Glenn v. MetLife ( 2006 )


Menu:
  •                             RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 06a0336p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    Plaintiff-Appellant, -
    WANDA GLENN,
    -
    -
    -
    No. 05-3918
    v.
    ,
    >
    METLIFE (Metropolitan Life Insurance Company)          -
    -
    -
    and LONG TERM DISABILITY PLAN for Associates of
    Defendants-Appellees. -
    Sears, Roebuck and Company,
    -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Columbus.
    No. 03-00572—George C. Smith, District Judge.
    Argued: April 28, 2006
    Decided and Filed: September 1, 2006
    Before: KEITH, MERRITT, and DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Stanley L. Myers, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. C. Scott Lanz, MANCHESTER,
    BENNETT, POWERS & ULLMAN, Youngstown, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Stanley L.
    Myers, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. C. Scott Lanz, MANCHESTER, BENNETT, POWERS &
    ULLMAN, Youngstown, Ohio, for Appellee.
    DAUGHTREY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which KEITH, J., joined.
    MERRITT, J. (p. 14), delivered a separate opinion concurring in the reversal of the judgment below
    but changing the instructions on remand.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. The plaintiff, Wanda Glenn, filed this
    ERISA action against defendant Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., the plan administrator for Sears,
    Roebuck and Co., after MetLife terminated the long-term disability benefits that Glenn had been
    receiving as a former Sears employee, on the ground that her condition had improved to the point
    that she was no longer “totally disabled.” The district court upheld MetLife’s determination, finding
    that the decision was not arbitrary and capricious, and granted summary judgment to the defendants.
    For the reasons set out below, we conclude that the record does not support the conclusion that
    1
    No. 05-3918           Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                 Page 2
    MetLife’s denial of Glenn’s claim was the result of a deliberative process or that it was based on
    substantial evidence. We therefore reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case
    for further proceedings.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The plaintiff, Wanda Glenn, worked for Sears, Roebuck from 1986 until April 29, 2000, at
    which point she took a medical leave of absence and has not since returned to work. Glenn’s final
    position with Sears was as sales manager in the women’s department, which entailed a workweek
    of 40-50 hours per week and the training and direct supervision of 20-30 sales associates. The
    description of her job, prepared by Sears, indicated that the job required sitting up to 20 percent of
    the workday, standing for 20-60 percent of the workday, and some climbing, reaching, stooping, and
    lifting. Glenn was responsible for supervising other employees, ensuring that her department was
    properly stocked with merchandise, satisfying the needs and demands of customers, and identifying
    and solving various problems as they arose. She reported to the store’s general manager.
    Glenn submitted a disability claim under Sears’s long-term disability plan on June 20, 2000,
    attaching a letter from her treating physician, Dr. Rajendera C. Patel, dated April 30, 2000,
    indicating that Glenn had been diagnosed with “severe dilated cardiomyopathy,” a disease of the
    heart muscle that causes the heart to become enlarged and, for that reason, to pump inadequately.
    Her symptoms included general fatigue and shortness of breath on exertion. Dr. Patel further stated,
    “From my standpoint, this patient cannot return to any kind of job that would require any significant
    physical or psychological stress.”
    The Sears disability plan for which Glenn applied covered two distinct stages of “total
    disability.” The first provided that a participant was totally disabled when she was “completely and
    continuously unable to perform each of the material duties of [her] regular job.” The second
    category became relevant after the first 24 months of benefits and required that the participant be
    “completely and continuously unable to perform the duties of any gainful work or service for which
    [she is] reasonably qualified taking into consideration [her] training, education, experience, and past
    earning.” (Emphasis added.) Glenn’s claim was approved, and she began receiving long-term
    disability benefits following the completion of the 140-day elimination period mandated in the plan.
    Two months later, in August 2000, Glenn filed for Social Security disability benefits at the
    direction of plan administrators, who steered Glenn to Kennedy & Associates, a law firm
    specializing in obtaining such benefits. The Social Security Administration initially denied Glenn’s
    claim, but an administrative law judge eventually issued a decision finding that Glenn was totally
    disabled as of April 30, 2000, and was entitled to benefits retroactive to October 2000. As a result,
    MetLife demanded reimbursement for its overpayment of benefits, based on the amount of Glenn’s
    newly awarded Social Security benefits, and collected $13,502.50 from her.
    On May 20, 2003, MetLife sent a letter advising Glenn that if she wished to continue
    receiving long-term disability benefits, she was required to demonstrate that she met the second
    definition for total disability, i.e., that she was “incapable of performing the material duties of any
    gainful occupation as defined by the plan.” The letter further advised that, in making a claim
    determination, MetLife would review “[Glenn]’s vocational information, medical information and
    [Glenn]’s specific restrictions and limitations that are supported by objective medical evidence.”
    Glenn’s medical information was provided largely by Dr. Patel, the cardiologist who
    oversaw Glenn’s care both before and during the period relevant to this appeal. The record indicates
    that Glenn had developed hypertension in the early 1980s and had been treated with anti-
    hypertension therapy since at least 1985. In 1989, she experienced “sudden cardiac death” but was
    resuscitated and implanted with a defibrillator system. Diagnosed with left ventricular dysfunction,
    Glenn was hospitalized twice again in the 1990s, once before and once after she began work at
    No. 05-3918            Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                   Page 3
    Sears. In 2000, she began experiencing prolonged chest tightness, shortness of breath, “increasing
    fatigue by the end of the day,” and edema in her legs from “prolonged standing at work.” Because
    of her progressive ventricular dysfunction, at one point Dr. Patel referred Glenn to Dr. Carl Leier
    at Ohio State University Hospital to consider the possibility of a heart transplant. In March 2000,
    Dr. Patel ordered an angiogram, from which he diagnosed Glenn with severe dilated
    cardiomyopathy. In a letter dated April 7, 2000, Dr. Patel indicated that his patient’s “main problem
    now is stress at work. She works in a Sears store and does have physical as well as psychological
    stress. Considering her low ejection fraction, I feel that she may not be able to continue to work in
    any kind of environment that would cause any significant physical or psychological stress and
    demands.” Glenn took medical leave from Sears at the end of that month.
