Salomaa v. Honda Long Term Disability Plan , 642 F.3d 666 ( 2011 )


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  •                       FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    SAMUEL SALOMAA,                                       No. 08-55426
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    D.C. No.
    v.
        2:06-cv-00754-AG-
    HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                                 FMO
    PLAN, an Erisa Plan,
    OPINION
    Defendant-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Andrew J. Guilford, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    May 4, 2009—Pasadena, California
    Filed March 7, 2011
    Before: Cynthia Holcomb Hall,1 Andrew J. Kleinfeld, and
    Barry G. Silverman, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Kleinfeld;
    Dissent by Judge Hall
    1
    Judge Hall died on February 26, 2011, before this opinion could be
    filed. She had previously circulated her dissent, with instructions to file it
    with the majority opinion.
    3187
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY        3191
    COUNSEL
    Charles J. Fleishman, Northridge, California, for the appel-
    lant.
    Melissa M. Cowan, Burke, Williams & Sorensen, LLP, Los
    Angeles, California, for the appellee.
    OPINION
    KLEINFELD:
    We address the standard for overturning an ERISA plan
    decision, and why the challenger met it.
    I.   Facts
    Samuel Salomaa worked for American Honda Motor Com-
    pany, Inc. for more than twenty years. His supervisor
    described him as “without a doubt the best employee to have
    worked for me” in her 15 years at Honda. He was never out
    sick, and never left work early or came in late. At age 47,
    Salomaa was a dedicated family man to his wife and daugh-
    ter, and an exercise enthusiast who jogged two miles to and
    from work every day and enjoyed playing tennis with his
    wife.
    3192       SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    But in October 2003, Salomaa fell ill with what he thought
    was a stomach flu that made him miss three days of work. He
    was never the same again. He returned to work, but was tired
    all of the time, and had difficulty concentrating. His supervi-
    sor noted that Salomaa “walked more slowly,” and co-
    workers asked her about Salomaa’s well-being. Not only did
    Salomaa no longer jog to work, he did not even walk to work.
    After work he was completely exhausted, and spent weekends
    in bed recovering.
    Salomaa went to Kaiser Permanente to find out what was
    wrong with him and get it cured. His complaint was grossly
    excessive fatigue, beginning when he had his “flu,” along
    with other symptoms, such as headache, insomnia, and exces-
    sive sensitivity to stimuli. His doctors went through a lengthy
    process of ruling out alternatives to chronic fatigue syndrome.
    Over the following months, Salomaa’s Kaiser Permanente
    physicians worked on a diagnosis. He had reported loss of
    libido, and a blood test showed low testosterone, but a subse-
    quent blood test was normal, so low testosterone was ruled
    out as an explanation. An MRI showed no brain abnormali-
    ties. The thyroid reading on his blood tests were normal.
    Heart failure might explain severe fatigue, and an echocardio-
    gram showed mild mitral regurgitation, but the examining
    cardiologist ruled out a heart problem as the cause of the
    fatigue.
    A Kaiser Permanente psychiatrist formed what she called
    a “working diagnosis” of “atypical depression.” The depres-
    sion was “atypical” in that Salomaa had no previous psychiat-
    ric history, could precisely identify the onset of his fatigue
    following his October 2003 flu, had no “precipitating stres-
    sors” that might have triggered the depression, and denied
    feeling depressed. The psychiatrist tried treating Salomaa with
    various anti-depressants and a counseling program. In July
    2004, Salomaa took medical leave, based on his doctor’s
    diagnosis of depression and anxiety. After several months, it
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY             3193
    was clear that the medication and counseling were not work-
    ing, so the physician who had made the working diagnosis of
    depression rejected the diagnosis.
    Salomaa’s condition got worse instead of better. Some
    days, getting up and getting dressed left him too exhausted to
    drive the two miles to his job, so he stayed home. When he
    did go to work, he could not do his job as well as he had been
    before his illness. His supervisor reported that on bad days he
    seemed confused, and she often insisted that he go home to
    rest. When he came home from work, he went straight to bed,
    even eating dinner there. In spite of his fatigue, Salomaa also
    had insomnia.
    A physician in the internal medicine department at Kaiser
    Permanente, Dr. Floyd Anderson, diagnosed chronic fatigue
    syndrome. He noted the ineffectiveness of various medica-
    tions that had been tried for other conditions that might
    explain the symptoms. He wrote on March 4, 2005 that “since
    beginning our Kaiser Permanente Chronic Fatigue/
    Fibromyalgia Clinic in 1992, Mr. Salomaa is one of the more
    severe patients that I have seen in the clinic as far as his
    energy level. He is probably the most sensitive patient I’ve
    seen in regard to sensitivity to sound. His memory has also
    markedly decreased secondary to his illness. Mr. Salomaa is
    totally disabled and would not be able to work even 30 min-
    utes per day on a daily basis.” The psychiatrist who had tenta-
    tively diagnosed depression wrote to the plan administrator
    concurring in Dr. Anderson’s diagnosis, and stating that Salo-
    maa had “never suffered from Major Depression though that
    was [her] working diagnosis for several months.”
    Salomaa applied to Honda’s ERISA plan administrator for
    long-term medical disability benefits.2 The claim manager
    2
    Under the terms of Honda Motor’s Long Term Disability Policy, an
    employee
    3194        SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    denied his claim on April 22, 2005. She wrote that Salomaa
    had no positive objective physical findings, the lack of objec-
    tive physical findings apparently forming the basis for the
    denial. She noted that Salomaa’s “thyroid, calcium, albumin,
    serum electrolytes, and CBC results were normal.” Contrary
    to her inference that Salomaa was healthy, the Kaiser Perma-
    nente physicians had used these normal results to rule out
    alternatives to chronic fatigue syndrome. She erred in some
    respects, suggesting a less than careful examination of Salo-
    maa’s medical record. For example, she wrote that he had “no
    fevers or weight loss,” but actually he had lost 14% of his
    body weight in six months according to the medical materials
    that had been submitted. She misunderstood the Kaiser Per-
    manente evaluation that “you never had major depression” as
    meaning that “your depression has improved.” In the denial
    letter, she relied on review by “our medical department,” by
    which she meant that one physician had read Salomaa’s medi-
    cal file and written his opinion.
    The denial had invited supplementation within thirty days,
    so Dr. Anderson provided more details. The disability claim
    manager had provided a form for Salomaa’s physician to use
    to check off physical abilities, and Dr. Anderson checked “oc-
    casionally,” the lowest level allowed on the form, for sitting,
    standing, walking, grasping, and carrying objects. He wrote a
    letter as well, stating that Salomaa had severe fatigue, and was
    “only able to do paperwork for a few minutes and then is very
    fatigued.” Dr. Anderson explained in his letter that patients
    with chronic fatigue syndrome have good days and bad days,
    is considered Disabled if, solely because of Injury or Sickness, he
    or she is:
    1.   unable to perform the material duties of his or her Regular
    Occupation; and
    2.   unable to earn 80% of more of his or her Index Covered
    Earnings from working his or her Regular Occupation.
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY             3195
    and that on a good day the patient might be able to perform
    the activities listed on the form for an hour or two, but then
    end up in bed for several days due to overexertion. In Salo-
    maa’s case, Dr. Anderson’s letter opined that “Salomaa would
    not be able to work perhaps 30 minutes to one hour” and that,
    “[e]ven this, if he happened to overexert, would leave him
    exhausted.” “Since beginning our clinic here in 1992, Mr.
    Salomaa is one of the more severe cases I have seen” and that
    Salomaa “definitely could not work.” He pointed out to the
    disability claim manager that “laboratory tests are always nor-
    mal and there is no test that is available at the present time for
    chronic fatigue syndrome.” The plan administrator’s review-
    ing physician called Dr. Anderson on the phone, and Dr.
    Anderson reminded him that Salomaa had chronic fatigue
    syndrome, and that Salomaa’s lack of positive laboratory
    findings was consistent with that diagnosis.
    The disability claim manager sent out a final denial on May
    20, 2005. She again recited the absence of positive laboratory
    results or physical findings, again made the error on weight
    loss and depression, and noted that Salomaa’s daily activities
    exceeded Dr. Anderson’s estimations. She pointed out that his
    daily journals had showed him driving a half-hour to an hour
    to Home Depot and an hour to pick up his children at school,
    both taking longer than the half-hour that his doctor said was
    the most he could work.
    Dr. Anderson responded that since Salomaa’s last two vis-
    its in May and June, he thought Salomaa’s condition had
    markedly deteriorated, to where he could no longer work even
    five minutes per day. Responding to the disability claim man-
    ager’s argument that Salomaa had “no physical findings to
    support chronic fatigue syndrome,” he wrote that in his expe-
    rience, “most patients’ symptoms and physical findings mani-
    fest when they initially develop the viral-type illness,” as
    Salomaa’s had. He pointed out that usually there were no
    physical findings for chronic fatigue syndrome except that the
    patient looked fatigued, just as there were no physical symp-
    3196        SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    toms for migraine headache except that the patient would
    appear to be in pain.
    Rebutting the plan administrator’s contention, Dr. Ander-
    son wrote that on his long trip to Home Depot, Salomaa had
    gone with his brother-in-law, “and was too fatigued to go into
    Home Depot and consequently sat in the car the entire time.”
    He had picked up his children at school only twice, in Janu-
    ary, and had been unable to do since. Refuting the administra-
    tor’s claim of “no appearance of physical findings,” Dr.
    Anderson wrote that had been “shocked” at Salomaa’s decline
