintains that she did not receive the Sun
43
Life benefits under a “prior disability plan” for the purposes of the Prior Plan Exclusion. The
court concludes that the Prior Plan Exclusion is not ambiguous, because Ms. Stewart’s
interpretation is unreasonable as a matter of law, so Hartford’s decision to deny her LTD benefits
on the basis of that exclusion was de novo correct.
At the outset, the court will note that the Prior Plan Exclusion certainly does not
constitute a paragon of artful drafting. As Ms. Stewart points out, the Disability Policy contains
many defined terms, but the Disability Policy’s Definitions section does not contain a definition
for “prior disability plan.” Hartford could and should have provided a definition for that term.
But the Prior Plan Exclusion, taken as a whole and read from the standpoint of a reasonable
insured, supports Hartford’s interpretation. (See AR at 20–22); see St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.
Co. v. Britt, 203 So. 3d 804, 811 (Ala. 2016).
The Prior Plan Exclusion relieves Hartford from paying benefits for the claimed
“Disability” if the claimant “is receiving” benefits for the same “Disability” under a “prior
disability plan” that was sponsored by the claimant’s employer and that was terminated before
the effective date of “The Policy.” Ms. Stewart falls into the exact category of claimants
contemplated by the exclusion: when she applied for LTD benefits because of her Parkinson’s
disease under Hartford’s Disability Policy, she was already receiving disability benefits because
of her Parkinson’s disease from Sun Life’s disability policy, which Burr sponsored. (AR at 127).
Burr terminated the Sun Life disability policy the day before the effective date of Hartford’s
Disability Policy. (AR at 7; 123). As Hartford points out, if it were to pay her LTD benefits for
her Parkinson’s disease, she would receive more in monthly disability benefits between the
Hartford and Sun Life policies than she would have received in monthly compensation for
working full-time. (Doc. 95–1 at 27). A reasonable insured would read the Prior Plan Exclusion
44
to prevent such a windfall; additionally, the court will not “rewrite [the Disability Policy] so as to
include…coverage that was not intended.” Britt, 203 So. 3d at 811.
Ms. Stewart’s suggested interpretations fail. As the court explained above, Ms. Stewart
argues that Burr has had one continuous disability “plan” and that only the insurance company
funding the plan changed; accordingly, the LTD benefits she was receiving from the Sun Life
policy did not constitute benefits from a “prior disability plan.” (Doc. 97 at 5, ¶ 6; 28). Ms.
Stewart also argues that the LTD benefits Sun Life paid her for her Parkinson’s disease were not
“benefits for a Disability” under the Prior Plan Exclusion because the Hartford plan has its own
definition of “Disability” separate and apart from the definition of “disability” in the Sun Life
plan. But both of these interpretations would render the Prior Plan Exclusion meaningless. As to
Ms. Stewart’s argument that her benefits from Sun Life were not from a “prior disability plan”
because Burr has had one continuous disability plan, the court cannot contemplate a situation
where the Prior Plan Exclusion would ever apply under such an interpretation, apart from a
situation where an employer terminated and replaced its entire employee welfare benefits plan.
Ms. Stewart, for her part, has not argued that Burr uprooted its entire employee welfare benefits
plan, nor has she provided an example of any situation where the exclusion would apply. But
such an interpretation would render the Prior Plan Exclusion meaningless, and courts must
presume “that every condition [in an insurance contract] was intended to accomplish some
purpose” and should not presume “that idle provisions were inserted.” Black Diamond Dev., Inc.
v. Thompson, 979 So. 2d 47, 51 (Ala. 2007) (quoting Royal Ins. Co. of Am. v. Thomas, 879 So.
2d 1144, 1154 (Ala. 2003)).
Ms. Stewart’s argument regarding Hartford’s definition of “Disability” fails for the same
reason. Every disability insurance policy has its own definition of “disability;” accordingly, the
45
Prior Plan Exclusion would never apply were it limited to disability benefits paid made pursuant
to Hartford’s own definition of “Disability” because no “prior plan” would pay disability
benefits pursuant to Hartford’s definition of “Disability.”
Ms. Stewart also argues that the Prior Plan Exclusion cannot apply to “prior policies”
because Hartford defined the term “Prior Policy” in the Definitions section of the Disability Plan.
