I. Background
Claiming debilitating depression, appellant Marcia Williams applied for benefits under her employer's (BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc.'s) disability plan. Unconvinced that her impairments completely prevented her from working, Kemper Risk Management Services, Inc. (Kemper)-the company BellSouth hired to administer claims 1 -denied the claim because she did not meet the plan's disability definition. 2
Invoking Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) jurisdiction, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001, et seq., Williams challenged that decision in district court. Applying the arbitrary and capricious review standard, the district court found that available medical evidence supported Kem-per’s non-disability determination, so it granted BellSouth summary judgment. Williams appeals, contending that: (1) the district court applied the wrong standard of review and (2) even under the arbitrary and capricious standard, the denial of benefits was improper.
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review on Appeal
We review the district court’s ruling
de novo,
applying the same legal standards that governed the district court’s disposition.
Carter v. Galloway,
B. ERISA Review Standard
ERISA provides no standard for reviewing decisions of plan administrators or fiduciaries.
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
Williams contends that, because Bell-South both funded and administered the disability benefits plan, 4 a conflict of interest existed, so the district court erred by not reviewing the denial of benefits using the “heightened” arbitrary and capricious standard.
We note that in most cases where .a company .both administers and funds a plan, a conflict of interest arises, thus triggering heightened arbitrary and capricious review.
See Brown v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama, Inc.,
But here BellSouth — though it retained the role of
“plan
administrator” — employed Kemper as its
“claim
administrator.” Kemper processed and decided claims that BellSouth would pay out.
See Smathers v. Multi-Tool, Inc.,
delegated to Kemper ... the duty to administer all claims for plan benefits for [BellSouth] plan participants. Kem-per is the named fiduciary under the plan with complete authority to review all denied claims for benefits in exercising such fiduciary responsibilities....
By doing this, BellSouth contends, it eliminated the conflict of interest (and thus the need for the heightened arbitrary and capricious review) because Kemper, a disinterested party, decided what claims Bell-South would pay.
The question for us, then, is whether a plan administrator (BellSouth) can avoid the heightened arbitrary and capricious standard applicable to conflict of interest cases by delegating its claim processing duties- to a third party (Kemper).
To answer that we turn to
Buce v. Allianz Life Ins. Co.,
Buce illuminates the dividing line between conflicted plans (where the administrator retains the ability to ultimately control whether to pay out on a claim) and non-conflicted plans (where the adminis *1136 trator does not). Williams argues that BellSouth retained such control because Kemper was actually BellSouth’s common law agent, as opposed to an independently acting contractor. But we need not venture down that state-law path because the “Buce rule” (if the plan-payout funding source retains ultimate control over the pay-out decision, the “heightened” review standard applies) adequately covers all the relevant bases here.
Turning to the BellSouth/Kemper contract, we note that it plainly spells out the scope of Kemper’s independence and discretion and, more importantly, the extent of BellSouth’s retained control. In the “Extent of Kemper’s Authority” section, two provisions explain Kemper’s and BellSouth’s relative authorities under the contract. One provision states that “Kem-per shall adjudicate all Plan claims and appeals in accordance with written claim review procedures provided by [Bell-South].”
Williams argues that this gives Bell-South control over how Kemper disposes of claims, and thus it is no different than BellSouth processing the claims itself since Kemper is using the same guidelines and procedures that BellSouth employed before delegating its claims duties to Kem-per. But there is a difference between giving general instructions applicable to the adjudication of all claims and having actual control over the disposition of specific claims. Buce requires application of the heightened arbitrary and capricious standard only with the latter.
Plus, it is difficult to imagine a situation in which a principal employing another to do a job would give no instructions at all. BellSouth’s “claim review procedure” is no more than general instructions for Kemper to apply in adjudicating all claims. It did not give BellSouth the ability to directly affect the disposition of specific claims. Thus, the general instructions by themselves do not place the BellSouth-Kemper arrangement over Buce’s dividing line.
But the BellSouth-Kemper contract also provides that, “[w]here specific instructions as to a particular matter have been given [by BellSouth], Kemper is charged with strict compliance with such instructions, no matter how broad its general powers may otherwise have been.” This provision, plainly construed, grants Bell-South the power to give Kemper specific instructions as to specific claims, which Kemper then must unquestioningly follow.
