OPINION
Plaintiff-Appellant Arthur Fallick has been an employee of Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, a subsidiary of Nationwide Life Insurance Company, for more than 25 years. As a Nationwide employee, Fallick was and is both a “participant” and a “beneficiary” of the Nationwide Insurance Companies and Affiliates Employee Health Care Plan, an employee medical benefit plan governed by the Employment Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. Nationwide was the fiduciary of that Plan, which was part of a group plan covering employees of other Nationwide entities. Nationwide also acted as the administrator or provided medical benefits through insurance contracts to other ERISA-governed plans of which Fallick is not a member.
Since 1992, Fallick has been on permanent disability leave due to health problems, including a heart condition, which require frequent medical attention, and therefore frequent claims for reimbursement from his medical benefits plan.
Since at least 1990, the Nationwide Plan has included a standard coverage exclusion limiting medical coverage to reimbursement for charges for a given service at a “reasonable and customary” rate. Such a standard is common among medical benefits plans governed by ERISA. On November 22, 1995, Fallick filed a complaint in the Franklin County (Ohio) Court of Common Pleas, alleging in part that Nationwide had breached its insurance contracts by applying the “reasonable and customary” limitations in a manner inconsistent with its contracts. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441, Nationwide successfully petitioned to remove the action to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, claiming that Fallick’s state court claims necessarily required inquiry into the terms of the employee benefits plan and therefore presented federal questions. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a).
Once in federal district court, Nationwide filed a Motion to Dismiss Fallick’s complaint for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that ERISA preempted his common law claims. On February 6, 1996, the district court held this motion to be moot, however, because Fallick filed an Amended Complaint alleging multiple causes of action under ERISA. First, under ERISA § 502(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a), Fallick maintains that Nationwide improper *412 ly denied benefits to him and others by implementing a methodology for computing reasonable and customary limitations that is at odds with the provisions of the Nationwide Plan itself. Second, Fallick further contends that in approving and implementing this reimbursement methodology, Nationwide violated its fiduciary duties under ERISA § 409, 29 U.S.C. § 1109. Plaintiff seeks in-junctive, declaratory and other relief on behalf of himself and a purported class of beneficiaries and participants in ERISA plans covering employees of entities which are not affiliated with Nationwide but whose plans are administered or insured by Nationwide.
On February 27, 1996, Nationwide filed a Motion to Dismiss Fallick’s Amended Complaint for lack of standing and failure to exhaust administrative remedies. On March 28, 1996, Nationwide filed a preemptive Motion for an Order to Stay Class Certification. Soon thereafter, on April 22, 1996, Fallick filed a Motion for Class Certification seeking to represent a class of all persons who are or were participants in, and/or beneficiaries of, ERISA-regulated health benefit plans insured, administered or promulgated by Nationwide who were alleged to have been improperly denied reimbursement of medical expenses and/or whose reimbursement payments were misdirected to a provider, thereby delaying reimbursement. 1
In an Opinion and Order filed on September 30, 1996 (“Opinion and Order”), District Judge Graham granted in part and denied in part Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, holding that Fallick lacked standing under Article III of the U.S. Constitution to represent participants in benefit plans other than his own. Nationwide’s motion for an order that the case is not maintainable as a class action was thus denied as moot. The district court also denied Plaintiffs Motion for Class Certification, without prejudice, and ordered Fallick to file a new Amended Complaint and an Amended Motion for Class Certification. In its Opinion and Order, the district court de-dined to rule on Nationwide’s argument regarding Fallick’s failure to exhaust his administrative remedies under the Nationwide Plan, and instead converted that part of the motion into one for summary judgment. The parties were given additional time to brief that issue.
Pursuant to the lower court’s Opinion and Order, Fallick filed a Second Amended Complaint and an Amended Motion for Class Certification in conformance with the district court’s directions. Fallick also filed a Motion for Reconsideration, or in the alternative, for interlocutory appeal, limited to the issue of his standing to represent absent class members who were participants in ERISA plans other than the Nationwide Plan. On November 4, 1996, Nationwide filed a Motion for Summary Judgment on the issue of exhaustion of administrative remedies.