But Hartford defined “Prior Policy” to mean “the long term disability insurance carried by the
Employer on the day before the Policy Effective Date.” (AR at 22) (emphasis added). If Hartford
had limited the Prior Plan Exclusion to apply only to its definition of “Prior Policy,” the Prior
Plan Exclusion would not apply to any benefits a claimant was receiving under an employersponsored disability policy in place before the policy in effect on the day before Hartford’s
policy went in to effect. Instead, Hartford crafted the exclusion to apply if the claimant was
receiving any employer-sponsored disability benefits at the time they sought benefits under
Hartford’s Disability Policy.
Ms. Stewart argues that Burr did not “terminate” the Sun Life disability policy as
required by the Prior Plan Exclusion because she continued to receive benefits under that policy.
But, as Hartford points out, that Burr “terminated” the Sun Life policy for the purposes of new
claimants does not mean that Sun Life did not have an obligation to continue its payment of
benefits to its current recipients of LTD benefits, including Ms. Stewart. The administrative
record in this case unequivocally shows that Burr terminated the Sun Life disability policy on
September 30, 2010. (AR at 123).
Ms. Stewart next argues that Hartford’s interpretation of the Prior Plan Exclusion would
render certain of the Disability Policy’s eligibility requirements meaningless. The Disability
Policy requires claimants to be “Full-Time Active Employees,” which the Disability Policy
46
defines as working “at least 30 hours weekly.” (AR at 9). The Disability Policy also provides a
deferred effective date for employees who were absent on the effective date of the Policy: for
those employees, the Disability Policy went in to effect on the first day that employee was
“Actively at Work”—working his or her usual number of hours for the employer—for one full
day. (AR at 11). According to Ms. Stewart, the Prior Plan Exclusion renders these provisions a
nullity: she was a “Full-Time Active Employee” within the Disability Policy’s meaning, yet
Hartford still denied her benefits. This argument fails, however, because these policies still have
effect so long as the claimant is not receiving benefits under a prior employer-sponsored
disability plan. The Prior Plan Exclusion does not strip meaning from the Disability Policy’s
general eligibility requirements.
Finally, Ms. Stewart argues that Hartford “invent[ed] its own denial language” when it
denied Ms. Stewart’s claim under the Prior Plan Exclusion. (Doc. 97 at 33). Ms. Stewart points
out that Hartford denied her claim because she was receiving benefits from a “prior carrier” as
opposed to benefits under a “prior disability plan” as required by the exclusion. (AR at 181). The
court, however, views the “prior carrier” language as Hartford’s interpretation of the “prior
disability plan.” Instead of “inventing its own denial language,” as Ms. Stewart asserts, Hartford
merely explained to Ms. Stewart that because she was receiving benefits from a prior carrier
under a plan sponsored by Burr, she was receiving benefits under a “prior disability plan” for the
purposes of the Prior Plan Exclusion. And the Disability Policy granted Hartford the discretion to
interpret the terms of its own policy. (AR at 19).
The court also concludes that adopting Hartford’s construction of the Prior Plan
Exclusion as a common-law rule better squares with ERISA’s goals. Congress enacted ERISA in
part with the goal of “protection of the interests of employees and their beneficiaries in employee
47
benefit plans.” Horton v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 141 F.3d 1038, 1041 (11th Cir. 1998).
As explained above, were Hartford to pay Ms. Stewart benefits in addition to the benefits Sun
Life continues to pay her, Ms. Stewart would receive more in monthly disability benefits than
she earned from working full time. But administrators of ERISA-governed plans owe a duty to
all beneficiaries to “preserve limited plan assets” and to “prevent…windfalls for particular
employees.” Conkright v. Frommert, 559 U.S. 506, 520 (2010) (deferring to plan administrator’s
interpretation of plan where alternative interpretation would put pension beneficiaries in better
position than employees who never left the company) (citing Varity Corp. v. Howe, 516 U.S.
489, 514 (1996)) (emphasis added). Additionally, Hartford’s interpretation better advances
ERISA’s goal of promoting “uniformity in the administration of employee benefit plans.”
Horton, 141 F.3d at 1041. As the court pointed out above, Ms. Stewart has not provided a
reasonable situation where the Prior Plan Exclusion would apply under her interpretation. But
this court will not render meaningless a reasonable and unambiguous exclusion.
