Dabertin, Judy v. HCR Manor Care Inc ( 2004 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    JUDY DABERTIN,
    Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    HCR MANOR CARE, INC., MANOR CARE, INC.
    SEVERANCE PLAN FOR SELECTED EMPLOYEES,
    MANOR CARE INC. SEVERANCE PLAN FOR
    SELECTED EMPLOYEES COMMITTEE, MANOR
    CARE INC. SEVERANCE PLAN FOR SELECTED
    EMPLOYEES PLAN ADMINISTRATOR,
    Defendants-Appellants, Cross-Appellees.
    ____________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 99 CV 1702—Ian H. Levin, Magistrate Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED DECEMBER 1, 2003—DECIDED JUNE 24, 2004
    ____________
    Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, and ROVNER, Circuit
    Judges.
    ROVNER, Circuit Judge. After being denied benefits under
    her employer’s Severance Plan for Selected Employees
    (“Plan”), Judy Dabertin brought an action under the
    Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29
    2                           Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq. against her employer HCR Manor
    Care (“HCR”), the Plan, and the Plan’s administrator and
    the committee appointed by HCR’s Board of Directors to
    administer the Plan (“Committee”) seeking district court
    review of the Committee’s determination. The district court
    held that the Committee was arbitrary and capricious in
    denying Dabertin’s claim for severance benefits. We affirm
    in all aspects save for one minor housekeeping matter
    which we remand for further consideration.
    I.
    For over seventeen years, Judy Dabertin worked for
    Manor Care Inc. (“Manor Care”), a company that owns and
    operates skilled nursing facilities across the country. For at
    least some portion of those years, Dabertin worked as one
    of several vice presidents of operations. Over the course of
    that time she became accustomed to her duties as vice
    president. Those duties changed, however, when, in Sep-
    tember 1998, Manor Care merged into a subsidiary of
    Health Care and Retirement Corporation. Paul Ormond,
    the designated President and Chief Executive Officer of the
    new organization, HCR, embarked on a plan to radically
    alter operations in the merged entity. As part of his plan, he
    required all vice presidents of operations, including
    Dabertin, to take on the additional role and title of general
    managers. As general managers, Ormond expected the
    executives to spend significantly more time in the facilities
    assigned to them and participate more directly in their day-
    to-day management. All of the vice presidents, including
    Dabertin, were required to perform all of the same func-
    tions they performed when they were solely vice presidents,
    but to those duties Ormond added new ones— those of a
    general manager. To accommodate the time-consuming
    nature of these increased hands-on duties, Ormond opted to
    reduce the number of facilities to which some vice presi-
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                               3
    dents were assigned. Dabertin, for example, had formerly
    directed operations of all of the facilities in the Central and
    Western Divisions of the company. The facilities in the
    Western Division, however, were geographically dispersed
    throughout California, Washington, Utah, Nevada and
    Arizona. According to HCR, the wide geographic dispersion
    of the facilities would make managing the Western Division
    under the new hands-on approach significantly more
    difficult than before. Consequently, Manor Care determined
    that in order to enable Dabertin to perform her new
    managerial duties properly, she could no longer oversee
    operations at both divisions. Ormond, therefore, assigned
    her to the Western Division alone. According to the defen-
    dants, Dabertin maintained the same authority, functions,
    duties, and responsibilities in the Western Division as she
    had previously for both the Central and Western Divisions.
    As a practical matter, however, this meant that she went
    from having authority for and oversight over forty-eight
    facilities to twenty-seven, from thirty-four skilled nursing
    units to seventeen, and from 4,639 beds to 2,309. According
    to Dabertin, she lost all of her authority, functions, duties
    and responsibilities for the Central Region operations, one
    of the largest and most complex markets. Her budgeted
    revenue decreased from $232 million to $114 million and
    her operating profits decreased from $61 million to $27
    million. Her independent capital spending authority went
    from $6 million to zero, and she lost her independent
    authority to manage her total budget. She no longer had
    any responsibility and authority for development and
    implementation of advertising, public relations, consulting,
    business meetings, seminars, and conventions. HCR
    eliminated her construction project authority for twenty
    Western Division sites and eliminated her role in identify-
    ing, reviewing, overseeing, and coordinating construction
    projects. When HCR closed the Pleasant Hill, California
    and Lombard, Illinois facilities, Dabertin lost her manage-
    ment function and hiring and firing authority for seventy-
    three staff members.
