(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2007 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE CO. ET AL. v.
GLENN
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
No. 06–923. Argued April 23, 2008—Decided June 19, 2008
Petitioner Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife) is an ad-
ministrator and the insurer of Sears, Roebuck & Company’s long-
term disability insurance plan, which is governed by the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). The plan gives
MetLife (as administrator) discretionary authority to determine the
validity of an employee’s benefits claim and provides that MetLife (as
insurer) will pay the claims. Respondent Wanda Glenn, a Sears em-
ployee, was granted an initial 24 months of benefits under the plan
following a diagnosis of a heart disorder. MetLife encouraged her to
apply for, and she began receiving, Social Security disability benefits
based on an agency determination that she could do no work. But
when MetLife itself had to determine whether she could work, in or-
der to establish eligibility for extended plan benefits, it found her ca-
pable of doing sedentary work and denied her the benefits. Glenn
sought federal-court review under ERISA, see 29 U. S. C.
§1132(a)(1)(B), but the District Court denied relief. In reversing, the
Sixth Circuit used a deferential standard of review and considered it
a conflict of interest that MetLife both determined an employee’s eli-
gibility for benefits and paid the benefits out of its own pocket. Based
on a combination of this conflict and other circumstances, it set aside
MetLife’s benefits denial.
Held:
1. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U. S. 101, sets out
four principles as to the appropriate standard of judicial review un-
der §1132(a)(1)(B): (1) A court should be “guided by principles of trust
law,” analogizing a plan administrator to a trustee and considering a
benefit determination a fiduciary act, id., at 111–113; (2) trust law
2 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Syllabus
principles require de novo review unless a benefits plan provides oth-
erwise, id., at 115; (3) where the plan so provides, by granting “the
administrator or fiduciary discretionary authority to determine eligi-
bility,” “a deferential standard of review [is] appropriate,” id., at 111,
115; and (4) if the administrator or fiduciary having discretion “is op-
erating under a conflict of interest, that conflict must be weighed as a
‘facto[r] in determining whether there is an abuse of discretion,’ ” id.,
at 115. Pp. 3–5.
2. A plan administrator’s dual role of both evaluating and paying
benefits claims creates the kind of conflict of interest referred to in
Firestone. That conclusion is clear where it is the employer itself that
both funds the plan and evaluates the claim, but a conflict also exists
where, as here, the plan administrator is an insurance company. For
one thing, the employer’s own conflict may extend to its selection of
an insurance company to administer its plan. For another, ERISA
imposes higher-than-marketplace quality standards on insurers, re-
quiring a plan administrator to “discharge [its] duties” in respect to
discretionary claims processing “solely in the interests of the [plan’s]
participants and beneficiaries,” 29 U. S. C. §1104(a)(1); underscoring
the particular importance of accurate claims processing by insisting
that administrators “provide a ‘full and fair review’ of claim denials,”
Firestone, supra, at 113; and supplementing marketplace and regula-
tory controls with judicial review of individual claim denials, see
§1132(a)(1)(B). Finally, a legal rule that treats insurers and employ-
ers alike in respect to the existence of a conflict can nonetheless take
account of different circumstances by treating the circumstances as
diminishing the conflict’s significance or severity in individual cases.
Pp. 5–8.
3. The significance of the conflict of interest factor will depend upon
the circumstances of the particular case. Firestone’s “weighed as a
‘factor’ ” language, 489 U. S., at 115, does not imply a change in the
standard of review, say, from deferential to de novo. Nor should this
Court overturn Firestone by adopting a rule that could bring about
near universal de novo review of most ERISA plan claims denials.
And it is not necessary or desirable for courts to create special bur-
den-of-proof rules, or other special procedural or evidentiary rules, fo-
cused narrowly upon the evaluator/payor conflict. Firestone means
what the word “factor” implies, namely, that judges reviewing a bene-
fit denial’s lawfulness may take account of several different consid-
erations, conflict of interest being one. This kind of review is no
stranger to the judicial system. Both trust law and administrative
law ask judges to determine lawfulness by taking account of several
different, often case-specific, factors, reaching a result by weighing all
together. Any one factor will act as a tiebreaker when the others are
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 3
Syllabus
closely balanced. Here, the Sixth Circuit gave the conflict some
weight, but focused more heavily on other factors: that MetLife had
encouraged Glenn to argue to the Social Security Administration that
she could do no work, received the bulk of the benefits of her success
in doing so (being entitled to receive an offset from her retroactive
Social Security award), and then ignored the agency’s finding in con-
cluding that she could do sedentary work; and that MetLife had em-
phasized one medical report favoring denial of benefits, had deem-
phasized other reports suggesting a contrary conclusion, and had
failed to provide its independent vocational and medical experts with
all of the relevant evidence. These serious concerns, taken together
with some degree of conflicting interests on MetLife’s part, led the
court to set aside MetLife’s discretionary decision. There is nothing
improper in the way this review was conducted. Finally, the Fire-
stone standard’s elucidation does not consist of detailed instructions,
because there “are no talismanic words that can avoid the process of
judgment.” Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U. S. 474, 489.
Pp. 8–13.
461 F. 3d 660, affirmed.
BREYER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which STEVENS,
SOUTER, GINSBURG, and ALITO, JJ., joined, and in which ROBERTS, C. J.,
joined as to all but Part IV. ROBERTS, C. J., filed an opinion concurring
in part and concurring in the judgment. KENNEDY, J., filed an opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part. SCALIA, J., filed a dissenting
opinion, in which THOMAS, J., joined.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 06–923
_________________
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
ET AL., PETITIONERS v. WANDA GLENN
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
[June 19, 2008]
JUSTICE BREYER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) permits a person denied benefits under an em-
ployee benefit plan to challenge that denial in federal
court. 88 Stat. 829, as amended, 29 U. S. C. §1001 et seq.;
see §1132(a)(1)(B). Often the entity that administers the
plan, such as an employer or an insurance company, both
determines whether an employee is eligible for benefits
and pays benefits out of its own pocket. We here decide
that this dual role creates a conflict of interest; that a
reviewing court should consider that conflict as a factor in
determining whether the plan administrator has abused
its discretion in denying benefits; and that the significance
of the factor will depend upon the circumstances of the
particular case. See Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
489 U. S. 101, 115 (1989).
I
Petitioner Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (Met-
Life) serves as both an administrator and the insurer of
Sears, Roebuck & Company’s long-term disability insur-
ance plan, an ERISA-governed employee benefit plan. See
2 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of the Court
App. 182a–183a; 29 U. S. C. §1003. The plan grants Met-
Life (as administrator) discretionary authority to deter-
mine whether an employee’s claim for benefits is valid; it
simultaneously provides that MetLife (as insurer) will
itself pay valid benefit claims. App. 181a–182a.