In sum, the court finds that the Prior Plan Exclusion—as read by a reasonable insured—
unambiguously excludes Ms. Stewart from LTD coverage under Hartford’s Disability Policy.
See St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Britt, 203 So. 3d 804, 811 (Ala. 2016). Because the Prior
Plan Exclusion is unambiguous, the court will not apply the doctrine of contra proferentem. See
Homes of Legend, Inc. v. McCollough, 776 So. 2d 741, 746 (Ala. 2000). Accordingly, the court
finds Hartford’s decision to deny Ms. Stewart LTD benefits under the Prior Plan Exclusion de
novo correct.
ii.
Blankenship Step Three: Arbitrary and Capricious Review
The parties agree that the Disability Policy granted Hartford deference to interpret its
terms under Blankenship’s second step. (AR at 19). Accordingly, even were Hartford’s decision
48
to deny Ms. Stewart LTD benefits de novo wrong, the court must review Hartford’s decision
under the deferential “arbitrary and capricious” standard. Blankenship v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,
644 F.3d 1350, 1355 (11th Cir. 2011). In the Eleventh Circuit, courts use the “arbitrary and
capricious” and “abuse of discretion” standards interchangeably. Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355
n.5 (quoting Jett v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala., 890 F.2d 1137, 1139 (1989)). And “a
decision to deny benefits is arbitrary and capricious if no reasonable basis exists for the
decision.” Levinson v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 245 F.3d 1321, 1325–26 (11th Cir. 2001)
(quoting Shannon v. Jack Eckerd Corp., 113 F.3d 208, 210 (11th Cir. 1997)).
In the context of the interpretation of ERISA-governed insurance contracts, the
administrator abuses its discretion if it makes its determination based on “an erroneous view of
the law.” Bradshaw v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 707 F. App’x 599, 606 (11th Cir. 2017).
In Bradshaw, for example, a plan administrator acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it applied
the wrong standard—as established by relevant caselaw—to a disability policy’s pre-existing
condition exclusion. Bradshaw, 707 F. App’x at 608–09.
In this case, even if Hartford made a de novo “wrong” decision to apply the Prior Plan
Exclusion to Ms. Stewart’s claim for LTD benefits, it certainly did not act arbitrarily and
capriciously in doing so. Unlike the claimant in Bradshaw, Ms. Stewart has not presented
caselaw that foreclosed Hartford’s interpretation of the Prior Plan Exclusion. Instead, even if the
court did find the Prior Plan Exclusion provision ambiguous, it still would not construe that
provision against Hartford in the context of arbitrary and capricious review. As the Eleventh
Circuit has pointed out, “the ‘reasonable interpretation’ factor and the arbitrary and capricious
standard of review would have little meaning if ambiguous language in an ERISA plan were
construed against the plan administrator.” White v. Coca-Cola Co., 542 F.3d 848, 857 (11th Cir.
49
2008) (quoting Cagle v. Bruner, 112 F.3d 1510, 1519 (11th Cir. 1997)) (internal alterations
omitted). And as explained above, Ms. Stewart’s claim satisfied all of the Prior Plan Exclusion’s
requirements: on the date she applied for LTD benefits under Hartford’s Disability Policy, she
continued to receive benefits for the same disability under a prior employer-sponsored disability
plan. Because Hartford had a “reasonable basis” for applying the Prior Plan Exclusion to Ms.
Stewart’s claim, Hartford did not abuse its discretion in denying Ms. Stewart’s LTD claim. See
Levinson, 245 F.3d at 1325–26.
Because Hartford’s benefits determination as to Ms. Stewart’s LTD claim was de novo
correct—or at least not an abuse of discretion—the court will DENY Ms. Stewart’s motion for
judgment as to her LTD claim and will GRANT Hartford’s motion as to her LTD claim.
C.
Benefits Determination: LWOP Claim
Hartford ultimately denied Ms. Stewart’s claim for life-waiver-of-premium benefits
because it determined that she did not meet the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled:”
Disabled: What does Disabled mean?
Disabled means You are prevented by injury or sickness from doing any work for
which You are qualified by:
1) Education;
2) Training; or
3) Experience.