    4                           Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    Dismayed by what she saw as her waning authority, on
    October 21, 1998, Dabertin gave notice to her supervisor,
    Keith Weikel, that she was leaving HCR. She made a claim
    for severance benefits under the Plan which had been
    adopted in preparation for the merger. That Plan des-
    ignated thirty-nine officers, including Dabertin, as Plan
    participants. Under the terms of the Plan, employees were
    entitled to severance benefits in the following two circum-
    stances:
    A Participant shall be entitled to severance benefits
    under this Plan if and only if his employment with the
    Company . . . terminates under either of the following
    circumstances:
    (A) a termination by the Company . . . other than for
    Cause, or
    (B) a termination by the Participant for Good Reason.
    (Sep. App. at 163).
    The Plan defines “Good Reason” as “a significant re-
    duction in the scope of a Participant’s authority, position,
    title, functions, duties or responsibilities.” (Sep. App. at
    161). Dabertin submitted to HCR that she had “good
    reason” to terminate her employment with HCR because,
    among other things, the number of facilities, beds, direct
    reports, and construction projects assigned to her had de-
    creased.
    HCR claims, however, that prior to the merger, Ormond
    (the incoming president and CEO of the merged entity)
    discussed the purpose and goal of the Plan with Stuart
    Bainum, Jr., the CEO of the former Manor Care. According
    to HCR, Ormond stated that Dabertin and the other ex-
    ecutives were critical to the success of the merged entity
    and he did not want the Plan to give them an incentive to
    resign and receive severance benefits under the Plan.
    Ormond and Bainum agreed that a switch to a more hands-
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                                5
    on operating procedure would not trigger any entitlement
    to severance benefits. Dabertin, of course, was not privy to
    these conversations. Nor were Ormond’s intentions recorded
    in the text of the Plan.
    Weikel denied Dabertin’s claim for benefits and she ap-
    pealed that denial to the Committee. On January 14, 1999,
    the Committee—comprised of Ormond and three others—
    met to consider Dabertin’s claim for benefits. During
    the hour-long consideration of Dabertin’s claim, Ormond
    relayed his pre-merger conversation with Bainum to the
    Committee, reiterating that it was his intention that the
    switch to the new hands-on approach would not constitute
    a reduction in the scope of a vice president’s authority, po-
    sition, title, functions, duties or responsibilities, and there-
    fore would not trigger entitlement to benefits. The
    Committee interpreted the Plan consistently with Ormond’s
    stated intention and denied Dabertin benefits, determining
    that “if a Participant continues to have a full range of
    operational, financial, administrative and other authority,
    functions, duties and responsibilities with respect to the
    business unit the Participant manages, the scope of the
    Participant’s authority, duties, functions and responsibili-
    ties would not be affected.” (Sep. App. at 231) (emphasis in
    original). It determined that in Dabertin’s case, her duties,
    responsibilities, authority, title, position and functions had
    actually “significantly increased” since, she, as well as the
    other vice presidents, “were expected to spend significantly
    more time in the facilities in their divisions, they were
    required to conduct operations reviews with the Regional
    Directors of Operations on every month on every center and
    they were required to be more involved in the day-to-day
    oversight of the centers in the areas of quality of care,
    staffing levels, accounts receivables, workers compensation
    and agency utilization.” (Sep. App. at 233). Finally, the
    Committee reasoned that Dabertin’s title and position were
    the same under the new operating scheme as the old: she
    6                            Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    was a vice president before the merger and remained a vice
    president after, and the additional title of general manager
    did not reduce her position within the company. To the
    contrary, the Committee found that Dabertin’s position with
    Manor Care was enhanced by the fact that the company
    was approximately twice as large as it had been before the
    merger. In short, the Committee concluded that if Dabertin
    had lost any duties, responsibility, authority, etc., she had
    gained far more and was not entitled, therefore, to sever-
    ance benefits under the plan.
    Dabertin filed suit in the district court on March 15, 1999,
    claiming that HCR, the Plan, Manor Care, the Committee,
    and the Plan Administrator (“defendants”) violated ERISA
    by refusing to pay her severance benefits, withholding
    certain documents related to the Plan, and breaching their
    fiduciary duties to Plan participants. In the alternative, she
    asserted claims for breach of contract and violation of the
    Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act. Holding that
    ERISA preempted the state law claims, the district court
    entered summary judgment for the defendants on those
    claims as well as the ERISA claim that the defendants had
    wrongfully withheld Plan documents. Dabertin v. HCR
    Manor Care, Inc., 
    177 F. Supp. 2d 829
    , 840-42 (N.D. Ill.
    2001) (“Dabertin I”). The district court also held that the
    Committee was not arbitrary and capricious in deciding
    that any changes in Manor Care’s bonus system did not
    adversely affect Dabertin and that Manor Care had not
    significantly reduced Dabertin’s employee benefits. 
