Vaughan v. Celanese Americas Corporation , 339 F. App'x 320 ( 2009 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 07-2064
    DEAN A. VAUGHAN; MICHAEL GRUENDER; JERRY DEAN BAKER;
    LADONNA C. BAKER; EVELYN C. BROWN; GREGORY STEPHAN
    COPELAND; REBECCA B. CORUM; BOBBY GERALD DAWKINS; JEFFREY
    S. GROSHANS; RYAN A. GRAV; KIMBERLY M. HENRY; DIANE B.
    HESS; KARIN M. HUDSON; WILLIAM L. LAWSON, III; XUAN THE
    LE; BRENDA C. MORRISON; THOMAS A. NEEDHAM; MARC P. RAY;
    THOMAS L. ROACH; DEBRA G. ROBINSON,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    v.
    CELANESE    AMERICAS   CORPORATION;   CELANESE    ADVANCED
    MATERIALS, INCORPORATED; THE CELANESE AMERICAS CORPORATION
    SEPARATION PAY PLAN,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of North Carolina, at Charlotte.   Frank D. Whitney,
    District Judge. (3:06-cv-00104-FDW)
    Argued:   January 28, 2009                 Decided:    July 30, 2009
    Before WILKINSON, KING, and GREGORY, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.    Judge King wrote a
    dissenting opinion.
    ARGUED: Louis L. Lesesne, Jr., ESSEX &             RICHARDS, P.A.,
    Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellants.           Jeanne Louise
    Bakker, MONTGOMERY, MCCRACKEN, WALKER & RHOADS, Philadelphia,
    Pennsylvania, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Beth A. Vanesse, ESSEX &
    RICHARDS, P.A., Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellants. John
    D. Cole, OGLETREE, DEAKINS, NASH, SMOAK & STEWART, P.C.,
    Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellees.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Appellants filed this action under the Employee Retirement
    Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 
    29 U.S.C. § 1133
     (2006),
    claiming that their employer denied them requisite compensation
    under a separation plan.                 The district court granted summary
    judgment for the Appellees.              We affirm.
    I.
    Appellants       are    former        employees     of    Appellee      Celanese
    Advanced   Materials,        Inc.       (“CAMI”),   a   subsidiary     of    Appellee
    Celanese Americas Corporation (“Celanese”).                    CAMI was comprised
    of two separate operations:              PBI, which employed Appellants, and
    Vectran.      In     2005,    Celanese       sold     both    CAMI   operations   to
    separate purchasers:          PBI to InterTech Group (“InterTech”) and
    Vectran to Kuraray.
    Celanese      maintained       a    Separation     Pay   Plan   (“the   Plan”).
    The Plan provided separation pay for Celanese employees upon
    termination     of   their     employment       under     specified     conditions,
    which included the sale of a business unit when the successor
    employer did not offer a “comparable level of compensation.”
    (J.A. 39.)      In the instant case, Appellants received the same
    base salary from their new employer, InterTech.                      However, their
    3
    benefits were reduced because InterTech did not offer a defined
    pension plan.
    The Vectran sale was the first to be negotiated when CAMI
    sold its operations.             In that transaction, Celanese and Kuraray
    negotiated a “side letter,” which gave the Vectran employees a
    “signing       bonus”     to    compensate        for    the    reduction       in    their
    benefits      package.         The   bonus    negotiated        in    the   Vectran    sale
    prompted PBI employees to ask for separation pay under the Plan
    to supplement their reduction in benefits.
    Under     the    Plan     there       is    a    Benefits       Committee      (“the
    Committee”) to address claims.                    Cheryl Cunningham was a member
    of the Committee.              During the beginning stage of negotiations
    for the PBI deal, Cunningham suggested that Appellants would be
    eligible for separation pay under the Plan.                          Jay Townsend, the
    senior      Celanese    official      negotiating        the    PBI    sale,    disagreed
    with       Cunningham’s    suggestion.            On    April    20,    2005,    Townsend
    conducted a conference call with Cunningham, B.J. Smith (a local
    human resources representative designated as the Administrator
    of the Plan), and Mathias Kuhr (Celanese’s in-house counsel). 1
    At the conclusion of the call, the group agreed that Appellants
    1
    Cunningham was the only member of the Committee on the
    call that the parties collectively refer to as the April
    decision.
    4
    would not be eligible to receive separation pay under the Plan
    to supplement their reduced benefits.
    In June of 2005, Appellants filed claims under the Plan for
    separation pay benefits.               On July 7, 2005, Smith sent Appellants
    a    letter   identifying        himself          as    the   Plan      Administrator          and
    advising them that they could submit additional evidence for
    consideration, “[i]n the interest of being fair.”                                  (J.A. 79.)
    He     assured    them    that        their       claims      would      be    “reviewed       in
    accordance       with    the    claims       procedures          of    the    Plan.”        (Id.)
    Appellants submitted additional information on July 17, 2005.
    On   September      21,       2005,    Smith       sent        Appellants       a    denial
    letter through his attorney, Jeanne Bakkar.                              The letter stated
    that    the   Committee’s        decision          was     final;       that     the       Vectran
    “signing bonus” was not separation pay under the Plan; that this
    bonus was paid by Kuraray; and that the phrase “comparable level
    of compensation” only required a comparable level of salary, not
    comparable salary and benefits.
    Appellants       wrote        back    on        October    3,     2005,     requesting
    numerous      documents        and    an     explanation          of    Appellees’          denial
    procedures.        Bakkar responded on November 9, 2005, addressing
    the concerns Appellants raised in the previous letter and with
    specific instructions on how to appeal.
    5
    Appellants         appealed       the     Plan       Administrator’s        September
    decision.           On December 29, 2005, the appeal was denied in a
    letter       from    Bakkar    on    behalf    of     the    Committee.          The    letter
    stated       that      the    Committee        relied        on     its      “discretionary
    authority” to construe the meaning of “compensation” as only
    including the base salary.               (J.A. 144-46.)             Further, the letter
    stated that the Vectran “signing bonus” provided no precedent to
    support Appellants’ claims.
    On March 9, 2006, Appellants filed an action in the Western
    District of North Carolina for denial of separation pay benefits
    under    the    Plan.         On    September       27,    2007,    the      district   court
    granted       summary       judgment    for    Appellees,          concluding     that    the
    Committee’s discretionary decision to deny separation pay was
    reasonable under Booth v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    201 F.3d 335
    (4th Cir. 2000).
    II.
    We    review    a    district    court’s          decision      to   grant     summary
    judgment de novo, and we employ the same legal standards applied
    by the district court.               Elliot v. Sara Lee Corp., 
    190 F.3d 601
    ,
    605   (4th     Cir.     1999).       With     respect       to    the   district       court’s
    findings, we review factual findings for clear error and legal
    6
    determinations de novo.              Williams v. Sandman, 
    187 F.3d 379
    , 381
    (4th Cir. 1999).
    Although we review summary judgment orders in the light
    most    favorable       to     the     non-moving       party,       Evans      v.    Techs.
    Applications & Servs. Co., 
    80 F.3d 954
    , 958 (4th Cir. 1996), we
    must   also    evaluate        a    denial    of    benefits       under   an    abuse    of
    discretion standard when, as here, an ERISA benefit plan vests
    discretionary          authority         to         make      benefit         eligibility
    determinations with the plan administrator, Ellis v. Metro. Life
    Ins. Co., 
    126 F.3d 228
    , 232 (4th Cir. 1997).                         An administrator’s
    decision “will not be disturbed if it is reasonable,” even if we
    “would have come to a different conclusion independently.”                                
    Id.
    A decision is reasonable when it is the “result of a deliberate,
    principled      reasoning          process        and   if    it     is    supported      by
    substantial evidence.”               Brogan v. Holland, 
    105 F.3d 159
    , 161
    (4th Cir. 1997) (internal citations omitted); see also Booth,
    
