Novak v. Life Insurance Company of North America et al
Filing
39
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order Signed by the Honorable Virginia M. Kendall on 7/9/2013.Mailed notice(tsa, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
CAROL NOVAK,
Plaintiff,
v.
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH
AMERICA and DISCOVERY FINANCIAL
SERVICES WELFARE BENEFITS PLAN
Defendants.
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12 C 9434
Judge Virginia M. Kendall
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
On November 27, 2012, Plaintiff Carol Novak filed this suit under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), alleging that Defendant
Life Insurance Company of North America (“LINA”) incorrectly denied her claim for long-term
disability benefits under a benefit plan (the “Plan”) offered by her former employer, Discover
Financial Services. Because the standard of review governing Novak’s claims will determine the
course of these proceedings, including discovery, the Court ordered that the issue be briefed and
resolved at the threshold. With the benefit of the parties’ briefs, the court concludes that the de
novo standard of review governs Novak’s long-term disability claim and that additional
discovery beyond the administrative record is not appropriate at this time.
DISCUSSION
I.
Standard of Review
ERISA does not set out the appropriate standard of review for actions under §
1332(a)(1)(B) challenging benefit eligibility determinations. To fill this gap, courts have held
that a denial of insurance benefits is reviewed de novo under ERISA “unless the benefit plan
gives the administrator or fiduciary discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits or
to construe the terms of the plan.” Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 114-15
(1989); see also Conkright v. Frommert, 559 U.S. 506 (2010); Black v. Long Term Disability
Ins., 582 F.3d 738, 743 (7th Cir. 2009); Perlman v. Swiss Bank Corp. Comprehensive Disability
Protection Plan, 195 F.3d 975, 980 (7th Cir. 1999). When the plan gives the administrator
discretionary authority, the standard of review is deferential and court “will set aside an
administrator’s decision only if it is arbitrary and capricious.” Black, 582 F.3d at 743-44 (citing
Herzberger v. Standard Ins. Co., 205 F.3d 327, 332 (7th Cir. 2000); Aschermann v. Aetna Life
Ins. Co., 689 F.3d 726, 728 (7th Cir. 2012); Hess v. Reg-Ellen Mach. Tool Corp. Employee Stock
Ownership Plan, 502 F.3d 725, 727 (7th Cir. 2007). In order for a plan to be grant discretionary
authority to the fiduciary, “[t]he reservation of discretion must be communicated clearly in the
language of the plan, but the plan need not use any particular magic words.” Gutta v. Standard
Select Trust Ins. Plans, 530 F.3d 614, 619 (7th Cir. 2008); Semien v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 436
F.3d 805, 810 (7th Cir. 2006) (plan should “clearly and unequivocally state that it grants
discretionary authority”).
A.
The Plan Terms
The Plan designates LINA as the “Claims Administrator” and fiduciary of the LTD
program and delegates to LINA “full discretionary authority to determine claims and appeals
under such Participating Program.” Specifically, § 2.9(a) of the Plan document, entitled “Claims
Administrator,” provides:
“Claims Administrator” means, with respect to any Participating
Program, the person(s) or entity(ies) appointed by the Plan
Administrator to decide, in its sole discretion, claims for benefits,
2
or the person(s) or entity(ies) appointed by the Plan Administrator
to decide, in its sole discretion, appeals of denied claims for
benefits …. The Claims Administrator will be a fiduciary (with
respect to the authority delegated to the Claims Administrator) of
the Plan.
(a) Fully Insured Participating Programs. The Claims Administrator
for the insured Participating Programs will be the insurance
company issuing the insurance policy or contract. Each Claims
Administrator under an insured Participating Program will have
full discretionary authority to determine claims and appeals under
such Participating Program, subject to the terms of the insurance
policy contract under which benefits are provided.
(Dkt. 23-1, p. 12.) In this case, LINA is the “Claims Administrator” and fiduciary for the LTD
program under § 2.9(a) because it issued the insurance policy that provides the LTD benefits.
