Schorsch v. Reliance Standard Life Insurance , 693 F.3d 734 ( 2012 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 10-3524
    D EBORAH S CHORSCH,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    R ELIANCE S TANDARD L IFE INSURANCE C O .,
    an Illinois Corporation,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:09-cv-03740—Robert W. Gettleman, Judge.
    A RGUED S EPTEMBER 8, 2011—D ECIDED A UGUST 28, 2012
    Before M ANION, R OVNER, and T INDER, Circuit Judges.
    T INDER, Circuit Judge.   The Employee Retirement
    Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) allows beneficiaries
    of plans governed by the statute to bring civil actions
    to recover benefits that are due to them. 
    29 U.S.C. § 1132
    (a)(1)(B). But in enacting ERISA, Congress also
    mandated internal claim review procedures. 
    29 U.S.C. § 1133
    (2). Recognizing that Congress gave the primary
    2                                             No. 10-3524
    responsibility for processing claims to ERISA plans as
    opposed to federal courts, we have held that district
    courts have discretion to require the exhaustion of ad-
    ministrative remedies as a precondition to such suits.
    See Powell v. A.T. & T. Commc’ns, Inc., 
    938 F.2d 823
    , 826
    (7th Cir. 1991). Yet there are exceptions that may excuse
    a failure to exhaust. We consider here whether the
    content of a termination notice, specifically the absence
    of particular information, caused the beneficiary’s
    failure to exhaust and whether the defendant is estopped
    from taking advantage of that failure. The district court
    found that the beneficiary offered no evidence of rea-
    sonable reliance on the absent information and that
    even if the notice was deficient, the alleged deficiencies
    were not material. Finding no abuse of discretion,
    we affirm.
    I. Background
    Deborah Schorsch enrolled in September 1991 in a long-
    term group disability insurance plan provided through
    her employer United Conveyor Corporation. Reliance
    Standard Life Insurance Company (“Reliance”) provided
    coverage for the plan. According to the summary plan
    description, United Conveyor was the plan sponsor and
    administrator. Yet the terms of the policy issued by
    Reliance governed the plan’s administration, and United
    Conveyor delegated authority to determine eligibility
    for benefits to Reliance as the claims administrator. The
    policy did not give Reliance discretionary authority
    to determine benefit eligibility or construe plan terms.
    No. 10-3524                                               3
    For unknown reasons, United Conveyor apparently
    never provided Schorsch with the summary plan descrip-
    tion or any document explaining that ERISA governed
    the plan.
    On August 1, 1992, a car struck the passenger side of
    the vehicle in which Schorsch was a passenger. Schorsch
    suffered a contusion and spinal cord damage, which
    caused her disability. Her symptoms include chronic
    pain syndrome, restricted movement, incontinence, an
    inability to concentrate, and fatigue. Schorsch also
    suffers from the side effects of her pain medicine. United
    Conveyor submitted a claim to Reliance for long-term
    disability benefits on Schorsch’s behalf. Reliance ap-
    proved the claim and Schorsch began receiving long-
    term disability benefits on January 29, 1993. The plan
    provides that for the first 60 months, “total disability”
    meant that Schorsch could not perform the material
    duties of her regular occupation. After 60 months, “total
    disability” meant that Schorsch could not perform the
    material duties of any occupation as reasonably allowed
    by her education, training, or experience. On May 16,
    1998, Reliance notified Schorsch that her condition
    satisfied the more stringent definition of total disability.
    Reliance told her she was eligible to receive disability
    benefits until she reached the age of 65 on January 27,
    2018, or until her condition no longer satisfied the defini-
    tion of total disability.
    On May 19, 2006, at Reliance’s request, Schorsch under-
    went an independent medical exam with Dr. Richard S.
    Tuttle, who produced a five-page report finding her
    4                                              No. 10-3524
    capable of performing a full-time medium duty job. The
    report listed as sources of information (1) Schorsch’s
    account of her primary history, (2) various medical
    records, and (3) “some surveillance transcripts from
    March 2006.” The surveillance source appears to
    reference a report from an investigation firm that
    observed Schorsch’s home for three days in March 2006.
