Donald Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Company , 631 F. App'x 397 ( 2015 )


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  •                      NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 15a0801n.06
    No. 15-1480                                 FILED
    Dec 09, 2015
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                     DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    DONALD GODMAR,                                       )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                          )
    )
    v.                                                   )
    ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY;                             )
    COURT FOR THE EASTERN
    HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY                              )
    DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    DISABILITY PLAN; SEDGWICK CLAIMS                     )
    MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC.,                           )
    Defendants-Appellees.
    BEFORE: DAUGHTREY, COOK, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Donald Godmar appeals the district
    court’s grant of judgment on the administrative record to Hewlett-Packard Company
    (HP), the Hewlett-Packard Disability Plan (the Plan), and Sedgwick Claims Management
    Services, Inc. (Sedgwick), in this action to recover disability benefits under the Employee
    Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 
    29 U.S.C. § 1132
    (a)(1)(B). Godmar
    argues the denial of his disability claim was arbitrary and capricious. We VACATE the
    district court’s judgment and REMAND for further proceedings.
    I.
    Godmar worked as a customer-project manager at HP. In this role, Godmar
    managed HP programs at General Motors and led a team of eighteen to forty persons. He
    drove from HP to General Motors on a daily basis and spent eight to ten hours at the
    General Motors site. His position also required more extensive travel approximately
    No. 15-1480
    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    every six weeks. Aside from driving, Godmar’s position required five to six hours of
    sitting per day and less than one hour of standing and walking.
    On September 20, 2009, Godmar sustained traumatic injuries to his left leg in a
    water-skiing accident, including dislocation of his tibia and fibula, a tibia plateau
    fracture, a torn meniscus, a torn medial collateral ligament, a ruptured plantar fascia, a
    damaged Achilles tendon, a damaged thigh muscle, damaged ligaments in his ankle, and
    damaged peroneal, femoral, and sciatic nerves. Over the next three years, Godmar
    underwent nine surgeries to repair the damage, culminating in a knee-replacement
    arthroplasty in October 2011.       Because of his numerous surgeries, Godmar was
    prescribed pain medication for more than two years. Godmar took intermittent leaves of
    absence from HP during treatment for his injuries, including the 2011 knee-replacement
    surgery. He apparently received disability benefits from HP for at least some of these
    leaves of absence, including a period in February 2010 and from October 5, 2011 until at
    least December 31, 2011.1 Godmar’s orthopedic surgeon approved his return to work in
    early 2012.
    HP provides disability benefits through the Plan, which is administered by
    Sedgwick. In the first twenty-six weeks following the onset of an injury or sickness, an
    employee is eligible for short-term disability benefits if “totally disabled.” An employee
    qualifies as totally disabled if “unable to perform the material and essential functions” of
    the employee’s “usual occupation,” defined as “the customary work assigned” to the
    employee on the employee’s “customary schedule.”           HP delegated to Sedgwick its
    1
    Godmar’s history of absences after the water-skiing accident is not well
    documented in the administrative record.
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    “discretionary authority” to determine whether an employee is totally disabled. This
    determination is made “on the basis of objective medical evidence,” defined as “evidence
    establishing facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings,
    prejudices, or interpretations.”
    On June 1, 2012, Godmar visited his primary-care physician, Dr. David Schwarz,
    to address chronic pain from the water-skiing accident. Godmar also reported to Dr.
    Schwarz that his medications were “out of control,” leading to addiction, depression, and
    anxiety.    Dr. Schwarz’s clinical impressions included left great-toe pain, pain-
    management issues, and left foot and ankle pain. Dr. Schwarz told Godmar not to return
    to work until July 15, 2012. Godmar took a leave of absence from HP and applied for
    short-term disability benefits. On June 4, Dr. Schwarz sent Sedgwick a certification that
    Godmar was disabled. The certification detailed a diagnosis of left leg, foot, and ankle
    pain arising from the knee-replacement surgery and stated that Godmar was “[u]nable to
    work” from June 1 to July 15 because of “pain/meds.”