Additionally, in a section entitled “Claims and Appeals Process Under the Discover Benefits
Plan,” the Summary Plan Description states:
What else should I know about how the reviewers make
decisions?
The administrators and fiduciaries of Discover’s benefits plans,
including the Reviewers, have discretionary authority to interpret
the plans and make determinations under the plans. Any decision
made pursuant to this authority is given full force and effect unless
arbitrary and capricious.
(Dkt. 23, Ex. C, p. 140.) In a section entitled “Other Important Information,” the Summary Plan
Document provides:
Discretionary Authority of Plan Administrator and Other Plan
Fiduciaries
In carrying out their respective responsibilities under the Plan, the
Plan Administrator and other Plan fiduciaries shall have the
exclusive right and discretionary authority to make any findings
necessary or appropriate for any purpose under the plan, including
to interpret the terms of the Plan and to determine eligibility for
and entitlement to Plan benefits.
Any interpretation or
determination made pursuant to such discretionary authority shall
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be given full force and effect, unless it can be shown that the
interpretation or determination was arbitrary and capricious.
(Id. at 155.)
B.
The Discretionary Language in the Plan Document does Not Conflict
with the Insurance Policy
Section 1.3(b) of the Plan, which governs conflicts, provides that“[i]f a Participating
Program is insured and there is a conflict between the specific terms of the Program Document
and the terms of the Plan, the Program Document will control.” (Dkt. 23-1, p. 9.) Novak argues
that based on a conflict between the Plan document and the insurance policy, the Plan document
cannot be read to grant discretionary authority to LINA with respect to the LTD component
program of the Plan. Specifically, Novak points to the fact that the Plan document contains a
broad conferral of discretion from the Plan Administrator to any claims review fiduciary while
the insurance policy contains no discretionary clause.
The Court finds that the Plan document’s discretionary language does not conflict with
any term contained in the insurance policy. Instead, it contains an additional term conferring
discretionary authority to a fiduciary. Novak does not dispute that the Plan document’s conferral
of jurisdiction refers to all components of the plan and that the Plan specifically incorporates by
reference the insurance policy. Taking the plan documents as a whole, the Plan language
unequivocally grants discretionary authority to LINA. See Marantz v. Permanente Med. Grp.,
Inc. Long Term Disability Plan, 687 F.3d 320, 327 (7th Cir. 2012) (“A district court conducts de
novo review of a denial of benefits under an ERISA plan unless the plan documents grant the
claim fiduciary discretionary authority to construe the policy terms to decide eligibility benefits
….”) (emphasis added); see, e.g., Borich v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., No. 12 C 734, 2013 WL
1788478, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 25, 2013) (“[discretionary language] is not rendered ineffective
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merely because it appears in plan documents other than the policy.”). Accordingly, the Court
rejects Novak’s argument that the discretionary clause contained in the Plan document does not
apply to the Plan’s LTD component simply because the clause is not reiterated in the insurance
policy.
C.
Illinois Law Invalidates the Plan’s Grant of Discretionary Authority to LINA
Novak next argues that even if the Plan documents grant LINA discretionary authority
with respect to the LTD component of the Plan, any such grant is invalid pursuant to a regulation
promulgated by the Illinois Department of Insurance, 50 Ill. Adm. Code tit. § 2001.3 (“the DOI
Regulation”). The DOI Regulation provides:
No policy, contract, certificate, endorsement, rider, application or
agreement offered or issued in this State, by a health carrier, to
provide, deliver, arrange for, pay for or reimburse any of the costs
of health care services or of disability may contain a provision
purporting to reserve discretion to the health carrier to interpret the
terms of the contract, or to provide standards of interpretation or
review that are consistent with the laws of this State.
Id. The purpose of the DOI Regulation is to:
prohibit all such policies from containing language reserving sole
discretion to interpret policy provisions with the insurer. The legal
effect of discretionary clauses is to change the standard for judicial
review of benefit determinations from one of reasonableness to
arbitrary and capricious. By prohibiting such clauses, the
amendments aid the consumer by ensuring that benefit
determinations are made under the reasonableness standard.