    201 F.3d at 342-43
           (listing   eight        factors     that     guide    the
    reasonableness analysis, discussed infra).
    The    regulations      promulgated         under     ERISA    prescribe,        inter
    alia, that:         1) Decisions must be made in accordance with plan
    documents,       
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (b)(5)            (2008);      2)     Plan
    procedures must be applied consistently, id.; and 3) Notice must
    be given in writing to deny a claim, state the basis for the
    7
    denial,   reference        the   plan    provision      relied    upon,   identify
    additional information required to perfect the claim, describe
    the appeal process, and notify the petitioner of the right to
    bring a civil action, 
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1
    (g) (2008).
    III.
    a.
    Appellants first argue that Appellees’ actions violated the
    Plan’s requirements because the initial decision to deny the
    claim was not made by the Committee in a meeting attended by
    quorum, pursuant to the Plan.                  See Bedrick By and Through v.
    Travelers    Ins.        Co.,    
    93 F.3d 149
    ,    153    (4th   Cir.     1996)
    (emphasizing the importance of ERISA’s requirement of “full and
    fair    review”     of    all    denied       claims   by     “appropriate     named
    fiduciary.”);       Ellis,       
    126 F.3d at 236-37
         (acknowledging
    importance of ERISA’s formal claims process, which protects from
    arbitrary decision making); Weaver v. Phoenix Home Life Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    990 F.2d 154
    , 157 (4th Cir. 1993) (stating that the
    “procedural guidelines are at the foundation of ERISA.”)
    ERISA’s    claim     requirements        are    only   triggered      when   a
    claimant makes a “claim for benefits.”                   
    29 C.F.R. § 2560.503
    -
    1(e) (2008).      A “claim for benefits” does not occur until there
    is a “request for a plan benefit or benefits made by a claimant
    8
    in   accordance     with   a   plan’s       reasonable       procedure      for    filing
    benefit claims.”        
    Id.
         Additionally, Section 5.6 of the Plan,
    titled   “Claims     Procedures,”      states:         “In    the    event    that       the
    Administrator denies, in whole or in part, a written claim for
    benefits by a Participant or his beneficiary, the Administrator
    shall    furnish     notice     of    the       adverse    determination          to    the
    claimant.”        (J.A. 51 (emphasis added).)                In the instant case,
    Appellants had not made a “request for a plan benefit” before
    the PBI deal closed.           The April 22, 2005, conference call was
    neither in response to Appellants’ claims nor a denial of a
    claim for benefits because Appellants did not make a claim until
    June    2005.      Therefore,    ERISA       procedures       did    not    govern      the
    Committee’s decision during the conference call.
    Appellants     attempt    to     skirt      the     fact      that    the       April
    decision was not a response to their claims by arguing that they
    were never afforded fair review under ERISA because Celanese had
    already made its decision in April concerning the substance of
    their June claims.         The gist of Appellants’ argument is that the
    decision     on    their    claims     was       “in   a     sense     foreordained.”
    (Appellants’ Reply Br. 2.)              Appellants’ contention has little
    weight because, as the district court correctly recognized,
    [I]t is in no way extraordinary that the benefits
    committee would have reached a conclusion as to
    whether severance benefits would be paid prior to the
    closing of the divestiture transaction, because the
    9
    business partners negotiating the deal would have
    needed to anticipate with a reasonable degree of
    certainty all of the transaction costs that would be
    incurred by the sale.
    (J.A.    1327.)           Business         transactions        would      be     significantly
    burdened       if        all     discussions           and     decisions         relating    to
    eligibility         of    benefits         must   follow      the   Plan’s       claim   review
    procedures even when, as here, no claim for benefits has been
    made.        Clearly, a plan fiduciary is not required to initiate
    formal claim review procedures every time internal discussions
    with management and plan fiduciaries might affect a potential
    claim for separation pay.                   And this Court does not impose such a
    burden here.
    b.
    Next, Appellants contend that the district court misapplied
    the     Booth       factors           in     concluding        that        the     fiduciary’s
    interpretation            of     the       Plan     and      denial       of     benefits   was
    reasonable.          In Booth, this Court established a non-exclusive
    list    of    factors          that    a    court      reviewing      a    decision      denying
    benefits in an ERISA case can consider to determine whether the
    denial was “reasonable”:
    (1) [T]he language of the plan; (2) the purposes and
    goals of the plan; (3) the adequacy of the materials
    considered to make the decision and the degree to
    which they support it; (4) whether the fiduciary’s
    interpretation was consistent with other provisions in
    the plan and with earlier interpretations of the plan;
    (5) whether the decision making process was reasoned
    10
    and   principled;  (6)  whether   the   decision   was
    consistent   with  the  procedural   and   substantive
    requirements of ERISA; (7) any external standard
    relevant to the exercise of discretion; and (8) the
    fiduciary’s motives and any conflict of interest it
    may have.
    
