Baker v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

                                                                United States Court of Appeals
                                                                         Fifth Circuit
                                                                      F I L E D
                  IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                        April 9, 2004
                           FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
                           _____________________                  Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                                                          Clerk
                                No. 02-20966
                           _____________________

GENA BAKER, Individually and as
Executor of the Estate of Keith Baker;
BURLINGTON RESOURCES INC.,

                                                  Plaintiffs - Appellants,

                                      versus

METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,

                                                       Defendant - Appellee.

__________________________________________________________________

            Appeal from the United States District Court
                 for the Southern District of Texas

_________________________________________________________________

Before JOLLY, WIENER, and BARKSDALE, Circuit Judges.

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

     This ERISA case presents an appeal of a denial of benefits

claimed by Gena Baker under a life insurance policy covering her

deceased husband, Keith Baker. Gena Baker and Burlington Resources

Inc., Keith Baker’s employer (who paid the benefits to Gena Baker

acquiring   her    right   to   the    proceeds   of    this   action),      sued

Metropolitan   Life    Insurance      Company   for    these   life   insurance

benefits.   The complaint also alleged state law claims for breach

of contract and violations of TEX. INS. CODE ANN. art. 21.21 et seq.
and TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 17.46 et seq.1         The district court

granted summary judgment in favor of Metropolitan Life Insurance

Co. and entered a final take-nothing judgment against Gena Baker

and Burlington Resources Inc., disposing of their ERISA and state

law claims.

     This appeal requires us to determine the degree of deference

the Plan insurer, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, is required

to give the named Plan administrator, Burlington Resources Inc.,

under the terms of the Metropolitan Life Plan.                 However, this

inquiry is substantially complicated by the fact that Mr. Baker

made his benefits election before the Plan had become effective and

died after the effective date of the Plan but before the Plan had

actually been drafted.         Nevertheless, we hold that the district

court was correct to uphold Metropolitan Life Insurance Company’s

denial   of   benefits    under   the   Plan,   but   that   it   prematurely

dismissed the state law claims.

                                        I

                                        A

     Keith    Baker      was   hired    by   Burlington      Resources   Inc.

(“Burlington”) on October 31, 1986.             He initially enrolled in


     1
      Baker and Burlington’s state law claims also included claims
for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, breach
of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, estoppel, and breach of
fiduciary duty.     Additionally, they requested other state law
relief including reformation, exemplary damages, and a declaratory
judgment under the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act, TEX. CIV. PRAC. &
REM. CODE ANN. § 37.009 et seq.

                                        2
Burlington’s group life insurance plan (“Burlington Plan”) and on

November 2, 1997, elected to receive both basic and supplemental

life insurance benefits equal to one-time his annual salary in

basic benefits and one-time his annual salary in supplemental

benefits.   In 1997 Burlington acquired the Louisiana Land and

Exploration Company, which had its own employee benefit plan.

Burlington sought an insurer that would take over its parallel

benefit programs as a new uniform program to cover all employees.

To this end, in April 1998, Burlington directed its agent and

broker, William Mercer, Inc., to submit a Request for Proposal to

numerous life insurance companies, including Metropolitan Life

Insurance Company (“MetLife”), inviting them to bid on Burlington’s

life insurance program.

     In the meantime, Mr. Baker’s health was deteriorating. On

October 15, 1998, he left work after developing skin cancer and on

October 19, 1998, he was classified by Burlington as short-term

disabled.   After he went on short-term disability, enrollment

notices were sent by Burlington to all “active” employees to allow

them to enroll in the new MetLife benefits Plan.2   Mr. Baker’s name

was carried on Burlington’s list of active employees and Burlington

sent him an enrollment notice.   Burlington employees who received

this notice were allowed to increase their life insurance coverage

     2
      It is unclear who deemed employees to be “active” for the
purposes of this initial enrollment.     However, Burlington had
consistently considered short-term disabled individuals to be
active, but not long-term disabled individuals.

                                 3
during the initial enrollment period. Consequently, on November 5,

1998, Mr. Baker called Burlington’s human resources department and

increased his life insurance coverage to six-times his annual

salary.3     He was sent a letter by Burlington confirming this

election, but the letter noted that any change in benefits would

not become effective until January, 1, 1999, the date the Plan

would become effective.