    from 163 to 140 pounds, perhaps because he was too fatigued
    to come to the table for breakfast or lunch and could only sit
    for five or ten minutes at dinner. Salomaa, Dr. Anderson
    wrote, was spending most of his time in bed, and at his last
    visit in June, Salomaa had been unable to sit up on the exam-
    ining table without assistance and “appeared cachectic
    [cachexia is severe generalized weakness, malnutrition and
    emaciation3] and weak.”
    The disability claim manager wrote that Dr. Anderson’s let-
    ter was unpersuasive because he had not mentioned various
    matters (many of which had not troubled the disability claim
    manager in earlier correspondence), and in a telephone con-
    versation with someone he had said that Salomaa’s limitations
    were based on what Salomaa had said:
    Dr. Anderson’s letter dated June 13, 2005 made no
    specific mention of substantial impairment of cogni-
    tive function, sore throat, current infection, tender
    lymph nodes, specific myalgia or arthralgia, or new
    onset of headache or post-exertion fatigue. There
    were no rational specific limitations of physical
    functional capacity such as the number of hours you
    are able to stand or the maximum amount of weight
    you are able to lift or carry. Dr. Anderson noted that
    3
    Blakiston’s Gould Medical Dictionary 235 (3d ed. 1972).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY             3197
    you looked tired and reported weight loss but the
    reason behind the weight loss and its relation to spe-
    cific physical functional capacity is unknown.
    Furthermore, there was no mention of new positive
    lab findings that may be supportive of the etiology
    of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. There is no indication
    that you are on an ongoing specific treatment pro-
    gram including pharmacological stimulants or other
    measures for reported lack of energy. In a telephone
    conversation with Dr. Anderson on May 19, 2005,
    he stated that your limitations of physical functional
    capacity were based entirely upon self report. Under
    generally accepted medical standards one would not
    expect to see this constellation of findings in a
    severe case of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome that is
    incapacitating in terms of pain or fatigue.
    Also during July, Salomaa’s short term disability benefits
    expired. He could no longer afford his house, so his family
    sold it and moved from Glendale, California to less expensive
    Arkansas. He could not help with the move because he was
    too exhausted. Nor was he strong enough to manage flying,
    so he lay in the backseat of a car while his brother-in-law
    drove.
    After the May 20, 2005 final denial of disability benefits,
    Salomaa appealed. His attorney made a written request for
    Salomaa’s entire file, including correspondence with anyone
    the plan consulted with regard to the claim. He also asked a
    number of questions, such as what “positive lab findings” the
    plan administrator thought might be relevant to the chronic
    fatigue syndrome diagnosis, it being a diagnosis ordinarily
    given when there are no positive laboratory findings despite
    chronic fatigue symptoms. Salomaa’s attorney also offered in
    his letter to submit Salomaa for an examination by the disabil-
    ity plan’s selected physicians and for such laboratory tests as
    the plan wished to have performed.
    3198       SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    The plan did not respond to Salomaa’s attorney’s letter.
    Nor did the plan ever have any physician of its choosing
    examine Salomaa. When Salomaa’s attorney wrote again, the
    disability claim manager told him that the plan had said all it
    was going to say, Salomaa’s claim was denied, and that Salo-
    maa had not appealed.
    Salomaa’s attorney also provided the plan with additional
    documentary evidence of Salomaa’s condition. Salomaa’s
    boss at Honda wrote that he was one of the few people in
    southern California to walk or jog to work, and had been a
    superb employee until he got sick, and that those at Honda
    aware of his difficulty getting his disability benefits were “ap-
    palled.” His brother-in-law wrote that he got to know Salomaa
    when they were students at Harvard and MIT, that Salomaa
    had been very energetic and intelligent, but that now he had
    “profound” apparent changes. For example, “any sentence
    containing a sequence of ideas was too difficult for him to
    comprehend.” While helping out with chores Salomaa had
    become unable to do, the brother-in-law observed that Salo-
    maa had lost the “ability to plan” and the stamina for simple
    household tasks and even for conversation. He could do well
    for a few minutes, but then collapsed. “I drove Sam and their
    daughter from Los Angeles to Arkansas. For the entire trip
    Sam was either fully or partially reclined in the back of their
    Honda Element. . . . When stopping to eat, Sam could not
    manage to eat in the restaurant. I would go in to order the
    food, and then bring it to Sam to eat in the car.”
    Salomaa’s attorney also forwarded a neuropsychological
    evaluation from New Jersey Medical School. Two neuropsy-
    chologists reported on a battery of intelligence and other tests
    they had administered. They included a standard test for
    malingering, which showed “a valid profile and that he was
    putting forth adequate effort.” His intelligence tested as “aver-
    age,” a full scale IQ of 108 which is fine for many people but
    shockingly low for a Harvard man with a career in computers.
    He “performed in the impaired range” when tasks became
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                  3199
    more difficult and distractors were introduced. The neuropsy-
    chologists’ conclusion was that there was no evidence of psy-
    chiatric illness, but a “neuropsychological profile consistent
    with reports in the literature that identify slowed processing
    speed and decreased mental efficiency (ability to process mul-
    tiple pieces of information at one time) as the hallmark cogni-
    tive symptoms of [chronic fatigue syndrome].”
    The director of the New Jersey Medical School Chronic
    Fatigue Syndrome/Fibromyalgia Center wrote after personally
    examining Salomaa that Salomaa “has underlying chronic
    fatigue syndrome superimposed on an extreme stress sensitiv-
    ity. . . . In fact, I think he is one of the most disabled individu-
    als I have seen in over 15 years of practice. I do not believe
    this patient can work, even on a part-time basis. Simple cogni-
    tive tasks produce a dramatic worsening of his entire symp-
    tom complex.” The dramatic symptom worsening from even
    minimal exertion was characteristic of chronic fatigue syn-
    drome and was the thing disabling Salomaa.
    Meanwhile, Salomaa had applied to the Social Security
    Administration for disability benefits. The Social Security
    Administration found that Salomaa was completely disabled
    and unable to perform any occupation in the national econ-
    omy, and awarded benefits. In January 2006, Salomaa’s law-
    yer forwarded a copy of the SSI award to the plan.
    But on February 14, 2006, the appeals claim manager for
    CIGNA Group Insurance, the plan administrator, wrote Salo-
    maa’s lawyer that on appeal CIGNA affirmed its previous
    denial. The plan administrator’s letter stated that the medical
    evidence had to show that Salomaa was unable to perform his
    occupation from July 24, 2004 to February 20, 2005, and it
    did not. The plan defines “disability” as inability, because of
    injury or sickness, to perform, or earn 80% as much from, his
    regular occupation.4 The “elimination period” screens out
    4
    The definition, in full, of disability under the plan is:
    The Employee is considered Disabled if, solely because of Injury
    3200           SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    temporary disabilities by requiring a continuous specified
    period of disability.5 CIGNA’s denial letter quoted from a file
    review it had obtained from its own consulting physician.
    This consulting physician’s report, like the previous one, was
    not provided to Salomaa’s lawyer.
    Salomaa sued the plan in district court, claiming wrongful
    denial of benefits.6 The district court applied an abuse of dis-
    cretion standard, taking into consideration the plan’s conflict
    of interest, and upheld the plan administrator’s denial of bene-
    fits. The district court emphasized the degree to which Salo-
    maa’s diagnosis depended on his own symptom reports
    or Sickness, he or she is:
    1. unable to perform the material duties of his or her Regular
    Occupation; and
    2. unable to earn 80% or more of his or her Indexed Earnings
    from working in his or her Regular Occupation.
    After Disability Benefits have been payable for 24 months, the
    Employee is considered Disabled if, solely due to Injury or Sick-
    ness, he or she is:
    1. unable to perform the material duties of any occupation for
    which he or she is, or may reasonable become, qualified based on
    education, training or experience; and
    2. unable to earn 80% or more of his or her Indexed Earnings.
    5
    It is derived from the policy language: “The Elimination Period is the
    period of time an Employee must be continuously Disabled before Dis-
    ability Benefits are payable. The Elimination Period is shown in the
    Schedule of Benefits.” In this case, the Elimination Period was 210 days,
    from July 24, 2004 through February 20, 2005.
    6
    After Salomaa sued, Honda’s plan administrator surreptitiously video-
    taped Salomaa’s home and Salomaa, when he left his house, in July and
    November 2006, and filed a DVD with the district court. Honda’s lawyer
    requested the district court to consider the tapes if and only if the court
    reviewed de novo. Salomaa objected to considering the video, and the dis-
    trict court decided that since it reviewed for abuse of discretion and not
    de novo, the video made no difference and was not considered for pur-
    poses of deciding whether Salomaa was disabled.
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                        3201
    because of the lack of objective laboratory or other findings,
    that the plan had taken the required steps of considering Salo-
    maa’s evidence and consulting qualified experts, and even
    with the abuse of discretion standard modified on account of
    the insurer’s conflict of interests, that “ ‘abuse’ is still a pow-
    erful word.”
    Salomaa appeals.
    II.    Analysis.
    A.     Standard of Review.
    We held in Kearney v. Standard Insurance Co.7 that by
    default, review of denial of ERISA benefits is de novo, and
    that to obtain the more lenient abuse of discretion standard of
    review, a plan must unambiguously so provide. The plan in
    this case does so. It expressly and unambiguously gives the
    administrator discretion to determine eligibility.8 Thus, under
    7
    