    Glenn underwent significant treatment during the next several months, taking as many as
    seven or eight prescription medications for her heart condition. Dr. Patel noted that, almost three
    months after ceasing to work at Sears, Glenn was “doing clinically well.” He observed that “some
    of her improvement is from the reduction of stress and strain of work. She still has good and bad
    days and in fact there are periods where she feels extremely tired and fatigued and runs out of
    steam.” In November 2000, however, Dr. Patel notified MetLife that Glenn was totally disabled
    from undertaking any occupation and that he did not expect her to be able to return to work.
    In March 2001, Glenn underwent a further evaluation of her cardiomyopathy that found her
    ejection fraction found to be “mildly reduced” and reported “some improvement in her LV [left
    ventricular] function.” Through a walking regime, Glenn had been able to increase her “exercise
    tolerance,” but Dr. Patel noted that she “still gets fatigued out and short of breath, particularly if she
    is under any kind of significant psychologic stress.” Dr. Patel also reported, “From overall
    evaluation, Wanda seems to be clinically stable and I have advised her to continue her current
    regimen including Lasix, potassium, Lanoxim, Norvasc, aspirin, calcium, Normodyne and Diovan.”
    In March 2002, a year later, when Dr. Patel filled out a MetLife long-term benefits evaluation form,
    he indicated that Glenn could lift and carry up to 20 pounds occasionally, had the ability to perform
    bilateral repetitive foot and hand movements, and could sit eight hours of the day, stand four, and
    walk two. He also checked “yes” when asked on the form whether she was “able to work in a
    sedentary physical exertion level occupation.” Although the evaluation form was intended to assess
    capacity for full-time work, Dr. Patel signed it without indicating whether he was releasing Glenn
    to return to work or what restrictions might apply if she did go back to work. In a later evaluation,
    Dr. Patel’s answers were consistent with his earlier responses, except that he added, “No emotional
    stress/No heavy exertion.” Dr. Patel filled out that form on June 12, 2002.
    However, just six days later, Dr. Patel sent a progress report to Glenn’s internist indicating
    that Glenn “was back in our office earlier than expected,” complaining of fatigue, “shortness of
    breath on moderate exertion,” and “significant anxiety . . . regarding the disability and having to
    return to work.” Dr. Patel concluded, “From my standpoint, again, considering her cardiomyopathy,
    I do not believe she will handle any kind of stress well at her work and she would be better off being
    on disability” rather than returning to her job. Dr. Patel reiterated his opinion that Glenn should not
    return to work in a letter dated July 22, 2002:
    [Glenn] has dilated cardiomyopathy as well as a history of ventricular tachycardia
    requiring an implantable defibrillator device. The patient has been on multiple
    medications for her dilated cardiomyopathy. The patient continues to have significant
    difficulty with exertional shortness of breath on any kind of moderate exertion. She
    also continues to have significant difficulty in returning to even any kind of
    sedentary job because any kind of psychologic stress at work causes significant
    problems with her cardiovascular condition and she decompensates fast. This has
    happened on multiple occasions in the past. The patient has tried to return to work
    No. 05-3918          Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                   Page 4
    in the past with exacerbation of her symptoms as well as exacerbation of her
    condition.
    At the present time, I do not believe Wanda should be forced to return to any kind
    of even sedentary work particularly because it is the psychologic stress of work that
    really exacerbates her cardiovascular condition and symp-tomology. The patient
    basically should be considered completely disabled from her dilated cardiomyopathy
    as well as history of ventricular tachycardia.
    On August 28, 2002, MetLife notified Glenn that her long-term benefits would be terminated
    on September 16, 2002, based on the administrative decision that “[t]here is no supportive medical
    documentation of the exacerbation of your cardiac condition and symptomology, due to subjective
    complaints of work-related stress.” The notice concluded that “records submitted for review do not
    support cardiovascular impairment that would prevent you from performing full time sedentary
    work” and pointed primarily to medical information showing that Dr. Patel had found her to be
    “clinically stable” with “a better exercise tolerance” on November 2, 2001, and – based on a check
    mark on MetLife’s evaluation form – able to return to work on March 13, 2002. MetLife’s letter
    did not address Dr. Patel’s letter of July 22, 2002, in which he stated that Glenn should not return
    to work.
    Glenn appealed the denial of disability benefits. While the appeal was pending, Dr. Patel
    submitted a letter dated February 12, 2003, in which he reiterated his opinion that Glenn could not
    return to work:
    Previous reports filled out by me state that the patient was fit for sedentary work,
    however based on her clinical condition and her symptomology, there was never a
    time where I felt that this patient would be able to return to full-time employment.
    I strongly believe that employment would put significant stress on her overall
    system, and she may decompensate. Ms. Glenn does not have any emotional
    condition that causes her cardiac problem. She has a cardiac problem that is
    exacerbated by any kind of stress.
    My position is that she should be considered completely disabled, mainly from her
    cardiomyopathy and associated symptoms from her LV dysfunction.
    In response, MetLife referred the case to an Independent Physician’s Consultant Board.
