Hopper v. Aetna Life Insurance Company
Filing
27
/// ORDER granting 24 Aetna's Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record (Memorandum in Opposition) as to Counts II and IV, Count III was given up by Plaintiff; and denying 23 Plaintiff's Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record. The clerk of court shall enter judgment in accordance with this order and close the case. So Ordered by Judge Landya B. McCafferty.(jbw)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Gary Hopper
v.
Civil No. 14-cv-450-LM
Opinion No. 2016 DNH 194
Aetna Life Insurance Company
O R D E R
In a previous order, document no. 20, the court granted
judgment in favor of Aetna Life Insurance Company (“Aetna”) on
Gary Hopper’s claim that Aetna, as the administrator of a longterm disability (“LTD”) plan, violated the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001-1461, by
terminating his LTD benefits.
That claim was one of four that
plaintiff asserted in his complaint.
Because the parties did
not address plaintiff’s other three claims in the motions that
resulted its previous order, that order did not address those
claims.
In a subsequent pleading, plaintiff gave up the claim
for breach of contract he had asserted in Count III.
Currently
before the court are the parties’ motions for judgment on the
administrative record on Count II, which asserts a claim that
Aetna violated 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2), and Count IV, which requests
a declaratory judgment that Hopper is entitled to LTD benefits.1
For the reasons that follow, Aetna’s motion is granted and
Hopper’s motion is denied.
I. Background
Until May of 2011, Hopper worked as a machinist for Ametek,
Inc.
As an Ametek employee, he was covered by an LTD plan that
was both administered and insured by Aetna.
Under that plan, an
employee with an impairment that prevents him from performing
his own job is entitled to two years of LTD benefits.
After two
years, however, an employee is entitled to LTD benefits only if
he meets a stricter test, which requires an impairment that
precludes him from performing “any reasonable occupation.”
In 2011, Hopper was awarded LTD benefits for a 24-month
period running through August 23, 2013.
That award was based
upon a determination that Hopper could no longer perform his
work as a machinist because he was suffering from, among other
things, eye problems and skin conditions.
In January of 2013,
Aetna notified Hopper that on August 23, he would become subject
to the stricter “any reasonable occupation” test and that his
Aetna’s pleading is actually captioned: “Defendant’s
Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiff’s Motion for
Judgment on Counts II & IV and in Support of Defendant’s CrossMotion for Judgment on the Pleadings or, Alternatively, Summary
Judgment.” The court construes Aetna’s pleading as a decision
memorandum. See LR 9.4(c).
1
2
claim would be reviewed under it.
On August 15, Aetna informed
Hopper that, as of August 23, he would no longer be eligible for
LTD benefits because he could perform the occupations of
machinist, bench assembler, and tool programmer.
On that basis,
Aetna terminated Hopper’s benefits.
Hopper appealed that decision to Aetna.
During the appeal
process, Aetna procured physician reviews of Hopper’s medical
records from Dr. Samuel Winn, an ophthalmologist, and Dr. Vesna
Petronic-Rosic, a dermatologist.
Dr. Winn opined that Hopper’s
visual impairments disqualified him from working as a machinist,
as a bench assembler, or as a tool programmer.
Dr. Petronic-
Rosic, in turn, when asked whether Hopper was capable of
performing any of those three occupations, gave the following
response:
No, he is not; the claimant cannot work in a dusty
factory environment. All the options listed in the
Labor Market Analysis [i.e., the occupations of
machinist, bench assembler, and tool programmer]
involve work in a centralized facility, i.e., factory
environment. He is capable of sustained full-time
employment in an office environment, but no such
options are listed.
Administrative Record (hereinafter “AR”), at D 000276.
In a
letter to Hopper’s counsel dated January 10, 2014, Aetna
overturned its decision to terminate Hopper’s LTD benefits and
explained:
[O]ur review has established that the employment
options identified do not fit within all of [Mr.
