Loy McCorkle v. Metropolitan Life Ins Co. ( 2014 )


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  •      Case: 13-30745      Document: 00512686671         Page: 1    Date Filed: 07/03/2014
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 13-30745                               FILED
    July 3, 2014
    Lyle W. Cayce
    LOY M. MCCORKLE,                                                                 Clerk
    Plaintiff-Appellee
    v.
    METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY;
    TURNER INDUSTRIES GROUP, L.L.C.,
    Defendants-Appellants
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 3:12-CV-124
    Before SMITH, WIENER and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    WIENER, Circuit Judge:*
    Harvey McCorkle (“Harvey”) died in January 2010. His wife, Plaintiff-
    Appellee Loy M. McCorkle (“Loy”), sued both Harvey’s employer, Turner
    Industries Group, LLC (“Turner”), and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
    (“MetLife”), the administrator of Turner’s ERISA-governed 1 employee welfare
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    1The parties stipulated that the Plan is governed by the Employee Retirement Income
    Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.
    Case: 13-30745        Document: 00512686671   Page: 2   Date Filed: 07/03/2014
    No. 13-30745
    plan (“the Plan”), for benefits triggered by Harvey’s death. On cross-motions
    for summary judgment, the district court held that MetLife abused its
    discretion and granted judgment to Loy for full benefits under the Plan, from
    which judgment MetLife and Turner (together, “Appellants”) timely filed a
    notice of appeal. As we conclude that MetLife did not abuse its discretion when
    it denied benefits on the basis of substantial evidence that Harvey committed
    suicide, we reverse and render judgment in favor of Appellants, dismissing
    Loy’s action with prejudice at her cost.
    I.      FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    A.    Harvey’s Death
    From 2002 until his death in January 2010, Harvey was a Turner
    employee and was eligible for coverage under the Plan for both accidental
    death and dismemberment (“AD&D”) and supplemental life insurance
    benefits. The Plan vested MetLife as plan administrator with “discretionary
    authority to interpret the terms of the Plan and to determine eligibility” for
    benefits.
    On January 13, 2010, Harvey visited his family physician, complaining
    of stress at work and trouble sleeping during the previous six months. He
    indicated that he had not been able to sleep at all for the three days preceding
    that office visit. His physician ruled out depression and treated Harvey for
    insomnia and anxiety by prescribing 3 milligrams per day of the sleep aid
    Lunesta. Harvey took his first dose of Lunesta on January 13 and repeated it
    on January 14 and 15. While taking the drug, he complained to Loy at some
    point about having problems with “fuzzy memory.”
    Before going to bed at midnight on January 16, Harvey again took
    Lunesta as prescribed. A few hours later, he got out of bed. Shortly thereafter,
    Loy found him lying in their driveway in a pool of blood suffering from a
    gunshot wound to his head. She called 911.
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    Detectives from the East Baton Rouge Sherriff’s Department (“EBRSD”)
    responded to the scene “in reference to an attempted suicide.” Harvey was
    transported to the hospital where he died several hours later. According to the
    treating physician at the hospital, Harvey had likely placed the handgun found
    at the scene under his chin, aimed it in an upward direction, and pulled the
    trigger. One detective personally observed that Harvey had an “exit wound on
    the left side of his head toward the top with what appeared to be brain matter
    oozing out of the wound.” Another detective noted blood on Harvey’s body and
    hands, as well as something that appeared to be “blowback” on his left hand.
    Detectives recovered a .45 caliber revolver lying approximately two feet
    from the blood stain on the driveway. The gun’s cylinder contained five live
    rounds and one fired round; the fired round was in line with the barrel and
    hammer. This evidence led detectives to “believe that the weapon was only
    fired one time and that no other attempt to fire the weapon had been made.”
    No one found a suicide note.
    The parish coroner issued Harvey’s death certificate the following
    month, listing the cause of death as “suicide.” Although he later provided
    affidavits explaining that Harvey was likely under the influence of Lunesta
    and therefore did not “consciously and intentionally t[ake] his own life,” the
    coroner made no move to amend the death certificate to reclassify the death as
    accidental.
    B.      The Administrative Proceedings
    Loy filed a claim under the Plan in August 2010 seeking basic life
    insurance, optional life insurance, and AD&D benefits.      MetLife paid her
    $50,000 in basic life insurance benefits in September 2010. In a subsequent
    letter to Loy, MetLife denied the remainder of her claim because the
    information in the administrative claim file indicated that Harvey had
    committed suicide.     Regarding AD&D benefits, MetLife explained that
    3
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    Harvey’s death was not an accident, so the Plan’s exclusions for suicide and
    intentionally self-inflicted injury applied. Regarding optional life insurance
    benefits, MetLife explained that, because Harvey’s death occurred less than
    two years after his optional life coverage had become effective, the Plan’s
    suicide exclusion applied.