29 Ill. Reg. 10172 (July 15, 2005).
1.
The DOI Regulation Applies Notwithstanding that it Appears in the
Plan Document Instead of the Insurance Policy
Defendants maintain that the DOI Regulation does not invalidate the clause granting
LINA discretionary authority because the clause appears in the Plan document, not in the
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insurance policy. The Plan document, according to Defendants, is not “a policy [or] contract to
provide, deliver, arrange for, pay for, or reimburse any of the costs of health care services or of a
disability.”
Courts in this district have rejected the argument that § 2001.3 does not apply by virtue of
the fact that the language conferring discretion appears only in the plan document and not in the
insurance policy itself. See, e.g., Borich, 2013 WL 1788478, at *4 (to hold that the regulation
cannot apply to Plan documents would be “both contrary to the plain language of the regulation
and the clear import of the language …. The regulation’s bar on insurer interpretive discretion
would be meaningless … if it could be avoided by the expedient of entering into a separate
agreement, outside the insurance policy, that provides the same discretion that § 2001.3 takes
away”); DiFatta v. Baxter Int’l, Inc., No. 12 C 5023, 2013 WL 157952, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 15,
2013) (section 2001.3 barred a grant of discretion to the LTD insurer despite the fact that the
discretionary language appeared in the master plan document and not the insurance policy); Ehas
v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., No. 12 C 3537, 2012 WL 5989215, at *5–7 (N.D. Ill. Nov. 29, 2012)
(section 2001.3 applied despite the fact that the insurance policy contained no language granting
discretion to LINA because another plan document—the appointment of claims review
fiduciary—did contain a clause stating that LINA would have discretion to interpret the
insurance policy).
In Ehas, for example, the court relied upon the Illinois Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation’s interpretation of § 2001.3 stating that it aims to (1) strip LTD insurers
of discretion when making decisions on LTD benefits claims, and (2) prevent an “arbitrary and
capricious” standard of review in such cases. 2012 WL 5989215, at *6 (citing 29 Ill. Reg. 10172
(July 15, 2005)). Addressing the absence of discretionary language in the policy itself, the court
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found that the plain language of the regulation makes it applicable to more than just insurance
policies because “[t]he regulation sweeps broadly, including not only an insurance ‘policy,’ but a
‘contract, certificate, endorsement, rider application or agreement.’ ” Id. The court reasoned that
allowing disability insurers to circumvent the Illinois regulation by placing the discretionary
clause in a plan document rather than in the insurance policy would “elevate form over
substance.” Id. (quoting Curtis v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co., No. 11 C 2448, 2012 WL
138608, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 18, 2012)). The Court finds this reasoning persuasive and holds that
the DOI Regulation applies to the discretionary clauses contained in the Plan document and
Summary Plan Description.
2.
The DOI Regulation is Not Preempted by ERISA
Defendants next argue that even if the DOI Regulation applies to the Plan document, it is
preempted by ERISA. ERISA’s preemption provision states that ERISA “supercede[s] any and
all State laws so far as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefits plan.” 29
U.S.C. § 1144(a). The Supreme Court has held a state law “relates to” an ERISA plan if it either
has a “connection with” or “reference to” such a plan. FMC Corp. v. Holliday, 498 U.S. 52, 58
(1990). In this case, § 2001.3 prohibits employers from delegating discretionary authority to a
fiduciary in a trust instrument that governs a plan. Thus the regulation has a “connection with”
and “reference to” an employee benefit plan.
However, ERISA’s savings clause protects from preemption “any law of any State which
regulates insurance, banking, or securities.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(b)(2)(A). Thus, “a State law
regulating insurance is saved from ERISA’s preemption provision thereby preserving State
regulation of the substantive terms of insurance policies, even those policies that fall within
ERISA’s purview.” Zaccone v. Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 10 C 00033, 2013 WL 1849515
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(N.D. Ill. May 1, 2013) (citing Rush Prudential HMO, Inc. v. Moran, 536 U.S. 355 (2002),
Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts, 471 U.S. 724 (1985), and Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am. v.