3
Hopper’s] physical restrictions and limitations. As a
result, your client’s claim has been returned to the
claims operation team and will be re-opened by [the]
Disability Benefits Manager (DBM) for review and
benefit payment, effective August 23, 2013.
Doc. no. 13 at 13.
On January 29, Hopper heard from Aetna again.
In what it
calls a “redenial letter,” AR, at D 001021, Aetna told Hopper
that while he was precluded from working as a machinist, bench
assembler, or tool programmer, he could work as an assignment
clerk.
Accordingly, Aetna determined that Hopper was ineligible
for LTD benefits.
After announcing that decision, the letter also told Hopper
that Aetna would “review any additional information [he] care[d]
to submit,” and described the kinds of information he might
submit.
AR, at D 000760.
Aetna also told Hopper that: (1) he
was entitled to a review of its decision; (2) he could request
copies of documents related to his claim; and (3) if he did “not
agree with the final determination upon review, [he had] the
right to bring a civil action under section 502(a) of ERISA.”
Id.
Finally, Aetna described the steps Hopper would need to
take to obtain a review of its decision.
On February 14, Hopper’s counsel asked Aetna for “a copy of
the complete contract (policy) used in [Aetna’s] letter of
January 29, 2014.”
AR, at D 000263.
By letter dated February
25, Hopper’s counsel acknowledged receipt of a “copy of the
4
‘Benefit Plan’ booklet.”
AR, at D 000261.
In addition, he
requested
a complete copy of whatever materials which in amy
[sic] way are claimed to govern Aetna’s decision
making process, procedural requirement[s] which bind
the fiduciary and the employee, and the required
reasonable procedures which must be exhausted before
resorting to a judicial forum.
AR, at D 000261.
Aetna’s Senior LTD Benefit Manager, Sammy
Maurice, responded:
We are in receipt of your letter dated 02/25/2014. It
appears you are indicating that you have not received
all of the documentation initially requested. We have
sent you a copy of the claim file and we have sent you
a copy of the LTD booklet. At this point I am still
unclear as to what else you are requesting.
AR, at D 000766.
In letters dated April 15 and April 23, 2014, Hopper’s
counsel attempted to clarify his request.
In the former, he
indicated he was “trying to ascertain the claim procedures which
were in effect at the time [Hopper’s] claim was originally made
or which may be [in] effect at this time.”
AR, at D 000257.
He
then explained his need for that information: “Before we can
resort to our judicial remedies, we must demonstrate that either
we have exhausted the administrative remedies in place as
required under the United States Department of Labor
regulations, or, such an appeal would be a useless gesture.”
Id.
In his subsequent letter, Hopper’s counsel elaborated:
5
This document [i.e., a copy of Aetna’s “claims
procedures”] is essential for the claimant to
ascertain the next step in obtaining the appropriate
remedy. Without this information, we are unable to
ascertain:
1-
Whether the administrator has enacted and
adopted claims procedures as required by the
law.
2-
Whether the claims procedures as adopted by
the Administrator are consistent with the
mandates of the law and are reasonable as
required by the law.
3-
The appropriate remedy for a self-reversal
by the Administrator as was done in this
case.
4-
Whether the remedy for the self-reversal is
voluntary or mandatory.
5-
Whether the administrator has acted
consistent[ly] with the mandates of the
procedures as it may have adopted or they
may exist.
AR, at D 000254.
Counsel then reiterated his concern that
without the “claims procedures,” it was impossible to determine
the proper forum in which to contest Aetna’s decision to
terminate Hopper’s benefits.
In the motion currently before the
court, Hopper says he never got the information he requested
from Aetna until March of 2015, five months after he filed this
suit.
He does not, however, indicate what that information was,
what he might have ascertained from it, or how he was harmed by
hot having that information earlier.
6
Notwithstanding any possible confusion over how to
challenge Aetna’s decision to terminate his benefits, Hopper
appealed that decision, to Aetna, by letter dated July 25, 2014.