Respondent Wanda Glenn, a Sears employee, was diag-
nosed with severe dilated cardiomyopathy, a heart condi-
tion whose symptoms include fatigue and shortness of
breath. She applied for plan disability benefits in June
2000, and MetLife concluded that she met the plan’s stan-
dard for an initial 24 months of benefits, namely, that she
could not “perform the material duties of [her] own job.”
Id., at 159a–160a. MetLife also directed Glenn to a law
firm that would assist her in applying for federal Social
Security disability benefits (some of which MetLife itself
would be entitled to receive as an offset to the more gener-
ous plan benefits). In April 2002, an Administrative Law
Judge found that Glenn’s illness prevented her not only
from performing her own job but also “from performing
any jobs [for which she could qualify] existing in signifi-
cant numbers in the national economy.” App. to Pet. for
Cert. 49a; see also 20 CFR §404.1520(g) (2007). The Social
Security Administration consequently granted Glenn
permanent disability payments retroactive to April 2000.
Glenn herself kept none of the backdated benefits: three-
quarters went to MetLife, and the rest (plus some addi-
tional money) went to the lawyers.
To continue receiving Sears plan disability benefits after
24 months, Glenn had to meet a stricter, Social-Security-
type standard, namely, that her medical condition ren-
dered her incapable of performing not only her own job but
of performing “the material duties of any gainful occupa-
tion for which” she was “reasonably qualified.” App. 160a.
MetLife denied Glenn this extended benefit because it
found that she was “capable of performing full time seden-
tary work.” Id., at 31a.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 3
Opinion of the Court
After exhausting her administrative remedies, Glenn
brought this federal lawsuit, seeking judicial review of
MetLife’s denial of benefits. See 29 U. S. C.
§1132(a)(1)(B); 461 F. 3d 660, 665 (CA6 2006). The Dis-
trict Court denied relief. Glenn appealed to the Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Because the plan granted
MetLife “discretionary authority to . . . determine bene-
fits,” the Court of Appeals reviewed the administrative
record under a deferential standard. Id., at 666. In doing
so, it treated “as a relevant factor” a “conflict of interest”
arising out of the fact that MetLife was “authorized both
to decide whether an employee is eligible for benefits and
to pay those benefits.” Ibid.
The Court of Appeals ultimately set aside MetLife’s
denial of benefits in light of a combination of several cir-
cumstances: (1) the conflict of interest; (2) MetLife’s fail-
ure to reconcile its own conclusion that Glenn could work
in other jobs with the Social Security Administration’s
conclusion that she could not; (3) MetLife’s focus upon one
treating physician report suggesting that Glenn could
work in other jobs at the expense of other, more detailed
treating physician reports indicating that she could not;
(4) MetLife’s failure to provide all of the treating physician
reports to its own hired experts; and (5) MetLife’s failure
to take account of evidence indicating that stress aggra-
vated Glenn’s condition. See id., at 674.
MetLife sought certiorari, asking us to determine
whether a plan administrator that both evaluates and
pays claims operates under a conflict of interest in making
discretionary benefit determinations. The Solicitor Gen-
eral suggested that we also consider “ ‘how’ ” any such
conflict should “ ‘be taken into account on judicial review of
a discretionary benefit determination.’ ” Brief for United
States as Amicus Curiae on Pet. for Cert. 22. We agreed
to consider both questions. See 552 U. S. __ (2008).
4 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of the Court
II
In Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U. S. 101,
this Court addressed “the appropriate standard of judicial
review of benefit determinations by fiduciaries or plan
administrators under” §1132(a)(1)(B), the ERISA provision
at issue here. Id., at 105; see also id., at 108. Firestone
set forth four principles of review relevant here.
(1) In “determining the appropriate standard of review,”
a court should be “guided by principles of trust law”; in
doing so, it should analogize a plan administrator to the
trustee of a common-law trust; and it should consider a
benefit determination to be a fiduciary act (i.e., an act in
which the administrator owes a special duty of loyalty to
the plan beneficiaries). Id., at 111–113. See also Aetna
Health Inc. v. Davila, 542 U. S. 200, 218 (2004); Central
States, Southeast & Southwest Areas Pension Fund v.
Central Transport, Inc., 472 U. S. 559, 570 (1985).
(2) Principles of trust law require courts to review a
denial of plan benefits “under a de novo standard” unless
the plan provides to the contrary. Firestone, 489 U. S., at
115; see also id., at 112 (citing, inter alia, 3 A. Scott & W.
Fratcher, Law of Trusts §201, p. 221 (4th ed. 1988); G.
Bogert & G. Bogert, Law of Trusts and Trustees §559, pp.
162–168 (2d rev. ed. 1980) (hereinafter Bogert); 1 Re-
statement (Second) of Trusts §201, Comment b (1957)
(hereinafter Restatement)).
(3) Where the plan provides to the contrary by granting
“the administrator or fiduciary discretionary authority to
determine eligibility for benefits,” Firestone, 489 U. S., at
115 (emphasis added), “[t]rust principles make a deferen-
tial standard of review appropriate,” id., at 111 (citing
Restatement §187 (abuse-of-discretion standard); Bogert
§560, at 193–208; emphasis added).
(4) If “a benefit plan gives discretion to an administrator
or fiduciary who is operating under a conflict of interest,
that conflict must be weighed as a ‘factor in determining
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 5
Opinion of the Court
whether there is an abuse of discretion.’ ” Firestone, su-
pra, at 115 (quoting Restatement §187, Comment d; em-
phasis added; alteration omitted).
The questions before us, while implicating the first
three principles, directly focus upon the application and
the meaning of the fourth.
III
The first question asks whether the fact that a plan
administrator both evaluates claims for benefits and pays
benefits claims creates the kind of “conflict of interest” to
which Firestone’s fourth principle refers. In our view, it
does.
That answer is clear where it is the employer that both
funds the plan and evaluates the claims. In such a cir-
cumstance, “every dollar provided in benefits is a dollar
spent by . . . the employer; and every dollar saved . . . is a
dollar in [the employer’s] pocket.” Bruch v. Firestone Tire
& Rubber Co., 828 F. 2d 134, 144 (CA3 1987). The em-
ployer’s fiduciary interest may counsel in favor of granting
a borderline claim while its immediate financial interest
counsels to the contrary. Thus, the employer has an “in-
terest . . . conflicting with that of the beneficiaries,” the
type of conflict that judges must take into account when
they review the discretionary acts of a trustee of a com-
mon-law trust. Restatement §187, Comment d; see also
Firestone, supra, at 115 (citing that Restatement com-
ment); cf. Black’s Law Dictionary 319 (8th ed. 2004) (“con-
flict of interest” is a “real or seeming incompatibility be-
tween one’s private interests and one’s public or fiduciary
duties”).
