Court Opinion

ID: 931965
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-26 15:47:23.159903+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:14:05.728479
License: Public Domain

12-152-cv
Miles v. Principal Life Ins. Co.

                              UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                                         FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
                                         _____________________

                                             August Term, 2012

                        (Argued: October 5, 2012             Decided: June 26, 2013)

                                            Docket No. 12-152-cv

                                         _____________________

                                               RALPH MILES,

                                                               Plaintiff-Appellant,

                                                        v.

                           PRINCIPAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                      AND VENABLE LLP LONG TERM DISABILITY PLAN,

                                                             Defendants-Appellees.

                                         _____________________

Before:

             WALKER and LYNCH, Circuit Judges, and GLEESON, District Judge.1

                Ralph Miles brings this appeal from an order of the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York (Marrero, J.) dismissing his complaint and entering
judgment for Defendants-Appellees. The district court held that Principal Life Insurance
Company’s decision denying Miles’s claim for long term disability benefits was not arbitrary
and capricious. Reviewing the district court’s decision de novo, we reverse and remand with
instructions to return the case to the plan administrator to reassess the application free of the
errors identified in this opinion.

                 REVERSED AND REMANDED.

1        The Honorable John Gleeson, of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New
York, sitting by designation.
                                            _____________________

                                                        KEVIN J. BRENNAN, Fabiani Cohen & Hall, LLP,
                                                        New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant,

                                                    STEVEN P. DEL MAURO (Valerie G. Pennacchio, on
                                                    the brief), McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney &
                                                    Carpenter, LLP, Morristown, NJ, for Defendants-
                                                    Appellees.
                                            _____________________

JOHN GLEESON, District Judge:

                  Plaintiff–appellant Ralph Miles appeals from a December 15, 2011 judgment of

the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Marrero, J.). Miles, a

partner in a law firm, suffers from bilateral tinnitus accompanied by ear pain, hearing loss,

headaches and vertigo. Claiming that these conditions prevent him from performing his job

duties, Miles applied for long term disability benefits. When Principal Life Insurance Company

(“Principal”) concluded that he was not eligible for benefits and denied the claim, Miles filed

this action in the district court pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B).2 After a bench trial on a

stipulated record pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52, the district court upheld the

plan administrator’s decision. Miles v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 831 F. Supp. 2d 767 (S.D.N.Y.

2011). We now reverse and remand with instructions to return the case to the plan administrator

to reassess Miles’s application free of the errors identified in this opinion and, if Principal

chooses, to seek additional evidence from Miles in support of his claim.

                                                 BACKGROUND

A.       Venable LLP’s Plan

                  Defendant Venable, LLP Long Term Disability Plan (the “Plan”) is an employee

benefit plan sponsored by the law firm of Venable LLP (“Venable”), of which Miles was a

partner. Principal issued a group Long Term Disability (“LTD”) insurance policy to Venable to

2        29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) affords a right of action to a “participant or beneficiary . . . 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.”

                                                            2
provide LTD coverage to eligible Plan participants. The Plan is governed by the Employee

Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. Principal is the

plan administrator and Miles, who was a full-time employee of Venable, is a member of the

Plan.

               According to the policy’s terms, when a Plan member submits “complete and

proper proof of Disability,” benefits “will be payable.” Venable LLP Group Policy (“Group

Policy”), Article 5, J.A. 36. As relevant to this appeal, a member will be considered disabled “if,

solely and directly because of sickness [or] injury,” the member “cannot perform the majority of

the Substantial and Material Duties of his or her Own Occupation.” Group Policy, Article 1,

J.A. 33. The policy defines “Substantial and Material Duties” as “[t]he essential tasks generally

required by employers from those engaged in a particular occupation that cannot be modified or

omitted,” and defines “Own Occupation” as “[t]he specialty in the practice of law the Member is

routinely performing for the Policyholder when his or her Disability begins.” Id. at 34. The

policy does not define “sickness” or “injury.”

                To be eligible for benefits, a claimant must provide “[w]ritten proof that

Disability exists and has been continuous.” Id. at 35. This proof “includes the date, nature, and

extent of loss.” Id. Principal, as the plan administrator, may “request additional information to

substantiate loss . . . [and] reserves the right to determine when these conditions are met.” Id.

B.      The Administrative Proceedings

               1.      Miles Applies for Benefits

               Miles, a commercial real estate attorney, worked as a senior equity partner in the

New York office of Venable, and was the head of its real estate practice. He stopped working

on April 17, 2009, as a result of bilateral tinnitus (high-frequency noises in both ears),

intractable ear and head pain, and a feeling of disorientation. He filed his claim for LTD

                                                  3
benefits soon thereafter, on May 9, 2009. He was 53 years old at the time he applied for

benefits.

                  On Friday, April 17, 2009, the day he stopped working, Miles made an

appointment for the following Monday to see his doctor, internist Dr. Steven Kobren, about the

pounding sensation in his ears and head. On April 19, he went to Winthrop Hospital emergency

room, believing he was having a heart attack or a stroke. The next day Miles visited Dr.

Kobren, seeking help for lightheadedness, dizziness, and loss of balance. Dr. Kobren indicated

that Miles suffered from vertigo, “[m]ost likely secondary to [labyrinthitis],”3 J.A. 292, and

referred Miles to Dr. Kenneth Etra, an Ear, Nose and Throat (“ENT”) specialist.

                  Dr. Etra’s report indicated that Miles’s difficulties commenced about eight

months earlier, when he began to suffer bilateral ear pain with tinnitus and hearing loss in his

left ear. Then, immediately before he stopped working on April 17, 2009, Miles developed

“significant pain in the ears as well as in the head with a pulsation feeling in his head.” Dr. Etra

identified “two separate problems; one being sinusitis and the second being the sensorineural

hearing loss with the tinnitus.” Id. at 299. He indicated a diagnosis of “[s]inusitis, sensorineural

hearing loss, tinnitus, and headache” and placed Miles on steroids and antibiotics. Dr. Etra also

referred Miles for a “neurological evaluation due to his fogginess.” That same day, a

neurologist, Dr. Itzhak C. Haimovic, performed a neurological consultation. His “review of

systems” reported as follows: “Significant for tinnitus, vertigo, hearing loss, headaches,

lightheadedness, and generalized weakness.” He ordered a series of tests, including an

electroencephalography (“EEG”) and an MRI of the brain, and placed Miles on a medication for

musculoskeletal headaches as well as a muscle relaxant.

