Dr. Antoine Khoury sought and obtained residual disability benefits from ReliaStar Life Insurance Company (ReliaStar), his employer’s long-term disability provider. After ReliaStar approved Dr. Khoury’s claim, the parties began to dispute the amount of benefits to which Dr. Khoury was entitled. Dr. Khoury exhausted his administrative remedies and filed an action in the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota claiming ReliaStar’s actions violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1001,et seq. The district court 2 granted ReliaStar’s motion for summary judgment, and Dr. Khoury appeals. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Dr. Khoury, a cardiologist employed by Group Health Plan, Inc. (Group Health), 3 was injured at work and suffered a partial disability. Group Health submitted a claim to ReliaStar, its long-term disability insurer. ReliaStar approved the claim and agreed to pay Dr. Khoury benefits.
Dr. Khoury’s compensation agreement was set forth in his employment contract with Group Health. Under the terms of the contract, Dr. Khoury received “Base Department Compensation” in an amount of $500,000 per year. In order to receive this amount of base compensation, Dr. Khoury was required to participate fully in the “Equal Call Schedule.” Doctors participating in the “Equal Call Schedule” were expected to be on-call one weekend every six weeks and two weekdays per month. Doctors who were on-call additional days, beyond those set forth in the “Equal Call Schedule,” would be paid $2,500 per day. The amount of money Dr. Khoury actually earned from being on-call on days beyond those required under the “Equal Call Schedule” varied from year to year. In 2008, Dr. Khoury’s additional pay was $92,500. In 2004, Dr. Khoury earned an additional $77,500.
After ReliaStar approved Dr. Khoury’s request for benefits, Dr. Khoury questioned how ReliaStar determined the amount of benefits to be paid. Dr. Khoury asserted he was required to work additional days on-call, and as a result, ReliaStar should use his total annual income of $580,000 as a starting point to calculate his “basic monthly earnings.” To support Dr. Khoury’s position, Group Health sent ReliaStar a seven-page facsimile, consisting of one cover page; one page of copied emails from Group Health’s manager of physician services and the manager responsible for the physician’s pay program (first email or missing email); and five pages of Dr. Khoury’s employment contract.
ReliaStar responded by explaining Dr. Khoury’s basic monthly earnings did not include the additional amounts he earned for being on-call, but instead, Dr. Khoury’s basic monthly earnings would be determined by using his “Base Department Compensation,” which was $500,000 per year. ReliaStar also informed Dr. Khoury that he had the right to appeal its decision.
Dr. Khoury appealed ReliaStar’s decision, claiming “his base salary [was] $580,000,” and attaching an email from Group Health in support of his position (second email). A Regions Hospital vice president stated in the second email that Dr. Khoury’s “base pay plus call[,] both of which were required by the [cardiology] department,” should be used in calculating his disability benefits.
ReliaStar’s appeals committee considered the appeal and requested Dr. Khoury’s entire employment contract. After the appeals committee obtained and reviewed Dr. Khoury’s entire employment contract, it denied the appeal, stating:
Although Dr. Khoury may have been required to perform [additional] [c]all shifts due to staffing issues, he receivedextra pay for the additional [on-c]all shifts worked over and above his $500,000 base pay. Extra pay received for extra time worked is generally considered “overtime” and is certainly considered “overtime” by the insurance industry. It doesn’t matter whether this additional [on-c]all time was required by Dr. Khoury’s employer as the fact remains that he received extra pay over and above his base salary for the extra hours worked which is consistent with the industry definition of overtime.
“Based on a thorough review of Dr. Khoury’s entire claim file, and taking into consideration the policy language,” the committee “uph[e]ld the claim department’s determination that Dr. Khoury’s” basic monthly earnings should be calculated using Dr. Khoury’s $500,000 annual base pay. The committee notified Dr. Khoury of his right to file a suit under ERISA.
Dr. Khoury filed suit in Minnesota state court, alleging, as relevant here, ReliaStar denied Dr. Khoury disability benefits in breach of a fiduciary duty. ReliaStar removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota, and moved for summary judgment. Dr. Khoury opposed the motion for summary judgment, arguing ReliaStar had a conflict of interest, and the ReliaStar employee who made the initial determination to use the $500,000 figure, instead of $580,000, to calculate Dr. Khoury’s benefits, engaged in malfeasance by excluding the first email in support of Dr. Khoury’s position from the administrative record.
The district court first considered “whether Relia[S]tar reasonably concluded that money earned for additional-call time should be omitted from [Dr.] Khoury’s ‘Basic Monthly Earnings.’ ” The district court found ReliaStar’s interpretation of the language in the insurance policy and the employment contract was reasonable. The district court then considered Dr. Khoury’s claims, and found, although Dr. Khoury cited cases discussing the conflict-of-interest issue in ERISA cases, Dr. Khoury failed to explain how any conflict applies in this case. The district court recognized the matter of the missing email, and noted there was “no evidence in the record indicating that the ‘disappearance’ of this e-mail was anything other than a clerical error.” The district court found Dr. Khoury’s argument was largely irrelevant because “Relia[S]tar’s initial claim decision ... is not at issue here. Rather, the decision before this Court is Relia[S]tar’s denial of [Dr.] Khoury’s appeal, ie., Relia[S]tar’s final decision.” The district court then held, “even if [Dr. Khoury] were correct that the e-mail went ‘missing1 for nefarious reasons, the Court’s analysis would not change,” and granted ReliaStar’s motion for summary judgment. 4
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standards of Review
“We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.”
