Background
Plaintiff Kimberly J. Crocco worked for defendant Xerox Corporation (“Xerox”) and participated in its employee benefits plan (the “Plan”). She received inpatient treatment at the Rye Psychiatric Hospital Center from February 2 through June 5, 1990, аnd sought benefits under the Plan to cover the costs of her hospitalization. American Psychmanagement, Inc. (“APM”), a private entity (which had contracted with Xerox to provide pre-admission and concurrent review—or “case management”—of mental health treatment covered by the Plan), certified coverage for Crocco’s treatment, but only from February 2 through March 3. It denied certification of Crocco’s treatment after March 3.
Crocco asked for and reсeived from APM two levels of “administrative” review of this partial denial of certification. When APM refused to alter its original determination, Crocco requested that defendant Nazemetz, the Plan Administrator, conduct a review of the decision—a review to which Crocco was entitled under § 503(2) of the Employee Retirement Income Security- Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). See 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2) (requiring a “full and fair review” by the plan administrator of a decision denying a plan participant’s claim for benefits).
In due course, Nazemetz affirmed APM’s partial denial of benefits.
In a letter to Crocco’s attorney, Nazemetz explained her. decision this way:
Please note that, treatment which is not certified by [APM] is not eligible for reimbursement under the Plan. Since APM determined that the levеl of acute care provided to [Crocco] was inappropriate for reimbursement after March 3, 1990, such treatment was not certified and therefore, is ineligible for reimbursement under the Plan.
Crocco v. Xerox Corp.,
At that point, Crocco filed this action in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Ellen B. Burns, Judge), seeking review of Nazemetz’s decision. In her complaint, which named Nazemetz, Xerox, and APM as defendants, Crocco alleged, inter alia, that she had been denied a “full and fair review” of her claim for benefits, in derogation of. her rights under ERISA § 503(2), 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2).
The district court held, as a matter of law, that APM was not a fiduciary under ERISA, and therefore dismissed Crocco’s claims against it.
See Crocco,
After conducting a thorough analysis of the administrative record and hearing the testimony of Nazemetz, the court found that, even under this'highly deferential standard, Nazemetz had failed to conduct the statutorily prescribed “full and fair review.” 1 See id. at 139-42. Accordingly, the court remanded the cause to Nazemetz so that the administrator could carry out a review of the denial of benefits that complied with the requirements of § 503(2). The court retained jurisdiction over any subsequent appeals of that decision. See id. at 144.
*107 Discussion
1. Is Xerox a proper party defendant ?
In
Leonelli v. Pennwalt Corp.,
We believe, however, that our reasoning in
Lee v. Burkhart,
Because it is clear from the Plan documents that Xerox was neither the designated *108 Plan administrator nor á Plan trustee, and because it could not, under the rationalе underlying- Lee, be a de facto co-administrator for purposes of § 502(a)(1), it cannot be held liable for benefits due to Croeco under the plan. It is, therefore, entitled to dismissal of the claims against it.
II. The Plan administrator’s denial of Crocco’s appeal
For substantially the reasons stated by the district court in its Memorandum of Deсision, which appears at
Because we do so, we need not consider, and do not embrace or reject the district court’s analysis of, the separate questions of (a) whether the notice of denial that APM provided to Croeco was defective, (b) whether APM’s fee arrangement and other contractual obligations to Xerox constituted a conflict of interest, and (e) what the consequences of such a conflict, if it existed, would be. We also decline to decide one other issue central tо this case; it concerns our jurisdiction to hear this appeal, and deserves some attention.
III. Jurisdiction
Appellants in their brief flag the question of whether we have jurisdiction over this appeal (and assert that we do).
5
The Ninth Circuit has held that a district court order remanding a claim to a plan administrator is a final appealable order.
See Snow v. Standard Ins. Co., 87
F.3d 327, 330 (9th Cir.1996). The First and Eleventh Circuits, by contrast, have refused to treat such orders as immediately reviewable.
See Petralia v. AT&T Global Info. Solutions Co.,
While we have not yet had occasion to rulе on this question, we held in
Perales v. Sullivan,
“[T]he normal rule is to decide jurisdiction before the merits,”
Browning-Ferris Indus, v. Muszynski,
The assumption of jurisdiction in this case will not do injustice to the parties.
See id.; Browning-Ferris,
Moreover, the jurisdictional issue is “difficult.”
Id.
We have not yet decided whether a remand to a plan administrator is immediately appealable, but, as we explained
supra,
the other circuits that have considered the question are in disagreement.
See RNR Enters.,
Under these circumstances, we leave for another day the question of whether the Perales or collateral order exceptions to the final judgment rule provide us with jurisdiction to review remands of the decisions of ERISA plan administrators.
Conclusion
We affirm the district court’s holding that the Plan administrаtor’s approval of the partial denial of Crocco’s claim was arbitrary and capricious, and hence that a remand for a “full and fair review” is required. 6 We reverse the determination that Xerox is a proper defendant. And wе decline to consider, as unnecessary to our disposition of the case, any questions concerning possible conflicts of interest on the part of APM or inadequacy of APM’s notice to Crocco.
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed In Pаrt, Reversed In Part, and Remanded.
Notes
. The court also held that the notice of denial that Crocco received from APM was inadequate to satisfy the requirements of ERISA § 503(1), 29 U.S.C. § 1133(1). See id. at 142-44.
. Alternatively, the district court may have held Xerox to be a proper party as a Plan fiduciary. But the relief that Crocco seeks in this action is the payment of benefits (as well as attorney’s fees and costs). She does not seek damages against Xerox—on behalf of the Plan—pursuant to ERISA § 502(a)(2), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2), for a breach оf fiduciary duty.
See Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Russell,
. Appellants cite to us an unpublished decision of this Court for the proposition that Nazemetz’s approval of APM’s certification decision was proper. As an unpublished summary order, however, that decision may not he cited as authority and appellants’ references to it are entirely improper.
See
2d Cir.R. 0.23. Moreover, we do not even think that the district court opinion affirmed by that order,
Semmler v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company,
. Croeco does not challenge our jurisdiction.
. Our decision in the instant case is not affected by the McKinsey court’s explanation that:
If in practice, company personnel other than the plan administrator routinely assume responsibility for answering requests from plan participants and beneficiaries, a plaintiff's suit against the plan administrator will not necessarily fail, as the First Circuit suggests in Law,956 F.2d at 373 . Rather, the actions of the other employees may be imputed to the plan administrator.
McKinsey,
. In an amicus brief filed in this case, the American Association of Retired Persоns ("AARP”) requests that we consider modifying the district court’s order by remanding to a different Plan fiduciary. AARP argues that Nazemetz, after having once conducted an inadequate review of Crocco’s claim, is unlikely, on remand, to perform a full and fair review. AARP cites no statute or case law that speaks to: (a) whether we have the authority to order such a reassignment; (b) if so, under what circumstances it would be proper for us to exercise that authority; and (c) who that other fiduciary might be. Because no request for assignment to a different fiduciary was made by a party in interest, we decline to consider the issue.
