In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 18‐2155
SHIRLEY LACKO,
Plaintiff‐Appellant,
v.
UNITED OF OMAHA LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant‐Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 1:17‐cv‐02100 — Jorge L. Alonso, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED NOVEMBER 5, 2018 — DECIDED JUNE 12, 2019
____________________
Before BAUER, ROVNER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Shirley Lacko filed suit against
United of Omaha Life Insurance Company (“United”), chal‐
lenging United’s denial of her claims for short‐term and long‐
term disability insurance. Those claims were brought pursu‐
ant to group insurance policies issued by United to her em‐
ployer, BKD, Inc., an accounting firm. Specifically, BKD pro‐
2 No. 18‐2155
vided two group insurance policies, Group Short Term Disa‐
bility Insurance Policy No. GUC‐ABF3 (the “STD” plan) and
the Group Long Term Disability Insurance Policy No. GLTD‐
ABF3 (the “LTD” plan). Both policies were issued by United,
who also served as the claims review fiduciary for claims to
STD and LTD benefits.
Lacko based her claims for STD and LTD benefits on the
adverse combination of a number of impairments, including
but not limited to gastroparesis, diabetes, rheumatoid arthri‐
tis, congestive heart failure, breathing difficulties, anxiety,
musculoskeletal impairments, and cognitive difficulties re‐
lated in part to the medication needed to manage the other
conditions. The district court opinion details the extensive
medical evidence presented to United in support of Lacko’s
disability benefits claims. It includes reports from numerous
physicians, as well as objective evidence such as MRI, X‐ray,
and lab reports. An exhaustive recitation of that evidence,
however, is unnecessary to resolve the issues presented in this
case. Therefore, we will set forth the evidence only to the ex‐
tent that it is necessary to decide the issues in this appeal and
defer to the district court the more extensive recitation.
Although United initially approved her claims for STD
benefits on three occasions for the time period spanning Oc‐
tober 12, 2015 through November 22, 2015, it denied STD ben‐
efits on June 16, 2016 for the period beyond November 22,
2015, concluding the records failed to demonstrate a change
in Lacko’s medical condition at the time she stopped working
or subsequently. United also denied her claim for LTD bene‐
fits. Lacko then filed this action in the district court under the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA),
29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., challenging the denial of LTD benefits,
No. 18‐2155 3
and the denial of STD benefits from the period of November
22, 2015 until December 27, 2015 (at which time LTD benefits
would apply). The district court granted summary judgment
in favor of United, and Lacko now appeals that decision to
this court.
I.
Lacko began working for the predecessor to BKD in ap‐
proximately January 1999 and worked until September 25,
2015. She applied for benefits under the STD plan on October
2, 2015. At the time that she ceased working, her position at
BKD was that of Senior Manager in the Audit Department,
with an annual salary of $93,250.04.
The two disability plans covered different time periods.
The first 90 days of disability are covered by the STD plan,
which in relevant part provides benefits when ,“because of an
Injury or Sickness, a significant change in Your mental or
physical functional capacity has occurred in which: … You
are prevented from performing the Material Duties of Your
Regular Job (on a part‐time or full‐time basis) or are unable to
work Full‐Time … .” STD Plan at 27. The STD plan defines
“Material Duties” as encompassing “the essential tasks, func‐
tions, and operations relating to Your Regular Job that cannot
be reasonably omitted or modified,” and “Regular Job” is de‐
fined as “the occupation You are routinely performing when
Your Disability begins.” Id. at 28–29.
The LTD plan applies beyond that 90‐day period and in‐
cludes slightly different requirements. Instead of speaking in
terms of the claimant’s ability to perform her regular job, the
LTD plan provides benefits when the claimant is incapable of
4 No. 18‐2155
the material duties of her regular occupation. Specifically, the
LTD plan provides:
Disability and Disabled means that because of
an Injury or Sickness, a significant change in
your mental or physical functional capacity has
occurred in which You are:
(a) prevented from performing at least
one of the Material Duties of Your Regu‐
lar Occupation on a part‐time or full‐time
basis; and
(b) unable to generate Current Earnings
which exceed 99% of Your Basic Monthly
Earnings due to that same Injury or Sick‐
ness. …
Material Duties means the essential tasks, func‐
tions, and operations relating to an occupation
that cannot be reasonably omitted or modified.
In no event will We consider working an aver‐
age of more than 40 hours per week in itself to
be part of material duties. One of the material
duties of Your Regular Occupation is the ability
to work for an employer on a full‐time basis. …
Regular Occupation means the occupation You
are routinely performing when Your Disability
begins. Your regular occupation is not limited to
the specific position You held with the Policy‐
holder, but will instead be considered to be a
similar position or activity based on job descrip‐
tions included in the most current edition of the
No. 18‐2155 5
U.S. Department of Labor Dictionary of Occu‐
pational Titles (DOT). We have the right to sub‐
stitute or replace the DOT with a service or
other information that We determine of compa‐
rable purpose, with or without notice. To deter‐
mine Your regular occupation, We will look at
Your occupation as it is normally performed in
the national economy, instead of how work
tasks are performed for the specific employer, at
a specific location, or in a specific area or region.