On March 13, 1997, the district court granted Nationwide’s Motion for Summary Judgment, entered judgment in Nationwide’s favor, and dismissed the action.
See Fallick v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
The instant matter presents two issues for this Court. First, we must address whether the district court erred in granting the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the issue of whether Fallick failed to exhaust his administrative remedies under the Nationwide Plan prior to filing suit in federal district court to challenge the Plan’s use of a “reasonable and customary” standard to limit *413 medical reimbursement. Second, we must decide whether a potential class representative in an ERISA class action has standing to represent members of a putative class against numerous ERISA-governed benefit plans, even if he is only a member of one of those plans. For the following reasons, we reverse the order of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Many ERISA plans have adopted a “reasonable and customary” standard for coverage of medical reimbursements to ensure that they are not forced to pay in full all medical claims regardless of whether they are commensurate with customary charges for such procedures and are otherwise reasonable. In May 1990, Nationwide announced to its employees that it had adopted such limits. In August of that year, Nationwide printed a reminder in its Benefits Bulletin and declared that such limits were being expanded to cover a wide variety of medical services.
The use of reasonable and customary limits allows Nationwide to increase automatically plan benefits based on rising medical costs. To this end, reasonable and customary limits are reviewed and updated once every six months, based on the charge information from the prior period. To the extent Nationwide determines that charges are in excess of its “reasonable and customary” standard, Nationwide treats the excess amount as if it is not covered by the policy. The plan participant or beneficiary must cover this difference between the reasonable and customary standard and the fee charged by the service provider.
Nationwide must adhere to its own established definition of “reasonable and customary,” which appears both in its insurance contracts and Plan booklets. “Reasonable and customary” means:
reasonable in terms of service, care, or treatment provided, and customary in that it is equal to the charge made by those in the same geographical area with similar professional standing.
Nationwide Employee Handbook at 1195. However, the Nationwide Plan does not determine its own reasonable and customary limits. Rather, these limits are based on information supplied to Nationwide by a Nationwide-supported association of commercial insurers, the Health Insurance Association of America (“the Health Insurance Association”), which compiles prevailing health care charge date for each medical and/or surgical procedure performed in a given geographical area. The data is based on charges contributed by hundreds of insurance carriers. Once the information is gathered, the charges over the prior six-month period are ranked from highest to lowest. According to its Benefits Bulletin of August 5, 1991, Nationwide set the reasonable and customary limit at the 85th percentile, which means that 85 percent of the charges in that area are equal to or less than the reasonable and customary limit. In 1993, the 90th percentile was adopted. Although Nationwide uses this data to establish its “reasonable and customary” reimbursement limitations, the Health Insurance Association as a supplier of prevailing health care charge data explicitly disclaims any specific use or interpretation of that data. See Disclaimer, Prevailing Healthcare Charges System, Subscriber Reference Manual, at vi.
ERISA § 503, 29 U.S.C. § 1133, and its accompanying regulations contemplate that each Plan will establish and maintain a reasonable claims procedure for assessing benefits claims made by participants and beneficiaries. 2 The Nationwide Plan contains a *414 typically comprehensive claims procedure which precludes a lawsuit against the Plan and related parties unless (1) the complainant has satisfied all the terms of the Plan, and (2) his claim for such benefits has been denied in writing by the Plan Administrator. See Nationwide Ins. Cos. and Affiliates Employee Health Care Plan § 13.1.13. Both the language of the Plan itself and the Summary Plan Description issued in April 1993 for the group insurance plan provide that appeals from denied benefits claims must be made in writing within six days of such denial. See id. § 13.1.3(2).