    In the following weeks, Sedgwick contacted Godmar to discuss his claim and
    ordered records from his medical providers. Sedgwick’s claim examiner requested an
    internal review by a registered nurse on June 20 to “determine if medical information
    presented substantiates initial benefits.” A nurse then reviewed the disability certification
    and concluded that “[m]edical information substantiate[d] disability from 6/1 to 6/15.”
    The nurse observed that Dr. Schwarz had referred Godmar to the orthopedic surgeon who
    performed the knee arthroplasty, Dr. Bruce Lawrence, and asked the examiner to request
    his notes for further review. The examiner then approved “initial benefits” for June 1
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    through June 30. Sedgwick contacted Godmar by phone on June 21 to inform him that
    he was approved for disability through the end of the month.
    The nurse reevaluated the available records on July 6 and determined there was
    no objective evidence to substantiate Godmar’s total-disability claim after June. On July
    12, while Godmar’s claim was still pending, Dr. Schwarz submitted a form to extend
    Godmar’s disability through September 15, 2012. By the end of July, Sedgwick obtained
    medical records from Dr. Lawrence, the orthopedic surgeon; Dr. Angel Rigueras, a
    physiatrist; Dr. John Kohn, a pain-management specialist; and Dr. Schwarz, the family
    physician. A second nurse reviewed the records on July 20 and found there was still no
    objective medical evidence to support Godmar’s claim. The second nurse reevaluated the
    claim on July 26, after receipt of additional records from Dr. Schwarz, but came to the
    same conclusion.
    Sedgwick issued its decision on July 30, 2012. In a letter to Godmar, Sedgwick
    informed him that short-term disability benefits had been terminated effective July 1.
    The letter explained that Sedgwick had reviewed the records from Godmar’s physicians,
    including Drs. Lawrence, Kohn, Rigueras, and Schwarz, and concluded that “[t]he
    medical documentation . . . [did] not contain objective findings to support [Godmar’s]
    inability to perform [his] usual and customary job duties.” The letter acknowledged that
    “a medical condition may exist” but stated that “there must be objective medical
    information to support disability benefits” under the Plan. Lastly, Sedgwick informed
    Godmar that he would need to “submit a written appeal and objective medical evidence”
    to perfect his claim.
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    Godmar submitted an appeal on August 8, 2012. In a six-page letter, Godmar
    addressed the findings Sedgwick cited in its decision and elaborated on the circumstances
    of his treatment in June and July. He explained that he was on morphine twenty-four
    hours per day, could no longer drive, and slept more than twenty hours per day several
    times per week. He also described his plan to seek professional help to address his opiate
    addiction. He attached a detailed spreadsheet that he and his wife used to track his
    medications.   On August 15, the day after Sedgwick received the appeal, Godmar
    checked himself into the Brighton Center for Recovery to treat his addiction; he was
    successfully discharged on August 28. On August 27, Dr. Schwarz sent Sedgwick a
    letter reiterating his support for Godmar’s disability claim and explaining that Godmar
    could not perform the core functions of his HP position because of his chronic pain and
    medication.
    Sedgwick sent Godmar’s records to two board-certified physicians to conduct
    outside reviews.   Dr. Richard Kaplan reviewed Godmar’s records from a physical-
    medicine perspective and found that although Godmar “appear[ed] to have [a] residual
    clinical finding in his left lower extremity from both an orthopedic and a neurological
    perspective,” this limitation “would not impact [Godmar’s] usual work activities”
    according to his job description. Dr. Kaplan concluded that Godmar was not totally
    disabled. Dr. Marcus Goldman reviewed Godmar’s file from a psychiatry perspective
    and found that Godmar was disabled from August 15 to August 28—the period when
    Godmar “was actively treating in a rehabilitation facility for his history of opiod [sic]
    addiction and was incapable of function or working due to his confinement.” Outside
    this period, Dr. Goldman concluded, there were “no relevant data to support disability.”
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    Relying on these reports, Sedgwick issued a decision on September 28 approving benefits
    from August 15 to August 28 and otherwise denying benefits beginning on July 2.
    Godmar’s attorney contacted Sedgwick on November 1, 2012, to inquire whether
    additional documents could be submitted. Sedgwick offered to “review new or additional
    information pertaining to Mr. Godmar’s claim, providing information submitted is not
    duplicate documentation already contained in the file.” Before the end of the month, Dr.
