Plаintiff-appellant Betsy Jaeger Wein-reb, widow of Dr. Herman Weinreb, appeals from the November 24, 2003, final judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Jed S. Rakoff, Judge) granting partial summary judgment to defendant-ap-pellee Hospital for Joint Diseases Ortho-paediс Institute (the “Hospital”),
see Weinreb v. Hosp. for Joint Diseases Or-thopaedic Inst.,
BACKGROUND
The facts and procedural history of this case are set forth in the district court’s thorough opinion. See id. at 384-86. We therefore recite only those facts that are relevant to this appeal.
In April 1998, the Hospital recruited Dr. Weinreb to be Chief of its Neurology Department. It provided him with a packet of preemployment forms, including a life-insurance enrollment form; he completed and returned most of the forms the same day and turned in a health-insurance form later that month. On April 16, 1998, Dr. Weinreb signed up for a $500,000 life-insurance policy sponsored by the American Medical Association (“AMA”), which was separate from any benefits offered by the Hospital. He began work at the Hospital on June 1,1998. A few months later, he submitted a form for prescription-drug coverage. On December 11, 1998, Gladys Colon, a human-resources specialist at the Hospital, sent Dr. Weinreb a memorandum reminding him that he had not yet enrоlled in a tax-sheltered annuity plan. He subsequently remitted the appropriate form for that plan.
Relevant to this appeal, however, Dr. Weinreb never submitted the enrollment form required under the Hospital’s Mass Mutual life-insurance plan (“the Plan”), despite repeated reminders. On Mаrch 1, 1999, Colon wrote to Dr. Weinreb, advising him that his employee file was “incomplete” because he had yet to fill out both his life-insurance and dental-insurance enrollment forms. In response, Dr. Weinreb sent a letter enclosing .his completed dental form, without referring to the life-insurance fоrm. A few days later, Colon followed up with a phone call to remind him to submit the life-insurance paperwork. Dr. Weinreb told her that he would do so, but never did. Thereafter, Dr. Weinreb failed to renew his AMA life-insurance policy, which lapsed on July 1, 1999. On' October 14, 1999, Colon sent
In December 1999, Dr. Weinreb resigned his position at the Hospital, and he died unexpectedly on April 14, 2000. After being informed that her husband did not have life insurance through the Hospital, Mrs. Weinreb brought this ERISA action claiming these benefits. We review
de novo
the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the Hospital.
See, e.g., Burke,
DISCUSSION
I. ERISA Claim
The principal question before this court is whether Dr. Weinrеb’s failure to enroll in the Plan should be excused because the Hospital did not provide him with an ERISA-mandated Summary Plan Description. Mrs. Weinreb argues that the Hospital’s lapse is fatal to its defense that her husband, by not submitting the required form, did not qualify for the Plan.
An ERISA benefit-plan administrator has a duty to provide an SPD to its participants setting forth information such as the name and type of benefit plan, the plan’s requirements with respect to eligibility for participation and benefits, and circumstances that may result in disqualification, ineligibility, or denial or loss of benefits. 29 U.S.C. §§ 1021(a), 1022, 1024(b). In fulfilling this duty, an administrator must also “make reasonable efforts to ensure each plan participant’s actual receipt of the plan documents.”
Leyda v. AlliedSignal, Inc.,
Despite ERISA’s statutory requirements, the Hospital did not create or рrovide ah SPD. In addition, Dr. Weinreb was not aware of the administration manual that Mass Mutual’s predecessor, Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, supplied to the Hospital at the time it undertook to insure benefits payable under the Plan. This manual set forth three conditions for coverage: (1) the participant had to fill out, execute, and submit an enrollment form; (2) the enrollment form had to be approved by Mass Mutual; and (3) the Hospital had to pay the initial premium. It is undisputed that none of these conditions were fulfilled, and, as a result, Dr. Weinreb never officially enrolled in the Hospital’s life-insurance program.
A suit for benefits due under the terms of an ERISA-governed plan necessarily fails where the participant does not qualify for those benefits, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B);
Strom v. Goldman, Sachs & Co.,
Judge Rakoff relied upon our decision in
Burke
to conclude that “even where an administrator fails to inform a participant of a requirement through a summary plan description, the administrator may avoid liability by showing thаt any error was harmless.”