In the instant matter, Fallick discovered that his medical reimbursement requests were routinely reduced as being in excess of the Plan’s reasonable and customary limitations. Fallick’s Complaint lists over twenty separate charges that were reduced under the reasonable and customary limitations. He therefore began a prolonged series of communications with both Nationwide and the State of New York Insurance Department (“the State Insurance Department” or “the Department”) to inquire about both the reduction of his benefits specifically and Nationwide’s methodology generally. Fallick maintains that any further.efforts at exhaustion of administrative remedies would be futile, as he alleges that Nationwide has consistently demonstrated its unwillingness to alter its methodology for determining reasonable and customary limitations. We agree. Indeed, Fallick’s interaction with Nationwide is best summed up by the old Scottish saying that expresses the idea of futility: “You can’t fatten a Greyhound.” This assertion requires us to examine in detail Fallick’s numerous pre-litigation attempts to communicate with Nationwide and the State Insurance Department in order to challenge the Plan’s methodology.
Beginning no later than August 1993, Fal-lick tried repeatedly over a period of two years to challenge the methodology used by Nationwide to determine its reasonable and customary limitations. Fallick contends that in the Spring of 1993, he contacted Ms. Artie Scott-Dawson, a Nationwide Insurance Employee Claims Manager, regarding the use of reasonable and customary limitations in processing his claims for reimbursement of certain medical procedures which occurred in 1991, 1992, and 1993. As the district court correctly noted, this initial correspondence remains undocumented.
See Fallick v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
Fallick also received a copy of a letter of November 1,1993, from Ms. Scott of Nationwide to Ms. Merline Smith of the Department wherein Nationwide, pursuant to the Department’s request, enclosed photocopies *415 of Health Insurance Association data used by .Nationwide to determine the reasonable and customary charge for each claim filed by Fallick. However, Nationwide did not explain the basis for that data beyond that it appeared to be based on sample fees charged by providers in a specific zip code area. On November 17,1993, the Department wrote to Nationwide to inform it that the Department’s review of the Health Insurance Association data that Nationwide had submitted several weeks earlier revealed significant discrepancies between the amounts listed in the 85th percentile of fees charged, that is, the amount Nationwide had pegged as its reasonable and customary limitation, and the amounts actually reimbursed by Nationwide. This review offered proof that Fallick had been undercompensated on numerous occasions. Accordingly, the Department requested that Nationwide issue payment to reflect these discrepancies. On November 22, 1993, Nationwide responded in writing to the Department’s request, noting that pursuant to the Department’s letter of November 17, “all charges previously denied as ‘in excess of Reasonable & Customary’ have been paid.” Fallick did receive such payment.
Despite Nationwide’s correction of specific accounting errors, Fallick remained undeterred. He renewed his inquiries regarding Nationwide’s methodology in establishing its reasonable and customary limitations. In his letter of January 4,1994, to Ms. Smith at the State Insurance Department, he made abundantly clear that his inquiries had not been addressed to his satisfaction. “My problem has not been resolved,” he wrote. In particular, although Nationwide had reconsidered specific calculation errors with respect to a number of his claims, it had not altered the Plan’s underlying methodology for calculating the claims of Plan beneficiaries, including Fallick’s wife. “My complaint has not been resolved since no action has been taken by the department concerning ... the amount Nationwide deems as a reasonable and customary charge. No where [sic] in the policy does it state the percentage of the eighty-fifth percental [sic] be allowed [sic], nor does it mention the use of HIAA. data base [sic] as a governing factor for payment,” he wrote. Between January 4 and March 3, 1994, Fal-liek telephoned Nationwide to contest the reimbursement received by his wife for one of her medical claims. On March 3, 1994, Nationwide wrote to the Department regarding this conversation, suggesting that the discrepancy “Mr. Fallick is appealing” was the result of an erroneous billing code submitted by the doctor who treated Mrs. Fal-lick and that Nationwide would reconsider its reimbursement upon receipt of a corrected code.
