Hannington v. Sun Life and Health Insurance , 711 F.3d 226 ( 2013 )


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  •            United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 12-1085
    DAVID HANNINGTON,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    SUN LIFE AND HEALTH INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. Nancy Torresen, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Ripple,* and Lipez,
    Circuit Judges.
    Joshua Bachrach, with whom Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman
    & Dicker LLP, Byrne Joseph Decker, and Pierce Atwood LLP were on
    brief, for appellant.
    Gisele M. Nadeau for appellee.
    March 29, 2013
    *
    Of the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation.
    RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. David Hannington filed this ERISA
    action against Sun Life and Health Insurance Company (“Sun”) after
    Sun reduced his disability payments under an ERISA-qualified plan
    (the “Plan”) because he also was receiving disability compensation
    under the Veterans’ Benefits Act.      The parties filed cross-motions
    for judgment on the record.   After a hearing, the magistrate judge
    recommended that the district court grant Mr. Hannington’s motion
    and deny Sun’s. The district court approved the magistrate judge’s
    recommended decision and entered judgment for Mr. Hannington.1    Sun
    timely appealed.2   For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we
    affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I
    BACKGROUND
    A.
    Mr. Hannington participated, through his employer, in a
    group long-term disability plan issued by Sun, then known as GE
    Group Life Assurance Company (“GE”).       Under the Plan, a disabled
    beneficiary receives sixty percent of his pre-disability salary.
    However, the Plan reduces this benefit by amounts received as
    1
    The district court’s jurisdiction was predicated on 28
    U.S.C. § 1331 and 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e).
    2
    The jurisdiction of this court is based on 28 U.S.C.
    § 1291.
    -2-
    “Other Income.” This term is defined in the “Other Income” section
    of the Plan, which lists seven categories of income that will be
    deemed “Other Income” for purposes of reducing payments under the
    Plan.     The fifth of these categories, the focus of the current
    dispute,    defines     “Other    Income”   to   include    “any   amount   of
    disability or retirement benefits under:             a) the United States
    Social Security Act . . . ; b) the Railroad Retirement Act; c) any
    other similar act or law provided in any jurisdiction.”3             The Plan
    further identifies GE, now replaced by Sun, as the claims fiduciary
    and grants it “the sole and exclusive discretion and power to . . .
    construe any and all issues relating to eligibility for benefits.”4
    It   further    provides   that    “[a]ll   findings,      decisions,   and/or
    determinations of any type made by the Claims Fiduciary shall not
    be disturbed unless the Claims Fiduciary has acted in an arbitrary
    and/or capricious manner.”5
    Mr. Hannington cannot work because he suffers from a
    
    3 A. 103
    . These seven categories of “Other Income” are:
    (1)   temporary   or   permanent   awards  under   various   laws;
    (2) disability benefits under any compulsory benefit act or law;
    (3) disability or loss of income benefits under various insurance
    plans; (4) benefits received under an employer retirement plan;
    (5) the disputed section; (6) income received from any salary
    continuance plan; and (7) benefits under unemployment compensation
    laws.   
    Id. To provide context,
    a copy of the “Other Income”
    section, denominated “Part 5” of the Plan, is appended to this
    opinion.
    4
    
    Id. at 120. 5
              
    Id. -3- blood disease
    that he contracted from the administration of
    vaccinations during his service in the United States Air Force. On
    account    of     this     disability,          he   receives       service-connected
    disability       compensation      (“VA      benefits”)      under    the     Veterans’
    Benefits Act.
    Sun approved Mr. Hannington’s claim for benefits under
    the Plan.        Upon learning that Mr. Hannington was receiving VA
    benefits, however, Sun determined that these VA benefits qualify as
    “Other Income” and so reduced the amount of Mr. Hannington’s
    monthly    plan     benefit     by    the    amount     of    his    VA     benefits.
    Consequently, Mr. Hannington filed an administrative appeal as
    required by the Plan.         Sun denied the appeal.
    B.
