Jаmes McDONALD and Karen McDonald, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. HOUSEHOLD INTERNATIONAL, INC., d/b/a Household Finance Corp., and United HealthCare Corp., d/b/a United Healthcare Insurance Co., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 04-3259.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 16, 2005. Decided Sept. 29, 2005.
425 F.3d 424
D. Bruce Kehoe (argued), Wilson Kehoe & Winingham, Indianapolis, IN, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
William J. Wortel (аrgued), Bryan Cave, Chicago, IL, Thomas W. Blessing (argued), Stewart & Irwin, Indianapolis, IN, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before EASTERBROOK, WOOD, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
At the time he began working for Household International, Inc. (Household), James McDonald expected that he would receive health insurance that included prescription drug coverage under the group insurance policy that the company maintained with United HealthCare Corporation (United). McDonald needed prescription drugs to control his blood pressure. For reasons that are unclear, his insurance was not activated promptly. Two months after he started work, he suffered a catastrophic intercerebral hemorrhagic stroke. In this lawsuit, McDonald and his wife, Karen McDonald, have raised a variety of state-law claims that turn on the fаct that McDonald did not receive the promised insurance coverage in time. The district court found that the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, commonly called ERISA, preempted the state law theories and on that basis dismissed the complaint. We conclude that although the district court was correct about ERISA preemptiоn, the dismissal was premature.
I
Our account of the facts accepts all well-pleaded allegations in the complaint as true and draws all reasonable inferences in favor of the McDonalds, as this case comes to us from a dismissal under
McDonald and his wife filed this lawsuit on November 13, 2003, invoking the diversity jurisdiction of the district court. The amount in controversy exceeds $75,000, and the McDonalds properly alleged that they were both citizens of Indiana. Their allegations about the corporate defendants were less complete than they should have been, but they correctly asserted that
The complaint was divided into six counts, five of which raised different theories supporting McDonald‘s claim, and the sixth of which was for loss of spousal services and consortium for Mrs. McDonald. Briefly, Count I asserted that Household had been negligent in failing to procure insurance for McDonald; Count II claimed that United negligently failed to process McDonald‘s insurance application and to secure insurance for him, in particular pharmaceutical covеrage; Count III raised a breach of contract claim against Household, which had promised in the November 16 letter to give McDonald health insurance under its policy, which included prescription drug benefits; Count IV was a similar breach of contract claim against United, alleging that United had received premiums from McDonald in exchange for the health policy; and Count V asserted that both Household and United had committed acts of gross negligence, willful or wanton misconduct, or intentional wrongs that led to McDonald‘s lack of health coverage and ultimately to the stroke.
Both Household and United filed a motion to dismiss under
II
Concerned that the district court‘s order of dismissal did not qualify as a final judgment, we ordered the parties to file jurisdictional memoranda addressing the subject of appellate jurisdiction. Relying principally on Tifft v. Commonwealth Edison Co., 366 F.3d 513 (7th Cir.2004), all parties argue that this case became final as a practical matter no later than September 2, 2004, which was the last day when plaintiffs could have filed an amended complaint. See id. at 516 n. 3. A notice of appeal that is filed too early is treated as if it was filed on the date when judgment
The central issue here is whether the McDonalds’ complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, as the district court concluded. Before addressing that, we must review the standards for evаluating a motion under
In a case very much like this one, where an employee sued his employer for an alleged wrongful failure to pay certain severance and pension benefits under a contract, the employee urged that he was relying solely on state law, while the employer took the position that the case fell within ERISA‘s broad ambit. See Bartholet v. Reishauer A.G. (Zürich), 953 F.2d 1073 (7th Cir.1992). In Bartholet, this issue governed whether the case was removable from state court to federal court: if the complaint alleged state-law theories, then it appeared that it had to stay in state court (or at least our opinion reveals no alternative basis for federal jurisdiction); if the complaint was an ERISA claim in state-law disguise, the аction was removable to federal court under
It does not follow, however, that Bartholet‘s suit should have been dismissed under
Rule 12(b)(6) . The district judge believed that until Bartholet amended his pleadings to invoke ERISA, all he had was a claim arising under state сommon law, and as state law is preempted the complaint failed. The assumption implicit in this approach is that a complaint must plead law as well as fact. Why? ...Common law pleading required the advocate to match facts to a legal theory, the “form of action.” Code pleading ended up in much the same place, as
courts rеad the code formula “facts constituting a cause of action” to require the pleader to state a legal theory.... “Cause of action” does not appear in the Rules of Civil Procedure, which uses “claim for relief” to denote a rejection of both common law and code approaches and a new, latitudinarian apрroach.... A complaint under Rule 8 limns the claim; details of both fact and law come later, in other documents. Instead of asking whether the complaint points to the appropriate statute, a court should ask whether relief is possible under any set of facts that could be established consistent with the allegations.... A drafter who lacks a legal theory is likеly to bungle the complaint (and the trial); you need a theory to decide which facts to allege and prove. But the complaint need not identify a legal theory, and specifying an incorrect theory is not fatal.