    Based on the exam, Dr. Tuttle found “little objective
    findings to support any significant restrictions or limita-
    tions or any significant impairment.” But Dr. Tuttle also
    mentioned in the next sentence that “surveillance” re-
    vealed that Schorsch “appears to be working out of
    her house, doing her childcare operation, and appears to
    be actively employed at this point, regardless.” He
    then stated that based on the exam, he saw “no
    functional impairment” and “no significant limitations
    or restrictions” and opined that Schorsch could resume
    regular employment. Dr. Tuttle did not mention that
    in March 2006 Reliance sent vocational rehabilitation
    specialist Daniel Rauch to Schorsch’s home to inter-
    view her. Rauch did not report observing a babysitting
    service but recommended in his report that Reliance
    should update Schorsch’s medical records and ask her
    treating physician to comment on her ability to work.
    Reliance notified Schorsch by letter dated June 13,
    2006, that it would terminate her disability benefits on
    June 29, 2006, because based on her file’s medical infor-
    mation, namely Dr. Tuttle’s exam, it determined she
    could work full-time and thus was no longer totally
    disabled. The letter stated that Reliance’s vocational
    staff reviewed her “complete claim file” and determined
    No. 10-3524                                               5
    based on her medical condition and past training, educa-
    tion, and experience that she qualified for a variety of
    jobs. The notice repeated that the decision was made
    “based on the information contained in your file and
    the policy provisions applicable to your claim” and went
    on to explain that:
    Our determination regarding whether you meet
    your group policy’s definition of disability is, and
    must be, based on the medical documentation
    in your claim file. We have no basis on which
    to measure subjective complaints or medical
    opinions that are not substantiated by the med-
    ical findings. We must determine if the medical
    information documents the presence of a physical
    or mental condition limiting your ability to per-
    form your own or regular occupation.
    The notice did not mention the surveillance report, but
    stated that Schorsch could “request a review of this
    denial by writing to” Reliance’s address and that:
    The written request for review must be sent
    within 60 days of receipt of this letter and state
    the reasons why you feel the claim should not
    have been denied. Include any additional docu-
    mentation which you feel will support your
    claim. We will treat the submission of any addi-
    tional documentation as a request for review
    unless specifically otherwise instructed. You or
    your duly authorized representative is also
    entitled to review the pertinent documents upon
    which our determination was predicated.
    6                                               No. 10-3524
    On August 3, 2006, only nine days before the 60-day
    deadline expired on August 12, Schorsch’s counsel sent
    Reliance a letter indicating that he represented:
    your insured, Deborah Schorsch, in connection
    with your revocation of disability payments to
    her under the captioned policy. We will ask that
    you review the revocation decision. However I
    am still waiting for certain documents and
    medical records for review before I can provide
    you with a detailed analysis of my client’s position
    at this time.
    Counsel wrote that he hoped to have the materials he
    needed “in the next few weeks and I should have a
    more detailed analysis presented to you for your con-
    sideration before the end of August.” He asked Reliance
    to “please consider this notice of an intent to ask for
    your reconsideration, which is an option indicated in
    your June 13, 2006 letter.” But neither Schorsch nor her
    attorney ever submitted a request for review.
    Reliance responded in a letter dated February 13,
    2007, stating that although “Ms. Schorsch may have
    intended to ask for a reconsideration, no such letter
    of appeal was ever received by” Reliance “and the dead-
    line for asking for an appeal has long since passed. As
    such, our decision to terminate Ms. Schorsch’s claim is
    final and she has no further avenues of administrative
    appeal available to her under the terms of her Policy.”