    201 F.3d at 342-43
    .       Each factor will be addressed in turn.
    (1) Language of the Plan
    All    parties     agree      that       the      Plan   does     not     define
    “compensation.”        The   district         court    found   that    although      the
    meaning of the term is ambiguous, this factor weighed in favor
    of    the   Appellees.        The    district          court   deferred       to     the
    Committee’s     interpretation           of     “compensation,”        because       it
    recognized    ERISA’s    policy     of    judicial       deference,    acknowledged
    the   Committee’s   “inherent       discretionary         authority,”     and      found
    “no compelling reason” to adopt Appellants’ interpretations of
    “compensation.”        (J.A. 1319-20.)           The Supreme Court stated in
    Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 
    489 U.S. 101
    , 111 (1989),
    that under ERISA, judicial deference is owed to a fiduciary’s
    reasonable discretionary decision.                In this case, the district
    court considered Appellants’ interpretation but decided that the
    fiduciary’s     interpretation           was     reasonable      and     worthy      of
    deference.    For the reasons set forth below, we agree.
    Appellants argue that “compensation,” as used in Section
    1.10, means “benefits” and salary.                    Appellants contend that in
    the Plan “Annual Base Pay,” or salary, is used to calculate the
    11
    amount of separation pay, but was never set forth as a synonym
    for “compensation.”     Further, the Plan does not refer to “Annual
    Base Pay” in Section 1.10, which sets out eligibility under the
    section      titled:   “Eligible       Termination      of       Employment.”
    Appellants argue that if the Plan intended “compensation” to
    mean just “Annual Base Pay” it would have said so explicitly as
    it did in other sections.
    The Plan language does not support Appellants’ definition.
    Article III of the Plan, which is otherwise titled “Separation
    Pay and Special Separation Allowances,” begins with Section 3.1:
    “Benefits Eligibility.”       This is the first indication, of many,
    that the Plan defines “benefits” as “separation pay” or “special
    separation allowances.”       Section 3.3, “Separation Pay,” states:
    If the Participant’s employment with the company is
    terminated as a result of an Eligible Termination of
    Employment, the Participant shall receive separation
    pay from the Company in an amount that will vary
    depending upon the number of Service Years the
    Participant has with the Company.   The separation pay
    shall be calculated on the basis of one (1) week of
    pay (based on a pro rata share of the Participant’s
    Annual Base Pay) for each continuous Service Year plus
    one additional week.
    (J.A. 44.)     The last section in Article III, “Special Separation
    Allowances,”    explains   that    special    separation     allowances    fall
    into    a   category   with   unused       vacation   days    and    are   also
    calculated    by   considering    a   participant’s    “Annual      Base   Pay.”
    Appellants’ argument that “compensation” in Section 1.10(c) of
    12
    the Plan should include salary and “benefits,” as Appellants
    define the word, is unsupported by the rest of the Plan.                               The
    separation     pay     benefit     is    an    amount    of    money    calculated      by
    looking at an employee’s immediate past salary.                        The formula for
    calculating separation pay does not include a variable for the
    value of lost future benefits.                 It was logical for Appellees to
    interpret “compensation” as salary since “benefits” are almost
    exclusively     calculated        by    considering      a    participant’s      salary;
    “benefits” as Appellants define them are not discussed in the
    Plan.
    Article IV, “Benefits Payments,” employs the same use of
    “benefits” as Article III:               a benefit is either separation pay
    or a special separation allowance.                    This Article, however, adds
    an important caveat:             “The total amount of benefits paid to a
    Participant      shall     not     exceed      the     equivalent      of     twice    the
    employee’s Annual Base Pay during the year immediately preceding
    the termination of his service with the Company.”                             (J.A. 46.)
    This language caps the amount of special separation allowances
    that can be paid to a participant in addition to their “Annual
    Base    Pay”   under     the     Plan.        Thus,    Appellants’      argument      that
    “compensation”       was       meant     to        encapsulate   both       salary     and
    benefits,      without     any    explicit         explanation    in    the    Plan,    is
    13
    unconvincing.      The   Plan   accounted       for   every    cent    paid    to    a
    participant and set out definite limits.
    Each of the four criteria for separation pay in Section
    1.10   describes    circumstances    where      Celanese       would   expect       an
    employee to require temporary replacement income because of an
    involuntary loss of employment with Celanese:
    1.10 “Eligible Termination of Employment” shall mean
    the involuntary termination of the Employee’s
    employment due to
    (a) a permanent reduction in force or job
    elimination;
    (b) a plant or department closing;
    (c) a sale of all or part of a business provided
    the   successor   employer  does  not  offer
    continued reemployment at a comparable level
    of compensation; or
    (d) an inability to perform required duties
    (unless   this   inability   is  due  to   a
    Disability).
    (J.A. 38-39.)      If we adopt Appellants’ suggestion that Section
    1.10(c) grants compensation for lost benefits, then employees
    that qualify under the Plan through Sections 1.10(a), (b), or
    (d)    would   receive   unequal    compensation         where    there       is    no
    indication of any intent to do so.           It would be unreasonable to
    conclude   from    the   language   of    the    Plan    that     employees        who
    qualify for separation pay under Section 1.10(c) are entitled to
    some    special    payment   that   those       who     qualify    under       other
    subsections     cannot   receive.        Therefore,      the     district      court
    rightly deferred to the Appellees’ interpretation of the Plan.
    14
    (2) Purposes and Goals of the Plan
    Appellants        argued     that     the       purpose    for       “compensation”
    covering salary and benefits was to “encourage employees facing
    the sale or shutdown of a business not to prematurely terminate
    their employment, so that a smooth transition could be made to
    the    new    purchaser.”         (Appellants’          Br.     29.)         However,   the
    district court found that the Committee reasonably believed the
    purpose      of   the   Plan     was   to   provide      an     “income      replacement”
    benefit (J.A. 1320) and that providing separation pay based on
    lost future benefits would create a windfall contrary to the
    Plan’s    goals.        The    district     court      rationalized          that   because
    Celanese      could     reduce    benefits       at    any    time     for    any   reason,
    Appellants never had an “earned and vested” right to receive
    future health and pension benefits.                   (J.A. 1322.)
    We agree with the district court that the purpose suggested
    by    Appellees       was   reasonable.           This       Court   has      continuously
    emphasized that a fiduciary’s reasonable interpretation is owed
    deference.        See Colucci v. Agfa Corp. Severance Pay Plan, 
    431 F.3d 170
    , 179 (4th Cir. 2005), abrogated on other grounds by
    Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn, ___ U.S. ___, 
    128 S. Ct. 2343
    (2008); Hickey v. Digital Equip. Corp., 
    43 F.3d 941
    , 945-46 (4th
    Cir. 1995); Doe v. Group Hospitalization & Med. Servs., 
    3 F.3d 15
