DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-appellee-cross-appellant Ronald Roganti ("Roganti") was a successful executive with defendant-appellant-cross-appellee Metropolitan Life Insurance Company ("MetLife"
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA"), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., creates a private right of action to enforce the terms of a benefit plan. 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). Roganti's pension plans vest interpretive discretion in the plan administrator, which means that the plan administrator's benefits decision is conclusive unless it is "arbitrary and capricious." Pagan v. NYNEX Pension Plan, 52 F.3d 438, 441 (2d Cir. 1995). After a summary bench trial on stipulated facts, the district court (Engelmayer, J.) determined that MetLife's denial of Roganti's claim was arbitrary and capricious because it was clear from the arbitral record that the award did represent back pay. We reverse. For the reasons stated below, we conclude that MetLife's denial of Roganti's claim was not arbitrary and capricious, and that MetLife is therefore entitled to judgment in its favor as to Roganti's benefits claim. In light of this decision, we affirm the district court's denial of Roganti's request for attorney's fees, from which Roganti has cross-appealed.
According to his complaint in this action, Roganti began working for MetLife as an account representative in 1971. Over the course of the next three decades, he was promoted multiple times, becoming a Vice President and the Managing Director of a New York business unit called R. Roganti & Associates, as well as the Executive Director of Agencies at another MetLife business unit known as the Tower Agency Group. Roganti's compensation rose significantly over the course of his career, and particularly between 1994, when he earned $351,000, and 2001, when he earned a high of $2.007 million.
Roganti alleges that beginning in 1999 and continuing until his retirement in 2005, his relationship with MetLife deteriorated as a result of his objections regarding unlawful, inappropriate, and unethical conduct at the company. Among various allegations, Roganti claims that a subordinate of his, Dorian Hansen, came under fire in 1999 for opposing fraudulent business practices employed by some MetLife insurance salespeople. As part of a campaign against Hansen's efforts to end these practices, Roganti was allegedly told to fire her; when he refused, the Tower Agency Group was dissolved, affecting Roganti's compensation. Roganti alleges that he thereafter continued to oppose illegal and unethical conduct, and that MetLife further reduced his compensation in retaliation. As a result, Roganti filed a retaliation complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration ("OSHA") in 2003, under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 ("SOX"), Pub.L. No. 107-204, 116 Stat. 745 (codified in relevant part at 18 U.S.C. § 1514A). The complaint was dismissed, however, when OSHA's preliminary investigation did not
In July 2004, while the second OSHA complaint was still pending (and some eight months before he retired), Roganti commenced FINRA arbitration proceedings against MetLife. In the arbitration, Roganti advanced three theories of recovery in addition to his claim that MetLife had violated SOX by retaliating against him for opposing its business practices and for filing a SOX complaint: (1) breach of contract, for the alleged breach of MetLife's commitment to make certain payments to him for overseeing the Tower Agency Group; (2) quantum meruit, to recover the reasonable value of services Roganti had provided, but for which he had been underpaid; and (3) ERISA violations, on the theory that MetLife had violated the statute by reducing Roganti's compensation for the purpose of diminishing his pension benefits. Roganti's statement of claim contained two separate paragraphs describing his request for relief. The first requested "back pay, liquidated damages, compensatory and punitive damages, attorneys fees and an accounting." J.A. 45. The second — in the statement of claim's "Wherefore" clause — sought an accounting of R. Roganti & Associates' revenues and expenses; "appropriate back pay, front pay and reimbursement for lost benefits"; liquidated damages; punitive damages; and attorney's fees and costs. J.A. 60-61.
The arbitration did not conclude until 2010, after a seventeen-day hearing. Roganti's counsel made clear throughout the proceedings that Roganti was focused on recovering two categories of damages: damages for "lost comp[ensation]" and "damages for the collateral effect [on] his pension benefits which are directly tied to his comp[ensation]." J.A. 2881; see also, e.g., J.A. 2891 (stating that Roganti "seeks nothing more than the compensation and pension benefits that he worked for and earned" (emphasis added)). Roganti is entitled to pension benefits by virtue of his participation in four MetLife retirement plans (the "Plans") and, as previously noted, he claimed before the arbitral panel that MetLife had reduced his compensation for the specific purpose of limiting the growth of his sizable pension.
As to the first component of damages — i.e., for lost compensation (or what Roganti's attorney referred to as "back pay") — Roganti retired in 2005, when he was 55 years and six months old, but he testified that he would have continued working at MetLife until age 62 had his compensation not been reduced. Roganti's counsel therefore argued that the panel should determine what Roganti would have earned not only in the years 2003 to 2005 had the company not reduced his compensation,
The evidence showed that Roganti's pay rose significantly from 1994 through 2001, and then decreased markedly: he earned $1.168 million in 1998, $1.24 million in 1999, $1.406 million in 2000, and $2.007 million in 2001, before his compensation declined to $1.506 million in 2002, $475,000 in 2003, $383,000 in 2004, and $67,000 for the first quarter of 2005, after which he retired.