Ward, 526 U.S. 358, 363 (1999)).
In Kentucky Ass’n of Health Plans v. Miller, 538 U.S. 329 (2003), the Supreme Court set
forth two requirements a state insurance regulation must satisfy in order to be saved from
ERISA’s preemption clause. First, the state law “must be specifically directed toward entities
engaged in insurance.” Id. at 342 (“[L]aws of general application that have some bearing on
insurers do not qualify.”). In this case, the Defendants argue that the DOI Regulation fails to
satisfy the first requirement because it is directed toward plan sponsors and trust instruments, not
entities engaged in insurance.
The fact that entities other than insurance companies may be affected by a state regulation
does not take that regulation outside the scope of the ERISA savings clause. The Miller Court
explained:
It is of course true that as a consequence of Kentucky’s AWP laws,
entities outside the insurance industry (such as health-care
providers) will be unable to enter into certain agreements with
Kentucky insurers. But the same could be said about the state laws
we held saved from pre-emption in [FMC Corp. v. Holliday, 498
U.S. 52 (1999)] and [Rush Prudential HMO, Inc. v. Moran, 536
U.S. 355 (2002)]. Pennsylvania’s law prohibiting insurers from
exercising subrogation rights against an insured’s tort recovery, see
[FMC Corp.], also prevented insureds from entering into
enforceable contracts with insurers allowing subrogation. Illinois’
requirement that HMOs provide independent review of whether
services are ‘medically necessary,’ [Rush Prudential], likewise
excluded insurers from joining an HMO that would have withheld
the right to independent review in exchange for a lower premium.
Yet neither case found the effects of these laws on noninsurers,
significant though they may have been, inconsistent with the
requirement that laws saved from pre-emption by § 1144(b)(2)(A)
be ‘specifically directed toward’ the insurance industry.
Regulations ‘directed toward’ certain entities will almost always
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disable other entities from doing, with the regulated entities, what
the regulations forbid; this does not suffice to place such regulation
outside the scope of ERISA’s saving clause.
Id. at 335–36 (first emphasis in original; second emphasis added).
The DOI Regulation, by prohibiting insurers from granting fiduciaries discretionary
authority to interpret plan terms, is clearly directed toward “entities engaged in insurance.” See
Standard Ins. Co. v. Morrison, 584 F.3d 837 (9th Cir. 2009) (“It is well-established that a law
which regulates what terms insurance companies can place in their policies regulates insurance
companies.”). The fact that the regulation also imposes limitations on Plan fiduciaries does not
change the outcome of the analysis.
The second requirement under Miller is that the state law “substantially affect the risk
pooling arrangement between the insurer and the insured.” 538 U.S. at 338. The Miller Court
explained the its rationale for imposing this requirement:
Otherwise, any state law aimed at insurance companies could be
deemed a law that ‘regulates insurance,’ contrary to our
interpretation of § 1144(b)(2)(A) in Rush Prudential, 536 U.S., at
364, 122 S.Ct. 2151. A state law requiring all insurance
companies to pay their janitors twice the minimum wage would not
‘regulate insurance,’ even though it would be a prerequisite to
engaging in the business of insurance, because it does not
substantially affect the risk pooling arrangement undertaken by
insurer and insured.
Id.
Defendants maintain that § 2001.3 affects the substance of the relationship between the
plan sponsor and the insurer-fiduciary, not the risk pooling arrangement between the insurer and
insured participants. Indeed the petitioners in Miller raised a near-identical argument, asserting
that the state laws at issue in that case failed to satisfy the second requirement because “they
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[did] not alter or affect the terms of insurance policies, but concern only the relationship between
insureds and third-party providers.” 538 U.S. at 338. The Miller Court disagreed:
We have never held that state laws must alter or control the actual
terms of insurance policies to be deemed “laws … which regulat[e]
insurance” under § 1144(b)(2)(A); it suffices that they substantially
affect the risk pooling arrangement between insurer and insured”
by alter[ing] the scope of permissible bargains between insurers
and insureds ….
