Plaintiff Joan R. Edwards filed a suit against The GreaG-West Life Assurance Company (“Great>-West”) in a Wisconsin state court seeking benefits allegedly due her under an employee welfare benefit plan formulated pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. Defendant removed the action to the court below under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441 and 1446.
The suit was a claim for recovery of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132. The question was whether plaintiffs deceased husband was eligible for death benefits, and the facts were stipulated. The district court entered judgment for plaintiff, resulting in this appeal.
Plaintiffs late husband, Thomas Edwards, was employed by Quad Graphics beginning January 3, 1990. Under the employee welfare benefit plan maintained by that concern, Mr. Edwards was eligible to participate upon satisfaction of the eligibility requirements of the plan. The plan provided general death and accidental death benefits upon the death of a covered employee. Quad Graphics purchased a group insurance policy from the defendant to fund the death benefits.
Great-West issued two group insurance policies providing for accidental death benefits and a specified death benefit. Both policies contained a clause defining employee eligibility and a clause defining the date of *749 effective coverage. The eligibility clause provided as follows:
EMPLOYEES ELIGIBILITY FOR INSURANCE
An employee whose service commences on or after January 1, 1990, is eligible: the first day of the insurance month coinciding with or next following the date on which he completes 60 days of continuous service. Employees starting between the first and tenth of the month will be counted as having started on the first of that month.
The effective date clause provided:
EFFECTIVE DATE OF AN ELIGIBLE EMPLOYEE’S INSURANCE
... It is, however, specifically provided that insurance of any employee who is not actively at work on the date his insurance would otherwise become effective shall not become effective until the date of his return to work. (Emphasis supplied.)
On February 27, 1990, Mr. Edwards went home from work at 3:30 p.m. and thereafter accidentally fell down the basement stairs of his Oeonomowoc, Wisconsin, residence. He was hospitalized in a coma and died on the evening of March 1, 1990, thus missing his February 28 and March 1 shifts.
Mrs. Edwards was the designated beneficiary of her husband and submitted claims for specified death benefits and accidental death benefits under the plan.. Great-West denied the claims on the ground that her husband was not “actively at work” on March 1, 1990, as required by the policies. Thereupon his wife filed this suit.
The district judge held that the phrase “actively at work” was satisfied because Mr. Edwards had been a Quad Graphics employee for 60 days before he died, thus supposedly satisfying the “actively at work” phrase and entitling Mrs. Edwards to recover. While sympathetic to such an interpretation, we cannot accept it. Therefore we reverse.
Our holding is in accord with the leading decision in point. Thus in
Todd v. Dow Chemical Company,
Our construction of the phrase “actively at work” accords with the ordinary understanding that the employee must be at work or be capable of performing his job on the day the insurance is to commence. Therefore, the rule of
Phillips v. Lincoln Nat Life Ins. Co.,
Other courts construing similar language are in accord with
Todd.
See,
e.g., Velez v. Crown Life Ins. Co.,
If we held to the contrary, we would be rewriting the plan and in effect setting up a new insurance contract between Quad Graphics and Great-West. That would be impermissible.
Burnham v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America,
The judgment below is reversed with directions to dismiss this action.
Notes
. Plaintiff argues that the phrase “actively at work” is ambiguous because she believes that Great-West has improperly equated “actively at work” with another phrase that appears in its contracts of insurance, "actually at work.” Reply Br. at 21. Great-West makes clear, however, that it does not equate these two phrases: “Actively at work” means, according to the defendant, that the employee was capable of working on the next regularly scheduled workday, while "actually at work” means that the employee was actually at work. See, e.g., Opening Br. at 11. Hence according to Great-West if the employee's waiting period ended on a Saturday (and therefore the employee was not actually at work when the period ended), the employee would still be covered as of that Saturday just so long as the employee was capable, on Saturday, of appearing at work .on Monday.
While we agree with plaintiff that "actively at work” is susceptible to the narrower definition (the employee is actually at work) rather than the broader one suggested by defendant, this is not the type of ambiguity that allows plaintiff to invoke the doctrine of '
contra proferentem.
"Rules of interpretation are tie-breakers ...,”
Harnischfeger Corp. v. Harbor Ins. Co.,