    80, 86 (4th Cir. 1993), abrogated on other grounds by Glenn; de
    Nobel v. Vitro Corp., 
    885 F.2d 1180
    , 1185-86 (4th Cir. 1989).
    (3)    Adequacy        of    the    Materials       Considered     To    Make    the
    Decision and the Degree to Which They Support It
    Appellants       take       issue   with      the   district     court’s    finding
    that the April decision was an adequate basis for denying their
    claim.        However, the district court correctly found that it was
    reasonable       for     the    Committee        to    consider    the    past     business
    decisions       made     by    the     company     that     affected     their     ultimate
    determination; this consideration did not violate ERISA.                                 See
    e.g., Elmore v. Cone Mills Corp., 
    23 F.3d 855
    , 863 (4th Cir.
    1994)    (holding      that         employer’s     decisions      in    creating    benefit
    plan    are    business        decisions     that      do   not   give    rise     to   ERISA
    procedures).       Appellants have not demonstrated that this finding
    was clearly erroneous.
    (4) Whether the Fiduciary’s Interpretation Was Consistent
    with Other Provisions in the Plan and with Earlier
    Interpretations of the Plan.
    Whether    the    administrator’s             decision    was    consistent     with
    its      earlier       Plan         interpretations          is    highly        contested.
    Appellants argue that the bonus payment to Vectran employees was
    precedent to support their claim.                       Conversely, Appellees argue
    16
    that Appellants’ claims were the first claims under the Plan and
    that the Vectran transaction was not applicable precedent.
    The district court found that the Vectran employees did not
    receive any benefit under the Plan.    The Vectran employees were
    given the difference between their old benefits and the benefits
    offered by their new employer in the form of a “signing bonus”
    because of their worth to the overall sale.     The district court
    specifically noted that:
    [B]ecause [Vectran’s] principal product was still in
    the   stages   of   research    and   development,  the
    intellectual capital of the seven Vectran employees
    was one of the business’s most significant assets.
    Accordingly, it made good business sense for Celanese
    to make concessions necessary to close the deal and
    keep the employees happy enough to continue their
    employment with the buyer.    PBI, however, presented a
    much different scenario:     It was a mature business
    with over $4 million in annual profits, and human
    capital was not as much of a critical asset of the
    business.
    (J.A. 1326, internal citations omitted.)       The district court
    gave the fiduciary the deference owed its interpretation of the
    Plan, and distinguished the divestiture negotiations from the
    plan administration. 2   Appellants have not demonstrated that the
    court’s factual findings were clearly erroneous.
    2
    See Sutton v. Weirton Steel Div. of Nat’l Steel Corp., 
    567 F. Supp. 1184
    , 1201 (N.D. W. Va. 1983), aff’d, 
    724 F.2d 406
     (4th
    Cir. 1983) (“When acting on behalf of the pension fund, there is
    no doubt that a fiduciary having such ‘dual loyalty’ must act
    solely to benefit participants and beneficiaries.    However, it
    is the Court’s opinion here that when a corporate employer
    17
    (5) Whether the Decision was Reasoned and Principled and
    (6) Consistency               with      Procedural            and         Substantive
    Requirements of ERISA
    The facts of this case support the district court’s finding
    that Booth factors (5) and (6) weigh in favor of Appellees.
    When Smith received Appellants’ claims, he immediately notified
    members    of    the      Committee.        Smith    sent    letters      to    Appellants
    acknowledging receipt of the claims and inviting them to submit
    additional information in support of their claims.                              Appellants
    did   in    fact       provide      supplemental       information,          which   Smith
    forwarded       to   the    Committee.        When     the       Committee      denied   the
    claims,    it    stated      a     clear   basis,    quoted       from    the    Plan,   and
    attached a summary of the Plan.                   The denial letter also informed
    the   parties        of    their    right    to     bring    a    civil    action    under
    negotiates the terms of sale of a division, whose employees are
    participants in a pension plan, the negotiations that affect the
    terms and conditions of future pension benefits (at least those
    that are not protected by ERISA’s vesting and non-forfeitability
    provisions), do not implicate fiduciary duties as to the
    pension fund. Such negotiations    are   distinct   from actually
    administering a plan and conducting transactions affecting the
    monies and property of the plan’s fund.      In other words, the
    mere fact that a company has named itself as pension plan
    administrator or trustee does not restrict it from pursuing
    reasonable business behavior in negotiations concerning pension
    benefits not otherwise affected by the requirements of ERISA.”)
    18
    § 502(a) of ERISA.          In response to the request of Appellants,
    Appellees provided them with a copy of the Plan. 3
    Appellants      have     not    demonstrated           that    the     September
    decision    denied   them     any    procedures        required       under   ERISA.
    Therefore, the district court reached the correct conclusions
    concerning Booth factors (5) and (6).                  See Brogan, 105 F.3d at
    165-66 (determining plaintiff was given full and fair review of
    his claim because he was notified of specific reasons for the
    benefit denial and of the relevant plan provisions); Ellis, 
    126 F.3d at 234-36
     (finding that plan administrator complied with
    ERISA’s    requirements      when   it        issued   letter       explaining   the
    reasons for the denial, quoted the relevant plan language, and
    described appeal procedures).
    (7) External       Standard      Relevant         to     the     Exercise    of
    Discretion
    Appellants argue that two external standards of statutory
    construction   governed      the    exercise      of    Appellees’        discretion.
    They claim that the doctrine of “expressio unius est exclusio
    3
    Although the initial letter did not tell Appellants how to
    appeal their claims, in response to Appellants’ next letter,
    counsel for Smith stated:    “In the event that you decide to
    appeal the Committee’s denial of your claim for severance
    benefits, you may do so by submitting comments in writing,
    documents, records, and other relevant information to the
    committee.   Please direct your appeal to the committee to my
    attention.” (J.A. 119.)
    19
    alterius” 4 leads to the conclusion that the drafters of the Plan
    did     not     intend      that     “Annual     Base   Pay”   be    understood     as
    “compensation.”            In support of their argument, Appellants state
    that the drafters of the Plan were aware of and used the concept
    of base salary in determining the amount of benefits; thus, the
    failure        to    do    so   in    defining    “compensation”       supports     the
    conclusion that “compensation” was intended to mean something
    more.         Therefore, under the doctrine of expressio unius, the
    fact that “Annual Base Pay” was expressly defined and used for
    another purpose in another section of the Plan means that the
    drafters would have done the same if “Annual Base Pay” was meant
    to equal “compensation” in the application of eligibility for
    separation pay.             (Appellants’ Br. 26.)          This argument is just
    another way of stating Appellants’ contention that “Annual Base
    Pay”        could    not   possibly    equal    “compensation”      because   “Annual
    Base Pay” is not mentioned in Section 1.10(c).                      As stated above,