    Id. at 853-54.
    A genuine issue of material fact, however, pre-
    vented the district court from determining whether the
    Committee acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it
    concluded that HCR had not reduced that scope of
    Dabertin’s duties, responsibilities, authority, title, position
    and functions. 
    Id. at 852.
    Consequently, the district court
    held a bench trial to determine the content of the record
    before the Committee and subsequently—on December 19,
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                                    7
    2002—determined that the Committee’s decision was
    indeed arbitrary and capricious. Dabertin v. HCR Manor
    Care, Inc., 
    235 F. Supp. 2d 853
    , 867-68 (N.D. Ill. 2002)
    (Dabertin II). In a separate order entered on March 27,
    2003, the court awarded $245,775 in prejudgment interest,
    and $270,617.08 in attorneys’ fees and costs.
    After the liability decision, the parties stipulated to the
    benefits calculation except for the calculation regarding the
    bonus that Dabertin argued she should receive. On March
    25, 2003, the district court calculated Dabertin’s bonus
    benefit amount and then on March 27, 2003, entered an
    order awarding Dabertin $785,150 in total benefits and
    $245,775 in prejudgment interest (R. at 113). On May 19,
    2003 the court entered an order awarding Dabertin
    $270,671.08 in attorneys’ fees and costs. (Sep. App. at 272).
    The defendants timely appealed the district court’s deci-
    sion that the Committee was arbitrary and capricious (the
    December 19, 2002 order) as well as the order awarding
    fees and costs (the May 19, 2003 order). Dabertin cross-
    appealed, contesting the district court’s calculation of the
    benefit amount (the March 27, 2003 order) and the court’s
    earlier grant of summary judgment (the December 20, 2001
    order) in Dabertin I.1
    1
    Dabertin states that “[i]f, as we submit, the District Court cor-
    rectly decided the Article 1.8(i) Good Reason claim after a bench
    trial, this Court need not address the summary judgment issues
    regarding Dabertin’s Article 1.8(iv) and (v) and fiduciary breach
    claims or the de novo review and heightened scrutiny issues.”
    (Appellee’s Brief at 30). Thus Dabertin’s cross-appeal of the
    December 20, 2001 district court order (Dabertin I) is conditioned
    on our ruling in favor of the defendant on the defendant’s appeal
    of the December 19, 2002 order. For the reasons supplied infra, we
    need not address Dabertin’s cross-appeal of the fiduciary breach
    claims or the de novo review and heightened scrutiny issues.
    8                              Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    II.
    Before addressing the merits, we must resolve the parties’
    dispute over the appropriate standard of review. Where an
    ERISA plan gives the plan administrator discretion to
    interpret the plan terms or determine benefits eligibility, a
    reviewing court employs the arbitrary and capricious
    standard. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 
    489 U.S. 101
    , 115 (1989); Militello v. Cent. States, Southeast and
    Southwest Areas Pension Fund, 
    360 F.3d 681
    , 685 (7th Cir.
    2004). The district court determined, and neither party
    disputes on appeal, that the plan at issue here gives such
    discretion. See Dabertin 
    I, 177 F. Supp. 2d at 843-44
    .
    Consequently, we, like the district court, look only to see
    whether the Committee acted arbitrarily and capriciously
    in denying Dabertin benefits.2 See Hackett v. Xerox Corp.
    Long-Term Disability Income Plan, 
    315 F.3d 771
    , 773 (7th
    Cir. 2003), Johnson v. Allsteel, Inc., 
    259 F.3d 885
    , 889-90
    (7th Cir. 2001), Perlman v. Swiss Bank Corp. Comprehen-
    sive Disability Prot. Plan, 
    195 F.3d 975
    , 980 (7th Cir. 1999).
    This standard gives great deference to the decision of a
    committee which cannot be overturned unless the commit-
    tee’s decision was a downright unreasonable one. Carr v.
    The Gates Health Care Plan, 
    195 F.3d 292
    , 294 (7th Cir.
    1999). It is not the function of the district court to decide
    2
    The discrepancy in the parties’ positions regarding the standard
    of review may have resulted, in part, from the fact that in this
    case the district court conducted a brief bench trial to resolve
    factual issues related to Dabertin’s loss of position and title, her
    loss of independent capital spending authority, loss of hiring and
    firing authority, loss of cluster market functions, and the defend-
    ants’ freezing of construction projects. Dabertin 
    I, 177 F. Supp. 2d at 852
    . The trial, however, was limited to determining what the
    record was before the Committee—a factual determination that
    we would review for clear error. Thomas v. Gen. Motors
    Acceptance Corp., 
    288 F.3d 305
    , 307 (7th Cir. 2002). This does not
    affect the level of deference that we owe to the Plan Committee’s
    determinations.
