Theresa Willcox v. Liberty Life Assurance ( 2009 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 08-1311
    ___________
    Theresa Willcox,                       *
    *
    Plaintiff-Appellee,       *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                               * District Court for the
    * District of Minnesota.
    Liberty Life Assurance Company         *
    of Boston,                             *
    *
    Defendant-Appellant.      *
    ___________
    Submitted: November 14, 2008
    Filed: January 12, 2009
    ___________
    Before MURPHY, HANSEN, and RILEY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    MURPHY, Circuit Judge.
    Theresa Willcox brought this action against Liberty Life Assurance Company
    of Boston (Liberty Life) pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
    of 1974 (ERISA), alleging that Liberty Life had wrongfully denied her claim for long
    term partial disability benefits. Both sides moved for summary judgment, and the
    district court1 granted Willcox’s motion after concluding that Liberty Life had abused
    1
    The Honorable Paul A. Magnuson, United States District Judge for the District
    of Minnesota.
    its discretion by ignoring evidence in support of her claim. Liberty Life appeals, and
    we affirm.
    I.
    Theresa Willcox was working as a claims adjustor for Blue Cross Blue Shield
    of Minnesota (BCBS) when she was injured in an automobile accident in March
    2003. Willcox reports that as a result of the accident she has suffered from severe
    pain in her lower back and lower left leg. After chiropractic treatments failed to
    relieve her symptoms, Willcox sought more aggressive alternatives. In November
    2004 she underwent a spinal discectomy and fusion. After several months
    recuperating, Willcox resumed part time work from home in February 2005. The
    surgical procedure appeared to alleviate the pain in her back, but Willcox claims to
    continue suffering from pain radiating into her lower left leg due to an ongoing
    irritation of the nerve root emanating from the L5 segment of the spine, a condition
    known as an L5 radiculopathy.
    Willcox asserts that as a result of her continuing leg pain she is unable to return
    to full time work. The evidence regarding Willcox’s alleged radiculopathy is
    complicated and spans several years of diagnosis and treatment. Medical information
    about her condition was obtained from electrodiagnostic tests, physical examinations,
    imaging scans, and epidural injections.
    Over the relevant period Willcox underwent three electromyograms (EMGs).
    The first two predated her November 2004 lumbar fusion surgery and produced
    normal results. The third, performed in March 2005, was postoperative and showed
    a slight abnormality which could be associated with an S1 radiculopathy. The
    abnormality, however, could also have been a result of Willcox’s surgery.
    -2-
    Willcox appeared for at least fifteen physical examinations with a variety of
    clinicians over the period from November 2003 through November 2005. During
    these examinations, the attending clinicians evaluated Willcox for some combination
    of muscle weakness, sensory loss, “foot drop2 and straight leg raising (SLR) ability.
    These various objective physical symptoms may be associated with an L5
    radiculopathy. Based on our review of the record, we note the following:
    Seven exams found no indication of muscle weakness. At least two found
    generalized weakness in the left leg, but nothing distinct to the areas served by
    the L5 nerve. Three others found weakness indicating a possible L5
    radiculopathy.
    •      Two exams found no loss in sensation. Another two found evidence of
    impaired sensation consistent with L5 radiculopathy.
    •      In four exams there was no observed foot drop. The condition was
    observed in two exams.
    •      Seven SLR tests3 were negative for L5 radiculopathy. Another produced
    mixed results. Two others were positive.
    •      One exam revealed “no discernible deficits” without discussing specific
    observations.
    A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) procedure performed in April 2003
    revealed moderate disc bulging at the L5-S1 segment of Willcox’s spine and “mild
    front/back left foraminal narrowing and mild flattening of the left L5 ganglion.” This
    2
    Foot drop occurs when muscle weakness causes the foot to slap against the
    floor while walking.
    3
    During an SLR test a “patient sits or lies on the examining table and the
    examiner attempts to elicit, or reproduce, physical findings to verify the patient’s
    reports of back pain by raising the patient’s legs when the knees are fully extended.”
    Phillips v. Barnhart, 91 F. App’x 775, 777 n.4 (3d Cir. 2004) (unpublished).
    -3-
    condition may put pressure on the L5 nerve, causing radicular symptoms. A second
    MRI in February 2004 showed essentially the same condition, but a reviewing
    clinician noted the scan did not necessarily indicate “definite nerve root
    impingement.” A computed tomography (CT) scan in January 2005 showed that the
    “[l]umbosacral foramina are widely patent and normal in caliber,” suggesting no
    pressure on the nerve root.