With respect to the second component of damages — i.e., for pension benefits to which Roganti would have been entitled but for the retaliatory decrease in his compensation (or what Roganti's attorney sometimes called "front pay") — the panel heard extensive testimony regarding how Roganti's benefits were calculated under the Plans. As Michael Bailey, an Assistant Vice-President and Corporate Actuarial at MetLife, explained (in testimony that was generally consistent with testimony from both Roganti and Robert Benmosche, MetLife's CEO), Roganti's retirement benefits were primarily a function of two variables: his pre-retirement compensation and his retirement age. Had Roganti retired at age 62, he would have been entitled to an annual benefit based on his five highest-earning years within his last fifteen years of employment at MetLife. However, this annual benefit was subject to an "early retirement discount" of four percent per year: retiring at 61 would mean receiving 96 percent of the annual benefit, retiring at 60 would mean receiving 92 percent of that benefit, retiring at 59 would mean receiving 88 percent, and so on. J.A. 2894.
Based on an assumption that Roganti's remaining life expectancy in 2010 was roughly twenty years, Roganti's counsel advanced a proposal, during his summation, as to how the arbitral panel ought to use the foregoing evidence to award Roganti damages for his decreased pension benefits. Based on MetLife's own projections of Roganti's pension had he not retired in 2005 (which assumed four percent annual growth from his actual 2002 compensation), Roganti would have been entitled to about $120,000 a month in pension benefits, or about $830,000 more per year than he had been receiving. Aggregated over twenty years, that difference would amount to lost benefits of about $17 million.
Roganti's counsel acknowledged, however, that the calculation of a pension award involves some measure of speculation. Most notably, if Roganti's compensation during any year between 2002 and his retirement would, but for MetLife's unlawful pay reductions, have been higher than the compensation he earned during one of his prior five highest-earning years, that higher figure would properly replace the lower one for calculating his pension. Thus, as an alternative, Roganti's counsel suggested that the panel could avoid calculating Roganti's pension by simply deciding what Roganti would have earned while still employed through age 62 (i.e., by choosing a back pay award), and then instructing MetLife to determine Roganti's entitlement to pension benefits based on that increase in compensation. As he put it:
J.A. 2290.
The panel's chairman, making clear that neither side "should infer anything from [the] question," then inquired whether the proposed "front pay part of [the] calculation," representing the loss of pension payments into the future, shouldn't be discounted to the present value of such payments, "if it is going to be reduced into an award." J.A. 2291. Roganti's counsel agreed that this was necessary, that "[t]his should be present valued, this $17 million if you are going to award it that way." J.A. 2291. He added, "that was one of the reasons I was addressing to the panel the alternative possibility of Met issuing its own annuity, adjusting the figures accordingly according to what Ron's compensation would be if he worked to 62." J.A. 2291. The panel chairman then concluded this discussion by noting that "under the scenario that we give you everything you want," the chairman himself could do the discounting: "I mean, I have a calculator, I could do it." J.A. 2291.
On August 28, 2010, the FINRA panel issued an award in Roganti's favor. Consistent with the first above-quoted paragraph in Roganti's statement of claim, the award noted that Roganti had requested "unspecified compensatory damages, unspecified punitive damages, an accounting of R. Roganti & Associates' revenues and expenses, appropriate back pay, front pay and reimbursement for lost benefits, attorneys' fees, costs, disbursements, interest, and such further and additional relief as the Panel may deem just and proper." J.A. 63. The arbitration panel further noted that Roganti had requested compensatory damages in the range of $11,483,000
J.A. 64. The award did not state the basis on which the panel had found MetLife liable, did not say what the "compensatory damages" were intended to compensate Roganti for, did not allocate the damages to particular years of Roganti's employment, and did not instruct MetLife to recalculate Roganti's pension benefits based on the award or to purchase an annuity.
On March 24, 2011 (roughly seven months after the panel issued its award), Roganti filed a benefits claim with MetLife, in its capacity as administrator of the Plans, arguing that the award was compensation for income that MetLife had unlawfully denied him while he was employed there, and that this increase in his pre-retirement earnings justified an increase in his benefits under the Plans. Roganti's claim was denied, first on June 16, 2011 by Karen Dudas, and then, after Roganti appealed Dudas's decision, on August 30, 2011 by Andrew Bernstein, MetLife's Plan Administrator. Dudas and Bernstein informed Roganti that an award of general "compensatory damages" was not benefits-eligible compensation under the Plans, and that nothing in the award indicated that it was intended to compensate him for wages he should have earned during his employment at MetLife, much less for wages attributable to particular years of service.