Furthermore, nothing appears to limit BellSouth’s ability to give any instruction it wants, including the instruction to grant or deny a claim. 5 This means that Bell-South has the same ability as the administrator in Buce to control any aspect of the disposition of claims it chooses.
Yet, there is a notable distinction. While the administrator in Buce expressly claimed the power to dispose of specific claims for itself, BellSouth has only expressly claimed the right to tell Kemper how to dispose of claims. Technically, then, BellSouth escapes Buce’s reasoning, since it does not have the ability to deny claims itself.
Still, that technical distinction does not change the ultimate truth-BellSouth nevertheless holds the ultimate power to do with claims as it wants; it just has to tell Kemper when to do it. As such, the con
*1137
flict between BellSouth’s fiduciary and profit-making interest, which triggers the heightened standard of review, remains.
See Buce,
This does not mean that, to avoid the heightened standard, there must be no contact at all. Some contact and interaction, the district court correctly noted, “is incidental to the contractual relationship” and thus a “certain amount of contact between the plan administrator ... and the claims administrator ... is necessary and appropriate.” But where the plan administrator’s abdication of its claims processing duty is only superficial (ie., it retains the ultimate power to affect the disposition of specific claims), the heightened arbitrary and capricious standard of review should still apply.
It follows that the district court should have applied the heightened, rather than the “regular” arbitrary and capricious standard.
C. Application
That the district court applied the wrong standard, however, does not necessarily entitle Williams to relief. She must still show that such error prejudiced her,
see
F.R.Civ.P. 61, and thus would have prevailed under heightened arbitrary and capricious standard. This she failed to do. We addressed essentially this same situation in
Levinson,
As was the case here, the Levinson employer (Rebanee) both funded and administered its disabibty plan, thus creating a conflict of interest between its fiduciary and profit-making interest. Id. at 1326. Accordingly, we found the heightened arbitrary and capricious review standard to apply. Id.
But the distinctions between the heightened arbitrary and capricious, arbitrary and capricious, and de novo standards of review have become difficult to discern over time. Given the semantic imprecision that has seeped into this area, we first pause to clarify these concepts before attempting to apply them.
De novo review, which we employ in reviewing “no-discretion” plan decisions, offers the highest scrutiny (and thus the least judicial deference) to the administrator’s decision. In fact, we accord no deference there, since, no judgment/discretion was exercised in making the determination (ie., there is no discretion to which we would defer).
In contrast, where the administrator has discretion
(ie.,
applies his own judgment) in making plan decisions, we review under the arbitrary and capricious standard (which is substantively the same as the “abuse of discretion” standard,
Shaw,
Finally, where the administrator has discretion but exercises it under a conflict of interest, we apply “heightened arbitrary and capricious” review. There we apply a level of deference (and conversely, scrutiny) somewhere between what is applied under the de novo and “regular” arbitrary and capricious standards.
In
HCA
we incorporated these varying levels of judicial review in a multi-step approach. For clarity, we recapitulate that approach (
*1138 (1) Apply the de novo standard to determine whether the claim administrator’s benefits-denial decision is “wrong” (ie., the court disagrees with the administrator’s decision); 7 if it is not, then end the inquiry and affirm the decision.
(2) If the administrator’s decision in fact is “de novo wrong,” 8 then determine whether he was vested with discretion in reviewing claims; if not, end judicial inquiry and reverse the decision.
(3) If the administrator’s decision is “de novo wrong” and he was vested with discretion in reviewing claims, then determine whether “reasonable” grounds 9 supported it (hence, review his decision under the more deferential arbitrary and capricious standard).
(4) If no reasonable grounds exist, then end the inquiry and reverse the administrator’s decision; if reasonable grounds do exist, then determine if he operated under a conflict of interest.
(5) If there is no conflict, then end the inquiry and affirm the decision.
(6) If there is a conflict of interest, then apply heightened arbitrary and capricious review to the decision to affirm or deny it.
We described “heightened arbitrary and capricious review”
swpra
as somewhere between the
de novo
and “mere” arbitrary and capricious standards. But where is that “somewhere”? Supreme Court decisions have not explained it.