    175 F.3d 1084
    , 1088-90 (9th Cir. 1999).
    8
    Section 4.2 states that “The Plan Administrator shall have all powers
    and duties necessary to fulfill its responsibilities, including . . . [t]o inter-
    pret the Plan as it, in its sole discretion, determines to be appropriate; . . .
    [and t]o determine all questions relating to the eligibility of persons to par-
    ticipate or receive benefits . . . .” Section 4.6(a) states that “The Plan
    Administrator is responsible for the general administration and manage-
    ment of the Plan and shall have all powers and duties necessary to fulfill
    its responsibilities, including, but not limited to, the discretion to interpret
    and apply the Plan and to determine all questions relating to eligibility for
    benefits. The Plan shall be interpreted in accordance with its terms and
    their intended meanings. However, the Plan Administrator and all Plan
    fiduciaries shall have the discretion to interpret or construe ambiguous,
    unclear, or implied (but omitted) terms in any fashion they deem to be
    appropriate in their sole and exclusive judgment, and to make any findings
    of fact needed in the administration of the Plan. The validity of any such
    interpretation, construction, decision, or finding of fact shall not be given
    de novo review if challenged in court, by arbitration, or in any other
    forum, and shall be upheld unless clearly arbitrary or capricious.”
    3202         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,9 we review the admin-
    istrator’s decision for abuse of discretion, rather than de novo.
    We have gradually refined and restated our standard of
    review. In Horan v. Kaiser Steel Retirement Plan,10 applied in
    Jordan v. Northrop Grumman Corp. Welfare Benefit Plan11
    and our more recent decision in Sznewajs v. U.S. Bancorp,12
    we held that “[a] decision is not arbitrary unless it is ‘not
    grounded on any reasonable basis.’ ”13 This “any reasonable
    basis” test is no longer good law.
    [1] The administrator of the plan before us has a conflict
    of interest, as the term is used in ERISA cases, because the
    insurer acts as both funding source and administrator.14 In our
    en banc decision in Abatie v. Alta Health, we held that if a
    plan gives discretion to an administrator operating under a
    conflict of interest, the “conflict must be weighed as a factor
    in determining whether there is an abuse of discretion.”15 Pro-
    cedural errors by the administrator are also “weighed in
    deciding whether the administrator’s decision was an abuse of
    discretion.”16 We held in Saffon v. Wells Fargo & Company
    Long Term Disability Plan17 that we apply different levels of
    skepticism on account of conflicts of interest, depending on
    various factors such as inconsistent reasons for denial or evi-
    dence of malice. We held that “when reviewing a discretion-
    9
    
    489 U.S. 101
    , 115 (1988); Standard Ins. Co. v. Morrison, 
    584 F.3d 837
    , 840 (9th Cir. 2009).
    10
    
    947 F.2d 1412
     (9th Cir. 1991).
    11
    
    370 F.3d 869
     (9th Cir. 2004), overruled on other grounds by Abatie
    v. Alta Health & Life Ins. Co., 
    458 F.3d 955
    , 969 (9th Cir. 2006).
    12
    