LTD Plan at 29–31.
Therefore, Lacko’s entitlement to benefits under the LTD
plan hinges upon whether Lacko was capable of fulfilling the
material duties of her regular occupation. That focus on her
occupation sets the stage for a major point of contention in
this appeal, which is whether United used an appropriate oc‐
cupational classification in determining her eligibility for ben‐
efits. As we will explore in detail later, United classified her
position as that of a Department Manager under the Diction‐
ary of Occupational Titles (“DOT”), but the Social Security
Administration (SSA) used a different DOT title in assessing
Lacko’s claim for benefits, classifying her position as that of
an Auditor or Accountant.
After Lacko’s requests for STD and LTD benefits were de‐
nied, Lacko requested reconsideration of those determina‐
tions from United. With respect to the STD benefits claim,
United in that appeal considered the evidence as to her gas‐
troparesis, back pain, and osteoarthritis, and determined that
she was capable of performing the duties of her job.
6 No. 18‐2155
In appealing the denial of LTD benefits, Lacko provided
United with the SSA decision granting benefits, but United
again determined that the denial of LTD benefits was appro‐
priate. In its determination denying that appeal regarding
LTD benefits, United stated that it had considered her claim
that she was disabled due to chronic pain, fatigue, congestive
heart failure, hypertension, osteoarthritis, diabetes, asthma,
gastroparesis, sleep disturbance, vertigo, vitamin D defi‐
ciency, anxiety and depression. United acknowledged that
the file revealed a history of back pain and diffuse joint pain
complaints, and that MRI studies of the lumbar, thoracic, and
cervical spine documented multi‐level degenerative changes
with disc bulging in some areas. Additionally, it noted that
X‐rays confirmed arthropathy in Lacko’s hands and feet. Ac‐
cordingly, United determined that she would be restricted to
sedentary work activities and should pursue continued treat‐
ment for pain management. It also found that her obstructive
sleep apnea and the resulting fatigue could also support that
limitation to sedentary work, and opined that her chronic ob‐
structive pulmonary disease and asthma would not preclude
sedentary work activities. Although it recognized other med‐
ical conditions, it did not find that they supported any further
limitations. For instance, it recognized that she suffered from
diabetes, but held that her diabetes was controlled with treat‐
ment and regular visits to her endocrinologist and therefore
would not require any restrictions or limitations. It also
acknowledged that she was diagnosed with chronic gastritis
and with gastroparesis due to diabetes requiring treatment
with medications. United found no limitations related to her
vertigo or dizziness, or from cardiac conditions or hyperten‐
sion. Finally, United recognized that symptoms of anxiety,
depression and memory loss had been reported. It held that
No. 18‐2155 7
there was no indication of an inability to perform the activities
of daily living or of cognitive issues or memory impairment
to preclude work activities. United noted that Lacko was eval‐
uated by Dr. Steven Fritz, Psy.D., for a mental residual func‐
tional capacity assessment as a part of the Social Security re‐
view, and it stated that the evaluation found no evidence of
memory impairment or cognitive impairment. United
acknowledged that Lacko has multiple medical complaints
requiring medication and regular visits to health providers,
but tracking the language of the LTD plan, it held that it did
not find evidence of a significant change in her physical or
mental functional capacity on or around her last date worked
to preclude her from continuing to perform the material du‐
ties of her regular occupation. It conceded that she had been
found disabled by the SSA and was receiving disability bene‐
fits but held that the SSA decision did not affect its disability
determination, stating only that “[e]ligibility requirements for
Social Security Disability may differ from the eligibility re‐
quirements under this policy.”
II.
Lacko subsequently filed this ERISA action seeking STD
benefits from November 22, 2015 through December 27, 2015,
and LTD benefits thereafter, under § 502 of ERISA, 29 U.S.C.
§ 1132(a)(1)(B), which provides that “[a] civil action may be
brought … by a participant or beneficiary … to recover bene‐
fits due to him under the terms of his plan, to enforce his
rights under the terms of the plan, or to clarify his rights to
future benefits under the terms of the plan.” The district court
granted summary judgment to United.
First, the court considered the decision as to STD benefits.