     Mr. Baker never returned to work.      He died on January 15,

1999. At the time of his death, the final MetLife Plan had not been

completed.    The Plan was not finalized until October 1999, and its

effective date was made retroactive to January 1, 1999.         The

beneficiary of Mr. Baker’s life insurance policy, his wife Gena

Baker (“Baker”), submitted a claim for $757,080 -- six-times Mr.

Baker’s salary.4   MetLife paid her $126,180 -- one-time Mr. Baker’s

salary – but refused to pay the additional $630,900.5      In March

     3
      Baker elected both Basic and Supplemental Life Insurance
equal to three-times his annual salary or a total of six-times his
annual salary.
     4
      As discussed infra, to is not clear whether Mrs. Baker’s
claim was first submitted to Burlington or MetLife. Based upon our
discussion infra, however, our resolution of this appeal is not
affected by this discrepancy.
     5
      As previously noted, Mr. Baker initially enrolled in the
Burlington Plan and on November 2, 1997, elected to receive both
basic and supplemental life insurance benefits equal to one-time
his annual salary in basic benefits and one-time his annual salary
in supplemental benefits. MetLife did not pay the supplemental
benefits under the Burlington Plan, contending that Mr. Baker had
failed to qualify for these benefits as well. This determination
does not appear to be contested; however, to the extent that it is
contested it has been abandoned as inadequately briefed. See FED.

                                  4
2000, Burlington gave Mrs. Baker a nonrecourse loan for the amount

alleged to be due under the Plan and Baker assigned the proceeds of

her causes of action to Burlington.

                                         B

       On April 25, 2001, Burlington and Baker filed this suit

asserting ERISA and state law claims.              The district court ordered

the parties to submit an agreed chronology and a “binder of not

more   than    twelve    documents      showing     the   evolution   of   their

arrangement through January 15, 1999” and provided that “[t]he

parties have through September 21, 2001 to move for judgment as a

matter of law on what the plan says.”

       Both parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment.

The district court held that “[t]he beneficiary is bound by the

plan as it ultimately existed or by the plan before the switch, and

in   neither   case     was    the   participant    allowed   unilaterally   to

increase his life coverage to six times his salary while on leave

with a terminal illness.” The district court reasoned that such an

increase was not allowed because Baker was not actively at work

when he made this election and did not return to active service

before his death.       The court reasoned that Mr. Baker could not have

been actively at work in November 1998 because he was known to have

been terminally ill.          Moreover, even if he were deemed actively at

work at this time, he would have been eligible only to continue his


R. APP. P. 28(a)(9)(A); L & A Contracting Co. v. Southern Concrete
Servs., 17 F.3d 106, 113 (5th Cir. 1994).

                                         5
benefits under the October 1999 Plan, and not to increase them.

Second, the district court held that Mr. Baker was ineligible to

increase his life insurance benefits because he had not provided

proof of insurability.       The court concluded by noting that all

parties -- the employer, insurer and participant -- are all bound

by the Plan, not preliminary negotiations, and the Plan did not

allow Mr. Baker to increase his life insurance benefits.           Finally,

the court made a common-sense observation that “[n]o fully-informed

disinterested person would expect an insurance company to allow a

terminally   ill    participant     to    increase   his   life   insurance

coverage.”6 Accordingly, the district court entered a take-nothing

judgment in favor of MetLife disposing of Burlington and Baker’s

ERISA and state law claims.

                                     II

     This appeal challenges the district court’s grant of summary

judgment in favor of MetLife upholding MetLife’s decision denying

Baker’s   claim    for   benefits   under   the   Plan   and   holding   that

Burlington’s state law claims are preempted by ERISA.



     This Court reviews summary judgments de novo, applying the

same standards applied by the district court. Performance Autoplex

     6
      Burlington challenges this conclusion as erroneous (because
there is nothing in the record regarding the seriousness of Mr.
Baker’s condition) and MetLife does not seem to dispute that
contention. However, our disposition of this case obviates the
need for us to pass on the alleged error of the district court’s
conclusion.

                                     6
II Ltd. v. Mid-Continent Casualty Co., 322 F.3d 847, 853 (5th Cir.

2003).   A grant of summary judgment is proper if there is no

genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law.     Id.; FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c).     In

evaluating the existence of a genuine issue of material fact, we

review the evidence and inferences drawn from that evidence in the

light most favorable to the non-moving party.   Daniels v. City of

Arlington, Tex., 246 F.3d 500, 502 (5th Cir. 2001).

