This сase was taken en banc to clarify the law in our circuit regarding state law preemption by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (1988). In this appeal, we must decide whether state law claims asserted against an independent insurance agent and his agency for fraudulent inducement to purchase and negligence in processing an application for an ERISA-governed insurance plan sufficiently relate to an employee benefit plan within the meaning of section 514(a) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a), so as to be preempted. Because we find that the state law claims in this case do not sufficiеntly relate to the employee benefit plan to be preempted by ERISA, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the insurance agent and his agency.
I. FACTS
Plaintiff-appellant, Margery Morstein, is the president, director, and sole shareholder of Graphic Promotions, Inc. (“Graphic”). At all times relevant to this appeal, Morstein was one of two employees of Graphic. In 1991, Morstein met with Scott Hankins, an insurance broker and employee of the Shaw Agency, for the purpose of obtaining a replacement policy of major medical insurance for herself and Graphic’s other employee. The policy was to be administered by National Insurance Services, Inc. (“National”) and underwritten by Pan-American Life Insurance Company (“Pan-American”). 1 Morstein alleges that, during her meeting with Han-kins, she advised him that any policy of major medical insurance that would replace *717 her current policy would be unacceptable if it excluded from coverage medical treatment related to any preexisting medical condition. Morstein asserts that Hankins assured her that the policy that he proposed would provide the same coverage for preexisting conditions as hеr current policy. The policy offered by Hankins was issued to Graphic, and Graphic paid the initial premium.
Over one year after the policy was issued, Morstein underwent total hip replacement surgery. When she submitted a claim for payment for this procedure, National refused payment because it asserted that Morstein’s surgery treated a preexisting condition, which she failed to disclose during the application process. National then rescinded the policy and refunded to Graphic the premium payments that were made on behalf of Morstein. Morstein claims that Hankins and the Shaw Agency frаudulently induced her to purchase a policy of major medical insurance and, therefore, that she allowed a separate full-coverage insurance policy to lapse. She further alleges that Hankins and the Shaw Agency were negligent in processing her application for insurance and that she has state law claims against them for negligence and fraud. 2
Morstein filed an action in state court and alleged negligence, malfeasance, misrepresentations, and breach of contract. Defendants removed the action to federal court on the basis that Morstein’s clаims were governed by ERISA. The district court denied Morstein’s motion to remand and found that defendants were entitled to summary judgment as to the state law claims against them. The district court concluded that Morstein’s claims “clearly relate to the employee benefit plan established by Graphic Promotions; therefore, those claims are preempted by ERISA.” R2-29-3. Morstein appealed the district court’s grant of summary judgment, and the original appellate panel in this case reluctantly affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment and held that it was bound by our decision in
Farlow v. Union Cent. Life Ins. Co.,
The original panel found the facts in this case to be duplicative of the facts in
Farlow
3
Id.
at 1137. The panel, therefore, was bound to adhere to the holding of
Farlow
that ERISA preempted a designated beneficiary’s state law misrepresentation and negligence claims against an insurance company and its agent.
4
Following our decision in
Farlow,
several district courts in our circuit were faced with similar state law claims and attempted to distinguish their cases from
Farlow. See Wiesenberg v. Paul Revere Life Ins. Co.,
Our decisions in the ERISA preemption area have been neither consistent nor clear. Since Farlow was decided, the Supreme Court and several other circuit courts have issued opinions that clarify the рurpose and intent of the ERISA state law preemption doctrine. Furthermore, the conflict among the district courts in our circuit demands that we revisit this issue and attempt to provide some clear guidance in the morass of ERISA preemption law. We find it helpful, therefore, to trace the development of the preemption doctrine before applying the words of the statute to this case.
II. ANALYSIS
Morstein alleges that the district court erred in applying the preemption doctrine under ERISA to bar her state law claims and thus erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Hankins and the Shaw Agency. We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo. Forbus v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
A ERISA Legislative History
The Supreme Court has described the overall intent of ERISA as follows: “ERISA is a comprehensive statute designed to promote the interests of employees and their beneficiaries in employee benefit plans.”
Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
The Supreme Court in
Shaw
relied heavily on the statements of Representative Dent and Senators Williams and Javits in support of its conclusion that the intent of Congress was to preempt broadly.
Shaw,
463 U.S. at
*719
99-100,
B. Supreme Court Case Law
Because the legislative history is sparse, it has fallen to the courts to interpret the phrase “relate to” ánd give it meaning in the context of the facts that arise in each particular case.
7
The Supreme Court noted as early as 1981 that defining boundaries of the preemption doctrine would not be an easy task.
Alessi v. Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc.,
The Court next addressed the preemption issue in
Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
A law “relates to” an employee benefit plan, in the normal sense of the phrase, if it has a connection with or reference to such a plan. Employing this definition, the Human Rights Law, which prohibits employers from structuring their employee benefit plans in a manner that discriminates on the basis of pregnancy, and the Disability Benefits Law, which requires employers to pay employees specific benefits, clearly “relate to” benefit plans. We must give effect to this plain language unless there is good reason to believe Congress intended the language to have some more restrictive meaning.
In fact, however, Congress used the words “relate to” in § 514(a) in their broad sense. To interpret § 514(a) to preempt only state laws specifically designed to affect employee benefit plans would be to ignore the remainder of § 514. It would have been unnecessary to exempt generally applicable state criminal statutes from preemption in § 514(b), for example, if § 514(a) applied only to state laws dealing specifically with ERISA plans.
Id.
at 96-98,
Some state actions may affect employee benefit plans in too tenuous, remote, or peripheral a manner to warrant a finding that the law “relates to” the plan.... The present litigation plainly does not present a borderline question, and we express no views about where it would be appropriate to draw the line.
Id.
at 100 n. 21,
The Supreme Court first addressеd the issue of whether ERISA preempts state common law tort and contract claims in
Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux,
In
Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. McClendon,
[I]n order to prevail, a plaintiff must plead, and the court must find, that an ERISA plan exists and the employer has a pension-defeating motive in terminating the employment. Because the court’s inquiry must be directed to the plan, this judicially created cause of action “relate[s] to” an ERISA plan.
Id.
at 140,
In 1995, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in
New York Conference of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
— U.S. -,
The Supreme Court rejected the conclusions of the Second Circuit and essentially turned the tide on the expansion of the preemption doctrine:
The governing text of ERISA is clearly expansive.... If “relate to” were taken to extend to the furthest stretch of its indeterminacy, then for all practical purposes pre-emption would never run its course, for “[r]eally, universally, relations stop nowhere,” H. James, Roderick Hudson xli (New York ed., World’s Classics 1980). But that, of course, would be to read Congress’s words of limitation as a mere sham, and to read the presumption against preemption out of the law whenever Congress speaks to the matter with generality. That said, we have to recognize that our prior attempt to construе the phrase “relate to” does not give us much help drawing the line here.
Id.
at-,
But this still leaves us to question whether the surcharge laws have a “connection with” the ERISA plans, and here an uncritical literalism is no more help than in trying to construe “relate to.” For the same reasons that infinite relations cannot be the measure of pre-emption, neither can infinite connections. We simply must go beyond the unhelpful text and the frustrating difficulty of defining its key term, and look instead to the objectives of the ERISA statute as a guide to the scope of the state law that Congress understood would survive.
Id.
at -,
While Congress’s extension of pre-emption to all “state laws relating to benefit plans” was meant to sweep more broadly than “state laws dealing with the subject matters covered by ERISA[,] reporting, disclosure, fiduciary responsibility, and the like,” Shaw,463 U.S., at 98 , and n. 19,103 S.Ct. at 2900 , and n. 19, nothing in the language of the Act or the context of its passage indicates that Congress chose to displace general health care regulation, which historically has been a matter of local concern. ...