On August 22, 1994, Fallick’s legal counsel, Mr. Paul Brozdowski, wrote to the Department to inquire further about the reasonable and customary limits used by Nationwide, as well as about a specific claim for medical services, the reimbursement for which exposed methodological flaws in Nationwide’s application of its reasonable and customary limitations. The letter made two important points. First, the first three digits of the zip code for Bronx County, New York, a relatively poor jurisdiction, was used to process a charge for a laboratory procedure for Fallick, even though the lab where the work was performed is located in Metpath, New Jersey. Second, Brozdowski noted that had Nationwide followed strictly the Health Insurance Association data sheet for the reasonable and customary charges for Fal-lick’s medical procedure in Bronx County, it should have allowed $52.00 for a test which cost Fallick $60.10. Instead, Nationwide paid 80% of $52.00, not 80% of $60.10, as contemplated by the Plan. Thus, Mr. Fallick was required to pay 20% of $52.00 plus $8.10, or $18.50 total, which represented 30.78% of the total bill. Again, Fallick challenged the methodology at the heart of the Plan. Brozdowski’s letter to the Department concluded: “[I]t is my understanding that R & C limits are not part of the original policy or contract. I am interested to know who is HIAA, how they compute their data, and why a Bronx area zip code was applied to this bill.” On September 7, 1994, the Department responded in writing, informing Brozdowski that his letter had been “forwarded to Nationwide for its position and response.” On September 15, 1994, Na *416 tionwide wrote to the Department to respond to Brozdowski’s inquiries. Addressing the misapplication of the Bronx area zip code to laboratory services rendered in Metpath, New Jersey, Nationwide wrote that “the charge in question was reconsidered on [September 12, 1994] because the reasonable and customary amount for procedure code 86701 was higher in the New Jersey area.” However, Nationwide still did not explain why the code for Bronx County, New York was used in the first place. As Brozdowski stated in his letter of October 8, 1994 to the Department: “Nationwide still has not explained its use of [the Bronx area zip code] for [services rendered] in New Jersey.” More than two months later, on December 12, 1994, Broz-dowski wrote to the Department yet again: “I still have not heard from you regarding Nationwide’s use of [the Bronx area code for services rendered] in New Jersey.... Nationwide is continuing to deduct benefits based upon usual and customary fees without any explanation of the zip code used.”
On February 2, 1995, Nationwide wrote to the Department to explain that it had used the Bronx area zip code “because the conversion table which accompanied the medical data” provided by the Health Insurance Association indicated that a number of different zip codes fell within the same geographical code for the purpose of determining the reasonable and customary charge for Fallick’s treatment. The tone of Nationwide’s letter indicates that it essentially considered the matter closed: “[0]ur goal is to provide prompt, fair and courteous service to all our Customers.... We feel that we have met our liability on this claim and spent enough time explaining the difference in our payment and the amount charged by the Provider. We are sorry but no further benefits are payable on this claim.” Fallick still remained undeterred.
On April 14, 1995, Brozdowski wrote directly to Nationwide, requesting copies of “certain computerized [Health Insurance Association] Data Sheets which reflect the reasonable and customary charge” for the laboratory services performed in Metpath, New Jersey. Nationwide responded in a letter of May 5, 1995. Citing a contractual obligation to the Health Insurance Association to refrain “from disclosing the data to anyone other than its Employees, Agents or Consultants whose duties require its specific disclosure,” Nationwide stated that it could not release such data. It added: “On one occasion we released a limited amount of data to the New York State Insurance Department anticipating discreet handling. That release was an effort to resolve the claim expeditiously. Continued requests for this data indicate that complete discretion was not exercised. Therefore, we cannot release further information.”
On March 27, 1995, Nationwide wrote directly to Mr. Fallick to inform him of what he already knew — that the Plan had erred in calculating the reimbursement he was due for the laboratory services conducted in New Jersey. While Nationwide admitted an accounting error with respect to this particular claim, it still did not address Fallick’s repeated inquiries about the Plan’s methodology. One month later, on April 27, 1995, Brozdowski again wrote to Nationwide on Fallick’s behalf, again to question the methodology used to calculate medical reimbursements for beneficiaries of the Plan. Challenging the exclusion of a portion of a specific charge that Nationwide had deemed to be “in excess of either the reasonable and customary charge or the Plan’s scheduled allowance,” Brozdowski again requested that Nationwide “provide a detailed explanation of the basis for the calculation of the potion [sic] not covered, including but not limited to the area code used and why” and “forward copies of all [Health Insurance Association] Data Sheets, conversion tables, documents, schedules, etc. used or referred to in calculating the portion not covered.” On June 14, 1995, Nationwide responded in writing, again citing contractual restrictions with the Health Insurance Association as the basis of its unwillingness to provide the information Brozdow-ski had requested. Nationwide concluded: “Again, our data combined with other healthcare prevailing medical data is used to establish R & C and we feel that our reasonable and customary determinations are statistically justified, in that the majority of procedures in the geographical areas surveyed are *417 billed at or below this reimbursement. We trust that our explanation of how this claim was handled is [sic] satisfactory to your client.”