Id. 338–39.
In this case, the DOI Regulation effectively changes the standard of review federal courts
will apply when reviewing claim determinations from arbitrary and capricious to de novo. Under
de novo review, district courts will be permitted to make “independent decisions” regarding
benefit claims and will no longer be limited to overturning only those decisions that they find
“downright unreasonable.” The likely result is that district courts will overturn more claims
denials, ultimately leading to more claims paid than under the arbitrary and capricious standard.
Thus, the DOI Regulation substantially affects the risk pooling arrangement between insurers
and insureds. See, e.g., Ehas, 2012 WL 5989215, at *9 (section 2001.3 “satisfies Miller’s second
requirement …. By preventing an insurer from having discretion in interpreting terms, Section
2001.3 may give insureds greater leeway to bargain over the substance of those terms. The
regulation may also compel insurers to offer different terms up front, since they can no longer
dictate their interpretation”); Zuckerman v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co., No. 09 C 4819, 2012
WL 3903780, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 6, 2012) (section 2001.3 “narrows the scope of permissible
bargains between insurers and insured, because Illinois ‘insureds may no longer agree to a
discretionary clause in exchange for a more affordable premium’ ”) (quoting Morrison, 584 F.3d
at 844–45); Ball v. Standard Ins. Co., No. 09 C 3668, 2011 WL 759952, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 23,
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2011) (finding that a state law satisfies the Miller test if it “alters the scope of permissible
bargains between the insurer and insureds,” recognizing that § 2001.3 substantially affects the
type of risk pooling arrangements that insurers may offer because the potential consequences of
§ 2001.3 will be considered and factored into insurance premiums due to increased insurance
costs and a greater number of claims paid).
Accordingly, because the DOI Regulation satisfies both requirements set forth in Miller,
the regulation is saved from preemption.
While the Seventh Circuit has not yet opined on whether § 1144(b)(2)(A) saves § 2001.3
from preemption, two other Courts of Appeals, in reviewing nearly identical state laws banning
discretionary clauses, have held that ERISA does not preempt such laws. See, e.g., Am. Council
of Life Insurers v. Ross, 558 F.3d 600 (6th Cir. 2009) (Michigan regulation “prohibiting insurers
from issuing … insurance contracts or policies that contain discretionary clauses” saved from
preemption under ERISA); Morrison, 584 F.3d 837 (9th Cir. 2009) (practice of disapproving
insurance contracts with discretionary clauses saved from preemption under ERISA); cf Hancock
v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 590 F.3d 1141 (10th Cir. 2009) (finding that a Utah regulation
establishing safe-harbor language and dictating font requirements for discretionary clauses was
preempted by ERISA because it did not meet the second prong of the Miller test, but adding that
the case would have been different if the regulation “imposed a blanket prohibition on the use of
discretion-granting clauses”) (citing Morrison and Ross). Relying upon Ross and Morrison,
district courts in the Northern District of Illinois have uniformly held that ERISA does not
preempt § 2001.3. See Zaccone, 2013 WL 1849515, at *3; Ehas, 2012 WL 5989215, at *10;
Zuckerman, 2012 WL 3903780, at *7; Barrett v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 868 F.Supp.2d 779, 781
(N.D. Ill. 2012); Curtis, 2012 WL 138608, at *10; Ball, 2011 WL 759952, at *4; see also Borich,
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2013 WL 1788478, at *4 (reaching the same conclusion without explicitly relying upon Ross or
Morrison).1
Defendants submit that Morrison and Ross—and by extension the district court decisions
relying on those cases—are wrongly decided because they fail to account for the important role
judicial deference plays in ERISA’s statutory scheme.2 Defendants further assert that Morrison,
Ross, and their progeny in the Northern District of Illinois have effectively been overturned by
the Supreme Court’s decision in Conkright v. Frommert, 130 S.Ct. 1640 (2010). In Conkright,
the plan gave the administrator discretionary authority to interpret the terms of a pension plan.