    In June 2003 Willcox received an epidural injection of a local anesthetic at her
    left L5 nerve root, producing “80% initial improvement” in her symptoms. This relief
    lasted about one day and suggested that irritation of her L5 nerve could be responsible
    for her pain. In March 2004 Willcox was administered an epidural at her S1 nerve
    root which first produced a “70% decrease in her symptoms” but ultimately
    aggravated her condition, causing her to miss a week of work.
    BCBS provided Willcox with short term partial disability payments for six
    months following her November 2004 disc fusion surgery. It maintained long term
    disability coverage for its employees through Liberty Life, and Willcox sought
    continuing benefits from Liberty Life when her short term benefits expired on May
    22, 2005. In February 2006 Liberty Life concluded, based in large part on an
    evaluation of the medical evidence by neurologist Dr. David Marks, that Willcox was
    capable of performing her job as a claims adjustor and was therefore not entitled to
    disability benefits. Willcox appealed, and in May 2006 Liberty Life affirmed its
    earlier determination. Thereafter Willcox filed this suit pursuant to ERISA § 502, 
    29 U.S.C. § 1132
    .
    Willcox submitted fifteen exhibits to the district court which were drawn from
    publicly available sources. They mainly consisted of generic anatomical charts,
    medical dictionary entries, journal articles, and the like. One exhibit concerned the
    qualifications of Liberty Life’s reviewing physician, Dr. Marks. None of the exhibits
    contained any medical data or diagnostic results specific to Willcox or her injury.
    -4-
    Liberty Life moved to strike the exhibits, noting that none of them had been provided
    to the company nor considered by it during its administrative process. Liberty Life
    argued in the alternative that if the district court were inclined to receive the exhibits,
    it should permit the company to offer rebuttal exhibits and remand the case for the
    company’s further administrative review rather than usurp the plan administrator’s
    ability to weigh and consider evidence in the first instance.
    The district court observed that it was generally not appropriate in ERISA cases
    for a reviewing court to consider evidence outside the administrative record. It
    therefore decided to remand the case back to Liberty Life so that the company could
    conduct an initial review and evaluation of the additional evidence. In returning the
    case for further administrative review the district court ordered Liberty Life to
    consider Willcox’s fifteen proffered exhibits, the rebuttal exhibits the company had
    identified, and “[a]ll other evidence relating” to the parties’ positions. Liberty Life’s
    request for permission to move for reconsideration was denied.
    Following the district court’s order Willcox submitted her generic exhibits on
    remand. In addition she produced personal medical records related to treatments she
    received in 2006 and 2007, questionnaires completed by two of her treating physicians
    regarding the specifics of her diagnosis, and two witness statements (one by her)
    attesting to her physical limitations. Liberty Life retained neurologist Dr. Steven
    McIntire to conduct an independent peer review. After reviewing the supplemented
    administrative record, Dr. McIntire concluded that Willcox might be restricted in her
    ability to walk, stand, or lift objects, but that such limitations ought not to affect her
    performance as a sedentary claims adjustor. Based on his findings, Liberty Life again
    denied Willcox’s claim.
    The case then returned to district court which took up the competing motions
    for summary judgment. The district court determined that Liberty Life had abused
    its discretion by failing to “evaluate Plaintiff’s medical records in their totality” and
    -5-
    by “blindly” relying on Dr. McIntire’s “cursory” medical opinion which it
    characterized as “almost devoid of any rationale,” and granted summary judgment to
    Willcox. Its order makes no reference to any of the exhibits Willcox submitted after
    the initial administrative review, and the district court does not appear to have relied
    on them in its decision. Liberty Life appeals, challenging both the decision to reopen
    the administrative record as well as the court’s conclusion that the company abused
    its discretion.
    II.
    The parties agree that the insurance policy at issue is governed by ERISA and
    that Liberty Life’s decision to deny Willcox’s claim is subject to deferential review
    for abuse of discretion. As the district court recognized, the general rule is that
    “review under the deferential standard is limited to evidence that was before” the
    administrator. Cash v. Wal-Mart Group Health Plan, 
    107 F.3d 637
    , 641 (8th Cir.
    1997) (internal quotation marks omitted). After considering the arguments made by
    the parties to the district court, however, it decided to remand for Liberty Life to
    consider the new submissions by Willcox and “[a]ll other evidence relating to her
    claim” put forward by either party. We review a decision to remand a case for
    additional administrative action for abuse of discretion. Cf. Ingram v. Barnhart, 
    303 F.3d 890
    , 893 (8th Cir. 2002) (applying abuse of discretion standard to the district
    court’s decision to remand to the commissioner of Social Security Administration).
