Lead Opinion
Daniel Casey attempted to commit suicide by throwing himself in front of an elevated train in Chicago on March 6, 1991. Casey survived, but he was severely and permanently injured. This case involves Casey’s attempt to compel his health insurance carrier to pay his medical expenses.
Uddeholm Health Benefits Plan refused to pay Casey’s medical bills because, it claimеd, Casey’s injuries were not “sustained accidentally” as his policy required. Casey protested, and a hearing on his case was held before the plan’s administrator. The administrator found against Casey.
Casey then sued under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), which allows a beneficiary to
When a district court grants summary judgment in a § 1132(a)(1)(B) action which challenges a denial of benefits based on a plan interpretation, we review that decision de novo. Halpin v. W.W. Grainger Inc.,
I. Interpretation of the Plan
The Administrator’s Interpretation of the Plan’s Language
The Uddeholm Health Benefits plan provided medical benefits for non-occupational injury. It defined “injury” as “an injury to the body that is sustained accidentally.” It did not define “accidentally.” The plan has nineteen exclusions, but it does not explicitly exclude attempted suicide or intentionally inflicted injuries.
The plan administrator concluded that Casey’s injuries were not accidental because they were the reasonably foreseeable consequence of his actions. Therefore Casey’s claim was not covered. The administrator also rejected the argument that “accidentally” could mean “not intended.”
In reaching these conclusions, the administrator relied on Senkier v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co.,
The District Court’s Review of the Administrator’s Interpretation of the Plan’s Language
■ The benefit plan does not grant discretion to the administrator to construe uncertain terms. Thus, the district court was required to conduct a de novo review when it еxamined plaintiffs challenge to the plan administrator’s adverse interpretation of the language of the plan. In Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
The district court, properly applying a de novo standard of review, rejected the administrator’s interprеtation that no injury resulting from a suicide attempt could be accidental as that term is used in the plan. The court relied on Phillips v. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co.,
The district court found that the plain language of the Uddeholm plan was ambiguous and did not mandate the result reached by the administrator. Specifically, (1) the word “accidentally” was not defined, (2) it is not explicit that “accidentally” may not be equated with “unintended” and, (3) the plan did not specifically exclude suicide аttempts or self-inflicted injuries.
Therefore, following Phillips, the court concluded that it was possible under a reasonable reading of the plan to find coverage
Based on this analysis, the district court determined that Casey would prevail if he could show that either (1) “he did not know or understand the nature or quality of his actions,” or (2) that “he was overcome by an irresistible impulse that essentially forced him to jump in front of the train against his will.” The court employed the language used in the cited cases and characterized such a mental state as “insanity.” The district court also emphasized that “a mere attempt to commit suicide, without more, dоes not evidence insanity.”
The district court found that the administrator’s conclusion, that the language of the policy required it to find that Casey was not covered, was wrong. While “accidentally” may be unambiguous in other contexts, we agree that it is ambiguous here in light of the specific facts of this case. The language of the policy is thus rendered ambiguous, for the reаsons that the court noted. Therefore the district court correctly followed the Phillips standard and construed the terms of the plan to favor the insured. Favoring the insured, in this case, meant acceptance of Casey’s argument that the policy, when referring to coverage of “accidental injuries,” did not necessarily preclude coverage where the insured party was injured when attempting suicide.
We also note that, contrary to the plan administrator’s finding, accidentally is commonly defined as “unexpected or unintentional.” Webster’s II New Riverside University Dictionary 71 (1984). A self-inflicted injury may be accidental, where accidental is taken to mean unintentional rather than unexpected. For example, it is an acсident when someone hits his thumb with a hammer when driving a nail. The injury was self-inflicted, but not intended, hence accidental. In the case of a suicide attempt like Casey’s, he claims he lacked intent because he had a mental incapacity which prevents the formation of intent, in which case his self-inflicted injury is an accident.
We agree with the district court’s analysis. The languаge of the policy was, with regard to injury resulting from a suicide attempt, ambiguous. The administrator’s conclusion to the contrary was wrong.
Having resolved the interpretation of the language of the plan, what remained to be determined was whether or not Casey’s suicide attempt fell into one of the two categories the district court derived from Terry.
II. Determination of the Facts
The Administrator’s Determination of the Facts and Their Application to the Plan
Because the administrator found, as a matter of legal interpretation, that Casey’s injuries resulting from the suicide attempt could
The District Court’s Review of the Facts and Their Application to the Plan
A question which remains unresolved in this сircuit is whether the de novo standard of review, mandated by the Supreme Court in Firestone, applies to factual determinations of an administrator as well as that administrator’s plan interpretations. In Petrilli v. Drechsel,
Relying on our comments in Petrilli, the Third Circuit has explicitly held that Firestone requires factual determinations of a plan administrator to be reviewed under a de novo standard. Luby v. Teamsters Health, Welfare and Pension Trust Funds,
The ancillary question of the scope of review under a de novo standard has also produced a circuit split. In Luby, the court held that district courts were free to limit their de novo review to the record before the plan administrator or they could permit further information or evidence to be submitted to enable a full exercise of informed and independent judgment. Luby,
Thе foregoing discussion concerning the standard of review and scope is based on the proposition that there are factual findings made by a plan administrator which are available for review by a district court. That is not the case before us.
