When leaving an employer, an employee may have the right to
“convert” group life insurance coverage into an individual policy. Not all employer-provided group policies
offer this conversion right but many do.
Most such policies provide the right to convert the group life insurance
coverage into an individual life insurance policy within 31 days of receiving a
conversion notice. Some policies require
that the policy be converted within a certain number of days from employee
termination.
We have seen numerous incidents of either the employee not
understanding his or her right to convert or, worse yet, not receiving notice
from the plan or claim administrator (aka, the employer or the insurance
company) of the right to convert. Under
such circumstances, a question arises as to whether the plan or insurance
company is responsible for payment of life insurance benefits if the employee
dies and the policy was not previously converted, and such employee never
received notice of his ability or right to do so from the administrator. In such circumstances, an argument exists
that the administrator breached its fiduciary duty owed to the plan
participant/employee due to the fiduciary’s failure to provide appropriate notification
containing the life insurance conversion form.
Many courts have concluded (wrongly in our opinion) that such a breach of
fiduciary duty does not result in a recoverable remedy under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), specifically ERISA § 502(a)(2). Section 502(a)(2) permits civil actions for
appropriate relief for breach of fiduciary duty but only holds those plan
fiduciaries liable for losses to the “plan.”
In a recent unpublished opinion from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit, the court recently looked at this issue and determined that the
surviving spouse of the deceased employee, who never received the conversion
forms, was provided no remedy under the ERISA statutory scheme even assuming
the breach of fiduciary duty claim could be proved. The claimant in that case (Walker v. Federal Express Corp.) sought
review by the United States Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court declined to review the appeals court decision. So, despite a clear breach of the duty, the
spouse received nothing.
What we learned from this ruling and others is that an
employee must be mindful of his/her own employer provided benefits to ensure
continued access to some of those benefits should he/she be terminated for any
reason. If you have a group life
insurance policy and find yourself no longer working for that employer who
provides such coverage, review your plan or policy language in detail to
determine if you have the right to convert the policy. You need to figure out the steps to be taken
to convert this policy to individual coverage and file all necessary forms and
applications in a timely manner. Life
insurance coverage is relatively inexpensive under these circumstances. Do not miss out.
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