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The California Department of Insurance Recently Created a Long-Term Care Insurance Task Force, But It Will Not Solve Insurer Claim Denials

According to the California Department of Insurance, most Californians cannot afford nursing home care – at an average cost of $6,000 per month – and are worried about the cost of growing older.  Purchasing a long-term care insurance policy is one solution to this dilemma facing an aging California population.  Long-term care insurance can be invaluable to elderly persons who can no longer care for themselves.  These insurance policies typically cover nursing home costs and in-home care at your own residence if you are unable to care for yourself.  But even if you are one of the lucky few that has LTC insurance, unfortunately, we regularly see long-term care insurers that do not honor their policy obligations.

The California legislature recently created a Long-Term Care Insurance Task Force within the Department of Insurance.  California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara just appointed six members to the Task Force with preeminent credentials.  The Task Force will explore how to design a statewide affordable long-term care insurance program including whether an increase in payroll taxes might allow for the program to be publicly subsidized.  An article on the Task Force is copied below.  You can learn more about the Task Force at  http://www.insurance.ca.gov/0500-about-us/03-appointments/ltcitf.cfm#about.

Hopefully, the Task Force will result in long-term care insurers honoring their contract obligations more frequently.  That is doubtful in our opinion.  That is not the goal of the Task Force.  Moreover, insurers are in the business of making money.  To do that successfully, an insurer must take your premiums and pay out as little in claims as possible.  In our experience, Department of Insurance actions usually do not change an insurer’s conduct in a particular claim.

So, what should you do if your long-term care insurer wrongfully denies your claim?  Relying on this new Task Force will not change your claim denial, and the Task Force is not even scheduled to create a potentially publicly subsidized long-term care insurance program for several years.  You should hire an experienced California insurance bad faith or ERISA lawyer to represent you.  If your claim for long-term care, long-term disability, life, accidental death, retirement or health benefits has been denied, you can call (949) 387-9595 for a free consultation with the attorneys of the McKennon Law Group PC, several of whom previously represented insurance companies and are exceptionally experienced in handling both ERISA insurance claims and non-ERISA California insurance bad faith claims.

Commissioner Lara Appoints Members to the California Long Term Care Insurance Task Force
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara today announced his six appointments to the new Long Term Care Insurance Task Force, established within the California Department of Insurance by legislation that he strongly supported to help address the long-term care services and insurance needs of older Californians.

“Our new Long Term Care Insurance Task Force will explore greater options for Californians to help them age with dignity and security,” said Commissioner Lara. “With their deep experience in insurance, culturally competent care and services, and the health needs of older Californians, these Task Force members are ready for the challenge of envisioning a statewide insurance program that is sustainable and meets the needs of our growing diverse population. The health disparities exposed by the current pandemic on our aging population and the services and supports they will need in coming years make this Task Force even more critical today.”

Created by the legislative passage and Governor Gavin Newsom’s signing of AB 567 (Calderon, Chapter 746, Statutes of 2019), the Task Force will, under Commissioner Lara’s leadership, explore how a statewide long-term care insurance program could be designed and implemented to expand the options for people who are interested in insuring themselves should they encounter functional or cognitive disability that requires long-term care, services, and supports. The 15-member Task Force includes the Insurance Commissioner, who will serve as its Chair, as well as the Director of the California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) or his designee, the Director of the California Department of Aging or her designee, six individuals appointed by the Commissioner, four individuals appointed by the Governor, one appointment made by the Speaker of the Assembly, and one appointment made by the Senate Committee on Rules.

“The lack of affordable long-term care is a serious threat to the well-being of many Californians, and yet another symptom of the systemic inequities in our health and social support systems,” said DHCS Director Will Lightbourne. “I’m pleased to join this task force and work on solutions that will increase access to long-term care and help provide healthy and dignified lives for our aging populations.”