    Mr. Hannington then initiated this action in the district
    court.     When     Sun    submitted      the     administrative      record    to   the
    district court, it also produced an affidavit from the associate
    director    of    its     appeal     unit    that    set     forth    the   procedures
    implemented by Sun to fulfill its fiduciary duties under the Plan.
    It submitted that these procedures sufficiently neutralize its
    structural conflict of interest as both plan underwriter and
    fiduciary.
    The district court referred the case to a magistrate
    judge for a recommended decision.                    In her recommendation, the
    -4-
    magistrate judge first noted that, because the plan document gave
    Sun discretion to interpret and construe the Plan’s language, the
    court’s review was governed by the deferential arbitrary and
    capricious standard.        The magistrate judge further noted, however,
    that the fact that Sun was construing policy language in favor of
    its own financial interest while laboring under a structural
    conflict of interest was not an irrelevant factor and that the
    court was entitled to take such a situation into consideration.
    Turning to the merits of the dispute, the magistrate
    judge reviewed the similarities that Sun had pointed out between
    the   Social   Security     Act   and   the    Veterans’     Benefits   Act6   and
    compared    the    service-connected          disability     compensation      that
    Mr. Hannington receives to Social Security disability benefits.
    She reviewed the respective statutes’ definitions of “disability”
    and their purposes in awarding disability benefits.7                Ultimately,
    the   magistrate    judge    determined       that   those   similarities      were
    6
    Before the magistrate judge, Sun provided no specific
    discussion of the Railroad Retirement Act. R.31 at 9 n.8. Sun
    identified the following similarities between the Veterans’
    Benefits Act and the Social Security Act: (1) they are federal
    laws, which provide disability benefits; (2) benefits are paid
    periodically; (3) death benefits are available; (4) the Acts
    contain   anti-assignment   clauses;   (5)   benefit   claims   are
    administered by independent agencies; and (6) a single application
    can be used to apply for both Social Security and VA benefits.
    R.21 at 6. Sun also argued that benefits under both are awarded
    without regard to fault and represent compensation for lost earning
    capacity.   
    Id. The magistrate judge
    rejected these last two
    arguments as erroneous. R.31 at 9-10 nn. 9, 10.
    7
    R.31 at 9-11.
    -5-
    superficial and represented only a “few common threads [which] are
    woven into larger and distinctly different fabrics.”8             In her view,
    it was “the differences [between these Acts] that stand out upon
    comparison, not the similarities.”9
    She   also    emphasized     Sun’s    structural      conflict   of
    interest, concluding that “[a] fiduciary free of a structural
    conflict of interest would not attempt to emphasize the limited
    similarities given the more substantial and meaningful differences
    that are readily apparent, particularly as the Plan Certificate
    makes no mention of VA benefits at all.”10                In the magistrate
    judge’s view, “[a] reasonable fiduciary would be troubled by the
    [Plan’s]    omission     of   any   reference    to   veterans’   benefits   or
    service-connected disability compensation.”11 The magistrate judge
    found persuasive the decision of the Eighth Circuit in Riley v. Sun
    Life & Health Insurance Co., 
    657 F.3d 739
    , 741 (8th Cir. 2011),
    cert. denied, 
    132 S. Ct. 1870
    (2012), in which the court construed
    identical plan language under a de novo standard of review because
    the fiduciary’s interpretation was “based on its construction of
    existing law.” The Riley court concluded that VA benefits, awarded
    “for a wartime service-related disability, as a matter of statutory
    8
    
    Id. at 10. 9
              
    Id. 10 Id. 11
               
    Id. at 11. -6-
    construction, do not derive from an act that is ‘similar to’ the
    SSA [Social Security Act] or the RRA [Railroad Retirement Act].”
    
    Id. at 742. In
    due course, the district court concurred in the
    magistrate       judge’s   analysis        and   entered   judgment    for
    Mr. Hannington.     Sun then filed this timely appeal.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of judgment
    on the record. Morales-Alejandro v. Med. Card Sys., Inc., 
    486 F.3d 693
    , 698 (1st Cir. 2007).       Therefore, we must employ the same
    standard of review that the district court was required to employ
    on the issue for decision.