That letter describes Hopper’s visual impairments and explains
that they were the reason why Ametek terminated his employment.
The letter also notes a diagnosis of skin cancer that had spread
to Hopper’s neck.
Finally, the letter refers to “some
additional medical documentation” that was enclosed with it.
AR, at D 000193.
The letter does not, however, identify or
describe that documentation.
Shortly after Hopper filed his appeal with Aetna, he sent
Aetna a copy of a July, 30, 2014, letter from his treating
ophthalmologist, Dr. Erin Fogel.
In her letter, Dr. Fogel
described Hopper’s eye problems and then concluded her letter
this way:
All of Gary’s chronic eye conditions have caused him
extreme light sensitivity, poor depth perception, and
overall poor vision. While he is functional for
activities of daily life, it is very difficult for him
to carry out any kind of work that would require good
depth perception or require him to work in a dusty or
dirty environment. He continues to require daily eye
drops, oral Acyclovir, and frequent office visits for
monitoring of his chronic eye problems.
AR, at D 000205.
The administrative record contains hundreds of pages of
internal documents generated by Aetna that chronicle its
handling of Hopper’s claim and his two appeals.
7
In entries that
post-date Hopper’s July 25, 2014 appeal, Aetna’s internal
documents mention: (1) Dr. Petronic-Rosic’s physician review;
(2) Dr. Winn’s physician review; (3) office notes from Dr.
Fogel, Dr. Mark Quitadamo (who treated Hopper’s eczema), Dr.
Michael McLeod (a family practitioner), Dr. Michael Shead (an
ophthalmologist), Dr. Laura Jarmoc (an allergist), and Dr. H.
Singh (an oncologist).
Aetna’s internal documents also include
this assessment:
There is a lack of medical evidence for impairment
beyond the assessment provided by the peer reviewers
[i.e., Drs. Petronic-Rosic and Winn]. The claimant
subsequently underwent radiation treatment 02/07/14
through 03/05/14 for squamous cell carcinoma of the
neck. This was discontinued due to significant skin
reactions. No formal restrictions or limitations were
submitted by the treating radiation oncologist for
this timeframe.
AR, at D 001038.
Before rendering a decision on Hopper’s appeal, Aetna
obtained a physician review from another ophthalmologist, Dr.
Morris Osowsky.
Dr. Osowsky reviewed 28 documents, including
the physician review authored by Dr. Winn and 22 documents
authored by Dr. Fogel.
Dr. Osowsky had this to say about Dr.
Fogel’s July 30 letter: “The information provided by Dr. Fogle’s
[sic] report of 07/30/14 did not provide new information as to
any change or worsening of [Hopper’s] condition which would
uphold a finding of disability under the plan.”
000188.
AR, at D
In its referral to Dr. Osowsky, Aetna asked for a
8
detailed description of Hopper’s functional impairments and then
asked: “During the time period referenced above, would Mr.
Hopper’s eye impairments, if any, from his eye diagnoses
preclude him from working full-time in a clean office
environment?”
AR, at D 000192.
Dr. Osowsky responded: “Mr.
Hopper would be able to work full-time in a clean office
environment, however his eye impairments would preclude him from
performing activities requiring a binocular visual acuity better
than 20/40, depth perception, and bilateral peripheral vision.”
Id.
In September of 2014, Aetna upheld its decision to
terminate Hopper’s LTD benefits.
Its decision rationale
discussed the information Hopper submitted in response to the
January 29 letter this way:
Claimant sent in documentation for his appeal on
07/29/2014 which did not provide any new information
involving claimant’s eyes. The information was
followed by a report dated 07/30/2014 by Erin Fogle
[sic], Opthamologist [sic] which did not note any
change in claimant[’]s eye conditions since 2013 and
noted [that] claimant is functional for activities of
daily living. The report of Dr. Fogle [sic] notes
that it is very difficult for claimant to carry out
any kind of work that would require good depth
perception or to work in a dusty or dirty environment.