***
(AR at 60). The parties agree that the Life Policy vested Hartford with discretion to interpret the
terms of the policy and to make benefits-eligibility determinations. (AR at 67). Ms. Stewart
additionally claims that Hartford’s conflict of interest tainted its decision to deny her LWOP
benefits. Accordingly, the court will conduct the full Blankenship analysis on Hartford’s LWOP
decision but will ultimately review its decision for abuse of discretion, taking the conflict into
50
consideration as one factor in determining whether Hartford acted arbitrarily and capriciously in
denying Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim.
The court concludes that, while a close call, Hartford’s decision to deny Ms. Stewart
LWOP benefits was de novo correct. Alternatively, the court concludes that Hartford’s LWOP
determination was not arbitrary and capricious and that Ms. Stewart has not shown that
Hartford’s conflict played a role in its decision.
i.
Blankenship Step One: De Novo Review
As explained above, Hartford denied Ms. Stewart’s initial claim for LWOP benefits on
October 1, 2012. (AR at 252). Hartford then granted Ms. Stewart LWOP benefits on December
28, 2012 after her first appeal. (AR at 244). After Ms. Stewart sat for testing with Dr. DeFilippis,
Hartford terminated her LWOP benefits on April 10, 2013. (AR at 235). Finally, Hartford,
through a letter written by Appeal Specialist Marsha Macko, upheld its decision to terminate Ms.
Stewart’s LWOP benefits on November 21, 2013. (AR at 223). Because courts reviewing ERISA
benefits determinations review only the administrator’s final decision, the court will limit its
review to Hartford’s final decision as communicated to Ms. Stewart by Ms. Macko. (AR at 223–
29). See Till v. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 678 F. App’x 805, 808 n.2 (11th Cir. 2017) (“This
Court, in line with several other Circuit Courts of Appeal, will consider only the reasonableness
of an administrator’s final decision”) (citing Glazer v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 524 F.3d
1241, 1245 (11th Cir. 2008)).
And to reiterate, at the de novo step of the Blankenship analysis, the court must
“determine whether the claim administrator’s benefits-denial decision is ‘wrong;’ i.e., [whether]
the court disagrees with the administrator’s decision.” Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355
51
(parenthesis omitted). Although it is a close call, the court agrees with Hartford’s decision to
deny Ms. Stewart LWOP benefits and consequently finds Hartford’s decision de novo correct.
The court will begin its de novo review of Hartford’s LWOP decision by emphasizing the
Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled.” Ms. Stewart claims that she met the Life Policy’s
definition of “Disabled” because the medical evidence clearly showed that she could not perform
the duties of an attorney, her occupation at the time she filed for LWOP benefits. (Doc. 97 at 36).
And Hartford does not dispute that Ms. Stewart could no longer perform the duties of an
attorney. (AR at 229). But, as Hartford points out, “the definition of ‘Disabled’ contained in the
[Life Policy] is specific to any occupation and is not limited to the duties of an attorney.” (AR at
229) (emphasis added). To meet the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled,” the claimant must be
“prevented by injury or sickness from doing any work for which [the claimant] is qualified by (1)
education; (2) training; or (3) experience.” (AR at 60) (emphasis added).
Hartford additionally interpreted the “any work” term to include “work that can be
performed on a full time or part time basis, for remuneration or on a volunteer basis.” (AR at
226). And this “any work” definition of “Disabled” stands in sharp contrast to the Disability
Policy’s definition of “Disabled,” under which the claimant is “Disabled” if she cannot perform
“one or more of the Essential Duties of Your Occupation…” (AR at 20) (emphasis added). By its
plain terms, then, a claimant does not necessarily meet the definition of “Disabled” in the Life
Policy if she cannot perform her own occupation but can perform any work, and the court will
not read such a requirement into the Life Policy.
When the court views the medical evidence through the lens of the proper standard, it
concludes that Ms. Stewart did not meet the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled.” Importantly,
her attending physician Dr. David Standaert never opined that Ms. Stewart could not perform
52
any work. Her visits with Dr. Standaert between 2010 and 2012 show a general trend of the
worsening of Ms. Stewart’s Parkinson’s symptoms, both physical and cognitive: she had
increased tremors and fatigue and decreased concentration. By 2012, Dr. Standaert reported that
she could sit, stand and drive only occasionally and never finger or handle. Dr. Standaert also
concluded in 2012 that “the severity of her symptoms at this point make it impossible for her to
continue in her occupation as an attorney, and I concur with the decision to seek disability and
retirement at this point.” (AR at 790) (emphasis added).
