In this сase, brought pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (2000), plaintiff-appellant Daniel J. Leahy alleges that defendant-appellee Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife), as the claims administrator for Raytheon Company’s long-term disability plan (the Plan), unreasonably denied his claim for benefits. The district court granted summary judgment in the defendants’ favor. 1 The plaintiff appeals. After addressing certain questions raised by the plaintiff anent the standard of review in ERISA benefit denial cases, we affirm.
I.
Background
The basic facts are uncontradicted. The Plan is an employee benefit plan funded by employee contributions and governed by ERISA. As the claims administrator, MetLife is responsible for making benefit determinations. For a participant to receive benefits, MetLife must determine that he is “fully disabled” as defined by the Plan. To meet that criterion, a claimant must show that by rеason “of a sickness or an injury which is not covered by an applicable workers’ compensation statute ... [he or she] cannot perform the essential elements and substantially all of the duties of his or her job at Raytheon even with a reasonable accommodation.”
The plaintiff began working for Ray-theon in 1969. He eventually became a departmental administrator and a Plan participant. On October 18, 1996, Ray-theon furloughed him from that essentially sedentary position. The plaintiff received a severance benefit that included six months of salary continuation.
Over the years, the plaintiff has had more than his share of serious health problems; among other things, he has undergone three hip replacements and two knee replacements. In April of 1997, he applied for benefits under the Plan, claiming that he had become fully disabled on or about October 19, 1996 (the day aftеr he was furloughed). The linchpin of his claim was an allegation that chronic hip pain prevented him from sitting for any length of time (and, therefore, prevented him from performing his job, even with a reasonable accommodation).
MetLife denied the claim on the ground that the plaintiff did not meet the Plan’s definition of “fully disabled.” In embellishing its decision, MetLife wrote that, taking into account available accommodations, the plaintiff had not establishеd an inability to perform substantially all the duties of his job.
After exhausting his administrative remedies, the plaintiff filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. He asserted that MetLife had violated ERISA when it unreasonably denied his claim. In due season, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the defendants’ motion and denied the plaintiffs counter *15 part motion. Leahy v. Raytheon Co., No. 00-CV-12093, slip op. (D.Mass. Jan. 29, 2002) (unpublished). The court noted that the Plan vested broad discretionary authority in MetLife to determine eligibility for benefits and declared that while some medical evidence supported the plaintiffs claim of disability, other evidence supported MetLife’s denial of benefits. On that scumbled record, the court ruled that MetLife’s determination was neither arbitrary nor capricious. This timely appeal followed.
II.
Standard of Review
This denial-of-benefits claim arises under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B).
2
The Supreme Court has provided the ground rules for determining the prоper standard of review. In
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
The Plan documents give MetLife “the exclusive right, in [its] sole discretion, to interpret the Plan and decide all matters arising thereunder....” The documents further provide that any decision by MetLife in the exercise of that authority “shall be conclusive and binding on all persons unless it can be shоwn that the ... determination was arbitrary and capricious.” This discretionary grant hardly could be clearer. Consequently, the arbitrary and capricious standard applies to judicial review of MetLife’s determination. 3
In an effort to blunt the force of this reasoning, the plaintiff makes two points. First, he suggests that a less deferential standard of review is appropriate in this case because the plan administrator operated under a conflict of interest. As a purely theoretical matter, this suggestion
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rests on a sound foundation. It is well settled that when a plan administrator labors under a conflict of interest, courts may cede a diminished degree of deference — or no deference at all — to the administrator’s determinations.
See, e.g., Doe v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
In the plaintiffs view, the ostensible conflict involves MetLife’s hiring of outside physicians to scrutinize the plaintiffs medical records. To affect the standard of review, however, a conflict of interest must be real. A chimerical, imagined, or conjectural conflict will not strip the fiduciary’s determination of the deference that otherwise would be due.
See Doyle,
Analyzing disability claims plainly requires expertise. It is, therefore, difficult to fault a plan administrator for seeking expert assistance (indeed, it probably would be easier to fault a plan administrator for not seeking such assistance). We are aware of no case holding that a plan administrator operates under a conflict of interest simply by securing independent medical advice to aid in the evaluation process. 4 Nor do we view this as an accident: common sense dictates that retaining outside physicians to assist in evaluating disability claims, without more, does not constitute a conflict of interest. Here, there is no “more” (and, thus, there is no conflict).