    572 F.3d 727
     (9th Cir. 2009).
    13
    Horan v. Kaiser Steel Retirement Plan, 
    947 F.2d 1412
    , 1417 (9th Cir.
    1991) (citation omitted).
    14
    Abatie, 
    458 F.3d at 965
    .
    15
    
    458 F.3d at 965
    .
    16
    
    Id. at 972
    .
    17
    
    522 F.3d 863
    , 868-69 (9th Cir. 2008).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY             3203
    ary denial of benefits by a plan administrator who is subject
    to a conflict of interest, we must determine the extent to
    which the conflict influenced the administrator’s decision and
    discount to that extent the deference we accord the adminis-
    trator’s decision.”18
    Subsequently, the Supreme Court issued its own refine-
    ment, superseding ours to the extent that there is any differ-
    ence. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Glenn holds that
    where “the entity that administers the plan, such as an
    employer or an insurance company, both determines whether
    an employee is eligible for benefits and pays benefits out of
    its own pocket . . . this dual role creates a conflict of interest;
    that a reviewing court should consider that conflict as a factor
    in determining whether the plan administrator has abused its
    discretion in denying benefits; and that the significance of the
    factor will depend upon the circumstances of the particular
    case.”19 Under Glenn, the conflict of interest must be
    “weighed as a factor” but does not convert abuse of discretion
    review into de novo review. The weight given the factor varies.20
    The Court emphasized that its “elucidation of Firestone’s
    standard does not consist of a detailed set of instructions” and,
    importing language from the standard of review of adminis-
    trative agency decisions, “there ‘are no talismanic words that
    can avoid the process of judgment.’ ”21
    [2] The Supreme Court further refined the standard of
    review in its decision this year in Conkright v. Frommert,
    holding that “a single honest mistake in plan interpretation”
    administration does not deprive the plan of the abuse of dis-
    cretion standard or justify de novo review for subsequent
    related interpretations.22 The Court emphasized that under
    18
    
    Id. at 868
    .
    19
    
    554 U.S. 105
    , ___, 
    128 S. Ct. 2343
    , 2346 (2008).
    20
    Id. at 2351.
    21
    Id. at 2352 (citation omitted).
    22
    
    130 S. Ct. 1640
    , 1644 (2010).
    3204         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    Glenn, “a deferential standard of review remains appropriate
    even in the face of a conflict.”23 Conkright noted, though, that
    “[a]pplying a deferential standard of review does not mean
    that the plan administrator will prevail on the merits.”24 What
    deference means is that the plan administrator’s interpretation
    of the plan “ ‘will not be disturbed if reasonable.’ ”25
    It is much easier to state the words of the formula for the
    standard of review than to say what the formula means in
    practice. We now know that the administrator’s decision can-
    not be disturbed if it is reasonable. And we know that even
    an unqualified abuse of discretion standard of review does not
    mean that the administrator necessarily prevails on the merits,
    because “no talismanic words . . . can avoid the process of
    judgment.” We know that we are supposed to “weigh” a con-
    flict of interest in deciding how skeptical to be of the adminis-
    trator’s decision, according varying weight to it depending on
    other factors, but that is a hard standard to apply. “Weighing”
    is a metaphor. Real weighing is done with a scale. For fine
    work one may gradually add two gram brass weights on one
    side of the scale, or use the one gram slider, until the trays on
    both sides are level. Because this connotes careful, precise,
    scientifically accurate results, it is a comforting metaphor for
    judicial work. But unlike weighing potassium bromide and
    potassium ferricyanide in a traditional darkroom, our “weigh-
    ing” is done without a scale, without the little brass weights,
    and without a substance to weigh that has any weighable
    mass.
    Nor is it easy to decide how many metaphorical grams
    should go on the metaphorical scale when we pretend to
    weigh conflicts of interest. The misleading precision of the
    metaphor is indeed a serious concern, because of the special
    protection the statute gives to insurance companies against
    23
    
    Id. at 1646
    .
    24
    
    Id. at 1651
    .
    25
    
    Id.
     (citation and quotation omitted).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                  3205
    claims. An insurance company that approaches claims-
    handling unfairly in an ERISA plan may have an incentive to
    be more unfair than, say, a life insurer or auto-liability
    insurer, because it cannot be subjected to the punitive dam-
    ages for bad faith that are the bogeymen of insurance compa-
    nies in those fields.26 Usually the record does not disclose an
    insurance company’s claims-handling history in other cases or
    its internal directives to claims managers about how to evalu-
    ate claims. Thus we are ordinarily ignorant of much of what
    we are supposed to “weigh.” For all we know, the claims
    administrator evaluating Salomaa’s claim would be voted for
    promotion based on the percentage of claims rejected, or had
    formed a personal opinion (or her boss had) that all chronic
    fatigue syndrome claims were fraudulent.
    Where, as in this case, the plan gives the administrator dis-
    cretion, and the administrator has a conflict of interest, we are
    to judge its decision to deny benefits to evaluate whether it is
    reasonable. Reasonableness does not mean that we would
    make the same decision. We must judge the reasonableness of
    the plan administrator skeptically where, as here, the adminis-
    trator has a conflict of interests. Even without the special
    skepticism we are to apply in cases of conflict of interest, def-
    erence to the plan administrator’s judgment does not mean
    that the plan prevails. “Deference” is not a “talismanic
    word[ ] that can avoid the process of judgment.”27 The con-
    flict of interest requires additional skepticism because the plan
    acts as judge in its own cause.
    [3] The meaning of “abuse of discretion” is elucidated in
    our en banc decision in United States v. Hinkson.28 There we
    held that the test for abuse of discretion in a factual determi-
    nation (as opposed to legal error) is whether “we are left with
    a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been com-
    26
    Cf. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 
    538 U.S. 408
     (2003).
    27
    Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2352
    .
    28
    
    585 F.3d 1247
     (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc).
    3206        SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    mitted,” and we may not merely substitute our view for that
    of the fact finder.29 To do so, we consider whether application
    of a correct legal standard was “(1) illogical, (2) implausible,
    or (3) without support in inferences that may be drawn from
    the facts in the record.”30 That standard makes sense in the
    ERISA context, so we apply it, with the qualification that a
    higher degree of skepticism is appropriate where the adminis-
    trator has a conflict of interest.
    B.     Reasonableness of the denial.
    In this case, the plan abused its discretion. Its decision was
    illogical, implausible, and without support in inferences that
    could reasonably be drawn from facts in the record, because:
    (1) every doctor who personally examined Salomaa con-
    cluded that he was disabled; (2) the plan administrator
    demanded objective tests to establish the existence of a condi-
    tion for which there are no objective tests; (3) the administra-
    tor failed to consider the Social Security disability award; (4)
    the reasons for denial shifted as they were refuted, were
    largely unsupported by the medical file, and only the denial
    stayed constant; and (5) the plan administrator failed to
    engage in the required “meaningful dialogue”31 with Salomaa.
    [4] At least four physicians examined Salomaa personally,
    as well as two psychologists who personally administered
    tests of Salomaa’s cognitive processing and a test to rule out
    malingering. Every one of them concluded, often in dramatic
    language, that Salomaa was totally disabled by his physical
    condition. Not a single physician who actually examined
    Salomaa concluded otherwise. The only documents with an
    “M.D.” on the signature line concluding that he was not dis-
    abled were by the physicians the insurance company paid to
    29
    