                               III

     “Any review of an ERISA benefit determination must begin with

the relevant plan language.”    Aboul-Fetouh v. Employee Benefits

Committee, 245 F.3d 465, 468 (5th Cir. 2001).         First we will

evaluate the terms of the Plan as they relate to Mr. Baker and then

we will turn to evaluate the relationship between Burlington and

MetLife under the Plan.7

     The Plan -- completed in October 1999, approximately ten

months after Mr. Baker’s death -- indicates that Mr. Baker failed

to meet the eligibility requirements for the increased benefits

because he was not actively at work when he increased his benefits.

 The MetLife Plan provides:

          If you make a request to be covered for
          Personal Benefits during the first annual
          enrollment period in which you can elect

     7
      Because by its terms Mr. Baker’s November 1998 enrollment did
not become effective until the Plan became effective on January 1,
1999, we will not discuss the Burlington Plan in existence before
January 1, 1999.

                                7
           coverage, your Personal Benefits will become
           effective on the first day of the calendar
           year following the annual enrollment period,
           subject to the Active Work Requirement.

Mr. Baker enrolled in “in the first annual enrollment period in

which [he could] elect coverage” -- November 1998 -- and his

benefits should have “become effective on the first day of the

calendar year following the annual enrollment period” -- January 1,

1999 -- provided that the Active Work requirement was met.

     The Active Work Requirement provides:

           You must be Actively at Work in order for your
           Personal Benefits to become effective. If you
           are not Actively at Work on the date when your
           Personal Benefits would otherwise become
           effective, your Personal Benefits will become
           effective on the first day after you return to
           Active Work.

     Mr. Baker’s entitlement to benefits thus turns on whether he

was actively at work on January 1, 1999 or sometime thereafter.

The Plan defines active work as “performing all of the material

duties of your job with the Employer where these duties are

normally carried out.”     Mr. Baker was on short-term disability and

not attending work on January 1, 1999.          Under the terms of the

Plan, he was not “actively at work” on that date.        Accordingly, his

increased benefits never became effective under the MetLife Plan

unless   the   Plan   includes   some   exception   to   the   Active   Work

requirement applicable to Mr. Baker.

     Burlington argues that it was permitted to deem Mr. Baker

“active” and to allow him to increase his benefits under the Plan.


                                    8
This contention is not supported by the language of the Plan, which

only provides: “If you are not Actively at Work as an Employee

because of a situation set forth below, the Employer may deem you

to be in Active Work as an Employee ... in order that certain

benefits under This Plan may be continued.”8      In this case the only

dispute   centers   around   whether   Mr.   Baker’s   benefits   may   be

increased; this provision does not allow Burlington to deem Baker

to be active for the purpose of increasing his benefits under the

Plan.

     In addition to the Active Work requirement, the Plan requires

participants in certain situations to provide proof of good health.

Pertinent to Mr. Baker, the Plan explicitly provides:

           If you make a request, during an annual
           enrollment period, to increase your Basic Life
           and Optional Life Benefits to an option of the
           Plan providing more than the next higher level
           of benefits, you must give us evidence of your
           good health.

     Mr. Baker provided no certificate of health when he increased

both his basic and supplemental life insurance benefits by more

than one level, which also precludes his recovery under the Plan.

                                  IV

     Although ERISA authorizes a district court to review denials

of claims (29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B)), the statute does not specify

the appropriate standard of review.      Vega v. Nat’l Life Ins. Serv.

     8
      The Plan sets forth sickness, injury or leave of absence for
a period of no longer than three months as situations where the
employee can be deemed active.

                                   9
Co., 188 F.3d 287, 295 (5th Cir. 1999)(en banc).         Our cases,

however, make clear that “when an administrator has discretionary

authority with respect to the decision at issue, the standard of

review should be one of abuse of discretion.”   Id. at 295; see also

Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 115 (1989).9

     This deferential standard is recognized by the Plan, which

provides that:

          In    carrying     out     their    respective
          responsibilities under the Plan, the Plan
          administrator and other Plan fiduciaries shall
          have discretionary authority to interpret the
          terms of the Plan and to determine eligibility
          for and entitlement to Plan benefits in
          accordance with the terms of the Plan. Any
          interpretation or determination made pursuant
          to such discretionary authority shall be given
          full force and effect, unless it can be shown
          that the interpretation or determination was
          arbitrary and capricious.