This conclusion is reinforced by the nature of the Plan. The Plan is a voluntary employee-funded entity, and market forces are at work. If MetLife denies claims that Plan participants as a group view as valid, those employees will be inclined to withdraw from the Plan, thus reducing Met-Life’s role (and, presumably, its compensation). By the same token, if MetLife awards benefits that are viewed as undeserved, Plan participants will experience an increase in their premiums and thus be inclined to withdraw from the Plan (again reducing MetLife’s role and remuneration). Either way, the structure of the Plan furnishes an incentive for MetLife to be unbiased in its handling of claims. This is telling, for courts should not lightly presume that a plan administrator is willing to cut off its nose to spite its face.
The plaintiff’s second ground for questioning the standard of review is more artful. He points to the usual rule that appellate review of an order granting summary judgment is de novo.
E.g., Plumley v. S. Container, Inc.,
To be sure, there is an obvious discongruence between the two standards. The arbitrary and capricious standard asks only whether a factfinder’s decision is plausible in light of the record as a whole,
see, e.g., Pari-Fasano v. ITT Hartford Life & Accid. Ins. Co.,
There are signs that, in ERISA cases, courts have found this dichotomy baffling. Some have glossed over it, giving lip service to the summary judgment standard but then proceeding to examine the evidence under the arbitrary and capricious standard.
See, e.g., Terry,
The degree of deference owed to a plan fiduciary is an underlying legal issue that remains the same through all stages of federal adjudication.
See Firestone,
The fortuity that the parties chose to use cross-motions for summary judgment as the procedural vehicle to bring the case forward for judicial review of the plan administrator’s determination cannot be permitted either to dilute the teachings of
Firestone
or to undercut the standard of review that the
Firestone
Court decreed for use in ERISA benefit denial cases.
Cf. S. Shore Hosp., Inc. v. Thompson,
III.
Analysis
We turn now to the merits of the denial of benefits. The Plan’s definition of “fully disabled” controls. That definition, quoted above, is clear and unambiguous. As in many such instancеs, however, the devil is in the details.
The basis for MetLife’s determination is summarized in a letter to the plaintiff dated March 16, 1998. That letter reveals that MetLife premised the denial of benefits on several sources of information, including statements and reports from the plaintiffs treating physicians, findings gleaned from an independent medical examination, the outcome of a functional capacity assessment, the conclusions of two retained рhysicians who reviewed the plaintiffs medical records at MetLife’s behest, the timing of the plaintiffs claim, and the Social Security Administration’s determination that the plaintiff was not disabled.
The medical evidence is extensive, and it would serve no useful purpose to rehearse it here. Disability, like beauty, is sometimes in the eye of the beholder. This is such a case: we have scrutinized the record with care and conclude, without serious question, that it is capable of supporting competing inferences as to the ex-
*19
tent of the plaintiffs ability to work. That clash does not suffice to satisfy the plaintiffs burden. We have held before, and today reaffirm, that the mere existence of contradictory evidence does not render a plan fiduciary’s determination arbitrary and capricious.
Vlass,
Here, the relevant definition of “full disability” harks back to the еmployee’s job description. It is undisputed that the plaintiffs white-collar job did not entail operose physical tasks, but, rather, was essentially sedentary. 7 The plaintiff had been functioning in this position prior to the layoff. MetLife’s view that he remained able to perform this job is anchored in independent medical record reviews conducted by Dr. Robert Petrie and Dr. Mark Moyer, respectively. Each reviewer found insufficient evidence to sustain а conclusion that the plaintiff was fully disabled.
The outside reviewers’ shared conclusion was buttressed by other medical evidence. Dr. Frank F. Davidson, Jr., a treating physician, declined just months before the asserted date of disability to say that the plaintiff was disabled. He classified the plaintiff S impairment as a “[mjoderate limitation of functional capacity” and declared him capable of performing sedentary activity that involved a mixture of sitting, standing, and walking. The limitations that Dr. Davidson placed on those activities fell well within the parameters of the plaintiffs job description.
By like token, Dr. John L. Doherty, an independent medical examiner selected by the plaintiff, stated in December of 1997 that the plaintiff could do sedentary work if accommodated. Dr. Doherty described an appropriate accommodation as one that allowed the plaintiff to readjust himself as needed and to move about from time to time. The plaintiffs position as a departmental administrator permitted this accommodation, and Raytheon was willing to allow it.
Finally, the record is replete with other telltales on which. MetLife was entitled to rely. We mention three of them. First, the results of a functional capacity assessment tended to show not only that the plaintiff had the physical ability to do the work but also that he appeared to be overstating his limitations. Sеcond, the timing of the plaintiffs claim was highly suspicious. The plaintiff had been working up until the time that Raytheon laid him off; he did not file a disability claim until almost six months thereafter (when his salary continuation benefits were about to expire); and he asserted, coincidentally, that the onset date of his disability was the day after he was furloughed. Last — but far from least — the record reflects that the plaintiff had applied unsuccessfully for social security disability benefits. Thе rejection of his claim by the Social Security Administration, while not dispositive of his effort to secure disability benefits under
*20
the Plan, is some evidence that he was not fully disabled.