    Appellants’ interpretation of “compensation” does not logically
    follow from the Plan’s language, whereas “Annual Base Pay” does
    complement the use of “compensation” in Section 1.10(c).
    Next, Appellants state that this case is governed by the
    doctrine        of    “contra   proferentem,”      which   requires     a   court    to
    4
    “A canon of construction holding that to express or
    include one thing implies the exclusion of the other, or of the
    alternative.” Black’s Law Dictionary 602 (7th ed. 1999).
    20
    construe ambiguous contract language against the drafter.                                      They
    claim     that     this     doctrine       has         repeatedly       been        applied      in
    interpreting ERISA plans and has specifically been identified as
    an “external standard.”                 (Appellants’ Br. 27 (citing Carolina
    Care Plan Inc. v. McKenzie, 
    467 F.3d 383
    , 388 (4th Cir. 2006),
    cert.     dismissed,        
    128 S. Ct. 6
         (2007)     (“Faced          with       such
    ambiguity, a reasonable administrator-insurer would look to an
    important        external       standard        for      interpreting          an     ambiguous
    contractual provision—that it be construed against the drafting
    party.”)).)
    Generally,       this     Court       limits      the     application             of     the
    doctrine     of      contra       proferentem            in     ERISA     cases        to        the
    interpretation of complicated insurance contracts, particularly
    health     insurance        contracts.                 See,     e.g.,     Doe        v.        Group
    Hospitalization & Med. Servs., 
    3 F.3d 80
    , 89 (4th Cir. 1993);
    Bynum v. CIGNA Healthcare of N.C., Inc., 
    287 F.3d 305
    , 313-14
    (4th Cir. 2002); Carolina Care Plan Inc., 467 F.3d at 389.                                        In
    our recent decision in Carden v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., ___ F.3d
    ___, 
    2009 WL 635419
     (4th Cir. March 11, 2009), we explicitly
    found     that     the    Supreme       Court’s          recent     decision          in       Glenn
    forecloses the use of contra proferentem to limit the discretion
    plan language gives to an administrator to interpret disputed or
    doubtful    terms.          Carden,      at     **3.          Neither   of     the     external
    21
    standards Appellants raise lessens the deference owed to the
    administrator’s interpretation of the Plan.                     Thus, the district
    court did not err in its determination that this Booth factor
    weighed in favor of Appellees.
    (8) Fiduciary Motives and/or Conflicts of Interest
    In determining the eighth factor, the court considers the
    “fiduciary’s motives and any conflict of interest it may have,”
    in    order   to   determine       the    reasonableness       of    the    fiduciary’s
    discretionary       decision.            See    Booth,   
    201 F.3d at 342-44
    .
    Appellants state that because the “funding for the plan comes
    directly from the coffers of a company, rather than through a
    funded trust . . . [and the] decision to award or deny benefits
    impacts    defendants’       own    financial     interests         . . .   a    conflict
    exists and must be weighed under Booth.”                 (Appellants’ Br. 45.)
    An administrator’s conflict of interest is only “one factor
    among     many”    that   a    court       considers     when        determining     the
    reasonableness of an administrator’s decision.                         Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2351
    .        The district court recognized that there was a
    conflict of interest, but determined that management did not
    exercise any undue influence on Cunningham or other members of
    the    Committee.      The    district         court   held    that    “the      benefits
    committee, although conflicted, was not influenced by improper
    motives or authorities.” (J.A. 1328.)                  Appellants have not shown
    22
    that the district court’s factual determinations were clearly
    erroneous.
    The district court held a three-day hearing to determine
    the effect of the conflict.             Appellants seem to suggest that we
    should set aside the district court’s factual and credibility
    determinations.      However, this Court must give due regard to the
    opportunity     of   the    trial   judge      to   weigh   the   credibility   of
    witnesses.      Minyard Enters. v. S.E. Chem. & Solvent Co., 
    184 F.3d 373
    , 380 (4th Cir. 1999).                 The district court thoroughly
    and   appropriately        considered    the    conflict    of    interest   under
    Glenn.       Therefore, this Court finds no reason to overturn the
    district court’s assessment of the Booth factors.
    IV.
    This Court reviews the district court’s determination of
    its standard for reviewing a plan administrator’s decision and
    interpretations of a plan’s language de novo.                 Colucci, 
    431 F.3d at 176
    .      Judicial      review     of    an    administrator’s     decision
    concerning an ERISA plan decision is reviewed “under a de novo
    standard unless the plan provides to the contrary.”                    Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2348
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted);
    Firestone, 
    489 U.S. at 115
    .              When the plan language, as here,
    grants   the    administrator       discretionary       authority,     review   is
    23
    conducted under an abuse of discretion standard.                              Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2348
    ; Smith v. Continental Cas. Co., 
    369 F.3d 412
    , 417
    (4th Cir. 2004).
    Although the district court concluded that the Committee
    “was    acting     under       an   inherent,      albeit     minimal,          conflict   of
    interest in that the Plan was unfunded and self-insured,” it
    found that “as a matter of law no reduction in the deference
    given to the discretionary decision of the benefits committee is
    necessary to ‘neutralize any untoward influence resulting from a
    [conflict of interest].’”                (J.A. 1318 (quoting Booth, 
    201 F.3d at
    343 n.2).)
    Appellants         argue      that        because      the        district        court
    acknowledged that there was a conflict of interest it should
    have     adjusted        the    degree      of     deference        to        sliding    scale
    deference.        Appellants’ argument has little merit in light of
    the Supreme Court’s holding in Glenn.
    In Glenn, the Court held that an administrator’s conflict
    of     interest     did    not      change       the    standard         of     review   from
    deferential to de novo review, or an alternative hybrid review.
    Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2350
    ; Champion v. Black & Decker (U.S.)
    Inc.,     
    550 F.3d 353
    ,     358     (4th       Cir.   2008);           Carden,    **3.
    Specifically, the Court in Glenn stated:
    We do not believe that Firestone’s statement implies a
    change  in   the   standard  of   review,   say,  from
    24
    deferential to de novo review. Trust law continues to
    apply a deferential standard of review to the
    discretionary decision making of a conflicted trustee,
    while at the same time requiring the reviewing judge
    to take account of the conflict when determining
    whether the trustee, substantively or procedurally,
    has abused his discretion.
    Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2350
    .                The Court stated further that a
    conflict of interest should not lead to “special burden-of-proof
    rules, or other special procedural or evidentiary rules, focused
    narrowly    upon    the     evaluator/payor      conflict.”         
    Id. at 2351
    .
    Instead,    as    stated    above,   a    conflict      is    merely    one     of   the
    “several different, often case-specific, factors” that a court
    weighs when evaluating whether there is an abuse of discretion.
    