J.A. 830. Accordingly, MetLife concluded, "[w]e do not see a reasonable basis in the Award document for treating the Award as benefit eligible compensation earned while you were an Employee." J.A. 832.
Roganti commenced this action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on January 9, 2012, after his appeal at MetLife had been denied. His complaint alleged that in denying
On June 18, 2012, the district court issued an opinion dismissing the SOX claim for failure to state a claim, but denying MetLife's motion to dismiss the ERISA claim. Roganti v. Metro. Life. Ins. Co., No. 12 Civ. 161(PAE), 2012 WL 2324476 (S.D.N.Y. June 18, 2012) ("Roganti I"). With respect to the latter claim, the district court held that if the FINRA award represented back pay, then it would be benefits-eligible compensation under the Plans. Id. at *6. But because the language of the award itself "d[id] not come close to reliably resolving whether or not the award represented back pay," the district court found it necessary to remand the case to MetLife, as plan administrator, to conduct "a close review of the arbitral record" and determine based on that review "whether or not the award represented back pay."
On remand, MetLife's Bernstein adhered to his earlier determination. In a submission dated September 14, 2012, he stated that despite having reviewed the arbitration hearing transcript and exhibits, he had uncovered neither "evidence ... of any mathematical or formulaic calculation that would allow [him] to identify the specific nature of the Award," nor "evidence of the arbitrat[ion] panel's intent to consider any potential award as eligible for consideration when determining Roganti's retirement benefits." J.A. 2897. In the absence of such evidence, Bernstein reasoned that the panel's failure to indicate that it was awarding Roganti only back pay — even though it knew he was seeking to recover for his reduced pension benefits — reflected a conscious choice by the panel to "award[] an amount in the form of compensatory damages ... to take care of all of Roganti's claims during the arbitration." J.A. 2900 (emphasis added).
In light of Bernstein's submission, the parties agreed to have the district court resolve their dispute by way of a summary bench trial on a stipulated factual record. On September 25, 2013, the district court issued an opinion agreeing with Roganti that the award represented back pay and holding that Bernstein's decision reaching the opposite conclusion was arbitrary and capricious. Roganti v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 972 F.Supp.2d 658 (S.D.N.Y.2013) ("Roganti II").
In concluding that the award was back pay, the district court adopted what it viewed as a "coherent explanation" proffered
On October 29, 2013, MetLife provided Roganti with a calculation of the judgment due to him as a result of the district court's September 2013 opinion. On November 14, 2013, the district court issued a short opinion rejecting certain challenges that Roganti had made to this calculation, directing judgment in Roganti's favor in the amount of $761,051 (plus interest) for previous benefits payments that he had not received, and ordering MetLife to incorporate the arbitration award into Roganti's 2003-2005 benefits-eligible compensation for purposes of calculating his benefits going forward. Roganti v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., No. 12 Civ. 161(PAE), 2013 WL 6043917 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 14, 2013) ("Roganti III"). Judgment was entered on November 22, 2013. MetLife filed a timely notice of appeal, and Roganti timely cross-appealed from the district court's denial of his request for attorney's fees. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Our review of a decision following a bench trial on stipulated facts is de novo, at least where, as here, the district court reached legal conclusions based on its review of the record and did not hear witness testimony or make credibility determinations. See Miles v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 720 F.3d 472, 485 (2d Cir.2013).
ERISA creates a private right of action to enforce the provisions of retirement plans. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). The Supreme Court has held that plan administrators' decisions on benefits eligibility must be evaluated pursuant to principles of trust law, which "make a deferential standard of review appropriate when a trustee exercises discretionary powers." Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 111, 109 S.Ct. 948, 103 L.Ed.2d 80 (1989); see Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 187 (1959). Accordingly, where (as in this case) the relevant plan vests its administrator with discretionary authority over benefits decisions, see supra note 2, the administrator's decisions may be overturned only if they are arbitrary and capricious. See Pagan v. NYNEX Pension Plan, 52 F.3d 438, 441 (2d Cir.1995).
On appeal, MetLife does not contest the district court's holding that if the FINRA award represented wages that Roganti would have earned at MetLife but for the unlawful reduction in his compensation — i.e., if the award represented back pay — then the award was benefits-eligible. See Roganti I, 2012 WL 2324476, at *6 ("Although Roganti was no longer employed at the time of the award, if that award represented back pay to compensate him for services rendered while he was a MetLife employee, such compensation would properly be included in benefits calculations."). Accordingly, the question before us is whether MetLife was arbitrary and capricious in rejecting Roganti's contention that the FINRA award did, in fact, represent back pay.