“Affording the care we need as we age, so we can live where we choose in the community, is a top priority for the thousands of Californians we heard from in developing the Governor’s Master Plan for Aging, released in January,” said California Department of Aging Director Kim McCoy Wade. “Innovative public private leadership and partnership, such as this new Task Force provides, are essential to developing effective and equitable solutions. I’m eager to work with Commissioner Lara and members of the Task Force to move this important work forward.”

Over the next two years, the Task Force will meet to discuss establishing a statewide long-term care insurance program and prepare a feasibility report for the Commissioner, the Governor, and the Legislature by January 1, 2023. The recommendations made by the Task Force in the feasibility report will then be analyzed in an actuarial report to ensure an adequate benefit within a solvent program which, if approved by the Task Force, will be submitted to the Legislature by January 1, 2024.

The first meeting of the inaugural Task Force is expected in early spring 2021. More details are available at http://www.insurance.ca.gov/0500-about-us/03-appointments/ltcitf.cfm.

# # #

 

Media Notes:

Newly appointed members include:

Dr. Lucy Andrews, is Director of Nursing and CEO for At Your Service Nursing and Home Care. Dr. Andrews presently serves as Board Chair for the California Association for Health Services at Home (CAHSAH) and is the former Vice Chair of the National Association for Home Care and Hospice in Washington, DC. She is also a recipient of the Lois Lillick Award, which honors advocacy and expertise in the home care industry. Dr. Andrews joins the Task Force as a representative of hospice and palliative care providers.

Grace Cheng Braun, MSPH is President and CEO of WISE & Healthy Aging, which administers the City & County of Los Angeles’ Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program (the largest Ombudsman program in the state, and second in the nation) and Elder Abuse Prevention Services. The community-based, nonprofit social services organization also operates two adult day care centers and other care coordination and enrichment programming for older adults and caregivers of the elderly in Los Angeles. She is also a member of the Steering Committee of both the Los Angeles Alliance for Community Health and Aging (LAACHA) and the Westside Older Adult Services Network, which promotes health and service equity in the Los Angeles community. Cheng Braun joins the Task Force as a representative of adult day services providers.

Michael Mejia is Senior Vice President, Operations for Atria Senior Living where he leads Atria’s operations in the Western U.S. and currently oversees operations at 43 Atria communities in California, including 33 with memory care neighborhoods. He joined Atria in 1998 and since then has overseen operations in Texas and Kansas as Regional Vice President and served as Senior Vice President previously in the Central, Southeast, and Southwest divisions. He is also a member of the California Assisted Living Association (CALA) Board of Directors. Mejia joins the Task Force as a representative of residential care facilities for the elderly.

Doug Moore is the Executive Director of the United Domestic Workers of America (UDW/AFSCME Local 3930) which represents more than 140,000 In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) providers and family child care providers across California. Moore also serves as International Vice President of AFSCME. He was appointed by the State Assembly to the California Task Force on Family Caregiving in 2017. In 2019, he was appointed to the Governor’s Task Force on Alzheimer’s Prevention and Preparedness. Moore joins the Task Force as a representative of independent providers of in-home personal care services.

Dr. Karl Steinberg, M.D., C.M.D., has been a skilled nursing facility and hospice medical director in San Diego County for over 25 years and cares for patients in nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and small board-and-care facilities. He is President-Elect of AMDA – The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine, a national organization representing physicians and medical directors working in various post-acute and long-term care settings, and is a delegate to the American Medical Association and the California Medical Association. Dr. Steinberg joins the Task Force as a representative of long-term care health professionals.

Tiffany Whiten is Senior Government Advocate at SEIU California State Council where she oversees and coordinates state legislative and administrative policy development on many SEIU-California policy priorities, including assisted living, IHSS, nursing homes, adult day care, developmentally disabled, and other long-term care sectors as well as racial and social justice issues. She not only represents and advocates on behalf of long-term care providers, workers, and consumers, but is also a family caregiver to her mother with Alzheimer’s. Whiten’s previous roles include working as an Associate with Niemela Pappas and Associates, a Consultant for Senator Mark DeSaulnier, a Legislative Aide to Senate Majority Leader Ellen Corbett, and a Legislative Aide to Senate President pro Tempore Don Perata. Whiten joins the Task Force as a representative of family caregivers.