                  On May 5, 2009, Miles completed a disability claim form seeking LTD benefits

under the Plan, alleging that he was unable to work beginning on April 17, 2009. Disability

3        Labyrinthitis is “inflammation of the labyrinth or inner ear,” 18 Oxford English Dictionary 950 (2d ed.
1989).

                                                         4
Claim Form (“Claim Form”), J.A. 151. Dr. Etra filled out the physician portion of the form,

listing diagnoses of intractable tinnitus, hearing loss, and headache. Expanding on his diagnoses

in an attached letter, Dr. Etra indicated that Miles “complains of a pounding in his head [that is]

synchronous with his heartbeat,” and opined: “I believe at this time he appears to be with

significant tinnitus, hearing loss and intractable head pain. Etiology at this point is

undetermined. He seems to be very foggy and unable to concentrate and it seems that he will at

the present time be unable to carry on his job.”

               In further support of his claim, Miles provided a description of his symptoms and

the duties and activities he was unable to perform at work as a result of those symptoms. With

respect to the former, he stated as follows:

               I have constant pain in my left ear and frequent pain in the right
               and a generalized painful sensation throughout my head. At
               times, I would describe the pain in my ears as a pounding
               sensation. I also have other odd sensations. The left side of my
               face feels numb and puffy. I feel disoriented with frequent “high
               frequency” sound in my ears blocking out everything else. These
               “high frequency” sounds occur even as I sleep, waking me and
               leaving me sleep deprived on many mornings. When I went to
               the emergency room on April 19 I was afraid I might be having a
               stroke. Since then, my doctors have diagnosed tinnitus and
               vertigo, and the pain and the sense of disorientation have
               continued.

See Claim Form, J.A. 155. As for the demands of his employment, Miles stated:

               My work as a large-firm commercial real estate partner has
               involved several main duties: communicating with others
               (including lengthy negotiation sessions) in person, by phone, and
               via computer or Blackberry; reading and understanding complex
               documents (both paper and electronic); drafting and revising
               dense and often lengthy documents; memorizing detailed facts;
               thinking about difficult problems and devising solutions; and
               supervising the work of associates assigned to work with me. All
               these tasks must be done both quickly and carefully, often under
               significant time pressure, and sometimes late into the night.

Id. He concluded that, “[b]ecause of these problems, especially the pain, I am not able to read

for any length of time and cannot concentrate adequately to address the complicated issues

                                                   5
typical for my work day. The last day I tried to work was Friday, April 17, but the pain and

disorientation made it impossible for me to do my work at all.” Id.

               2.      Principal’s Initial Investigation

               Principal’s claim examiner conducted a lengthy telephone interview of Miles on

August 10, 2009. Forty-five minutes into the interview Miles lost his concentration and asked

for a 20-minute break to lie down. When the interview resumed, he explained the nature and

demands of his employment as a real estate lawyer. The claim examiner’s notes state, in

relevant part, as follows:

               [On Thursday] April 16, 2009 . . . as [Miles] was driving, he began to feel
               disorientated . . . . As evening wore on, he began to have something like
               pounding sensation in ears and head . . . . Did not pass with time and even when
               went to bed it was still persisting, but felt if he got thru day it would begin to
               wear off. Went to work [on Friday, April 17], but whole day nothing changed . .
               . and he called the doctors (sic) office . . . . Made an appointment to see Dr.
               Kobren . . . on 4/20/09.

               [On Sunday April 19, Miles] went to ER . . . as the pounding sensation
               in ears and head was more rapid . . . . [On April 23, Miles s]aw Dr. Etra
               . . . . Told him overview of symptoms and beyond pain [he had]
               constant ringing in ears, high pitched sound . . . . Continues to have
               severe pain in left ear and hearing loss, pain in head, creates a lack of
               concentration . . . .

               Restrictions: Constant tinnitus, pain in ears, disorientation daily and
               constant . . . . [His work] involved very intense negotiations and all
               forms whether in person or phone, he would get novel documents to
               review and comment on prior to multi million dollar transactions and
               billions of dollars of real estate loans. Long hours, and it really takes a
               lot of concentration and a lot of focus . . . . Ability to concentrate and
               focus for long periods of time is not something he can perform.

J.A. 167-69.

               There was no indication in the record that Miles stopped working at Venable for

any reason other than the above-described symptoms. Nevertheless, three weeks after the

telephone interview of Miles, the claims examiner called Venable’s Benefits Coordinator and

explained that it “need[ed] to know what actually happened at [the] time Ralph stopped

                                                 6
working.” Specifically, Principal “[a]sked [the Benefits Coordinator] if she can confirm if

termination was due to [a] medical condition, or other reasons.” The Benefits Coordinator, who

worked in the Washington, D.C. office of Venable, not in New York, reportedly answered that

“she thinks it was other reasons, but will need to make some additional phone calls.” The

record indicates that Principal left two follow-up voicemail messages with the Benefits

Coordinator, neither of which was returned.

                 3.       Miles’s Offer to be Examined

                 October 10, 2009 marked the end of the 180-day “elimination period” under the

policy, and Miles’s attorney contended that Miles was entitled to benefits beginning one month

after that date. On October 16, 2009, the attorney, frustrated by the fact that he had not heard

from Principal for about two months, asked why Principal had not simply sent Miles for an

examination. Principal explained that it typically did not do that, but rather relied on the

information from treating physicians and exercised its discretion to schedule an examination

only if that information proved inadequate.

                 4.       The October 27 Letter: Principal Informs Miles that it Needs Additional
                          Information in Order to Complete its Evaluation

                 On October 27, 2012, Principal sent Miles a letter indicating that it had received

“medical records from all of the physicians,”4 but it lacked information “from them regarding

specific restrictions and limitations they have placed upon you that would prevent you from

continuing to perform your” occupation. Letter from Principal, Oct. 27, 2009, J.A. 39. The

letter further stated that the “testing that has been performed, other then (sic) the auditory testing

we recently received from Dr. Etra, indicates normal findings.” Id. Although Principal

acknowledged that Miles had provided them with his “occupational functions with Venable,”

the letter concluded that “it is unclear what specific functions you are precluded from

4
         The listed physicians were Dr. Etra, Dr. Haimovic, and Dr. Kobren. Dr. Kobren’s records included letters
to him from a Dr. Blanck and a Dr. Makovsky.

                                                        7
performing as an Attorney, or what condition/conditions are of the severity to prevent you from

performing your own occupation . . . .” Id. Under the heading “Information Needed to Continue

Our Evaluation,” Principal stated as follows:

               Medical documentation to support the severity of symptoms you
               experience related to your condition, and confirmation from your
               treating physician regarding what specific restrictions and limitations
               they have imposed, which prevent you from performing your own
               occupation effective April 17, 2009 through the present time.