It held that United denied STD benefits on the basis that there
8 No. 18‐2155
had been no change in Lacko’s functional capacity that would
prevent her from performing her job. The court found that it
was reasonable for United to focus on whether Lacko had ex‐
perienced a change in medical symptoms, because the plain
language of the STD plan requires a change. According to the
court, when Lacko was first granted STD benefits by United,
it had received medical records from April 2015 that showed
Lacko was “feeling good,” and records from September 2015
showing that Lacko reported feeling pain all over, thus indi‐
cating a “change.” Subsequently, United received additional
medical records which showed that Lacko had suffered gas‐
troparesis since at least 2011, and degenerative disc disease
from at least 2013, and evidence that she had taken opiates for
pain for a decade. The court held that “[g]iven that plaintiff’s
medical conditions were of long duration, it was reasonable
for defendant to conclude that plaintiff had not experienced a
change in functional capacity.” Dist. Ct. Memorandum and
Order of May 15, 2018 (hereinafter “Dist. Ct.”) at 20.
The court then turned to United’s denial of LTD benefits.
First, it held that United did not err in relying on the DOT for
her job description, because the LTD plan explicitly allows for
such an approach. The court also rejected the argument that
United erred in relying on the opinions of non‐examining
physicians. The court noted that Lacko supplied medical rec‐
ords from eight treating physicians, but six of them described
only Lacko’s symptoms and diagnoses without translating
those into work restrictions. Of the two doctors that described
work restrictions, the court described one—Dr. Daniel
Hirsen—as providing useful but imprecise information in
stating that Lacko was unable to sit for long periods of time
due to neck and back pain and unable to do computer work
due to joint swelling. The other doctor who identified work
No. 18‐2155 9
restrictions, Dr. Vanessa Hagan, checked boxes indiscrimi‐
nately, indicating that pain rendered her unable to perform
every task on the list including basic tasks such as following
rules and relating to co‐workers. The court acknowledged
that Dr. Hagan subsequently provided additional infor‐
mation about Lacko’s restrictions, stating that Lacko’s pain
medication makes it difficult for her to focus such that she
could not work if she took her medications as prescribed. The
court countered, however, that “[s]eparately and to the con‐
trary, the Social Security Administration concluded that
plaintiff was capable of performing light‐duty work.” Id. at
23. Based on the competing conclusions and the imprecise re‐
strictions, the court concluded that it was reasonable for
United to seek review of the records by non‐examining phy‐
sicians and adopt their conclusions that she was restricted to
sedentary work.
The court next considered whether United properly con‐
sidered her various ailments in combination when determin‐
ing her restrictions. The court noted that the treating physi‐
cians had determined that her physical ailments limited her
to sedentary work. The court noted, however, that the seden‐
tary restriction related only to her physical capability, and
that Dr. Hagan had noted, in describing the combined effect
of Lacko’s ailments, that the medications for those conditions
affected Lacko’s ability to focus. The court rejected Lacko’s ar‐
gument that United failed to take that mental impairment into
account. The court noted that in its decision, United specifi‐
cally recognized that Lacko had seen Dr. Fritz for a mental
residual capacity evaluation in connection with her applica‐
tion for Social Security benefits. The court stated that “[t]he
10 No. 18‐2155
result of that evaluation was that plaintiff had sufficient con‐
centration and attention to work.” Dist Ct. at 24. The court
held that United’s analysis was therefore reasonable.
Finally, the court considered Lacko’s argument that the
denial of benefits was arbitrary and capricious because
United failed to properly consider the SSA decision granting
her benefits. The court held that United reviewed that deci‐
sion and noted that the standard for disability benefits from
SSA is not the same as the terms of the Plan. In addition, the
court noted that the SSA decision concluded that Lacko could
perform light work, but granted benefits because her age, ed‐
ucation and lack of transferable skills made an award manda‐
tory. The Plan in this case does not require benefits based on
age and skill. In conclusion, the court stated that United did
not ignore the SSA decision; rather, United “reviewed the ev‐
idence, was persuaded by some of it (including Dr. Fritz’s as‐
sessment) and rejected some of it (including the conclusion
that plaintiff could do light duty work; defendant concluded
plaintiff was more restricted).” Dist. Ct. at 25. The district
court therefore granted summary judgment to United.
III.
On appeal, Lacko raises a number of challenges to
United’s denial of her LTD and STD benefits. First, she alleges
that United erred in concluding that there was no change in
her physical functional capacity which would prevent her
from performing the material duties of her job, and that it fur‐
ther erred in using an incorrect occupational description. She
also argues that United’s decision is deficient in that it failed
to adequately address the grant of Social Security disability
benefits. Moreover, Lacko asserts that United, in denying ben‐
efits, failed to address the combination of impairments, and
No. 18‐2155 11
improperly relied on the opinions of non‐examining physi‐
cians who ignored objective medical evidence.