AR, at D 001067.
Finally, the decision rationale explained that
Dr. Osowsky’s findings were presented to Aetna’s vocational
expert, who factored them into the determination that, with
9
certain accommodations for his visual impairments, Hopper could
work as an assignment clerk.
This action followed.
Plaintiff initially sued in four counts.
already been granted judgment on Count I.
Defendant has
Plaintiff has given
up Count III, in which he asserted a claim for breach of
contract.
See doc. no. 21 at 1-2.
In Count II, plaintiff
claims that Aetna violated ERISA by terminating his benefits
without affording him the procedure he was due, and in Count IV,
he seeks a declaratory judgment that he is entitled to LTD
benefits.
II. Discussion
Each party argues that it is entitled to judgment on the
record on each of the two remaining claims.
The court begins
with Count II and then turns to Count IV.
A. Count II
In his complaint, Hopper frames Count II in the following
way:
AETNA, in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1133[(2)],
wrongfully failed to afford a reasonable opportunity
to Hopper for a full and fair review by the
appropriate named fiduciary of the decision denying
his claim.
Doc. no. 1 at ¶ 56.
In his motion for judgment on the record,
Hopper splits his § 1133(2) claim in two.
First, he claims that
Aetna “deprived [him] of pre-judicial process, as required by
10
law.”
Doc. no. 23 at 4.
Second, he claims that Aetna “failed
to provide a review that took into account all comments,
documents, records, and other information submitted by the
claimant and failed to engage in a meaningful dialogue with
[him] regarding [his] claim.”
original).2
Id. at 10 (emphasis in the
In this section, the court considers Hopper’s two §
1133(2) claims in turn, but begins by describing the relevant
law.
1. Relevant Law
Under the heading “Claims procedure,” section 1133 of
chapter 29 of the U.S. Code provides:
In accordance with regulations of the Secretary,
every employee benefit plan shall-. . . .
(2) afford a reasonable opportunity to any
participant whose claim for benefits has been
denied for a full and fair review by the
appropriate named fiduciary of the decision
denying the claim.
Plaintiff’s reference to a “meaningful dialogue” would
appear to be extraneous. That phrase is drawn from caselaw
applying regulations that effectuate the notice requirement
imposed by 29 U.S.C. § 1133(1). See, e.g., Booton v. Lockheed
Med. Benefit Plan, 110 F.3d 1461, 1463 (9th Cir. 1997). Here,
however, Hopper bases his claim on the “full and fair review”
requirement imposed by § 1133(2), not the § 1133(1) notice
requirement. In his memorandum of law, he refers to decisions
in cases brought under 29 U.S.C. § 1133(1) and to parts of the
regulation that effectuates that statute, but his complaint
cannot be reasonably construed as asserting anything other than
a § 1133(2) claim.
2
11
Section 1133(2) is effectuated by 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h),
which is titled “Appeal of adverse benefit determinations.”
That regulation provides, in general, that
[e]very employee benefit plan shall establish and
maintain a procedure by which a claimant shall have a
reasonable opportunity to appeal an adverse benefit
determination to an appropriate named fiduciary of the
plan, and under which there will be a full and fair
review of the claim and the adverse benefit
determination.
29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(1).
The regulation further provides:
[T]he claims procedures of a plan will not be deemed
to provide a claimant with a reasonable opportunity
for a full and fair review of a claim and adverse
benefit determination unless the claims procedures-. . . .
(iii) Provide that a claimant shall be provided,
upon request and free of charge, reasonable access to,
and copies of, all documents, records, and other
information relevant to the claimant’s claim for
benefits. . . .;
(iv) Provide for a review that takes into account
all comments, documents, records, and other
information submitted by the claimant relating to the
claim, without regard to whether such information was
submitted or considered in the initial benefit
determination.
29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(2).
