NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 18a0156n.06
Case No. 17-5811
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
Mar 27, 2018
HUMANA INSURANCE COMPANY OF ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
KENTUCKY, )
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF
WHITNEY O’NEAL, ) KENTUCKY
Defendant-Appellant, )
)
TESSA M. PERKINS, Individually and as )
Administrator of the Estate of Ted Wesley )
Hamilton, )
)
Defendant-Appellee.
)
____________________________________/
Before: MERRITT and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; CLELAND, District Judge.*
MERRITT, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal from an interpleader action by plaintiff
Humana Insurance Company of Kentucky to determine the beneficiary of the life insurance
proceeds between two competing claims for the benefit made by defendant Whitney O’Neal, the
ex-girlfriend of the decedent, and defendant Tessa Perkins, sister of the decedent and the
administrator of his estate. Humana’s life insurance plan is regulated by the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, and this action arises under 29 U.S.C.
§ 1132(a)(3)(B)(ii).
*
The Honorable Robert H. Cleland, United States District Court Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting
by designation.
Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
I.
The decedent, Ted Hamilton, was a participant in the Humana Basic Life Insurance Plan,
an ERISA-regulated employee welfare benefit plan sponsored, self-funded and administered by
Humana. A basic life insurance benefit was provided to all employees. The decedent’s life
insurance benefit was $94,000 based on a number of factors, including decedent’s age and salary
at the time of his death. The Plan provided that the employee could name a beneficiary or, if a
beneficiary was not named, Humana would pay the benefit at its option to either the surviving
spouse or the estate. Hamilton died on August 5, 2015. At the time of his death, Hamilton was
not married and had no dependents. According to Humana, Hamilton had used its online
enrollment platform and named defendant O’Neal as the primary beneficiary in 2014. The next
year, during the reenrollment period in 2015 several months prior to his death, Hamilton did not
name a beneficiary.
Humana received claims from both the administrator of Hamilton’s estate, defendant
Tessa M. Perkins, and O’Neal, the named beneficiary of the policy in 2014. Humana contacted
O’Neal and Perkins informing them that their claims were adverse to each other and requesting
that the competing claimants attempt to settle the matter so as to preserve the benefit from
litigation fees and costs. Interpleader Complaint at ¶ 26; Letters dated March 25, 2016. Humana
informed Perkins and O’Neal that it had not yet denied the claim or distributed the benefit, and
advised them that it would be forced to file an interpleader action if they could not resolve the
dispute between themselves.
A year after Hamilton’s death, Perkins and O’Neal still had not resolved their dispute
over entitlement to the life insurance benefit. Because Humana believed that it likely faced
exposure to a suit and possible double liability if it awarded the benefit, it filed an interpleader
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
action pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 22 naming O’Neal and Perkins as
defendants.1 In response, O’Neal filed a crossclaim against Perkins and a counterclaim against
Humana. O’Neal later voluntarily dismissed her crossclaim against Perkins. At the conclusion
of discovery, the matter culminated in a Motion for Judgment on the Record by O’Neal,
Humana’s Motion to Dismiss O’Neal’s Counterclaim, Humana’s Motion for Attorney Fees, a
Motion for Summary Judgment by Perkins, and a Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings by
O’Neal. The district court granted Humana’s motion to dismiss and denied its motion for
attorney fees, granted Perkins’ motion for summary judgment, and denied O’Neal’s motion for
judgment on the pleadings and motion for judgment on the record. Humana Ins. Co. of Ky. v.
O’Neal, No. 16-cv-173, 2017 WL 3015173 (E.D. Ky. July 14, 2017). This appeal followed.
II.
Although O’Neal’s brief on appeal does not outline her issues on appeal with precision, it
appears that she challenges the district court’s opinion and order on the following grounds:
(1) Humana should not have been allowed to bring an interpleader action; (2) Humana failed to
exhaust administrative remedies before bringing the interpleader action; (3) the district court
should not have allowed any discovery; (4) the district court erred in granting Humana’s motion
to dismiss the counterclaim; (5) the district court erred in granting Perkins’ motion for summary
judgment and awarding the life insurance benefit to the decedent’s estate; and (6) the district
1
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 22(a) provides:
(a) Grounds.