We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary
judgment. Hennen v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 904 F.3d 532, 539 (7th
Cir. 2018); Holmstrom v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 615 F.3d 758,
766 (7th Cir. 2010). But where, as here, a plan grants to the
administrator the discretionary authority to determine bene‐
fits, we review the decision of that administrator under the
more stringent arbitrary and capricious standard. Id. Alt‐
hough that standard is necessarily deferential, it is “’not a rub‐
ber stamp’” and we will not uphold an administrator’s deci‐
sion “’when there is an absence of reasoning in the record to
support it.’” Id.
A.
“In conducting this review, we remain cognizant of the
conflict of interest that exists when the administrator has both
the discretionary authority to determine eligibility for bene‐
fits and the obligation to pay benefits when due.” Jenkins v.
Price Waterhouse Long Term Disability Plan, 564 F.3d 856, 861
(7th Cir. 2009); Metro. Life Ins. v. Glenn, 554 U.S. 105, 112, 114
(2008); Hennen, 904 F.3d at 539; Dragus v. Reliance Standard Life
Ins. Co., 882 F.3d 667, 673 (7th Cir. 2018). Both parties
acknowledge that United stands in that position, as the deter‐
miner of eligibility for benefits and the payor of benefits.
The Supreme Court and this court have clearly and con‐
sistently held that a conflict of interest is present where the
administrator has both the authority to determine benefits
and the obligation to pay them, and that such a conflict is
weighed as a factor in determining whether there is an abuse
12 No. 18‐2155
of discretion, and can act as a tiebreaker when the other fac‐
tors are closely balanced. Glenn, 554 U.S. at 117; Hennen, 904
F.3d at 539; Dragus, 882 F.3d at 673. Surrounding circum‐
stances may increase or decrease the likelihood that the con‐
flict of interest impacted the disability determination. For in‐
stance, a conflict of interest “should prove less important (per‐
haps to the vanishing point) where the administrator has
taken active steps to reduce potential bias and to promote ac‐
curacy, for example, by walling off claims administrators
from those interested in firm finances, or by imposing man‐
agement checks that penalize inaccurate decision‐making ir‐
respective of whom the inaccuracy benefits.” Glenn, 554 U.S.
at 117. Similarly, the potential adverse impact of a conflict of
interest can be ameliorated where an administrator uses sep‐
arate third‐party vendors to secure independent physicians
who then review the claim. See Dragus, 882 F.3d at 673. United
argues that it employed such procedures here, which can cre‐
ate a distance between the conflict and the decision thus de‐
creasing the likelihood that the disability determination was
impacted by the conflict.1
In contrast, “a conflict may carry more weight when the
‘circumstances suggest a higher likelihood that it affected the
benefits decision,’ as when an insurer has a history of biased
claims administration,” takes inconsistent positions in the So‐
cial Security disability proceedings and its own disability de‐
termination, constantly changes its demands to avoid award‐
1 As we will discuss later, however, in this case the use of independent
examiners does not insulate United from the decision because those ex‐
aminers did not consider the cognitive limitations and would still be lim‐
ited by the evidence and job descriptions provided by United.
No. 18‐2155 13
ing benefits, or engages in selective consideration of the evi‐
dence. Raybourne v. Cigna Life Ins. Co. of New York, 700 F.3d
1076, 1082 (7th Cir. 2012) quoting Glenn, 554 U.S. at 117;
Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 772, 777–78. For instance, where the
administrator assists the claimant in obtaining Social Security
disability benefits, arguing that she is unable to engage in any
work, and then after obtaining those benefits, denies disabil‐
ity benefits under its own plan, the self‐dealing can signal that
the administrator is acting in its own interests rather than that
of the claimant. The Plan benefits in such a situation because
it is often entitled to recover some of the Social Security bene‐
fit awarded to the claimant, and it avoids the payment of
money to the claimant in denying benefits under its own plan.
We have recognized that “this scenario justified the reviewing
court in giving more weight to the conflict because the seem‐
ingly inconsistent positions taken by the insurer were both fi‐
nancially advantageous to the insurer.” Raybourne, 700 F.3d at
1088; Glenn, 554 U.S. at 118; Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 777. Such
concordance between the actions and positions taken by the
administrator and its own financial interest suggest a higher
likelihood that the conflict of interest affected the benefits de‐
cision. See Raybourne, 700 F.3d at 1088. That is the scenario
present in many cases in which we have held that the conflict
of interest could have impacted the disability determination,
but there is no evidence that United engaged in self‐dealing
of that nature here. United argues that Raybourne is inapplica‐
ble because that involvement in the social security process
was absent here, but that self‐dealing is merely one factor im‐
pacting the weight given to that structural conflict of interest,
and does not mean that no structural conflict exists. Courts
must consider all surrounding circumstances in determining
14 No. 18‐2155
whether that conflict of interest could have impacted the dis‐
ability determination.