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                                   9
    whether it would have reached the same conclusion as the
    committee (Id.) or to substitute its judgment for the judg-
    ment of the committee. Smart v. State Farm Ins. Co., 
    868 F.2d 929
    , 936 (7th Cir. 1989). But even review under this
    most deferential standard does not amount to a rubber
    stamp. 
    Hackett, 315 F.3d at 774-75
    . The committee must
    articulate a rational connection between the facts found, the
    issue to be decided, and the choice made. Cozzie v. Metro.
    Life Ins. Co., 
    140 F.3d 1104
    , 1109 (7th Cir. 1998). Where the
    committee’s interpretation of the plan defies all common
    sense, the district court must overturn that decision. See
    Hess v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., 
    274 F.3d 456
    , 461
    (7th Cir. 2001) (“In some cases, . . . simple common sense
    will require the court to pronounce an administrator’s
    determination arbitrary and capricious.”)
    The facts regarding the changes to Dabertin’s job are
    largely undisputed.3 They include: (1) reduction of her in-
    dependent capital spending authority from $6 million to
    zero; (2) elimination of her overhead budget development
    and implementation responsibilities and authority for ad-
    vertising, public relations, consulting, business meetings,
    seminars and conventions; (3) elimination of her manage-
    ment functions including hiring and firing authority for
    seventy-three staff members; (4) elimination of independent
    authority to manage her total budget; (5) elimination of
    management functions and responsibilities in three areas;
    (6) discontinuation of construction project authority,
    functions and responsibilities in twenty sites in the Western
    3
    There appears to be a minor dispute as to whether Dabertin lost
    responsibility for cluster markets or MedBridge accounts in the
    Western Division. See Combined Reply/Responsive Brief of
    Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees at 11. The defendants do
    not, of course, dispute that Dabertin lost all of her functions and
    responsibilities in the Central Division. Nor do they dispute that
    she lost some functions in the Western Division. 
    Id. at 12.
    10                           Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    Division; (7) elimination of a host of decision-making
    authority and other responsibilities for building projects
    and new markets; (8) elimination of operational, adminis-
    trative and strategic authority, position, title, functions,
    duties or responsibilities for the Central Division; (9)
    reduction of her overall budget authority, her budgeted
    revenue, and her budgeted operating profit; (10) reduction
    by half of the number of skilled nursing units and the
    number of beds under her authority; and (11) a halving of
    the number of direct reports. Dabertin 
    II, 235 F. Supp. 2d at 859-61
    . It is also undisputed that HCR added new tasks
    to Dabertin’s plate with the addition of her new duties as a
    general manager.4 
    Id. at 860.
      The question we face is whether these job alterations
    amounted to a “reduction in the scope of a Participant’s au-
    thority, position, title, functions, duties or responsibilities”
    so as to trigger payment of benefits under the Plan. The
    Committee determined that the scope of Dabertin’s employ-
    ment had not changed as she had the same list of duties
    before and after the merger; she just had fewer facilities in
    which to perform them. (Sep. App. at 363). It also concluded
    that the additional tasks of “general manager” added to the
    scope of her duties. 
    Id. Under the
    Committee’s interpreta-
    tion of the term “scope”, if Dabertin had certain duties,
    responsibilities, and functions for 100 facilities before the
    merger, and had the same duties, responsibilities and
    functions for fifty facilities after the merger, she would not
    suffer a significant reduction in the scope of her duties,
    4
    Dabertin argues that there was no record evidence before the
    Committee regarding the addition of these duties and that the
    defendants cannot, in their appeal, use the Committee’s own de-
    cision as a substitute for record evidence. The district court
    deemed it unnecessary to reach Dabertin’s argument on this mat-
    ter, (Id. at 868, n. 17) and we agree.
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                              11
    responsibilities or functions. The district court reasonably
    concluded that this definition of “scope” defied common
    sense and was not in accord with the ordinary and popular
    meaning of the term, and therefore was arbitrary and
    capricious. 
    Id. at 865-66.
    In some cases, “simple common
    sense will require the court to pronounce an administrator’s
    determination arbitrary and capricious.” 
    Hess, 274 F.3d at 461
    . This is just such a case.