    Id. at 1262
     (citation and quotation omitted).
    30
    
    Id.
     (citation and quotation omitted).
    31
    Booton v. Lockheed Med. Ben. Plan, 
    110 F.3d 1461
    , 1463 (9th Cir.
    1997).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY           3207
    review his file. They never saw Salomaa. Salomaa’s lawyer
    wrote to the plan, offering to make Salomaa available for
    examination by its physicians. The administrator did not even
    respond to this offer. Thus the plan not only did not have its
    physicians examine Salomaa, but also rejected the opportunity
    to do so. An insurance company may choose to avoid an inde-
    pendent medical examination because of the risk that the phy-
    sicians it employs may conclude that the claimant is entitled
    to benefits. The skepticism we are required to apply because
    of the plan’s conflict of interests requires us to consider this
    possibility in this case. The medical record by physicians who
    actually examined Salomaa is entirely one sided in favor of
    Salomaa’s claim. The plan rejected its opportunity to see if
    there was another side.
    The plan’s reasons for denial shifted, as old reasons, proved
    erroneous, were replaced by new ones. The initial denial
    emphasized that there were “no positive physical findings.” It
    mistakenly said that there was no weight loss, even though
    Salomaa had lost 14% of his body weight over a six-month
    period. Expanding upon the “no physical findings” reason, the
    denial said that “thyroid, calcium, albumin, serum electrolytes
    and CBC results are normal.” Likewise the final denial
    emphasized Salomaa’s normal objective findings, and that
    there was “no underlying condition, such as cancer or HIV
    disease” to explain his fatigue or weight loss. These reasons
    were illogical, because such objective measures as blood tests
    are used to rule out alternative diseases, not to establish the
    existence of chronic fatigue syndrome.
    [5] There is no blood test or other objective laboratory test
    for chronic fatigue syndrome. As we said in Friedrich v. Intel
    Corp., the condition “does not have a generally accepted ‘dip-
    stick’ test” and “[t]he standard diagnosis technique for
    [chronic fatigue syndrome] includes testing, comparing symp-
    toms to a detailed Centers for Disease Control list of symp-
    toms, excluding other possible disorders, and reviewing
    3208         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    thoroughly the patient’s medical history.”32 Salomaa’s physi-
    cians explained this to the plan administrator, but were evi-
    dently ignored, as was the Center for Disease Control
    definition provided to the administrator:
    The chronic fatigue syndrome is a clinically defined
    condition (1-4) characterized by severe disabling
    fatigue and a combination of symptoms that promi-
    nently features self-reported impairments in concen-
    tration and short-term memory, sleep disturbances,
    and musculoskeletal pain. Diagnosis of the chronic
    fatigue syndrome can be made only after alternative
    medical and psychiatric causes of chronic fatiguing
    illness have been excluded. No pathognomonic signs
    or diagnostic tests for this condition have been vali-
    dated in scientific studies (5-7); moreover no defini-
    tive treatments for it exist (8).
    The plan administrator issued a “Coverage Position” paper for
    chronic fatigue syndrome acknowledging that there are no
    objective tests for it, and adopting the Center for Disease
    Control criteria:
    The multiple symptoms of [chronic fatigue syn-
    drome], which are seen in numerous other condi-
    tions, make it a difficult condition to diagnose.
    Therefore, diagnosis is made by exclusion of other
    conditions.
    ...
    Despite extensive research, the etiology of [chronic
    fatigue syndrome] is unknown.
    ...
    32
    Friedrich v. Intel Corp., 
    181 F.3d 1105
    , 1112 (9th Cir. 1999).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                 3209
    In order to receive a diagnosis of [chronic fatigue
    syndrome], a patient must meet the following two
    criteria:
    •   The patient must have clinically evaluated, unex-
    plained persistent or relapsing chronic fatigue
    that is of new or definite onset (i.e., not lifelong),
    is not the result of ongoing exertion, is not sub-
    stantially alleviated by rest, and results in sub-
    stantial reduction in previous levels of
    occupational, educational, social, or personal
    activities.
    •   The patient must have concurrent occurrence of
    four or more of the following symptoms: substan-
    tial impairment in short-term memory or concen-
    tration; sore throat; tender lymph nodes; muscle
    pain; multi-joint pain without swelling or red-
    ness; headaches of a new type, pattern, or sever-
    ity; unrefreshing sleep; and post-exertional
    malaise lasting more than 24 hours. These symp-
    toms must have persisted or recurred during six
    or more consecutive months of illness and must
    not have predated the fatigue.
    There are no specific diagnostic studies (i.e., labora-
    tory, radiography, psychosomatic or other testing)
    or physical findings that are specific to the diagnosis
    of [chronic fatigue syndrome]. Diagnosis of this syn-
    drome is by exclusion of other underlying diseases.
    (emphasis added)
    [6] Salomaa’s medical documentation established that he
    met the criteria specified by the Center for Disease Control
    and CIGNA’s own position paper. The plan administrator
    never claimed that he did not. In its brief, the plan argues not
    that Salomaa failed to meet CIGNA’s diagnostic criteria, but
    that the criteria should be ignored, because the “Coverage
    3210         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    Position” was drafted by CIGNA Health Care, a “wholly dif-
    ferent entity” from Life Insurance Company of North Amer-
    ica, and was issued after the final denial. The first reason is
    frivolous, because a different part of the brief concedes that
    Life Insurance Company of North America is a wholly owned
    subsidiary of CIGNA, and the plan administrator’s denials are
    all written on CIGNA stationary, stating that they come from
    “CIGNA Disability Management Solutions.” As for timing,
    the parties were still engaged in a dialogue after the final
    denial, and the CIGNA position is nothing new, just a restate-
    ment of the previously issued Center for Disease Control
    diagnostic criteria. As we said in dicta in a fibromyalgia case,
    “if the administrator had said, ‘we will not accept fibromyal-
    gia as a diagnosis unless you present objective evidence of it
    such as positive findings on x-rays,’ she would have been
    demanding what cannot exist . . . .”33 We now establish as
    holding what was then dicta, that conditioning an award on
    the existence of evidence that cannot exist is arbitrary and
    capricious.
    [7] The plan’s reasons for denial were shifting and incon-
    sistent as well as illogical. The initial denial says that there
    were “no specific serial descriptions of appearance or physical
    signs consistent with chronic fatigue syndrome,” but the final
    denial omits any mention of physicians’ observations, because
    the physicians’ letters to CIGNA are replete with dramatic
    descriptions of their observations of Salomaa’s appearance
    and physical condition. About the only thing that stays the
    same from the initial denial to the final denial is the irrelevant
    emphasis on absence of objective evidence such as blood
    tests.
    One can understand the frustration of disability plan admin-
    istrators with claims based on such diseases as chronic fatigue
    33
    Jordan v. Northrop Grumman Corp. Welfare Benefit Plan, 
    370 F.3d 869
    , 877 (9th Cir. 2004), overruled in part on other grounds by Abatie v.
    Alta Health & Life Ins. Co., 
    458 F.3d 955
    , 969 (9th Cir. 2006).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                   3211
    syndrome and fibromyalgia. Absence of objective proof
    through x-rays or blood tests of the existence or nonexistence
    of the disease creates a risk of false claims. Claimants have
    an incentive to claim symptoms of a disease they do not have
    in order to obtain undeserved disability benefits. But the
    claimants are not the only ones with an incentive to cheat. The
    plan with a conflict of interests also has a financial incentive
    to cheat. Failing to pay out money owed based on a false
    statement of reasons for denying is cheating, every bit as
    much as making a false claim. The plan has no exception to
    coverage for chronic fatigue syndrome, so CIGNA has taken
    on the risk of false claims for this difficult to diagnose condi-
    tion. Many medical conditions depend for their diagnosis on
    patient reports of pain or other symptoms, and some cannot
    be objectively established until autopsy. In neither case can a
    disability insurer condition coverage on proof by objective
    indicators such as blood tests where the condition is recog-
    nized yet no such proof is possible.
    [8] The Social Security Administration was persuaded that
    Salomaa was indeed unable to work at any job in the national
    economy, and awarded disability benefits to him. Its award
    was provided to the plan administrator. Amazingly, the plan’s
    initial and final denial letters do not even mention the Social
    Security award. Social Security disability awards do not bind
    plan administrators,34 but they are evidence of disability. Evi-
    dence of a Social Security award of disability benefits is of
    sufficient significance that failure to address it offers support
    that the plan administrator’s denial was arbitrary, an abuse of
    discretion.35 Weighty evidence may ultimately be unpersua-
    sive, but it cannot be ignored.
    34
    Montour v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 
    588 F.3d 623
    , 635 (9th Cir.
    2009).
    35
    