    There, Dr. Chandrakant Pujara reviewed Glenn’s medical records and offered an opinion based on
    a review of Glenn’s file. In a letter dated May 2, 2003, he noted that Glenn’s “ejection fraction
    indeed has improved with medical therapy and probably with biventricular pacing as well” but
    concluded that Glenn was unable to do any “exertional physical activity.” Dr. Pujara’s prognosis
    was, at best, ambiguous:
    The actual impact of any form of real or perceived emotional stress on cardiac
    arrhythmias, or cardiomyopathy is difficult to gauge in an individual patient.
    However, based on Dr. Patel’s own physical capacity evaluation on June 12, 2002,
    the patient seems to be a reasonable candidate to try one of the sedentary job classes
    at least on a trial basis. If the job environment entails [a] significant degree of
    emotional stress, and the patient is not able to cope with that, then certainly
    permanent disability can be considered.
    Despite the equivocal nature of this report, MetLife issued a final denial of disability benefits to
    Glenn on May 20, 2003. The notice of denial relied on the same information as in the prior
    termination notice, notably Dr. Patel’s June 2002 evaluation form, as well as Dr. Pujara’s
    assessment. Although MetLife acknowledged Dr. Patel’s letter of February 2003, in which he
    No. 05-3918            Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                   Page 5
    clarified his position regarding Glenn’s ability to return to work, MetLife concluded that
    “documentation on file does not support a disability that would prevent Ms. Glenn from performing
    any occupation, as defined in the plan.” As before, however, no mention was made of Dr. Patel’s
    July 2002 letter, in which he rendered essentially the same opinion as in his letter of February 12,
    2003.
    Having exhausted her administrative remedies under the plan, Glenn brought a civil action
    pursuant to Section 502(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended,
    29 U.S.C. § 1132 (ERISA). The district court denied her motion for judgment on the administrative
    record and, instead, granted MetLife’s cross-motion. This appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    We review de novo the decision of a district court granting judgment in an ERISA disability
    benefit action based on an administrative record, see Wilkins v. Baptist Healthcare Sys., Inc., 
    150 F.3d 609
    , 613 (6th Cir. 1998), and apply the same legal standard as did the district court. See i.d.;
    Whitaker v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., 
    404 F.3d 947
    , 949 (6th Cir. 2005). In this case, the
    district court appropriately reviewed the record under the “arbitrary and capricious” standard,
    because the plan at issue granted the plan administrator discretionary authority to interpret the terms
    of the plan and to determine benefits. See Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 
    489 U.S. 101
    , 111-
    15 (1989); McDonald v. Western-Southern Life Ins. Co., 
    347 F.3d 161
    , 168 (6th Cir. 2003). Indeed,
    the plaintiff conceded that review for arbitrariness was the correct standard of review here.
    Under that standard, we will uphold the administrator’s decision “if it is the result of a
    deliberate, principled reasoning process and if it is supported by substantial evidence.” Baker v.
    United Mine Workers of Am. Health & Ret. Funds, 
    929 F.2d 1140
    , 1144 (6th Cir. 1991). Despite
    this deferential standard, however, our review is no mere formality. “The arbitrary-and-capricious
    standard . . . does not require us merely to rubber stamp the administrator’s decision.” Jones v.
    Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    385 F.3d 654
    , 661 (6th Cir. 2004) (citation omitted). Instead, we are required
    to review “the quality and quantity of the medical evidence and the opinions on both sides of the
    issues.” 
    McDonald, 347 F.3d at 172
    .
    Moreover, as discussed below, we are entitled to take into account the existence of a conflict
    of interest that results when, as in this case, the plan administrator who decides whether an employee
    is eligible for benefits is also obligated to pay those benefits and to factor in the plan administrator’s
    failure to give consideration to the Social Security Administration’s determination that Glenn was
    totally disabled.
    B. Conflict of Interest
    In the instant case, MetLife is authorized both to decide whether an employee is eligible for
    benefits and to pay those benefits. This dual function creates an apparent conflict of interest. See
    Darland v. Fortis Benefits Ins. Co., 
    317 F.3d 516
    , 527 (6th Cir. 2003), overruled on other grounds
    by Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord, 
    538 U.S. 822
    (2003) (holding that plan administrators
    do not owe special deference to the opinion of a treating physician). In discussing the applicable
    standard of review, the district court identified this conflict of interest as a relevant factor in
    determining whether an abuse of discretion had taken place. See Glenn v. Metropolitan Life Ins.
    Co., 
    2005 WL 1364625
    at *4 (S.D. Ohio, June 8, 2005) (citing Firestone Tire & 
    Rubber, 489 U.S. at 115
    (“[I]f a benefit plan gives discretion to an administrator or fiduciary who is operating under
    a conflict of interest, that conflict must be weighed as a ‘facto[r] in determining whether there is an
    abuse of discretion.’”) (internal citation omitted)). However, the court’s analysis of the plan
    administrator’s basis for terminating benefits does not include any discussion of the role that
    No. 05-3918           Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                   Page 6
    MetLife’s conflict of interest may have played in its decision nor appear to give that conflict any
    weight. It appears to us, as a result, that this factor did not receive appropriate consideration by the
    district court.