    At oral argument counsel for Liberty Life acknowleged that as part of its
    presentation to the district court it had invited remand for consideration of new
    evidence and that the real issue on appeal is not the propriety of the order to remand
    but the admissibility of Willcox’s supplemental exhibits. Willcox argued that her
    proffered exhibits were drawn from widely available public sources and not unique
    to her case, distinguishing them from cases in which reviewing courts declined to
    consider extra record evidence specific to a plaintiff’s symptoms or diagnosis. See,
    -6-
    e.g, Rittenhouse v. UnitedHealth Group Long Term Disability Ins. Plan, 
    476 F.3d 626
    ,
    630 (8th Cir. 2007); Brown v. Seitz Foods, Inc. Disability Benefit Plan, 
    140 F.3d 1198
    , 1200 (8th Cir. 1998). Willcox maintained that her exhibits were simply meant
    to provide context to assist the district court in interpreting complex medical evidence.
    For example, one exhibit provided a medical definition of “foot drop,” another defined
    “radiculopathy;” others discussed the diagnostic relevance of epidural injections or
    suggested that EMGs may fail to detect an active radiculopathy; yet another discussed
    how a narrowing of the space through which a nerve root passes could place pressure
    on the nerve.
    We expressed concern in Cash that explanatory material may be “outside the
    permissible scope of deferential review,” 
    107 F.3d at 642
    , but the objectionable
    material in that case was an affidavit prepared by the plaintiff’s physician in
    anticipation of litigation. By contrast, the exhibits offered by Willcox in the district
    court were culled from widely available medical publications and websites, all of
    which had been produced with no thought to litigation. In previous cases this court
    has itself cited public medical sources on its own initiative in order to provide context
    for a decision, see, e.g., Barnhart v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    179 F.3d 583
    , 585-
    86 nn.4-7 (8th Cir. 1999), and at least one circuit has explicitly held that generic
    materials may be introduced in the district court in ERISA cases to provide context
    and guidance. Vega v. Nat’l Life Ins. Servs., Inc. 
    188 F.3d 287
    , 299 (5th Cir. 1999)
    (en banc) (“[E]vidence . . . that assists the district court in understanding the medical
    terminology or practice related to a claim would be . . . admissible.”). But even if we
    decline to adopt a general rule permitting reviewing courts to consider generic medical
    exhibits in ERISA cases, the district court did not take it upon itself to review and
    consider the new evidence, but rather asked Liberty Life to do so. See King v.
    Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., 
    414 F.3d 994
    , 1006 (8th Cir. 2005) (en banc)
    (remand appropriate for “the administrator to consider in the first instance evidence
    received by the district court, but not presented to the administrator).
    -7-
    The district court’s remand order reflected the deference it owed to the plan
    administrator:
    [R]emand will allow the administrator to consider the evidence
    submitted to the Court but not presented to the administrator. Otherwise,
    the Court would be acting as a claims administrator by determining what
    Liberty Life’s decision would have been had it been aware of the
    information in the exhibits at the time it made the benefits determination.
    . . . [T]he Court’s responsibility is to determine whether Liberty Life’s
    denial of benefits was an abuse of discretion—not whether Willcox was,
    in the Court’s view, entitled to disability benefits.
    The district court thus preserved the company’s prerogative to conduct an initial
    assessment of the expanded record and to submit its own rebuttal exhibits,
    contemplating that Liberty Life would consider all appropriate evidence in the record.
    When the case returned after the remand, the district court applied an abuse of
    discretion standard rather than attempting a de novo assessment of the evidence.
    Liberty Life’s alternative suggestion for a remand opened the door for the
    district court to send the publicly available exhibits offered by Willcox to Liberty Life
    for further administrative review without reaching the issue of whether the court might
    undertake its own review of them. Liberty Life should not now be heard to complain
    that the district court followed a path which the company itself had suggested as an
    alternative. Based on this record we conclude that it was not an abuse of discretion
    for the district court to remand the case. Although the subsequent inclusion of
    personal materials in addition to the generic exhibits was more problematic, it does
    not appear that the district court considered them in its evaluation of Liberty Life’s
    performance as plan administrator. The ultimate issue in this appeal is whether
    Liberty Life abused its discretion in either its original review or the one following
    remand. Since we conclude that the company abused its discretion in its reviews both
    before and after the remand, any issue about the propriety of the remand is essentially
    moot.
    -8-
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment, applying
    the same deferential abuse of discretion standard to Liberty Life’s denial of Willcox’s
    claim. Shipley v. Ark. Blue Cross & Blue Shield, 
    333 F.3d 898
    , 901 (8th Cir. 2003).