Id. at 1646. Applying deferential review, the Second Circuit held that the plan administrator’s
interpretation of certain plan provisions was unreasonable. Id. at 1645. The court then crafted its
own exception to Firestone deference, holding that on remand the district court need not use a
deferential standard when a plan administrator’s previous construction of the same plan terms
was found to violate ERISA. Id. The Supreme Court rejected this “one-strike-and-you’re-out”
approach, holding that “it has no basis in … Firestone, which set out a broad standard of
deference without any suggestion that the standard was susceptible to ad hoc exceptions.” Id. at
1646. The Court reasoned that “a single honest mistake in plan interpretation” does not strip the
plan administrator’s discretion or justify de novo review for subsequent related interpretations.
Id. at 1644.
1
One court in this district, after acknowledging Ross, Morrison, and the district court decisions cited
above, expressly refused to “endorse the view that ERISA does not preempt § 2001.3 and laws like it” and instead
rested its holding that § 2001.3 applied “solely on the ground that Defendants forfeited their preemption argument
by failing to develop it.” Difatta, 2012 WL 157952, at *3
2
Defendants also attempt to further distinguish Curtis v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 2012 WL 138608,
on the basis that the discretionary clause in that case appeared in the group policy itself and not in the Plan
document. While this distinction may arguably be relevant—though, as explained above, not determinative—for the
purpose of deciding whether LINA has discretionary authority in deciding claims specifically related to the LTD
component of the Plan, Defendants fail to develop any argument suggesting how this is at all relevant for the
purpose of preemption.
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In so holding, the Conkright Court discussed the tension between “ensuring fair and
prompt enforcement of rights under a plan and the encouragement of the creation of such plans.”
Id. at 1649. The Court explained that in drafting ERISA, Congress attempted to create a system
that was not so complex “that administrative costs, or litigation expenses, unduly discourage
employers from offering plans in the first place.” Id. Instead, the goal of ERISA was to induce
“employers to offer benefits by assuring a predictable set of liabilities.” Id. Judicial deference,
the Court stated, protects this careful balance “by permitting an employer to grant primary
interpretive authority over an ERISA plan to the plan administrator.” Id.
Such deference
“promotes efficiency by encouraging resolution of benefits disputes through internal
administrative proceedings” and “promotes predictability” because an employer can rely on the
expertise of a claims administrator rather than “worry about unexpected and inaccurate plan
interpretations that might result from de novo judicial review.” Id.
Despite its language emphasizing the importance of judicial deference in federal ERISA
proceedings, Conkright does not control the issue presented in this case. Conkright did not
address, discuss, or mention, much less overturn, the Sixth and Ninth Circuit’s decisions in
Morrison and Ross. Indeed the issue of preemption was not even in play. At issue in Conkright
was whether a federal court may strip an administrator of its discretionary authority on an “adhoc basis,” not whether state regulatory bodies are precluded from regulating insurance by
promulgating rules restricting deference-conferring clauses that otherwise clearly fall within the
ambit of ERISA’s savings clause. Therefore the Court declines the Defendants’ invitation to
take Conkright—a case that had nothing to do with preemption, insurance regulation, or
ERISA’s savings clause—and stretch its holding to effectively preclude any state law restricting
the grant of discretionary authority to an administrator. See, e.g., Zaccone, 2013 WL 1849515, at
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*5 (“Conkright does not alter the analyses in Ross and Morrison or require the conclusion that
Section 2001.3 is outside ERISA’s savings clause and has been preempted by ERISA.”).
The remaining cases Defendants cite are also unpersuasive. Defendants cite: Shaw v.