After two years of repeated inquiries by Fallick to ascertain (1) the precise nature of the methodology used by Nationwide to determine reasonable and customary medical reimbursements, and (2) whether that methodology conformed with Nationwide’s medical benefits plan, Nationwide still had provided no more than a cursory explanation of its process. Fallick described his frustration in an affidavit to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio:
At this point I believe that I have more than “exhausted” any administrative remedies. I have repeatedly brought the nature of my claims to Nationwide’s attention, in writing, and have repeatedly received denials, justifications and excuses in return.... Any further efforts on my part short of resort to this Court would, I believe, be futile.
Affidavit of Arthur Fallick at 8 (Mar. 25, 1996). Fallick then filed suit against Nationwide on November 22, 1995, in Ohio State Court, alleging that Nationwide had breached its insurance contracts by applying the “reasonable and customary” limitations in a manner with the Plan. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441, Fallick’s action was removed to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio.
In the lower court, Plaintiff Fallick claimed that Nationwide’s calculation of reasonable and customary charges deviate from the Plan’s written description of those calculations in three ways. First, Fallick asserted that Nationwide calculates its payments for their group insurance plans based upon a set percentile (e.g. the 85th or 90th percentile) of the entire range of charges for a given procedure in a geographic region. Fallick claimed that this practice is inconsistent with the “equal to the charge” and “does not exceed the usual charge” language that Nationwide uses in its definition of “reasonable and customary.” Second, Plaintiff asserted that Nationwide routinely fails to calculate the “usual charge” for a given medical procedure by the “reasonable and customary” amount in a geographic area. According to his Amended Complaint, Nationwide instead relies upon the Health Insurance Association to provide such figures. Fallick also alleged that the Health Insurance Association’s data is sometimes inadequate, and that when that is the case, multiple disparate geographic areas are grouped together in the process of calculating the “usual charge.” Third, Fallick argued that, based upon Nationwide’s payment patterns, Nationwide makes no effort to differentiate the professional standing of various health care providers. According to the Amended Complaint, Nationwide treats as identical all surgeons in a particular field for purposes of determining a “reasonable and customary charge,” regardless of a surgeon’s standing in the profession or reputation in the community. Fallick thus maintained that Nationwide’s wrongful conduct had damaged him and other members of the proposed class. Fallick, as an individual and the sole representative of the proposed class, brought claims for recovery of benefits and enforcement of rights under ERISA § 502, for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA § 409 and for estoppel under ERISA and federal common law. His Amended Complaint also sought an accounting in addition to declaratory and injunctive relief. Finally, Fallick argued that he had largely complied with Nationwide’s appeal process, and to the extent that he had not, the process is both futile and inadequate.
After its own review of the triangular dialogue of communications in every direction between Fallick, the State Insurance Department, and Nationwide, the district court found that the Plaintiff did not exhaust his administrative remedies with respect to the medical charges he incurred in 1991, 1992, and early 1993. In particular, the court found that this lengthy dialogue did not comply with the Plans’s formal appeals process.
See Fallick v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
II. EXHAUSTION OF ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES
A Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies under ERISA
The application of the administrative exhaustion requirement in an ERISA ease is committed to the sound discretion of the district court and thus can be disturbed on appeal only if there has .been an abuse of discretion.