See Pinto v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co.,
Our circuit, at least in plan interpretation cases (unlike this, a factual determination case), has incorporated a two step, burden-shifting, approach:
(1) The claimant shows that the administrator of a discretion-vesting plan is conflicted.
(2) The administrator then proves that his plan interpretation was not tainted by self-interest.
See Brown,
A wrong but apparently reasonable interpretation is arbitrary and capricious if it advances the conflicting interest of the administrator at the expense of the claimant. Id. at 1566-67. But, if the administrator can demonstrate a routine practice or give other plausible justifications — such as benefitting the interests of other beneficiaries — judicial deference to it may be granted, since “[e]ven a conflicted [administrator] should receive deference when [he] demonstrates that [he] is exercising discretion among choices which reasonably may be considered to be in the interests of the participants and beneficiaries.” Id. at 1568.
In both
Shaw
and
Levinson,
two factual-determination cases, we did not say wheth
*1139
er Brown’s “heightened arbitrary and capricious,” burden-shifting approach should be applied to factual determination cases like this. In
Levinson,
we mentioned the “heightened” standard because a conflict existed there,
We also had no occasion to so conclude in Shaw. As we will now show, we find the same to be the case here (hence, we leave the issue to another day, but proffer the above framework to assist future determinations). 10
Turning back to the instant case, we note that Kemper reviewed the medical records of several doctors, including Williams’s own doctor, Dr. Michael Holt, in making its benefits-denial decision. None indicated that Williams was completely incapable of working.
Kemper also had Williams examined by an independent medical examiner (IME), Dr. Charles Whestall. She indicated to Whestall that she was engaging normally in the significant activities of daily living, including caring for two young children and a granddaughter, cooking all meals, performing housework, tending to finances, and attending religious services. And instead of claiming that she could not work at all, she said that she would like to change to a less stressful job. Whestall concluded from her testing that her stress was “not overwhelming her capacity for coping.”
Accordingly, we cannot say that Kem-per’s no-disability determination was de novo wrong under the terms of BellSouth’s disability plan. Unlike the plan administrator in Levinson, Kemper thoroughly gathered and reviewed medical evidence concerning Williams’s condition, including that of an IME.
Also, there was more than sufficient medical evidence to contradict Williams’s claim that she was unable to perform “any kind of work” as required for disability benefits under the BellSouth Plan. Because no grounds exist to disturb Kem-per’s determination under the de novo review standard, we need not review it under the more deferential (“mere” or “heightened” arbitrary and capricious) standard, much less reach the parties’ remaining arguments.
III. Conclusion
Although the district court erred in applying the wrong standard, it reached the right result, so we
AFFIRM
its judgment.
See Watkins v. Bowden,
Notes
. Kemper is a company independent of Bell-South. Prior to its contract for Kemper’s services, BellSouth processed its own claims.
. BellSouth's plan defines "Disability” as "a medical condition which makes a Participant unable to perform any type of work as a result of physical or mental illness or an accidental injury.”
.
Firestone
actually addressed the standard for judicial review of an administrator's plan interpretations (i.e., its interpretation of what plan provisions mean), whereas here we are dealing with a plan administrator's factual determinations
(i.e.,
that Williams was in fact not disabled under the plan because she was not completely unable to work). Courts, however, read
Firestone
broadly, applying its three levels of review to both plan interpretations and factual determinations.
Shaw,
. BellSouth's disability plan is not a trust or otherwise self funded. Rather, any benefits are paid directly out of BellSouth’s operating expenses. It is therefore, not in BellSouth's financial interest to approve disability benefit claims.
. Williams points out that in the past, Bell-South has exercised this power by giving Kemper the specific instruction to deny a claim. BellSouth disputes that fact, claiming that it only did so upon court order. We need not resolve this issue because BellSouth, under the contract itself, in fact retained the ability to control all aspects of claims dispositions.
. We thus mean both benefits denials based on plan interpretations as well on factual determinations, since many, if not most determinations will involve "issues of both plan inter
*1138
pretation
and
fact,”
Shaw,
. See HCA, 240 F.3d at 993 n. 23.
. We have also used the phrase " ‘wrong’ from the perspective of
de novo
review,”
Brown,
.See HCA,
. Much discussion on the subject is found in
Thomas v. SmithKline Beecham Corp.,