Id. The letter also informed Miles that Principal had asked an ENT specialist and a neurologist

to review the claim.

               5.      Miles’s Response to the October 27, 2009 Letter

               In a letter dated November 9, 2009, Miles’s attorney disputed Principal’s

assertions that the specific functions Miles could no longer perform and the conditions that

prevented him from performing them were unclear. Citing the evidence already submitted to

Principal, counsel asserted that Miles suffered from intractable tinnitus, vertigo, severe hearing

loss, ear pain, and headaches, and that those conditions prevented Miles from communicating

with others (including lengthy negotiation sessions), reading and understanding complex

documents, drafting and revising such documents, memorizing numerous factual details,

thinking about and devising solutions for difficult legal and transactional problems, and

supervising associates, all of which tasks sometimes required working late into the night. The

attorney expressed confusion why this “clear proof” was insufficient to satisfy the specific

language of the policy. Counsel’s letter also asked for an opportunity to review and comment

on any reports from the neurology and ENT specialists Principal had stated it would retain.

               6.      Principal Retains Independent Medical Evaluators to Review Miles’s File

               On November 18, 2009, Principal engaged two specialists from Reliable Review

Services – neurologist Dr. Bruce LeForce and otolaryngologist (i.e., ENT specialist) Dr. Thomas

Klein – to conduct a “peer file review.” Principal specifically instructed Dr. LeForce to call Dr.

                                                 8
Haimovic, Miles’s treating neurologist, “to discuss his findings and find out what he feels is

impeding work.” Though Dr. LeForce attempted to do so twice, Dr. Haimovic indicated that he

had not been provided with a release, so he could not discuss Miles with Dr. LeForce. In his

assessment, Dr. LeForce stated that “[t]here are no objective findings to support impairment

from a neurological perspective. There are no restrictions or limitations supported by the

information provided. He is capable of full time work.” Lead Advisory Report, J.A. 350-52.

                Dr. Klein completed a “Secondary Advisory Report.” Whereas Dr. LeForce had

been unable to consult with the treating neurologist, Dr. Klein consulted with Miles’s treating

ENT physician, Dr. Etra. Dr. Klein’s report attributed to Dr. Etra the impression “that the

tinnitus was subjective and the vertigo was not a real problem and the headaches were not

related to ear, nose or throat; nor was the fogginess related to ear, nose or throat.” Secondary

Advisory Report, J.A. 354. When asked about restrictions and limitations, Dr. Klein concluded

that “[t]here is [a] lack of objective findings . . . to support the need for restrictions and

limitations on work activities from an otolaryngology prospective (sic).” He also noted a “lack

of objective findings to support . . . the claimant’s subjective complaints.” Id. at 355. In

conclusion, Dr. Klein emphasized that the file lacked observable, objective information

confirming that Miles is disabled:

                While the claimant has a history of hearing loss, vertigo and ear pain, with
                the exception of the hearing loss there is no clinical documentation . . .
                from the treating provider that clearly details any significant or severe
                positive objective findings or significant severe functional limitations
                occurring that would have prevented his return back to his regular job.
                The observeable (sic) information provided does not clearly support
                severity of impairment with significant limitations of functioning.

Id.

                7.      Principal’s Initial Denial of Miles’s Claim

                Principal did not respond to Miles’s attorney’s November 9 letter or allow

counsel to comment on the reports from Dr. LeForce and Dr. Klein. Rather, on December 8,

                                                   9
2009, it informed Miles that it had completed its review of his claim and decided to deny it.

See Initial Denial, J.A. 45-50. Principal provided a series of reasons for this decision. First, it

pointed out that Dr. Etra had indicated “none” in “the portion of the work status sheet which

asks the physician for specific restrictions.” Id. at 46. Specifically, Dr. Etra wrote “none” in a

box asking whether he had restricted the number of hours Miles can sit, stand, stoop, use his

hands to push or pull, etc. Immediately above this box on the Work Status Sheet, Dr. Etra stated

that Miles was “unable to work” due to “hearing loss, vertigo, [and] tinnitus.” Work Status

Sheet, J.A 343. However, Principal did not mention the latter information in its initial denial.

                Second, Principal’s denial stated that “[a]lthough [Dr. Etra’s] work status sheet

primarily outlines physical restrictions . . . , Dr. Etra did not identify other conditions, such as

concentration, headaches, or hearing loss as being of the severity these (sic) would preclude you

from returning to your own occupation.” Initial Denial, J.A. 47 (emphasis added). Actually, as

mentioned above, Etra’s work status sheet states unequivocally that Miles is unable to work due

to hearing loss, vertigo and tinnitus. Work Status Sheet, J.A 343.

                Third, Principal indicated that “[i]t is not clear what . . . transpired on April 17,

2009 to prevent you from returning to work following this date.” Initial Denial, J.A. 47. Fourth,

Principal noted that its claims examiner “did not have difficulty with verbal communication”

with Miles during the August 10, 2009 phone interview. Id. Fifth, Principal quoted Dr. Klein’s

summary of his conversation with Dr. Etra; according to Dr. Klein: “Dr. Etra also felt that the

tinnitus was subjective, the vertigo was not a real problem[,] and the headaches were not related

to ear, nose or throat; nor was the fogginess.” Id.

                Principal’s initial denial acknowledged that the reviewing neurologist, Dr.

LeForce, had not discussed Miles’s case with the treating neurologist, Dr. Haimovic. However,

Principal placed the blame for that as follows: “Dr. Haimovic would not discuss you as he

indicated he did not have proper authorization. But, Dr. LeForce had forwarded an

                                                  10
authorization to Dr. Haimovic on two separate occasions.” Id. (emphasis added). This was

inaccurate. In fact, Dr. LeForce’s report states only that he had asked RRS – the service through

which he had been retained – to send the release to Dr. Haimovic.5

                  In summary, Principal stated as follows in declining Miles’s claim:

                  While you have a history of hearing loss, vertigo and ear pain, with the
                  exception of the hearing loss there is no clinical documentation available for
                  review from the treating providers that clearly states . . . any significant
                  severe functional limitations . . . that would have prevented you from
                  returning back to your regular job. The observable information provided
                  does not clearly support the severity of impairment with significant
                  limitations of functioning. Therefore, we are declining your claim for Long
                  Term Disability Benefits as the information we have received does not
                  support the severity of symptoms related to a condition/conditions that
                  would prevent you from performing your Own Occupation.

Initial Denial, J.A. 48.

                  After laying out the above reasons for denying his claims, Principal informed

Miles that he had the right to appeal. Principal directed that Miles provide “[m]edical

information,” “testing,” and “results” to meet his burden of proof on appeal. Id. at 49.