Another circumstance that should alert the court that the
conflict of interest may have influenced the decision is found
where the administrator engages in only a selective presenta‐
tion of the evidence in the record, focusing on the portions
that will support a denial of the claim and ignoring or misrep‐
resenting the facts that could demonstrate the disability. See
Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 777; Raybourne, 700 F.3d at 1082; Glenn,
554 U.S. at 118. As we will discuss, this case does present such
a selective presentation of some of the evidence in the record.
In fact, the failure to consider some of the evidence requires a
remand here even absent a consideration of the conflict of in‐
terest, because it renders the decision arbitrary. Holmstrom,
615 F.3d at 776–77 (in addition to showing that the conflict of
interest may have influenced the decision, selective consider‐
ation of the evidence can indicate that a decision was arbitrary
even aside from that conflict). Although the conflict of interest
is therefore a factor, which is weighed more heavily in light
of that selective presentation of the evidence, that conflict
does not act as a tiebreaker here because a remand is required
even absent that conflict.
B.
We turn first to the claim that United failed to adequately
address the Social Security disability determination, because
that issue touches upon at least two other arguments pre‐
sented by Lacko—namely, her argument as to the proper oc‐
cupational description and her argument that United failed to
address the combination of impairments. SSA determined
that Lacko was entitled to benefits. That determination in‐
No. 18‐2155 15
volved the application of SSA’s five‐step sequential evalua‐
tion process. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520. Under the first three
parts of the test, SSA determined that Lacko was not engaged
in substantial gainful activity, that she had severe medically‐
determinable impairments consisting of inflammatory arthri‐
tis, disorders of back—discogenic and degenerative, chronic
heart failure, and affective disorders, and that her impair‐
ments did not meet or equal a listing. See id. Before proceed‐
ing to the fourth step, the regulations require SSA to assess
the claimant’s residual functional capacity, which it then uses
at steps four and five when evaluating the claim at those
steps. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4). SSA conducted a physical re‐
sidual functional capacity assessment and a mental residual
functional capacity assessment (“MRFC”). The MRFC was
conducted by Dr. Fritz and determined that Lacko had under‐
standing and memory limitations. Although he found that
Lacko was not significantly limited in her ability to remember
locations and work‐like procedures and her ability to under‐
stand and remember very short and simple instructions, Dr.
Fritz concluded that she was moderately limited in her ability
to understand and remember detailed instructions. He fur‐
ther concluded that she sustained concentration and persis‐
tence limitations which rendered her moderately limited in
her ability to carry out detailed instructions. Finally, he also
determined that she had adaptation limitations, in that she
was moderately limited in her ability to respond appropri‐
ately to changes in the work setting.
SSA applied that MRFC in considering at step four
whether she was capable of performing her past relevant
work. First, it identified the DOT title for her past relevant
work, determining that the job titles of Field Auditor and Ac‐
countant were proper. SSA determined that Lacko could not
16 No. 18‐2155
perform her past relevant work because her MRFC reduced
her skill level. It determined that her past relevant work was
skilled work, and that her impairments limited her to un‐
skilled, light work.
United and the district court both recognized that SSA had
limited her to light work, a higher level than the sedentary
work limitation that United found, but neither addressed her
mental limitations. Neither United nor the district court
acknowledged or addressed the determination that she was
limited to unskilled work based on the MRFC. In fact, the de‐
cisions by United and the district court mischaracterized the
SSA decision. United characterized Dr. Fritz’s evaluation as
finding no evidence of memory impairment or cognitive im‐
pairment, but that is unsupportable. The SSA decision, and
specifically the MRFC within it, found her moderately limited
in her ability to understand and remember detailed instruc‐
tions, carry out detailed instructions, and respond appropri‐
ately to changes in the work setting, and based on that MRFC
she was deemed limited to unskilled work and therefore un‐
able to perform her past work which was skilled work. United
never acknowledged those memory and cognitive limitations
found by Dr. Fritz, nor the limitation to unskilled work that
followed from that MRFC.
Similarly, United again acknowledges only part of Dr.
Fritz’s findings on appeal, characterizing them as follows:
A mental status assessment conducted on June
24, 2016 by Dr. Steven Fritz, Psy. D. found Ms.
Lacko to have (1) sufficient attention and con‐
centration to persist at and complete work activ‐
ities for the usual periods required in the gen‐
eral work force; (2) the capacity for adequate
No. 18‐2155 17
pace and perseverance to maintain a schedule
and on time attendance and (3) the capacity to
complete a normal work day and work week on
a regular basis. Dr. Fritz also determined that
psychologically based symptoms would not
markedly impair Ms. Lacko’s capacity to com‐
plete a normal work week.
(citations omitted) Appellee’s Brief at 22. That summary re‐
cites the conclusions of Dr. Fritz as to her ability to fulfill the
duties of unskilled work, but again fails to reflect the areas in
which he found her moderately limited, and which precluded
her from skilled work.