Indeed, Firestone itself involved an employer who ad-
ministered an ERISA benefit plan and who both evaluated
claims and paid for benefits. See 489 U. S., at 105. And
thus that circumstance quite possibly was what the Court
had in mind when it mentioned conflicted administrators.
6 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of the Court
See id., at 115. The Firestone parties, while disagreeing
about other matters, agreed that the dual role created a
conflict of interest of some kind in the employer. See Brief
for Petitioners 6–7, 27–29, Brief for Respondents 9, 26,
and Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 22, in Fire-
stone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, O. T. 1988, No. 87–1054.
MetLife points out that an employer who creates a plan
that it will both fund and administer foresees, and implic-
itly approves, the resulting conflict. But that fact cannot
change our conclusion. At trust law, the fact that a settlor
(the person establishing the trust) approves a trustee’s
conflict does not change the legal need for a judge later to
take account of that conflict in reviewing the trustee’s
discretionary decisionmaking. See Restatement §107,
Comment f (discretionary acts of trustee with settlor-
approved conflict subject to “careful scrutiny”); id., §107,
Comment f, Illustration 1 (conflict is “a factor to be consid-
ered by the court in determining later whether” there has
been an “abuse of discretion”); id., §187, Comment d
(same); 3 A. Scott, W. Fratcher, & M. Ascher, Scott and
Ascher on Trusts §18.2, pp. 1342–1343 (5th ed. 2007)
(hereinafter Scott) (same). See also, e.g., Bogert §543, at
264 (rev. 2d ed. 1993) (settlor approval simply permits
conflicted individual to act as a trustee); id., §543(U), at
422–431 (same); Scott §17.2.11, at 1136–1139 (same).
MetLife also points out that we need not follow trust law
principles where trust law is “inconsistent with the lan-
guage of the statute, its structure, or its purposes.”
Hughes Aircraft Co. v. Jacobson, 525 U. S. 432, 447 (1999)
(internal quotation marks omitted). MetLife adds that to
find a conflict here is inconsistent (1) with ERISA’s efforts
to avoid complex review proceedings, see Varity Corp. v.
Howe, 516 U. S. 489, 497 (1996); (2) with Congress’ efforts
not to deter employers from setting up benefit plans, see
ibid., and (3) with an ERISA provision specifically allow-
ing employers to administer their own plans, see 29
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 7
Opinion of the Court
U. S. C. §1108(c)(3).
But we cannot find in these considerations any signifi-
cant inconsistency. As to the first, we note that trust law
functions well with a similar standard. As to the second,
we have no reason, empirical or otherwise, to believe that
our decision will seriously discourage the creation of bene-
fit plans. As to the third, we have just explained why
approval of a conflicted trustee differs from review of that
trustee’s conflicted decisionmaking. As to all three taken
together, we believe them outweighed by “Congress’ desire
to offer employees enhanced protection for their benefits.”
Varity, supra, at 497 (discussing “competing congressional
purposes” in enacting ERISA).
The answer to the conflict question is less clear where
(as here) the plan administrator is not the employer itself
but rather a professional insurance company. Such a
company, MetLife would argue, likely has a much greater
incentive than a self-insuring employer to provide accu-
rate claims processing. That is because the insurance
company typically charges a fee that attempts to account
for the cost of claims payouts, with the result that paying
an individual claim does not come to the same extent from
the company’s own pocket. It is also because the market-
place (and regulators) may well punish an insurance
company when its products, or ingredients of its products,
fall below par. And claims processing, an ingredient of the
insurance company’s product, falls below par when it
seeks a biased result, rather than an accurate one. Why,
MetLife might ask, should one consider an insurance
company inherently more conflicted than any other market
participant, say, a manufacturer who might earn more
money in the short run by producing a product with poor
quality steel or a lawyer with an incentive to work more
slowly than necessary, thereby accumulating more billable
hours?
Conceding these differences, we nonetheless continue to
8 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of the Court
believe that for ERISA purposes a conflict exists. For one
thing, the employer’s own conflict may extend to its selec-
tion of an insurance company to administer its plan. An
employer choosing an administrator in effect buys insur-
ance for others and consequently (when compared to the
marketplace customer who buys for himself) may be more
interested in an insurance company with low rates than in
one with accurate claims processing. Cf. Langbein, Trust
Law as Regulatory Law, 101 Nw. U. L. Rev. 1315, 1323–
1324 (2007) (observing that employees are rarely involved
in plan negotiations).
For another, ERISA imposes higher-than-marketplace
quality standards on insurers. It sets forth a special
standard of care upon a plan administrator, namely, that
the administrator “discharge [its] duties” in respect to
discretionary claims processing “solely in the interests of
the participants and beneficiaries” of the plan, §1104(a)(1);
it simultaneously underscores the particular importance of
accurate claims processing by insisting that administra-
tors “provide a ‘full and fair review’ of claim denials,”
Firestone, 489 U. S., at 113 (quoting §1133(2)); and it
supplements marketplace and regulatory controls with
judicial review of individual claim denials, see
§1132(a)(1)(B).
Finally, a legal rule that treats insurance company
administrators and employers alike in respect to the
existence of a conflict can nonetheless take account of the
circumstances to which MetLife points so far as it treats
those, or similar, circumstances as diminishing the signifi-
cance or severity of the conflict in individual cases. See
Part IV, infra.
IV
We turn to the question of “how” the conflict we have
just identified should “be taken into account on judicial
review of a discretionary benefit determination.” 552 U. S.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 9
Opinion of the Court
__ (2008). In doing so, we elucidate what this Court set
forth in Firestone, namely, that a conflict should “be
weighed as a ‘factor in determining whether there is an
abuse of discretion.’ ” 489 U. S., at 115 (quoting Restate-
ment §187, Comment d; alteration omitted).
We do not believe that Firestone’s statement implies a
change in the standard of review, say, from deferential to
de novo review. Trust 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 de-
termining whether the trustee, substantively or proce-
durally, has abused his discretion. See Restatement §187,
Comments d–j; id., §107, Comment f; Scott §18.2, at 1342–
1344. We see no reason to forsake Firestone’s reliance
upon trust law in this respect. See 489 U. S., at 111–115.
Nor would we overturn Firestone by adopting a rule that
in practice could bring about near universal review by
judges de novo—i.e., without deference—of the lion’s share
of ERISA plan claims denials. See Brief for America’s
Health Insurance Plans et al. as Amici Curiae 3–4 (many
ERISA plans grant discretionary authority to administra-
tors that combine evaluation and payment functions).