Specifically, it indicated that he should provide: (1) “testing to support the severity of your

condition/conditions”; (2) an explanation from his treating doctors “outlining upon what medical

basis they would support your inability to perform your occupation”; (3) “[m]edical records,

testing and results . . . that supports (sic) your inability to return to your own occupation with the

use of [a] hearing aid.”; (4) “[r]esults of cognitive testing with findings of the severity that they

(sic) impact your ability to concentrate, and a physician who will support [that] these results . . .

would have prevented you from performing your own occupation as of April 17, 2009”; and (5)

“[s]pecific restrictions and limitations from your treating Physician with a diagnosis or

5         It is undisputed that Miles had executed a release authorizing Principal to speak to any physician or
healthcare provider that had provided any kind of treatment within the past ten years. Auth. For Release, J.A. 291.
Moreover, Miles’s attorney had offered his assistance to obtain paperwork from Miles’s doctors when Principal
had, in the past, attributed delays in processing Miles’s claim to difficulty in obtaining medical information. J.A.
44.

                                                         11
symptoms . . . includ[ing] medical documentation to support these restrictions . . . [and]

sustained functional limitations due to your disabling diagnosis.” Id.

                  8.        Miles Requests Review of the Denial

                  On September 27, 2010, Miles sought review of the denial of his claim. He

argued that Principal’s reasons for denying his claim were not supported by the record proof and

submitted more than 60 pages of additional information in support of the claim. Specifically, he

included updated reports from Dr. Etra and Dr. Haimovic (both dated September 23, 2010) and

the results of videonystagmography (“VNG”) testing.6 In his report, Dr. Etra explained that

tinnitus was Miles’s most significant issue and elaborated on his clinical findings:

            It is a roaring tinnitus which is constantly in [Miles’s] head. In addition,
            he has significant ongoing headaches due to the tinnitus. He has been
            fully worked up and has had all treatment modalities that are available,
            yet despite this, the hearing loss has remained profound . . . . [The
            tinnitus] is a subjective complaint. It clearly is completely consistent
            with the degree of hearing loss. Patients who have this degree of
            tinnitus have significant inability to concentrate and perform ongoing
            significant mental tasks that require this prolonged concentration.

Letter from Dr. Etra, Sept. 23, 2010, J.A. 84

                  Miles also included: (1) records related to “vertigo-related injuries” that occurred

in February 2010, J.A. 59-60; (2) a report from physical therapist Dr. Sheetal Desai, who

summarized objective findings7 in support of Miles’s diagnosis and opined that Miles’s

6
         Videonystagmography (“VNG”) is a series of tests used to determine the causes of a patient’s dizziness or
balance disorders. The test works by documenting a person’s ability to follow visual objects with their eyes and
how well the eyes respond to information from the vestibular system. See Videonystagmography,
http://www.jeffersonhospital.org/tests-and-treatments/videonystagmography (last visited June 21, 2013). The
audiologist who conducted Miles’s VNG test opined that “[t]he vestibular findings in conjunction with the
complaints of tinnitus and hearing loss may suggest Meniere’s disease,” a disorder of the inner ear. Patient Report
– VNG Test, J.A. 77. In a follow-up letter, Dr. Haimovic opined that “the patient’s sensation of true vertigo,
dizziness, balance disorder, fogging, and difficulties with concentration are all supported by the abnormal [VNG],”
and that Miles “has received symptomatic therapy for more than a year now without any improvement.” Letter from
Dr. Haimovic, J.A. 83.
7
         Dr. Desai described, inter alia, the results of the VNG, which “suggests caloric responses of right ear 31%
weaker than Left ear and abnormal gain asymmetry with left beating caloric responses 28% stronger than right
beating caloric responses.” J.A. 79. Dr. Desei concluded that Miles’s VNG indicated “optikinetic and horizontal
tracking results [that] were abnormal bilaterally,” and that these “limitation[s] affect[] the essential tasks of his own
occupation.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Dr. Desai also discussed the results of an MRI of the cervical
spine in 2010, which showed disc abnormalities.

                                                           12
“significant pain in neck, headaches, tinnitus, ringing in ears and loss of hearing . . . limit[] his

ability to . . . sit through lengthy negotiation sessions . . . sit at a desk and read for an extended

period of time . . . [and] writ[e] and draft[] papers,” J.A. 78-79; (3) a “physical residual

functional capacity questionnaire” completed on March 11, 2010 by Dr. Haimovic, which

indicated, inter alia, that Miles’s symptoms “interfere with attention and concentration . . .

[c]onstantly,” J.A. 71-72; (4) a new medical report from Dr. Michael Gordon, an ENT specialist,

who stated his “impression . . . that Mr. Miles has objective evidence of conductive hearing loss

in his left ear as well as evidence of probable vestibular dysfunction in his right ear,” and further

indicated that Miles “is experiencing troublesome tinnitus in both ears, which cannot be

measured objectively.” J.A. 82. Dr. Gordon opined that Miles’s “constant headaches cannot be

explained on the basis of otologic disease, [but] it is possible that his tinnitus and vestibular

function resulted from systemic factors that also cause the headaches,” J.A. 82; (5) and Dr.

Gordon’s opinion that a hearing aid would not alleviate Miles’s disequilibrium or tinnitus.

                Miles also objected to Principal’s focus on the lack of objective information

confirming the cause of Miles’s tinnitus, noting that “the Plan language requires that Mr. Miles

prove that he suffers from a sickness but does not also require that he prove the cause of that

sickness.” J.A. 60. Miles pointed out that the initial denial did not dispute the truthfulness of

any of Miles symptoms, including their persistence, severity intensity, and duration. Id. at 55.

In fact, Principal’s denial letter “did not state that the Plan did not credit” Miles’s statement

about his symptoms and, thus, Miles argued that his symptoms ought to be considered

undisputed. Id. at 53 (emphasis in original). Miles also objected to the fact that Principal did

not “identify any . . . objective findings or limitations that, considering Miles’ undisputed

symptoms, the Plan would reasonably have expected to see.” Id. Finally, Miles argued that

“Principal’s express reliance on the absence of ‘restrictions and limitations’ . . . violated

                                                   13
Principal’s . . . fiduciary duty to decide Mr. Miles’ claim in accordance with the terms of the

Plan.” Id. at 56.