    Under the abuse of discretion standard, “we look to see whether [the plan
    administrator’s] decision was reasonable. In doing so, we must determine whether the
    decision is supported by substantial evidence, which is more than a scintilla, but less
    than a preponderance.” Clapp v. Citibank, N.A. Disability Plan (501), 
    262 F.3d 820
    ,
    828 (8th Cir. 2001) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
    Willcox’s initial application for long term partial disability benefits was first
    reviewed for Liberty Life by Dr. Thomas Cuevas, a specialist in internal medicine.
    Dr. Cuevas concluded that the available records “do not establish impairment in her
    capacity to perform sedentary activities” but suggested that Liberty Life might wish
    to obtain the opinion of a neurologist or a specialist in physical medicine. Liberty Life
    then requested the opinion of an independent peer review physician, Dr. David Marks
    who is a neurologist. Dr. Marks began his report by listing the various medical
    records he reviewed. This list indicates that all of the medical evidence discussed here
    was in one form or another available to Dr. Marks. By his own estimate Dr. Marks
    spent two hours reviewing these materials. He ultimately concluded that Willcox “had
    no objective evidence of radiculopathy” and “as of May 21, 2005, was able to work
    in her job as a claims adjustor for Blue Cross-Blue Shield on a full time basis.”
    Adopting Dr. Marks’s report, Liberty Life denied Willcox’s claim on the basis
    that her condition was not disabling. Willcox promptly sought administrative review
    of the denial and supplemented her medical records at this time with a letter from her
    orthopedic surgeon, Dr. James Schwender. Dr. Schwender’s letter elaborated on
    Willcox’s symptoms and his opinion that she suffered from a “partial, permanent
    disability.” Liberty Life again denied her claim, concluding that Dr. Schwender’s
    letter did not “contain any new information” and quoting Dr. Marks’s determination
    that there was “no objective evidence for a radiculopathy.” This lawsuit followed.
    -9-
    Liberty Life’s determination is reviewable under a deferential abuse of
    discretion standard. Under this standard its decision must be supported by substantial
    evidence, which is “more than a scintilla, but less than a preponderance.” Clapp, 
    262 F.3d at 828
    . Liberty Life was entitled to seek and obtain a professional peer review
    opinion from Dr. Marks, but it was “not free to accept this report without considering
    whether its conclusions follow logically from the underlying medical evidence.”
    Abram v. Cargill, Inc., 
    395 F.3d 882
    , 887 (8th Cir. 2005). Dr. Marks’s
    report—intentionally or not—mischaracterizes the medical evidence in several
    important respects.
    First, as the district court noted, Dr. Marks twice claimed in his report that the
    medical record showed “no objective evidence” of radiculopathy. This is not
    accurate. The record documents multiple instances of muscle weakness, loss of
    sensation, foot drop, positive SLR tests, a positive response to an epidural, and MRIs
    consistent with radiculopathy. It may be that Dr. Marks believed these reports were
    less compelling than other contrary indications, but this is not what he said. It was not
    accurate to claim that the record contained no objective evidence to support Willcox’s
    claim. It may also be that Dr. Marks was simply careless in how he chose to
    summarize a large volume of conflicting data. It was nevertheless an abuse of
    discretion for Liberty Life to rely on his demonstrably incorrect conclusion that there
    was no objective evidence in the record to support Willcox’s claim.
    Second, Dr. Marks writes that “[Willcox] had a left L5 nerve block performed
    on 6/12/03 without any relief.” This also is not accurate. The diagnostic report
    prepared in conjunction with the nerve block could not have been more clearly to the
    contrary. Under the prominent heading “CONCLUSION,” the interpreting physician
    wrote “80% initial improvement after injection of steroid and local anesthetic in the
    left L5 nerve root sheath.” According to Dr. Marks’s own catalog of the materials
    provided to him, this diagnostic report was among the records at his disposal. His
    suggestion that the procedure offered Willcox no relief may indicate that he failed to
    -10-
    read the report or consulted it so cursorily that he missed its import. We conclude that
    Dr. Marks’s report reflects an incomplete and selective picture of the medical
    evidence.
    Third, even if Dr. Marks’s report is accepted at face value, it at most addresses
    the alleged cause of Willcox’s lower leg pain; it does not in any respect rebut the
    existence of the debilitating pain. On this point the record indicates that every medical
    professional actually to have examined Willcox—from her initial treating physician
    to her orthopedic surgeon to pain management consultants to physical
    therapists—uniformly accepted that her symptoms were real. There is absolutely no
    evidence that she was malingering or that her complaints were manufactured. While
    an ERISA plan administrator need not accord special deference to a treating
    physician’s opinion, Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord, 
    538 U.S. 822
    , 825
    (2003), an administrator may not “arbitrarily refuse to credit a claimant’s reliable
    evidence, including the opinions of a treating physician,” 
    id. at 834
    . Moreover,
    eliminating one potential cause of a claimant’s disability may be insufficient to deny
    a claim if the symptoms are otherwise credible and other potential causes exist. See
    Abram, 
    395 F.3d at 887
     (abuse of discretion to consider only one possible cause of
    claimant’s symptoms and ignore others).