(Emphasis added).10

     9
      Although the Plan describes this deferential standard of
review as arbitrary and capricious, we “detect only a semantic, not
a substantive, difference” between it and Firestone’s “abuse of
discretion” standard. Wildbur v. ARCO Chemical Co., 974 F.2d 631,
635 n.7 (5th Cir. 1992).
     10
      This paragraph indicates that MetLife, which was reviewing
Burlington’s decision, was required to accept Burlington’s decision
unless it was arbitrary and capricious. Although in this appeal we
review MetLife’s decision denying the benefits, as a practical
matter we are determining whether Burlington’s decision granting
the benefits was arbitrary and capricious.

     Moreover, we recognize that because MetLife “potentially
benefits from every denied claim,” its decision is accorded “less
than full deference.” Gooden v. Provident Life & Acc. Ins. Co.,
250 F.3d 329, 333 (5th Cir. 2001) (quoting Vega, 188 F.3d at 295);
see also Vega, 188 F.3d at 299; Bratton v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins.
Co., 215 F.3d 516, 521 n.4 (5th Cir. 2000) (describing a “sliding

                                10
         Although we suggested in Wildbur v. ARCO Chem. Co., 974 F.2d

631, 337 (5th Cir. 1992), that evaluating an administrator or

fiduciary’s denial of benefits under the abuse of discretion

standard may be a two-step process, and although this two-step

process has been followed in several cases for which such analysis

was appropriate, see, e.g., Abraham v. Exxon Corp., 85 F.3d 1126,

1131 (5th Cir. 1996); Pickrom v. Belger Cartage Serv., 57 F.3d 468,

471 (5th Cir. 1995), we have also made clear that this two-step

analysis is not applicable in every case.             Duhon v. Texaco, Inc.,

15 F.3d 1302, 1307 n.3 (5th Cir. 1994).11               For example, if the

administrator’s interpretation and application of the Plan is

legally correct, then our inquiry ends because obviously no abuse

of discretion has occurred.           See Spacek v. Maritime Ass’n, 134 F.3d

283, 292 (5th Cir. 1998).                Furthermore, “if an administrator

interprets an ERISA plan in a manner that directly contradicts the

plain meaning of the plan language, the administrator has abused

his discretion even if there is neither evidence of bad faith nor

of   a        violation   of   any   relevant   administrative   regulations.”




scale” approach to be employed in case where the administrator has
conflicted interests, “giving less deference to the administrator
in proportion to the administrator’s apparent conflict”).
         11
      In Wildbur this court described this two step process as
requiring a court to first determine the whether the administrator
gave the plan a legally correct interpretation and, if not, whether
the administrator’s decision was an abuse of discretion. Wildbur,
974 F.3d at 637.

                                          11
Gosselink v. AT&T, Inc., 272 F.3d 722, 727 (5th Cir. 2001); see

also Wilbdur, 974 F.2d at 638.

     The   application   here    of    these   otherwise   intelligible

principles is somewhat confused by the fact that MetLife, as an

insurer, is a Plan fiduciary and is also entitled to exercise

discretionary authority under the Plan.12

                                   A

     Thus, our next step in resolving this appeal is to determine

what effect, if any, Burlington’s decision approving Baker’s claim

for benefits must be given under the Plan.13       MetLife is required

by the Plan to give Burlington’s discretionary decision approving

     12
      Although   Burlington   is   designated  by   the  Plan   as
administrator, it is not disputed that MetLife is a Plan fiduciary
and is also afforded discretionary authority under the Plan. In
its brief Burlington states that “[t]he determinations of MetLife,
as a Plan fiduciary, are entitled to much less deference” than the
decisions of Burlington. Moreover, under ERISA, “a person is a
fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent ... he has any
discretionary authority or discretionary responsibility in the
administration of such plan.”     29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A) (2003)
(emphasis added).      MetLife clearly possesses discretionary
authority under the Plan and is properly considered a Plan
fiduciary. See infra note 14.
     13
      Once again, we note that the record is unclear regarding the
precise claims process.     Burlington contends that Mrs. Baker
submitted her claim to Burlington, which approved it, and forwarded
it to MetLife for payment.        This interpretation is perhaps
consistent with the Plan that requires beneficiaries to submit the
claims to Burlington “who will then certify that [they] are insured
under the Plan and will then forward the claim form” to MetLife.
MetLife, however, argues that under the Plan it is entitled to
review all submitted claims and make its own independent
eligibility determination.    For the purposes of this appeal, we
need not resolve this dispute and will assume that Burlington’s
contentions are correct.