Weinreb,
Cognizant of ERISA’s distribution of benefits, we require, for a showing of prejudice, that a plan participant or beneficiary was likely to have been harmed as a result of a deficient SPD. Where a participant makes this initial showing, however, the employer may rebut it through evidence that the deficient SPD was in effect a harmless error.
Id. at 113 (emphasis in original).
Mrs. Weinreb argues that no prejudice showing should be required when the employer fails to dеvelop, much less provide to its employees, an SPD. We disagree. Although Burke only addressed the standard to be applied where the.SPD is deficient, we now apply the principle in Burke to these facts and hold that an ERISA claim premised on the complete absence of an SPD also requires a showing of likely prejudice. The inquiry in either case is the same. In both situations, the plan administrators have failed to fulfill ERISA’s statutory mandate that they apprise participants of coverage conditions. See id. (“The statute and the DOL regulations place the burden on emplоyers to draft an SPD that is accurate, comprehensible, and clear regarding restrictions on eligibility for benefits. The consequences of an inaccurate SPD must be placed on the employer. The individual employee is powerless to affect the drafting and less equipрed to absorb the financial hardship of the employer’s errors.” (internal citations omitted)). An SPD that is deficient only as to a particular requirement communicates that requirement no better than a wholly missing summary description, and both threaten the same harm to employees. Also, disрensing with any showing of prejudice in the latter situation would afford unjustified windfalls to employees or their successors who knowingly fail to qualify for plans. Thus, we hold that the prejudice analysis articulated in Burke applies where no SPD has been distributed. 1
We further hold that Dr. Weinreb suffered no prejudice from the absence of an SPD. The district cоurt properly found that the Hospital’s repeated efforts to prompt Dr. Weinreb to fill out the enrollment form were sufficient to place Dr. Weinreb on actual notice of the Plan’s enrollment requirement.
See Weinreb,
“[O]n at least three occasions the Hospital told Dr. Weinreb to complete the document clearly marked ‘Insurance Enrollment Form,’ and there is no dispute that he received the form two, if not three, times.”
Weinreb,
Mrs. Weinreb points out that the Plan’s enrollment form, unlikе the other benefit forms, contained no specific warning or legend that stated that completion of the form was required for coverage. However, the form was unmistakably titled “Insurance Enrollment Form”; any contention that the form failed to communicate that action on Dr. Weinreb’s part was required is unavailing. The word “enroll” has a clear, everyday meaning that indicates the need affirmatively to sign up. See Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 385 (10th ed.1997) (defining “enroll” as follows: “to insert, register, or enter on a list, catalog, or roll”). While a formal warning on the form may have been рreferable, the use of the term “enrollment” on the form coupled with the Hospital’s repeated requests that Dr. Weinreb complete and submit the form — the last referring to the “enrollment form” — were easily sufficient to inform him of this requirement.
In sum, we agree with the district court that the several аttempts that the Hospital made to secure Dr. Weinreb’s completion of the enrollment form provided actual notice of the condition precedent at issue here:
After two written memoranda and a phone call, no reasonable person in Dr. Weinreb’s position could disclaim knowledge that completion of that form was a prerequisite to coverage, especially in light of the evidence that Dr. Weinreb twice responded to Gladys Colon’s reminders by submitting other missing forms.
Weinreb,
II. Promissory-Estoppel Claim
Appellant’s promissory-estoppel argument is similarly unpersuasive. A plaintiff must satisfy four elements to succeed on a promissory-estoppel claim: “(1) a promise, (2) reliance on the promise, (3) injury caused by the rfeliance, and (4) an injustice if the promise is not enforced.”
Schonholz v. Long Island Jewish Med. Ctr.,
Again, we agree with the district court that “at no point did the Hospital ever promise Dr. Weinreb that he would have life insurance even if he did not fill out the Enrollment Form.”
Weinreb,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasоns, the judgment of the district court is hereby AffiRmed.
Notes
. We note that an employer's failure to provide an SPD may be cognizable as a separate claim for breach of fiduciary duty.
See Lee v. Burkhart,
. We find it telling that Dr. Weinreb's decision to allow the AMA рolicy to lapse roughly coincided with the period during which he likely made his decision to leave the employ of the Hospital. We also note that the more plausible inference to draw from the record evidence is that Dr. Weinreb ignored the Hospital's repeated requests that he complete the enrollment form because he had already signed up for this AMA plan.