    Counsel responded on April 5, 2007, advising Reliance
    that Illinois law, not ERISA, governed the policy, and
    that Schorsch never received an ERISA plan. He said
    No. 10-3524                                               7
    that “[t]he delay in following up on my August 3, 2006
    [letter] was due mostly to my trial schedule.” Counsel
    wrote that the decision to terminate Schorsch’s benefits
    breached the policy and that Schorsch would pursue
    her remedies under Illinois law by suing unless “you
    wish to reconsider receiving a different analysis,
    please advise.”
    On May 22, 2009, Schorsch’s complaint for breach of
    contract and vexatious and unreasonable denial of
    benefits under Illinois insurance law was filed in Illinois
    state court. Reliance removed the action to federal district
    court and Schorsch filed an amended complaint seeking
    to recover the same long-term disability benefits under
    ERISA. See 
    29 U.S.C. § 1132
    (a)(1)(B). During discovery,
    Reliance admitted that it had lost the administrative
    record relating to Schorsch’s claim. Eventually Reliance
    produced some “computer screens” but it never
    found the documents it used in deciding to terminate
    Schorsch’s benefits. In response to Schorsch’s interrogato-
    ries, Reliance stated, “Dave Lembach, Vocational Rehab-
    ilitation Specialist . . . conducted the vocational evalua-
    tion referenced in” the June 13 letter. Yet in Lembach’s
    deposition, he first testified that he did not make “any
    decision as to whether she could perform a particular
    occupation,” and later said he did not recall making the
    evaluation referenced in Reliance’s interrogatory an-
    swer. After discovery, the district court granted Reliance’s
    motion for summary judgment on the ground
    that Schorsch failed to exhaust her administrative reme-
    dies. Schorsch v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., No. 09 C
    8                                                 No. 10-3524
    3740, 
    2010 WL 3893914
     (N.D. Ill. Sept. 29, 2010) (unpub-
    lished opinion and order). Schorsch appealed.
    II. Analysis
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judg-
    ment de novo, viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to Schorsch. See Fleming v. Livingston County,
    Ill., 
    674 F.3d 874
    , 878 (7th Cir. 2012). We will affirm
    if there is “no genuine dispute as to any material fact”
    and Reliance is “entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law.” See 
    id.
    The parties dispute the district court’s exercise of discre-
    tion in dismissing Schorsch’s claim for failure to exhaust
    her administrative remedies. As the district court recog-
    nized, Schorsch does not seriously contest the fact that
    she failed to timely request a review. In fact, she never
    requested a review. Instead, she argues that a series of
    irregularities in Reliance’s process for terminating her
    benefits denied her meaningful access to review and
    that as a result, Reliance is estopped from benefitting
    from her failure to exhaust. Accordingly, we consider
    whether the district court abused its discretion in
    requiring “exhaustion as a prerequisite to bringing suit.”
    Edwards v. Briggs & Stratton Ret. Plan, 
    639 F.3d 355
    , 361 (7th
    Cir. 2011) (quoting Salus v. GTE Directories Serv. Corp., 
    104 F.3d 131
    , 138 (7th Cir. 1997)). We will reverse only if the
    district court’s decision is “obviously in error.” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Salus, 
    104 F.3d at 138
    ).
    Congress established the administrative claims resolu-
    tion process to “reduce the number of frivolous law-
    No. 10-3524                                                 9
    suits under ERISA; to promote the consistent treatment
    of claims for benefits; to provide a nonadversarial
    method of claims settlement; and to minimize the cost of
    claims settlement for all concerned.” Kross v. W. Elec. Co.,
    
    701 F.2d 1238
    , 1244-45 (7th Cir. 1983) (quoting Amato v.
    Bernard, 
    618 F.2d 559
    , 567 (9th Cir. 1980)). Although
    ERISA does not require administrative exhaustion as
    a prerequisite to suit, “we have interpreted ERISA as
    requiring exhaustion of administrative remedies as a
    prerequisite to bringing suit under the statute.” Edwards,
    
    639 F.3d at 360
    . The exhaustion requirement gives force
    to Congress’s intent in establishing the administrative
    claims resolution process by serving the objectives
    noted above. 