And other than that mischaracterization of the mental lim‐
itations, United in its denial of LTD benefits did not further
attempt to reconcile the SSA determination that she was enti‐
tled to disability benefits, dismissing it with one statement:
“Eligibility requirements for Social Security Disability may
differ from the eligibility requirements under this policy.” See
Dist. Ct. at 16. That trite statement is of no value in any anal‐
ysis. That something “may differ” from the Plan requirements
says nothing, as it is noncommittal as to whether there is any
actual difference. It failed to identify any difference, and to
explain how that difference would impact the disability de‐
termination.
On appeal, United argues that the SSA decision granting
benefits was based in part on her age, and that age is not a
factor under the Plan. The final decision by the SSA, at step
five of the sequential evaluation process, considers whether
the claimant is capable of making the adjustment to other
work, and the claimant receives disability benefits only if the
SSA concludes that she is both not capable of performing her
18 No. 18‐2155
past relevant work and not capable of adjusting to other work.
At step five, the SSA considers factors such as age and educa‐
tion, which are not factors in United’s determination of disa‐
bility. That difference is irrelevant, however, because those
factors are not considered by the SSA at step four in determin‐
ing her ability to perform her past work, and that is the anal‐
ysis that equates with the Plan’s language. The question at
step four of the SSA evaluation process was whether Lacko
was capable of performing her past work as it is performed in
the national economy, and the Plan under which United de‐
nied benefits similarly considers whether she was prevented
from performing the material duties of her regular occupa‐
tion. There is no apparent basis for determining that the SSA
determination of her ability to perform past work is materi‐
ally different from the disability eligibility requirements for
United. That discussion by United is insufficient to constitute
a reasoned consideration of Dr. Fritz’s evaluation or the SSA
decision as a whole.
Moreover, the record lacks any mental or psychological
evaluation that contradicts or casts doubt on the conclusions
by Dr. Fritz, and United has never challenged or questioned
those findings. Those findings indicate that Lacko is incapable
of performing an occupation that requires more than un‐
skilled work. Unskilled work for SSA purposes is work that
“requires little or no judgment to do simple duties that can be
learned on the job in a short period of time (30 days or less).”
Program Operations Manual System (POMS) DI 25015.017.
Skilled work, in contrast, “[r]equires high levels of judgment
and adaptability; [i]nvolves setting realistic goals or making
plans independently; [r]equires understanding, carrying out,
remembering complex instructions; [e]ncompasses abstract
No. 18‐2155 19
ideas and problem solving; … and requires both … work ac‐
tivity exercising judgment beyond carrying out simple duties
… and knowledge of principles and processes of an art, sci‐
ence, or applied trade and the ability to apply that knowledge
in a proper and approved manner.” Id. There is no basis what‐
soever in the record to conclude that a job of Senior Manager
for the Audit Department is anything less than skilled work.
Therefore, because United failed to recognize and address the
cognitive limitations set forth in the SSA decision, there is no
reasoned basis in the decision to support the determination
that Lacko was ineligible for disability benefits.
The district court failed to address that deficiency in
United’s analysis. In addressing the MRFC, the court stated
that “[t]he result of that evaluation was that plaintiff had suf‐
ficient concentration and attention to work,” and held that
United’s analysis was therefore reasonable. Dist. Ct. at 24. On
appeal, United continues in its selective characterization of
the SSA’s decision, stating that “[t]he SSA also found that Ms.
Lacko’s limitations as a result of her pain, weakness, fatigue
and alleged understanding and memory difficulties had not
arisen to such level as to prevent her from participating in
work related activities.” Appellee’s Brief at 23. That of course
is only partially true. The MRFC evaluation indeed deter‐
mined that Lacko possessed sufficient concentration and at‐
tention to “work” if the work was unskilled work. Her limita‐
tions were not so severe as to preclude unskilled work. But it
determined that she lacked the ability to perform her past rel‐
evant work because it was skilled work. The district court,
like United, failed to recognize and address that significant
distinction, which is controlling for the purposes here of de‐
termining her ability to perform the job of Senior Manager.
Moreover, the district court held that United accepted the
20 No. 18‐2155
findings of Dr. Fritz. If, as the district court states, United ac‐
cepted the determination of Dr. Fritz, then it would have to
accept that Lacko possessed mental limitations that rendered
her incapable of work other than unskilled work.
C.