 

McKennon Law Group PC Founding Partner, Robert J. McKennon, Receives 2021 “Super Lawyer” Designation and Receives Rare 10-Year “Super Lawyer” Designation

McKennon Law Group PC is proud to announce that its founding partner, Robert J. McKennon, has been recognized as one of Southern California’s “Super Lawyers” for Insurance Coverage and appeared in the 2021 edition of Southern California Super Lawyers magazine. Mr. McKennon has been recognized as a “Super Lawyer” for 11 years in a row, and in 2020 received a special designation as a 10-Year “Super Lawyer,” a rare designation achieved by less than 1% of attorneys.

Each year, Super Lawyers magazine, which is published in all 50 states and reaches more than 14 million readers, names attorneys in each state who attain a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The Super Lawyer designation is given to less than 5% of lawyers nationally after being nominated and voted on by their peers. Mr. McKennon has received this Southern California Super Lawyer designation every year from 2011 through 2021.

Mr. McKennon and his firm have also received numerous other awards and recognitions (click here).

Los Angeles Daily Journal Publishes Article on January 4, 2021 by Robert McKennon Entitled “ERISA Ruling Expands Protection for Employees, Beneficiaries”

In the January 4, 2021 issue of the Los Angeles Daily Journal, the Daily Journal published an article written by the McKennon Law Group PC’s Robert J. McKennon entitled “ERISA Ruling Expands Protection for Employees, Beneficiaries.”  The article addresses a recent case by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Beverly Oaks Physicians Surgical Center, LLC v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, which found that while anti-assignment provisions in ERISA matters are valid and enforceable, plan administrators can waive the right to assert and enforce these provisions when their actions are inconsistent with the provision or they are aware that the claimant is acting as an assignee.  This opinion will greatly benefit employees who have medical insurance and sign agreements with their medical providers to assign their rights to collect payment from their health insurers.  The Ninth Circuit’s opinion will be not only useful for claimants/employees who have health insurance claims, but also those who have disability, life or other employee benefit claims as the decision in Beverly Oaks will serve to prevent employers and insurers from making misrepresentations regarding ERISA plan terms and/or taking actions inconsistent that which they had previously represented.

Los Angeles Daily Journal Publishes Article on January 4, 2021 by Robert McKennon Entitled “ERISA Ruling Expands Protection for Employees, Beneficiaries”

In the January 4, 2021 issue of the Los Angeles Daily Journal, the Daily Journal published an article written by the McKennon Law Group PC’s Robert J. McKennon entitled “ERISA Ruling Expands Protection for Employees, Beneficiaries.”  The article addresses a recent case by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Beverly Oaks Physicians Surgical Center, LLC v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, which found that while anti-assignment provisions in ERISA matters are valid and enforceable, plan administrators can waive the right to assert and enforce these provisions when their actions are inconsistent with the provision or they are aware that the claimant is acting as an assignee.  This opinion will greatly benefit employees who have medical insurance and sign agreements with their medical providers to assign their rights to collect payment from their health insurers.  The Ninth Circuit’s opinion will be not only useful for claimants/employees who have health insurance claims, but also those who have disability, life or other employee benefit claims as the decision in Beverly Oaks will serve to prevent employers and insurers from making misrepresentations regarding ERISA plan terms and/or taking actions inconsistent that which they had previously represented.

 

By Robert J. McKennon

 

The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, or ERISA, governs most employer-sponsored benefit plans.  ERISA establishes protections for employees in the administration of their employer-sponsored benefits, requiring that the administrator adhere to certain requirements when determining a plan participant’s eligibility for benefits.  Typically the ERISA plan’s terms govern, although that is not always the case.