But Dr. Standaert also opined that Ms. Stewart could participate in vocational
rehabilitation services. (AR at 813). And when he communicated with Dr. Gordon about Ms.
Stewart’s Parkinson’s disease, he concluded that he did not think her capable of “continuing her
former occupation” and that “she unquestionably qualifies as having disability under the more
ordinary terms of the ADA.” (AR at 1024) (emphasis added). But neither of these statements
support a conclusion that Ms. Stewart could not perform “any work;” the ADA does not define
“Disabled” as the inability to perform “any work.” See 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(A) (“The term
‘disability’ means, with respect to an individual, a physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits one or more major life activities of such individual…”).
Additionally, all of Hartford’s external reviewers concluded that Ms. Stewart had both
the physical and cognitive capability to perform some work. Dr. Uzma Sharif, who spoke with
Dr. Standaert and relied only upon his records in formulating her opinion, concluded that Ms.
Stewart had the physical capability to work somewhere where “she did not have the stress of
deadlines; where she could perform open-ended tasks at her own comfort level and where she
did not have to perform fine motor manipulation.” (AR at 225). Dr. DeFilippis concluded that
she had only mild cognitive impairment related to her speed in completing tasks and to her
53
attention span; he noted that she “likely has a belief that she is less capable from a cognitive
standpoint than she actually is.” (AR at 1050). Dr. Contardo likewise concluded that Ms. Stewart
retained the cognitive capacity to perform “full time work that does not require higher-level,
complex organization and cognitive skills.” (AR at 924). Finally, Dr. Gordon, who, like Dr.
Sharif, communicated about Ms. Stewart with Dr. Standaert, concluded that Ms. Stewart retained
the physical capability to perform “full time sedentary work” within certain limits. (AR at 930).
Additionally, Ms. Stewart’s self-reported limitations also tend to show that she did not
meet the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled.” On her application for LWOP benefits, Ms.
Stewart reported primarily that she had issues with performing her own job as an attorney. (AR
at 1614). Ms. Stewart reported similar concerns to Dr. DeFilippis. (AR at 1041). And Ms.
Stewart reported to Dr. DeFilippis that she could travel, serve in several light volunteer roles,
prepare meals, handle financial matters, shop, spend time with friends, and drive with
medication. (AR at 1040–41). A person with these capabilities could very likely perform some
work, even if that person had to work part time.
However, several of Dr. Standaert’s statements to Dr. Gordon support a finding that Ms.
Stewart satisfied the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled.” Dr. Standaert informed Dr. Gordon
that Ms. Stewart’s Parkinson’s caused her to have “impaired balance with the risk of falling,
impaired use of hands with inability to write, and rigidity, all of which make self-care difficult or
impossible much of the time.” (AR at 1024). Dr. Standaert additionally noted to Dr. Gordon that
fatigue presented as an “early and dominant” symptom of Ms. Stewart’s Parkinson’s disease and
prevented her from working full days as an attorney. (AR at 1024). Such fatigue would likely
prevent Ms. Stewart from working full days in any occupation, but Hartford did not limit its
definition of “any work” to just full-time work.
54
And, as explained above, the Social Security Administration found that Ms. Stewart
became “disabled” for its purposes on April 1, 2012. (AR at 560). But Hartford did not
necessarily make a de novo “wrong” determination that Ms. Stewart did not meet its Life
Policy’s definition of “Disabled” merely because it rendered a decision at odds with that of the
Social Security Administration. As Hartford pointed out in Ms. Macko’s November 21, 2013
letter, the Life Policy contained a more stringent definition of “Disabled” than that used by the
SSA. (AR at 229). Other courts have concluded that a private insurer properly denied a claimant
disability benefits even when the SSA granted the same claimant benefits. See, e.g., Blair v.
Metro. Life Ins. Co., 955 F. Supp. 2d 1229, 1248 (N.D. Ala. 2013) (where, like here, the
administrative record contained only Notice of Award from SSA, this court found that SSA
award standing alone had “limited probative value” as to claimant’s eligibility for LTD benefits
under looser “Own Occupation” definition of “Disabled”) (citing Shaw v. Conn. Gen. Life Ins.