    The Committee’s interpretation of a decrease in the scope
    of duties defies common sense. If HCR had added to each
    vice president’s duties a new set of duties—emptying
    bedpans, delivering meals, and mopping floors—under
    HCR’s interpretation of the Plan, these new duties would
    not have decreased the “scope” of the vice president’s role at
    all. In fact, the scope of the vice president’s duties would
    have increased. After all, they have not lost their title (they
    are still vice presidents, they have just added to that title
    the additional title of “janitor”). Likewise, they have not lost
    any of their prior duties; they simply have added a few new
    tasks. Common sense dictates otherwise. When the defen-
    dants took the Central Division away from Dabertin, they
    eliminated her authority for the Central Division, and the
    additional general manager tasks in no way compensated
    Dabertin for the loss of authority. Although the tasks
    assigned to a general manager are not as low in the corpo-
    rate pecking order as those of a janitor, they are lower
    nevertheless. It is not Dabertin’s loss of prestige alone,
    however, that bolsters our conclusion that HCR signifi-
    cantly reduced Dabertin’s job. There is plenty of other
    evidence that she suffered a significant reduction in her
    authority, functions, duties and responsibilities. So much
    evidence, in fact, that any decision by the Committee
    otherwise would be arbitrary and capricious.
    The defendants, of course, must concede that by eliminat-
    ing her responsibilities for the Central Division, Dabertin
    12                            Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    lost responsibility for beds, staff, facilities, and projects.
    They also concede that Dabertin did lose some duties,
    responsibilities, authority, position and functions in the
    Western Division as well. Combined Reply/ Responsive
    Brief of Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees at 12. They
    dismisses these as insignificant based on the fact that
    Dabertin did not mention the loss in her initial application
    for benefits, but raised it for the first time on appeal to the
    Committee, and then “buried” the claim on the last pages of
    her twenty-three page position paper submitted to the
    Committee. We think it unfair to impose a judgment
    regarding the significance of a loss based on the page
    number on which the claim appears. Likewise, the defen-
    dants put too fine a point on the fact that Dabertin did not
    mention a particular loss in her initial application for
    severance benefits. She had no reason to know that her
    application for benefits would be so hotly contested and that
    she might need to load it with every piece of available
    evidence of job diminution from the get-go. In any case,
    her twenty-three page position paper submitted to the
    Committee and her brief before the district court set forth
    in great detail all of the many ways in which she believed
    HCR had significantly reduced the scope of her authority,
    position, title, functions, duties or responsibilities, including
    the loss of beds, staff, budget dollars, and construction
    oversight, to name a few. As the district court concluded:
    a lay person could reasonably conclude that the phrase
    “scope of a Participant’s authority, position, title, func-
    tions, duties or responsibilities” when applied to a
    Vice-President of Operations for the Central/Western
    Division would mean the common measures of that
    Vice-President’s authority, functions, duties and re-
    sponsibilities over and involving beds, facilities, em-
    ployees, budgets, and projects managed or supervised.
    In the ordinary and popular sense then the number of
    beds, facilities, projects and direct reports would define
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                             13
    the scope or extent of such an employee’s authority, po-
    sition, functions, duties or responsibilities. HCR Manor
    Care, however, adopted a definition of the term “scope”
    that was beyond the ken of “a person of average intel-
    ligence and experience.”
    Dabertin 
    II, 235 F. Supp. 2d at 865
    (internal citations
    omitted).
    The defendants refer us to Collins v. Ralston Purina Co.,
    
    147 F.3d 592
    , 596 (7th Cir. 1998) as evidence of this court’s
    recognition of the possibility that an employee whose ter-
    ritory is reduced but who gains additional tasks does not
    necessarily suffer a substantial reduction in duties or au-
    thorities. In the first instance, the defendants contort the
    language and reasoning of Collins. The majority in Collins
    did not conclude that Collins’ responsibilities and duties
    were not significantly reduced, but rather the opinion con-
    cluded that Collins’ employer never actually re-assigned
    Collins’ duties, nor did it even make an offer to do so. 
    Id. at 600.
    Collins thought he saw the writing on the wall and
    quit before he could be re-assigned. In fact, the majority
    stated, “[w]ithout more we will assume the . . position
    offered to Collins would have meant a lesser job and fewer
    responsibilities.” 