2. Deprivation of Pre-Judicial Process
In his first claim, plaintiff asserts that Aetna violated
29 U.S.C. § 1133(2) when it did not provide him with the “claims
procedures” he requested in April of 2014, as required by 29
C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(2)(iii).
Aetna attacks plaintiff’s first
12
claim from several angles, but is entitled to judgment in its
favor because even if Hopper can establish a technical violation
of § 2560.503-1(h)(2)(iii), he has failed to demonstrate
prejudice.3
In a case involving a claim that an ERISA plan
administrator had failed to provide a claimant with information,
as required by 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(iii), the court of
appeals held that “as a basis for a remand, the district court
correctly required [the claimant] to demonstrate a connection
between Hartford’s failure to disclose the complete file and her
inability to receive from the plan administrator a full and fair
review of her claim to benefits.”
DiGregorio v. Hartford
Comprehensive Emp. Benefit Serv. Co., 423 F.3d 6, 16 (1st Cir.
Aetna also argues that Hopper waived his procedural
objections to its decision by failing to raise them in his first
motion for judgment on the record. In addition, Aetna argues
that Hopper’s request for judgment on Count II is in reality an
untimely request for reconsideration of the court’s ruling on
Count I because: (1) the principal relief that Hopper seeks in
Count II is an award of benefits; (2) that is the same relief
Hopper sought in Count I; and (3) the proper relief for a claim
under 29 U.S.C. § 1133 is a remand, not an award of benefits.
The court agrees that, generally speaking, the proper relief for
a violation of § 1133 is a remand. See Brown v. J.B. Hunt
Transp. Servs., Inc., 586 F.3d 1079, 1087 (8th Cir. 2009).
However, in Count II, Hopper also asks for “all other relief as
the facts and law may provide.” Doc. no. 1 at ¶ 57. That
request surely encompasses relief in the form of a remand.
Thus, Hopper’s prayer for relief is sufficient to shield Count
II from Aetna’s argument that Hopper is merely seeking
reconsideration of the court’s ruling that he is not entitled to
an award of benefits.
3
13
2005).
As for the contours of that requirement, Hopper “must
show prejudice in a relevant sense.”
Id. (quoting Recupero v.
N.E. Tel. & Tel. Co., 118 F.3d 820, 840 (1st Cir. 1997)).
In
DiGregorio, to show prejudice, the claimant was obligated to
“show that as a result of Hartford’s failure to disclose her
complete claim file, she did not understand the evidence that
she had to provide to dispute Hartford’s conclusion that she was
not entitled to benefits.”
423 F.3d at 16.
In response to Aetna’s prejudice argument, Hopper first
suggests that prejudice may not always be required.
There may
be circumstances in which prejudice is not required, but Hopper
does not explain what those circumstances might be, or why
prejudice would not be required in this case.
Turning to the
rationale behind the prejudice requirement, the typical remedy
for a violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1133 is a remand to the plan
administrator.
See Brown, 586 F.3d at 1087.
That remedy, in
turn, allows a plan administrator to correct its error and undo
the harm a claimant has suffered as a result of that error.
If
a claimant has not been prejudiced by a plan administrator’s
procedural error, remand would seem to be a hollow gesture,
incapable of providing any real relief.
Thus, prejudice would
seem to be an essential element of any claim under § 1133.
But, even if prejudice is not always required, the court
can see no reason why, under the circumstances of this case,
14
plaintiff would not need to show prejudice.
He says he has.
The court does not agree.
In the motion currently pending before the court, Hopper
describes the harm he suffered this way:
The actions of AETNA, in this case, completely
undermined the claimant’s ability to preserve and
present his case. He needed, not an attorney, but a
clairvoyant to ascertain whether Aetna’s particular
plan was governed by de novo, or ‘substantial
deference’ standard on initial judicial appeal. He
was left to consult a soothsayer as to whether he
should retain an expert of his own, when and in what
exact field. The alternative was fiscally crushing,
and logistically impossible. It required the
exhaustion of his precious resources which well
exceeded the amounts to which he would be entitled
under the plan, if approved.