    Jeffrey M. Rosenberg, a pain specialist who treated Godmar, submitted a certification of
    disability to Sedgwick, and Dr. Schwarz submitted another certification on December 3.
    On March 14, 2013, Godmar’s attorney sent a forty-six-page letter and additional
    documentation, including records dating back to 2009 from more than a dozen doctors
    who treated Godmar after his water-skiing accident.
    Drs. Kaplan and Goldman reviewed the new files and spoke with Godmar’s
    providers. Dr. Kaplan remarked that “this new information continues to not address the
    question of whether the claimant could perform his usual activity, which is essentially a
    sedentary desk type job,” and Dr. Kaplan reaffirmed his opinion that any limitations were
    “based on subjective symptoms” and “not clearly supported objectively by [Godmar’s]
    neurological or orthopedic condition.” Dr. Goldman reviewed evidence of “depression,
    anxiety, pain and opiate use” but reported that these issues “are not pathological” and
    “[m]ost mental status examinations . . . revealed no significant abnormalities.” Sedgwick
    engaged Dr. James Tran, a neurosurgeon, to conduct a third file review. Dr. Tran
    concluded there was “no evidence of neurologic deficits” that would impact Godmar’s
    “ability to function,” citing the same evidence that the nurses described in their initial
    reviews.
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    Sedgwick issued its final decision on June 4, 2013, concluding there was
    insufficient objective evidence to support Godmar’s claim of total disability after June
    2012, except for the period he was at Brighton Recovery Center in August 2012.
    Godmar did not return to work until February 2014. Godmar brought this ERISA action
    to recover disability benefits, and the district court granted judgment on the
    administrative record to HP, the Plan, and Sedgwick.
    II.
    We review the district court’s judgment de novo and apply the same standard of
    review as the district court. Waskiewicz v. UniCare Life & Health Ins. Co., 
    802 F.3d 851
    ,
    855 (6th Cir. 2015). Where, as here, the benefits plan grants the administrator discretion
    to make eligibility determinations, we review the administrator’s decision under a
    deferential arbitrary-and-capricious standard. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 
    489 U.S. 101
    , 115 (1989); McClain v. Eaton Corp. Disability Plan, 
    740 F.3d 1059
    , 1065 (6th
    Cir. 2014). “[W]e will uphold a plan administrator’s decision ‘if it is the result of a
    deliberate, principled reasoning process and if it is supported by substantial evidence.’”
    Balmert v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 
    601 F.3d 497
    , 501 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting
    Baker v. United Mine Workers of Am. Health & Ret. Funds, 
    929 F.2d 1140
    , 1144 (6th
    Cir. 1991) (per curiam)).
    III.
    A.
    Godmar first challenges Sedgwick’s decision to deny his claim after approving
    one month of benefits. Sedgwick’s decision was arbitrary and capricious, he argues,
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    because it reversed the initial disability determination without evidence that his condition
    had improved. We disagree.
    Godmar relies on two cases addressing the cancellation of approved benefits.
    In Kramer v. Paul Revere Life Insurance Co., 
    571 F.3d 499
     (6th Cir. 2009), we held that
    a plan administrator’s decision to terminate benefits was arbitrary and capricious because
    the administrator offered “no explanation for the decision to cancel benefits that had been
    paid for some five years based upon the initial determination of total disability in the
    absence of any medical evidence that the plaintiff’s condition had improved during that
    time.” 
    Id. at 507
    . And in Morris v. American Electric Power Long-Term Disability Plan,
    399 F. App’x 978 (6th Cir. 2010), we observed that it “would be the very definition of
    ‘arbitrary and capricious’” for a plan administrator that makes an initial disability
    determination to “reverse[] course” without “a reason for the change.”          Id. at 984
    (emphasis in original).
    Unlike the plan administrators in those cases, however, Sedgwick did not cancel
    approved benefits. In both Kramer and Morris, the claimant received ongoing long-term
    disability benefits—for five and twelve years, respectively—that were terminated after
    the plan administrator reexamined the longstanding disability determination. See Morris,
    399 F. App’x at 986; Kramer, 
    571 F.3d at 507
    . In contrast, Godmar applied for short-
    term disability benefits and received preliminary approval for only the first month of his
    claim. Sedgwick did not terminate the approved month of benefits or reverse its limited
    eligibility determination; rather, Sedgwick declined to approve continued benefits.