Had Congress intended such a system of review, we be-
lieve it would not have left to the courts the development
of review standards but would have said more on the
subject. See Firestone, supra, at 109 (“ERISA does not
set out the appropriate standard of review for actions
under §1132(a)(1)(B)”); compare, e.g., C. Gresenz et al.,
A Flood of Litigation? 8 (1999), http://www.rand.org/pubs/
issue_papers/2006/IP184.pdf (all Internet materials as
visited June 9, 2008, and available in Clerk of Court’s case
file) (estimating that 1.9 million beneficiaries of ERISA
plans have health care claims denied each year), with
Caseload of Federal Courts Remains Steady Overall (Mar.
11, 2008), http://www.uscourts.gov/Press_Releases/2008/
10 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of the Court
caseload.cfm (257,507 total civil filings in federal court in
2007); cf. Whitman v. American Trucking Assns., Inc., 531
U. S. 457, 468 (2001) (Congress does not “hide elephants
in mouseholes”).
Neither do we believe it necessary or desirable for courts
to create special burden-of-proof rules, or other special
procedural or evidentiary rules, focused narrowly upon the
evaluator/payor conflict. In principle, as we have said,
conflicts are but one factor among many that a reviewing
judge must take into account. Benefits decisions arise in
too many contexts, concern too many circumstances, and
can relate in too many different ways to conflicts—which
themselves vary in kind and in degree of seriousness—for
us to come up with a one-size-fits-all procedural system
that is likely to promote fair and accurate review. Indeed,
special procedural rules would create further complexity,
adding time and expense to a process that may already be
too costly for many of those who seek redress.
We believe that Firestone means what the word “factor”
implies, namely, 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. See Restatement §187,
Comment d; cf., e.g., Citizens to Preserve Overton Park,
Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U. S. 402, 415–417 (1971) (review of
governmental decision for abuse of discretion); Universal
Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U. S. 474 (1951) (review of
agency factfinding).
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 fac-
tor’s inherent or case-specific importance. The conflict of
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 11
Opinion of the Court
interest at issue here, for example, should prove more
important (perhaps of great importance) where circum-
stances 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. See Langbein, supra, at
1317–1321 (detailing such a history for one large insurer).
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 exam-
ple, by walling off claims administrators from those inter-
ested in firm finances, or by imposing management checks
that penalize inaccurate decisionmaking irrespective of
whom the inaccuracy benefits. See Herzel & Colling, The
Chinese Wall and Conflict of Interest in Banks, 34 Bus.
Law 73, 114 (1978) (recommending interdepartmental
information walls to reduce bank conflicts); Brief for Blue
Cross and Blue Shield Association as Amicus Curiae 15
(suggesting that insurers have incentives to reward claims
processors for their accuracy); cf. generally J. Mashaw,
Bureaucratic Justice (1983) (discussing internal controls
as a sound method of producing administrative accuracy).
The Court of Appeals’ opinion in the present case illus-
trates the combination-of-factors method of review. The
record says little about MetLife’s efforts to assure accurate
claims assessment. The Court of Appeals gave the conflict
weight to some degree; its opinion suggests that, in con-
text, the court would not have found the conflict alone
determinative. See 461 F. 3d, at 666, 674. The court
instead focused more heavily on other factors. In particu-
lar, the court found questionable the fact that MetLife had
encouraged Glenn to argue to the Social Security Admini-
stration that she could do no work, received the bulk of the
benefits of her success in doing so (the remainder going to
the lawyers it recommended), and then ignored the
agency’s finding in concluding that Glenn could in fact do
12 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of the Court
sedentary work. See id., at 666–669. This course of even-
ts was not only an important factor in its own right (be-
cause it suggested procedural unreasonableness), but also
would have justified the court in giving more weight to the
conflict (because MetLife’s seemingly inconsistent posi-
tions were both financially advantageous). And the court
furthermore observed that MetLife had emphasized a
certain medical report that favored a denial of benefits,
had deemphasized certain other reports that suggested a
contrary conclusion, and had failed to provide its inde-
pendent vocational and medical experts with all of the
relevant evidence. See id., at 669–674. All these serious
concerns, taken together with some degree of conflicting
interests on MetLife’s part, led the court to set aside Met-
Life’s discretionary decision. See id., at 674–675. We can
find nothing improper in the way in which the court con-
ducted its review.
Finally, we note that our elucidation of Firestone’s stan-
dard does not consist of a detailed set of instructions. In
this respect, we find pertinent this Court’s comments
made in a somewhat different context, the context of court
review of agency factfinding. See Universal Camera Corp.,
supra. In explaining how a reviewing court should take
account of the agency’s reversal of its own examiner’s
factual findings, this Court did not lay down a detailed set
of instructions. It simply held that the reviewing judge
should take account of that circumstance as a factor in
determining the ultimate adequacy of the record’s support
for the agency’s own factual conclusion. Id., at 492–497.
In so holding, the Court noted that it had not enunciated a
precise standard. See, e.g., id., at 493. But it warned
against creating formulas that will “falsif[y] the actual
process of judging” or serve as “instrument[s] of futile
casuistry.” Id., at 489. The Court added that there “are
no talismanic words that can avoid the process of judg-
ment.” Ibid. It concluded then, as we do now, that the
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 13
Opinion of the Court
“[w]ant of certainty” in judicial standards “partly reflects
the intractability of any formula to furnish definiteness of
content for all the impalpable factors involved in judicial
review.” Id., at 477.
We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
It is so ordered.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 1
Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 06–923
_________________
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
ET AL., PETITIONERS v. WANDA GLENN
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
[June 19, 2008]
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS, concurring in part and concur-
ring in the judgment.
I join all but Part IV of the Court’s opinion. I agree that
a third-party insurer’s dual role as a claims administrator
and plan funder gives rise to a conflict of interest that is
pertinent in reviewing claims decisions. I part ways with
the majority, however, when it comes to how such a con-
flict should matter. See ante, at 8–13. The majority would
accord weight, of varying and indeterminate amount, to
the existence of such a conflict in every case where it is
present. See ante, at 10–11. The majority’s approach
would allow the bare existence of a conflict to enhance the
significance of other factors already considered by review-
ing courts, even if the conflict is not shown to have played
any role in the denial of benefits. The end result is to
increase the level of scrutiny in every case in which there
is a conflict—that is, in many if not most ERISA cases—
thereby undermining the deference owed to plan adminis-
trators when the plan vests discretion in them.
I would instead consider the conflict of interest on re-
view only where there is evidence that the benefits denial
was motivated or affected by the administrator’s conflict.