All too familiar to patients of health care providers are agreements that assign to the health care providers their right under an ERISA plan to collect insurance benefits under their patients’ health insurance plans.  However, most health insurance plans have anti- assignment provisions that prohibit insureds from assigning their right to collect insurance proceeds directly.  Anti-assignment provisions in ERISA plans are valid and enforceable.  Davidowitz v. Delta Dental Plan of Cal., Inc., 946 F.2d 1476, 1481 (9th Cir.1991); Spinedex Physical Therapy USA Inc. v. United Healthcare of Arizona, Inc., 770 F.3d 1282, 1296 (9th Cir. 2014).  Therefore, courts have prevented health care providers from suing insurers under ERISA where health insurance plans have anti-assignment provisions, thus frustrating the efforts of health care providers to collect insurance proceeds to satisfy unpaid claims.

In its landmark 2011 decision in CIGNA Corp. v. Amara, 131 S. Ct. 1866 (2011), the U.S. Supreme Court signaled a broad expansion of the availability of equitable remedies under ERISA.  The doctrines of equitable estoppel and waiver have provided plan participants with methods of forcing an employer or insurance company to honor their representations and take responsibility for previous conduct.  But what about applying these equitable doctrines for the benefit of health care providers? There has been some recent good news for them.

The recent case of Beverly Oaks Physicians Surgical Center, LLC v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, 2020 DJDAR 132372 (Dec. 18, 2020) further expands protection for employees and their beneficiaries by expanding the circumstances their medical providers can sue insurers directly based on an assignment, even where the plan at issue contained an anti-assignment provision.  In Beverly Oaks, the U.S. 9th Circuit Appeals Court allowed an out-of-network healthcare provider to assert equitable claims under ERISA seeking a direct recovery of unpaid claims from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois (BCBS).

Beverly Oaks Physicians Surgical Center, LLC (Beverly Oaks) performed out-of-network procedures on 14 patients who had employer-sponsored health insurance plans administered by BCBS. Each patient signed a form granting the center the right to collect benefits on their behalf. The center sought and obtained preapproval for each claim from BCBS, the latter stating it would typically pay between 50% to 100% of the claim.

After performing the procedures, the Beverly Oaks submitted the claims to collect ERISA benefits. BCBS either denied every claim or paid a small reimbursement amount and paying only $140,000 of the total $1.4 million of benefits sought.  At no time during the pre-surgery conversations or during the administrative claim process did BCBS advise Beverly Oaks that it intended to assert an anti-assignment provision as a basis for denying reimbursement sought under a patient assignment of benefits.

Beverly Oaks filed a lawsuit alleging that BCBS waived or was equitably estopped from asserting the anti-assignment provision in the plan since BCBS did not assert that provision in pre-surgery telephone conversations or the administrative claim process.  BCBS argued that the anti-assignment provision was valid and enforceable, even though the first time BCBS asserted the provision as a defense to payment was in litigation.  The district court agreed that the anti-assignment provision was valid and enforceable.  Beverly Oaks appealed.

In reversing the trial court’s order, the appeals court found that while anti-assignment clauses are valid and enforceable, plan administrators can waive the right to assert and enforce these provisions when their actions are inconsistent with the provision or they are aware that the claimant is acting as an assignee.

The court defined waiver as follows: “Waiver is ‘the intentional relinquishment of a known right.’ Gordon v. Deloitte & Touche LLP Grp. Long Term Disability Plan, 749 F.3d 746, 752 (9th Cir. 2014) (citing Intel Corp. v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 952 F.2d 1551, 1559 (9th Cir. 1991) (Waiver occurs when ‘a party intentionally relinquishes a right, or when that party’s acts are so inconsistent with an intent to enforce the right as to induce a reasonable belief that such right has been relinquished.’)).