See Costantino v. TRW, Inc.,
ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), 3 provides a contract-based cause of action to participants and beneficiaries to recover benefits, enforce rights, or clarify rights to future benefits under the terms of an employee benefit plan. ERISA is silent as to whether exhaustion of administrative remedies is a prerequisite to bringing a civil action. The statute itself merely provides that a claims procedure must be established and sets forth minimum requirements for this procedure. See ERISA § 503, 29 U.S.C. § 1133. However, due to ERISA’s provision for the administrative review of benefits, ten federal circuits have read an exhaustion of administrative remedies requirement into the statute. 4
ERISA § 502(a)(2), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2), permits civil actions to be brought by participants or beneficiaries for relief under ERISA § 409, 29 U.S.C. § 1109, 5 for breaches of ERISA’s fiduciary provisions. In this case, Fallick seeks to not only to enforce the terms of the Nationwide Plans, but also to hold Nationwide responsible for breaches of fiduciary duty for, among other things, operating the Plan in a manner inconsistent with Plan documents and thus improperly reducing benefits to which participants are entitled, failing to impart accurate information to himself and potential class members, and failing to protect the best interests of participants and beneficiaries. The question of whether one must exhaust administrative remedies when bringing an action to assert rights granted by ERISA itself is generally unsettled. 6 In the instant matter, because we find *419 that exhaustion of administrative remedies would be futile, we need not reach this issue.
B. The Futility Exception
Although ERISA’s administrative exhaustion requirement for claims brought under § 502 is applied as a matter of judicial discretion, a court is obliged to exercise its discretion to excuse nonexhaustion where resorting to the plan’s administrative procedure would simply be futile or the remedy inadequate.
See Costantino v. TRW Inc.,
The standard for adjudging the futility of resorting to the administrative remedies provided by a plan is whether a clear and positive indication of futility can be made.
See, e.g., Davis v. Featherstone,
Plaintiff Fallick argues that any further efforts at exhaustion of administrative remedies would be pointless in the present case, as Nationwide has proven itself unwilling to alter its methodology for determining reasonable and customary limitations. In response, Defendant Nationwide asserts that it always has been and remains open to considering evidence of mistakes in its reimbursement calculations. Moreover, it points to the fact that it has remedied accounting errors with respect to Fallick’s claims in the past despite the fact that Fallick did not engage the Plan’s formal appeals process. In granting Nationwide’s Motion for Summary Judgment, the district court stated:
Whether Nationwide’s method impermissi-bly deviates from the terms of the plan is chiefly [an issue] of interpretation of those terms. That interpretation, of course, must be assessed in the context of the unique factual posture of each claim, all of the information relevant to each claim with which Nationwide was provided and the ultimate manner in which Nationwide calculated reimbursement of each claim.
In
Costantino v. TRW, Inc.,
The retirees ... are not challenging TRW’s interpretation of its amendments, but the amendments themselves. It would be completely futile to require the retirees to exhaust this administrative remedy. TRW would simply re-calculate their benefits ... and reach the same result. Therefore, because the administrative process is futile, this Court, in its sound discretion, will not require the retirees to exhaust their administrative remedies before seeking relief in this Court.
Id.
at 43. This Court affirmed based on the lower court’s reasoning.
See
Likewise, in the present case, Fallick, his counsel, and the State Department of Insurance spent two years trying to ascertain both the precise nature of the methodology used by Nationwide to determine reasonable and customary medical reimbursements and whether that methodology conformed with the actual terms of the Plan. As Fallick argues on appeal:
While [Nationwide] seek[s] to miscast this action as one primarily for a claim-by-claim payment of medical benefits, in reality this action is only tangentially about the reimbursement of individual medical claims. Instead, this case centers on Fallick’s attempt to challenge defendants’ across-the-board application of a methodology for determining reasonable and customary limitations which does not, by defendants’ own admissions, take into account the terms of the Plans requiring that the “geographical area” where the service was performed and the “professional standing” of the provider both be utilized in assessing reasonable and customary benefits.