    Further, the justification for Sedgwick’s initial approval contemplates a
    subsequent denial.        The approval was the result of the consulting nurse’s terse
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    recommendation, after reviewing Dr. Schwarz’s one-page disability certification, that
    Sedgwick should approve two weeks of disability benefits. She noted Godmar’s referral
    to an orthopedic surgeon and stated that the notes from that meeting would be necessary
    to extend his disability benefits. The examiner then approved a full month of benefits—
    twice the length recommended by the nurse—and noted, “Initial beneits [sic] approved
    from 01-JUN-2012 thru 30-JUN-2012 to prevent lapse in benefits while obtaining
    additional information for review. Benefits beyond 30-JUN-2012 is pending receipt and
    review of medical information requested.”
    Thus, Godmar’s argument that Sedgwick could not deny further benefits without
    evidence of improvement is misplaced.              In Morris, we explained that when an
    administrator evaluates whether further benefits are appropriate, “the ultimate question is
    whether the plan administrator had a rational basis for concluding that [the claimant] was
    not disabled at the time of the new decision.” Morris, 399 F. App’x at 984. Sedgwick’s
    denial of benefits would be arbitrary and capricious only if it lacked a rational basis at the
    time of the denial, regardless of its earlier approval.
    B.
    Godmar also challenges Sedgwick’s decision-making process, particularly its
    reliance on a file review conducted by consulting physicians. Sedgwick’s decision was
    arbitrary and capricious, he argues, because Sedgwick selectively reviewed the record
    and improperly dismissed his limitations as subjective. We agree.
    1.
    After three rounds of review, Sedgwick determined there was no objective
    evidence that Godmar had a total disability. Godmar argues that Sedgwick cherry-picked
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    evidence from the record to reach this conclusion.         We have explained that plan
    administrators may not engage in a “selective review of the administrative record,” Moon
    v. Unum Provident Corp., 
    405 F.3d 373
    , 381 (6th Cir. 2005), by ignoring evidence of
    disability or giving undue weight to evidence favoring denial, see, e.g., Shaw v. AT&T
    Umbrella Benefits Plan No.1, 
    795 F.3d 538
    , 548–50 (6th Cir. 2015); Metro. Life Ins. Co.
    v. Conger, 
    474 F.3d 258
    , 265 (6th Cir. 2007); Kalish v. Liberty Mutual/Liberty Life
    Assurance Co. of Bos., 
    419 F.3d 501
    , 509 (6th Cir. 2005). When an administrator
    “focuse[s] on slivers of information that could be read to support a denial of coverage and
    ignore[s]—without explanation—a wealth of evidence that directly contradict[s] its basis
    for denying coverage,” the administrator’s “decision-making process is not deliberate or
    principled.” Conger, 
    474 F.3d at 265
     (emphasis in original).
    Sedgwick’s decision-making process is difficult to parse. Its final denial letter
    offered little analysis of Godmar’s medical records. Most of the letter is a rote recitation
    of the records Sedgwick received and the steps taken by its consulting physicians. The
    letter then provides a brief summary of the medical documentation—including “chronic
    nerve pain,” “ongoing pain management,” and “opioid dependence with substantial
    limitations”—and offers a conclusory assertion that this evidence is insufficient to
    support disability benefits. But there appears to be no dispute that Godmar suffered from
    continuing injuries and pain from the water-skiing accident at the time he requested
    disability.   For example, Dr. Kaplan, one of Sedgwick’s reviewers, observed that
    Godmar’s medical data evidenced an “extremely complex combined orthopedic and
    neurological injury.” Sedgwick’s decision rested on the conclusion that the pain Godmar
    suffered from these injuries would not prevent him from performing his job at HP.