Co., 353 F.3d 1276, 1280 n.2, 1281, 1286 (11th Cir. 2003)). And Ms. Stewart does not contend
that Hartford improperly failed to consider the SSA award.
But, taken as a whole, Ms. Stewart’s own reports of her symptoms and the opinions of
both Dr. Standaert and the reviewing doctors lead to the court to conclude that Ms. Stewart had
the capability to perform some work, even if that work was part time or volunteer. Accordingly,
she did not meet the Life Policy’s definition of “Disabled” and Hartford’s decision to deny her
LWOP benefits was de novo correct, although the record likely supports an alternative
conclusion.
ii.
Blankenship Step Three: Arbitrary and Capricious Review
Even if Hartford’s decision to deny Ms. Stewart LWOP benefits was de novo wrong, it
did not act arbitrarily and capriciously in doing so. An administrator makes an arbitrary and
55
capricious benefits determination if “no reasonable basis exists for the decision.” Levinson v.
Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 245 F.3d 1321, 1325–26 (11th Cir. 2001) (emphasis added). In
other words, “the record [must] reasonably support[] the administrator’s decision.” Kaviani v.
Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 799 F. App’x 753, 757 (11th Cir. 2020) (citing Turner v. Delta
Family-Care Disability & Survivorship Plan, 291 F.3d 1270, 1273 (11th Cir. 2002)). In the
specific context of disability determinations, an administrator acts arbitrarily and capriciously if
it “cherry-pick[s] favorable evidence to rely upon [but ignores an] abundance of unfavorable
medical evidence.” Kaviani, 799 F. App’x at 759.
Ms. Stewart also contends that Hartford’s conflict of interest caused it to arbitrarily and
capriciously in denying her claim for LWOP benefits. The parties agree that Hartford had a
conflict of interest because it both makes benefits determinations and pays benefits under the
Burr plan. See Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355 (quoting Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn, 554 U.S.
105, 112 (2008)). But because such a conflict represents “an unremarkable fact in today’s
marketplace,” the burden falls on Ms. Stewart to show that the conflict influenced Hartford’s
decision; in other words, Hartford need not “prove its decision was not tainted by self-interest.”
Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1356, 1355 (citing Glenn, 554 U.S. at 120, and quoting Doyle v. Liberty
Life Assurance Co. of Boston, 542 F.3d 1352, 1360 (2008)). When determining whether
Hartford’s conflict of interest caused it to act arbitrarily and capriciously, the court must examine
the conflict’s “inherent or case-specific importance” to Ms. Stewart’s case. Blankenship, 644
F.3d at 1355 (quoting Glenn, 554 U.S. at 117). And under the Blankenship framework,
Hartford’s conflict remains “merely…a factor for the court to take into account when
determining whether an administrator’s decision was arbitrary and capricious.” Blankenship, 644
F.3d at 1355 (citing Glenn, 554 U.S. at 116).
56
The court concludes that Hartford had a reasonable basis for its decision to deny Ms.
Stewart LWOP benefits and accordingly did not act arbitrarily and capriciously in making that
decision. As explained above, all of Hartford’s external reviewers concluded that Ms. Stewart
had the physical and cognitive abilities to perform some work. Dr. Sharif concluded that Ms.
Stewart had the physical capacity to work somewhere “without the stress of deadlines” (AR at
748); Dr. DeFilippis concluded that she likely believed that her cognitive impairments were
worse than they actually were (AR at 1050); Dr. Contardo concluded that she retained the
cognitive capacity to perform “full time work that does not require higher-level, complex
organization and cognitive skills” (AR at 924); and Dr. Gordon opined that she retained the
physical capacity to work within limits and with breaks. (AR at 930).
Ms. Stewart argues that Hartford unreasonably interpreted Dr. Standaert’s opinion of Ms.
Stewart’s abilities in reaching its conclusion that she could perform some work. Although Dr.