    Id.
        While Appellants’ suggestion that the district court should
    have   used   a    different    standard       of    review    in   light     of     the
    conflict might have been availing pre-Glenn, it has no merit
    now.
    Second, Appellants argue that where a decision is not made
    according to the Plan, the decision should not be reviewed for
    an abuse of discretion.           See Sharkey v. Ultramar Energy Ltd.,
    Lasmo PLC, 
    70 F.3d 226
    , 229 (2d Cir. 1995); Sanford v. Harvard
    Indus., Inc., 
    262 F.3d 590
    , 597 (6th Cir. 2001).                        Perhaps this
    argument    would    have    merit   if    the      April    decision    were    being
    reviewed.        The district court rightly found that “Plaintiffs
    [sic] claim for separation pay was the first formal claim ever
    25
    made under the Plan, and consequently the first time that the
    Committee    was     obligated   to   act   qua   fiduciary    in    making     an
    authoritative        eligibility      determination    under        the     Plan.
    Therefore, Celanese’s informal business practices are simply not
    relevant to this matter.”             (J.A. 1324.)     The district court
    correctly found that the denial of separation pay in September
    was the decision under ERISA review and that ERISA procedures
    did   not   attach    to   informal   business    decisions    predating      the
    claims.      Appellants      cannot    demonstrate    that    the    September
    decision was contrary to the Plan.
    V.
    For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district
    court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    26
    KING, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Because of the dubious circumstances of Celanese’s decision
    to deny separation pay to Appellants, I would prefer to dispose
    of this case by directing the district court to enter judgment
    in   Appellants’        favor    on    their    ERISA   claim,    brought     under   
    29 U.S.C. § 1132
    (a)(1)(B) to recover benefits due.                        In any event,
    the case should be remanded in the wake of Metropolitan Life
    Insurance Co. v. Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. 2343
     (2008), for the district
    court to properly weigh Celanese’s conflict of interest in the
    applicable abuse-of-discretion analysis.                      Thus, with all respect
    to my fine colleagues on the panel majority, I dissent.
    I.
    Two decades ago, the Supreme Court held in Firestone Tire &
    Rubber      Co.    v.    Bruch        that,    “[c]onsistent       with    established
    principles of trust law, . . . a denial of benefits challenged
    under § 1132(a)(1)(B) is to be reviewed under a de novo standard
    unless the benefit plan gives the administrator or fiduciary
    discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits or
    to construe the terms of the plan.”                     
    489 U.S. 101
    , 115 (1989).
    More     recently,       while    this        appeal    was    pending,     the   Court
    clarified in Glenn that the abuse-of-discretion standard applies
    even   if    the   plan    administrator           operated    under   a   conflict   of
    interest, including the common situation where “the entity that
    27
    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.”                               
    128 S. Ct. at 2346
    .       The court explained that, although the decision of a
    conflicted       administrator           is     entitled        to     deference,          the
    administrator’s         “conflict    should         ‘be    weighed     as   a     factor    in
    determining whether there is an abuse of discretion.’”                               
    Id. at 2350
        (quoting       Firestone,    
    489 U.S. at 115
    )    (other      internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    Writing    for     the    Glenn    majority,         Justice    Breyer      observed
    that “[t]rust law continues to apply a deferential standard of
    review    to     the     discretionary        decisionmaking          of    a    conflicted
    trustee, while at the same time requiring the reviewing judge to
    take    account     of    the    conflict          when    determining       whether       the
    trustee,       substantively        or        procedurally,           has       abused     his
    discretion.”       Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2350
    .                   He further explained
    that
    when judges review the lawfulness of benefit denials,
    they will often take account of several different
    considerations of which a conflict of interest is one.
    This kind of review is no stranger to the judicial
    system.   Not only trust law, but also administrative
    law, can ask judges to determine lawfulness by taking
    account of several different, often case-specific,
    factors, reaching a result by weighing all together.
    In such instances,            any one factor will act as a
    tiebreaker  when   the             other   factors  are  closely
    balanced, the degree of            closeness necessary depending
    upon the tiebreaking               factor’s inherent or case-
    28
    specific importance.   The conflict of interest . . .
    should   prove   more  important    (perhaps   of  great
    importance) where circumstances suggest a higher
    likelihood that it affected the benefits decision,
    including, but not limited to, cases where an
    insurance company administrator has a history of
    biased claims administration.     It should prove less
    important (perhaps to the vanishing point) where the
    administrator   has taken    active   steps   to  reduce
    potential bias and to promote accuracy, for example,
    by walling off claims administrators from those
    interested in firm finances, or by imposing management
    checks    that   penalize   inaccurate    decisionmaking
    irrespective of whom the inaccuracy benefits.
    