    Id. at 360-61
    . That said, courts may excuse
    a failure to exhaust administrative remedies “where
    there is a lack of meaningful access to review proce-
    dures, or where pursuing internal plan remedies would
    be futile.” 
    Id. at 361
    .
    Schorsch argues that Reliance should be estopped from
    asserting her failure to exhaust as a defense. To invoke
    estoppel, Schorsch must show, inter alia, that Reliance
    knowingly misrepresented or concealed a material fact,
    that she did not know the truth, and that she reasonably
    relied on the misrepresentation or concealment to her
    detriment. See, e.g., Loyola Univ. of Chi. v. Humana Ins. Co.,
    
    996 F.2d 895
    , 902 (7th Cir. 1993). Schorsch cannot cir-
    cumvent ERISA’s administrative remedies by simply
    pointing to errors in Reliance’s claims termination pro-
    cess. Flaws in Reliance’s termination notice and other
    errors become relevant only if Schorsch reasonably
    relied on them in failing to request a review of its decision
    10                                                No. 10-3524
    to terminate her disability benefits, see 
    id.,
     or if Reliance’s
    missteps denied her meaningful access to a review, see
    Edwards, 
    639 F.3d at 361
    . (She doesn’t allege that pursuing
    a review would have been futile.)
    Schorsch’s first argument for reasonable and detri-
    mental reliance is that Reliance’s June 13 letter misrepre-
    sented that her “complete claim file” was “reviewed by
    our vocational staff” and that it failed to disclose that
    the “real basis” for terminating benefits was the surveil-
    lance report claiming she ran a babysitting service. She
    also suggests that the notice was deficient in failing to
    disclose Rauch’s written report, which didn’t recom-
    mend terminating benefits. But Reliance had a good
    basis for its decision to terminate benefits, even if it
    didn’t disclose every piece of information it relied on
    to Schorsch.
    Reliance based its decision in part on Dr. Tuttle’s May 19,
    2006, examination of Schorsch. Dr. Tuttle conducted a
    thorough physical examination and documented his
    observations and findings, including that Schorsch did
    “not appear to be in any significant pain or distress.” He
    wrote that she had “no significant objective findings,
    really the only finding is related to subjective complaints
    of pain” and “there are no significant pain behaviors
    or sitting intolerance or any significant findings to any
    significant pain condition or any significant spinal cord
    injury.” Based on his exam, Dr. Tuttle found “little ob-
    jective findings to support any significant restrictions
    or limitations or any significant impairment.” He saw
    “no functional impairment” and opined “with a rea-
    No. 10-3524                                               11
    sonable degree of medical certainty that Ms. Schorsch
    can resume regular employment at a medium duty level
    for an 9-hour day or 40 hour work-week.” To be sure,
    Dr. Tuttle referred to the surveillance of March 2006,
    but his report reveals that this was done to corroborate
    his findings that she had no significant limitations or
    restrictions. His opinion was based on his examination
    of Schorsch. Thus, Schorsch’s suggestion that the sur-
    veillance report was the only basis for Reliance’s ter-
    mination decision is unsupported by the record.
    Schorsch points to several cases, e.g., Schneider v. Sentry
    Group Long Term Disability Plan, 
    422 F.3d 621
    , 628 (7th
    Cir. 2005), where we found that denial notices failed to
    substantially comply with ERISA’s statutory and regula-
    tory requirements. But they are of little assistance here
    because the claimants in those cases exhausted their
    administrative remedies. See 
    id. at 625-26
    . These cases
    suggest that Reliance’s termination notice may have
    been less than perfect, but deficiencies in the notice
    would not necessarily excuse Schorsch’s failure to
    exhaust her administrative remedies. Nor does Robyns
    v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 
    130 F.3d 1231
     (7th Cir.
    1997), assist Schorsch. There, the claimant alleged that
    she was excused from the exhaustion requirement
    because she was never informed of the internal admin-
    istrative appeals process. 
