MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Apparently having been disserved by prior attorneys in connection with this dispute, plaintiff Robert Riley belatedly brought this action to obtain a remedy for an alleged miscalculation of his long-term disability benefits by defendant Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”).
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
The relevant facts are undisputed. Riley was an associate general manager for MetLife, making approximately $80,000 per year, until he left work in February 2000 as a result of depression and chronic pain. Riley received short-term disability benefits until July 2000. In the Spring of 2001, he returned to work in a non-managerial capacity, earning much less than he did in his managerial position.
In May 2002, Riley’s chronic pain returned, and he went back on short-term disability through November 2002. When no longer eligible for short-term disability, Riley applied for long-term disability benefits, which were approved in March 2005.
Under the long-term disability plan — an employee benefit plan governed by ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. — Riley was entitled to receive fifty percent of his pre-disability earnings. MetLife measured Riley’s long-term disability from 2002, meaning his benefits were based on his non-managerial salary. Riley was thus entitled to $871 per month, but the benefit was reduced to $50 per month — the minimum allowed by the plan — following an offset in the amount of Social Security benefits received by Riley. Using Riley’s managerial 2000 salary, his long-term disability benefit would have been about $3,000 per month which, after the Social Security offset, would have come to about $1,400 per month.
Riley received his first long-term disability benefits check, for $50, on April 15, 2005. He continued to receive these checks monthly, but refused to cash them, and returned the checks to MetLife in December 2005. Riley also communicated with MetLife through counsel in October 2005, threatening suit based on MetLife’s allegedly improper determination of the period of long-term disability and the relevant salary Riley earned at the beginning of the period of disability.
Represented by his prior counsel, Rear-don & Horgan, Riley brought suit against MetLife in state court under Mass. Gen. Law ch. 98A on February 7, 2007, for the alleged mishandling of his benefits. Met-Life removed the case to federal court, and the action was dismissed in November 2007 as preempted by ERISA. Riley v. MetLife, Order, No. 07-10467-RGS (D.Mass. Nov. 1, 2007). An untimely motion for reconsideration was also denied, and the district court’s judgment was affirmed on appeal. Riley v. MetLife, Judgment, No. 08-2569 (1st Cir. Oct. 14, 2009). Reardon & Horgan, meanwhile, failed to inform Riley that the action had been dismissed, and that the post-judgment motions and appeal had been denied.
Following efforts by Riley to communicate with his counsel early in 2011 — which included expressions of concern about the statute of limitations — Reardon & Horgan re-filed suit in federal court on March 18, 2011, bringing a claim under ERISA to recover unpaid benefits. The complaint, however, did not conform to local rules,
B. Procedural History
Represented by new counsel, Riley filed this action on March 22, 2012. The complaint included malpractice claims against his prior counsel, but the parties have stipulated to dismissal of those claims. Remaining is Riley’s claim under ERISA to recover unpaid disability benefits from MetLife. Following limited discovery structured to address timeliness questions, on November 30, 2012, MetLife filed the motion for summary judgment before me on the ground that this action was filed outside the applicable statute of limitations.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 “mandates the entry of summary judgment, after adequate time for discovery and upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
III. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
A. Legal Framework
The parties agree that ERISA does not supply a statute of limitations for Riley’s claim, given that the allegations are unrelated to a breach of fiduciary duty. Cf. 29 U.S.C. § 1113 (setting limitation on claims for breach of fiduciary duty). Without guidance from federal law, courts borrow the limitations period for the most closely analogous state law, while applying federal common law to determine the accrual date. Salcedo v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Both parties characterize Riley’s claim as one to correct MetLife’s miscalculation of his long-term disability benefits, and to recover resulting unpaid benefits. Riley, however, does not specify which civil enforcement provision of ERISA § 502 he means to invoke. See, e.g., 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) (allowing plan participant “to recover benefits due to him under the terms of his plan” and “to enforce his rights under the terms of the plan”); id. § 1132(a)(3) (allowing plan participant to obtain “appropriate equitable relief ... to redress” plan violations). In any event, the parties agree that Riley’s claim is most closely analogous to a claim for breach of contract, and thus the six-year statute of limitations under Massachusetts law applies. Laurenzano v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Massachusetts, Inc. Ret. Income Trust,