Pari-Fasano,
The plaintiff also argues that the plan administrator gave insufficient weight to the views of his treating physicians, especially his principal orthopedist, Dr. William H. Harris. He suggests that Met-Life should have assiduously adhered to the so-called “treating physician” rule, and that its failure to do so was arbitrary and capricious.
The treating physician rule originated in the social security setting and has been formalized by regulation in that context.
See
20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1527(d)(2), 416.927(d)(2). The rule requires that the factfinder (there, the administrative law judge) weigh more heavily the opinions of the claimant’s treating physicians in determining his or her eligibility for benefits. The rationale for the rule is said to be that treating physicians have the best opportunity “to know and observe the patient as an individual.”
Morgan v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec. Admin.,
The calculus of decision in social security сases differs significantly from that employed in ERISA cases. In the former instance, Congress and the Secretary of Health and Human Services have established a specific framework for determining disability.
See Shaw v. Chater,
Several other courts of appeals, when faced with the question of whether the treating physician rule should be extended to ERISA cases, have expressed grave doubt.
See, e.g., Turner v. Delta Family-Care Disab. & Survivorship Plan,
This court has not yet taken a definitive position as to the applicability vel non of the treating physician rule in ERISA cases, 8 and we see no need to do so today. Even if wе assume, for argument’s sake, that the opinions of the plaintiffs treating physicians should be accorded special weight, the plaintiff cannot prevail in this case. While some of his doctors (Dr. Harris, for example) stated that he was fully disabled, others (Dr. Davidson, for exam- *21 pie) took a different view. Moreover, even Dr. Harris wavered. Although he originally expressed an opinion that the plaintiff was fully disabled, he agreed, in a subsequent conversatiоn with Dr. Moyer, that it was possible for the plaintiff to return to work so long as he could move about from time to time. Given the contours of the plaintiffs job, this freedom easily could have been arranged — and Raytheon was willing to make the accommodation (in point of fact, the record contains evidence that the plaintiff already had received permission to move about freely).
We add, finally, that even where the treating physiciаn rule holds sway, it is not an absolute. When other evidence sufficiently contradicts the view of a treating physician, that view appropriately may be rejected.
See Regula,
The short of it, then, is that the plan administrator’s determination, though not inevitable, was solidly grounded. Whether or not the treating physician rule applies in ERISA cases — a question that we expressly reserve — the denial of benefits here passes muster.
IV.
Conclusion
We need go no further. Given the contents of the record, MetLife’s finding of no full disability cannot be labeled unreasonable, unsupported, or contrary to the clear weight of the medical evidence. The ensuing denial of benefits was, therefore, neither arbitrary nor capricious.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The named defendants, appellees here, include MetLife, Raytheon, the Plan (formally known as the Raytheon Employees Disability Trust), and the Plan's trustees. For ease in reference, we treat the case as if MetLife were the sole defendant.
. The statute provides in pertinent part:
A civil action may be brought — •
(1) by a participant or beneficiary—
(B) to recover benefits due to him under the terms of his plan, to enforce his rights under the terms of the plan, or to clarify his rights to future benefits under the terms of the plan;....
29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B).
. We note that, in this context, the terms "arbitrary and capricious” and "abuse of discretion” have bеen used interchangeably. Although at least one commentator has lamented this usage,
see
Kathryn J. Kennedy,
Judicial Standard of Review in ERISA Benefit Claim Cases,
50 Am. U.L. Rev. 1083, 1130 (2001) (positing that abuse of discretion signifies a less deferential standard), the
Firestone
Court did not distinguish between the terms.
Compare Firestone,
. In point of fact, extrapolating from the available case law suggests the opposite conclusion.
See, e.g., Sweatman v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.,
. This approach is not altered by the incidence of cross-motions for summary judgment. "The happenstance that both parties move simultaneously for brevis disposition does not, in and of itself, relax the taut line of inquiry that Rule 56 imposes.”
Blackie v. Maine,
. We do not foreclose the possibility that, in special circumstances, a district court might take evidence in an ERISA case.
Cf. Vlass,
. The record indicates that the job required the plaintiff mainly to sit. It invоlved standing less than 20% of the time and walking less than 20% of the time.
. We note, however, that our decisions reflect at least a tacit reluctance to apply the treating physician rule in the ERISA context.
See, e.g., Vlass,