    Id. at 1236, 1238
    . Schorsch was
    informed of her right to seek review.
    And Reliance provided Schorsch with adequate notice
    of the reasons for its decision and the process for review.
    Its letter informed Schorsch that it would terminate
    12                                             No. 10-3524
    her disability benefits based on the medical information
    in her file, namely Dr. Tuttle’s exam, applicable policy
    provisions, Reliance’s review of her complete claim
    file, and its determination that she could work full-time
    and was no longer totally disabled. The letter told her
    that she could submit a “written request for review,”
    stating “the reasons why you feel the claim should not
    have been denied. Include any additional documenta-
    tion which you feel will support your claim.” It also
    notified her that she or her representative was “entitled
    to review the pertinent documents upon which our de-
    termination was predicated.” Thus, Reliance’s termina-
    tion letter gave Schorsch a “reasonable opportunity” to
    provide additional documentation to support her claim
    and seek a review of its decision. See Aschermann v.
    Aetna Life Ins. Co., No. 12-1230, 
    2012 WL 3090291
    , at *4-*6
    (7th Cir. July 31, 2012). Nothing in Reliance’s notice
    prevented Schorsch from requesting a review.
    Yet even assuming the worst about Reliance’s pro-
    cess—as Schorsch claims, the company “basically lied in
    its June 13, 2006 letter” that it performed a vocational
    assessment and that Reliance actually based its decision
    on the surveillance report as opposed to her medical
    information — Schorsch fails to show how she reasonably
    relied on those alleged misrepresentations. She claims
    she would have immediately contested the decision
    had she known the circumstances behind the vocational
    assessment or that Dr. Tuttle thought she ran a baby-
    sitting business from her home. But this after-the-fact
    claim does not show that had she known these alleged
    defects in Reliance’s review process, she would have
    No. 10-3524                                             13
    acted differently. Schorsch could have raised these
    alleged defects in the administrative review process.
    Indeed, the statutorily mandated administrative review
    process best addresses such claims, which is one of the
    reasons exhaustion is required. See Edwards, 
    639 F.3d at 360
    . Schorsch obviously could not contest what she
    did not know, but the termination notice gave her and
    her counsel an opportunity to “review the pertinent
    documents upon which” Reliance made its decision.
    Because Schorsch failed to exercise that option, she
    cannot now claim that had she known certain details,
    material or otherwise, she would have requested review
    of Reliance’s decision to terminate her benefits.
    Schorsch’s second argument is that Reliance’s stated 60-
    day deadline to appeal was incorrect because the
    2002 amendments to the regulations provide for 180 days
    to appeal an adverse determination. See 
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (h)(3)(i). Reliance maintains that it relied on
    the older regulations providing for 60 days because the
    2002 regulations only apply to “claims filed under a
    plan on or after January 1, 2002,” 
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503
    -
    1(o)(1), and Schorsch filed her original claim well
    before then. We need not decide if the new regulations
    apply to appeals made after 2002 regarding adverse
    decisions of pre-2002 claims. Even if they do apply and
    Reliance’s letter should have given Schorsch 180 days to
    appeal, she has not shown how that would have made
    any difference in her failure to file a request for a re-
    view. Simply stated, Schorsch never requested review. The
    same goes for her rather skeletal argument regarding
    the inadequate notice of ERISA rights. Schorsch wholly
    14                                                No. 10-3524
    fails to explain how she could have reasonably relied on
    the absence of information regarding her right to sue
    under ERISA in failing to seek an administrative review.
    Schorsch also argues that Reliance’s loss or destruc-
    tion of the administrative record was a misstep that
    excuses her failure to seek review. But she has not
    shown how Reliance benefitted from the loss or destruc-
    tion of the administrative record. Nor has she shown
    that she could have relied on that future occurrence
    in failing to seek review years earlier. Reliance’s loss of
    the administrative record is regrettable, but we cannot
    see how it had any effect on Schorsch’s failure to seek
    review years earlier.