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    This determination was contrary to the opinions of Godmar’s treating physicians,
    who supported his claim.      “[P]lan administrators are not obliged to accord special
    deference to the opinions of treating physicians,” and there is no “discrete burden of
    explanation when [administrators] credit reliable evidence that conflicts with a treating
    physician’s evaluation.” Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord, 
    538 U.S. 822
    , 825, 834
    (2003); see also Balmert, 
    601 F.3d at 504
    . But administrators also “may not arbitrarily
    repudiate or refuse to consider the opinions of a treating physician.” Glenn v. MetLife,
    
    461 F.3d 660
    , 671 (6th Cir. 2006). The Supreme Court has described “the opinions of a
    treating physician” as “reliable evidence” of disability. Nord, 
    538 U.S. at 834
    .
    Three of Godmar’s treating physicians informed Sedgwick that Godmar could not
    perform his job at HP. Dr. Schwarz, his family physician, repeatedly documented pain in
    Godmar’s left leg and certified to Sedgwick that Godmar was totally disabled in June,
    July, and December 2012. Dr. Rigueras, a physiatrist, concluded that Godmar had
    lumbar radiculopathy, neuropathy, and knee pain, and noted in late June 2012 that
    Godmar could not “run, jump, [or] sit for long times.” In May 2013, Dr. Rigueras told
    Dr. Tran, one of the consulting physicians, that Godmar would be disabled until 2014.
    Dr. Rosenberg, a pain-management specialist, reported in September 2012 that Godmar
    had “burning, electric shock-like, sharp, stabbing, dull, and shooting” pain that was
    increased by “sitting, standing, physical activity, work activity, and lying down.” He
    diagnosed Godmar with complex regional pain syndrome and described Godmar’s
    symptoms as “persistent, severe, [and] disabling.” In November 2012, Dr. Rosenberg
    sent Sedgwick a certification that Godmar was disabled by “consistent pain in left knee
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    and foot with muscle spasms, numbness, tingling and weakness,” as well as “increased
    pain with physical activity (sitting, standing).”
    These findings were corroborated by other treating physicians. Dr. Susan Mosier-
    LaClair, an orthopedist, noted in October 2012 that Godmar had “diffuse paresthesias in
    the distribution of the peroneal nerve both common and deep and superficial today from
    the fibular head area or knee joint down through the foot” that “can feel like a stabbing
    sensation or ice pick.” She stated that these symptoms were mainly “related to the
    dyesthesias of the peroneal nerve” and recommended him for a spinal stimulator.
    Dr. Holly Gilmer, a neurosurgeon, reported in December 2012 that Godmar had “pain
    specifically at the fibular head on the left, and around his ankle as if there is a tourniquet”
    and recorded an impression of peroneal neuropathy.            Dr. Mary Spires, a physical-
    medicine specialist, noted in January 2013 that Godmar had “severe pain,” including his
    left foot feeling “on fire” and “a stabbing pain like he is being penetrated with an ice
    pick” in his left knee. Dr. Spires had difficulty evaluating his strength because “the pain
    inhibits testing.” Dr. Spires’s impression was “neuropathic pain trauma” and she told
    Godmar that there might be no “method[] of resolving his pain” and that he would likely
    “have pain for the long-term and for lifetime.”
    Sedgwick apparently determined that these reports were not credible, relying on
    the reports of its three consulting physicians—Drs. Tran, Kaplan, and Goldman—who
    determined Godmar was not disabled.            Dr. Tran, the neurosurgeon, offered little
    reasoning to support this conclusion.       His initial report, submitted April 12, 2013,
    included almost no analysis. Seven of the report’s ten pages are a recitation of Godmar’s
    medical history and the records submitted in support of Godmar’s claim. Cf. Elliott v.
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    473 F.3d 613
    , 619 (6th Cir. 2006) (describing a report that consisted
    mostly of findings described in earlier documentation); Kalish, 
    419 F.3d at 509
    (describing a report that was almost entirely medical history). The remaining pages
    repeatedly describe Dr. Tran’s conclusion that Godmar was not disabled because of one
    record—a report of an electromyographic (EMG) study conducted by Dr. M. Nasser
    Sabbagh on June 26, 2012. Dr. Sabbagh’s report, on referral from Dr. Schwarz, revealed
    “left sciatic or common peroneal mononeuropathy,” which showed “significant
    improvement” from an EMG study conducted in 2010. Dr. Tran concluded that Godmar
    was not disabled because there was improvement in the EMG and “no evidence of
    neurologic deficits.”