    Through counsel, Loy administratively appealed MetLife’s adverse
    benefits determinations. She contended, inter alia, that Lunesta caused his
    behavior, so he did not intentionally shoot himself. In support of her Lunesta
    theory, Loy submitted to MetLife: (1) copies of Harvey’s medical records from
    his treating family physician; (2) an affidavit from another medical doctor; (3)
    an affidavit from the coroner; (4) an affidavit from a pharmacist; (5) her own
    affidavit; (6) Lunesta package inserts; 2 and (7) an article entitled “FDA
    Strengthens Warnings on Sleep Drugs and Lunesta Oral.” Loy claimed that
    this evidence tended to show that, even if Harvey pulled the trigger on the gun
    that killed him, he did so “while acting out of his head and unaware of what he
    was doing” because he was taking Lunesta. Thus, she argued, Harvey’s death
    was not suicide because he did not have the requisite intent to cause his own
    death.
    MetLife reviewed Loy’s appeal and, in April 2011, stood by its original
    decision. MetLife nevertheless afforded Loy another opportunity to appeal,
    which it was not required to do under the Plan. In September 2011, MetLife
    again reviewed Loy’s claim and again denied it. MetLife also notified Loy of
    her right to bring a civil action pursuant to ERISA to recover any benefits that
    she believed were still owed. Instead, in December 2011 and January 2012,
    2  The parties refer to the literature contained in packages of Lunesta as “package
    inserts.” That literature warns that some people who have taken Lunesta have experienced
    “unusual changes in their thinking and/or behavior,” including confusion, strange behavior,
    and hallucinations.
    4
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    Loy sent MetLife further evidence in support of her claim. MetLife did not
    consider those additional submissions because Loy had already exhausted her
    administrative remedies under the Plan.
    C.      The District Court Proceedings
    In February 2012, Loy filed the instant civil action in the Middle District
    of Louisiana pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), seeking full benefits due
    under the Plan, plus attorney’s fees, costs, and interest. The parties eventually
    filed cross-motions for summary judgment.                 In their motion, Appellants
    insisted that MetLife’s administrative determination denying Loy’s claim was
    reasonable and based on substantial evidence, and therefore was not an abuse
    of discretion. In her motion, Loy countered that MetLife had failed to give her
    claim a full and fair review and that it had abused its discretion when it denied
    her claim.
    The district court held oral argument on the summary judgment
    motions, at the conclusion of which the court granted Loy’s motion and denied
    Appellants’. The district judge orally stated 3 for the record that it was “more
    reasonable, based on the facts and evidence in this case, that [Harvey] was
    under the control of the Lunesta and not [acting] of his own free will or
    volition.” 4 Relying on the definition of suicide in Black’s Law Dictionary, he
    concluded that “Lunesta caused [Harvey’s] death” and held that MetLife
    abused its discretion because—in the words of the court—the drug “took away
    [Harvey’s] understanding that this was self-destruction.”                 The court then
    3 Consistent with his recent practice, this district judge from the Western District of
    Louisiana, sitting by designation in the Middle District, did not favor us or the parties with
    written reasons.
    4   Emphasis added.
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    entered judgment for Loy, awarding her full benefits under the Plan, as well
    as attorney’s fees, costs, and interest.
    On appeal, Appellants present but one question for this court’s
    consideration: Did the district court reversibly err in holding that MetLife
    abused its discretion when it determined that Loy was not entitled to benefits
    under the Plan?
    II.    ANALYSIS
    A.        Standard of Review
    This court reviews “a district court judgment on cross-motions for
    summary judgment de novo.” 5 All evidence and inferences must be construed
    in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. 6 “Summary judgment is
    only appropriate if the evidence shows that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law.” 7
    It apparently bears repeating here that district courts hearing
    complaints from disappointed ERISA plan members or their beneficiaries for
    the administrative denial of benefits are not sitting, as they usually are, as
    courts of first impression. Rather, they are serving in an appellate role. 8 And,
    their latitude in that capacity is very narrowly restricted by ERISA and its
    regulations, as interpreted by the courts of appeals and the Supreme Court,
    Cedyco Corp. v. PetroQuest Energy, LLC, 
    497 F.3d 485
    , 488 (5th Cir. 2007) (citing
    5
    White Buffalo Ventures, LLC v. Univ. of Tex., 
    420 F.3d 366
    , 370 (5th Cir. 2005)).
