Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife) terminated the payment of long-term disability benefits to Charlie Groves (Groves) after determining Groves was no longer disabled. Groves sought judicial review of MetLife’s decision by filing a claim under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461. Groves appeals the district court’s 1 grant of summary judgment in favor of MetLife. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Groves worked for Great Lakes Chemical Corporation (Great .Lakes) as a truck driver and was eligible for benefits under a long-term disability plan (Plan) provided by Great Lakes’s insurer, MetLife. Groves ceased working for Great Lakes on December 17, 2000, after a tree fell on Groves while he was removing fallen branches from his driveway. On March 1, 2001, Groves filed a claim with. MetLife for long-term disability benefits. On May 2, 2001, MetLife approved the payment of long-term disability benefits.
Approximately two years later, on June 23, 2003, MetLife terminated Groves’s long-term disability benefits. MetLife determined Groves was no longer disabled and could return to-a “sedentary to light work level position.”
After exhausting his administrative remedies, Groves filed a claim under ERISA, seeking judicial review of MetLife’s decision to terminate payment of long-term disability benefits. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of MetLife, 'concluding MetLife did not abuse its discretion, as substantial evidence sup *874 ported MetLife’s decision to terminate benefits. Groves appeals, arguing (1) the district court erred in applying the abuse of discretion standard, and (2) MetLife abused its discretion in terminating the payment of long-term disability benefits to Groves.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review for Plan Administrator’s Decision
We review de novo a challenge to the denial of ERISA benefits, “unless the benefit plan grants the plan administrator discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits or to construe the terms of the plan.”
Ortlieb v. United HealthCare Choice Plans,
Groves contends the district court erred in failing to apply a de novo standard of review because the Plan did not properly delegate discretionary authority to MetLife. We disagree.
The Plan booklet 2 distributed to Great Lakes employees, which summarized the Plan for employees, states:
In the event that you properly submit a claim to be paid by the Plan and the Plan denies the claim, you can appeal the denial through the appeal process outlined above. However, if the appeal is made through the internal appeals process, or to a court of law, you, by virtue of your participation in the Plan, agree that the standard for review of the denial of the claim will be whether the denial was made in an arbitrary and capricious manner. Furthermore, the Plan Sponsor has discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits and interpret uncertain terms, unaddressed items, and other Plan [provisions].
The Plan booklet also states Great Lakes appointed an administrator “to process and pay claims for these benefits in accordance with the terms of the Plan.”
We conclude the Plan provides discretionary authority to MetLife as plan administrator. According tp the Plan booklet, the “Plan Sponsor,” Great Lakes, had discretionary authority to determine benefits eligibility, and Great Lakes granted its discretionary authority to the plan administrator, MetLife, to act as its delegate. Accordingly, the district court properly applied an abuse of discretion standard of review in analyzing MetLife’s decision to terminate Groves’s long-term disability benefits.
B. MetLife’s Decision to Terminate Benefits
Having determined the district court applied the correct standard of re
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view, we next address whether MetLife abused its discretion in terminating Groves’s long-term disability benefits. We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment, using the same standards as the district court.
Ortlieb,
In applying an abuse of discretion standard, “we must affirm if a reasonable person
could
have reached a similar decision, given the evidence before him, not that a reasonable person
would
have reached that decision.”
Ferrari v. Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n,
Under the deferential standard of review applicable in this case, we conclude substantial evidence supported MetLife’s decision to terminate Groves’s long-term disability benefits. MetLife reviewed Groves’s extensive medical records and then sent them to Dr. Kevin Smith (Dr. Smith), an independent physician consultant. Dr. Smith reported Groves’s conditions prevented him from working as a truck driver, but Groves retained “functional abilities within a sedentary to light work capacity level.” MetLife then asked Dr. Larry D. Ezell (Dr. Ezell), Groves’s treating physician, to comment on Dr. Smith’s report. Dr. Ezell opined:
[Groves] may be able to perform at the sedentary level. He might be able to function as a motor vehicle dispatcher, freight-rate clerk, or train dispatcher.... I do not think this patient is employable. I would not hire this patient personally as an employer for even sedentary positions. It remains my opinion that he should be considered permanently disabled and incapable of even the most sedentary occupation.
MetLife was entitled to rely -on the reviewing physician’s contrary opinion.
See Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of MetLife.
Notes
. The Honorable J. Leon Holmes, Chief Judge, United States District Court for , the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Groves objects to any reference to the Plan booklet because MetLife failed to place the actual Plan document or the controlling insurance policy in the record. Groves does not challenge the Plan booklet as an inaccurate statement of the Plan terms. Plan documents explaining an ERISA plan for employees are generally acceptable evidence of the plan terms.
See, e.g., Jensen v. SIPCO, Inc.,