No such evidence was presented in this case. I would
nonetheless affirm the judgment of the Sixth Circuit,
because that court was justified in finding an abuse of
2 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.
discretion on the facts of this case—conflict or not.
In Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U. S. 101
(1989), this Court recognized that plan sponsors could, by
the terms of the plan, reserve the authority to make dis-
cretionary claims decisions that courts would review only
for an abuse of that discretion. Id., at 111. We have long
recognized “the public interest in encouraging the forma-
tion of employee benefit plans.” Pilot Life Ins. Co. v.
Dedeaux, 481 U. S. 41, 54 (1987). Ensuring that reviewing
courts respect the discretionary authority conferred on
ERISA fiduciaries encourages employers to provide medi-
cal and retirement benefits to their employees through
ERISA-governed plans—something they are not required
to do. Cf. Aetna Health Inc. v. Davila, 542 U. S. 200, 215
(2004).
The conflict of interest at issue here is a common feature
of ERISA plans. The majority acknowledges that the
“lion’s share of ERISA plan claims denials” are made by
administrators that both evaluate and pay claims. See
ante, at 9; see also Guthrie v. National Rural Elec. Coop.
Assn. Long-Term Disability Plan, 509 F. 3d 644, 650 (CA4
2007) (describing use of dual-role administrators as “ ‘sim-
ple and commonplace’ ” (quoting Colucci v. Agfa Corp.
Severance Pay Plan, 431 F. 3d 170, 179 (CA4 2005)); Hall
v. UNUM Life Ins. Co., 300 F. 3d 1197, 1205 (CA10 2002)
(declining to permit additional evidence on review “when-
ever the same party is the administrator and payor” be-
cause such an arrangement is “commonplace”). For this
reason, the majority is surely correct in concluding that it
is important to retain deferential review for decisions
made by conflicted administrators, in order to avoid “near
universal review by judges de novo.” Ante, at 9.
But the majority’s approach does not do so. Saying that
courts should consider the mere existence of a conflict in
every case, without focusing that consideration in any
way, invites the substitution of judicial discretion for the
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 3
Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.
discretion of the plan administrator. Judicial review
under the majority’s opinion is less constrained, because
courts can look to the bare presence of a conflict as author-
izing more exacting scrutiny.
This problem is exacerbated because the majority is so
imprecise about how the existence of a conflict should be
treated in a reviewing court’s analysis. The majority is
forthright about this failing. In a triumph of understate-
ment, the Court acknowledges that its approach “does not
consist of a detailed set of instructions.” Ante, at 12. The
majority tries to transform this vice into a virtue, pointing
to the practice of courts in reviewing agency determina-
tions. See ante, at 10, 12–13. The standard of review for
agency determinations has little to nothing to do with the
appropriate test for identifying ERISA benefits decisions
influenced by a conflict of interest. In fact, we have re-
jected this analogy before, see Firestone, supra, at 109–110
(rejecting the arbitrary and capricious standard of review
under the Labor Management and Relations Act for claims
brought under ERISA §1132(a)(1)(B)), and not even the
Solicitor General, whose position the majority accepts,
endorses it, see Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae
29–30, n. 3 (noting the “key differences between ERISA
and the administrative law context”).
Pursuant to the majority’s strained analogy, Universal
Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U. S. 474 (1951), makes an
unexpected appearance on stage. The case is cited for the
proposition that the lack of certainty in judicial standards
“ ‘partly reflects the intractability of any formula to fur-
nish definiteness of content for all the impalpable factors
involved in judicial review.’ ” Ante, at 13 (quoting Univer-
sal Camera, supra, at 477). Maybe. But certainty and
predictability are important criteria under ERISA, and
employers considering whether to establish ERISA plans
can have no notion what it means to say that a standard
feature of such plans will be one of the “impalpable factors
4 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.
involved in judicial review” of benefits decisions. See Rush
Prudential HMO, Inc. v. Moran, 536 U. S. 355, 379 (2002)
(noting “ERISA’s policy of inducing employers to offer
benefits by assuring a predictable set of liabilities, under
uniform standards of primary conduct”). The Court leaves
the law more uncertain, more unpredictable than it found
it. Cf. O. Holmes, The Common Law 101 (M. Howe ed.
1963) (“[T]he tendency of the law must always be to nar-
row the field of uncertainty”).
Nothing in Firestone compels the majority’s kitchen-sink
approach. In Firestone, the Court stated that a conflict of
interest “must be weighed as a ‘facto[r] in determining
whether there is an abuse of discretion.’ ” 489 U. S., at 115
(quoting Restatement (Second) of Trusts §187, Comment d
(1959) (alteration in original)). The cited Restatement
confirms that treating the existence of a conflict of interest
“as a factor” means considering whether the conflicted
trustee “is acting from an improper motive” so as to “fur-
ther some interest of his own or of a person other than the
beneficiary.” Id., §187, Comment g (emphasis added). See
also post, at 5–7 (SCALIA, J., dissenting). The language in
Firestone does not specify whether the existence of a con-
flict should be thrown into the mix in an indeterminate
way along with all other considerations pertinent in re-
viewing a benefits decision, as the majority would appar-
ently have it, or instead weighed to determine whether it
actually affected the decision.
It is the actual motivation that matters in reviewing
benefits decisions for an abuse of discretion, not the bare
presence of the conflict itself. Consonant with this under-
standing, a conflict of interest can support a finding that
an administrator abused its discretion only where the
evidence demonstrates that the conflict actually motivated
or influenced the claims decision. Such evidence may take
many forms. It may, for example, appear on the face of
the plan, see Pegram v. Herdrich, 530 U. S. 211, 227, n. 7
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 5
Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.
(2000) (offering hypothetical example of a plan that gives
“a bonus for administrators who denied benefits to every
10th beneficiary”); it may be shown by evidence of other
improper incentives, see Armstrong v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
128 F. 3d 1263, 1265 (CA8 1997) (insurer provided incen-
tives and bonuses to claims reviewers for “claims sav-
ings”); or it may be shown by a pattern or practice of un-
reasonably denying meritorious claims, see Radford Trust
v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., 321 F. Supp. 2d 226, 247
(Mass. 2004) (finding a “pattern of erroneous and arbi-
trary benefits denials, bad faith contract misinterpreta-
tions, and other unscrupulous tactics”). The mere exis-
tence of a conflict, however, is not justification for
heightening the level of scrutiny, either on its own or by
enhancing the significance of other factors.