Doc. no. 23 at 6.
In response to Aetna’s argument that he
cannot show prejudice, Hopper elaborated:
The lack of a meaningful dialogue between AETNA and
Mr. Hopper left him in the dark about the contour, and
procedural landscape governing the treatment of his
claim. Not having the specific policies and
procedures governing the claims and appeals process
limited Mr. Hopper’s tactical and strategic options
during the appeals process. When he successfully
appealed the first adverse determination, he had no
notice that AETNA could then take it upon itself to
reverse its reinstatement of Mr. Hopper’s LTD benefits
due to the lack of notice of the specific policies and
procedures governing the process. As such, Mr. Hopper
was clearly prejudiced by AETNA’s failure to provide a
full and fair review.
Doc. no. 26 at 5.
Hopper’s attempt to demonstrate prejudice is
long on generalities but short on specifics.
15
To demonstrate prejudice, Hopper must explain how his
appeal of the January 29 redenial might have been successful if
he had been able to use the information that Aetna withheld from
him.
See DiGregorio, 923 F.2d at 17.
But, despite now having
the information he asked Aetna for in April of 2014 – which he
does not appear to identify in his pleadings – Hopper does not
say how he could have used that information to mount a
successful appeal.
Specifically, he does not: (1) explain how
knowing the standard of review on an action in this court would
have materially enhanced his ability to appeal the January 29
decision to Aetna; (2) explain how a lack of information about
Aetna’s internal procedures detrimentally limited his tactical
and strategic options; or (3) identify anything in the
information that Aetna belatedly provided that would have
supported an argument, in his appeal from the January 29
decision, that Aetna was procedurally barred from reconsidering,
sua sponte, the favorable decision that the January 29 decision
replaced.
Moreover, the record shows that: (1) Hopper knew enough
about Aetna’s appeal process to file an appeal of the initial
decision to discontinue his LTD benefits; (2) Aetna’s January 29
redenial letter clearly described the appeal process; (3) Hopper
was able to file an appeal of Aetna’s redenial; and (4)
notwithstanding Hopper’s claimed lack of information on Aetna’s
16
appeal process, his appeal of the redenial was resolved against
him on the merits, not because of some procedural error he could
have avoided with the benefit of the information he was seeking
from Aetna.
In short, Hopper is in the same position as the
claimant in DiGregorio who lost on her ERISA claim in court
because she had “not demonstrated that [the plan
administrator’s] failure to disclose her complete file upon
request prevented her from submitting evidence necessary to
dispute the denial of her claim,” and had not “shown that the
refusal to disclose the complete claim file had any impact on
her meaningful participation in the internal review process or
otherwise impaired her ability to prepare an informed response
to [the plan administrator’s] decision.”
923 F.2d at 17
(quoting Palmer v. Univ. Med. Grp., 994 F. Supp. 1221, 1240 (D.
Or. 1998)) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
Because Hopper cannot show that he was prejudiced by his
lack of information about Aetna’s appeal process, Aetna is
entitled to judgment on Hopper’s § 1133(2) claim to the extent
that claim is based upon an asserted violation of 29 C.F.R. §
2560.503-1(h)(2)(iii).
17
3. Failure to Provide Adequate Review
In his second claim, plaintiff asserts that Aetna violated
29 U.S.C. § 1133(2) by failing to provide a review that took
into account all the information he submitted in support of his
claim, as required by 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(2)(iv).
More
specifically, he faults Aetna for relying solely upon the review
provided by Dr. Osowsky, and criticizes Dr. Osowsky’s review as
being limited to a small portion of the medical record.4
To begin, Hopper’s focus on the scope of Dr. Osowsky’s
review seems to miss the mark.
While Hopper criticizes Dr.
Osowsky’s review for being limited to only 28 documents, he does
not identify any other information that Aetna should have
provided Dr. Osowsky, but did not.