                  9. Miles is Awarded Disability Benefits from the Social Security Administration

                  After Miles’s appeal letter was sent to Principal, the Social Security

Administration (“SSA”) found that he had been disabled since April 16, 2009. Miles sent the

SSA decision to Principal and asked it to consider the decision in its review. The Commissioner

of SSA concluded that Miles has the following severe impairments: hearing loss; vertigo;

tinnitus; and cervical impingement with radiculopathy. Miles was found to be disabled at step

three of the Commissioner’s five-part disability inquiry.8 Decision of the SSA, J.A 134.

Specifically, the Commissioner concluded that Miles’s impairments meet the criteria of listing

2.07: “Disturbance of labyrinthine-vestibular function (including Meniere’s disease),

characterized by a history of frequent attacks of balance disturbance, tinnitus, and progressive

loss of hearing.”9 In reaching this conclusion, the Commissioner specifically found that Miles

was credible:

                  After considering the evidence of record, the undersigned finds that the
                  claimant’s medically determinable impairments could reasonably be
                  expected to produce the alleged symptoms, and that the claimant’s
                  statements concerning the intensity, persistence and limiting effects of
                  these symptoms are generally credible. In evaluating the record, I note
                  that the clamant has a long work history, which enhances his credibility.

Decision of the SSA, J.A 135.

8        SSA regulations prescribe a five-step process for evaluating disability claims.
             First, the Commissioner considers whether the claimant is currently engaged in substantial gainful
             activity. If he is not, the Commissioner next considers whether the claimant has a “severe impairment”
             which significantly limits his physical or mental ability to do basic work activities. If the claimant
             suffers such an impairment, the third inquiry is whether, based solely on medical evidence, the
             claimant has an impairment which is listed in Appendix 1 of the regulations. If the claimant has such
             an impairment, the Commissioner will consider him disabled without considering vocational factors
             such as age, education, and work experience . . . . Assuming the claimant does not have a listed
             impairment, the fourth inquiry is whether, despite the claimant’s severe impairment, he has the
             residual functional capacity to perform his past work. Finally, if the claimant is unable to perform his
             past work, the Commissioner then determines whether there is other work which the claimant could
             perform.
DeChirico v. Callahan, 134 F.3d 1177, 1179-80 (2d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
9        See Social Security Administration, Appendix 1 to Subpart P of Part 404—Listing of Impairments,
http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/cfr20/404/404-app-p01.htm (last visited June 21, 2013).

                                                         14
                  10.      Principal Requests Additional Independent Medical Evaluations

                  As mentioned above, in October 2009 Principal declined Miles’s lawyer’s

suggestion that Principal conduct an in-person examination of Miles during the initial review of

his claim.    However, a year later, in connection with Miles’s request for review of the initial

denial of benefits, Principal requested that Miles submit to physical examinations. Principal

asserts that Miles refused to submit to these exams, but the record reveals a more nuanced

dispute over their permissible scope. We need not decide here whether Principal had an

unfettered right to require such exams.10

                  Principal retained additional independent experts to review Miles’s file. ENT

specialist Dr. Robert Carpenter from Reliable Review Services and neurologist Dr. Leonid

Topper from MES Solutions reviewed the file and submitted written reports in response to

questions posed by Principal. Dr. Carpenter reported that the diagnoses on which Miles’s claim

rested were in fact substantiated by objective findings: “left mixed hearing loss, mostly

conductive[;] right vestibular weakness[; and] cervical disc disease,” and that “there are no

objective tests for tinnitus.” Dr. Carpenter Advisory Report, Nov. 15, 2010, J.A 148. Dr.

Carpenter further stated that Miles “stopped working because of the headaches and foggy

feeling along with the loud tinnitus.” It was his prognosis was that, absent successful

treatment,11 Miles would suffer a “continuation of the same symptoms.” Id. at 149.

Nevertheless, in response to the question: “What restrictions and limitations would you

recommend,” Dr. Carpenter responded: “From the objective data in the medical records, there

appear to be no physical limitations or restrictions.” Id. (emphasis added).

10
          The district court noted that “Principal continued with its review and did not base its Final Determination
on Miles’s refusal,” and thus declined to consider whether Miles was obligated under the terms of the policy to
attend the examination. Miles, 831 F. Supp. 2d at 774 n.2. Principal does not appeal the district court’s refusal to
resolve this question on the merits. Accordingly, this question is not before us, and we decline to consider it.
11
          Dr. Carpenter observed that Miles’s hearing loss and right vestibular weakness “may possibly be further
treatable.” J.A 150.

                                                          15
                  Dr. Topper stated that “[t]he medical records fail to document any specific

neurological diagnosis that would explain at least a larger part of the claimant’s symptoms.

Specifically, the claimant’s difficulty concentrating and daily headaches are essentially self-

reported . . . .” Peer Review Report, Jan. 25, 2011, J.A. 127. He opined that the “self-reported

complaints cannot be explained by any known neurological condition.” Peer Review Report,

Nov. 17, 2010, J.A. 143. Finally, Dr. Topper opined, inter alia, that Miles’s “headaches [were]

reported to happen in the claimant’s fifth decade of life, which is not typical for primary

headaches . . . . [T]he claimant’s headaches do not match a typical pattern of migraine . . . [and]

[t]hese headaches have multiple symptoms which are not typically seen in migraines . . . .” Peer

Review Report, J.A. 122.

                  11. Principal’s Final Decision Denying Miles’s Claim

                  On February 11, 2011, Principal issued a final decision reaffirming its decision to

decline Miles’s claim for benefits. Principal explained that “[t]he medical documentation . . .

received does not support a medical condition that would preclude Mr. Miles from performing

his occupation.” J.A. 540. It again stated that it was unclear “what changed in [Miles’s]

condition in April of 2009, to prevent him from working,” noting that it had attempted to get this

information about his employment history but Venable had “declined to discuss this with us.”12

J.A. 542. It summarized the medical reports to date, and noted that “[t]he tinnitus did not find

an explanation by ENT or by neurology . . . [and] [m]any of the complainant’s complaints do

not match the findings of neurological examination.” Id. It concluded that Miles’s “description

12         As mentioned above, Principal’s claims investigator called Venable’s Benefits Coordinator almost four
months after the claim was filed and explained her “need to know what actually happened” when Miles stopped
working, that is, whether his departure from the firm was due to “medical conditions, or other reasons.” J.A. 261.
Based on an offhand remark by that Benefits Coordinator (who did not even work in the same office as Miles) that
there might be another reason for Miles’s departure from work, Principal pursued that possibility for almost two
months. As its counsel conceded at oral argument, see Oral Arg. Recording at 11:25:00, the effort unearthed
nothing, as it appears that Venable never returned Principal’s calls. Accordingly, there is literally no evidence in
the record of any reason why Miles stopped working other than his symptoms, and indeed the only statement in the
record on the subject from the Benefits Coordinator is that Miles’s employment ended because of “illness.”
J.A.151. The admitted absence of any support for it did not deter Principal from including the following statement
in its brief to this Court: “[The Benefits Coordinator] thought [Miles’s] termination was due to a reason other than
his medical condition.” Appellee Br. at 9.