The court found that Beverly Oaks had plead adequate facts to support waiver, including Beverly Oaks indicated on the claim form submitted to BCBS that it was acting as its patient’s assignee, BCBS processed each claim, denied in full or underpaid Beverly Oaks’ billed charges, and at no time during pre-surgery telephone conversations or the administrative claim process did BCBS raise the anti-assignment provision as a basis to deny benefits.  This was to enough to show that BCBS should have been aware that Beverly Oaks sought to collect plan benefits through a patient assignment.  The court also commented on BCBS’ silence and payment during the claims process, commenting that this behavior was “’so inconsistent with an intent to enforce’ the anti-assignment clause as to ‘induce a reasonable belief that [the right to enforce the clause] ha[d] been relinquished.’” The court held that “Blue Cross thus cannot raise the anti-assignment provision for the first time in litigation when Blue Cross held that provision in reserve as a reason to deny benefits.”

 

In addition to waiver, the court found the alleged facts also plausibly showed that BCBS made actionable misrepresentations upon which Beverly Oaks reasonably relied and therefore, were equitably estopped from raising the anti-assignment provisions.  “Equitable estoppel ‘holds the fiduciary to what it had promised and operates to place the person entitled to its benefit in the same position he would have been in had the representations been true.”  Specifically, the court pointed to telephone conversations between BCBS representative and Beverly Oaks wherein the representative stated that Beverly Oaks was eligible to receive payment, thus inducing Beverly Oaks to move forward with the claims process.  In addition to traditional requirements to establish equitable estoppel, under 9th  Circuit authority, Beverly Oaks also had to allege (1) extraordinary circumstances; (2) that the provisions of the plan at issue were ambiguous such that reasonable persons could disagree as to their meaning or effect; and (3) that the representations made about the plan were an interpretation of the plan, not an amendment or modification of the plan.  The court held that these requirements were properly alleged facts that show a BCBS made a promise that it reasonably should have expected to induce action or forbearance on Beverly Oaks’ part, combined with a showing of repeated misrepresentations over time.  Thus, the 9th Circuit reversed and remanded the case the case to the district court.

While federal courts consistently find anti-assignment clauses in ERISA matters enforceable, the decision in Beverly Oaks will have wide-reaching implications not only for medical providers, but also for plan participants and their beneficiaries.  Plan and claim administrators must beware that making misrepresentations regarding plan terms, making representations about whether a procedure is covered or failing to raise certain defenses during the pre-claim and claim administrative review process could give rise to equitable claims that inure to the benefit of plan participants, their beneficiaries, and to their assignees.  Because waiver and equitable estoppel serve as some of the legal systems’ fundamental checks on the fairness of a party’s actions and these doctrines serve to prevent employers and insurers from performing actions contradictory to what they have previously guaranteed or established via their words or conduct, decisions like Beverly Oaks are to be lauded.

Los Angeles Daily Journal Publishes Article on October 23, 2020 by Robert McKennon Entitled “Ruling Demonstrates When Employers Are Agents of Insurers”

In the October 23, 2020 issue of the Los Angeles Daily Journal, the Daily Journal published an article written by the McKennon Law Group PC’s Robert J. McKennon.  The article addresses a recent case by the California Court of Appeals, Dones v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., which reversed the trial court’s ruling sustaining demurrers without leave to amend based upon an agency theory due to the employer county’s errors administering the life insurance policy on behalf of the insurance company.  These errors were imputed to the insurance company, rendering it liable for the employer’s mistakes under the equitable remedies of waiver and estoppel.  The Dones case will surely be read to further expand liability against non-governmental employers and insurers and assist employees and their beneficiaries in receiving their much needed plan benefits.

Ruling demonstrates when employers are agents of insurers

A recent 9th Circuit decision affirms that in the context of employer-sponsored benefits, the employer is the agent of the insurer with regard to the administration of the policy.