    Similarly, the suggestion that Reliance’s failure to tell
    Schorsch or her counsel that ERISA governed the policy
    is also a non-starter. The plan administrator under
    
    29 U.S.C. § 1002
    (16)(A) is the person designated by
    the terms of the plan or the plan sponsor if the plan does
    not designate an administrator. Here, the summary
    plan description identifies United Conveyor as the plan
    administrator. We have long refused to attribute an em-
    ployer’s behavior to an insurer because the employer is
    not the insurer’s agent. Sur v. Glidden-Durkee, a div. of S. C.
    M. Corp., 
    681 F.2d 490
    , 493 (7th Cir. 1982) (refusing to
    impute employer’s misrepresentations to insurer be-
    cause an employer is not the insurer’s agent); Metro. Life
    Ins. Co. v. Quilty, 
    92 F.2d 829
    , 832 (7th Cir. 1937) (noting
    that “the employer does not act as agent for the in-
    surer”). United Conveyor as the plan administrator had
    the responsibility of providing Schorsch with a summary
    No. 10-3524                                           15
    plan description, 
    29 U.S.C. §§ 1021
    (a), 1022; see also
    CIGNA Corp. v. Amara, ___ U.S. ___, 
    131 S. Ct. 1866
    , 1877
    (2011) (“ERISA § 102(a) . . . obliges plan administrators
    to furnish summary plan descriptions”), and we will not
    impute its apparent and unfortunate failing to Reliance.
    Schorsch maintains that Reliance failed to establish
    or follow reasonable claims procedures under 
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503
    –1(l) and therefore she should “be deemed to
    have exhausted the administrative remedies available
    under the plan.” 
    Id.
     Section 2560.503–1(l) applies “on
    the basis that the plan has failed to provide a
    reasonable claims procedure that would yield a decision
    on the merits of the claim.” The Labor Department
    has explained that the provision was intended to strip
    judicial deference from decisions made in the absence
    of minimal procedural protections. 
    65 Fed. Reg. 70246
    –01,
    70255 (Nov. 21, 2000). “At a minimum, claimants denied
    access to the statutory administrative review process
    should be entitled to take that claim to a court” because
    “[c]laimants should not be required to continue to
    pursue claims through an administrative process that
    does not comply with the law.” 
    Id. at 70256
    . Section
    2560.503–1(l) assumes claimants attempted to exhaust
    their administrative remedies but the lack of a rea-
    sonable claims procedure blocked “a decision on the
    merits of the claim.” Schorsch, who never attempted to
    exercise her opportunity to seek review, fails to show
    how Reliance denied her access to its administrative
    review process. Reliance’s termination notice told her
    how and where she could request a review of its decision
    and the allotted period in which she could “state the
    16                                           No. 10-3524
    reasons why you feel the claim should not have been
    denied.” And Schorsch could have requested the docu-
    mentation underlying Reliance’s decision.
    Finally, Schorsch argues that Reliance should not
    be permitted to take advantage of the exhaustion
    doctrine because it was intended to benefit a fiduciary
    that conducts itself in full compliance with ERISA. We
    do not condone Reliance’s missteps—particularly the
    loss of the administrative record, the confusion over
    who performed her vocational assessment, and the im-
    pression it gave Schorsch that its decision was based
    only on her medical records when in fact the surveil-
    lance report suggesting she ran a babysitting service
    influenced the decision by some measure. But Schorsch
    cannot show how these problems caused her failure to
    seek review of Reliance’s termination decision. The con-
    gressionally mandated internal claims resolution process
    is the first stop in ERISA’s scheme for addressing such
    disputes. Schorsch never followed Reliance’s instruc-
    tions for seeking review, and she does not show how she
    reasonably relied on any misrepresentation or lack of
    information in failing to exhaust her administrative
    remedies. Thus, the district court did not abuse its dis-
    cretion in requiring exhaustion.
    III. Conclusion
    We A FFIRM the district court’s judgment.
    8-28-12