                                                         16
of his symptoms . . . does not match any recognizable pattern of any primary or secondary

headaches syndrome known to neurologists,” and therefore rejected his claim for LTD benefits.

Id. at 545.

C.      The Procedural History of this Case

              Miles brought this action challenging Principal’s denial of his claim, asserting that

he “met all of his obligations under the terms of the Policy and the Plan,” and that Principal

“arbitrarily and capriciously denied [his] claim for benefits and then arbitrarily and capriciously

failed to provide a full and fair review of that denial.” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 18, 26, J.A. 10.

                 The parties consented to a bench trial on a stipulated administrative record

pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. The District Court reviewed Principal’s initial

determination and concluded that it was supported by substantial evidence and that it was

neither arbitrary nor capricious. Miles, 831 F. Supp. 2d at 775-78. Specifically, it held that

Principal (1) reasonably relied on Miles’s failure to demonstrate “restrictions and limitations” as

a basis to deny his claim; (2) did not err by failing to expressly state whether it credited Miles’s

subjective complaints; and (3) reasonably required objective proof of a significant impairment.

                 Because the district court concluded that the initial denial was neither arbitrary

nor capricious, it reviewed the final determination solely to determine if Principal afforded

Miles a full and fair review of the initial denial decision. Miles, 831 F. Supp. 2d at 778.

Concluding that the final decision “considered and addressed both the proof submitted before

the Initial Determination and the additional proof submitted during the appeal,” the court

concluded that Miles was accorded the full and fair review to which he was entitled prior to the

final determination denying his claim. Accordingly, it directed the entry of judgment dismissing

the complaint. This appeal followed.

                                                  17
                                                  DISCUSSION

A.       Standard of Review

              This appeal centers on the legal significance of the facts in the administrative record

that was jointly submitted to the district court. The district court did not hear witness testimony

or make any credibility determinations; rather, it reviewed the record and made legal

conclusions based on its contents. Accordingly, we review the district court’s legal conclusions

de novo. LoPresti v. Terwilliger, 126 F.3d 34, 38-39 (2d Cir. 1997).

              Judicial review of a plan administrator’s underlying benefits determination is

reviewed de novo unless, as here, the plan grants the administrator discretionary authority to

determine eligibility for benefits or to construe the terms of the plan. Firestone Tire & Rubber

Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 115 (1989). Since the parties agree that Principal has such

discretionary authority, this Court applies a more deferential standard, seeking to determine only

whether the administrator’s decision was “arbitrary and capricious.” Celardo v. GNY Auto.

Dealers Health & Welfare Trust, 318 F.3d 142, 145 (2d Cir. 2003) (“[P]lans investing the

administrator with broad discretionary authority to determine eligibility are reviewed under the

arbitrary and capricious standard.”). Thus, despite our de novo review of the district court’s

decision, we accord substantial deference to Principal’s underlying determination denying

Miles’s claim. However, courts may dial back deference if “a benefit plan gives discretion to an

administrator or fiduciary who is operating under a conflict of interest.” Bruch, 489 U.S. at

115.13

13
         In reviewing an administrator’s decision under the deferential “arbitrary and capricious” standard, we
remain cognizant of the conflict of interest that exists when the administrator has both the discretionary authority to
determine eligibility for benefits and the obligation to pay benefits when due. See Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Glenn,
554 U.S. 105, 111, 114 (2008); Durakovic v. Bldg. Serv. 32 BJ Pension Fund, 609 F.3d 133, 138 (2d Cir. 2010).
“The weight properly accorded a Glenn conflict varies in direct proportion to the likelihood that the conflict
affected the benefits decision.” Durakovic, 609 F.3d at 139 (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted). We
agree with the district court that there is no evidence that Principal has a history of biased claim adjudication.
Miles, 831 F. Supp. 2d at 776. The question of conflict is to be considered anew if, after remand to Principal for
reconsideration of the claim, this case returns to the federal courts for additional review.

                                                          18
               A decision is arbitrary and capricious only if it is found to be “without reason,

unsupported by substantial evidence or erroneous as a matter of law.” Pagan v. NYNEX Pension

Plan, 52 F.3d 438, 442 (2d Cir. 1995) (internal quotation marks omitted). “[W]here the

administrator imposes a standard not required by the plan’s provisions, or interprets the plan in a

manner inconsistent with its plain words, its actions may well be found to be arbitrary and

capricious.” McCauley v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., 551 F.3d 126, 133 (2d Cir. 2008) (quoting

Pulvers v. First UNUM Life Ins. Co., 210 F.3d 89, 93 (2d Cir. 2000)). Further, where, by their

interpretation, the trustees of a plan “render some provisions of the plan superfluous, their

actions may well be found to be arbitrary and capricious.” Miles v. N.Y. State Teamsters

Conference Pension & Ret. Fund Emp. Pension Benefit Plan, 698 F.2d 593, 599 (2d Cir. 1983).

B.     Analysis

       1. Principal Failed to Properly Consider Miles’s Subjective Complaints

               This Court has long recognized that subjective complaints of disabling conditions

are not merely evidence of a disability, but are an “important factor to be considered in

determining disability.” Connors v. Conn. Gen. Life Ins. Co., 272 F.3d 127, 136 (2d Cir. 2001)

(quoting Mimms v. Heckler, 750 F.2d 180, 185 (2d Cir. 1984)). In Connors, the district court

described a claimant’s alleged disability as “a subjective matter,” and disregarded subjective

evidence of pain in its assessment of the disability claim. We reversed, concluding that the

court “erred in discounting Connors’s complaints of pain as merely ‘subjective,’” and holding

that courts may not “dismiss complaints of pain as legally insufficient evidence of disability.”

Id. at 136. Connors and other decisions by this Court have made it clear that it is arbitrary and

capricious to disregard evidence simply because it is subjective. See, e.g., Thurber v. Aetna Life

Ins. Co., 712 F.3d 654, 660 (2d Cir. 2013) (noting that the plan administrator must give

“sufficient attention to . . . subjective complaints”); Krizek v. Cigna Grp. Ins., 345 F.3d 91, 101-

                                                 19
02 (2d Cir. 2003) (noting that it is error to reject subjective evidence simply because it is

subjective); Marcus v. Califano, 615 F.2d 23, 27 (2d Cir. 1979) (“[T]he subjective evidence of

appellant’s pain, based on her own testimony and the medical reports of examining physicians,

is more than ample to establish her disability, if believed.”)