    C. Social Security Disability Determination
    There is yet another factor that the district court appears to have given inadequate
    consideration. The plaintiff contends that the plan administrator was arbitrary in failing to consider
    the award of disability benefits that she secured from the Social Security Administration. The record
    reflects that Metlife notified her that payments for long-term disability were subject to a discount
    for amounts received from other sources and steered her to a law firm specializing in securing
    disability benefits from the Social Security Administration. After the firm secured an award of
    benefits for her based on a claim of total disability, MetLife deducted the amount of those
    government benefits from the disability payments that it was obliged to pay and demanded a refund
    from Glenn in the amount of $13,500. And, yet, in making the decision to terminate payments under
    the MetLife policy, the plan administrator gave no weight whatever to the Social Security
    Administration’s determination of total disability. Hence, Glenn posits that MetLife took blatantly
    inconsistent positions – relying on the finding by the Social Security administrative law judge that
    she was totally disabled but contending that she was capable of performing sedentary work in
    denying her ERISA benefits.
    The district court recognized this inconsistency but declined to invoke the doctrine of
    estoppel. Although we conclude that this ruling was technically correct, the fact that MetLife and
    the Social Security Administration reached contrary conclusions regarding Glenn’s disability status
    has two ramifications for this appeal. The first stems from the fact that MetLife assisted Glenn in
    obtaining Social Security benefits and reaped a financial benefit of its own when that assistance was
    successful. The second issue relates to the fact that, in denying Glenn continuation of her long-term
    benefits, MetLife failed to address Social Security’s contrary determination of Glenn’s status. It is
    obvious that both factors are relevant in determining whether MetLife’s decision was arbitrary and
    capricious.
    The courts have recognized that a disability determination by the Social Security
    Administration is relevant in an action to determine the arbitrariness of a decision to terminate
    benefits under an ERISA plan. In Ladd v. ITT Corp., 
    148 F.3d 753
    , 755-56 (7th Cir. 1998), for
    example, the Seventh Circuit overturned a plan administrator’s denial of disability benefits after
    finding that the insurance company had encouraged and assisted the plaintiff in applying for Social
    Security benefits, which were granted after an administrative law judge found that the plaintiff was
    totally disabled. Writing for the court, Judge Posner noted that the concept of judicial estoppel was
    not technically applicable but, nevertheless, he concluded that the inconsistency in litigation
    positions had to be factored into a review of the plan administrator’s determination for arbitrariness:
    The grant of social security disability benefits . . . brings the case within the
    penumbra of the doctrine of judicial estoppel – that if a party wins a suit on one
    ground, it can’t turn around and in further litigation with the same opponent
    repudiate the ground in order to win a further victory. The doctrine is technically not
    applicable here, because MetLife and ITT, the defendants in this suit, were not
    parties to the proceeding before the Social Security Administration. Yet they
    “prevailed” there in a practical sense because the grant of social security benefits to
    Ladd reduced the amount of her claim against the employee welfare plan. If we
    reflect on the purpose of the doctrine, which is to reduce fraud in the legal process
    by forcing a modicum of consistency on a repeating litigant, we see that its spirit is
    applicable here. To lighten the cost to the employee welfare plan of Ladd’s
    disability, the defendants encouraged and supported her effort to demonstrate total
    No. 05-3918               Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                                Page 7
    disability to the Social Security Administration, going so far as to provide her with
    legal representation. To further lighten that cost, it then turned around and denied
    that Ladd was totally disabled, even though her condition had meanwhile
    deteriorated. In effect, having won once the defendants repudiated the basis of their
    first victory in order to win a second victory. This sequence casts additional doubt
    on the adequacy of their evaluation of Ladd’s claim, even if it does not provide an
    independent basis for rejecting that evaluation.
    
    Id. at 756
    (citations omitted).
    We adopted the Seventh Circuit’s “penumbra” rationale in Darland v. Fortis Benefits
    Insurance Co., a case in which the ERISA plan administrator had, as here, “requested that Darland
    apply for Social Security disability benefits so as to reduce the amount of monthly disability
    payments that it paid Darland under the plan” and then demanded reimbursement for overpayment
    of insurance benefits at the same time it sought to terminate Darland’s benefits on the ground that
    he was no longer disabled. 
    Darland, 317 F.3d at 530
    . We concluded that “a plan administrator’s
    decision denying disability benefits where the Social Security Administration has determined that
    the applicant was totally disabled” can be considered arbitrary and capricious, 
    id. at 529,
    especially
    where “it is plainly evident that the Social Security standard for a disability determination is much
    more stringent than that required by [the defendant’s] insurance policy.” 
    Id. at 530.
    The latter
    observation not only pertains in this case to the language of the policy1 but is all the more relevant
    in the wake of the Supreme Court’s subsequent ruling that the special deference extended to the
    opinion of a treating physician in a Social Security dispute is not applicable in ERISA cases. See
    Black & Decker Disability 
    Plan, 538 U.S. at 833-34
    .
    The district court in this case recognized that MetLife had encouraged and assisted Wanda
    Glenn in obtaining Social Security disability benefits, just as MetLife had in Ladd, but found
    Glenn’s case to be distinguishable in two respects. First, the district court noted, correctly, that the
    record before the administrative law judge did not include the report, signed on the same day that
    the administrative judge’s decision was made, in which Dr. Patel answered “yes” to MetLife’s
    question, “Do you believe Ms. Glenn is able to work in a sedentary physical exertion level
    occupation?” However, the relative significance of this omission in the record is undercut by the
    existence of Dr. Patel’s subsequent clarification of July 22, 2002, in which he indicated that he had
    never considered his patient capable of resuming full-time work, and by the fact that there is no
    indication in the record that Glenn’s government benefits have ever been discontinued. Second, the
    district court found, incorrectly, that it was unclear whether or not MetLife had actually benefitted
    from the plaintiff’s receipt of Social Security benefits. We find it abundantly clear on the record
    that Glenn reimbursed MetLife for overpayment of benefits, based on her receipt of Social Security
    benefits.