By Robert J. McKennon

People are often drawn to job opportunities because of the employee benefits offered to them and their families.  A generous benefit package that includes several types of insurance such as medical, short-term and long-term disability, and life coverage could be the deciding factor for a prospective employee.  They are not experts in the enrollment process.  They often rely on their employer’s human resources department to help them understand their coverage options, pay their premiums, understand what forms they must submit and help them solve any problems that may arise.  However, if the employer fails to accurately explain coverage requirements, and if the forms are not correctly completed to an insurer’s satisfaction, insurers can and will deny claims, blaming the employees or their employers.  California law protects employees in some circumstances.  For example, under an agency theory, an employee can impute legal responsibility to the insurer for the employer’s errors in administering an employee benefit plan, thus rendering the insurer liable for the employer’s mistakes or negligence under equitable remedies of waiver and estoppel.  

The recent case of Dones v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 2020 DJDAR 10896 (Oct. 7, 2020) further expands protection for employees and their beneficiaries.  In Dones, an employee of the County of Alameda (County), Trina Johnson, enrolled in supplemental life insurance coverage with the Life Insurance Company of North America (LINA).  She was a County employee but on a medical leave of absence.  While on her medical leave, she received information regarding her benefit eligibility for the supplemental life insurance.  She made her election online, selecting $230,000 in supplemental life coverage and naming Michael Dones as her primary beneficiary.

The master policy stated, “If an Employee is not actively at work due to Injury or Sickness, coverage will not become effective for an Employee on the date his or her coverage would otherwise become effective under this Policy. [¶] Coverage will become effective on the date the Employee returns to Active Service.”  The master policy defined “Active Service” as follows:

An Employee will be considered in Active Service with the Employer on a day which is one of the Employer’s scheduled work days if either of the following conditions are met: [¶] 1. He or she is actively at work. This means the Employee is performing his or her regular occupation for the Employer on a full-time basis, either at one of the Employer’s usual places of business or at some location to which the Employer’s business requires the Employee to travel. [¶] 2. The day is a scheduled holiday, vacation day or period of Employer approved paid leave of absence, other than disability or sick leave after 7 days.

After her cancer diagnosis, Johnson received confirmation that she had successfully elected her benefits and that her coverage would become effective on January 1, 2017.  The County deducted premiums for her benefits which were sent to and accepted by LINA.  Johnson remained on leave and died six months later without having returned to work.

After Johnson’s death, a County employee informed Dones that Johnson’s life insurance coverage never became effective because she had not returned to “active service.”

Dones sued both LINA and the County.  In his second amended complaint, he asserted causes of action for breach of contract, breach of implied contract and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (against LINA only).  Dones asserted that both defendants waived and were estopped from asserting the active service requirement.  The second amended complaint alleged that if an employee who elected the supplemental insurance benefit while on leave returned to work for even one day after the January 1, 2017, effective date, the supplemental benefit would become active.  But Johnson did not understand the requirement and reasonably believed that the policy covered her automatically after the effective date.

Defendants filed demurrers to Dones’ amended complaint.  The trial court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend.  It rejected Dones’ argument that LINA and the County waived, or were estopped from enforcing, the active service requirement.  The trial court relied on case law holding that waiver and estoppel arguments cannot be used to create insurance coverage that does not exist in the plan documents.  Dones appealed.

In reversing the trial court’s order, the California Court of Appeals considered several cases, including most importantly the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Salyers v. Met. Life Ins. Co., 871 F.3d 934 (9th Cir. 2017), a case involving employee benefits subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).  The Salyers court found a waiver where the insurer accepted premium payments but later denied a death benefit because the plan participant failed to provide a “Statement of Health” as required for eligibility.  The court held, “The deductions of premiums, [the insurer] and [employer’s] failure to ask for a statement of health over a period of months, and [the employer’s] representation to Salyers that she had $250,000 in coverage were collectively ‘so inconsistent with an intent to enforce’ the evidence of insurability requirement as to ‘induce a reasonable belief that [it] ha[d] been relinquished.’”