    Id.
     (“While ERISA plan administrators are not bound by the SSA’s
    determination, complete disregard for a contrary conclusion without so
    much as an explanation raises questions about whether an adverse benefits
    determination was ‘the product of a principled and deliberative reasoning
    process.’ In fact, not distinguishing the SSA’s contrary conclusion may
    indicate a failure to consider relevant evidence.” (internal quotations and
    citations omitted).).
    3212         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    [9] The continual shifting of the plan’s grounds for denial
    also suggest abuse of discretion. The initial denial gave
    absence of weight loss as a reason. The final denial gave
    absence of cancer or HIV disease as a reason to explain the
    previously ignored 14% weight loss. The initial denial says
    “no major depression” and “your depression has improved,”
    the final denial does not mention depression (perhaps because
    ruling out depression by administering serotonin reuptake
    inhibitors without effect was among the grounds for the
    chronic fatigue syndrome diagnosis). The initial denial notes
    Salomaa’s physician’s report of “decreased memory” but
    absence of “formal mental status tests to quantify any specific
    abnormalities of cognitive functioning,” the final denial says
    that even though the specific cognitive testing “shows some
    abnormalities, it does not support that those deficits were
    present during the elimination period” (even though, in com-
    bination with the consistent symptom reports and observa-
    tions of others during the elimination period, the tests did
    indeed tend to show that the deficits were present throughout
    the elimination period).
    [10] The plan also failed to conform to the claims proce-
    dure required by statute and regulation. The statute entitles the
    claimant to “full and fair” review of a denial.36 The regula-
    tions contain many requirements that the plan failed to meet,
    among them that it explain, upon denial, any “additional
    information needed,”37 and that it give the claimant “reason-
    able access to, and copies of all, documents, records, and
    other information relevant to the claimant’s claim for bene-
    fits.”38 The review was not “fair,” as the statute requires,
    because the plan did not give Salomaa and his attorney and
    physicians access to the two medical reports of its own physi-
    cians upon which it relied, among other reasons. In addition,
    the plan administrator denied the claim largely on account of
    36
    
    29 U.S.C. § 1133
    .
    37
    
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (f)(3).
    38
    
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (h)(2)(iii).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                   3213
    absence of objective medical evidence, yet failed to tell Salo-
    maa what medical evidence it wanted. Where it did tell him,
    such as “no formal clinical mental status tests,” Salomaa pro-
    vided the evidence. The initial denial said he should provide
    “x-rays, CT, MRI reports, etc. that support your physician’s
    assessment,” but did not tell him what x-rays etc. it wanted.
    The request was of course absurd, since x-rays, computerized
    tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging are not used to
    diagnose chronic fatigue syndrome. A layman might be
    fooled by this statement of reasons into thinking he left some-
    thing relevant out of his claim package, but fooling someone
    unfamiliar with the medical terms with irrelevant medical
    mumbo jumbo violates the statutory duty to write a denial “in
    a manner calculated to be understood by the claimant.”39
    [11] The plan evidently based its denial in large part on
    review of Salomaa’s file by two physicians, one for the first
    denial, another for the final denial. They both wrote their
    appraisals for the plan administrator. Yet the plan failed to
    furnish their letters to Salomaa or his lawyer. The regulation,
    quoted above, requires an ERISA plan to furnish “all docu-
    ments, records, and other information relevant for benefits to
    the claimant.”40 A physician’s evaluation provided to the plan
    administrator falls squarely within this disclosure requirement.41
    The disclosure requirement serves the purpose of facilitating
    what the regulation also requires, providing claimants “the
    opportunity to submit written comments, documents, records,
    and other information relating to the claim for benefits.”42 Had
    the plan met its duty of providing copies of its physicians’
    39
    See Saffon v. Wells Fargo & Company Long Term Disability Plan,
    
    522 F.3d 863
    , 870 (9th Cir. 2008) (citation and quotation omitted).
    40
    
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (h)(2)(iii).
    41
    See Abram v. Cargil, Inc., 
    395 F.3d 882
    , 886 (8th Cir. 2005) (plan did
    not conduct “full and fair review” of where claimant was not provided
    access to doctor’s report that served as the basis for the plan’s denial of
    benefits until after the plan had made its final decision)
    42
    
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (h)(2)(ii).
    3214        SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    evaluations, then Salomaa’s treating physicians could have
    provided such comments and performed such additional
    examinations and tests as might be appropriate. By denying
    Salomaa the disclosure and fair opportunity for comment, the
    plan denied him the statutory obligation of a fair review pro-
    cedure.
    The administrator’s procedural violations are similar to
    those in Saffon v. Wells Fargo & Company Long Term Dis-
    ability Plan43 and Boonton v. Lockheed Medical Benefit Plan.44
    There, as here, the administrator did not provide material suf-
    ficient to meet the requirement of “meaningful dialogue.” We
    held in those cases, where the denials were based on absence
    of some sort of medical evidence or explanation, that the
    administrator was obligated to say in plain language what
    additional evidence it needed and what questions it needed
    answered in time so that the additional material could be pro-
    vided. An administrator does not do its duty under the statute
    and regulations by saying merely “we are not persuaded” or
    “your evidence is insufficient.” Nor does it do its duty by
    elaborating upon its negative answer with meaningless medi-
    cal mumbo jumbo. In this case, the skeptical look required by
    us in a case of a conflicted administrator requires us to con-
    clude that the administrator acted arbitrarily and capriciously,
    both procedurally and substantively, thereby abusing its dis-
    cretion in the denial of Salomaa’s claim.
    III.   Conclusion.
    [12] The plan violated its procedural obligations and vio-
    lated its substantive obligation by abusing its discretion and
    judging the disability claim arbitrarily and capriciously. Our
    skepticism of its approach is heightened because of its con-
    flict of interests. Where the plan administrator has a conflict
    of interests, review for abuse of discretion is not as deferential
    43
    