The majority’s application of its approach confirms its
overbroad reach and indeterminate nature. Three sets of
circumstances, the majority finds, warrant the conclusion
that MetLife’s conflict of interest influenced its decision to
deny Glenn’s claim for benefits: MetLife’s failure to ac-
count for the Social Security Administration’s finding of
disability after MetLife encouraged Glenn to apply to the
agency for benefits; MetLife’s emphasis of favorable medi-
cal reports and deemphasis of unfavorable ones; and Met-
Life’s failure to provide its internal experts with all the
relevant evidence of Glenn’s medical condition. See ante,
at 11–12. These facts simply prove that MetLife abused
its discretion in failing to consider relevant, expert evi-
dence on the question of Glenn’s disability status. There
is no basis for supposing that the conflict of interest lent
any greater significance to these factors, and no logical
reason to give the factors an extra dollop of weight because
of the structural conflict.
Even the fact that MetLife took “seemingly inconsistent
positions” regarding Glenn’s claim for Social Security
benefits falls short. Ante, at 12. That MetLife stood to
6 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.
gain financially from ignoring the agency’s finding and
denying Glenn’s claim does not show improper motivation.
If it did, every decision to deny a claim made by a dual-
role administrator would automatically qualify as an
abuse of discretion. No one here advocates such a per se
rule. As for MetLife’s referral of Glenn to the agency, the
plan itself required MetLife to deduct an estimated
amount of Social Security disability benefits “whether or
not [Glenn] actually appl[ied] for and receive[d] those
amounts,” App. 167a, and to assist plan participants like
Glenn in applying for Social Security benefits, see id., at
168a. Hence, it was not the conflict that prompted Met-
Life to refer Glenn to the agency, but the plan itself, a
requirement that any administrator, whether conflicted or
not, would be obligated to enforce.
In fact, there is no indication that the Sixth Circuit
viewed the deficiencies in MetLife’s decision as a product
of its conflict of interest. Apart from remarking on the
conflict at the outset and the conclusion of its opinion, see
461 F. 3d 660, 666, 674 (2006), the court never again
mentioned MetLife’s inconsistent obligations in the course
of reversing the administrator’s decision. As the court
explained, MetLife’s decision “was not the product of a
principled and deliberative reasoning process.” Id., at 674.
MetLife failed to acknowledge the contrary conclusion
reached by the Social Security Administration, gave scant
weight to the contrary medical evidence supplied by Dr.
Patel, and neglected to provide its internal experts with
Dr. Patel’s reports. Ibid.; see also ante, at 11–12. In these
circumstances, the Court of Appeals was justified in find-
ing an abuse of discretion wholly apart from MetLife’s
conflict of interest.
I would therefore affirm the judgment below.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 1
Opinion of KENNEDY, J.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 06–923
_________________
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
ET AL., PETITIONERS v. WANDA GLENN
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
[June 19, 2008]
JUSTICE KENNEDY, concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
The Court sets forth an important framework for the
standard of review in ERISA cases, one consistent with
our holding in Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489
U. S. 101 (1989). In my view this is correct, and I concur
in those parts of the Court’s opinion that discuss this
framework. In my submission, however, the case should
be remanded so that the Court of Appeals can apply the
standards the Court now explains to these facts.
There are two ways to read the Court’s opinion. The
Court devotes so much of its discussion to the weight to be
given to a conflict of interest that one should conclude this
has considerable relevance to the conclusion that MetLife
wrongfully terminated respondent’s disability payments.
This interpretation is the one consistent with the question
the Court should address and with the way the case was
presented to us. A second reading is that the Court con-
cludes MetLife’s conduct was so egregious that it was an
abuse of discretion even if there were no conflict at all; but
if that is so then the first 11 pages of the Court’s opinion is
unnecessary to its disposition.
The Court has set forth a workable framework for tak-
ing potential conflicts of interest in ERISA benefits dis-
putes into account. It is consistent with our opinion in
2 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
Opinion of KENNEDY, J.
Firestone, and it protects the interests of plan beneficiaries
without undermining the ability of insurance companies to
act simultaneously as plan administrators and plan fun-
ders. The linchpin of this framework is the Court’s recog-
nition that a structural conflict “should prove less impor-
tant (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 fi-
nances, or by imposing management checks that penalize
inaccurate decisionmaking irrespective of whom the inac-
curacy benefits.” Ante, at 11. And it is on this point that
the Court’s opinion parts company with the decision of the
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The Court ac-
knowledges that the structural conflict of interest played
some role in the Court of Appeals’ determination that
MetLife had abused its discretion. Ibid. But as far as one
can tell, the Court of Appeals made no effort to assess
whether MetLife employed structural safeguards to avoid
conflicts of interest, safeguards the Court says can cause
the importance of a conflict to vanish.
The Court nonetheless affirms the judgment, without
giving MetLife a chance to defend its decision under the
standards the Court articulates today. In doing so, it
notes that “[t]he record says little about MetLife’s efforts
to assure accurate claims assessment,” ibid., thereby
implying that MetLife is to blame for failing to introduce
structural evidence in the earlier proceedings. Until
today’s opinion, however, a party in MetLife’s position had
no notice of the relevance of these evidentiary considera-
tions.
By reaching out to decide the merits of this case without
remanding, the Court disadvantages MetLife solely for its
failure to anticipate the instructions in today’s opinion.
This is a deviation from our practice, and it is unfair.
Given the importance of evidence pertaining to structural
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 3
Opinion of KENNEDY, J.
safeguards, this case should have been remanded to allow
the Court of Appeals to consider this matter further in
light of the Court’s ruling.
For these reasons, I concur in part but dissent from the
order affirming the judgment.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 1
SCALIA, J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 06–923
_________________
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
ET AL., PETITIONERS v. WANDA GLENN
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
[June 19, 2008]
JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE THOMAS joins,
dissenting.
I agree with the Court that petitioner Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company (hereinafter petitioner) has a conflict
of interest. A third-party insurance company that admin-
isters an ERISA-governed disability plan and that pays for
benefits out of its own coffers profits with each benefits
claim it rejects. I see no reason why the Court must vol-
unteer, however, that an employer who administers its
own ERISA-governed plan “clear[ly]” has a conflict of
interest. See ante, at 5. At least one Court of Appeals has
thought that while the insurance-company administrator
has a conflict, the employer-administrator does not. See
Colucci v. Agfa Corp. Severance Pay Plan, 431 F. 3d 170,
179 (CA4 2005). I would not resolve this question until it
has been presented and argued, and the Court’s unneces-
sary and uninvited resolution must be regarded as dictum.
The more important question is how the existence of a
conflict should bear upon judicial review of the adminis-
trator’s decision, and on that score I am in fundamental
disagreement with the Court. Even if the choice were
mine as a policy matter, I would not adopt the Court’s
totality-of-the-circumstances (so-called) “test,” in which
the existence of a conflict is to be put into the mix and
given some (unspecified) “weight.” This makes each case
2 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
SCALIA, J., dissenting
unique, and hence the outcome of each case unpredict-
able—not a reasonable position in which to place the
administrator that has been explicitly given discretion by
the creator of the plan, despite the existence of a conflict.