    A.
    The     district   court        reviewed   Sun’s   offset    of
    Mr. Hannington’s VA benefits under a deferential, arbitrary and
    capricious standard.12     This deferential standard is appropriate
    when “the benefit plan gives the administrator or fiduciary[13]
    discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits or to
    12
    See 
    id. at 5. 13
            “Administrator,” “claims fiduciary” and “plan fiduciary”
    are used interchangeably by the parties in this case.         For
    consistency, we shall refer to Sun as the Plan’s “fiduciary.”
    -7-
    construe the terms of the plan.”             Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v.
    Bruch, 
    489 U.S. 101
    , 115 (1989).              Thus, when such discretion is
    vested in the plan fiduciary, as it is here, our standard of review
    for the fiduciary’s interpretation of plan language is deferential.
    See Cusson v. Liberty Life Assurance Co., 
    592 F.3d 215
    , 230 (1st
    Cir. 2010).      However, when the plan fiduciary is required, in the
    course   of    determining    the     meaning       of   the   plan   language,   to
    interpret material outside the plan, our review of the extra-plan
    material is de novo.
    For instance, in Coffin v. Bowater Inc., 
    501 F.3d 80
    (1st
    Cir. 2007), we addressed an administrator’s determination that its
    plan obligations to its subsidiary’s workers terminated upon the
    subsidiary’s sale. The plan at issue allowed the administrator “to
    modify, amend or terminate the plan at any time” and “afford[ed]
    the administrator substantial deference.”                    
    Id. at 84, 85.
          The
    Coffin   administrator       argued    that     a    stock     purchase    agreement
    executed in connection with the sale contained language sufficient
    to   terminate    its   obligations      and    satisfy        ERISA’s    procedural
    termination requirements.        
    Id. at 84. Discussing
    the standard of
    review, we held that “[w]here the administrator’s determination of
    eligibility depends upon an interpretation of non-plan documents
    (in this case, the [stock purchase agreement]), our review is . . .
    de novo.”     
    Id. at 85 (citing
    Firestone, 489 U.S. at 112
    ).                Thus, we
    reviewed de novo the administrator’s interpretation of the stock
    -8-
    purchase agreement and of ERISA (that the stock purchase agreement
    satisfied ERISA’s requirements).
    Our decision in Coffin is in accord with the decisions of
    the other circuits that have recognized that when a fiduciary’s
    interpretation of the plan is based on a legal determination,
    review is de novo.         See, e.g., Daft v. Advest, Inc., 
    658 F.3d 583
    ,
    594 (6th Cir. 2011) (noting that the deferential standard of review
    “does    not    apply    to     a    plan    administrator’s     determination   of
    questions of law, such as whether a plan meets the statutory
    definition of a top-hat plan; a court reviews those questions de
    novo”); 
    Riley, 657 F.3d at 741-42
    (concluding in a case identical
    to the one before us in all significant respects that the de novo
    standard of review ought to apply because the court was required to
    review    the     administrator’s           “interpretation     of   a   controlling
    principle of law”--the character and scope of benefits under the
    Veterans’       Benefits       Act   (internal      quotation    marks   omitted));
    Johannssen v. Dist. No. 1--Pac. Coast Dist., MEBA Pens. Plan, 
    292 F.3d 159
    ,     169    (4th     Cir.   2002)      (“Such   legal    questions   are
    appropriate terrain for the courts, not plan administrators, and
    when eligibility determinations turn on questions of law we have
    not hesitated to apply a de novo standard of review.”), abrogated
    on other grounds by Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn, 
    554 U.S. 105
    (2008); Weil v. Ret. Plan Admin. Comm. of Terson Co., 
    913 F.2d 1045
    , 1049 (2d Cir. 1990) (same), vacated on other grounds, 933
    -9-
    F.2d 106 (2d Cir. 1991); see also 2 Lee T. Polk, ERISA Practice &
    Litigation § 11:53 (2010).