We have quoted at length from Bartholet because, as should be apparent, the present case is so similar. The district court thought that the consequence of a decision that the McDonalds were bringing a suit that fell within the territory covered by ERISA had to be either dismissal under
Our account of thе complaint shows that it relied on conventional common law theories: torts, either based on negligent actions or intentional actions, contracts, and loss of consortium. The complaint makes it equally clear that the central fact underlying each of the legal theories presented is the fact that James McDonald did not receive thе medical insurance benefit (in particular the prescription drug benefit) that he was promised. The question is whether ERISA, which “comprehensively regulates, among other things, employee welfare benefit plans that, through the purchase of insurance or otherwise, provide medical ... care,” Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux, 481 U.S. 41, 44 (1987), preempts any or all of those state laws.
The statute provides the starting point for our analysis.
McDonald aсknowledges this, but he argues that his case is more like Travelers,
McDonald‘s claim looks much more like the one the Court considered in Davila, supra, where two individuals sued their respective HMOs for alleged failures to exercise ordinаry care in the handling of coverage decisions. But it turned out that the HMOs were merely implementing coverage restrictions that appeared in the ERISA-regulated plans that the HMOs were administering. See 124 S.Ct. at 2497-98. The proximate cause of any injury the plan participant and beneficiary suffered was therefore the failure of the plan to cover the requеsted treatment, not any independent decision of the HMO. The Court thus found that the claims in Davila were preempted by ERISA. In so doing, it rejected a number of arguments that had persuaded the court of appeals. The fact that the respondents were trying to assert a tort claim, and that they were not seeking reimbursement for benefits denied to them, was not significant; otherwisе, preemption would depend on the label attached to a particular theory. Id. at 2498. Furthermore, the fact that state law provided remedies beyond those authorized by
Returning to McDonald‘s complaint, we can see that it focuses on the defendants’ failure to give McDonald the benefits under the medical plan that he had been promised. This is precisely the kind of claim that
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.
McDonald was an employee of Household from November 19, 2001, at least until the time of his stroke. ERISA defines the term “participant” to mean “any employee or former employee of an employer ... who is or may become eligible to receive a benеfit of any type from an employee benefit plan which covers employees of such employer ....”
We conclude, therefore, that McDonald‘s state law claims were preempted by ERISA, as the district court held. The question remains whether the facts he has alleged could, under the favorable standard that applied to
III
It will be up to the McDonalds on remand to deсide whether they wish to proceed with their case or to abandon it. In that connection, they may wish to take note of Justice Ginsburg‘s comment in her concurring opinion in Davila, in which she drew attention to the Government‘s suggestion that ERISA “as currently written and interpreted, may allo[w] at least some forms of ‘make-whole’ relief against a breaching fiduciary in light of the general аvailability of such relief in equity at the time of the divided bench.” Id. at 2504 (internal quotations omitted). (We note that in Davila, as here, the respondents had declined the opportunity to amend their state-law complaints to add ERISA claims, id. at 2502-03 n. 7, but it appears that no one argued to the Court that this step was unnecessary, and it thus had no occasion to reach the point we have discussed in this opinion.)
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