    Dr. Tran also spoke to Dr. Gilmer, who told him that Godmar had a “sciatic nerve
    injury” and had “trouble standing” because of “severe leg pain.” Dr. Tran reported this
    conversation but did not discuss it in his assessment. Dr. Tran did not explain why Dr.
    Gilmer’s report that Godmar had trouble standing—or the similar reports in the medical
    records—did not substantiate that Godmar was impeded from performing his job at HP;
    in fact, Dr. Tran made no reference to Godmar’s job description in his analysis. Cf.
    Elliott, 
    473 F.3d at 619
     (describing a report that “offered no specific rebuttal to [a treating
    physician’s] conclusions” and did not opine how the claimant’s “medical condition
    related to the demands of her job”). After receiving this report, Sedgwick insisted that
    Dr. Tran speak to more of Godmar’s treating physicians in May 2013. He eventually
    spoke to Dr. Rosenberg, who told Dr. Tran that Godmar had “complex regional pain
    syndrome” but said he “would not be able to comment on the claimant’s disability.” Dr.
    Tran also spoke to Dr. Rigueras, who told him that Godmar “was disabled from lumbar
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    radiculopathy, neuropathy, and knee pain.” Dr. Tran affirmed his earlier opinion, stating,
    “My conversation with the attending providers did not reveal any evidence of loss of
    function from the claimant’s left leg pain that would preclude the claimant’s ability to
    perform his regular unrestricted occupation.”
    Dr. Kaplan, the physical-medicine specialist, offered substantially more analysis
    than Dr. Tran.     In his September 2012 report, Dr. Kaplan concluded that Godmar
    “appears to have residual clinical finding in his left lower extremity from both an
    orthopedic and a neurological perspective,” but “these limitations would not impact the
    claimant’s usual work activities per the job description,” which he described as
    “essentially a desk based cognitive job.”       He did not speak to Godmar’s attending
    providers, and he made little reference to the records provided by Drs. Schwarz and
    Rigueras, which he described as “only partially legible.” Dr. Kaplan apparently did not
    account for the fact that Godmar was required to drive between GM and HP on a daily
    basis. In his April 2013 report, Dr. Kaplan again noted that Godmar had a “substantial
    impairment” that would prevent him from “performing numerous types of heavy
    activity,” but concluded that “[t]he overwhelming preponderance of [the] evidence
    suggests that return to this claimant’s usual employment would be not only possible, but
    likely therapeutic.”
    In reaching this conclusion, Dr. Kaplan placed great weight on a conversation
    with Dr. Rosenberg, one of Godmar’s pain-management physicians. Dr. Rosenberg told
    Dr. Kaplan that Godmar had “essentially subjective symptoms in terms of sedentary
    activities” and that Godmar “often appears comfortable in the office.” They discussed
    performing a functional capacity evaluation but decided that it “might be challenging to
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    determine the question of sitting tolerance.”     Dr. Kaplan made no mention of Dr.
    Rosenberg’s certification to Sedgwick that Godmar was unable to perform his job at HP
    in November 2012 because his pain made it difficult to sit or stand.         Further, this
    conversation took place in April 2013, more than ten months after Godmar applied for
    disability. Dr. Rosenberg’s observation in April 2013 that Godmar could sit comfortably
    did not address directly whether he was disabled in July or August 2012.
    Dr. Kaplan also relied on the report of Dr. Michael Sytniak, a psychologist who
    saw Godmar in January 2013. Dr. Sytniak recommended behavioral treatment “to assist
    [Godmar] in adjusting to his ongoing pain” and to “help[] him adjust to his pain and
    develop a more adaptive approach to managing it.” Dr. Kaplan described this report as
    suggesting “that limitations in the claimant’s ability to perform cognitive desk type work
    appear to be based on subjective symptoms,” and interpreted Dr. Sytniak to suggest “that
    increasing or returning to the claimant’s former level of activity may well be therapeutic
    from an overall cognitive behavioral perspective.” But Dr. Sytniak’s conclusion that
    Godmar could learn to adjust to his pain does not address whether Godmar was disabled
    from performing his job in 2012, and Dr. Sytniak did not recommend that Godmar return
    to his former level of activity.
