The 4th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently
issued an instructive, albeit unpublished
ruling, in Gorski v. ITT Long Term
Disability Plan, 2008 U.S.App.LEXIS
22904 (4th Cir. Nov. 3, 2008) (unpublished),
which points to a new way of evaluating
disability benefit denials under the abuse
of discretion standard. The plaintiff, who
had undergone back surgery and received
disability benefits commencing in 1999,
continued to experience excruciating pain
due to dislodged hardware from her surgery
that was causing nerve root compression.
Notwithstanding the
treating doctors' unequivocal support for
Gorski's ongoing disability, MetLife
nonetheless terminated benefits after
receiving a surveillance report asserting
Gorski was moving about normally, and based
on a Network Medical Review report completed
by Dr. Marc Soriano, who found no objective
support for Gorski's pain complaints.
The key portion of the
opinion rejected MetLife's reliance on
Soriano's opinion, explaining: ''The problem
with Dr. Soriano's opinion is that Dr.
Soriano never explained on what basis he
doubted the veracity of Gorski, whom he had
never examined. To the extent that he did
not believe that Gorski's physical problems
would cause the intense pain of which she
complained, he never revealed why he
rejected the view of the other doctors that
dislodged surgical hardware was irritating
surrounding nerve tissue, resulting in
debilitating pain for Gorski.''
The court thus concluded
that MetLife's decision was not supported by
substantial evidence. In reaching that
conclusion, the court made a crucial
observation that globally impacts ERISA
litigation.
''Importantly,'' the
court wrote, ''the defect in MetLife's final
decision was not that the evidence before it
was insufficient to support a
hypothetical decision to deny benefits,
but rather, that the actual decision that
MetLife issued was not reasoned and
principled.''
Because the record showed
conclusively that Gorski was unable to work,
and since the surveillance failed to show
Gorski could sustain physical activities
over a sufficient period of time, the court
reinstated benefits. A dissenting opinion
would have remanded the matter to the
insurer, though.
It is disappointing that
this ruling is unpublished because Gorski
makes a key point. The recent ruling in
Metro.Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn, 128
S.Ct. 2343 (2008), is somewhat Delphic given
the Supreme Court's refusal to prescribe
specific rules or guidelines; however, this
decision appears to capture the Supreme
Court's meaning. While the Supreme Court
adhered to the abuse of discretion standard
in ERISA cases, the impact of Glenn
is in its discussion as to how that standard
is to be applied. Glenn, and now
Gorski, indicate that a reviewing court
must do more than simply look to see whether
any evidence in the record supports the
''reasonableness'' of the conclusion
reached, as has heretofore been the rule.
Instead, the reviewing court is required to
assess the entire record and consider a
''combination of factors,'' which includes,
among a host of other elements,
consideration of the plan administrator's
inherent conflict of interest. Glenn,
128 S. Ct. at 2351-52.
The Glenn
opinion's citation to two seminal cases
instructing lower courts to evaluate the
entire record assembled in support of
administrative decisions, rather than
looking to see if there is any evidence in
the record supporting the decision (Citizens
to Preserve Overton Park Inc. v. Volpe,
401 U.S. 402, 415-417 (1971), and
Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U.S.
474 (1951)), points to the correctness of
the evaluative framework applied in
Gorski.
Although Chief Justice
John G. Roberts Jr. remarked in a concurring
opinion that administrative standards do not
govern ERISA, his ensuing comments about the
citation to Universal Camera suggest
the instructive value of that ruling. In
essence, Glenn and this ruling
illustrate that the appropriate paradigm for
evaluating ERISA cases is not a micro but a
macro perspective taking into consideration
the entire record in order to assure the
accuracy of the benefit plan's claim
determination.
This more
all-encompassing scope of judicial review is
perhaps what triggered criticism from
Roberts and Justice Antonin Scalia, and
further prompted Scalia to refer to the new
regime in his dissent as ''nothing but de
novo review in sheep's clothing.'' Although
not to the extent suggested by Scalia, the
dissent illuminates the paradigm shift
created by Glenn. The 4th Circuit's
ruling in Gorski reinforces that
change has come, and that the lenient regime
of claim reviews is over.