Standaert’s observations that Ms. Stewart suffered from fatigue and experienced difficulty in
self-care support a conclusion that Ms. Stewart did not have the capability to perform any work,
nothing required Hartford to give his opinion controlling weight. Instead, “[w]hile plan
administrators may not arbitrarily refuse to credit a claimant’s reliable evidence, including the
opinions of a treating physician, courts have no warrant to require administrators automatically
to accord special weight to the opinions of a claimant’s physician; nor may courts impose on
plan administrators a discrete burden of explanation when they credit reliable evidence that
conflicts with a treating physician’s evaluation.” Shaw v. Conn. Gen. Life Ins. Co., 353 F.3d
1276, 1287 (11th Cir. 2003) (quoting Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord, 538 U.S. 822, 834
(2003)) (internal alterations omitted).
57
And in this case, although Hartford did not give Dr. Standaert’s opinion controlling
weight, it did not arbitrarily refuse to give it any credit. Hartford conceded, for instance, that Ms.
Stewart did not have the ability to perform the material duties of an attorney, a conclusion that it
drew from Dr. Standaert’s opinion. (AR at 229). Hartford instead decided to give more weight to
opinions of its own independent medical reviewers and to Ms. Stewart’s own self-reported
functionality, an allowable course of action. See Hufford v. Harris Corp., 322 F. Supp. 2d 1345,
1359 (M.D. Fla. 2004) (“It is entirely appropriate for an administrator to rely on written reports
of consultants who have done paper review of a claimant’s medical records, even if those reports
rebut the opinion of the treating physicians asserting claimant is disabled”) (citing Donato v.
Metro. Life Ins. Co., 19 F.3d 375, 380 (7th Cir. 1994)). Indeed, Hartford gave the most weight to
Ms. Stewart’s own self-reported functionality, which supported a finding that she retained the
physical and cognitive capability to perform at least part-time work. (AR at 227).
In her “Motion to Strike and/or Evidentiary Objections,” Ms. Stewart argues that
Hartford acted arbitrarily and capriciously by not supplying Drs. Contardo and Gordon with all
of Ms. Stewart’s medical records. The administrative record shows that Ms. Macko provided
Drs. Contardo with “all medical records received as of the date of [the] referral…including [Ms.
Stewart’s] most recent self-reported statements of functionality.” (AR at 1031). But Ms. Macko
did not provide Drs. Contardo and Gordon with Dr. DeFilippis’s BFE because Ms. Stewart
complained on appeal that Dr. DeFilippis erroneously filled out the BFE; the BFE directed Ms.
Stewart’s attending physician to complete it, not Dr. DeFilippis. Ms. Stewart cannot complain
that the BFE contained flaws while also complaining that Hartford failed to take it into account.
(AR at 154). Additionally, Ms. Macko did not provide Dr. Sharif’s report to Drs. Contardo and
Gordon because Dr. Sharif had not examined Ms. Stewart (AR at 154) and because Hartford did
58
not want Dr. Sharif’s opinion to bias Drs. Gordon and Contardo, who acted as subsequent
independent reviewers. (AR at 1031). Ms. Stewart has not shown that Hartford failed to provide
any other records to Drs. Gordon and Contardo, and any argument that it did fail to provide
medical records amounts to nothing but speculation. And Hartford did not act arbitrarily and
capriciously in withholding the documents it did withhold from Drs. Gordon and Contardo; it has
provided reasonable explanations for that decision.
But Ms. Stewart primarily argues that Hartford’s conflict of interest caused it to
arbitrarily and capriciously deny her LWOP benefits. First, Ms. Stewart believes that Ian Hardy
improperly terminated her LWOP benefits after Ms. Golych approved her claim and after Dr.
DeFilippis tested Ms. Stewart. (AR 235–39). In several of Mr. Hardy’s performance reviews
that Ms. Stewart obtained in discovery, Mr. Hardy noted his role in a so-called “PW stretch
project.” (Doc. 67-4 at 26). According to Ms. Stewart, Hartford initiated this “stretch project” to
deny LWOP claims regardless of their merit. Ms. Stewart cites Mr. Hardy’s LinkedIn profile in
support of her conclusion, but because the administrative record does not contain Mr. Hardy’s
LinkedIn profile and because Ms. Stewart has not shown that the claims administrator otherwise
had knowledge of Mr. Hardy’s comments on LinkedIn, the court will not repeat or rely on those
comments here. See Glazer v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 524 F.3d 1241, 1246 (11th Cir.