Id.
at-,
C. Application to Morstein’s Claims
While the narrow holding in New York Blues that state laws which govern general healthcare regulation and affect ERISA plans only by means of indirect economic effects are not preempted, is not particularly relevant to this ease, the broad guidance that the Court gave in analyzing a state law is helpful. Using the analysis outlined by the Supreme Court in New York Blues, we look to see whether the state law claims brought by Morstein have a “connection with” the ERISA plan. To determine that, we examine whether the claims brought fit within the scope of state law that Congress understood would survive ERISA.
The Fifth Circuit has found that Congress did not intend for ERISA preemption to extend to state law tort claims brought against an insurance agent.
Perkins v. Time Ins. Co.,
Morstein is a plan beneficiary who is bringing a suit against the insurance agency and agent, who she alleges fraudulently induced her to change benefit plans. The insurance agent and agency are not ERISA entities. ERISA entities are the employer, the plan, the plan fiduciaries, and the beneficiaries under the plan.
See Travitz v. Northeast Dept. ILGWU Health & Welfare Fund,
In
Variety Children’s Hosp., Inc. v. Century Medical Health Plan, Inc.,
Although the remedy sought may affect the plan in that Morstein’s damages (should she successfully prevail on her claims) against Hankins and/or the Shaw Agency may be measured based on what she would have received under her old plan, such indirect relation between a beneficiary and the plan is not enough for preemption.
Forbus,
Allowing preemption of a fraud claim against an individual insurance agent will not serve Congress’s purpose for ERISA. As we have discussed, Congress enacted ERISA to protect the interests of employees and other beneficiaries of employee benefit plans.
See Shaw,
III. CONCLUSION
Morstein challenges the district court’s conclusion that her stаte law claims against an independent insurance agent and his agency for fraudulent inducement to purchase and negligence in processing her application for an ERISA-governed insurance plan are preempted by section 514(a) of ERISA. We conclude that these claims do not fall within ERISA’s broad preemptive scope, as they do not have a sufficient connection with the plan to “relate to” the plan. Accordingly, the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Hankins and the Shaw Agency is REVERSED.
Notes
. Morstein voluntarily dismissed National and Pan-American before the commencement of this appeаl, although they were defendants in the original action.
. The Shaw Agency is an independent agency or brokerage that is authorized to write policies for several insurance companies.
See
Hankins Depo. at 11-14. In Georgia, independent insurance agents are generally considered to be agents of the insured, not the insurer.
European Bakers, Ltd. v. Holman,
. In
Farlow,
plaintiff was a shareholder, president, and member of the board of directors of Pace-Plus, Inc. Farlow and his wife were designated beneficiaries under Pace-Plus’s employee benefit plan. The Farlows alleged that an insurance agent induced them to purchase a new grоup health life insurance plan and that the insurance agent fraudulently misrepresented that, among other things, the new policy would provide the same coverage as the company's old policy.
Farlow,
.Our court found the conduct alleged by the Farlows to be "intertwined” with the refusal to pay benefits:
[T]he conduct alleged in these claims is not only contemporaneous with [the insurer's] refusal to pay benefits, but the alleged conduct is intertwined with the refusal to pay benefits. Finding the Farlows’ state law claims not wholly remote in content from the [insurer’s] plan, we reject the Farlows' contention that simply because their claims invoke misconduct in the sale and implementation of the [insurer's] plan, their claims do not relate to the plan.
Consequently, we hold that ERISA preempts the Farlows’ misrepresentation and negligence claims.
Farlow,
. Section 1003(a)(1) provides that ERISA applies to all employee benefit plans established or maintained "by any employer engaged in commerce or in any industry or activity affecting сommerce.” 29 U.S.C. § 1003(a)(1). The exemptions described in section 1003(b) are not applicable in this case. Id. at § 1003(b).
