Oct 092019
 

When disability occurs within the first year of employment, a pre-existing condition investigation is a near certainty.  But what may seem to be “pre-existing” sometimes proves to be otherwise, and, as always, claimants would be wise to be on guard against over-zealous insurers trying to take advantage.

John Lavery was diagnosed with a malignant melanoma on June 19, 2014, less than three weeks after his group long-term disability coverage became effective.  When he stopped working a few months later, his company’s LTD insurer (Aetna) launched a pre-existing condition investigation, ultimately pointing to an April 14, 2014 visit with his primary care physician (during which Mr. Lavery sought treatment for a lesion on his back) as evidence that the condition responsible for Mr. Lavery’s disability was pre-existing.

His LTD claim having been denied on that basis, Mr. Lavery sued in federal court in Massachusetts, where a district court judge ruled in his favor.  On appeal to the First Circuit Court of Appeals (before a panel that included retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter), Aetna pressed two (2) arguments.  First, echoing the position it had articulated when it denied the claim, Aetna asserted that at the primary care office visit, either the melanoma was “diagnosed or treated” or “services were received” for it.  The problem with that, however, is that while Mr. Lavery received treatment for a skin legion, it wasn’t until two months later that the legion was determined to be malignant.  Finding the subject plan language ambiguous, and calling Aetna out for various signs of partiality in its claims handling, the First Circuit sided with Mr. Lavery.

Next, Aetna argued that Mr. Lavery’s LTD coverage actually began on July (not June) 1, which meant that June 19, the date on which the melanoma was diagnosed, fell within the “look-back” period. To that seemingly formidable point, the First Circuit responded “not so fast,” observing that because Aetna had taken the position throughout the claim and administrative appeal stages that coverage began on June 1, it is disingenuous (to say the least) for it to now assert otherwise.  In fact, held the First Circuit, to allow Aetna to change its tune would be to subvert Mr. Lavery’s ERISA-guaranteed right to administrative review, something the court would not tolerate, especially since it runs afoul of the applicable Department of Labor regulations.

Ultimately, then, Mr. Lavery prevailed across the board, with Aetna’s position undermined on every level, and its corporate ego in desperate need of some “restoration.”

Lavery v. Restoration Hardware Long Term Disability Benefits Plan, 937 F.3d 71 (1st Cir. 2019)

Oct 092019
 

Accidents and illnesses that are severe enough to trigger a long-term disability (“LTD”) claim commonly lead to another development: involuntary employment termination.  Federal law, in particular the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, affords a level of job protection, but it’s not universally applicable (companies with fewer than 50 employees are exempt) and, in any event, the rights that it affords are not without limits.

Employment termination (whether voluntary or involuntary) in and of itself poses no challenge for an LTD claimant; as long as disability began while the claimant was “actively at work,” and provided that the claim is submitted on a timely basis, a subsequent change in one’s status from employed to terminated should be of no moment.  So if that’s the case then what’s the problem?

The problem is that sometimes when an employee is asked to leave, particularly when severance benefits are in the picture, he or she will be handed a separation agreement that spells out the terms under which the parties shall endeavor to amicably part ways.  And almost invariably, buried somewhere deep in the agreement, there will appear a broad and binding release of all claims against the employer and (typically) its subsidiaries and affiliated and related entities.

When Kim Keister, a stroke victim whose claim for LTD benefits was denied, was asked by his employer (AARP) to sign such an agreement, he had no idea that by doing so he would be foreclosed from bringing an ERISA lawsuit against the AARP Benefits Committee (plan administrator of AARP’s LTD plan).  Unfortunately for him, however, that’s exactly what happened.  Deeming the agreement broad enough to cover not only AARP but also the AARP Benefits Committee, and comprehensive enough to cover his ERISA claim, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia dismissed Mr. Keister’s case.

As should be evident from Mr. Keister’s experience, if you’re a disability claimant whose been asked to sign an employment separation agreement, the need to consult with an experienced ERISA attorney cannot be overstated . . . lest you run the risk of ending up on the wrong side of the courthouse door, sitting on your keister.

Keister v. AARP Benefits Committee, 410 F. Supp. 3d 244 (D.D.C. 2019)