    522 F.3d 863
     (9th Cir. 2008).
    44
    
    110 F.3d 1461
     (9th Cir. 1997).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY            3215
    as abuse of discretion review of district court or administra-
    tive agency decisions. On the record it had, the plan was obli-
    gated to award benefits. Accordingly, we REVERSE and
    REMAND with instructions to direct an award of benefits.
    HALL, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Samuel Salomaa appeals the district court’s decision
    affirming the administrative denial of his ERISA plan disabil-
    ity benefits for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. The majority
    holds that the plan abused its discretion; I disagree. Therefore,
    I respectfully dissent.
    I.
    I readily agree with the majority that the standard of review
    applied to the plan’s denial is abuse of discretion with some
    degree of skepticism. Opinion at 3205-06. The abuse of dis-
    cretion standard is typically a deferential one, see, e.g., Conk-
    right v. Frommert, 
    130 S. Ct. 1640
    , 1646 (2010), but this
    deference is often muted when an ERISA plan administrator
    both administers and funds its plan. See Saffon v. Wells Fargo
    & Co. Long Term Disability Plan, 
    522 F.3d 863
    , 868 (9th Cir.
    2008). Although this standard’s dualism between skepticism
    and deference may seem strange, it is the proper standard and
    must be applied carefully. Suffice to say, as the majority aptly
    notes, we evaluate the plan’s denial for reasonableness. Opin-
    ion at 3205.
    But it is in this evaluation where I depart from my col-
    leagues. The majority highlights several points in support of
    its holding that the plan abused its discretion. I address each
    in turn.
    3216       SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    II.
    A.
    The majority first draws attention to the fact that the doc-
    tors who personally examined Salomaa found that he was dis-
    abled. Opinion at 3206-07. Those doctors who found
    otherwise, the majority explains, did not personally meet with
    Salomaa. 
    Id.
     The majority then derives importance from this
    fact, suggesting (without outright stating) that doctors who
    personally examine claimants are somehow more reliable than
    doctors who do not personally examine claimants. See 
    id.
     It
    then implies that the plan’s decision not to personally exam-
    ine Salomaa evinces an abuse of discretion. See 
    id.
     It is
    unclear from the opinion why the majority adopts these views,
    as it provides no clear reason why a doctor who personally
    examined Salomaa should be given more authority or atten-
    tion than one who didn’t, and no clear reason why a lack of
    personal examination precipitates an abuse of discretion. See
    
    id.
     Perhaps no reasons were given because no reasons exist.
    Consider Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord, 
    538 U.S. 822
     (2003), an ERISA case in which the Supreme Court
    vacated a judgment of this court. In holding that the “treating
    physician rule” does not apply to ERISA plans, a unanimous
    Court stated, “Nothing in [ERISA] suggests that plan admin-
    istrators must accord special deference to the opinions of
    treating physicians. Nor does [ERISA] impose a heightened
    burden of explanation on administrators when they reject a
    treating physician’s opinion.” 
    Id. at 831
    . The Nord opinion
    seems sufficient to dispel any notion of treating physician
    superiority, so it is puzzling why the majority nevertheless
    chastises the plan for not personally examining Salomaa.
    In fact, I’ve found no published Ninth Circuit case stating
    that “personal examination” dictates whether an ERISA plan
    administrator abused its discretion. The Nord Court indicates
    why: “[T]he assumption that the opinions of a treating physi-
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY            3217
    cian warrant greater credit than the opinions of plan consul-
    tants may make scant sense when, for example, 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. at 832
    .
    Given Nord, the majority’s emphasis on personally examin-
    ing physicians is misplaced. I do not think the plan’s lack of
    personally examining physicians indicates that it abused its
    discretion in denying Salomaa’s claim.
    B.
    Next, the majority finds an abuse of discretion in that “the
    plan administrator demanded objective tests to establish the
    existence of a condition for which there are no objective
    tests.” Opinion at 3206. Though I agree with the majority that
    a plan administrator ought not be able to condition an award
    on the existence of evidence that is impossible to produce, I
    disagree with its conclusion that there was no objective evi-
    dence of Salomaa’s disability. See Opinion at 3210.
    Salomaa did, ultimately, provide the plan with objective
    evidence of his disability in the form of neuropsychological
    testing, but because this evidence was acquired after the elim-
    ination period, the plan administrator found it inadequate to
    prove Salomaa’s condition. This neuropsychological testing
    showed deficiencies in Salomaa’s mental activity—a known
    symptom of CFS. And even though this evidence was gath-
    ered at the wrong time, its very existence demonstrates that
    objective tests can be used to prove disability from CFS, and
    that Salomaa could have proven his disability with objective
    evidence.
    But don’t take my word for it. Just ask Salomaa himself. In
    Salomaa’s opening brief, he admits that the belated neuropsy-
    chological testing “objectively proved the existence of” his
    3218         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    disability caused by CFS.1 Appellant’s Br. at 31. So it appears
    that the majority has rejected the factual understandings of
    both parties by deciding that no objective evidence of Salo-
    maa’s condition could have been produced.
    The majority gives only superficial attention to the neurop-
    sychological testing that everyone but it views as objective
    evidence of Salomaa’s disability. It uses this testing to color-
    fully describe how debilitating Salomaa’s condition is, noting
    that the “battery of intelligence and other tests” revealed that
    Salomaa’s IQ was average, “which is fine for many people
    but shockingly low for a Harvard man with a career in com-
    puters.” Opinion at 3198. Now I’m no “Harvard man,” and I
    can barely operate an iPhone let alone pursue a career in com-
    puters, but I don’t understand why the majority at once boasts
    how meaningful the neuropsychological testing is—having
    revealed in Salomaa “ ‘the hallmark cognitive symptoms’ ” of
    CFS—yet later dismisses the testing as merely “bad perfor-
    mance on an intelligence test” that could “be faked.” See
    Opinion at 3198-99, 3210.
    I also find it peculiar that the majority speculates that Salo-
    maa could be faking his neuropsychological testing results.
    This seems to be the only time that the majority acknowledges
    that Salomaa might be faking his disability. The majority
    wields no similar skepticism when considering the other
    aspects of Salomaa’s claim, such as the mountains of self-
    reported symptoms that prompted the plan’s desire for objec-
    tive evidence in the first place. Furthermore, the assertion that
    Salomaa may have faked this testing seems to conflict with
    the majority’s own description of the testing, “which showed
    ‘a valid profile and that [Salomaa] was putting forth adequate
    effort.’ ” Opinion at 3198.
    1
    In full, Salomaa’s statement reads: “Why would CIGNA, if it was act-
    ing in good faith, ignore the testing which objectively proved the existence
    of symptoms that Mr. Salomaa had complained about for months?” Appel-
    lant’s Br. at 31. The answer, as noted, is because this testing was per-
    formed after the elimination period.
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY                 3219
    Finally, I find the majority’s citation to the plan administra-
    tor’s parent company’s position paper to be unpersuasive.
    This paper states that “[t]here are no specific diagnostic
    studies . . . or physical findings that are specific to the diagno-
    sis of CFS.” ER 158-59. This is unhelpful, however, because
    this position paper says nothing about the existence—or lack
    thereof—of objective evidence of CFS-caused disability. See
    