(1) By a Plaintiff. Persons with claims that may expose a plaintiff to double or multiple liability
may be joined as defendants and required to interplead. Joinder for interpleader is proper even
though:
(A) the claims of the several claimants, or the titles on which their claims
depend, lack a common origin or are adverse and independent rather than
identical; or
(B) the plaintiff denies liability in whole or in part to any or all of the claimants.
(2) By a Defendant. A defendant exposed to similar liability may seek interpleader through a
crossclaim or counterclaim.
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
court erred in denying O’Neal’s motion for judgment on the pleadings and motion for judgment
on the record.2
A. O’Neal’s Procedural Challenges to the Proceedings Below
Humana brought this interpleader action pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 22.
Rule 22(a) interpleader allows a party to join all other claimants as adverse parties when its
claims are such that it may be exposed to multiple liability. This permits the insurance company,
here Humana, as the stakeholder who has no claim to the money and is willing to release it to the
rightful claimant, “to put the money . . . in dispute into court, withdraw from the proceeding, and
leave the claimants to litigate between themselves the ownership of the fund in court.” Metro.
Life Ins. Co. v. Marsh, 119 F.3d 415, 418 (6th Cir. 1997) (quoting Zechariah Chafee, Jr.,
The Federal Interpleader Act of 1936: I, 45 Yale L.J. 963, 963 (1936)).
O’Neal continually litigated the proceeding below as if it were an ERISA action
challenging the denial of benefits, and she continues to persist with this approach on appeal.
Humana did not deny O’Neal’s claim for benefits so this is not a typical ERISA benefits action.
Humana took no position on the outcome as between O’Neal and Perkins and placed the benefit
amount in the district court registry. There is no “administrative record,” although Humana
communicated with both O’Neal and Perkins before filing the interpleader action.
The correspondence, the Plan documents, and other documents under Humana’s control
concerning the decedent’s benefit choices are all part of the record below and were considered
by the district court. In her briefs on appeal, O’Neal intertwines arguments concerning the
appropriateness of an interpleader action by Humana, whether Humana was required to exhaust
2
Humana does not appeal the district court’s denial of attorney fees. O’Neal argues that she is entitled to
prejudgment interest and attorney fees, but she did not make this argument below and the district court did not
address it in its opinion and order.
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
administrative remedies before bringing suit in federal court, and whether it was proper for the
district court to order discovery to gather information outside the “administrative record.”
We can quickly dispose of O’Neal’s procedural challenges. We have repeatedly
authorized use of the interpleader process where there are competing claims to an ERISA
benefit. See, e.g., Marsh, 119 F.3d at 418. Humana was not required to investigate the
competing claims and make a determination regarding the proper recipient of the death benefit.
This was not a case where Humana had the discretion to determine how to distribute the life
insurance proceeds. Humana is required to award the benefit to the designated beneficiary
according to the decedent’s designation under the Plan. Given the protracted dispute between
O’Neal and Perkins in the year after Hamilton’s death, Humana faced a real risk of litigation and
possible double liability had it made a benefits decision, and the filing of an interpleader action
was appropriate.
Because Humana properly instituted an interpleader action below, it was not required to
exhaust administrative remedies. When a plan participant challenges a benefits decision, he is
generally required to exhaust administrative remedies before coming to federal court to allow
“plan fiduciaries to efficiently manage their funds; correct their errors; interpret plan provisions;
and assemble a factual record which will assist a court in reviewing the fiduciaries’ actions.”
Ravencraft v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 212 F.3d 341, 343 (6th Cir. 2000) (internal quotation
marks and emphasis omitted). That is not the situation here. There was no benefits decision by
Humana to review.