    Having benefitted financially from the government’s determination that Glenn was totally
    disabled, MetLife obviously should have given appropriate weight to that determination. As we held
    in Calvert v. Firstar Finance, Inc., 
    409 F.3d 286
    , 295 (6th Cir. 2005), a case with several parallels
    to this one, an ERISA plan administrator’s failure to address the Social Security Administration’s
    finding that the claimant was “totally disabled” is yet another factor that can render the denial of
    1
    After 24 months, the plan awards disability benefits to an individual who is “completely and continuously
    unable to perform the duties of any gainful work or service for which he is reasonably qualified, taking into consideration
    his training, education, experience, and past earning.” Social Security disability insurance benefits are awarded only
    if the individual’s impairment is of such severity that he “cannot, considering his age, education, and work experience,
    engage in any other kind of substantial gainful work which exists in the national economy, regardless of whether such
    work exists in the immediate area in which he lives.” 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(2)(A). The Social Security determination does
    not take into account past earning or location of the applicant.
    No. 05-3918           Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                   Page 8
    further long-term disability benefits arbitrary and capricious. In Calvert, as here, the plan
    administrator relied almost exclusively on the recommendation of a physician, hired by the
    administrator, who conducted a file review but not a physical examination of the claimant. See 
    id. We held
    that such a review was clearly inadequate, given that in reaching the determination to deny
    benefits, the plan administrator not only overlooked surgical reports, X-rays, and CT scans that
    documented the claimant’s disability, but also failed to mention the Social Security Administration’s
    determination, “not . . . even to discount or disagree with it, which indicates that he may not even
    have been aware of it.” 
    Id. at 296.
            Here, there is no possibility that the plan administrator failed to discuss the Social Security
    award for lack of awareness. And, “the S[ocial] S[ecurity] A[dministration] determination, though
    certainly not binding, is far from meaningless.” 
    Id. at 294.
    That MetLife apparently failed to
    consider the Social Security Administration’s finding of disability in reaching its own determination
    of disability does not render the decision arbitrary per se, but it is obviously a significant factor to
    be considered upon review.
    D. The Medical Evidence
    Even more perplexing than the plan administrator’s failure to consider the award of Social
    Security benefits is the persistent failure to give any weight to Dr. Patel’s letters of July 22, 2002,
    and February 12, 2003, in which he clearly stated that he did not believe Glenn was capable of
    returning to work, sedentary or otherwise. This omission stands in stark contrast to the heavy
    reliance MetLife placed in its brief on the “physical capacity assessment” form that MetLife
    provided to Dr. Patel and that he filled in and signed on March 13, 2002. On the form, Dr. Patel
    indicated that his patient could sit for eight hours a day, stand for four hours, and walk for two hours.
    He also checked yes when asked, “Do you believe Ms. Glenn is able to work in a sedentary physical
    exertion level occupation?” That information is so inconsistent with other medical evidence and
    detailed reports supplied by Dr. Patel over a period of three years that it can best be described as
    aberrational.
    Nevertheless, MetLife cannot be faulted for its initial reliance on the opinion that Glenn
    could “work at a sedentary physical exertion level occupation” in consulting a “transferable skills
    analyst,” who then compiled a list of clerical jobs (account information clerk, attendance clerk,
    classified ad clerk) that would be available to someone with the physical limitations listed on the
    physical assessment form. There is no indication in the record, however, that the transferable skills
    analyst considered the medical evidence in the record or Dr. Patel’s reasons for concluding that his
    patient should not return to full-time work of any kind. Nevertheless, the plan administrator, relying
    only on the vocational assessment, the information on the MetLife form supplied by Dr. Patel on
    March 13, 2002, and certain other technical information that seems to have been almost randomly
    selected from his reports (one paragraph reads in its entirety, without further explanation: “Your
    June 18, 2002 examination showed an ejection fraction of 35 to 40%.”), declined to grant further
    long-term benefits in a letter dated August 28, 2002. Nowhere in the notice of denial does the plan
    administrator mention the decision of the Social Security Administration finding that Glenn was
    totally disabled.
    Perhaps most curious is the plan administrator’s treatment of Dr. Patel’s then-most recent
    assessments of his patient’s condition. The plan administrator emphasized the content of yet another
    “physical capacities evaluation” dated June 12, 2002, that indicated by check-off information
    consistent with that on the March 13 form (“sit for eight hours, stand for four hours, walk for 2 to
    4 hours,” etc.). But the June 12 form does not recommend that Glenn return to work, nor does it
    release her to return to work. Furthermore, the notice from the plan administrator made no mention
    whatever of the letter Dr. Patel sent on July 22, 2002, which, as described above, noted that Glenn
    “continues to have significant difficulty with exertional shortness of breath on any kind of moderate
    No. 05-3918              Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                            Page 9
    exertion” and “significant difficulty in returning to even any kind of sedentary job because any kind
    of psychologic stress at work causes significant problems with her cardiovascular condition and she
    decompensates fast.” Dr. Patel concluded:
    At the present time, I do not believe Wanda should be forced to return to any kind
    of even sedentary work particularly because it is the psychologic stress of work that
    really exacerbates her cardiovascular condition and symptomatololgy. The patient
    basically should be considered completely disabled from her dilated cardiomyopathy
    as well as history of ventricular tachycardia.
    This letter to MetLife is consistent with a follow-up report a month earlier that Dr. Patel sent to
    Glenn’s internist, Dr. Rhee, in which he concluded: “From my standpoint, again, considering her
    cardiomyopathy, I do not believe she will handle any kind of stress well at her work and she would
    be better off being on disability.”