    Lastly, the consulting physicians did not respond to Godmar’s claim that he was
    disabled by the side effects of the medication prescribed to treat his chronic pain. Dr.
    Schwarz noted in his June 2012 disability certification that Godmar’s medication
    prevented him from performing his job at HP, and in his August 2012 appeal, Godmar
    stated:
    Currently, I am not able to function in my normal personal activities or
    work activities due to the 24 hours a day morphine consumption and use
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    of Percocet. On my current meds I am restricted from driving, and I am
    sleeping up to 20 hours per day several times a week.
    Dr. Schwarz observed in his August 2012 letter:
    The combination of severe trauma, multiple surgeries and use of
    prescribed medications have not only left Mr. Godmar with opiate
    addiction; it has also impacted his ability to perform daily personal tasks
    and the requirements of the job.
    Mr. Godmar has not driven an automobile since May 29, 2012. His state
    of mind at that time and through August 15, 2012 impaired his abilities to
    analyze data, provide recommendations, program management duties,
    team management, customer management and travel – all of which were
    examples of job functions related to his position at Hewlett Packard. I
    certainly cannot believe that Hewlett Packard would be accustomed or
    supportive of Mr. Godmar representing his role in this state.
    Dr. Schwarz attached Godmar’s pharmacy records, which included prescriptions for
    morphine on June 1, June 18, July 17, and August 13, 2012.
    Dr. Goldman, Sedgwick’s psychiatric reviewer, concluded that there was no
    objective evidence that Godmar’s addiction issues prevented him from working until he
    was confined in the recovery center. But Dr. Goldman did not address the effects of
    Godmar’s pain medications—nor did Drs. Tran or Kaplan. Sedgwick’s final denial
    similarly failed to even mention the issue.          Neither Sedgwick nor its consultants
    explained how Godmar could perform a job that required him to drive between HP and
    GM on a daily basis while he was prescribed a regimen of morphine that prevented him
    from driving. Sedgwick’s failure to address this issue counsels in favor of finding that its
    decision was arbitrary and capricious. See, e.g., Conger, 
    474 F.3d at 265
    .
    2.
    Sedgwick appears to have rejected the treating physicians’ clinical impressions
    mainly because they relied on Godmar’s descriptions of his pain. Sedgwick made this
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    judgment without conducting an independent medical examination, relying only on a file
    review. We have explained that there is “nothing inherently objectionable about a file
    review by a qualified physician in the context of a benefits determination.” Javery v.
    Lucent Techs., Inc. Long Term Disability Plan for Mgmt. or LBA Emps., 
    741 F.3d 686
    ,
    702 (6th Cir. 2014) (quoting Calvert v. Firstar Fin., Inc., 
    409 F.3d 286
    , 296 (6th Cir.
    2005)) (internal quotation marks omitted). However, Sedgwick had the right to examine
    Godmar under the Plan, and the decision not to exercise that right “raise[s] questions
    about the thoroughness and accuracy of the benefits determination.” Judge v. Metro. Life
    Ins. Co., 
    710 F.3d 651
    , 663 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting Calvert, 409 F.3d at 296) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    File reviews are particularly troubling when the administrator’s consulting
    physicians—who have never met the claimant—discount the claimant’s limitations as
    subjective or exaggerated. See Calvert, 409 F.3d at 296–97. Thus, we have observed
    that “reliance on a file review may be inadequate” when “the conclusions from that
    review include critical credibility determinations regarding a claimant’s medical history
    and symptomology.” Evans v. UnumProvident Corp., 
    434 F.3d 866
    , 878 (6th Cir. 2006)
    (quoting Calvert, 409 F.3d at 297 n.6) (internal quotation marks omitted). Further, “we
    will not credit a file review to the extent that it relies on adverse credibility findings when
    the files do not state that there is reason to doubt the applicant’s credibility.” Bennett v.
    Kemper Nat. Servs., Inc., 
    514 F.3d 547
    , 555 (6th Cir. 2008).
