Appellant Sandra J. Chronister appeals the District Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Appellee Unum Life Insurance Company of America (“Unum”). For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
Sandra Chronister was employed as a nurse at Baptist Health in Arkansas. In 1995, she was injured in a car accident, and thereafter sought disability benefits under Baptist Health’s long-term disability plan, which was insured and administered by Unum. Unum initially granted her application for disability benefits. At Unum’s urging, Chronister also applied for, and received, social security disability benefits. After 24 months, however, Unum informed Chronister that it was terminating her benefits under the “self-reported symptoms” limitation of the plan. Chronister exhausted her administrative remedies and then brought suit. The district court ultimately determined that Unum’s decision to deny Chronister benefits based on the self-reported symptoms limitation was not supported by substantial evidence. The court remanded the matter to Unum with directions to re-open the administrative record and make a new determination.
Both parties appealed that decision.
See Chronister v. Baptist Health,
After remand, Chronister contends that Unum did not timely determine her claim. She therefore moved the district court to reopen the case. Several days later, Unum denied Chronister’s claim. Unum determined that Chronister could perform sedentary work and was therefore not disabled from performing any occupation, as required by the disability insurance plan. Chronister amended her Complaint and the parties proceeded to assemble the ad *775 ministrative record and cross-move for summary judgment. The district court, applying an abuse-of-discretion standard, granted Unum’s motion for summary judgment, affirming its decision to deny Chronister’s claim for disability benefits.
Chronister now argues that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn,
— U.S. -,
There is no doubt that
Glenn
changed ERISA review in some ways. First, the Supreme Court determined specifically that when the entity that administers the plan “both determines whether an employee is eligible for benefits and pays benefits out of its own pocket” a conflict of interest exists.
Glenn,
Similarly, under this Court’s
pre-Glenn
precedent, a financial conflict of interest would not trigger less-deferential review unless the claimant could show that the conflict was causally connected to the specific decision at issue.
See Woo v. Deluxe Corp.,
In sum, the Supreme Court found in
Glenn
that the abuse-of-discretion standard remains the appropriate standard to evaluate an ERISA fiduciary’s decision. That standard, however, requires a court “to determine lawfulness by taking account of several different, often case-specific, factors, reaching a result by weighing all together.”
Glenn,
This Court’s post
-Glenn
decision in
Wakkinen v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
Here, there are several factors that point to an abuse of discretion in Unum’s handling of Chronister’s claim. First is Unum’s financial conflict of interest, which during the time of Chronister’s initial application for benefits led to a “disturbing pattern of erroneous and arbitrary benefit denials, bad faith contract misinterpretations, and other unscrupulous tactics.”
Radford Trust v. First Unum Life Ins. Co.,
Other evidence also indicates an abuse of discretion under the circumstances of this case. Most egregious is Unum’s failure to follow its own claims-handling procedures 3 with respect to the determination of the Social Security Administration (“SSA”) that Chronister was disabled and therefore entitled to Social Security Disability Insurance (“SSDI”) benefits. 4 Unum’s claims manual unequivocally requires Unum to give “significant weight” to the SSA’s disability determination and to reject that determination only if there is “compelling evidence” that the decision is (1) legally erroneous or an abuse of discretion, (2) inconsistent with the medical evidence, (3) inconsistent with the insurance policy’s definition of disability, or (4) “[tjhere is other evidence that clearly shows that the claimant is not disabled.” (Pl.’s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Summ. J., Ex. E at 2.)
*777 More importantly, however, the manual provides that, should Unum’s disability determination differ from that of the SSA, Unum “must [ ] articulate the reason and analysis [based on the four factors listed above]; and [] support that reason and analysis with reference to facts and information in the claim file documentation.” (Id.) In its January 19, 2007, letter denying Chronister’s claim on remand, however, Unum nowhere mentions the SSA’s determination that Chronister was disabled. Nor does the letter perform the analysis required by the claims manual. There is no explanation of why the SSA’s disability determination was not entitled to significant weight in Chronister’s case, and no attempt by Unum to support its unstated decision to reject the SSA’s determination with reference to any facts in Chronister’s claim file. It appears from the denial letter that Unum did not consider the SSA’s disability determination at all. This is contrary to the clear dictates of Unum’s claims-handling policies, and is a factor weighing in favor of a finding that Unum abused its discretion in its denial of Chronister’s remanded claim.
Weighing all the evidence, as Glenn requires, the Court is left with the firm impression that Unum’s decision to deny Chronister’s remanded claim was an abuse of the discretion given to Unum under the terms of the plan. Chronister urges us not to remand this matter for further proceedings, given that her benefits claims have been pending for more than a decade, and we agree that such a remand would needlessly delay the already long-delayed benefits payments.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for the entry of judgment in Chronister’s favor.
Notes
. We are not laced with determining whether
Glenn
changes the discovery limitations in ERISA cases.
See, e.g., Hogan-Cross v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,
. These procedures were put in place pursuant to settlement agreements and consent decrees between Unum and various state insurance commissioners and the Department of Labor after investigations into Unum's claims-handling practices.
See Wakkinen,
. Unum urges us to follow
Chronister I's
determination that Unum’s failure to consider the SSDI award did not mandate less-deferential review.
Chronister I,