    In the particular dispute before us, Sun’s interpretation
    of the “Other Income” section of the Plan depends wholly upon its
    interpretation of external, non-plan material:        the Veterans’
    Benefits Act,14 the Social Security Act15 and the Railroad Retirement
    Act.16    Under the Plan language, the character of, and especially
    14
    The only citation Sun provides to the Veterans’ Benefits
    Act is 38 U.S.C. § 1110. See Appellant’s Br. 16. Section 1110 is
    only    the    provision   concerning     basic   entitlement    to
    service-connected disability compensation. Like other courts to
    consider the issue, see, e.g., Riley v. Sun Life & Health Ins. Co.,
    
    657 F.3d 739
    , 740 (8th Cir. 2011), we believe that the Veterans’
    Benefits Act begins at 38 U.S.C. § 101 and encompasses all of Title
    38 (Veterans’ Benefits).
    It is probably a misnomer to refer to Title 38 this way. See
    Gov’t’s Amicus Br. 5. Title 38 provides for all veterans’ benefits
    but is not comprised of one act. In 1958, Congress passed Public
    Law 85-857, which was codified as Title 38, “[t]o consolidate into
    one Act all of the laws administered by the Veterans’
    Administration.” Pub. L. No. 85-857, 72 Stat. 1105 (1958). This
    enactment codified provisions for both service-connected disability
    compensation and non-service-connected disability pensions.      In
    subsequent years, Title 38 has been amended multiple times.
    However, since the parties use the term “Veterans’ Benefits Act,”
    we also refer to Title 38 in this way for ease of discussion.
    On October 15, 2012, this court issued an order inviting the
    United States to file a brief as amicus curiae “presenting its view
    on whether the Veterans’ Benefits Act reasonably could be
    characterized as similar to the Social Security Act or the Railroad
    Retirement Act such that benefits under the Veterans’ Benefits Act
    could be deemed equivalent to those provided under the other two
    acts.” Hannington v. Sun Life & Health Ins. Co., No. 12-1085, R.32
    at 2 (Oct. 15, 2012). The court expresses its thanks to the United
    States for having accepted the invitation and for having provided
    a very helpful brief.
    15
    42 U.S.C. §§ 401 et seq.
    16
    45 U.S.C. §§ 231 et seq.
    -10-
    the benefits available under, the comparator acts and the statute
    providing the benefits potentially available for off-set determine
    the scope of benefits available under the Plan.             If the Veterans’
    Benefits Act is not similar to the Social Security Act and/or the
    Railroad Retirement Act, then Sun cannot offset Mr. Hannington’s VA
    benefits.       Therefore,     because         Sun’s   decision   to    offset
    Mr.   Hannington’s    VA   benefits      was    governed   entirely    by   its
    interpretation of several statutes, the district court ought to
    have reviewed de novo Sun’s determination that Mr. Hannington’s VA
    benefits were “Other Income” under the Plan; this is the standard
    of review which we also must employ.
    B.
    We now turn to an examination of Sun’s decision, as plan
    fiduciary, to set off Mr. Hannington’s VA benefits against the
    amount owed him under the Plan.
    1.
    Sun seeks reversal of the district court’s decision
    prohibiting   its    offset   of   Mr.     Hannington’s    service-connected
    disability compensation under the Veterans’ Benefits Act against
    the long-term disability payments that it provides to him under the
    Plan.   Sun bases its position on an interpretation of the Plan’s
    “Other Income” section.       In its view, under the fifth clause of
    -11-
    this section, Mr. Hannington’s VA service-connected disability
    compensation must be considered income from “a similar act or law.”
    The fifth clause defines “Other Income” as follows:
    [a]ny amount of    disability     or   retirement
    benefits under:
    a) the United States Social Security Act to
    which[:]
    i) you are entitled; and
    ii) your Dependents may be entitled
    because of your disability or retirement;
    b) the Railroad Retirement Act;
    c) any other similar act or law provided in
    any jurisdiction.[17]
    Sun determined that the Veterans’ Benefits Act is similar
    to the Social Security Act and/or the Railroad Retirement Act based
    simply on its identification of some common characteristics of the
    statutes.    Sun observes that all (1) are federal, (2) pay certain
    periodic disability benefits, (3) have anti-assignment clauses and
    (4) are administered by independent agencies. It also stresses the
    similarities between the Social Security Act and the Veterans’
    Benefits Act:    Both pay benefits based on impairment of earning
    capacity, both ensure a minimum level of income and both can have
    identical qualifications because one way to qualify for VA benefits
    is to have been determined permanently disabled under the Social
    Security Act.