2008) (courts in ERISA cases may only consider “the facts known to the administrator at the
time the decision was made”) (quoting Jett v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala., 890 F.2d 1137,
1139 (11th Cir. 1989)).
Ms. Stewart points to several comments Mr. Hardy made in his performance reviews to
support her conclusion that Hartford initiated the “stretch project” to deny LWOP claims
regardless of their merit. (Doc. 67-4). The court has reviewed each of Mr. Hardy’s comments
59
cited by Ms. Stewart and the context in which he made them. The court concludes that these
statements do not satisfy Ms. Stewart’s burden of showing that Hartford’s conflict caused it to
arbitrarily and capriciously deny her LWOP claim. First, Mr. Hardy’s statements in no way
prove that he wrongfully terminated Ms. Stewart’s LWOP benefits. As Hartford noted in its
interrogatory responses, Hartford employees used the term “stretch project” to refer to work
distinct from the ordinary responsibilities of that employee. (Doc. 95-3 at 4). And Hartford has
already explained Ian Hardy’s involvement with Ms. Stewart’s claim: Mr. Hardy took part in
Hartford’s effort to centralize its LWOP claims by reassigning those claims to a dedicated team
located in one office. (Doc. 95-3 at 4).
But most importantly, the court notes that even assuming without deciding that Mr.
Hardy did in fact improperly terminate Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim, which she has not shown,
Mr. Hardy played no role in Hartford’s final benefits decision. Ms. Macko issued Hartford’s
final decision to terminate Ms. Stewart’s LWOP benefits. And courts reviewing ERISA benefits
determinations review only the administrator’s final decision. Till v. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co.,
678 F. App’x 805, 808 n.2 (11th Cir. 2017) (“[t]his Court, in line with several other Circuit
Courts of Appeal, will consider only the reasonableness of an administrator’s final decision”)
(citing Glazer v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 524 F.3d 1241, 1245 (11th Cir. 2008)).
Accordingly, the court concludes that Mr. Hardy’s participation in an LWOP “stretch project”
does not prove—or even suggest—that Hartford’s conflict of interest played any role in its
decision to deny Ms. Stewart LWOP benefits.
Finally, Ms. Stewart argues that Anna Davis—the Hartford employee who directed Ms.
Stewart’s neuropsychological testing in the notes of Ms. Stewart’s LWOP claim (AR at 165)—
actually worked for Hartford’s “business unit” and directed Ms. Stewart’s testing to improperly
60
terminate her benefits. Ms. Stewart again reaches this conclusion based on a LinkedIn profile
belonging to an “Anna Davis” who worked for Hartford’s business unit. But Ms. Stewart has
pointed to no evidence in the administrative record supporting her conclusion or showing that the
Anna Davis who worked on Ms. Stewart’s claim is the Anna Davis on LinkedIn who worked for
Hartford’s business unit. In the absence of such evidence, the court will not consider such a
speculative argument. And although Hartford has not explained Ms. Davis’s appearance, it does
not bear the burden of showing that its conflict of interest led to her involvement. See
Blankenship, 644 F.3d at 1355.
For the above reasons, the court concludes that a reasonable basis existed in the record
for Hartford’s decision to deny Ms. Stewart LWOP benefits and finds that Ms. Stewart has not
borne her burden of proving that Hartford’s conflict of interest played any role in its decision.
Accordingly, even if Hartford made a de novo wrong decision to deny Ms. Stewart LWOP
benefits, it did not act arbitrarily and capriciously in making that decision.
V.
Conclusion
Hartford acted within its discretion in applying the Prior Plan Exclusion to Ms. Stewart’s
LTD claim and supported its decision that she did not qualify as “Disabled” under the Life
Policy with evidence in the record. And Hartford acted within its procedural authority in making
those determinations.
Accordingly, the court will DENY Ms. Stewart’s motion for judgment (doc. 96), will
GRANT Hartford’s motion (doc. 95), and will ENTER JUDGMENT for Hartford and against
Ms. Stewart. And because Ms. Stewart improperly brought her “Motion to Strike and/or
Evidentiary Objections” (doc. 103), the court will DENY that motion.
61
DONE and ORDERED this 6th day of May, 2021.
____________________________________
KARON OWEN BOWDRE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
62
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