Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”) appeals from the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Bonnie Gannon on her claim that MetLife violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (2000), by terminating her long-term disability benefits. Gannon v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., Civ. Action No. 01-40192-NMG (D. Mass. *212 2004). Because we conclude that Met-Life’s benefits decisiоn was not arbitrary or capricious, we reverse.
BACKGROUND
Ms. Gannon began working at Astra Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. in March 1991. During her employment with Astra she participated in the Astra USA, Inc. Long Term Disability Plan (the “Plan”), which was administered by MetLife. Under the Plan, a participant is initially considered “disabled” and thus entitled to disability benеfits if she is unable to perform the material duties of her regular job. After twenty-four months, however, a participant is considered “disabled” only if she is also unable to perform “the material duties of any gainful work or service for which [she is] reasonably qualified taking into consideration [her] training, education, experience, and past earnings.”
Gannon was diagnosed with a tumor of the spinal cord in July 1997. She stopped working shortly thereafter and underwent surgery the following month. Gannon subsequently applied for, and on June 6, 1998 was finally awarded, long-term disability benefits under the Plan.
On October 17, 2000, however, MetLife denied Gannon’s request for continued disability benefits, determining that Gannon no longer qualified as “disabled” under the Plan because she was not unable to perform “the material duties of any gainful work or service for which [she was] reasonably qualified.” In a letter informing Gannon of its decision, MetLife cited the following documents: an attending physician statement, which documented Gan-non’s subjective complaints of pain but indicated that she could sit, stand, and walk on an intermittent basis; a functional capacities evaluation (“FCE”), which stated that Gannon should be capable of performing a sedentary occupation; an independent medical consultant’s analysis, which stated the same; and a transferable skills analysis (“TSA”), which identified three occupations that Gannon should be capable of performing. MetLife subsequently denied Gannon’s appeal of its decision to terminate her disability benefits on June 25, 2001.
On October 16, 2001, Gannon filed a complaint against MetLife in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, alleging that MetLife wrongfully terminated her disability benefits in violation of ERISA. The district court denied MetLife’s motion for summary judgment and granted Gannon’s cross-motion for summary judgment, concluding that MetLife’s decision to terminate Gannon’s disability benefits was arbitrary and capricious because it was not supported by reasonably sufficient evidence. More particularly, the court found the evidence relied on by MetLife to be “circumstantial, unconvincing and contrary to direct medical opinion.” Gannon, slip op. at 12. The court accordingly granted summary judgment to Gannon. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Vlass v. Raytheon Employees Disability Trust,
On appeal, MetLife argues that its decision to terminate Gannon’s disability benefits was not arbitrary and capricious, despite thе conflicting evidence relating to Gannon’s ability to work. MetLife adverts to the following five pieces of evidence in support of its position: the FCE, the independent medical consultant’s opinion, the TSA, a surveillance report, and the Social Security Administration’s (“SSA’s”) denial of Gannon’s claim for disability benеfits. Gannon responds that MetLife’s decision to terminate her disability benefits was arbitrary and capricious because it was not supported by substantial evidence and was in direct contradiction to the opinions of Dr. Robin Davidson and Dr. Charles Sweet, the two physicians who treated and examined her.
We agrеe with MetLife that its decision to terminate Gannon’s disability benefits was not arbitrary and capricious, for our review of the record convinces us that MetLife’s decision was reasonably supported by the evidence in the record. First, MetLife directs our attention to the FCE, a report completed by a рhysical therapist who evaluated Gannon over a two-day period in August 2000. The FCE indicated that Gannon did not put forth her maximum effort during the tests (refusing to complete tasks due to subjective complaints of pain but without objective limitations) and that her performance was inconsistent in various ways. With regard to Gannоn’s functional capacities, the FCE indicated that Gannon demonstrated significant abilities with walking and hand coordination. The FCE evaluator further observed that Gannon presented a sitting tolerance of four minutes and twelve seconds, but stated that “she may be able to return to work performing data entry” if she cоuld change positions every five minutes. Ultimately, the FCE evaluator concluded that Gannon was capable of working eight hours per day and forty hours per week with certain restrictions. Despite the district court’s discrediting of the FCE’s overall recommendation,
Gannon,
slip op. at 26, and recognizing that reasonable minds could differ about this analysis, we conclude that MetLife’s reliance on the FCE was rational. The FCE provided objective clinical evidence that Gannon was physically capable of performing restricted work activities. It also provided evidence that Gannon was exaggerating her symptoms. Although we do not doubt that Gannon continues to experience pain, it was appropriate for the physical therapist, based upon his observations of Gannon over a two-day period, to assess the extent to which her pain limited her functional capabilities.