    Based on Dr. Patel’s assessment of her condition, Glenn appealed MetLife’s decision to
    terminate her benefits, and the decision was reviewed internally by MetLife. In a letter dated May
    20, 2003, the plan administrator once again denied benefits, this time based on the evaluation form
    signed by Dr. Patel in June 2002, the transferable skills analysis from July 2002, and two items that
    had not been part of the earlier review: a letter from Dr. Patel dated February 12, 2003, and the
    report from the outside consultant, Dr. Pujara, dated May 2, 2003. Once again, there is no mention
    of Dr. Patel’s July 2002 letter stating unequivocally that his patient was not able to return to work.
    The appeal decision does indicate that Dr. Patel’s letter “noted that his previous reports
    indicated that Ms Glenn was fit for sedentary work” but that “based on her clinical condition and
    symptomatology, Dr. Patel never felt that Ms. Glenn could return to full-time employment” and that
    she “should be considered completely disabled from her cardiomyopathy and associated symptoms
    from her LV dysfunction.” On the other hand, there is no explanation in the notice for the failure
    to give any weight to this report.
    The summary of Dr. Pujara’s report reiterated the information that he found in the medical
    files submitted by MetLife – Dr.Pujara did not conduct an examination of Glenn but merely
    undertook a file review – and concluded: “The consultant noted that based on the medical
    information Ms. Glenn has achieved a relatively stable cardiac status.” What the summary omits
    is any indication that the consultant thought that she could return to work. In fact, Dr.Pujara noted
    that given the information in her file, “the patient certainly is not able to do any exertional physical
    activity” and, with regard to the possibility of “sedentary activity,” concluded that “[i]f the job
    environment entails a significant degree of emotional stress, and the patient is not able to cope with
    that, then certainly permanent disability can be considered.” Although it appears that MetLife
    forwarded the June 2002 evaluation form to Dr.Pujara, there is no indication that he was provided
    with copies of Dr. Patel’s letters of July 2002 and February 2003, in which Dr. Patel concluded that
    Glenn was not able to undertake     sedentary work because any degree of stress caused her medical
    condition to “decompensate.”2
    The Plan provides that “[w]hile a claim is pending, we, at our expense, have the right to have
    you examined by doctors of our choice when and as often as we reasonably choose.” MetLife
    instead opted to have a file review, a decision that does not render its denial of benefits arbitrary per
    se. However, it is yet another factor to be considered in the overall assessment of its decision-
    making process. See 
    Calvert, 409 F.3d at 295
    . Moreover, as noted above, it appears that the
    2
    At oral argument of this case, the defendants conceded that Glenn had not been offered a part-time position
    at Sears and that she would have no chance of receiving benefits under the Sears ERISA plan if she went to work at for
    another employer on the trial basis that Dr. Pujara suggested.
    No. 05-3918                Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                              Page 10
    physician charged with conducting the independent file review was not provided with Dr. Patel’s
    letters of July 2002 and February 2003.
    As a result, Dr. Patel is the only physician to have personally treated and observed Glenn
    over the entire course of her dispute with MetLife. As noted above, the plan administrator need not
    accord special deference to the opinion of a treating physician. By the same token, it may not
    arbitrarily repudiate or refuse to consider the opinions of a treating physician. See Black & Decker
    Disability 
    Plan, 538 U.S. at 834
    . In its final rejection of Glenn’s claim, however, MetLife did not
    indicate that3 it had considered Dr. Patel’s letter of February 12, 2003, nor did it provide a reason for
    rejecting it. It also did not indicate whether or not it had considered Dr. Patel’s letter of July 22,
    2002, which was consistent with the February 12 letter advising that Glenn could not return to work.
    In the absence of an explanation from MetLife, the district court provided its own, noting
    that because Dr. Patel “expressly acknowledged that he had stated that plaintiff was fit for sedentary
    work . . . MetLife did not abuse its discretion by viewing Dr. Patel’s recantation with skepticism.”
    In support of this conclusion, the district court invoked United States v. Willis, 
    257 F.3d 636
    , 645-46
    (6th Cir. 2001), for the proposition that affidavits recanting trial testimony are viewed with “extreme
    suspicion.” The court’s reliance on Willis is misplaced, however, because that case addresses the
    full recantation of a witness’s testimony in a criminal trial, a situation which is hardly equivalent to
    Dr. Patel’s follow-up letters, which were consistent with his earlier assessments of Glenn’s ability
    to work and which are more aptly described as clarifications, rather than recantations. Indeed, the
    concept of recantation has little application outside the unique context of the criminal case, and any
    presumption regarding the credibility of inconsistent testimony should be limited to that context.
    We conclude that the only fair inference from the record would actually undercut Dr. Patel’s
    check-offs and his brief assessment on the functional capacity form dated March 13, 2002, because
    that information was in direct conflict both with his earlier assessments      and with every detailed
    written explanation that he gave concerning Glenn’s disability.4 Clearly, the plan administrator
    rejected Dr. Patel’s more detailed reports while crediting the check-off forms. However, MetLife
    offered no explanation for its resolution of the conflict or, for that matter, whether it was given any
    consideration at all. The omission is critical, because the failure to consider evidence that is offered
    after an initial denial of benefits renders a final denial of benefits arbitrary and capricious. See
    Williams v. Int’l Paper Co., 
    227 F.3d 706
    , 712-14 (6th Cir. 2000). As for the district court’s attempt
    to reconcile the conflicts in the record, we point out that the court’s role is to review the basis for
    the decision that was actually made by the plan administrator, not to provide an adequate basis
    where none was offered.