In considering the SSA decision, United also failed to ad‐
dress the different classification used by the SSA from the Dic‐
tionary of Occupational Titles (4th ed. 1991) (“DOT”). The LTD
plan required United to determine whether Lacko could per‐
form her regular occupation, which it defined as not limited
to her specific position, but “instead will be considered to be
a similar position or activity based on job descriptions in‐
cluded in the [DOT].” In denying benefits, United character‐
ized her job as one of “189.167‐022 Manager, Department,” a
generic classification under the DOT that falls under the gen‐
eral catchall category of “189 Miscellaneous Managers and
Officials, NEC.” According to the DOT, “[t]his group includes
miscellaneous managers and officials, not elsewhere classi‐
fied.” DOT defines this position as applying to one who
“[d]irects and coordinates, through subordinate supervisors,
department activities in commercial, industrial, or service es‐
tablishment,” and the only reference to financial work is that
it can include one who “[m]onitors and analyzes costs and
prepares budget, using computer.” Dictionary of Occupational
Titles 189 (4th ed. 1991)
In contrast, the SSA classified Lacko’s job as falling under
“160 Accountants, Auditors, and Related Occupations,”
which falls under category 16 that “includes occupations con‐
cerned with specialized administrative and managerial func‐
tions which are common to many types of organizations,” and
No. 18‐2155 21
specifically “160.167‐038 Auditor, Tax” and “160.162‐018 Ac‐
countant.” The DOT provides that:
This group includes occupations concerned
with examining, analyzing, and interpreting ac‐
counting records for the purpose of giving ad‐
vice or preparing statements. It also includes oc‐
cupations involved in devising or installing ac‐
counting systems and advising on cost‐record‐
ing systems or other financial and budgetary
data.
Dictionary of Occupational Titles 160 (4th ed. 1991). The titles
used by SSA therefore apply to the audit and accounting man‐
agerial functions common to many organizations. Those ap‐
pear more directly related to the Senior Manager position at
issue here.
They also more closely align with the job description for
the position of Senior Manager in the Audit Department. The
summary of the job description by BKD, upon which the par‐
ties agree, provides that:
The Senior Manager supervises Seniors, Associ‐
ates, and Interns. He or she is responsible for au‐
dit program approval, personnel scheduling,
audit working papers review, financial state‐
ment disclosure footnote approval, day to day
client relationships, determination of billings
for engagements, and evaluation of Interns, As‐
sociates, and Seniors.
Defendant’s Response to Plaintiff’s Local Rule 56.1 Statement
of Material Facts 12 at 5–7. That description indicates that the
position requires the specialized skills of an auditor rather
22 No. 18‐2155
than solely managerial skills. In addition, the job description
includes the following list of “Essential Duties and Responsi‐
bilities,” which more precisely delineate the job requirements:
‐ Manages multiple concurrent engagements
without disruption or loss of control and
within the time allotted
‐ Correctly completes and reviews routine audit
engagement procedures in a timely and profes‐
sional manner
‐ Demonstrates ability to recognize problems
and proposes sensible solutions, with appro‐
priate balance between clients’ needs and
firm’s risk
‐ Establishes accountability for meeting as‐
signed deadlines or budgets and provides
advanced warning of variances
‐ Demonstrates proficiency/subject matter exper‐
tise with industry‐specific technical standards,
participation in specialty professional organiza‐
tions and anticipates impact of specialty with cli‐
ents and BKD teams
‐ Conducts and reviews technical research and ap‐
plies research to findings within complex ac‐
counting areas
‐ Proven ability to supervise and train other
professionals
‐ Balances assigned workload between self
and staff. Provides staff with timely perfor‐
mance feedback
No. 18‐2155 23
‐ Develops contacts and referral sources
through involvement in professional or civic
community organizations as a committee
member or board member
‐ Business Development: sells services to new
and existing clients that provide value to cli‐
ents, building client loyalty and satisfaction.
(emphasis added) Id. As the italicized sections demonstrate,
the essential duties and responsibilities of Lacko’s position re‐
quired technical and specialized expertise and included du‐
ties beyond the common supervisory duties of a manager,
such as the duty to conduct technical research and apply re‐
search to findings within complex accounting areas.
United’s vocational expert nevertheless determined that
only the general, catchall “Manager, Department” title of the
DOT was the most applicable. Tellingly, that vocational ex‐
pert’s listing of the material duties of Lacko’s position in‐
cluded only the general summary of the job description set
forth above, along with an exposition of such standard man‐
agerial responsibilities as that of interviewing, hiring and
training employees and appraising performance. Absent from
the Senior Manager job description set forth by United’s vo‐
cational consultant is any mention of the “Essential Duties
and Responsibilities,” including the more specialized and
technical duties italicized above.
In fact, nothing in the vocational expert’s description mir‐
rors or even alludes to the technical and specialized duties
italicized above, which constitute 3 of the 10 essential job du‐
ties. Moreover, the essential nature of those duties is rein‐
forced by the education and experience requirements of the
24 No. 18‐2155
job, which mandated that the Senior Manager have seven
years of public accounting experience or its equivalent, that
she have certification as a Certified Public Accountant (CPA),
and that she maintain a current CPA license. The vocational
expert’s report fails to mention those job requirements, and
therefore could not properly determine whether the DOT oc‐
cupation of “Manager, Department” was a “similar position
or activity” to her specific position, as required under the LTD
plan. Finally, although United’s vocational consultant dis‐
cussed the physical demand characteristics of the occupation,
identifying it as at the sedentary exertion level, the consultant
never examined the mental characteristics of the occupation,
which would have identified the skill level needed for the po‐
sition.