    Id. at 2351
     (citations omitted); see also 
    id. at 2352
     (Roberts,
    C.J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (“The
    majority    would       accord    weight,      of    varying    and     indeterminate
    amount, to the existence of . . . a conflict in every case where
    it is present.”).
    In the wake of Glenn, we have recognized that “any conflict
    of     interest    is     considered     as    one    factor,        among   many,   in
    determining         the        reasonableness         of       the      discretionary
    determination.”           Champion v. Black & Decker (U.S.) Inc., 
    550 F.3d 353
    ,     359   (4th     Cir.   2008)       (reiterating       the   “familiar
    standard” that “a discretionary determination will be upheld if
    reasonable”).             And,    we    have    acknowledged          the    continued
    applicability of our pre-Glenn reasonableness test, comprised of
    eight nonexclusive factors that a court may consider (including
    the existence of a conflict):
    “(1) the language of the plan; (2) the purposes and
    goals of the plan; (3) the adequacy of the materials
    29
    considered to make the decision and the degree to
    which they support it; (4) whether the fiduciary’s
    interpretation was consistent with other provisions in
    the plan and with earlier interpretations of the plan;
    (5) whether the decisionmaking process was reasoned
    and   principled;  (6)   whether   the   decision   was
    consistent   with  the   procedural   and   substantive
    requirements of ERISA; (7) any external standard
    relevant to the exercise of discretion; and (8) the
    fiduciary’s motives and any conflict of interest it
    may have.”
    Champion, 
    550 F.3d at 359
     (quoting Booth v. Wal-Mart Stores,
    Inc. Assocs. Health & Welfare Plan, 
    201 F.3d 335
    , 342-43 (4th
    Cir. 2000)).∗
    II.
    Here, the district court properly recognized that Celanese
    was accorded discretionary authority to make benefit eligibility
    determinations     and,    thus,      that    the     rejection      of   Appellants’
    claim    for   separation       pay   was     to    be    reviewed    for   abuse    of
    discretion.        And,     the       court        correctly    acknowledged        the
    applicability     of      our    eight-factor            reasonableness     test     in
    conducting such review.           As Glenn now makes clear, however, the
    ∗ Prior to Glenn, as we observed in Champion, we also
    accounted for conflicts of interest by applying “a ‘modified’
    abuse-of-discretion standard that reduced deference to the
    administrator to the degree necessary to neutralize any untoward
    influence resulting from the conflict of interest.”     Champion,
    