See Matias-Correa v. Pfizer, Inc.,
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Second, MetLife focuses on the report of Dr. Gary Greenhood, an independent medical consultant who reviewed Gannon’s file in September 2000. When asked whether the information in the file suggested that Gannon possessed the work capacity to perform certain sedentary jobs, Dr. Green-hood replied “Yes.” He then explained that, based upon his assessment of Gan-non’s medical records (which included Dr. Sweet’s opinion, Dr. Davidson’s opinions, and an MRI) as well as the FCE, Gannon’s documented limitations “would not be expected to preclude all forms of sedentary work capacity.” Dr. Greenhood’s opinion thus constitutes medical evidence in support of MetLife’s decision to terminate Gannon’s benefits. That Dr. Greenhood did not рhysically examine Gannon does not decrease the credibility of his medical opinion, as the district court suggested,
Gannon,
slip op. at 18. On the contrary, we have treated a nonexamining physician’s review of a claimant’s file as reliable medical evidence on several occasions.
See, e.g., Matias-Correa,
Third, MetLife рoints to the TSA, which was prepared by a vocational consultant in September 2000. The purpose of the TSA was to evaluate whether there were jobs that Gannon could perform given her education, her work experience and training, her past earnings, and her residual physical capacities. Considering those factors, the TSA identified three sedentary occupa
tions
— i.e., personnel scheduler, repair order clerk, and assignment clerk — that Gannon should have been capable of performing. The district court faulted the TSA for its reliance on the “suspect conclusions of Dr. Greenhood and the FCE” and for its selective consideration of the FCE’s findings.
Gannon,
slip op. at 26. However, as discussed above, Dr. Green-hood’s opinion and the FCE provided objective evidence relating to Gannon’s capacity for work. The TSA then identified particular occupations that would comport with that caрacity for work as well as Gannon’s experience and qualifications. MetLife was therefore entitled to consider the TSA in determining whether Gannon was unable to perform any job for which she was qualified.
See, e.g., Lopes,
Fourth, MetLife relies on a survеillance report. On February 2, 2000, an independent investigator observed Gannon leaving her home on four occasions to retrieve her mail, drive for ten minutes, drive to and enter a department store, and drive to the post office and a car dealership. Although the district court correctly pointed out that the surveillance report alone does not provide substantial evidence that Gannon was able to work,
Gannon,
slip op. at 22, it does somewhat undermine Dr. Davidson’s
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assessments that she could, for example, sit and walk only intermittently and work zero hours per day.
See Vlass,
Finally, MetLife points to the SSA’s denial of Gannon’s claim for social security disability benefits in August 1999. In its letter denying her request for reconsideration, the SSA stated that Gannon’s medical and other information indicated that Gan-non was able to move about in a satisfactory manner, sit most of the day, and lift up to ten pounds. While recognizing that her condition prevented her from performing her past job, the SSA concluded that Gan-non’s condition “d[id] not prevent [her] from doing other work.” Although the SSA’s determination of a claimant’s entitlement to social security disability benefits is not binding on disability insurers, it can be relevant to an insurer’s determination whether that claimant is eligible for disability benefits.
Pari-Fasano v. ITT Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co.,
Viewed in the aggregate, MetLife’s evidence is both substantial and reasonably supportive of its decision to terminate Gannon’s disability benefits. Gannon argues nonetheless that the evidence relied on by MetLife is inadequate to support MetLife’s decision because it is contradictory to and outweighed by the opinions of the two physicians who examined her. We disagree. To be sure, both Dr. Davidson and Dr. Sweet consistently opined that Gannon was unable tо work.
2
Dr. Davidson also submitted to MetLife several attending physician statements in which he indicated that Gannon could only sit, stand, and walk intermittently and lift little or no weight. However, that evidence, while supportive of Gannon’s position, is by no means unassailable. For one thing, ERISA does not require plan administrators or reviewing сourts to accord special deference to the opinions of treating physicians.
Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord,
Furthermore, our case law does not, as Gannon suggests on appeal, require that the evidence relied on by a plan administrator include the opinion of an examining physician. In fact, in
Matias-Correa v. Pfizer, Inc.,
Notes
. The Plan provides that MetLife, as the plan administrator, "shall have discretionary authority to interpret the terms of the Plan and to determine eligibility for and entitlement to Plan benefits in accordance with the terms of the Plan.” It further provides that "[a]ny interpretation or determination made pursuant to such discretionary authority shall be given *213 full force and effect, unless it can be shown that the interpretаtion or determination was arbitrary and capricious.”
. For example, Dr. Sweet concluded in May 1998 that Gannon was “completely disabled from any productive work ... for the foreseeable future.” Dr. Davidson similarly stated in a letter dated June 22, 1999 that he considered Gannon to be “disabled from her usual mode of employment because of [her] inability to bend, flex, sit or stand or twist.”