Relatedly, O’Neal complains that the district court erred in granting discovery and not
limiting its decision to the “administrative record.” The district court ordered discovery during a
telephone conference on December 20, 2016. O’Neal’s lawyer objected to any discovery saying
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
“this is a straightforward ERISA benefits case, and . . . the posture and procedure should be
based upon the [administrative record alone in accordance with] Wilkins [v. Baptist Healthcare
Sys., Inc., 150 F.3d 609 (6th Cir. 1998)].” Tr. at 6. The district court judge explained that this
was not a typical ERISA benefits action and that without discovery to attempt to determine the
intent of the decedent, O’Neal would lose because there was no beneficiary designated by
decedent in 2015. Id. at 8. O’Neal continues to argue on appeal that allowing discovery in an
ERISA action is error. When interpleader is properly invoked, as it is here, the court determines
the respective rights of the claimants to the fund or property at stake through the normal
litigation processes, including pleading, discovery, motions, and trial. United States v. High
Tech. Prods., Inc., 497 F.3d 637, 641 (6th Cir. 2007)
B. O’Neal’s Counterclaim Against Humana
In her counterclaim against Humana, O’Neal claims that Humana breached its fiduciary
duty to administer the Plan benefits in accordance with the terms of the Plan. ERISA requires
plan fiduciaries to discharge their duties “with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence” necessary
under the circumstances. 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(B). O’Neal argued that Humana breached its
fiduciary duty to her because it failed to administer the plan benefits in accordance with the Plan
terms and because it failed to answer her questions. The district court disagreed and dismissed
her counterclaim. Humana, 2017 WL 3015173, at *4. She now claims on appeal that she raised
Humana’s
failure to fulfill its fiduciary duties, not as a separate cause of action, but to
demonstrate culpability in an interpleader action and its failure to administer the
Plan in accordance with statute, regulations, and the Plan document itself. O’Neal
only has a benefits claim under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). But this court should
analyze the actions of Humana to clarify the obligations of a fiduciary and find
Humana culpable.
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
O’Neal’s Initial Br. at 52-53. Despite O’Neal’s confusing position, we can unequivocally say
that Humana did not breach any fiduciary duties. Humana received two competing claims for a
benefit. It explained the competing claims in a letter sent to O’Neal on December 15, 2015.
Humana did its best to answer all of O’Neal’s questions. As O’Neal’s own exhibits to her
counterclaim and motions demonstrate, Humana provided documents, engaged in
correspondence and phone calls with the two claimants or their lawyers, provided a designated
point person to handle questions, responded to discovery requests, and deposited the benefit at
issue in the court registry. It remained firmly neutral in the dispute between O’Neal and Perkins.
The district court properly dismissed O’Neal’s counterclaim against Humana.
C. O’Neal’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings and Perkins’ Motion for Summary
Judgment Regarding Distribution of the Life Insurance Benefit
The main objective of O’Neal’s appeal is to seek reversal of the district court’s
determination that Perkins is entitled to the life insurance proceeds. She challenges the district
court’s grant of Perkins’ motion for summary judgment and the denial of her motion for
judgment on the pleadings, the two motions below focusing on this issue.3
The plain language of ERISA directs that benefits are to be paid “in accordance with the
documents and instruments governing the plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(D). Courts must not
look beyond the plan documents to determine the beneficiary. Marsh, 119 F.3d at 420 (“ERISA
itself supplies the rule of law for determining [a plan] beneficiary.”); Metro. Life Ins. Co. v.
Pressley, 82 F.3d 126, 130 (6th Cir. 1996) (“[ERISA] establish[es] a clear mandate that plan
administrators follow plan documents to determine the designated beneficiary.”). The relevant
language in the Plan provides as follows:
3
The district court considered O’Neal’s motion for judgment on the record as part of her motion for judgment on the
pleadings.
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
BENEFICIARY FOR BASIC TERM LIFE
The Employee may name any beneficiary he or she chooses. The Employee may
also change a named beneficiary at any time by notifying Us in writing or by
Electronic submission. The change will be effective on the date the Employee
signs/submits the form. If We make a payment before receiving the change form,
We are released from further liability to the extent of the payment.
If a payment is to be made to two or more beneficiaries but the Employee has not
specified the portions payable to each, the payment will be shared equally. If the
Employee has not named a beneficiary, or if the beneficiary he or she named is
not alive at the Employee’s death, the payment will be made, at Our option, to any
one or more of the following:
Your legal spouse; or
Your estate.