MetLife contends that Riley’s claim accrued when he knew or reasonably should have known that his benefits payment had been miscalculated. See Novella v. Westchester County,
Riley responds that his claim is akin to one for breach of an installment contract, whereby each underpayment is an independent breach giving rise to a new cause of action and subject to a new statute of limitations. In many states, the statute of limitations on a claim to recover any individual installment runs from the date on which the installment was due. See Berezin v. Regency Sav. Bank,
B. Relevant Authority
The First Circuit has not provided complete guidance as to the propriety of using an “installment contract” approach in actions to recover underpayments on an ERISA benefits plan. In McNamara v. City of Nashua,
In dictum, however, the court noted that “conceivably if the City had to make periodic payments to McNamara and successively underpaid him, a claim might arise each time a payment was made and a suit could be brought within the limitations period on any underpayment.” McNamara,
I do not view the dictum in McNamara as a straw in the wind suggesting how the First Circuit might decide this ease. The plaintiff in McNamara apparently did not even argue that the federal standard of
MetLife contends that Edes v. Verizon Communications, Inc.,
A claim for violation of ERISA § 510, however, is more closely analogous to an action in tort and thus is subject to the Massachusetts three-year statute of limitations on tort actions. Edes,
Lacking binding First Circuit authority, I turn to a survey of other sources of authority for guidance. Although many states apply the “installment contract” rule to claims to recover payments on insurance policies, see Pierce,
For example, in a case involving an allegedly improper calculation of benefits under a disability pension plan, the Second Circuit found that the statute of limitations begins to run “when there is enough information available to the [beneficiary] to assure that he knows or reasonably should know of the miscalculation.” Novella,
The Third Circuit, in another case involving a miscalculation of disability benefits, found that the plaintiffs claim accrued when his benefits under the plan had been “clearly repudiated.” Miller,
an underpayment can qualify as a repudiation because a plan’s determination that a beneficiary receive less than his full entitlement is effectively a partial denial of benefits. Like a denial, an underpayment is adverse to the beneficiary and therefore repudiates his rights under a plan.
Id. at 521. The court was unwilling to encourage excessively long limitations periods — for example, in cases where benefits payments did not begin until well after the allegedly erroneous benefits determination — and thus rejected the “installment contract” approach. Id. at 522; accord Lang v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
The Ninth Circuit, in a claim to recover underpaid insurance premium reimbursements, found that the statute of limitations ran from the point at which the employer initially froze reimbursements, rather than from the date of subsequent underpayments. Pisciotta v. Teledyne Indus., Inc.,
Given the lack of binding First Circuit authority and the weight of authority from other circuits, I decline to adopt an “installment contract” approach to the statute of limitations here. Rather, I find that Riley had a single cause of action that accrued in 2005, when he should have known that MetLife had clearly repudiated his entitlement to a greater amount of long-term disability benefits. Cf. Miller,
In federal question cases, and absent a contrary directive from Congress, “a plaintiff’s cause of action accrues when he discovers, or with due diligence should have discovered, the injury that is the basis of the litigation.” Union Pac. R. Co. v. Beckham,
I recognize that Judge DiClerico in Pierce questioned whether the “installment contract” rule creates an indefinite limitations period because “the approach limits the insured’s recovery to those individual payments as to which suit was brought before the limitations period expired.”