Delta Air Lines, Inc., 463 U.S. 85, 97 (1983), where the Supreme Court held that ERISA
preempted a New York law requiring employers to structure their employee benefit plans to
provide the same benefits for pregnancy-regulated disabilities as for other disabilities; Retail
Indus. Leaders Ass’n v. Fielder, 475 F.3d 180, 197 (4th Cir. 2007), where the court struck down
a law requiring employers to spend at least 8% of their total payrolls on employees’ health
insurance costs; and Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am. v. Ward, 526 U.S. 358, 378–80 (1999), where the
Supreme Court found that ERISA preempted a California rule that required the employer to act
as agent of the insurer in the performance of “duties of administering group insurance policies”
under ERISA plans because the rule forced the employer, as plan administrator, “to assume a
role, with attendant legal duties and consequences, that it had not undertaken voluntarily.
However, as at least one other court in this district has noted, “each of these cases involved
legislation that sought to regulate employers’ benefit obligations rather than the interpretation of
an insurance policy.” Borich, 2013 WL 1788478, at *4 n.2. The DOI Regulation, by contrast,
“has no direct impact on the employer or what benefits it must provide, but rather affects the way
that the insurance policy is construed.” Id.
Accordingly, because the Court finds that the DOI Regulation strips Discover Financial
Services Welfare Benefits Plan’s ability to grant LINA discretionary authority to construe Plan
terms and determine eligibility for benefits and is not preempted by ERISA, the Court will apply
de novo review and make an independent decision as to whether Novak was under the Plan’s
terms.
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II.
Scope of Discovery
Nevertheless, even under the de novo standard of review, Novak is not permitted to
engage in additional discovery beyond the administrative record at this time. In Estate of Blanco
v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 606 F.3d 399 (7th Cir. 2010), the Seventh Circuit set forth the
approach for determining the scope of discovery in an ERISA proceeding where the district court
applies a de novo standard of review. Under de novo review, district courts have “discretion to
limit the evidence to the record before the plan administrator, or to permit the introduction of
additional evidence necessary to enable it to make an informed and independent judgment.” Id.
at 402 (quoting Patton v. MFS/Sun Life Fin. Distributors, Inc., 480 F.3d 478, 490–91 (7th Cir.
2007)). The Blanco court stated four factors courts must consider in determining whether extrarecord discovery should be allowed: (1) whether “the new evidence is necessary to make an
informed and independent judgment”; (2) whether the parties had an opportunity to present
evidence at the administrative level; (3) whether the extra-record discovery relates to the plan
terms or historical facts concerning the claimant; (4) whether the administrator faces a conflict of
interest. Id. at 402; Patton, 480 F.3d at 491. “The most important factor … is whether the new
evidence is necessary to make an informed judgment.” Blanco, 606 F.3d at 402. As a general
matter, however, “the district court should restrict itself to the evidence before the plan
administrator” and “review evidence beyond that which was before the plan administrator only
when circumstances clearly establish that additional evidence is necessary.” Casey v. Uddeholm
Corp., 32 F.3d 1094, 1099 (7th Cir. 1994) (citing Quisenberry v. Life Ins. Co. of North America,
987 F.2d 1017, 1025 (7th Cir. 1993)).
In this case, Novak argues that extra-record discovery should be allowed because
allowing the Defendants to determine what constitutes the administrative record would “only
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encourage administrators to under-disclose.” In Novak’s view, the “only way to determine
whether the purported administrative record supplied by LINA actually contains the information
LINA knew … is through limited purpose discovery requests.” Novak also argues that she
should be allowed to engage in additional discovery so that the Court may render an informed
decision regarding whether any additional medical affidavits may be introduced. Neither reason
presents sufficient basis allowing additional discovery. The mere assertion that allowing the
Defendants to determine what constitutes the administrative record may lead to abuse plainly
does not satisfy the factors set forth in Blanco. Indeed under Novak’s approach, courts would
allow for extra-record discovery in every case involving de novo review. Novak does not cite—
nor could this Court find—any support for such a proposition.
Nor does Novak explain why additional discovery is necessary for the Court to make an
informed and independent judgment regarding her condition.