Certificate of Insurance at 7.
Humana’s basic life insurance coverage is available to all full-time employees. The
employee does not need to participate in open enrollment to receive coverage. If an employee
does not participate in open enrollment and designate a beneficiary, the life insurance coverage is
not waived and the death benefit is distributed in accordance with the Plan—to the surviving
spouse or the estate, at the option of the Plan administrator.
The undisputed facts of this case establish that decedent enrolled in Humana’s basic
group life insurance plan in 2014 and designated O’Neal as the sole beneficiary. Screenshots of
the computer screen that decedent submitted during open enrollment in 2014 show that in the
“Life Coverage” section, “Whitney Oneal [sic]—100%” is listed under the “Primary
Beneficiary” designation. The facts also show that he did not affirmatively select O’Neal, or any
named beneficiary, when he completed the online reenrollment in 2015. On the screenshot from
the May 14, 2015 enrollment, no beneficiary is listed under the “Life Coverage” section. The
question is whether Hamilton’s designation of O’Neal in 2014 holds over to 2015 because he
failed to select a named beneficiary that year, as O’Neal contends, or whether Hamilton made an
affirmative choice not to name a beneficiary in 2015, as Perkins contends, and the benefit should
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
go to his estate. The Plan documents, and Humana’s policy and practice, establish that an
employee must designate a beneficiary every year, even if it is the same beneficiary as the prior
year.
O’Neal argues that because there was no requirement in the Plan language for the
employee to redesignate a previously-named beneficiary every year, a beneficiary designation
remains in effect until “changed.” The Plan language does not address whether a beneficiary
must be redesignated each year, but it does not prohibit Humana from periodically giving
employees an affirmative opportunity to designate a new beneficiary—or to leave the
designation blank and allow the Plan to distribute proceeds according to its terms.
An examination of other plan documents reveals that participants are instructed
affirmatively to select a beneficiary during each reenrollment period, even if it is the same
beneficiary as the prior year. Prior to open enrollment season, Humana provides all employees
with an Enrollment Booklet describing the various benefit options. Under the heading “Life
Insurance” there is a subsection labeled “Basic Life.” It advises employees that they
automatically receive basic life insurance and the benefit cannot be waived, and it advises that
they may purchase additional term life insurance coverage if they choose. With respect to the
basic life insurance coverage, the Enrollment Booklet provides as follows:
• You should also designate beneficiaries for each of your life insurance plans.
• You can choose beneficiaries from a drop-down list that's populated with all of
your dependents.
• Or you can add beneficiaries by clicking “Add Other” and entering their
demographic data.
Those instructions indicate that a Plan participant should affirmatively select a beneficiary from
the drop-down menu, or add a new beneficiary and enter the information for them. Nowhere do
the instructions indicate that beneficiaries named in prior years will automatically remain as the
named beneficiaries.
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
In their answers to Perkins’ interrogatories, Humana’s Human Resources department
explained that “[t]he names of beneficiaries need to be re-entered each year during the open
enrollment process. For the convenience of the participant, all dependents and previously
identified beneficiaries to the specific benefit are offered to the participant via a drop down box
and are visible to the participant for selection.” Humana’s Answers and Responses to Perkins’
First Set of Interrogatories, Requests for Production of Documents, and Request for Admissions
to Humana at 8. Humana confirmed that its policy was to require the employee affirmatively to
select a beneficiary each year during open enrollment and not to regard a previously named
beneficiary as the beneficiary under the Plan if not redesignated. Interpleader Complaint at ¶ 17;
Humana’s Answers and Responses to Perkins’ First Set of Interrogatories, Requests for
Production of Documents, and Request for Admission at 8, 13.