    
    17 A. 103
    .
    -12-
    Importantly, Sun has never considered whether the VA
    service-connected disability compensation Mr. Hannington receives
    is similar to available disability benefits under the comparator
    acts.     Sun’s statutory interpretation ignored the context and the
    purpose of the comparison.        When, as here, the object of the
    inquiry is to identify sources of income for purposes of set-off,
    a meaningful comparison of the Social Security Act and the Railroad
    Retirement Act to a potentially similar act or law requires a
    comparison of the benefits offered by the laws in question.               The
    “Other Income” section has no interest in the administrative
    mechanics    of   various   statutory    schemes    or   of   the   statutory
    structure of the agency administering the disbursement.             Its focus
    is simply the nature of the payments and the role that they play in
    the financial health of the recipient.             The district court was
    therefore correct in characterizing Sun’s focus on factors not
    relevant to this inquiry as “superficial.”18         Sun’s approach to the
    18
    R.31 at 10.   Sun also cites the Texas Supreme Court’s
    statement in Barnett v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 
    723 S.W.2d 663
    ,
    666 (Tex. 1987), of the “similar features” of the Social Security
    Act and the Veterans’ Benefits Act. Both “are (1) governmental or
    legislative plans providing for (2) periodic payment (3) to
    qualified individuals (4) who have suffered a physical disability
    (5) without regard to fault.     In addition, all provide death
    benefits, have anti-assignment clauses, and are administered by
    independent agencies.” 
    Id. These similarities are
    superficial; as
    the Texas Supreme Court went on to note, “the similarity of
    features of the acts are not the key ingredient, rather it is the
    objectives for which they were created and the manner in which the
    acts are implemented.” 
    Id. at 666-67. -13-
    interpretation question was thus improper and, as we shall explain,
    its conclusion also was erroneous.
    2.
    Sun’s inexplicable decision to omit from its comparison
    of the disability statutes any examination and comparison of the
    substantive features of the veterans’ disability scheme caused it
    to misapprehend, seriously, the degree of dissimilarity between the
    Veterans’    Benefits   Act   and   the    comparator   acts.     When   the
    substantive features of the Veterans’ Benefits Act are viewed as a
    whole, its    dissimilarity    in   scope   and   purpose   to   the   Social
    Security Act and the Railroad Retirement Act is evident.
    The primary purpose of the Veterans’ Benefits Act is to
    care for and to support those who have served our Country in the
    Armed Forces of the United States.19         Its purpose is to, “in the
    words of Abraham Lincoln, ‘provide[] for him who has borne the
    19
    Title 38 therefore includes not only disability
    compensation, but a host of other benefits for veterans. See,
    e.g., 38 U.S.C. §§        1902 (life insurance policies), 3461
    (entitlement to educational assistance), 3710 (loans to purchase or
    construct a primary residence). Therefore, as a threshold matter,
    the Veterans’ Benefits Act’s broad scope demonstrates the
    inaccuracy of Sun’s view that its “primary purpose [is] providing
    the same types of benefits” as the Social Security Act and the
    Railroad Retirement Act. Appellant’s Br. 16. The Social Security
    Act and Railroad Retirement Act do not provide life insurance, home
    or small business loans, educational benefits or any other benefits
    beyond those for disability and retirement; they certainly do not
    offer benefits specifically designed to assist beneficiaries with
    navigating most major facets of civilian life.       See 38 U.S.C.
    §§ 3001-4335 (Part III. Readjustment and Related Benefits).