    6   
    Id. 7 High
    v. E-Sys. Inc., 
    459 F.3d 573
    , 576 (5th Cir. 2006).
    Anderson v. Cytec Indus., Inc., 
    619 F.3d 505
    , 511-12 (5th Cir. 2010) (per curiam).
    8
    (“This court reviews de novo the district court’s conclusion that an ERISA plan administrator
    did not abuse its discretion in denying benefits, and in doing so reviews the plan
    administrator’s decision from the same perspective as the district court.” (internal citations
    omitted)).
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    including the oft-repeated admonition to affirm the determination of the plan
    administrator unless it is “arbitrary” or is not supported by at least
    “substantial evidence”—even if that determination is not supported by a
    preponderance. 9        We had thought that by now this was understood and
    accepted by all district judges of this circuit. But, as this case demonstrates
    that we were wrong, at least as to one of them, we try yet again to drive that
    message home.
    When, in an ERISA case, “the language of the plan”—like the one at
    issue here—“grants discretion to an administrator to interpret the plan and
    determine eligibility for benefits, a court will reverse an administrator’s
    decision only for abuse of discretion.” 10             “A plan administrator abuses its
    discretion where the decision is not based on evidence, even if disputable, that
    clearly supports the basis for its denial.” 11 “We reach a finding of abuse of
    discretion only [when] ‘the plan administrator acted arbitrarily or
    9 Ellis v. Liberty Life Assurance Co. of Bos., 
    394 F.3d 262
    , 273 (5th Cir. 2004) (“If the
    plan fiduciary’s decision is supported by substantial evidence and is not arbitrary and
    capricious, it must prevail.”).
    10  
    High, 459 F.3d at 576
    . As we have previously stated, “[a]pplying an abuse of
    discretion review of an administrator’s interpretation of the plan consists of a two-step
    process: first inquiring whether the plan administrator’s decision was ‘legally correct,’ and, if
    it is not, secondly inquiring whether the administrator abused his discretion.” Porter v.
    Lowe’s Cos., Inc.’s Bus. Travel Accident Ins. Plan, 
    731 F.3d 360
    , 364 (5th Cir. 2013) (citing
    Crowell v. Shell Oil Co., 
    541 F.3d 295
    , 312 (5th Cir. 2008)). Nevertheless, this court may
    “ ‘bypass, without deciding, [the issue] whether the Plan Administrator’s denial was legally
    correct, reviewing only whether the Plan Administrator abused its discretion in denying the
    claim’ if that can be ‘more readily determine[d].’ ” 
    Porter, 731 F.3d at 364
    (quoting Holland
    v. Int’l Paper Co. Ret. Plan, 
    576 F.3d 240
    , 246 n.2 (5th Cir. 2009)). Because the parties have
    not briefed whether MetLife’s decision was “legally correct,” but rather debate whether the
    benefits denial ultimately was an “abuse of discretion,” we dispense with step one of the
    analysis.
    11   
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 246
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
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    capriciously.’ ” 12 “A decision is arbitrary if it is ‘made without a rational
    connection between the known facts and the decision.’ ” 13
    Even though the “administrator’s decision to deny benefits must be
    supported by substantial evidence,” 14 substantial evidence is merely “more
    than a scintilla, less than a preponderance, and is such relevant evidence as a
    reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” 15
    Ultimately, a court’s “ ‘review of the [Plan] administrator’s decision need not
    be particularly complex or technical; it need only assure that the
    administrator’s decision fall[s] somewhere on a continuum of reasonableness—
    even if on the low end.’ ” 16 Obviously, no court may substitute its own judgment
    for that of the plan administrator. 17
    12 
    Id. (quoting Meditrust
    Fin. Servs. Corp. v. Sterling Chems., Inc., 
    168 F.3d 211
    , 214
    (5th Cir. 1999)). To put it another way, the “abuse of discretion” standard “is the functional
    equivalent of arbitrary and capricious review: ‘[t]here is only a semantic, not a substantive,
    difference between the arbitrary and capricious and the abuse of discretion standards in the
    ERISA benefits review context.’ ” 
    Anderson, 619 F.3d at 512
    .
    13   
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 246
    (quoting Meditrust Fin. 
    Servs., 168 F.3d at 215
    ).