    Id. In any
    case, the determination of what
    constitutes a substantial reduction in duties and responsi-
    bilities obviously varies greatly based on the specific facts
    of the particular case and the tasks allotted before and after
    a job re-assignment. After considering all of the evidence
    that the Committee had before it, including the functions,
    duties, and responsibilities Dabertin lost, as well as those
    she gained, we conclude, that under a common sense view
    of the changes in Dabertin’s job assignments, the Commit-
    tee arbitrarily and capriciously denied her benefits. There
    simply is no rational connection between the facts (the
    amount of authority, beds, budget, etc. that Dabertin lost)
    and the Committee’s conclusion that HCR did not reduce
    the scope of her job. See 
    Cozzie, 140 F.3d at 1109
    (“The
    14                           Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    committee must articulate a rational connection between
    the facts found, the issue to be decided, and the choice
    made.”)
    This lack of rational connection is certainly enough to
    allow us to conclude that the Committee’s decision was ar-
    bitrary and capricious. In addition, we agree with the dis-
    trict court that the Committee imposed new requirements
    on Plan participants that were not part of the plain lan-
    guage of the Plan. Dabertin 
    II, 235 F. Supp. 2d at 866
    . An
    ERISA benefit cannot be a moving target where the plan
    administrator continues to add conditions precedent to the
    award of benefits. See Swaback v. Am. Info. Tech. Corp.,
    
    103 F.3d 535
    , 542 (7th Cir. 1996) (it is arbitrary and
    capricious to impose requirements that are not part of the
    plain language of the benefit plan); 
    Cozzie, 140 F.3d at 1108
    (an insurance company is bound by the terms of the benefit
    and although it may interpret the language of the plan, it
    may not modify it). The district court noted three additional
    qualifications that the Committee added that did not exist
    in the plain language of the Plan:
    (1) that “if a Participant continues to have a full range
    of operational, financial, administrative and other
    authority, functions, duties and responsibilities with
    respect to the business unit the Participant manages,
    the scope of the Participant’s authority, functions and
    responsibilities would not be affected;”
    (2) “that absent a significant adverse effect on the
    Participant’s status in the organization (e.g., reporting
    relationships, participation in major decisions, etc.) or
    a significant reduction in the scope of the Participant’s
    authority, duties, functions or responsibilities with re-
    spect to the business unit for which the Participant has
    responsibility, a significant reduction under Section
    1.8(i) has not occurred;” and
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                                 15
    (3) the purpose of Article 1.8(i) is only to preclude
    changes that make a Participant’s continued employ-
    ment “degrading or humiliating.”
    
    Id. at 866,
    n. 12. The district court reasoned that this lan-
    guage imposed requirements beyond those articulated in
    the Plan as the Plan does not reference the size of the bus-
    iness unit, there is no Plan language requiring a “signifi-
    cant adverse effect,” or requiring such an effect on a Partici-
    pant’s status in the organization, reporting relationships or
    participation in major decisions, and the Plan says nothing
    about whether the changes to the Participants’s job must be
    “degrading or humiliating.”5 
    Id. at 867.
    The district court
    identified these limitations as modifications to the original
    Plan and not merely interpretations of it, and concluded
    that the addition of the extraneous conditions was arbitrary
    and capricious. 
    Id. We agree
    with the district court’s
    conclusions.
    The defendants argue that, in coming to this conclusion
    the district court conducted a de novo review. We must not,
    however, misconstrue the district court’s careful consider-
    ation of the facts and proceedings of the Committee as de
    novo review. Unlike the district courts in the out-of-circuit
    cases cited by the defendants, the district court here did not
    re-weigh evidence (see Vlass v. Raytheon Employees Disabil-
    ity Trust, 
    244 F.3d 27
    , 32 (1st Cir. 2001)), did not substitute
    its own weighing of the conflicting evidence for that of the
    Committee (see Bolling v. Eli Lilly & Co., 
    990 F.2d 1028
    ,
    1029 (8th Cir. 1993)), nor did it simply reject the Commit-
    tee’s reasonable decision merely because it disagreed with
    the conclusion (see Fletcher Merrit v. Nor-Am Energy Corp.,
    5
    The district court noted that the term, “adverse effects” imposed
    by the Committee is not merely the equivalent of the Plan lan-
    guage that requires a “significant reduction” in job authority,
    position, title, functions, duties or responsibilities. 
    Id. 16 Nos.
    03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    
    250 F.3d 1174
    , 1180 (8th Cir. 2001)). What the district court
    did do was to consider the undisputed facts regarding the
    diminution of Dabertin’s territory and responsibilities and
    her added general managerial duties and assess the plain
    language of the Plan to determine whether there was any
    reasonable basis for the Committee’s conclusion that
    Dabertin had not experienced a significant reduction in the
    scope of her authority, position, title, functions, duties or
    responsibilities. And although the district court recognized
    the vast amount of deference due to the Committee, it found
    that the Committee’s decision lacked any rational connec-
    tion between the plain meaning of the language of the Plan
    that permits benefits to those who have suffered “a signifi-
    cant reduction in the scope of a Participant’s authority,
    position, title, functions, duties or responsibilities” and the
    Committee’s decision to deny Dabertin benefits.