While insurers and plan administrators often argue that waiver cannot be used to create coverage beyond that actually provided in an employee benefit plan, Salyers noted the distinction created by the acceptance of premiums.  The Salyers court held that where premium payments have been accepted despite the plan participant’s alleged noncompliance with policy terms, giving effect to the waiver does not expand the scope of the plan, but rather, provides the plaintiff with an available benefit for which he paid. 

The Dones court noted further that waiver and estoppel are normally questions of fact.  It declined to hold that these principles cannot establish the existence of an effective contract of insurance as a matter of law.

It then turned to whether the County’s conduct could support causes of action for breach of contract against LINA.  The court considered the California Supreme Court’s decision in Elfstrom v. New York Life Ins. Co., 67 Cal.2d 503, 512 (1967), which held as a matter of law that the employer is the agent of the insurer in performing the duties of administering group insurance policies.  The California Supreme Court based its reasoning on the fact that the employee has no knowledge or control over the employer’s actions in handling the policy or its administration.  The Dones court found that Dones’ allegations (that the County was acting as an agent for LINA in the administration of the life insurance policy as well as informing Johnson of available benefit options, communicating with her about and confirming her selections, deducting premium payments and transmitting them to LINA) were sufficient to allege agency under Elfstrom.  It determined that the County acted as LINA’s agent in administering the life insurance policy (for purposes of determining LINA’s liability).  But it held that the County could not be held responsible, relying on law that makes it difficult to pin liability on governmental entities.  

This decision affirms that in the context of employer-sponsored benefits, the employer is the agent of the insurer with regard to the administration of the policy.  This can be very important to tie an employer’s errors in administration to the insurer and thus provide an avenue of recourse for a beneficiary such as Dones who would otherwise be without recourse. 

Plan administrators must carefully and accurately communicate coverage options and policy terms to employees like Johnson.  If they do not, they and the insurer may be exposed to litigation and potential liability for their misconduct.  As was the case with Salyers, this often occurs with a “proof of good health” requirement that the plan administrator and insurer fails to enforce, leading the unsuspecting employees to believe they are fully covered.  Recent expansion of breach of fiduciary duty liability, waiver, estoppel and agency theories in federal ERISA cases have been a welcome development for employees who obtain insurance coverage from their employers.  While the Dones case did not find liability against the County, when read in conjunction with Salyers, it will surely be read to further expand liability against non-governmental employers and insurers outside of the ERISA context and will thus assist employees and plan beneficiaries to secure their much needed plan benefits.    Robert J. McKennon is a shareholder of McKennon Law Group PC in its Newport Beach office. His practice specializes in representing policyholders in life, health and disability insurance, insurance bad faith and ERISA litigation. He can be reached at (949) 387-9595 or rm@mckennonlawgroup.com. His firm’s California Insurance Litigation Blog can be found at mslawllp.com/news-blog/.

After McKennon Law Group PC Prevails on Fee Motion, Judge Orders Aetna to Pay Nearly $115,000 in Attorneys’ Fees to Plaintiff in ERISA Disability Case

On May 26, 2020, in the matter of Karen Fogerty v. Aetna Life Insurance Company, Case No. 2:19-cv-03018-DSF-GJS, Judge Dale S. Fischer of the U.S. District Court, Central District of California granted the McKennon Law Group PC’s motion for attorneys’ fees after its client prevailed in her ERISA lawsuit.  Aetna had wrongfully denied Fogerty’s disability claim and then, after a mediation, reversed its decision and agreed to pay her all past-due disability benefits and pay ongoing future benefits.  However, Aetna refused to agree to pay attorneys’ fees so we filed a motion for attorneys’ fees.  In granting the motion, the Court rejected several of Aetna’s arguments, including that McKennon Law Group PC had spent too much time drafting a detailed Amended Complaint, reviewing the administrative record and preparing a thorough mediation brief.  In the end, after determining that Fogerty was entitled to a fee award because she had achieved “some degree of success on the merits,” the Court awarded her $113,685 in fees.

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