               Thus, a reviewing court is obliged to determine whether a plan administrator has

given “sufficient attention to [the claimant’s] subjective complaints . . . before determining that

they were not supported by objective evidence.” Thurber, 712 F.3d at 660. If the subjective

evidence is not credited, Section 503(1) of ERISA mandates that the plan administrator provide

the claimant with “adequate notice in writing . . . setting forth the specific reasons for such

denial, written in a manner calculated to be understood by the participant.” 29 U.S.C. §

1133(1). This notice requirement is essential to fair claims administration, as it is meant to

“provide claimants with enough information to prepare adequately for further administrative

review or an appeal to the federal courts.” Hobson v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 574 F.3d 75, 87 (2d

Cir. 2009) (quoting Juliano v. Health Maint. Org. of N.J., Inc., 221 F.3d 279, 287 (2d Cir.

2000)).

               Looking to the record before us, we conclude that Principal did not give adequate

attention to Miles’s subjective complaints, as it failed to either assign any weight to them or to

provide specific reasons for its decision to discount them. Instead, in its initial denial, Principal

cited Dr. Etra’s statement that “the tinnitus was subjective” as a reason for denying Miles’s

claims. See Initial Denial, J.A. 47; Appellee Br. at 17. Pointing out that evidence is

“subjective” is not, by itself, a proper basis to reject evidence. Connors, 272 F.3d at 136.

Moreover, Principal failed to mention that Dr. Etra himself had found these subjective

complaints credible, concluding that Miles “appears to be with significant tinnitus, hearing loss,

and intractable head pain.” Claim Form, J.A. 274. As Principal cites to no reason to discount

                                                  20
the evidence (other than its subjective nature), we conclude that Principal arbitrarily rejected

Miles’s subjective evidence of disability.

                   In its final determination, Principal continued to point to the subjective nature of

Miles’s complaints as the only basis for disregarding the evidence. For example, Principal

stated that Miles’s “self-reported loss of orientation and concentration was never verified by

objective testing and remained self-reported only,” and pointed out that “[m]any of the

claimant’s complaints . . . [were] never observed by his neurologist and [were] never confirmed

by exams.” Final Determination J.A. 545 (internal quotation marks omitted). However, as

discussed above, pointing out that evidence is “subjective” is not, standing alone, a reasonable

basis on which to accord that evidence limited weight. Since subjective evidence is “more than

ample to establish [Miles’s] disability, if believed,” Marcus, 615 F.2d at 27, Principal must do

more than simply point to the subjective nature of the evidence when denying his claim. It must

either assign some weight to the evidence or provide a reason for its decision not to do so.14

                   Principal has identified nothing in the present record that would support a

rejection of Miles’s subjective complaints. Though there is no objective evidence of tinnitus,

multiple specialists have said there is no objective test for it. See infra Section 2. Tinnitus is

consistent with hearing loss, for which there are objective tests, and the record indicates that

there is undisputed objective evidence of such hearing loss in Miles’s case. See, e.g., Dr.

Carpenter Advisory Report, J.A 148; Dr. Klein Secondary Advisory Report, J.A. 354. Finally,

as the Commissioner of Social Security observed in crediting Miles’s account of his symptoms,

Miles’s long history of hard work supports his credibility on this issue. Decision of the SSA,

J.A. 135. We do not mean to suggest that Principal is required on remand to credit Miles’s

14
            The first point in Miles’s letter seeking review of the initial denial was that Principal “did not state that the
Plan did not credit what Mr. Miles had said about what had happened to him, including the symptoms he had
reported to his doctors and had described for Principal.” J.A. 53 (emphasis in original). Upon our review of the
initial denial, we agree that Miles’s credibility was not addressed. And though Principal’s final decision suggests
strongly that it rejected Miles’s description of the severity of his headaches, see J.A. 112, J.A. 144 (twice referring
to the fact that such severe headaches typically occur in the first or second decades of a person’s life, not in the
fifth), it did not similarly disparage his claims about the severity of his tinnitus.

                                                             21
statements regarding the nature and severity of his subjective symptoms. However, considering

the present record as a whole, we conclude that Principal acted arbitrarily and capriciously by

disregarding Miles’s subjective complaints without providing any reason for this decision.

       2. Principal’s Request for Objective Evidence Proving that Miles Suffered from
          Tinnitus Was Unreasonable

                 In its final decision, Principal relied on the lack of an objective proof of tinnitus

as a basis to deny the claim. J.A. 545 (“The tinnitus did not find an explanation by ENT or by

neurology. Specifically, neurologically there was no vascular lesion on (sic) imaging to explain

audible tinnitus.”). The district court held that this insistence on objective evidence to establish

the existence of a disabling impairment was reasonable. Miles, 831 F. Supp. 2d at 777-78.

Although acknowledging that tinnitus “may be difficult to prove,” the district court held that “it

was not unreasonable for Principal to require proof of significant impairment beyond Etra’s

diagnosis.” Id. at 778. Considering the issue de novo, we disagree. A claimant bears the

burden of proving that a disability is covered, see Mario v. P & C Food Mkts., Inc., 313 F.3d
758, 765 (2d Cir. 2002), but plan administrators may not impose unreasonable requests for

objective evidence. Here, the record suggests that there is no objective test to prove the

presence of tinnitus. It was unreasonable for Principal to request objective evidence of

impairment when it had not identified any such test that exists. Accordingly, we conclude that

Principal arbitrarily and capriciously relied on Miles’s failure to provide objective evidence of

tinnitus as a reason to deny his LTD claim without specifying the objective evidence it would

expect to see.

                 In Hobson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 574 F.3d 75 (2d Cir. 2009), this

Court held that a plan administrator may accord less weight to subjective complaints where the

claimant is unable to produce objective corroboration. Hobson, 574 F.3d at 88. In Hobson, a

plan administrator informed a claimant that “trigger point tenderness” was a “major criteri[on]

                                                   22
for the diagnosis of fibromyalgia,” and requested objective evidence of trigger-point tenderness

in assessing the disability claim. Id. The claimant failed to produce the objective evidence after

being notified of the need to do so. This Court concluded that, “[i]n light of this notification,”

the plan acted within its discretion in denying benefits. Id.

               Here, in contrast to Hobson, the evidence in the record suggests that tinnitus may

not be amenable to objective verification. Indeed, the independent evaluator whom Principal

retained – Dr. Carpenter – concluded that “there are no objective tests for tinnitus,” see

Carpenter Advisory Report, Nov. 15, 2010, J.A 148. This conclusion was repeated by Dr.