Additional discovery is not
granted as a matter of course. See Patton, 480 F.3d at 492 (“A court should not automatically
admit new evidence whenever it would help to reach an accurate decision …. The record calls
for additional evidence only where the benefits of increased accuracy exceed the costs.”). In
Krolnik, for example, the Seventh Circuit determined that the district court should have
permitted extra-record discovery where there was conflicting evidence in the administrative
record. 570 F.3d at 843. In Patton, the court permitted extra-record discovery solely to clarify an
unexplained contradiction between two statements a treating physician made about the
claimant’s capacities. 480 F.3d at 492–93. On the other hand, in Blanco, the court denied extrarecord discovery where the medical records on file were more than sufficient and left no “serious
dispute” that the plaintiff suffered from a pre-existing condition. 606 F.3d at 402–03. Similarly,
in Ehas, the court found that the plaintiff had not established a basis for extra-record discovery
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because he “failed to sufficiently allege facts supporting the grant of discovery as to either the
issues of disability or conflict of interest. 2012 WL 5989215, at *11. In Ball, the court, after
determining that the de novo standard of review applied, denied a motion to compel depositions
based on its finding that the experts’ reports and the claimant’s medical records, which were
already part of the administrative record, were sufficient to enable the court to make an informed
and independent judgment. 2011 WL 2708366, at *2.
Here, Novak alleges that LINA’s medical reviewers refused to acknowledge her muscle
testing results, ignored the results of her electromyogram (“EMG”), failed to acknowledge the
results of her functional capacity evaluation (“FCE”), and never explained why the above-results
should be discounted or disregarded. These allegations, if true, may establish that LINA’s
decision was incorrect (or even unreasonable). That, however, is a determination the Court will
be able to make based on its own independent review of the administrative record. Aside from
alleging that LINA made the wrong call, Novak offers no specific basis for allowing additional
discovery at this time. Novak asserts that the Court may find helpful the affidavit of one of his
pain specialists, Dr. Jay Joshi, but fails to articulate why Dr. Joshi’s opinion is necessary for the
court to form an independent and informed conclusion regarding her alleged disability. Unlike
the plaintiffs in Patton and Krolnik, Novak points to no contradiction in the administrative
record, nor does she identify a specific aspect of her treatment that is not adequately discussed in
the files already contained within the administrative record. Accordingly, Novak has not shown
that extra-record discovery is necessary for the Court to arrive at an independent determination
regarding her long-term disability benefits claim.
Lastly, to the extent Novak seeks to take discovery regarding whether the Plan
administrator’s decision was influenced by a structural conflict of interest, such conflict is
17
irrelevant because the Court, proceeding under de novo review, will make an independent
determination as to whether Novak was disabled under the Plan.
As the Seventh Circuit
explained in Diaz v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 499 F.3d 640 (7th Cir. 2007):
[W]hen de novo consideration is appropriate in an ERISA case …
the court can and must come to an independent decision on both
the legal and factual issues that form the basis of the claim. What
happened before the Plan administrator or ERISA fiduciary is
irrelevant …. That means that the question before the district court
was not whether Prudential gave Diaz a full and fair hearing or
undertook a selective review of evidence; rather, it was the
ultimate question of whether Diaz was entitled to the benefits he
sought under the plan.
Id. at 643 (citations omitted); see, e.g., Borich, 2013 WL 1788478, at *5 (“Because the Court
will not rely in any way on LINA’s denial of benefits, whether LINA’s decision was influenced
by a conflict of interest has no probative value whatsoever.”); Walsh v. Long Term Disability
Coverage for All Emps. Located in the U.S. of DeVry, Inc., 601 F.Supp.2d 1035, 1043 (N.D. Ill.
2009) (finding any violations the plan administrator might have committed in denying an LTD
claim irrelevant to the question of whether a claimant is eligible for benefits).
Accordingly, the Court finds that extra-record discovery unwarranted at this time.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, the Court will make an independent determination of whether
Novak was disabled under the terms of the Plan. Novak’s request to engage in extra-record
discovery is denied at this time.
__________________________________
Virginia M. Kendall
United States District Court Judge
Northern District of Illinois
Date: July 9, 2013
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