See ante, at 3–4 (ROBERTS, C. J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment). More importantly, however, this
is not a question to be solved by this Court’s policy views;
our cases make clear that it is to be governed by the law of
trusts. Under that law, a fiduciary with a conflict does not
abuse its discretion unless the conflict actually and im-
properly motivates the decision. There is no evidence of
that here.
I
Our opinion in Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
489 U. S. 101 (1989), does not provide the answer to the
all-important question in this case, but it does direct us to
the answer. It held that federal courts hearing 29 U. S. C.
§1132(a)(1)(B) claims should review the decisions of
ERISA-plan administrators the same way that courts have
traditionally reviewed decisions of trustees. 489 U. S., at
111. In trust law, the decision of a trustee who was not
vested with discretion would be reviewed de novo. Id., at
112–113. Citing the Restatement of Trusts current at the
time of ERISA’s enactment, Firestone acknowledged that
courts traditionally would defer to trustees vested with
discretion, but rejected that course in the case at hand
because, among other reasons, the Firestone plan did not
vest its administrator with discretion. Id., at 111 (citing
Restatement (Second) of Trusts §187 (1959)). Accordingly,
Firestone had no occasion to consider the scope of, or limi-
tations on, the deference accorded to fiduciaries with
discretion. But in sheer dictum quoting a portion of one
comment of the Restatement, our opinion said, “[o]f
course, if a benefit plan gives discretion to an administra-
tor or fiduciary who is operating under a conflict of inter-
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 3
SCALIA, J., dissenting
est, that conflict must be weighed as a ‘facto[r] in deter-
mining whether there is an abuse of discretion.’ ” 489
U. S., at 115 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Trusts
§187, Comment d).
The Court takes that throwaway dictum literally and
builds a castle upon it. See ante, at 9–12. But the dictum
cannot bear that weight, and the Court’s “elucidation” of
the sentence does not reveal trust-law practice as much as
it reveals the Justices’ fondness for a judge-liberating
totality-of-the-circumstances “test.” The Restatement does
indeed list in Comment d certain circumstances (including
conflict of interest) that “may be relevant” to deciding
whether a trustee has abused his discretion.1 It does not,
however, suggest that they should all be chucked into a
brown paper bag and shaken up to determine the answer.
Nowhere does it mention the majority’s modus operandi of
“weighing” all these factors together. To the contrary, the
immediately following Comments (e–l) precisely elaborate
upon how some of those factors (factor (1), extent of discre-
tion, see Comment j; factor (4), existence of an external
standard for judging reasonableness, see Comment i;
factors (5) and (6), motives of the trustee and conflict of
interest, see Comment g) are relevant—making very clear
that each of them can be alone determinative, without the
necessity of “weighing” other factors. These later Com-
——————
1 Comment d provides in full: “Factors in determining whether there is
an abuse of discretion. In determining the question whether the trustee
is guilty of an abuse of discretion in exercising or failing to exercise a
power, the following circumstances may be relevant: (1) the extent of
the discretion conferred upon the trustee by the terms of the trust; (2)
the purposes of the trust; (3) the nature of the power; (4) the existence
or non-existence, the definiteness or indefiniteness, of an external
standard by which the reasonableness of the trustee’s conduct can be
judged; (5) the motives of the trustee in exercising or refraining from
exercising the power; (6) the existence or nonexistence of an interest in
the trustee conflicting with that of the beneficiaries.” Restatement
(Second) of Trusts §187, Comment d (1959).
4 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
SCALIA, J., dissenting
ments also address other factors not even included in the
earlier listing, some of which can be alone determinative.
See Comment h, Trustee’s failure to use his judgment;
Comment k, Limits of power of settlor to confer discretion.
Instead of taking the pain to reconcile the entirety of the
Restatement section with the Firestone dictum, the Court
treats the dictum like a statutory command, and makes up
a standard (if one can call it that) to make sense of the
dictum. The opinion is painfully opaque, despite its prom-
ise of elucidation. It variously describes the object of
judicial review as “determining whether the trustee, sub-
stantively or procedurally, has abused his discretion”
(ante, at 9), determining “the lawfulness of benefit denials”
(ante, at 10), and as tantamount to “review of agency
factfinding” (ante, at 12). How a court should go about
conducting this review is unclear. The opinion is rife with
instruction on what a court should not do. See ante, at 9–
10. In the final analysis, the Court seems to advance a
gestalt reasonableness standard (a “combination-of-factors
method of review,” the opinion calls it, ante, at 11), by
which a reviewing court, mindful of being deferential,
should nonetheless consider all the circumstances, weigh
them as it thinks best, then divine whether a fiduciary’s
discretionary decision should be overturned.2 Notwith-
standing the Court’s assurances to the contrary, ante, at 9,
——————
2I
do not take the Court to adopt respondent’s position that courts
should consider all the circumstances to determine how much deference
a trustee’s decision deserves. See Brief for Respondent 46–50. The
opinion disavows that reading. See ante, at 9 (“We do not believe that
Firestone’s statement implies a change in the standard of review, say,
from deferential to de novo review”). Of course when one is speaking of
deferring to the judgment of another decisionmaker, the notion that
there are degrees of deference is absurd. There are degrees of respect
for the decisionmaker, perhaps—but the court either defers, or it does
not. “Some deference,” or “less than total deference,” is no deference at
all.
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 5
SCALIA, J., dissenting
that is nothing but de novo review in sheep’s clothing.3
Looking to the common law of trusts (which is, after all,
what the holding of Firestone binds us to do), I would
adopt the entirety of the Restatement’s clear guidelines for
judicial review. In trust law, a court reviewing a trustee’s
decision would substitute its own de novo judgment for a
trustee’s only if it found either that the trustee had no
discretion in making the decision, see Firestone, supra, at
111–112, or that the trustee had discretion but abused it,
see Restatement (Second) of Trusts §187. Otherwise, the
court would defer to the trustee. Cf. Shelton v. King,
229 U. S. 90, 94–95 (1913). “Abuse of discretion,” as the
Restatement uses the term, refers specifically to four
distinct failures: the trustee acted dishonestly; he acted
with some other improper motive; he failed to use judg-
ment; or he acted beyond the bounds of a reasonable
judgment. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §187,
Comment e.