Plaintiffs Reply Br. 3-4. Yet throughout Falliek’s quest, Nationwide has consistently defended its long-standing policy and has yet to provide more than but a cursory explanation of its methodology. Moreover, it has established unequivocally that it will continue to use data supplied by the Health Insurance Association to calculate its reimbursement determinations despite evidence that this policy violates the actual terms of the Nationwide Plan.
Clear and positive evidence of the futility of exhausting the Plan’s administrative remedies may also be found by looking to the purposes of the exhaustion of remedies doctrine, as enumerated by the Fourth Circuit in
Makar v. Health Care Corp. of Mid-Atlantic (Carefirst),
Accordingly, we hold that Plaintiff Arthur Falliek may proceed both with his claim for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA § 409 and with his claims of estoppel and other equitable relief under ERISA § 502 without exhausting his administrative remedies.
III. STANDING
Falliek seeks to certify and represent a class of all persons who are participants or beneficiaries of ERISAjegulated health insurance plans administered or insured by Nationwide and who, as of January 1, 1990, made a claim for health care benefits and were improperly denied reimbursement of medical expenses. In its Opinion and Order of September 30,1996 (“Opinion and Order”), the district court held that Falliek lacked standing under Article III of the U.S. Constitution to represent participants in benefit plans other than his own. The district court’s opinion warrants close scrutiny, as its analysis confuses the requirements of Article III and Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which govern standing and the certification of class actions, respectively. 7
The lower court began its inquiry into Fallick’s standing by observing correctly that “[i]t is clear that, insofar as Falliek asserts his [ERISA] claims ... with respect to the Nationwide Plans, he has met the three requirements for standing” set forth by the Supreme Court in
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The proposed class has been drawn to include class members who are participants or beneficiaries in plans that Falliek is not. Plaintiff Falliek dearly lacks individual standing to assert those causes of action. Class certification in this ease would not only be improper, but it would be insufficient to bestow upon plaintiff the requisite individual standing to invoke federal jurisdiction over the claims he asserts in his amended complaint on behalf of others. This is the case regardless of the extent to which his legal claims against defendants may be typical of participants of other plans, and regardless of the extent to which his factual circumstances may be *422 similar to those individuals.... Because individual standing is a threshold jurisdictional injury, the proper procedure in this case is to dismiss the claims plaintiff asserts in this case on behalf of his proposed class.
Order and Opinion at 23-24.
The district court’s analysis is fundamentally flawed in two important respects. First, conceptually, it confuses the issue of a plaintiffs standing under Article III vis-a-vis a defendant with the relationship between a potential class representative and absent class members, which is governed by Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
See Goodman v. Lukens Steel Co.,
“[T]he question of standing is whether the litigant is entitled to have the [judiciary] decide the merits of the dispute or of particular issues.”
Warth v. Seldin,
*423
Threshold individual standing is a prerequisite for all actions, including class actions.
See O’Shea v. Littleton,
Where, as here, the crux of an ERISA plaintiffs complaint concerns the methodology used to determine benefits, courts have recognized that the standing-related provisions of ERISA were not intended to limit a claimant’s right to proceed under Rule 23 on behalf of all individuals affected by the challenged conduct, regardless of the representative’s lack of participation in all the ERISA-governed plans involved.
See Forbush v. J.C. Penney Co., Inc.,
In
Forbush v. J.C. Penney Company, Inc.,
The foregoing analysis supports our conclusion that once a potential ERISA class representative establishes his individual standing to sue his own ERISA-governed plan, there is no additional constitutional standing requirement related to his suitability to represent the putative class of members of other plans to which he does not belong.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND the case for further consideration, with specific instructions to the district court to proceed with a careful Rule 23 analysis of Plaintiff Arthur Fallick’s relationship with the putative class of similarly ■ situated persons entitled to participate in or benefit from ERISA plans administered or insured by Nationwide, including plans of which he is not a member.
Notes
. Nationwide's claim forms allow a participant seeking reimbursement to indicate whether the participant has already paid the provider of medical services. In his Amended Complaint, Plaintiff Fallick alleged that even in those instances when participants indicated that they had paid the provider, Nationwide nonetheless routinely forwarded payment to the provider in order to capture the time value of the payment before the error was corrected. This issue has been dropped on appeal.