    The importance of a resolution of the apparent conflict between Dr. Patel’s responses on the
    check-off form and his later reports is even more pronounced given that Dr. Patel consistently
    deemed psychological stress to be a critical factor in Glenn’s treatment and the deciding factor in
    assessing her ability to return to work. On April 7, 2000, Dr. Patel wrote that Glenn’s “main problem
    3
    MetLife maintains in its brief on appeal that the denial notice “specifically discussed” Dr. Patel’s letter of
    February 12, 2003, we find that the word “discussed” is somewhat misleading; “mentioned” would be a more accurate
    choice.
    4
    This case is not the first in which we have been called upon to review MetLife’s over-reliance on an
    aberrational report from a physician. In Spangler v. Lockheed Martin Energy Systems, Inc., a case with several
    interesting parallels to this one, the plan administrator denied benefits based on the responses of the plaintiff’s treating
    physician on the same form that Dr. Patel filled out in this case, a physical capacities evaluation that we described as
    “somewhat aberrant,” given that “all of [the physician’s] prior reports and statements clearly indicate[d] that Spangler
    [wa]s not able to perform any work.” 
    313 F.3d 356
    , 362 (6th Cir. 2002). We concluded that “MetLife, as Spangler
    contends, ‘cherry-picked’ her file in hopes of obtaining a favorable report from the vocational consultant as to Spangler’s
    ability to work.” 
    Id. No. 05-3918
              Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                 Page 11
    now is stress at work.” On April 30, 2000, he concluded that Glenn “cannot return to any kind of
    job that would require any significant physical or psychological stress.” On July 29, 2000, after
    Glenn had been on leave from work for approximately three months, Dr. Patel observed that “some
    of her improvement is from the reduction of stress and strain of work.” On June 12, 2002, Dr. Patel
    also indicated that Glenn’s functional limits included “no emotional stress.” The law firm retained
    by MetLife to represent Glenn before the Social Security Administration certainly relied on Dr.
    Patel’s analysis of the impact of stress on Glenn’s condition, even if MetLife did not. Contending
    before the administrative law judge assigned to her claim that “[i]n addition to findings of impaired
    myocardial function, Dr. Patel indicated that the severity of Ms. Glenn’s symptoms and physical
    condition were aggravated by emotional stress,” the firm pointed out that “this opinion was
    rendered by a longtime treating source who had referred the claimant for implantation of a new
    cardiac device, referred the claimant for transplantation assessment, and provided consistent care
    while the claimant’s left ventricular functioning deteriorated.”
    Despite the consistent and repeated references by Dr. Patel to stress as a factor in Glenn’s
    condition, MetLife concluded in its final denial of benefits to Glenn, “There is no supportive medical
    documentation of the exacerbation of your cardiac condition and symptomology, due to the
    subjective complaints of work-related stress.” But, this conclusion unjustifiably implies that Dr.
    Patel’s observations and notations regarding stress do not constitute “supportive medical
    documentation.” Although it is not clear from the record what sort of documentation MetLife would
    have found sufficient to establish the negative effect of stress on Glenn’s medical condition, the plan
    itself does not restrict the type of evidence that may be used to demonstrate total disability. Rather,
    the plan provides that “[t]o qualify for benefits under the Plan, Total Disability must be supported
    by current medical documentation” and the claimant “must be under the regular care of a qualified
    physician under a course of treatment appropriate for the disability.” We conclude that the plan
    administrator’s rejection of Dr. Patel’s assessment, under the standard set out in the plan, was, in
    fact, arbitrary.
    That conclusion is supported by our decisions in similar ERISA cases. In Evans v.
    UnumProvident Corp., 
    434 F.3d 866
    (6th Cir. 2006), for example, a claimant applied for long-term
    disability benefits on the basis that her frequent seizures rendered her incapable of work. Her
    treating physician opined that the stress associated with her administrative duties was responsible
    for the severity and frequency of the episodes. See 
    id. at 870.
    While on medical leave, the claimant
    saw an improvement in her condition. Her treating physician determined that it would be in the
    claimant’s best interest not to return to work. See 
    id. at 871.
    The insurer denied the claim, finding
    it unreasonable to speculate that a return to work would exacerbate the claimant’s condition. See
    
    id. In reaching
    this decision, the insurer relied heavily on an independent physician’s review, which
    declared that the impact of stress on the patient’s condition was entirely self-reported and had not
    been corroborated by medical studies. See 
    id. at 875.
    We found that the insurer’s decision was
    arbitrary and capricious. “[D]espite the unwavering expert medical opinion of plaintiff’s treating
    physician . . . that stress is probably the most important seizure-provoking factor in all patients, and
    not just plaintiff, and that plaintiff’s high-stress position would exacerbate her condition, defendant
    nonetheless unreasonably discounted stress as merely a ‘prophylactic’ factor that should be accorded
    minimal, if any, weight in its determination of disability.” 
    Id. at 879.
            In the present case, although Dr. Patel’s opinion of Glenn’s ability to perform sedentary work
    has not been consistently expressed, he likewise has been “unwavering” in his opinion that stress
    is an important factor in her condition. As in Evans, the plan in this case does not say that
    prophylactic determinations are not relevant to the decision, nor does it say that self-reported or
    “subjective” factors should be accorded less significance than other indicators. And, although it is
    not clear that stress is the most important factor in all cases of cardiomyopathy, as it apparently is
    with epilepsy, it is unreasonable for MetLife to have dismissed stress as an improperly documented,
    subjective, and irrelevant factor in its disability determination.