An "employee benefit plan” is defined under ERISA as "an employee welfare benefit plan or an employee pension benefit plan or a plan which is both an employee welfare benefit plan and an employee pension benefit plan.” Id. at § 1002(3).
The medical insurance policies involved in this case qualify as "employee welfare benefit plans”, which, together with the term “welfare plan,” are defined in ERISA section 3(1) as:
any plan, fund, or program which was heretofore or is herеafter established or maintained by an employer or by an employee organization, or by both, to the extent that such plan, fund, or program was established or is maintained for the purpose of providing for its participants or their beneficiaries, through the purchase of insurance or otherwise, (A) medical, surgical, or hospital care or benefits, or benefits in the event of sickness, accident, disability, death or unemployment....
Id. at § 1002(1).
. Senator Javits commented:
Both House and Senate bills provided for preemption of State law, but — with one major exception appearing in the House bill — defined the perimeters of preеmption in relation to the areas regulated by the bill. Such a formulation raised the possibility of endless litigation over the validity of State action that might impinge on Federal regulation, as well as opening the door to multiple and potentially conflicting State laws hastily contrived to deal with some particular aspect of private welfare or pension benefit plans not clearly connected to the Federal regulatory scheme.
Although the desirability of further regulation — at either the State or Federal level— undoubtedly warrants further attention, on balance, the emergence of a comprehensive and pervasive Federal interest and the interests of uniformity with respect to interstate plans required — but for certain exceptions — the displacement of State action in the field of private employee benefit programs. The conferees — ■ recognizing the dimensions of such a policy— also agreed to assign the Congressional Pension Task Force the responsibility of studying and evaluating preemption in connection with State authorities and reporting its findings to Congress. If it is determined that the preemption policy devised has the effect of precluding essential legislation at either the State or Federal level, appropriate modifications can be made.
120 Cong.Rec. 29,942 (1974).
The ERISA Oversight Report of the Pension Task Force of the Subcommittee on Labor Standards was issued in 1977. Pension Task Force of Subcomm. on Labor Standards of House Comm, on Educ. and Labor, ERISA Oversight Report, H.R.Rep. No. 365, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. (1977). The Task Force concluded that, "[biased on our examination of the effects of section 514, it is our judgment that the legislative scheme of ERISA is sufficiently broad to leave no room for effective state regulation within the field preempted. Similarly it is our finding that the Federal interest and the need for national uniformity are so great that enforcement of state regulation should be precluded.” Id. at 9.
. According to one commentator:
In the twenty-one years since ERISA was enacted, the Court has rendered decisions with written opinions in twelve ERISA preemption cases, and has decided a number of others without opinion. Preemption cases constitute roughly half of all the ERISA cases the Court has considered. The relatively large number of ERISA preemption opinions has not, however, led to clarity in the law. The lower courts have decided thousands of preemption cases, yet remain mired in confusion about basic points. ERISA preemptiоn offers proof that plain language textualism leads to uncertainty and incoherence in the law.
Catherine L. Fisk, The Last Article About the Language of ERISA Preemption? A Case Study of the Failure of Textualism, 33 Harv.J. on Legis. 35, 58-59 (1996) (footnotes omitted).
The Supreme Court apparently has not given its final word on the issue of preemption. The Court recently granted certiorari in
Dillingham Construction N.A., Inc. v. Sonoma County,
. The difficulty for the Court came in its determination of whether the causes of action should be saved under the insurance savings clause.
Pilot Life,
. We recognize that the factual situation now before us is not the only one in which a state law claim will not be preempted by ERISA.
. Our conclusion contradicts the reasoning offered by this court in
Belasco v. W.K.P. Wilson & Sons, Inc.,
. This type of claim can be contrasted with an action brought by a beneficiary against an insurance company regarding the scope of the coverage of the plan. The claim brought by Morstein against Pan-American and National was of the latter type and would be preempted, but Mor-stein’s claims against Pan-American and National are not at issue on appeal.