The “clear repudiation” approach is also consonant with the statute of limitations prescribed by ERISA for breach of fiduciary duty claims. As relevant here, 29 U.S.C. § 1113 requires a breach of fiduciary duty claim to be brought within “three years after the earliest date on which the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the breach or violation.” In Phillips v. Alaska Hotel & Rest. Employees Pension Fund,
Although Congress spoke only to fiduciary claims, section 1113 reflects background policies of ERISA that should guide a judicially-crafted federal common law as to the accrual of non-fiduciary claims. As with section 1113, my refusal to apply an “installment contract” approach to non-fiduciary claims helps to ensure that the enforcement scheme does not impose unnecessary burdens on ERISA plan providers. Cf. Conkright v. Frommert,
Riley complains that the refusal to apply an “installment contract” approach creates an asymmetry in the ability respectively of him and MetLife to obtain a remedy for incorrect payments. The benefits plan gives MetLife the right to recover over-payments by demanding a refund from the beneficiary or by reducing future benefits payments to offset past underpayments. Because the plan does not include a time limitation, Riley asserts that MetLife can recover overpayments even when it knew of the miscalculation more than six years earlier. Courts, however, may well refuse to assist MetLife in belated efforts to recover overpayments — either in a suit by MetLife to enforce a demand, or in an action by a beneficiary seeking to challenge untimely offsets. MetLife also disavows its ability to engage in belated recovery efforts. Such cases, however, must be decided if and when they arise. In the meantime, the potential asymmetry does not affect my resolution of this case. Contractual provisions giving MetLife broader rights to recovery of incorrect payments than those available to Riley under the civil enforcement provisions of ERISA may appear asymmetrical, but they do not change my analysis of the point at which Riley’s claim accrued.
Measured from MetLife’s clear repudiation in 2005 of Riley’s right to a greater amount of long-term disability benefits, this action, filed in 2012, is untimely under the applicable six-year statute of limitations.
IV. EQUITABLE TOLLING
I also find equitable tolling of the statute of limitations unavailable in this case. To justify tolling, Riley must “establish that extraordinary circumstances beyond his control prevented a timely filing.” Ortega Candelaria v. Orthobiologics LLC,
Riley argues that the purposes of a limitations period are not served by strict adherence to the statute of limitations where missteps by his former counsel appear to be the cause of the belated filings. Given Riley’s earlier attempts at recovery, for example, MetLife cannot claim to be “surprised” by this action. Cf. Order of R.R. Telegraphers v. Ry. Express Agency,
To the extent Riley seeks equitable tolling based on substandard professional care by his previous counsel, it is clear that “the principles of equitable tolling ... do not extend to what is at best a garden variety claim of excusable neglect.” Irwin,
Riley also argues that, even attributing all of counsel’s actions to him, the earlier attempts at recovery are sufficient to toll the statute of limitations. Riley compares this case to Burnett v. New York Cent. R. Co.,
As a general proposition, the interests of justice do not weigh heavily in favor of Riley, given that he still has a remedy— albeit not one against MetLife. Rather, under these circumstances, a litigant in Riley’s position can more appropriately seek remedy in a suit for malpractice against his prior counsel. Allowing the suit against MetLife as a matter of equitable discretion, by contrast, would “visit[] the sins of plaintiffs lawyer upon the defendant,” which I decline to do. Damiani
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth more fully above, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.
Notes
. Riley's approach might be called a "continuing violation theory"; courts have used that term without great precision. In circumstances similar to those presented by this case, several circuits have treated a “continuing violation” approach as synonymous with Riley’s "installment contract” theory. Novella v. Westchester County,
. Edes does, however, explain why both parties ignore portions of the complaint alleging
. Previously, in a case involving the implementation of a pension plan amendment that unlawfully scheduled the phase-out of payment increases over several years, the Ninth Circuit had reasoned that ”[e]ach check issued to [the beneficiary] in an amount reduced under the inoperative amendment con
. The "clear repudiation” test produces the same result in this case as would the test proposed by MetLife and adopted by the Second Circuit. Cf. Novella,
. The case before me might helpfully be contrasted with Ferbar, which involved suit by a pension fund to collect payments due from an employer who had withdrawn from the fund, under a liability scheme created by the Mul-tiemployer Pension Plan Amendments Act ("MPPAA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1381(a). Although there the Court applied an "installment contract” approach, it did so because the initial act of withdrawal imposed no liability on the employer, Ferbar,
. Tolling might also be appropriate if Riley were "materially misled into missing the deadline,” Ortega Candelaria v. Orthobiologics LLC,
. I recognize Riley has already settled the malpractice claims against his previous attorneys. The details of that settlement are unknown to me, and in any event would not affect my disposition of this motion generally or the interest of justice analysis in particular.