The Restatement discusses all four of these manners of
abusing discretion successively, in Comments f, g, h, and i,
describing the aim of a court’s inquiry into each. A trustee
abuses his discretion by acting dishonestly when, for
example, he accepts bribes. See id., §187, Comment f. A
trustee abuses his discretion by failing to use his judg-
ment, when he acts “without knowledge of or inquiry into
the relevant circumstances and merely as a result of his
arbitrary decision or whim.” Id., §187, Comment h. A
trustee abuses his discretion by acting unreasonably when
his decision is substantively unreasonable either with
regard to his exercise of a discretionary power or with
——————
3 The Solicitor General proposes an equally gobbledygook standard:
“Reasonableness Under The Totality Of The Circumstances,” a.k.a.
“[r]eview . . . as searching . . . as the facts and circumstances . . . war-
rant,” by which a reviewing court takes “extra care” to ensure that a
decision is reasonable. See Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae
22, 25.
6 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
SCALIA, J., dissenting
regard to his assessment of whether the preconditions to
that exercise have been met.4 See id., §187, Comment i.
And—most important for this case—a trustee abuses his
discretion by acting on an improper motive when he acts
“from a motive other than to further the purposes of the
trust.” Id., §187, Comment g. Improper motives include
“spite or prejudice or to further some interest of his own or
of a person other than the beneficiary.” Ibid. (emphasis
added).
The four abuses of discretion are clearly separate and
distinct. Indeed, the circumstances the Restatement
identifies as relevant for finding each abuse of discretion
are not identified as relevant for finding the other abuses
of discretion. For instance, “the existence or non-
existence, the definiteness or indefiniteness, of an external
standard by which the reasonableness of the trustee’s
conduct can be judged,” id., §187, Comment d, is alluded to
only in the later Comment dealing with abuse of discretion
by acting beyond the bounds of reasonable judgment, id.,
§187, Comment i. And particularly relevant to the present
case, “the existence or nonexistence of an interest in the
trustee conflicting with that of the beneficiaries,” id., §187,
Comment d, is mentioned only in the later Comment
dealing with abuse of discretion by reason of improper
motive, id., §187, Comment g. The other Comments do not
even hint that a conflict of interest is relevant to determin-
ing whether one of the other three types of abuse of discre-
tion exists.
Common sense confirms that a trustee’s conflict of
——————
4 The latter is the sort of discretionary decision challenged in this
case. Petitioner, as a precondition to paying respondent’s benefits, had
to assess whether she was disabled. Cf. Restatement (Second) of Trusts
§187, Comment i, Illustration 9 (dealing with a trustee’s assessment of
a beneficiary’s competence to manage property, which is the condition
of the trustee’s obligation to pay the principal of the trust to that
beneficiary).
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 7
SCALIA, J., dissenting
interest is irrelevant to determining the substantive rea-
sonableness of his decision. A reasonable decision is rea-
sonable whether or not the person who makes it has a
conflict. If it were otherwise, the consequences would be
perverse: A trustee without a conflict could take either of
two reasonable courses of action, but a trustee with a
conflict, facing the same two choices, would be compelled
to take the course that avoids the appearance of self-
dealing. He would have to do that even if he thought the
other one would better serve the beneficiary’s interest, lest
his determination be set aside as unreasonable. It makes
no sense to say that a lurking conflict of interest, or the
mere identity of the trustee, can make a reasonable deci-
sion unreasonable, or a well-thought-out, informed deci-
sion uninformed or arbitrary. The Restatement echoes the
commonsensical view: It explains that a court applying
trust law must pretermit its inquiry into whether a trus-
tee abused his discretion by acting unreasonably when
there is no standard for evaluating reasonableness, but
“[i]n such a case . . . the court will interpose if the trustee
act[ed] dishonestly, or from some improper motive.” Id.,
§187, Comment i. That explanation plainly excludes the
court’s “weighing” of a trustee’s conflict of interest.
A trustee’s conflict of interest is relevant (and only
relevant) for determining whether he abused his discre-
tion by acting with an improper motive. It does not itself
prove that he did so, but it is the predicate for an inquiry
into motive, and can be part of the circumstantial evidence
establishing wrongful motive. That circumstantial evi-
dence could theoretically include the unreasonableness of
the decision—but using it for that purpose would be en-
tirely redundant, since unreasonableness alone suffices to
establish an abuse of discretion. There are no gradations
of reasonableness, so that one might infer that a trustee
acted upon his conflict of interest when he chose a “less
reasonable,” yet self-serving, course, but not when he
8 METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. v. GLENN
SCALIA, J., dissenting
chose a “more reasonable,” yet self-serving, course. Rea-
sonable is reasonable. A reasonable decision is one over
which reasonable minds seeking the “best” or “right”
answer could disagree. It is a course that a trustee acting
in the best interest of the beneficiary might have chosen.
Gradating reasonableness, and making it a “factor” in the
improper-motive determination, would have the precise
effect of eliminating the discretion that the settlor has
intentionally conferred upon the trustee with a conflict, for
such a trustee would be foreclosed from making an other-
wise reasonable decision. See supra, at 6–7.
Respondent essentially asks us to presume that all
fiduciaries with a conflict act in their selfish interest, so
that their decisions are automatically reviewed with less
than total deference (how much less is unspecified). But if
one is to draw any inference about a fiduciary from the
fact that he made an informed, reasonable, though appar-
ently self-serving discretionary decision, it should be that
he suppressed his selfish interest (as the settlor antici-
pated) in compliance with his duties of good faith and
loyalty. See, e.g., Gregory v. Moose, 266 Ark. 926, 933–
934, 590 S. W. 2d 665, 670–671 (1979) (citing Jarvis v.
Boatmen’s Nat. Bank of St. Louis, 478 S. W. 2d 266, 273
(Mo. 1972)). Only such a presumption can vindicate the
trust principles and ERISA provisions that permit settlors
to appoint fiduciaries with a conflict in the first place. See
Pegram v. Herdrich, 530 U. S. 211, 225 (2000).
II
Applying the Restatement’s guidelines to this case, I
conclude that the only possible basis for finding an abuse
of discretion in this case would be unreasonableness of
petitioner’s determination of no disability. The principal
factor suggesting that is the finding of disability by the
Social Security Administration (SSA). But ERISA fiduci-
aries need not always reconcile their determinations with
Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008) 9
SCALIA, J., dissenting
the SSA’s, nor is the SSA’s conclusion entitled to any
special weight. Cf. Black & Decker Disability Plan v.
Nord, 538 U. S. 822, 834 (2003). The SSA’s determination
may have been wrong, and it was contradicted by other
medical opinion.
We did not take this case to make the reasonableness
determination, but rather to clarify when a conflict exists,
and how it should be taken into account. I would remand
to the Court of Appeals for its determination of the rea-
sonableness of petitioner’s denial, without regard to the
existence of a conflict of interest.