                                  12
Baker’s claim full force and effect as long as that decision is not

arbitrary and capricious.   See supra note 10; see also 29 U.S.C. §

1104(a)(1)(D) (requiring a fiduciary to discharge his duties “in

accordance with the documents and instruments governing the plan”).

     Burlington contends that its decision is not arbitrary and

capricious -- and entitled to full force and effect under the Plan

-- because, it argues, Mr. Baker’s claim involves two distinct

agreements:   “one regarding the initial open enrollment period and

one governing the parties’ obligations on a going forward basis,

after the initial enrollment period” -- i.e., the Plan. As already

discussed, Mr. Baker’s increased benefits never became effective

under the Plan; thus, any entitlement to benefits must originate in

the asserted collateral agreement governing the initial enrollment

period.

     Burlington contends that this collateral agreement is embodied

in an e-mail sent by MetLife on August 7, 1998, which stated:

          For employees currently covered for either
          Basic or Optional Life, we will allow an
          increase of one level (1 X Salary) without
          having to provide a statement of health. The
          only exception to this [one-level increase
          limit] rule is for this enrollment where we
          will allow current employees who have less
          than 3 X Salary to increase coverage to 3 X
          salary without providing a statement of
          health.

     According to Burlington, this e-mail waived all requirements

-- Active Work and Proof of Health -- and allowed Mr. Baker to

increase his benefits to three times his salary.        Burlington


                                 13
contends that this collateral agreement supports its decision

approving Baker’s benefits and its decision is, therefore, not

arbitrary and capricious and entitled to full force and effect.

     Assuming that Burlington is correct about the ultimate legal

effect of this correspondence, it is clear that Burlington’s

interpretation of this correspondence is not entitled to deference

under the Plan.      Under the Plan, the only determinations entitled

to   deference      are    those    “made       pursuant   to   [Burlington’s]

discretionary authority” and the Plan only gives Burlington the

discretionary     authority        to    “determine    eligibility   for      and

entitlement to Plan benefits in accordance with the terms of the

Plan” (emphasis added).

     As discussed above, Mr. Baker’s benefits increase was never

given effect under the Plan.            Moreover, even if Baker’s increased

benefits are effective under the collateral agreement -- and we do

not judge that claim today –- Burlington’s consideration of that

agreement in approving Baker’s claim exceeded its discretionary

authority   under    the    Plan.       Thus,    Burlington’s   resort   to    an

agreement extraneous to the Plan and its determination that Baker

was entitled to the increased benefits are in direct conflict with

the terms of the Plan; as such, Burlington’s decision is arbitrary

and capricious and not entitled to “full force and effect” under

the Plan.   See Gosselink, 272 F.3d at 727; see also Wildbur, 974

F.2d at 638 (stating that an interpretation in direct conflict with



                                         14
the explicit language of the Plan indicates that the interpretation

is arbitrary and capricious).

                                    B

     Having decided that the Plan did not require MetLife to give

Burlington’s interpretation of the Plan full force and effect, we

are now required to determine if MetLife’s denial of Baker’s claim

for benefits was an abuse of discretion.   As noted above, because

MetLife is the insurer of the Plan, we will review its denial of

benefits with less than full deference.    See supra note 10.

     Because we have already determined that Mr. Baker’s election

to increase his benefits during the initial enrollment period never

became effective under the terms of the Plan, MetLife’s decision

denying those benefits is legally correct and does not constitute

an abuse of discretion.     See Spacek v. Maritime Ass’n, 134 F.3d

283, 292 (5th Cir. 1998).   Accordingly, the district court’s entry

of a take-nothing judgment against Burlington and Baker with

respect to their ERISA claims is AFFIRMED.14

                                V



     14
      When the Plan speaks specifically of a review of Burlington’s
decision, it only says that a beneficiary may seek review of a
claim denied by Burlington. When, however, the Plan is construed
as a whole in the light of its other provisions, the Plan cannot be
read as restricting MetLife’s authority to interpret the Plan in
cases such as the instant one. The fact that the Plan provides for
appeal of a denial of a claim to MetLife does not negate the fact
that the Plan grants MetLife administrative authority, as Plan
fiduciary, to “interpret the terms of the Plan and to determine
eligibility for and entitlement to Plan benefits”.