Necessarily, he does not
indicate how Dr. Osowsky’s findings might have been different
had he reviewed the information that Aetna did not provide him.
Finally, the only piece of information Hopper specifically
identifies in his memorandum of law, Dr. Fogel’s July 30 letter,
is mentioned in both Dr. Osowsky’s review and Aetna’s decision
Hopper contends that Dr. Osowsky reviewed only 28
documents out of an administrative record that includes at least
1000 pages. The administrative record is 1306 pages long. But
it includes hundreds of pages of plan descriptions, internal
claim-review documents, and other material that would have been
entirely irrelevant to Dr. Osowsky’s review. Thus, the court is
not moved by Hopper’s characterization of the record.
4
18
rationale.
Clearly, Aetna did take that information into
account.
In addition to criticizing the scope of Dr. Osowsky’s
review, Hopper also claims that Aetna violated 29 U.S.C. §
1133(2) by basing its final decision exclusively on Dr.
Osowsky’s review and, consequently, failing to take into account
all of the information he submitted to Aetna.
Again, Hopper
stumbles on the prejudice requirement by failing to specifically
identify information Aetna did not take into account and explain
how consideration of that information might have led to a
favorable decision.
Hopper’s claim.
But, there is an even larger problem with
He asserts that Aetna relied exclusively on Dr.
Osowsky’s review, but the administrative record demonstrates
otherwise.
Aetna’s internal documents show that when Aetna
reviewed its redenial, after Hopper filed his appeal, Aetna took
into account the physician reports by Drs. Petronic-Rosic and
Winn as well as approximately 20 medical records authored by six
different physicians.
See AR, at D 001034 – D 001041.
Thus,
the court cannot accept the factual premise for Hopper’s claim
that Aetna violated 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2).
Finally, the court
notes that Hopper praises Aetna’s handling of his first appeal,
and points with approval to Aetna’s commissioning of and
reliance upon reports from Drs. Petronic-Rosic and Winn.
19
The
record demonstrates that Aetna also considered those reports
when handling Hopper’s second appeal.
In sum, Hopper has identified no evidence that Aetna
failed to take into account, and has identified no prejudice
that resulted from Aetna’s alleged violation of 29 C.F.R. §
2560.503-1(h)(2)(iv).
Accordingly, the requirement described in
that regulation provides no basis for a determination that Aetna
failed to provide Hopper with a full and fair review of his
appeal, as required by 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2).
Thus, to the extent
that Hopper’s § 1133(2) claim is based upon an asserted
violation of 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(h)(2)(iv), Aetna is entitled
to judgment on that claim.
B. Count IV
In Count IV, Hopper claims that he “is entitled to a
declaratory judgment against AETNA for all past and future
benefits due [him] under the policy, plus pre- and post-judgment
interest; all reasonable attorney’s fees; costs; and all other
relief as the facts and law may provide.”
Doc. no. 1 at ¶ 65.
He does not address Count IV in his motion for judgment on the
record.
Aetna argues that plaintiff has abandoned Count IV.
Plaintiff does not address that argument in his reply brief.
In
any event, plaintiff advances no legal theory apart from those
underlying the claims asserted in Counts I, II, and III, that
would entitle him to the declaratory judgment he seeks in Count
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IV.
III.
Thus, Count IV is entirely duplicative of Counts I, II, and
Because Aetna is entitled to judgment on the claims
asserted in Counts I, II, and III, Aetna is also entitled to
judgment on Count IV.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons described above, Hopper’s motion for
judgment on the record, document no. 23, is denied, and Aetna’s
motion for judgment on the record, document no. 24, is granted.
The clerk of the court shall enter judgment in accordance with
this order and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________
Landya McCafferty
United States District Judge
May 16, 2016
cc:
Byrne J. Decker, Esq.
Scarlett L. Freeman, Esq.
John Houston Pope, Esq.
Tony F. Soltani, Esq.
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