. ERISA § 503, 29 U.S.C. § 1133, provides:
In accordance with regulations of the Secretary, every employee benefit plan shall—
(1) provide adequate notice in writing to any participant or beneficiary whose claim for benefits under the plan has been denied, setting forth the specific reasons for such denial, written in a manner calculated to be understood by the participant, and
(2) afford a reasonable opportunity to any participant whose claim for benefits has been denied for a full and fair review by the appropriate named fiduciary of the decision denying the claim.
*414 To be considered reasonable, a plan’s claims procedure must: (1) establish a procedure for the filing of claims by participants and beneficiaries, provide for a written notification procedure for denial or partial denial of claims, and provide for an appeal procedure for denied or partially denied claims, see 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-l(b)(l)(i); (2) be described in the Summary Plan Description, see id. § 2560.503 — 1 (b)(l)(ii); (3) not contain any provision and not be administered in a way that "unduly inhibits or hampers the initiation or processing of plan claims,” id. § 2560.503 — 1 (b)(l)(iii); and (4) provide for a procedure for informing participants in a timely fashion of the time periods for decisions on claims made and the time periods for making appeals and receiving decisions thereon, see id. § 2560.503-1 (b)(l)(iv).
. ERISA § 502(a) provides, in pertinent part:
A civil action may be brought—
(1) by a participant or beneficiary.—
(B) to recover benefits 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....
29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B).
.
See Diaz v. United Agr. Employee Welfare Benefit Plan,
. ERISA § 409 provides:
(a) Any person who is a fiduciary with respect to a plan who breaches any of the responsibilities, obligations, or duties imposed upon fiduciaries by this subchapter shall be personally liable to make good to such plan any losses to the plan resulting from each such breach, and to restore to such plan any profits of such fiduciary which have been made through use of assets of the plan by the fiduciary, and shall be subject to such other equitable ... relief as the court may deem appropriate, including removal of the fiduciary. A fiduciary may also be removed for a violation of section 1111 of this title.
(b) No fiduciary shall be liable with respect to a breach of fiduciary duty under this subchap-ter if such breach was committed before he became a fiduciary or after he ceased to be a fiduciary.
29 U.S.C. § 1109.
. Five circuits have held that exhaustion is required in such circumstances.
See Lindemann v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
. Rule 23 sets our four prerequisites for any class action: (1) the class must be so numerous that joinder is impracticable; (2) there must be questions of law or fact common to the class; (3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class; and (4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a). Assuming these threshold requirements are met, the action may be maintained as a class action if: the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class, thereby making appropriate final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief with respect to the class as a whole, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2); or the court finds that the questions of law or fact common to the members of the class predominate over any questions affecting only individual members, and that a class action is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3).
. Under
Lujan,
in order to establish standing to sue a defendant, a potential plaintiff must: (1) have suffered an injury-in-fact, an invasion of a legally protected interest that is concrete and actual; (2) demonstrate that a causal connection exists between the injury and the conduct of which the plaintiff complains; and (3) demonstrate the likelihood, and not merely the speculative possibility, that the injury will be redressed by the requested relief.
See
. In support of their general proposition that a plaintiff must be a participant or beneficiary of every plan against which he brings a claim, defendants cite the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
Acosta v. Pacific Enterprises,
However, unlike Cooper and Fallick’s claims in the instant matter, Acosta brought suit only in his individual capacity; he did not seek to represent a class of plaintiffs similarly situated with respect to the two pension plans in question. In this respect, the Ninth Circuit's standing analysis was correct. At the same time, however, this important difference renders Acosta inapposite to the case now before this Court. Had Acosta sought to bring a class action, the Ninth Circuit would first have had to determine whether he had standing to sue his own plan, and that plan only. In a class action framework, however, the second question whether Acosta could have represented members of the putative class against their own plans would have depended solely on whether his relationship with those class members satisfied Rule 23, not a separate determination of standing, which was relevant in Acosta only with respect to the facts presented to the Ninth Circuit.