As we stated earlier, the administrator made no findings resolving the factual dispute concerning Casey’s mental state. Thus, with no administrator’s factual findings, there can be no deferential review. Any review of the facts by the district court in this case necessarily must be de novo — and any resolution of contested material facts must be through a fact-finding proceeding. Thus, the district judge in a bench trial of this case would have been free to review the evidence de novo, and weigh the facts, resolving any contradictions.
But the matter before the district court wаs not a trial to the bench but rather the disposition of a summary judgment motion. It is axiomatic that when there are contested issues of material fact, the district court is precluded from granting summary judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Where the plan administrator has left contested issues of fact unresolved, the district court’s review under Rule 56(e) should have been limited to determining whether any of the facts in dispute were material.
This language leaves no question that the district court improperly weighed the evidence in this case in аrriving at its decision to grant summary judgment. This is not entirely surprising, however, because the court assumed that it was required to review the facts de novo. Given the lack of factual determination by the administrator, the district court applied the right standard of review — but in the wrong proceeding. Where the administrator has made no factual determination in denying plan benefits the district court should аpply a de novo standard of review and arrive at its own factual findings in determining whether benefits were properly denied. However, the appropriate proceedings for such fact-finding is a bench trial and not the disposition of a summary judgment motion,
In Quisenberry v. Life Ins. Co. of North America,
III. Conclusion
The district court’s decision, rejecting the administrator’s interpretation of the language of the plan and “adopting] an interpretation that would extend coverage for injury sustained as a result of a suiсide attempted while insane” is correct. However, there remains a genuine issue of material fact concerning Casey’s mental state at the time he was injured and it was error for the district court to resolve that factual dispute through summary judgment.
Therefore, the summary judgment in favor of Uddeholm Corporation and Uddeholm
Notes
. In light of our analysis below, a partial summary judgment, limited to the interpretation of the plan language, would have been appropriate.
. The district court’s independent review of the facts was preceded by the mistaken conclusion that the administrator had actually resolved the сontested issues of fact and made a determination that “Casey failed to establish that he was insane.” The court said it found "no error in the Administrator's determination,” and upon the conclusion of its independent review, stated that "we arrive at the same conclusion” as the administrator.
. The decisive issue in this case was Casey's mental state at the time of his suicide аttempt. There is evidence in the record that Casey had severe mental and emotional problems in the period leading up to the attempt but it is unclear what Casey’s state of mind was at the time he sustained the injury. The experts, Dr. Cava-naugh and Dr. Ostrove, disagree as to whether Casey was able to form the intent to commit suicide and whether he was driven by an irresistible impulse. These unresolved factual issues are unquestionably outcome determinative and material.
. The district court is not required to remand the case to the administrator. Under our pre-Fire-stone cases, Wardle v. Central States,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Daniel Casey jumped in front of a train for the purpose of committing suicide. His attempt failed. He lived, but with major injuries. Casey then attemptеd to collect under his company’s insurance plan, which allowed recovery for injuries “sustained accidentally.” The district court did not allow recovery. This court has reversed and remanded for an evidentiary hearing to consider Casey’s state of mind when he jumped. I do not think that is necessary.
Casey concedes in his brief that he “threw himself’ onto the tracks in an “аttempted suicide.” I think those characterizations resolve the coverage question. Casey does not allege that he wandered onto the tracks in some trance-like state brought about by mental infirmity. If he alleged that, we might be permitted to consider his injuries accidental. The reasonable presumption is that Casey waited for the train and jumped at the exact moment the train passed. A suicide attempt is a deliberate act. See Black’s Law Dictionary, Special Deluxe Fifth Edition, 1286 (1979) (suicide is “the deliberate termination of one’s existence”). An accident, on the other hand, is always a chance event. Id. at 14. By definition, if an event is deliberate— like a suicide attempt — it can not be considered an accident. There is no need for an evidentiary heаring to consider whether Casey was insane. By conceding that he “threw himself’ onto the tracks in an “attempted suicide” he admits that he acted deliberately.
Federal courts are in the process of developing federal common law rules of contract interpretation for ERISA cases. Senkier v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co.,
If Casey truly attempted suicide, then he expected to die. “If he actually expected the result, even if he did not specifically intend it, then his actual expectations make his death not accidental.” Wickman,