    A plan administrator abuses its discretion when it ignores relevant evidence.
    In Norris v. Citibank, N.A. Disability Plan (501), 
    308 F.3d 880
    , 885 (8th Cir. 2002),
    we held that a plan administrator had abused its discretion in part by failing to
    “address the extensive medical evidence relating to [the claimant’s] disability or the
    consistent conclusions of her doctors and various [plan administrator] personnel that
    she could not work.” See also Torres v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    405 F.3d 670
    ,
    681 (8th Cir. 2005) (abuse of discretion to “ignore[] evidence that was directly related
    to the Plan’s definition of disability”).
    -11-
    Other circuits have made similar assessments. The Sixth Circuit has recently
    concluded that a plan administrator abused its discretion when it
    focused on slivers of information that could be read to support a denial
    of coverage and ignored—without explanation—a wealth of evidence
    that directly contradicted its basis for denying coverage. Such a
    decision-making process is not deliberate or principled, and the
    explanation provided was far from reasoned, as it failed to address any
    of the contrary evidence.
    Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Conger, 
    474 F.3d 258
    , 265 (6th Cir. 2007); see also
    Moon v. Unum Provident Corp., 
    405 F.3d 373
    , 381 (6th Cir. 2005) (abuse of
    discretion to conduct “selective review of the administrative record” rather than
    “administrative record as a whole”). The Seventh Circuit had earlier come to a similar
    conclusion. See Govindarajan v. FMC Corp., 
    932 F.2d 634
    , 637 (7th Cir. 1991)
    (“[The plan administrator’s] selective review of the medical evidence and its
    completely erroneous assertion that there was no physical cause for the subjective
    symptoms of pain renders its decision not only unreasonable but arbitrary and
    capricious.”).
    On remand Liberty Life was given another opportunity to review the record and
    assess Willcox’s claim. The company retained independent peer review physician Dr.
    Steven McIntire, a neurologist. Although Dr. McIntire concluded that “[t]here was
    not evidence of an ongoing active radiculopathy,” he opined that Willcox should not
    stand or walk more than three to four hours in an eight hour day. Based on this
    limitation and a vocational case manager’s assessment of Willcox’s duties as a claims
    adjustor, Liberty Life concluded Willcox was able to resume her occupation full time
    and again denied her claim for long term partial disability benefits. This post remand
    decision is also reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    -12-
    Dr. McIntire’s report shows that he had access to the same materials relied upon
    by Dr. Marks, yet his report is even more cursory. Although he notes in passing some
    evidence of generalized weakness in Willcox’s left leg, he neglects to mention other
    evidence tending to support her claim. The unmentioned evidence included the results
    of her tests for foot drop, positive SLR, decreased sensation, and epidural injections.
    Only by ignoring such evidence, however, could Dr. McIntire conclude, as he does,
    that “[t]here was not evidence of an ongoing active radiculopathy.” It was therefore
    an abuse of Liberty Life’s discretion to rely on Dr. McIntire’s incomplete, selective
    review of the medical evidence.
    It is well settled that in ERISA cases a reviewing court may not “substitute [its]
    own weighing of the evidence for that of the administrator.” Ferrari v. Teachers Ins.
    & Annuity Ass’n, 
    278 F.3d 801
    , 807 (8th Cir. 2002). But Liberty Life’s obligation
    as an ERISA fiduciary required more than combing the record for evidence in its favor
    and abandoning its review upon discovering “more than a scintilla” of such evidence.
    See Metropolitan Life, 
    474 F.3d at 265
    . Liberty Life was required to evaluate the
    available evidence in its entirety before reaching a determination, particularly after the
    district court had ordered it on remand to consider all of the evidence relating to her
    claim. The record does not show that the company met this duty, and we therefore
    conclude Liberty Life abused its discretion in denying Willcox’s claim.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons we conclude that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion by accepting Liberty Life’s suggestion to remand the case for further
    administrative review but that Liberty Life abused its discretion by relying on the
    opinions of two reviewing physicians which mischaracterized the medical evidence
    and ignored key findings in support of Willcox’s claim. Accordingly, we affirm the
    judgment of the district court.
    ______________________________
    -13-