    14   
    Id. 15 Ellis,
    394 F.3d at 273 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    16 
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 247
    (quoting Corry v. Liberty Life Assurance Co. of Boston, 
    499 F.3d 389
    , 398 (5th Cir. 2007)); see also Lain v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    279 F.3d 337
    , 342
    (5th Cir. 2002) (stating that the administrator’s decision must be “based on evidence, even if
    disputable, that clearly supports the basis for its denial” (citation omitted)).
    17 Truitt v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    729 F.3d 497
    , 513 (5th Cir. 2013), cert. denied,
    
    2014 WL 235015
    (U.S. Mar. 31, 2014) (“[W]e decline to substitute our judgment for that of
    the plan administrator.”); McDonald v. Hartford Life Grp. Ins. Co., 361 F. App’x 599, 608 (5th
    Cir. 2010) (unpublished) (“The reviewing court may not substitute its judgment for that of
    the plan administrator.”).
    We note that a “court must take into consideration the conflict of interest inherent in
    a benefits system in which the entity that pays the benefits . . . maintains discretionary
    control over the ultimate benefits decision.” 
    Anderson, 619 F.3d at 512
    (citing Metro. Life
    Ins. Co. v. Glenn, 
    554 U.S. 105
    , 111-16 (2008); 
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 247
    n.3). Although such
    a conflict is “one factor among many that a reviewing judge must take into account” when
    considering a fiduciary’s benefits determination, the mere existence of a conflict does not alter
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    B.     Merits
    Appellants insist that MetLife did not abuse its discretion in denying
    Loy’s claim because substantial evidence supports its determination that
    Harvey committed suicide. 18 We agree. Evidence in the administrative record,
    including but not limited to Harvey’s death certificate and the EBRSD reports,
    indicates that Harvey died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Even if we
    were to assume arguendo that Harvey was hallucinating or somehow unaware
    of what he was doing when he shot himself, this would not obviate the
    undisputed fact that he actively pulled the trigger: The gun did not discharge
    accidentally and there is no evidence of third party presence, much less
    involvement. Indeed, our conclusion would be no different if Harvey had been
    under the influence of alcohol or illicit drugs, had lost at Russian Roulette, or
    had been delirious from profound sleep deprivation.                  Under any of those
    circumstances, death resulting from his own non-accidental discharge of the
    gun that he owned, loaded, placed under his chin, and fired would still be self-
    inflicted—and thus reasonably deemed by MetLife to be “suicide” within the
    the standard of review. See 
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 247
    (“[W]eighing a conflict as a factor in
    the abuse of discretion analysis does not ‘impl[y] a change in the standard of review, say,
    from deferential to de novo review.’ ” (quoting 
    Glenn, 554 U.S. at 115
    )). When a claimant,
    like Loy here, does not come forward with any evidence that the conflict of interest influenced
    the fiduciary’s benefits decision, the court gives this factor little or no weight. 
    Glenn, 554 U.S. at 117
    ; 
    Anderson, 619 F.3d at 512
    ; 
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 249
    .
    18 We need not reach Loy’s argument that MetLife failed “to follow the dictates of
    Vega” when it did not consider the supplemental evidence she adduced after her second
    appeal was denied in September 2011. Although we recognize that in Vega this court, sitting
    en banc, stated that, if a claimant “submits additional information to the administrator . . .
    and requests the administrator to reconsider his decision, that additional information should
    be treated as part of the administrative record,” 
    Vega, 188 F.3d at 300
    , we may sidestep any
    “thorny timing issues posed by Vega” when the additional information is “cumulative” or
    “irrelevant.” 
    Anderson, 619 F.3d at 516
    & n.9. Loy’s post-September 2011 evidence—which
    further addressed Lunesta’s side effects and Harvey’s state of mind—was cumulative of the
    evidence already contained in the administrative record at the time that MetLife gratuitously
    reconsidered then denied her second appeal.
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    meaning of the Plan. And there is a plethora of substantial evidence to support
    such a determination, even if the district judge here thought it was “more
    reasonable, based on the facts and evidence in this case”—his words—that
    Harvey was not acting of his own “free will or volition.” Weighing the evidence
    that way constitutes finding the “preponderance,” which has no place in this
    ERISA review.