Michael Gordon, an ENT specialist retained by Miles, who stated that Miles “is experiencing

troublesome tinnitus in both ears, which cannot be measured objectively.” J.A. 82.

               Whether an alleged impairment lends itself to objective clinical findings is a

factual determination to be made by the plan administrators. See, e.g., Martucci v. Hartford

Life Ins. Co., 863 F. Supp. 2d 269, 278 (S.D.N.Y. 2012) (noting that is reasonable to require

objective evidence documenting the amount of debilitation caused by a particular illness where

tests for such evidence exist). Unlike in Hobson, Principal did not identify any objective

findings that, considering Miles’s symptoms, it would reasonably have expected to see. Under

these circumstances, we conclude that it was unreasonable for Principal to rely on the lack of

objective evidence of tinnitus to deny Miles’s claim. See e.g., Magee v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,

632 F. Supp. 2d 308, 318, 321 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (ignoring “MetLife’s erroneous objective

evidence requirement” where “in a Catch–22, MetLife acknowledges that there is no test for

[chronic fatigue syndrome],” but MetLife nevertheless rejected plaintiff’s claim because he

“failed to provide ‘objective evidence,’ establishing that he was suffering from a disabling

impairment”); Fitzpatrick v. Bayer Corp., No. 04 Civ. 5134 (RJS), 2008 WL 169318, at *11-12

(S.D.N.Y., Jan. 17, 2008) (distinguishing the question of whether a person suffers from a

particular impairment from the question of whether that person is disabled as a result); see also

                                                 23
Salomaa v. Honda Long Term Disability Plan, 642 F.3d 666, 676-78 (9th Cir. 2011) (holding

that a plan administrator abused its discretion when it demanded objective tests to establish the

existence of a condition for which there are no objective tests); Cusson v. Liberty Life Assurance

Co. of Boston, 592 F.3d 215, 227 (1st Cir. 2010) (drawing “a distinction between requiring

objective evidence of the diagnosis, which is impermissible for a condition that does not lend

itself to objective verification, and requiring objective evidence that the plaintiff is unable to

work, which is allowed”).

       3. Principal Erred by Selectively Considering Evidence in the Record

               Principal failed to support many of its assertions with sound reasoning in the

record and, in some instances, made assertions that are contradicted by the record. For example,

in both the initial and final denials of Miles’s claim, Principal stated that “[i]t’s not clear what

changed in [Miles’s] condition in April of 2009, to prevent him from working.” J.A. 109; see

also J.A. 46. But the record before Principal could hardly have been clearer on the subject.

Before the initial denial, Dr. Etra informed Principal that Miles’s difficulties began eight months

earlier with bilateral ear pain, tinnitus, and hearing loss. Then, just before Miles ceased working

on April 17, 2009, he developed significant headaches and dizziness as well. Between the initial

denial and the final decision, Dr. Carpenter, the second of the two ENT specialists retained by

Principal to review the claim, stated that what had changed in April of 2009 was the onset of

headaches and foggy feelings five days before Miles stopped working. J.A. 149. Dr. Carpenter

wrote that, “From my record review it appears that the claimant stopped working because of the

headaches and foggy feeling along with the loud tinnitus.” Principal’s assertion that Miles

failed to explain why he ceased work is based on a selective reading of the record that is not

reasonably consistent with the record as a whole.

               Principal also mischaracterized the record when denying Miles’s claim. In its

initial denial, Principal informed Miles that his treating neurologist, Dr. Haimovic, refused to

                                                  24
speak to Dr. LeForce, the independent neurologist, on privacy grounds even though “Dr.

LeForce had forwarded an authorization to Dr. Haimovic on two separate occasions.” J.A. 47

(emphasis added). This was an unfair characterization of what actually occurred. A fair reading

of Dr. LeForce’s report reveals that he had asked a third party to send the authorization, and

there is no evidence in the record indicating that one had been sent. Finally, in its initial denial,

Principal relied on the fact that Dr. Etra wrote “none” in a box asking whether he had restricted

the number of hours Miles can sit, stand, stoop, use his hands to push or pull, etc., to conclude

that Miles’s doctors declined to impose restrictions and limitations on Miles. However,

Principal omitted from its decision the fact that Dr. Etra made a statement on the same form

noting that Miles is “unable to work” due to “hearing loss, vertigo, [and] tinnitus.” Work Status

Sheet, J.A 343. Furthermore, the same Work Status Sheet asked as follows: “Considering the

limitations and restrictions you’ve outlined above, if vocational alternatives can be identified

within these restrictions/limitations, are there any other reasons you are aware of that your

patient would not be able to return to work?” Id. (emphasis added). It is not reasonable to

conclude that, by checking “no,” Dr. Etra, was indicating that Miles could return to his work as

a real estate partner at Venable.

C.     The Appropriate Remedy

               Miles requests an order directing the award of benefits, but we conclude that such

relief is unwarranted. Our precedents make clear that even where we conclude a plan

administrator’s finding was arbitrary and capricious, we will typically not substitute our own

judgment, but rather will return the claim for reconsideration unless we “conclude that there is

no possible evidence that could support a denial of benefits.” Miller v. United Welfare Fund, 72
F.3d 1066, 1074 (2d Cir. 1995); see also id. at 1071 (remand for reconsideration required

“unless no new evidence could produce a reasonable conclusion permitting denial of the claim

or remand would otherwise be a useless formality”) (internal quotation marks omitted). We

                                                  25
cannot reach that conclusion here. Among other things, remand will afford Principal the

opportunity to consider the evidence under the appropriate legal standards and, if it wishes, to

evaluate Miles. We do not suggest that those are the only appropriate considerations on remand,

and we intend no limitation by mentioning them. Principal is expected to provide a full and fair

reconsideration of Miles’s claim.

               A benefit determination is a fiduciary act, and Principal owes plan beneficiaries a

special duty of loyalty. Glenn, 554 U.S. at 111. This duty requires Principal to interpret and

apply plan terms “solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries and . . . for the

exclusive purpose of . . . providing benefits to participants and their beneficiaries.” 29 U.S.C. §

1104(a)(1)(A)(i). While this fiduciary obligation “does not necessarily favor payment over

nonpayment,” Varity Corp. v. Howe, 516 U.S. 489, 514 (1996), Principal is reminded that it may

not adopt an adversarial approach toward Miles in the benefits determination.

D.     Conclusion

               For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Principal’s denial of Miles’s claim

was arbitrary and capricious. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the

case is remanded to that court with our instructions to return the matter to the plan administrator

for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                                  26