    550 F.3d at 359
    . Of course, Glenn abrogated our modified abuse-
    of-discretion standard.     See Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2351
    .
    Accordingly, I agree with the panel majority’s rejection of
    Appellants’ pre-Glenn contention that the district court should
    have applied the modified abuse-of-discretion standard.
    30
    court’s   analysis    of   the   conflict   of    interest   factor   was
    fundamentally flawed.
    A.
    Significantly,    the   district    court   conducted   a   three-day
    bench trial in late July 2007 for the sole purpose of taking
    evidence on the conflict issue.         The court specifically focused
    on the question of “whether or not there was undue influence on
    the Benefits Committee which would have impacted the legitimacy
    of the committee’s interpretation of the [Separation Pay Plan].”
    J.A. 1001.   The evidence adduced during the bench trial, as well
    as that submitted by the parties in support of their cross-
    motions for summary judgment, reflected the following.
    ●    The Plan required participants to first submit
    written separation pay claims to the Plan’s
    Administrator, and to then appeal any adverse
    decision to the three-member Benefits Committee.
    See 
    29 U.S.C. § 1133
    (2) (mandating that ERISA
    plans “afford a reasonable opportunity to any
    participant whose claim for benefits has been
    denied for a full and fair review by the
    appropriate named fiduciary of the decision
    denying the claim”).
    ●    Celanese    officials   repeatedly  —    but  only
    privately — acknowledged in early 2005 that both
    the Vectran and PBI employees would be entitled
    to separation pay under the Plan if they were to
    receive inferior benefits from the purchasers of
    their respective business units (Kuraray and
    InterTech).    There was particular concern about
    the larger separation pay obligation to the PBI
    employees (approximately $876,000) than to the
    Vectran employees (about $125,000), and the
    corresponding    effect  on   the  value   of  the
    InterTech deal.
    31
    ●   On April 1, 2005, Celanese executed a “side
    letter” with Kuraray — under which Celanese would
    provide separation pay to the Vectran employees,
    but the payment would appear to be part of a
    “signing bonus” funded by Kuraray — apparently to
    conceal from the PBI employees the payment of
    Plan benefits to their Vectran counterparts.
    ●   In mid-April 2005, Cheryl Cunningham, Celanese’s
    benefits manager, concluded that the InterTech
    benefits   were   indeed  inferior   and,   thus,
    recommended that PBI employees receive separation
    pay — just as the Vectran employees (secretly)
    had.
    ●   At the direction of Jay Townsend, the Celanese
    official negotiating the PBI-InterTech sale, a
    telephone conference call was conducted on April
    22, 2005, with Townsend, in-house counsel Mathias
    Kuhr, benefits manager Cunningham, and human
    resources   official  B.J.  Smith  participating.
    Only Cunningham (as just one member of the three-
    member Benefits Committee) and Smith (the Plan’s
    Administrator) possessed any authority to decide
    the separation pay issue.
    ●   During the conference call, Smith convinced
    Cunningham that the PBI employees were not
    entitled to separation pay under the Plan — not
    because of the plain terms of the Plan (which
    Smith had never read), but based on past
    practices in non-Plan-related divestitures. Soon
    after the call, Cunningham and the second member
    of the Benefits Committee informally agreed that
    the PBI employees were ineligible for Plan
    benefits; the third Committee member was never
    consulted about the matter.     The PBI-InterTech
    negotiations    then     proceeded    with    the
    understanding that any claim for Plan benefits
    made by the PBI employees would definitely be
    denied.
    ●   Unaware that the decision to deny them Plan
    benefits had already been made, the Appellant PBI
    employees submitted written claims for separation
    pay in June 2005.   Celanese thereafter conducted
    32
    sham administrative proceedings — orchestrated by
    its lawyers — in order to give the appearance of
    a full and fair claims review.     As just a few
    examples of Celanese’s egregious and dishonest
    conduct:
    -   Smith advised Appellants in a July 7,
    2005   letter  that   they   were  being
    permitted, “[i]n the interests of being
    fair,” ten days to submit additional
    evidence in support of their claims,
    J.A. 79, but the letter had actually
    been drafted by a Celanese lawyer as a
    means to “requir[e] the [PBI employees]
    to submit all of their evidence up
    front,    most  likely    limiting   any
    evidence in [any subsequent] lawsuit to
    the information submitted in the claims
    process,” 
    id. at 239
    ;
    -   Once     Appellants    submitted     their
    additional     evidence,    counsel    for
    Celanese   explored   various   post   hoc
    justifications (other than the plain
    language    of    the   Plan)   for    the
    predetermined April 22, 2005 decision
    to deny Appellants’ claims for Plan
    benefits; and
    -   Correspondence from a Celanese attorney
    to Appellants, sent in the fall of 2005
    to announce and defend the benefits
    denial        decision,       contained
    misinformation concerning, inter alia,
    the decision-making process utilized by
    Celanese, the Appellants’ procedural
    rights, and the nature of the so-called
    “signing bonus” paid to the Vectran
    employees.
    ●   Significantly, the April 22, 2005 benefits denial
    decision not only contravened Plan procedures
    (requiring the Plan’s Administrator to make the
    initial claim determination and the Benefits
    Committee to resolve any appeal thereof), but
    also deprived Appellants of protections afforded
    by ERISA (mandating a full and fair review).
    33
    At the conclusion of the bench trial, the district court
    acknowledged that “without a doubt . . . it was a sloppy and
    messy    process        by    which    the    Benefits       Committee         reached”    the
    benefits denial decision.                J.A. 1005.          Nevertheless, the court
    accepted         as     truthful        the         testimony       of       Cunningham       —
    uncontradicted by direct evidence (though called into question
    by circumstantial evidence) — that the Committee had not been
    improperly influenced by Townsend or anyone else.                               As such, the
    court concluded that “the best we can say for plaintiffs is that
    this bench trial ends in a draw.”                          
    Id. at 1005-06
    .             Because
    “plaintiffs [had] the burden of proof [and] the party with the
    burden      of   proof       loses    when    it’s    a    draw,”      the     court   further
    concluded that it was compelled to “find[] as a matter of fact
    there was no undue influence on the decision of the Benefits
    Committee that PBI employees were ineligible for separation pay
    under the plan.”             
    Id. at 1006
    .
    Thereafter, in disposing of the parties’ cross-motions for
    summary judgment by written Memorandum and Order of September
    27,     2007,     the    district       court        engaged      in     our    eight-factor
    reasonableness test.             The court deemed the conflict of interest
    factor to be “inapplicable,” however, based on its determination
    at    the    conclusion         of    the     bench       trial    “that       the     benefits
    committee, although conflicted, was not influenced by improper
    34
    motives or authorities.”                   J.A. 1328.            The court did acknowledge
    that     “[t]he       lack         of     formalities            by     which      the    benefits
    committee’s decisions were reached, and the indiscrete mixing of
    fiduciary and non-fiduciary roles, has not made this an easy
    case to decide.”             
    Id.
            “However,” the court concluded, “Celanese
    has produced wholly benign motives and reasons for its decision,
    and Plaintiffs have failed to carry their burden of persuasion
    by     showing    that       these        explanations           are     implausible.”            
    Id.
    Accordingly,       the       court       ruled     that     “it        was   not    an    abuse   of
    discretion to deny Plaintiffs’ claims for separation pay under
    the Plan.”       
    Id. at 1329
    .
    B.
    Simply put, the district court’s handling of the conflict
    of     interest       factor        —     disregarding            Celanese’s        acknowledged
    conflict on the ground that Appellants failed to demonstrate by
    a preponderance of the evidence that there was undue influence
    on the Benefits Committee — is wholly at odds with controlling
    Supreme       Court     precedent,         culminating            in    Glenn.       As    Justice
    Breyer       observed    therein,          trust      law    “requir[es]           the   reviewing
    judge to take account of the conflict when determining whether
    the     trustee,      substantively           or      procedurally,           has    abused       his
    discretion.”          Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2350
     (emphasis added).                                 The
    reviewing judge is not permitted to disregard a conflict for
    lack    of    proof     by    a     preponderance           of    the    evidence        that   such
    35
    conflict impacted the benefits decision; rather, the judge must
    simply consider the conflict as one of the factors to be weighed
    in assessing the decision’s overall reasonableness.                              See Carden
    v.   Aetna     Life       Ins.    Co.,    
    559 F.3d 256
    ,    260     (4th     Cir.   2009)
    (recognizing that, under Glenn, “a conflict of interest becomes
    just    one     of        the     ‘several      different,      often      case-specific,
    factors’      to     be    weighed       together      in    determining        whether   the
    administrator abused its discretion” (quoting Glenn, 
    128 S. Ct. at 2351
    ).      Indeed, the purpose of having a judge — rather than a
    jury — assess the reasonableness of a benefits decision is that
    the judge is better-equipped to engage in a nuanced weighing of
    relevant factors.               See Berry v. Ciba-Geigy Corp., 
    761 F.2d 1003
    ,
    1007    (4th       Cir.         1985)    (observing         that,   under       trust     law,
    “proceedings to determine rights under employee benefit plans
    are equitable in character and thus a matter for a judge, not a
    jury”).
    Finally,       that       the     district    court      wrote     off    Celanese’s
    conflict      of   interest         as   “inapplicable”        to   the    reasonableness
    inquiry is particularly problematic in view of the circumstances
    of the benefits denial decision.                     For example, Celanese failed
    to “take[] active steps to reduce potential bias and to promote
    accuracy . . . by walling off claims administrators from those
    interested in firm finances,” such as would render the conflict
    “less important (perhaps to the vanishing point).”                               Glenn, 128
    36
    S. Ct. at 2351.          Rather, Plan Administrator Smith and Benefits
    Committee member Cunningham made their benefits denial decision
    — a sudden reversal of a Plan interpretation widely shared by
    Celanese officials, including Cunningham — during a conference
    call     arranged    and     participated         in    by    PBI-InterTech        deal
    negotiator    Townsend.           Because    these     and   other    “circumstances
    suggest a higher likelihood that [Celanese’s conflict] affected
    the benefits decision,” id., the conflict should have been given
    significant weight in the abuse-of-discretion analysis — weight
    that, at a minimum, probably would have tipped the scale in
    Appellants’      favor.      It    is   thus     imperative    that    we    at   least
    remand    this    case     for    proper     consideration      of     the   conflict
    factor.
    Accordingly, I dissent.
    37
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-2064

Citation Numbers: 339 F. App'x 320

Judges: Gregory, King, Per Curiam, Wilkinson

Filed Date: 7/30/2009

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/7/2023

Authorities (23)

19-employee-benefits-cas-2590-pens-plan-guide-p-23914y-daniel-j-sharkey , 70 F.3d 226 ( 1995 )

De Nobel v. Vitro Corp. , 885 F.2d 1180 ( 1989 )

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Brenda Elliott v. Sara Lee Corporation , 190 F.3d 601 ( 1999 )

Neal S. Smith v. Continental Casualty Company, Neal S. ... , 369 F.3d 412 ( 2004 )

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