    The district judge also disregarded the rule that, when an ERISA plan
    vests a fiduciary with discretion to interpret plan terms, the fiduciary “has the
    power to resolve ambiguities.” 19 The question for any reviewing court “is not
    whether the interpretation of the Plan ‘is most persuasive, but whether the
    plan administrator’s interpretation is unreasonable.’ ” 20 By relying on nothing
    other than Black’s Law Dictionary for the definition of suicide and then
    weighing the record evidence de novo instead of reviewing it for substantial
    evidence and thus reasonableness, this district judge yet again, as he did in
    Smith, “turned the deference afforded to plan administrators flatly on its
    head.” 21     Moreover, in so doing, he repeated conduct we had condemned
    previously when he “finely pars[ed] the plan’s language without paying any
    19 
    Porter, 731 F.3d at 365
    . Regarding ambiguity of the undefined term, “suicide,” in
    the Plan, the district judge stated:
    I continue to be perplexed as to why some of these—if not most—
    policies for life insurance don’t define suicide, since it is an
    actual exclusion, so that people would know what is meant by
    suicide. . . . So we looked up the Black’s Law Dictionary
    definition of suicide, and it states . . . : [“]Suicide is the willful
    and voluntary act of a person who understands the physical
    nature of the act and intends by it to accomplish the results of
    self-destruction.[”] That’s pretty clear. That’s not confusing. So
    if this lady, widow, was denied the extra insurance that was paid
    for by her husband because it was suicide, then someone has the
    obligation of putting into the policy itself what suicide is.
    20   
    Id. (citing Winters
    v. Costco Wholesale Corp., 
    49 F.3d 550
    , 553 (9th Cir. 1995)).
    21   Smith v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 459 F. App’x 480, 484 (5th Cir. 2012) (unpublished).
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    heed, save lip-service, for the discretion that was reasonably exercised by
    [MetLife] when interpreting” the term “suicide.” 22 As he had in Smith, this
    judge erred by “substituting [his] own, narrower interpretation of the term
    [“suicide”] in place of [MetLife’s] reasonable, yet broader, interpretation.” 23
    And he expressly confirmed that he did so in full awareness that he was
    proceeding in violation of established circuit law, stating on the record at the
    oral argument hearing of this case: “I know how the Fifth Circuit feels about
    this, and I may get reversed again.”
    We have repeatedly emphasized that the standard of review the district
    courts—and this court, for that matter—must apply in these ERISA cases is
    the deferential abuse of discretion standard. 24 In the words of the Fourth
    Circuit, when a court reviews a plan administrator’s decision for abuse of
    discretion, it must “not disturb an administrator’s decision if it is reasonable,
    even if the court would have reached a different decision.” 25 Given the absence
    of any evidence whatsoever that the gun went off accidentally or was fired by
    a third party, MetLife’s determination that Harvey’s non-accidental taking of
    his own life was a suicide was indisputably reasonable, i.e., it was rationally
    connected to the known facts. For the district court to overturn MetLife’s
    decision was error.
    22   
    Id. 23 Id.
    We need not reach the question whether Louisiana’s presumption against
    suicide applies in this case. See, e.g., Zanca v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    770 So. 2d 1
    , 4 (La.
    App. 4th Cir. 2000) (citing Canal-Commercial Bk. v. Employer’s Liab. Assurance Corp., 
    99 So. 542
    , 545 (La. 1924)). Even assuming arguendo that the presumption is applicable,
    MetLife did not abuse its discretion in denying Loy’s claim because, as we have discussed, its
    determination that Harvey committed suicide was reasonable.
    24   
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 247
    .
    25Donovan v. Eaton Corp. Long Term Disability Plan, 
    462 F.3d 321
    , 326 (4th Cir.
    2006) (emphasis added).
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    III.   CONCLUSION
    Harvey’s death under the circumstances of this case is indeed tragic.
    Distressing facts, however, do not relieve the district court of its duty to uphold
    a plan administrator’s benefits determination when, as here, it falls
    “somewhere on a continuum of reasonableness.” 26 Although, by his own words,
    the district judge “kn[ew] how the Fifth Circuit feels about this,” he
    deliberately ignored our previous instructions by selecting—in his words—the
    “more reasonable” of two reasonable conclusions, Loy’s over MetLife’s.
    Regrettably, we must take this opportunity to remind him and all district
    courts of this circuit that the reviewer may never substitute its judgment for
    the reasonable judgment of the plan administrator when it is grounded in
    substantial evidence. 27
    Our de novo review confirms that MetLife’s benefits determination was
    grounded in substantial evidence and was neither arbitrary nor unreasonable.
    We therefore hold that MetLife did not abuse its discretion in denying Loy’s
    claim for benefits under the Plan. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s
    judgment and render judgment in Appellants’ favor, dismissing Loy’s action
    with prejudice at her cost.
    REVERSED and RENDERED.
    26   
    Holland, 576 F.3d at 247
    .
    27   
    Truitt, 729 F.3d at 513
    ; McDonald, 361 F. App’x at 608.
    12