    Furthermore, because it must have been clear to the dis-
    trict court that “it would be unreasonable for the plan ad-
    ministrator to deny the application on any ground,” 
    Hess, 274 F.3d at 464
    , the district court did not err by refusing to
    remand the case to the Committee for further reconsidera-
    tion. 
    Id. See also
    Miller v. United Welfare Fund, 
    72 F.3d 1066
    , 1071 (2d Cir. 1995) (no remand necessary where “no
    new evidence could produce a reasonable conclusion per-
    mitting a denial of the claim.”) The defendants state that it
    is “quite likely that the Committee could consider addi-
    tional evidence that would produce a reasonable conclusion
    permitting denial of Ms. Dabertin’s claim,” (Appellants’
    Brief at 24), yet they fail to inform the court what that
    evidence might be or why the Committee did not consider
    it in the first place. It would be a terribly unfair and in-
    efficient use of judicial resources to continue remanding a
    case to the Committee to dig up new evidence until it found
    just the right support for its decision to deny an employee
    her benefits. See Vega v. Nat’l Life Ins. Servs., Inc., 
    188 F.3d 287
    , 302 n. 13 (5th Cir. 1999) (en banc) (parties must make
    their full records before coming to the federal courts as
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                           17
    “allowing the case to oscillate between the courts and the
    administrative process prolongs a relatively small matter
    that, in the interest of both parties, should be quickly
    decided.”) The district court appropriately concluded that a
    remand would serve no purpose. It did however, schedule
    further proceedings to determine the proper amount of
    damages.
    On March 25, 2003, the district court determined the
    amount of Dabertin’s severance bonus benefit and on March
    27, 2003, it entered an order calculating the full amount of
    Dabertin’s severance benefits and prejudgment interest,
    awarding Dabertin $785,150 in benefits and $245,775 in
    prejudgment interest. Dabertin disputes the calculation the
    district court made in its March 25, 2003 order calculating
    the bonus benefit. Under the terms of Article IV(B) of the
    Plan, employees who were entitled to severance benefits
    under the Plan were also entitled to their bonus under the
    following provision:
    The Company shall pay to the Participant as a bonus
    for the year in which his Termination Date falls an
    amount equal to a portion (determined as provided in
    the next sentence) of the maximum bonus that the
    Participant could have received under the Company’s
    annual bonus program for the fiscal year in which his
    termination Date falls. Such portion shall be deter-
    mined by dividing the number of days of the Partici-
    pant’s employment during such calendar year up to his
    Termination Date by 365 (366 if a leap year). Such
    payment shall be made in a lump sum within 30 days
    after such Termination Date, and the Participant shall
    have no right to any further bonuses under said pro-
    gram.
    (Sep. App. at 164) (emphasis supplied). When it came time
    to calculate the bonus owed to Dabertin, the parties noticed
    a quirk in the language of the Plan. Although HCR operated
    on a fiscal year calendar and employees had been given
    18                           Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    their bonuses at the end of the previous fiscal year, the Plan
    makes reference to a calendar year in determining the
    amount of the benefit. Dabertin argues that the Committee
    should have applied the plain language of the Plan and
    calculated her bonus based on the number of days she
    worked in the calendar year 1998. HCR, on the other hand,
    concluded that the Plan language was inherently ambigu-
    ous and should be interpreted in a manner that made
    logical sense—that was to use the fiscal calendar year that
    had been used for all previous bonus calculations and
    payments. The practical ramification is that under
    Dabertin’s method, she would receive a prorated bonus
    based on approximately eleven months of work (January 1,
    1998 through November 20, 1998). Under HCR’s method,
    she would receive a prorated bonus based on approximately
    six months of work (June 1, 1998 through November 20,
    1998).
    The district court agreed with HCR that the Plan lan-
    guage “such calendar year” was ambiguous. As the district
    court noted, because the word “such” in this context means
    “aforementioned” (See Black’s Law Dictionary, 1432 (6th
    Ed. 1990) (“Identical with, being the same as what has been
    mentioned . . . referring to the last antecedent”)), that
    phrase must refer to a prior discussion of a calendar year.