    id.
     Indeed, the majority’s quoted material only discusses “spe-
    cific” studies and findings rather than “objective” studies and
    findings, and it pertains to establishing a diagnosis rather than
    disability. The majority therefore conflates the notions of spe-
    cific and objective (and diagnosis and disability) while ignor-
    ing the admissions in Salomaa’s own brief.
    For these reasons, the plan’s demand for objective evidence
    of Salomaa’s disability does not indicate that the plan abused
    its discretion.
    C.
    The majority surmises that “the administrator failed to con-
    sider the Social Security disability award.” Opinion at 3206.
    I see nothing in the record to support this finding.
    The plan administrator’s failure to mention the Social
    Security award in its correspondence with Salomaa does not
    mean the plan administrator ignored the award altogether. In
    fact, there is no proof that the administrator failed to consider
    the award, just as there is no proof that it closely and deliber-
    ately studied the award. In short, the record is silent as to what
    the administrator did with the award. Instead of treating this
    fact as inconclusive, the majority assumes that it demonstrates
    an abuse of discretion.2
    2
    This assumption is worsened by the facts that the plan administrator
    was not bound by the Social Security award whatsoever, see Montour v.
    Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., 
    588 F.3d 623
    , 635 (9th Cir. 2009), and
    the standard used to determine a Social Security award differs considera-
    3220         SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    D.
    The majority faults the plan administrator for failing to
    meaningfully communicate with Salomaa. Opinion at 3206.
    While it is a close question, I agree with the majority that the
    plan administrator failed to engage Salomaa in a meaningful
    dialogue. However, this failure should lessen the discretion
    this panel accords to the plan and should not itself substantiate
    a conclusion that the plan abused its discretion.
    The majority compares the administrator’s conduct to the
    violations addressed in Booton v. Lockheed Medical Benefit
    Plan, 
    110 F.3d 1461
     (9th Cir. 1997) and Saffon v. Wells
    Fargo & Co. Long Term Disability Plan, 
    522 F.3d 863
     (9th
    Cir. 2008). However, the failures in communication in Booton
    and Saffon are far worse than those alleged in the present
    case. In Booton, a plan administrator denied a claim “without
    explanation” and without requesting “necessary—and easily
    obtainable—information.” See Booton, 
    110 F.3d at 1463-64
    .
    In Saffon, a plan administrator’s communications included
    late test requests, self-contradictory statements, failures to tell
    the insured about discussions with her doctor, and omissions
    of important language from doctors’ reports. See Saffon, 
    522 F.3d at 871
    , 873 & n.5.
    The plan administrator’s communication in Salomaa’s case,
    though faulty, was much less severe. For instance, it provided
    Salomaa with a series of denial letters that described the med-
    ical records at issue, it specifically addressed most of Salo-
    maa’s evidence, it contrasted Salomaa’s reported activities
    with his alleged symptoms, and it outlined other information
    bly from an ERISA benefits standard. See, e.g., Nord, 
    538 U.S. at 832-33
    (noting differences between the two standards, including the fact that the
    former allows for more reliance on treating physicians’ opinions, and the
    latter is especially sensitive to the terms and design of each particular
    plan).
    SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY           3221
    that Salomaa could provide. Because the administrator’s com-
    municative failures are not nearly as egregious as the viola-
    tions in Booton and Saffon, I would not analogize those cases
    to this case, and I do not view the administrator’s failure to
    meaningfully communicate as evidence of an abuse of discre-
    tion.
    Any remaining problems with the plan administrator’s
    approach to Salomaa’s claim are minor and, in my view, they
    do not themselves demonstrate an abuse of discretion.
    III.
    The standard of review is important in this case, and it
    requires this panel to weigh carefully the plan administrator’s
    conflict of interest when reviewing the plan’s denial for abuse
    of discretion. In my view, the points highlighted by the major-
    ity do not demonstrate that the plan abused its discretion, even
    in light of the conflict of interest weighing against the plan.
    The majority cleverly observes that “weighing” is only a
    metaphor, and that judicial “weighing” is much more difficult
    than the “weighing” one might do in a traditional darkroom
    with little brass weights and literal scales. Opinion at 3204. I
    agree. Generally speaking, the “weighing” metaphor is mis-
    leading as it suggests that judicial balancing is an extremely
    precise—even mathematical—exercise. It is not. However,
    today’s decision demonstrates that the metaphor of darkroom
    weighing is not totally amiss. To arrive at today’s decision,
    the majority had to overlook binding precedent and turn a
    blind eye to inconvenient facts—almost as though it were
    looking at nothing at all, in a room of near total darkness.
    3222          SALOMAA v. HONDA LONG TERM DISABILITY
    I respectfully dissent.3
    3
    Even if I agreed with the majority that the plan administrator abused
    its discretion, I would not reverse and remand with instructions to direct
    an award of benefits. To qualify for benefits, Salomaa has to prove (1) that
    he suffers from a sickness or injury, and (2) that his sickness or injury ren-
    ders him “disabled.” See ER 125, 150. Both of these elements—diagnosis
    and disability—must be established. The district court affirmed the plan’s
    denial of benefits based on Salomaa’s failure to prove disability, and the
    court set aside the diagnosis issue, as it was “not well-suited for judicial
    determination.” Salomaa v. Honda Long Term Disability Plan, 
    542 F. Supp. 2d 1068
    , 1076-77 (C.D. Cal. 2008). Therefore, the diagnosis issue
    remains unresolved. Were I to find an abuse of discretion, I would remand
    with instructions to conduct further proceedings regarding the diagnosis
    issue.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-55426

Citation Numbers: 642 F.3d 666, 2011 WL 2040934

Judges: Hall, Kleinfeld, Silverman

Filed Date: 3/7/2011

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (15)

Conkright v. Frommert , 130 S. Ct. 1640 ( 2010 )

ellen-abram-v-cargill-incorporated-cargill-incorporated-and-associated , 395 F.3d 882 ( 2005 )

robert-patrick-horan-and-jonnie-s-koch-v-kaiser-steel-retirement-plan , 947 F.2d 1412 ( 1991 )

Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord , 123 S. Ct. 1965 ( 2003 )

Rex T. KEARNEY, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellant, v. STANDARD ... , 175 F.3d 1084 ( 1999 )

Marjorie Booton v. Lockheed Medical Benefit Plan , 110 F.3d 1461 ( 1997 )

United States v. Hinkson , 585 F.3d 1247 ( 2009 )

joseph-h-friedrich-v-intel-corporation-intel-corporation-long-term , 181 F.3d 1105 ( 1999 )

Salomaa v. Honda Long Term Disability Plan , 542 F. Supp. 2d 1068 ( 2008 )

Saffon v. Wells Fargo & Co. Long Term Disability Plan , 522 F.3d 863 ( 2008 )

karla-h-abatie-v-alta-health-life-insurance-company-a-delaware , 458 F.3d 955 ( 2006 )

Montour v. Hartford Life & Accident Insurance , 588 F.3d 623 ( 2009 )

Sznewajs v. U.S. Bancorp Amended & Restated Supplemental ... , 572 F.3d 727 ( 2009 )

Standard Insurance v. Morrison , 584 F.3d 837 ( 2009 )

Vicki Jordan v. Northrop Grumman Corporation Welfare ... , 370 F.3d 869 ( 2004 )

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