This explanation comports with the instructions provided to participants in the Plan
documents and communications with employees. Once the employee logs into the enrollment or
reenrollment portal, all the benefits will be available for the employee to see, at which time the
employee may confirm previous choices or make new choices. It is undisputed that Hamilton
entered into the portal and made various choices, including medical and vision coverage, during
the open enrollment season in 2015, several months before his death. Enrollment Verification
Screen for Ted Hamilton, dated May 14, 2015. The screenshot verifies that the Basic Life
Insurance section is left blank. Compare Enrollment Verification Screen in 2015 with
Enrollment Verification Screen in 2014.
The company reminds employees about open enrollment season, including a reminder to
recheck beneficiaries, through multiple emails sent through its intranet, known as the Hi! Portal,
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Case No. 17-5811, Humana Ins. Co. v. O’Neal, et al.
and through announcements sent through the mail to each employee’s home address. One such
email, dated May 8, 2015, included the following:
3. Enrolling in life insurance? Consider your beneficiaries.
Whether you’re planning to enroll—or re-enroll—in additional life insurance
benefits, it’s always a good idea to make sure you have the correct beneficiary
information in the system. . . .
If you’re re-enrolling in these benefits, confirm all information, including pre-
populated beneficiary information, is correct and up-to-date.
Open Enrollment 2015: Four things to know before OE begins at 2.
O’Neal argues that we cannot look to documents outside the Plan itself. O’Neal Initial
Br. at 23. This is incorrect. The Plan alone controls only when there is a conflict with Plan
documents. CIGNA Corp. v. Amara, 563 U.S. 421, 438 (2011) (where there is a conflict
between the language of the plan summary and the plan document, the plan document controls);
Liss v. Fid. Emp’r Servs. Co., 516 F. App’x 468, 473 (6th Cir. 2013) (“Amara does not support
[the plaintiff’s] argument because there is no conflict between the [plan document] and the [plan
summary] in the case at hand.”); Bidwell v. Univ. Med. Ctr., Inc., 685 F.3d 613, 620, n.2 (6th
Cir. 2012) (concluding that the court need not address Amara where there is no conflict between
the plan summary and the plan document). Plan documents, such as the Enrollment Booklet,
direct employees to check their beneficiary designations every year. This does not conflict with
the Plan language that states that “[t]he Employee may name any beneficiary he or she chooses.
The Employee may also change a named beneficiary at any time by notifying Us in writing or by
Electronic submission.” Contrary to O’Neal’s argument, Plan documents can, and should, be
used to interpret Plan language.
It is uncontested that Hamilton listed O’Neal as the beneficiary for the policy year 2014,
when O’Neal and the decedent lived together. O’Neal provides no evidence that leaving the
beneficiary designation blank one year later in 2015 was not an affirmative choice by the
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decedent. Indeed, circumstances indicate it was likely. It is uncontested that O’Neal and the
decedent ended their relationship in August 2014 when O’Neal asked Hamilton to leave the
shared home, which he did. O’Neal alleged domestic abuse against Hamilton in March 2015 in
Kenton Family Court and received a court-ordered permanent order of protection prohibiting
Hamilton from contacting O’Neal. They did not reconcile before Hamilton’s death in August
2015, and were not in a relationship when Hamilton made his benefit selections in May 2015.
O’Neal’s claim that by leaving the beneficiary designation blank in 2015 the decedent intended
to confirm his prior designation of O’Neal as the beneficiary is not consistent with the status of
the relationship at that time.
While we cannot say with 100% certainty that Hamilton intended to leave the beneficiary
designation blank during open enrollment in 2015, the evidence both within Humana’s own
records and outside of that record indicate that Hamilton did not intend to designate O’Neal as
his beneficiary. The circumstances of his relationship with O’Neal at the time of the 2015
reenrollment period further corroborates that Hamilton likely intended to remove O’Neal as his
beneficiary. In the year following his designation of O’Neal, the two had terminated their
relationship, O’Neal had made Hamilton leave their shared home, and she had obtained a
restraining order against him. When Hamilton made his benefits choices in the spring of 2015,
he was provided with a prompt via the drop-down menu that O’Neal was a previously designated
beneficiary. He did not choose to name her again. He did everything he could do to change his
designation in 2015 to reflect that he no longer wished O’Neal to continue as his beneficiary.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
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