    Here, Sedgwick and its consulting physicians concluded that Godmar’s consistent
    reports of pain were not objective evidence of disability.          Sedgwick acknowledged
    Godmar’s extensive injuries and his treating physicians’ continuous documentation of
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    No. 15-1480
    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    pain in his left leg.   But the consulting physicians apparently dismissed Godmar’s
    reported pain—and any corroborating diagnosis by his treating physicians—as inherently
    subjective. In so doing, Sedgwick implicitly determined that Godmar’s description of his
    limitations was not credible. Cf. Helfman v. GE Grp. Life Assurance Co., 
    573 F.3d 383
    ,
    395–96 (6th Cir. 2009) (stating that dismissing a claim as subjective is an implicit
    credibility determination).
    We addressed similar situations in Smith v. Continental Casualty Co., 
    450 F.3d 253
     (6th Cir. 2006), and Shaw v. AT&T Umbrella Benefits Plan No. 1, 
    795 F.3d 538
     (6th
    Cir. 2015). In Smith, we explained that making “credibility findings concerning [the
    claimant’s] pain without the benefit of a physical exam” would “support the finding that
    [the administrator’s] determination was arbitrary.” 
    450 F.3d at 264
    . And in Shaw, we
    observed that the administrator “should not have made a credibility determination about
    [the claimant’s] continuous reports of pain” without an examination, even under an
    objective-evidence standard. 795 F.3d at 550. “Because chronic pain is not easily
    subject to objective verification, the Plan’s decision to conduct only a file review
    supports a finding that the decision-making was arbitrary and capricious.” Id. Like the
    administrators in Smith and Shaw, Sedgwick decided that Godmar’s pain was subjective
    without examining him, and that failure weighs in favor of a determination that the denial
    of his claim was arbitrary and capricious.
    3.
    On this record, we conclude that the decision to deny Godmar’s claim for short-
    term disability benefits beginning in July was arbitrary and capricious. First, Sedgwick’s
    determination that Godmar could perform his job at HP from July 2, 2012, until he
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    entered recovery on August 15, 2012, is an unsupported interpretation of the record.
    Godmar’s severe pain and prescription medications prevented him from driving, a
    requirement of his job, and Sedgwick improperly determined that Godmar’s pain
    symptoms were not objective evidence of disability without a medical examination.
    Further, Sedgwick also failed to adequately explain why it rejected evidence of Godmar’s
    disability from August 29, 2012, when the records of his treating physicians were
    completely aligned in assessing his injuries, his pain, and his limitations, through
    November 5, 2012, the earliest date that Godmar’s records suggested he might not be
    objectively disabled. Dr. Rosenberg’s April 2013 conversation with Dr. Kaplan may
    have called Godmar’s disability into question beginning on some date to be determined
    through a “deliberate, principled reasoning process,” Balmert, 
    601 F.3d at 501
    , but the
    record does not reflect such a process or determination.
    Thus, “we have two options: award benefits to the claimant or remand to the plan
    administrator.”   Shaw, 795 F.3d at 551.       “[R]emand to the plan administrator is
    appropriate ‘where the problem is with the integrity of the plan’s decision-making
    process, rather than that a claimant was denied benefits to which he was clearly
    entitled.’” Cooper, 486 F.3d at 171 (quoting Elliott, 
    473 F.3d at 622
    ). In this case, the
    record establishes that Godmar was entitled to benefits until he was discharged from the
    recovery center on August 28, 2012, because there was objective evidence of his
    disability and no basis to conclude otherwise. But because we cannot say that Godmar is
    “clearly entitled to benefits” after August 28, the appropriate remedy is a remand to the
    district court for the “full and fair” review required by ERISA. Elliott, 
    473 F.3d at
    622–
    23. On remand, Sedgwick should remain cognizant of Godmar’s full job description,
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    Godmar v. Hewlett-Packard Co., et al.
    avoid making credibility determinations without the benefit of a physical examination,
    and if it concludes that Godmar is not entitled to further benefits, explain why the
    evidence proffered by Godmar’s treating physicians does not meet its objective-evidence
    standard as of a particular date.
    IV.
    For these reasons, we VACATE the district court’s judgment and REMAND to
    the district court with instructions to enter an order awarding Godmar short-term
    disability benefits from July 2, 2012, to August 15, 2012, and otherwise remanding the
    case to Sedgwick for a full and fair review.
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