Duffy v. McPhillips,
When an ERISA plan grants the administrator “discretionary authority to determine eligibility for benefits or to construe the terms of the plan,” courts review the administrator’s benefit decisions for an abuse of that discretion.
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
B. District Court’s Inferences and Findings of Fact
Dr. Khoury argues the district court, in considering ReliaStar’s motion for summary judgment, made inferences and findings of fact in the light most favorable to ReliaStar, contrary to the required standard of review. In particular, Dr. Khoury claims the district court made findings of fact against him regarding what happened to the missing email. Dr.
Next, Dr. Khoury attacks the district court’s finding that the missing email was irrelevant because the appeals committee was in possession of a second email which provided substantially the same information as the first email. Dr. Khoury alleges the author of the second email was “not directly in the pay chain for Dr. Khoury,” and the explanations of the emails were not the same. Although Dr. Khoury asserts the author of the second email was not “directly in the pay chain,” he has not presented any argument as to why the appeals committee would have given greater weight to someone in Dr. Khoury’s pay chain than to the person he refers to as the “Vice President of Operations at Regions Hospital.” We decline to accept Dr. Khoury’s invitation to find a material issue of fact where there is none.
See Anderson,
C. Conflict of Interest
It is undisputed by the parties that “ReliaStar ... has final discretionary authority to determine all questions of eligibility and status and to interpret and construe the terms of [the policy] of insurance.” We therefore review the administrator’s eligibility determination for an abuse of discretion.
See Glenn,
554 U.S. at-,
In
Glenn,
the Supreme Court clarified that the existence of a conflict of interest is “one factor among many that a reviewing judge must take into account” when determining whether a plan administrator has abused its discretion in denying benefits.
Id.
at 2351. The Court acknowledged the existence of a conflict should be weighed more heavily “where circumstances suggest a higher likelihood that it affected the benefits decision, including, but not limited to, cases where an insurance company administrator has a history
Aside from the history of the claim at issue here, the record contains no evidence of ReliaStar’s claims administration history or its efforts “to reduce potential bias and to promote accuracy.” Id. Thus, the district court was required to give the conflict some weight, but the existence of the conflict alone is not determinative. Cf. id. at 2351-52. As recognized by the district court, Dr. Khoury was unable to state how the existence of a conflict of interest impacted the claims decision. The district court observed, even if the initial claims processor had maliciously destroyed the missing email, the appeals committee was in possession of a second email containing substantially the same information. Even if each of Dr. Khoury’s allegations are true, neither the existence of the conflict alone, nor the intentional destruction of the email, on this record, impacted the ultimate determination of the appeals committee. Cf. id. at 2351-52. We conclude the district court properly considered the existence of the conflict of interest.
D. Reasonableness of ReliaStar’s Decision
Lastly, Dr. Khoury argues the district court erred in finding ReliaStar’s interpretation of the relevant contract provisions was reasonable because there was no evidence the additional call pay was overtime. “Under the abuse of discretion standard, this court must defer to [ReliaStar’s] interpretation of the plan so long as it is ‘reasonable,’ even if the court would interpret the language differently as an original matter.”
Darvell v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am.,
The district court considered each of the Finley factors, and found they supported ReliaStar’s decision. Dr. Khoury argued, both before the district court and on appeal, that ReliaStar improperly interpreted the term “overtime,” which was left undefined in the policy. ReliaStar’s appeals committee found:
Although Dr. Khoury may have been required to perform [additional on-call] shifts due to staffing issues, he received extra pay for the additional [on-call] shifts worked over and above his $500,000 base pay. Extra pay received for extra time worked is generally considered “overtime” and is certainly considered “overtime” by the insurance industry.
The appeals committee determined the additional call pay was overtime, and as such, could not be included in the calculation of Dr. Khoury’s “Basic Monthly Earnings” for purposes of his benefits calculation. Dr. Khoury contends his additional on-call time is not overtime.
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Richard H. Kyle, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. Khoury stipulated in the district court to the dismissal of Group Health from this case.
. Courts have struggled with the use of summary judgment to dispose of ERISA cases.
Cf. Wilkins v. Baptist Healthcare Sys., Inc.,
. Although the first email contained more information, Dr. Khoury’s counsel at oral argument acknowledged the two emails set forth the same position. The first email described some uncertainty, stating, "We have batted around the questions of 'additional call’ pay for quite some time.” A telephone call to ReliaStar also conveyed Group Health’s position, but the record does not reflect the content of the call.