We have repeatedly condemned that type of selective con‐
sideration of only the evidence that supports one outcome.
See Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 777; Raybourne, 700 F.3d at 1082;
Glenn, 554 U.S. at 118. The determination that Lacko’s job fell
within the DOT title “Manager, Department” is rendered
questionable because the vocational expert’s job description
failed to include those essential duties that required her spe‐
cialized audit and accounting skills, and failed to identify the
educational and license requirements of the position. In light
of that deficiency, the failure to acknowledge and reconcile
the alternative DOT title applied by SSA is even more egre‐
gious. That, in turn, impacted the disability determination be‐
cause United never engaged in a determination as to whether
Lacko had the mental and physical capacity to perform the
tasks required of an Auditor or Accountant position under the
DOT.
No. 18‐2155 25
At a minimum, United should have addressed the DOT
classification used by the SSA. Moreover, United should have
reconciled its choice of the more general DOT title in relation
to all of the job requirements, including the requirement that
Lacko maintain a current CPA license.
IV.
Therefore, both in its assessment of Dr. Fritz’s evaluation,
and its consideration of the DOT classification, United pro‐
vided a selective characterization of the record that discussed
only the portions that would favor a determination that Lacko
was not disabled, and ignored or mischaracterized the por‐
tions that would support a finding of disability. We have pre‐
viously held that where an administrator is operating under
a conflict of interest, as United is here, such a selective analy‐
sis is evidence that the conflict of interest may have impacted
the decision. See Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 777; Raybourne, 700
F.3d at 1082; see also Glenn, 554 U.S. at 118. The potential im‐
pact of that conflict of interest is a factor to consider in deter‐
mining whether the decision was arbitrary. We note that the
use of third‐party reviewers, as United did here, can provide
some separation between the decision and that conflict of in‐
terest, lessening the likelihood that the conflict impacted the
decision, but here that is of little value because those review‐
ers were not asked to opine as to the mental limitations nor is
there any indication that they received the proper description
of the job requirements. In the end, however, our decision that
a remand is necessary does not depend on that conflict of in‐
terest as the tipping point, because even absent a conflict of
interest the decision cannot be sustained based on the failure
to properly characterize and address Dr. Fritz’s evaluation
and the mental limitations, and the failure to address the DOT
26 No. 18‐2155
classification used by the SSA. See Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 773
(a plan administrator must address the Social Security find‐
ings and evidence in the record and provide a reasonable ex‐
planation for discounting it).
That determination is dispositive as well of Lacko’s claim
that United failed to address the combination of her impair‐
ments.2 United failed to discuss the mental limitations found
by Dr. Fritz, and the impact of Lacko’s medications on her
cognitive and physical functioning. Accordingly, United must
address the combination of all her impairments, including the
impact of medication and treatment for those ailments, on her
ability to perform the material duties of her regular occupa‐
tion. That failure to consider the combination of impairments,
including the mental limitations, on her ability to perform her
job is fatal to the denial of STD benefits as well. Moreover, we
would note that the Plan’s requirement of a “change” in a per‐
son’s physical or mental capacity in order to qualify for bene‐
fits does not by its terms preclude a degenerative condition
from qualifying a claimant for benefits. A condition can exist
for years, and only prevent a person from performing her job
at a later point in time when the worsening condition proves
2 Lacko also asserts that United erred in crediting the opinions of non‐
examining physicians over the opinions of her treating physicians, partic‐
ularly where the Plan allowed United to require Lacko to submit to an
examination from a physician of United’s choice. It is well‐established,
however, that unlike disability claims under SSA, a plan administrator de‐
termining disability benefits is not required under ERISA to give special
deference to the opinions of treating physicians. Black & Decker Disability
Plan v. Nord, 538 U.S. 822, 825 (2003).
No. 18‐2155 27
unmanageable. The deterioration can be sufficient to consti‐
tute a change in conditions under the plain language.
The most common remedy when an ERISA plan adminis‐
trator’s benefits decision is deemed arbitrary is to remand the
matter for a fresh administrative decision, rather than to grant
an outright award of benefits, and we believe that is the ap‐
propriate remedy here. Holmstrom, 615 F.3d at 778; Hennen,
904 F.3d at 542. A remand is necessary for United to reassess
Lacko’s claim in light of the deficiencies identified in this
opinion.
Accordingly, the decision of the district court is
REVERSED and the case REMANDED for further proceed‐
ings consistent with this opinion.