    There is no prior mention of a calendar year in Article IV(B)
    however. The district court concluded that the inconsistency
    could be resolved by interpreting “calendar year” to mean
    “fiscal year.” The district court bolstered its conclusion that
    this was the right result by looking at how HCR intended to
    compensate its employees. “It doesn’t make sense,” the
    district court reasoned, “to employ the calendar year in the
    severance bonus benefit calculation, in view of the clear
    intent of the clause to allocate and fairly compensate a
    severed participant for the portion of the fiscal year that the
    participant worked.” (R. at 111). Because HCR had paid
    bonuses to employees for the fiscal year ending May 31,
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                              19
    1998, calculating the bonus based on a calendar year would
    mean that Dabertin and other participants who ended their
    employment with HCR in 1998 would receive two bonuses
    for the period between January 1, 1998 and May 31, 1998.
    On the flip side, participants who ended their employment
    with HCR during 1999 would not receive any bonus for the
    work they did between June 1, 1998 and December 31,
    1998. Using this linguistic and logical approach, the district
    court determined that the Committee properly calculated
    Dabertin’s bonus. 
    Id. Again, we
    must give great deference to the Committee’s
    interpretation of its plan, including its interpretation of the
    ambiguous language in the Plan. Firestone 
    Tire, 489 U.S. at 115
    . In that vein, we cannot merely apply federal common
    law principles of contract interpretation, but rather must
    view the contractual ambiguity through a lens that gives
    broad discretion to the plan administrator to interpret the
    plan. See Ross v. Ind. St. Teacher’s Assoc. Ins. Trust, 
    159 F.3d 1001
    , 1011 (7th Cir. 1998). Under this standard, we
    find that the Committee was not arbitrary and capricious in
    interpreting the Plan language to determine that Dabertin’s
    bonus should be calculated based on the number of days she
    had worked in the fiscal year beginning June 1, 1998.
    This conclusion, unfortunately, does not resolve the bonus
    issue entirely, as there remains a mathematical mystery
    that plagues the defendants’ calculations. Even if we
    assume that the Committee was correct in determining that
    the bonus should be calculated based on the number of days
    that Dabertin worked in the fiscal year beginning June 1,
    1998, HCR’s final calculation of the bonus amount is
    mathematically incorrect. Under HCR’s interpretation,
    Dabertin’s bonus must be calculated as follows: The number
    of days worked in fiscal year 1998, divided by 365, multi-
    plied by the maximum bonus amount. Both parties agree
    that Dabertin worked from June 1, 1998 through November
    20                                Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461
    20, 1998, and both parties agree that the maximum amount
    of Dabertin’s bonus for fiscal year 1998 was $122,330.6 By
    this court’s calculation, Dabertin worked 173 days in the
    fiscal year beginning June 1, 1998. Plugging these numbers
    into the equation, the calculation appears as follows:
    173/365*122,330 = $57,981.07. The defendants, however,
    calculated a total bonus amount of $58,477. We have
    previously held that we need not remand to the Plan
    administrator when all that remains to be accomplished is
    a mechanical calculation of the amount of benefits due.
    Reich v. Ladish Co, Inc., 
    306 F.3d 519
    , 525 (7th Cir. 2002).
    We therefore remand to the district court for the purpose of
    untangling the mathematical error and resolving this
    discrepancy of $495.93 in line with this court’s discussion
    above.
    Because we affirm the district court’s decision that
    Dabertin was entitled to severance benefits pursuant to the
    Article 1.8(i) “Good Reason” claim under the Plan, we need
    not address Dabertin’s other claims regarding the breach of
    fiduciary duty and the use of heightened scrutiny and turn
    instead to the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees and
    costs.
    We review the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees and
    costs only for an abuse of discretion. 
    Hess, 274 F.3d at 464
    .
    HCR does not dispute that Dabertin would be entitled to
    fees if she prevailed, they argue only that Dabertin is not
    entitled to fees if she is not a prevailing party. Because we
    affirm the district court’s conclusion that Dabertin pre-
    vailed in her claim for benefits under the Plan, we also
    affirm the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees and costs
    pursuant to the terms of that Plan.
    6
    (R. at 107, p.3; 108, p.7; 109 at pp.4-5).
    Nos. 03-1918, 03-2034, 03-2461                           21
    III.
    In sum, because the district court did not err in finding
    that the Committee was arbitrary and capricious in denying
    benefits to Dabertin, we affirm the court’s judgment on all
    matters save for the calculation of Dabertin’s benefit under
    Article IV(B) of the Plan. We vacate the district court’s
    judgments of March 25 and March 27, and remand for
    recalculation of the bonus benefit amount in accord with
    this opinion. Appellee shall recover her cost of appeal.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    ________________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—6-24-04