                                    15
     We now turn to address the district court’s holding that

Burlington’s state law claims are preempted by ERISA. As discussed

above, the district court directed that “[t]he parties have through

September 21, 2001 to move for judgment as a matter of law on what

the plan says” (emphasis added).        In compliance with this command,

Burlington and MetLife submitted summary judgment motions and

limited their respective arguments to the meaning of the Plan.

     The district court, however, without the benefit of any

briefing by the parties, held that “[b]ecause this benefit arises

in an employee plan, the claims beyond seeking the correct benefit

are vacuous.”    Particularly in the light of our opinion today,

which leaves open any claim Burlington may have on the pre-Plan

correspondence and negotiations, this conclusion does not seem so

certain.

     Moreover, “a district court may not grant summary judgment sua

sponte on grounds not requested by the moving party.”          John Deere

Co. v. American Nat’l Bank, 809 F.2d 1190, 1192 (5th Cir. 1987);

FED. R. CIV. P. 56.    In the instant case, in compliance with the

district court’s command, neither party sought summary judgment on

Burlington’s state law claims and the district court’s holding that

they were preempted was, therefore, premature.          Accordingly, the

district   court’s    grant   of   summary   judgment   with   respect   to

Burlington and Baker’s state law claims is VACATED, and those

claims are REMANDED for further proceedings.

                                   VI

                                     16
     Based on the above, the district court’s entry of a take-

nothing judgment in favor of MetLife is AFFIRMED with respect to

Burlington and Baker’s ERISA claims and VACATED and REMANDED with

respect to their state law claims.

                  AFFIRMED in part; VACATED and REMANDED in part.




                               17
WIENER, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:



     I concur with the Court’s decision and write separately only

to clarify two points that I believe deserve further amplification

to assist future courts in reviewing claims for denial of ERISA

benefits.

A.   The “Direct-Contradiction Exception” to the Wildbur Two-
     Step Framework

     As the panel opinion recognizes,15 we announced in Wildbur v.

ARCO Chem. Co. the two-step test that courts in our circuit should

employ when analyzing a challenge to the denial of ERISA benefits

by a plan administrator vested with broad discretion to interpret

and apply the plan.16      Under Wildbur, the court first must decide

whether the plan administrator’s interpretation of the plan is

legally correct. If it is, the inquiry ends because no abuse of

discretion      could   have   occurred;   but   if   the   administrator’s

determination is found not to be legally correct, the court must

determine whether the administrator’s legally incorrect decision

also rose to the level of abuse of discretion,17 which in this

context is equivalent to an “arbitrary and capricious” decision.18




     15
          See Maj. Op. at ____ & n.11.
     16
          974 F.2d 631, 637-638 (5th Cir. 1992).
     17
          Id.
     18
          See Maj. Op. at ____ n.9.

                                     18
     Although it is true that reviewing courts are not “rigidly

confined” to the Wildbur test in every case,19 that framework ——

calculated to ensure that proper deference is accorded to a plan

administrator’s interpretation and application of an ERISA plan ——

should be used by reviewing courts unless compelling circumstances

justify a departure.         The purpose of this two-step analysis is to

minimize judicial intrusion into the ERISA plan administration

process     and    to    manage       the    often-competing   interests    and

constituencies involved in ERISA plans.

     Today’s panel opinion, however, employs a method that is an

exception to the Wildbur framework and concludes that Burlington

reached an interpretation that was not merely “legally incorrect,”

but did so “in a manner that directly contradicts the plain meaning

of the plan language.”20       Our post-Wildbur jurisprudence recognizes

that in the exceptional instance when the plan administrator’s

decision is       such   a   direct    contradiction   of   the   plan’s   plain

language that there is no room to support the plan administrator’s

discretionary interpretation, a reviewing court can short-circuit

the Wildbur process and refuse to give any effect to the plan



     19
       Duhon v. Texaco, Inc., 15 F.3d 1302, 1307 n.3 (5th Cir.
1994) (relying on Wildbur’s notation that “[a]pplication of the
abuse of discretion standard may involve [the] two-step process.”
(quoting Wildbur, 974 F.2d at 637 (adding emphasis))).      Accord
Gosselink v. AT&T, Inc., 272 F.3d 722, 727 (5th Cir. 2001);
Threadgill v. Prudential Securities Group, Inc., 145 F.3d 286, 292
n.12 (5th Cir. 1998).
     20
          Gosselink, 272 F.3d at 727 (emphasis added).