    No. 05-3918           Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                Page 12
    MetLife cites Eastover Mining Co. v. Williams, 
    338 F.3d 501
    (6th Cir. 2003), as justification
    for discrediting Dr. Patel’s opinion that Glenn was not capable even of sedentary employment. In
    reviewing a benefits determination in a black lung case, the Eastover Mining court observed that
    “treating physicians may have strong pro-claimant biases and lack the expertise held by non-treating
    doctors.” 
    Id. at 510
    (citing Black & Decker Disability 
    Plan, 538 U.S. at 832
    ). It is true that treating
    physicians, “in a close case, may favor a finding of 
    ‘disabled’,” 538 U.S. at 832
    , and that a
    presumption of deference to treating physicians makes little sense when “the relationship between
    the claimant and the treating physician has been of short duration, or when a specialist engaged by
    the plan has expertise the treating physician lacks.” 
    Id. Moreover, although
    Black & Decker
    Disability Plan makes clear that MetLife bears no heightened burden of explanation when making
    a disability determination that runs contrary to a treating physician’s opinion, 
    see 538 U.S. at 831
    ,
    MetLife’s decision with respect to Glenn’s claim does not appear to be the result of a principled
    reasoning process, given that Dr. Patel had expertise in treating Glenn’s disability and had a long-
    term relationship with her.
    Finally, we note that a claimant’s potential ability to “return to work under certain limited
    circumstances,” 
    McDonald, 347 F.3d at 170
    , should not be taken to satisfy the requirements of the
    Sears ERISA plan when those circumstances are, as here, very limited and would not permit Wanda
    Glenn, pursuant to the language of the plan, to perform the duties of gainful work for which she is
    reasonably qualified, “taking into consideration her training, education, experience, and past
    earning.” As we observed in McDonald:
    The mere possibility that a participant in an ERISA plan might be able to return to
    some type of gainful employment, in light of overwhelming evidence to the contrary,
    is an insufficient basis upon which to support a plan administrator’s decision to deny
    that participant’s claim for [long-term disability] benefits.
    
    Id. at 170-71.
                                              CONCLUSION
    Even when it is reviewed under the highly deferential standard applicable in this case, we
    conclude that the plan administrator’s determination to deny benefits to Glenn cannot be sustained.
    [The] obligation under ERISA to review the administrative record in order to
    determine whether the plan administrator acted arbitrarily and capriciously in making
    ERISA benefits determinations . . . inherently includes some review of the quality
    and quantity of the medical evidence and the opinions on both sides of the issues.
    Otherwise, courts would be rendered to nothing more than rubber stamps for any
    plan administrator’s decision as long as the plan [administrator] was able to find a
    single piece of evidence – no matter how obscure or untrustworthy – to support a
    denial of a claim for ERISA benefits.
    
    McDonald, 347 F.3d at 172
    .
    For the reasons set out above, we conclude that MetLife’s decision to deny long-term
    benefits in this case was not the product of a principled and deliberative reasoning process. MetLife
    acted under a conflict of interest and also in unacknowledged conflict with the determination of
    disability by the Social Security Administration. In denying benefits, it offered no explanation for
    crediting a brief form filled out by Dr. Patel while overlooking his detailed reports. This
    inappropriately selective consideration of Glenn’s medical record was compounded by the fact that
    the occupational skills analyst and the independent medical consultant were apparently not provided
    with full information from Dr. Patel on which to base their conclusions. Moreover, there was no
    adequate basis for the plan administrator’s decision not to factor in one of the major considerations
    No. 05-3918               Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                                            Page 13
    in Glenn’s pathology, that of the role that stress played in aggravating her condition and, in the
    language of the MetLife policy, in preventing her return to “gainful work or service for which [she
    is] reasonably qualified taking into consideration [her] training, education, experience, and past
    earning.” Taken together, these factors reflect a decision by MetLife that can only be described as
    arbitrary and capricious.
    We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND the case with
    directions to reinstate Glenn’s long-term disability benefits, retroactive to the date on which they
    were terminated,5 and for such other relief as the district court finds appropriate in view of our ruling
    in this case.
    5
    See Kalish v. Liberty Mutual / Liberty Life Assurance Co., 
    419 F.3d 501
    (6th Cir. 2005) (remanding for
    retroactive reinstatement of benefits where plan administrator arbitrarily and capriciously refused to consider evidence
    of claimant’s depression as factor in disability); Williams v. Int’l Paper Co., 
    227 F.3d 706
    (6th Cir. 2000) (remanding
    for retroactive reinstatement of benefits where plan administrator had opportunity to review all evidence and did so in
    a manner that was arbitrary and capricious).
    No. 05-3918          Glenn v. MetLife, et al.                                              Page 14
    _____________________
    CONCURRENCE
    _____________________
    MERRITT, Circuit Judge, concurring in the reversal of the judgment below but changing the
    instructions on remand. A doctor reviewing Glenn’s medical records on behalf of MetLife noted
    that Glenn “seems to be a reasonable candidate to try one of the sedentary job classes [previously
    suggested by MetLife] at least on a trial basis.” The contract for long-term benefits expressly
    provides for an arrangement called “rehabilitative employment” allowing individuals like Glenn to
    work on a trial basis without forfeiting their benefits. At this late point, it is unclear whether
    rehabilitative employment is still available under the terms of the plan. What is clear, however, is
    that the parties should have pursued this reasonable approach earlier. Doing so would have enabled
    Glenn to return to work so long as her health permitted and would have reduced MetLife’s payments
    to Glenn. I would remand the case to the district court for a hearing in which the rehabilitative
    employment option is explored. Otherwise, I concur in the majority opinion.