    -14-
    battle, and his widow and his orphan.’”       Walters v. Nat’l Ass’n of
    Radiation   Survivors, 
    473 U.S. 305
    ,    309   (1985).   VA   benefits
    therefore are linked not to employment but to past service in the
    Armed Forces.   Notably, because of this fundamental difference in
    purpose and scope, “funding for SSA [Social Security Act] and RRA
    [Railroad Retirement Act] disability benefits derives from a tax on
    both the employee and employer” whereas Veterans’ Benefits Act
    “benefits are funded by Congress through the VA’s budget instead of
    by a tax on members of the military.” 
    Riley, 657 F.3d at 742
    , 743.
    This purpose stands in stark contrast to the Social
    Security Act and the Railroad Retirement Act.        The Social Security
    Act and the Railroad Retirement Act, like many of the other types
    of “Other Income” defined in the Plan, are insurance programs tied
    to the beneficiary’s employment.20         See generally Hisquierdo v.
    Hisquierdo, 
    439 U.S. 572
    , 573 (1979) (discussing the Railroad
    Retirement Act’s purpose as “provid[ing] a system of retirement and
    disability benefits for persons who pursue careers in the railroad
    industry”); California Dep’t of Human Res. Dev. v. Java, 
    402 U.S. 121
    , 130-32 (1971) (discussing the purposes and history of the
    Social Security Act).
    20
    “Other Income” includes: workers’ compensation; benefits
    under an occupational disease law; a settlement with an employer in
    lieu of workers’ compensation; benefits received under a plan
    related to or from the beneficiary’s employer; unemployment
    compensation; and a salary continuance plan. A.R. 103.
    -15-
    Furthermore, when we focus only on benefits related to
    disability, the statutory scheme of the Veterans’ Benefits Act
    provides for two different types of benefits:         service-connected
    disability    compensation    (which    Mr.   Hannington   receives)   and
    disability pensions for veterans of wartime service or their
    surviving spouses or children.21       The latter benefit arguably might
    bear some substantive similarity to the benefits obtainable under
    the Social Security Act and the Railroad Retirement Act, but we
    need not and do not decide that question today.              The former,
    however--the service-connected disability compensation received by
    Mr. Hannington--is decidedly different, and it is the substantive
    nature of this benefit that must be compared to those under the
    comparator statutes.    These VA benefits are based on diseases and
    injuries incurred by service personnel on account of their military
    service.    They are calculated not on a particular veteran’s actual
    disability but rather “represent as far as can practicably be
    determined the average impairment in earning capacity resulting
    from such diseases and injuries and their residual conditions in
    civil occupations.”22        Because they     are based on the special
    sacrifice of illness or injury in military service, they are
    payable in increments of disability ranging from ten percent to one
    21
    See 38 U.S.C. §§ 1521, 1541, 1542.
    22
    38 C.F.R. § 4.1; see also 38 U.S.C. § 1155.
    -16-
    hundred    percent.23         Notably,    although         Congress     has    forbidden
    duplication for some government benefits, it has not done so when
    there is     an    overlap between        Social Security         Act     or    Railroad
    Retirement Act benefits and VA benefits.24
    There are very important substantive differences between
    the Veterans’ Benefits Act and the Social Security Act and the
    Railroad Retirement Act, especially between the service-connected
    disability    compensation        received       by    Mr.     Hannington       and   the
    available benefits under the comparator acts.                     These differences
    render the        Veterans’    Benefits    Act,       as   a   matter    of    statutory
    construction,       dissimilar    to     the    Social      Security     Act    and   the
    Railroad Retirement Act.           Thus, the VA benefits Mr. Hannington
    receives are not “Other Income” for purposes of reducing the
    payment Sun owes Mr. Hannington under the Plan.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED.
    23
    See 38 U.S.C. §§ 1114, 1115.
    24
    See 20 C.F.R. § 226.72(d) (Railroad Retirement benefits are
    not reduced by the receipt of VA benefits); 
    id. § 404.408(b)(2)(ii) (Social
    Security benefits are not reduced by the receipt of VA
    benefits).
    -17-
    APPENDIX
    -18-