                                            19
administrator’s interpretation.21           This is not only efficient but

also        avoids   reaching   “the   anomalous   finding   that   a   Plan

administrator’s interpretation which directly violates the plain

meaning of the plan language is not an abuse of discretion simply

because the plan language has always been interpreted in the same

manner and there are no inferences of bad faith.”22

       For the reasons already stated in the panel opinion,23 this

exception —— which clearly constitutes a substantial departure from

the well-established base rule of Wildbur —— is warranted on the

unique facts of this case in light of the language of the ERISA

plan here at issue.        I write separately to emphasize that courts

should be chary about resorting to application of this direct-

contradiction exception to the Wildbur framework: Just because a

court disagrees with the plan administrator’s interpretation of the

plan by finding it legally incorrect does not necessarily mean that

the administrator has been arbitrary or capricious.



B.     Choosing Between Two ERISA Entities Entitled to Exercise
       Discretionary Authority under the Plan




       21
            Id.
       22
            Id.
       23
        Maj. Op. at ____ (“Burlington’s resort to an agreement
extraneous to the Plan and its determination that Baker was
entitled to the increased benefits are in direct conflict with the
terms of the Plan.”).

                                       20
     Although the Wildbur framework and the direct-contradiction

exception     to     it     that   we    employ        today     are     relatively

straightforward, this case poses an additional question, because

the plan at issue extends discretionary authority to interpret the

plan to two ERISA entities —— the plan administrator (Burlington)

and another plan fiduciary (MetLife).24            On the peculiar facts of

this case, the task of selecting between competing interpretations

by these two entities became a non-issue because the direct-

contradiction exception to Wildbur vitiates the need to accord any

deference     to     the    interpretation        by        Burlington    as    plan

administrator.        If,    however,   we   had       merely    determined     that

Burlington’s interpretation was legally incorrect but not arbitrary

or capricious, we would have been required to defer to Burlington

and credit its interpretation over MetLife’s for two reasons.

First, when an ERISA plan administrator has discretionary authority

concerning     the    decision     at    issue,        we     presume    that    the

administrator’s interpretation of the plan is correct unless the

presumption is overcome under the Wildbur test.                 The second reason

that Burlington’s interpretation would have trumped MetLife’s is

that, under Vega v. Nat’l Life Ins. Svcs. Co.,25 Burlington did not


     24
          Maj. Op. at ____ n.12.
     25
       188 F.3d 287, 297 (5th Cir. 1999) (en banc) (“[W]e reaffirm
today that our approach to this kind of case is the sliding scale
standard articulated in Wildbur. The existence of a conflict is a
factor to be considered in determining whether the administrator
abused its discretion in denying a claim. The greater the evidence
of conflict on the part of the administrator, the less deferential

                                        21
labor       under   a   conflict    of    interest    whereas       because   MetLife

“potentially benefits from every denied claim,” its decision would

have been entitled to “less than full deference.”26                     Thus, had we

been forced to choose between an unconflicted plan administrator

and     a    Vega-conflicted       plan    fiduciary,    we     would      have   been

constrained to defer to the administrator.

       To summarize, I concur specially only to expand our guidance

on    two    points:    First,     the    direct-contradiction        exception     to

application of the two-step Wildbur framework should be used by

reviewing courts sparingly and with restraint.                       Second, when a

reviewing       court    must    choose    between,     on    the    one    hand,   an

interpretation made by an unconflicted plan administrator that is

legally incorrect but is not arbitrary or capricious, and, on the

other hand, an interpretation made by a                      Vega-conflicted plan

fiduciary, the court must side with the plan administrator.




our abuse of discretion standard will be.”). See also Wildbur, 974
F.2d at 638-42 (5th Cir. 1992) (“We note that the arbitrary and
capricious standard may be a range, not a point. There may be in
effect a sliding scale of judicial review of trustees’
decisions——more penetrating the greater is the suspicion of
partiality, less penetrating the smaller that suspicion is....”).
       26
            Maj. Op. at ___ n.10.

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