Roganti argues, and the district court held, that MetLife's denial of his claim was arbitrary and capricious because it is sufficiently evident that the FINRA award represents back pay for the period starting in 2003 and ending upon Roganti's retirement in 2005. As noted, Roganti's theory is that the FINRA panel (1) rejected his contention that he would not have retired in 2005 had his compensation not decreased; (2) assumed that, but for the unlawful reduction in his pay, his annual compensation from 2003 to 2005 would have equaled his 2002 compensation of $1.506 million; and (3) awarded him the difference between that "but for" amount and his actual earnings from 2003 to 2005, and nothing else. That theory — under which the award necessarily constitutes back pay — predicts a dollar figure that is $19.46 higher than the amount of the actual award. The district court faulted MetLife for rejecting Roganti's "convincing explanation for the Award" without offering its own competing explanation of what the award represented. Roganti II, 972 F.Supp.2d at 672. MetLife argues that this was error, and for the following reasons, we agree.
An ERISA plan administrator such as MetLife owes a fiduciary duty not just to the individual participant or beneficiary whose claim is under review, but to all of the participants and beneficiaries of the plan. See 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1); Morse v. Stanley, 732 F.2d 1139, 1144-45 (2d
On the one hand, "[p]lan administrators... may not arbitrarily refuse to credit a claimant's reliable evidence." Black & Decker Disability Plan v. Nord, 538 U.S. 822, 834, 123 S.Ct. 1965, 155 L.Ed.2d 1034 (2003). But it is also true that administrators may exercise their discretion in determining whether a claimant's evidence is sufficient to support his claim. For instance, in cases where the evidence conflicts, an administrator's conclusion drawn from that evidence that a claim should be denied will be upheld unless the evidence points so decidedly in the claimant's favor that it would be unreasonable to deny the claim on the basis of the evidence cited by the administrator. Compare Tocker v. Philip Morris Cos., 470 F.3d 481, 490-91 (2d Cir.2006) (upholding administrator's determination that plaintiff was not a participating employee under the plan where "ample evidence" suggested that he had been terminated, though there was "also evidence that [he] was not terminated"), and Hobson v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 574 F.3d 75, 89-90 (2d Cir.2009) (rejecting argument that administrator erred in concluding that the claimant was not disabled based on its weighing of competing medical evaluations), with McCauley v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., 551 F.3d 126, 138 (2d Cir.2008) (concluding that administrator's "reliance on one medical report ... to the detriment of a more detailed contrary report without further investigation was unreasonable"), and Durakovic v. Bldg. Serv. 32 BJ Pension Fund, 609 F.3d 133, 140 (2d Cir.2010) (holding that funds' reasoning was inappropriately "one-sided" where funds "summarily dismissed" a report by the claimant's vocational expert, "which was vastly more detailed and particularized than the report on which the Funds relied"). Put differently, if the administrator has cited "substantial evidence" in support of its conclusion, the mere fact of conflicting evidence does not render the administrator's conclusion arbitrary and capricious. See Durakovic, 609 F.3d at 141 (defining "substantial evidence" as "such evidence that a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support the conclusion reached by the administrator" (quoting Celardo, 318 F.3d at 146)).
In other cases, the record evidence may not conflict — the only available evidence may, in fact, point in the claimant's favor — but it may nonetheless be permissible for the plan administrator to conclude that the evidence is insufficient to support the claim. See Juliano v. Health Maint. Org., 221 F.3d 279, 287-88 (2d Cir.2000) (explaining that an ERISA claimant bears the burden of establishing his entitlement to benefits).
Under certain circumstances, it may be arbitrary and capricious for the administrator to reject a claimant's evidence as inadequate without making a reasonable effort to develop the record further. See Gaither v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 394 F.3d 792, 808 (10th Cir.2004) ("An ERISA fiduciary presented with a claim that a little more evidence may prove valid should seek to get to the truth of the matter."); Miller v. United Welfare Fund, 72 F.3d 1066, 1073 (2d Cir.1995) (faulting fund for not seeking evidence to confirm whether its "speculation" as to plaintiff's need for a private nurse was correct). Ultimately, however, "[t]he rule is one of reason," and "[n]othing ... requires plan administrators to scour the countryside in search of evidence to bolster a petitioner's case." Harrison, 773 F.3d at 22; see also O'Reilly v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., 272 F.3d 955, 961 (7th Cir.2001) (explaining that ERISA requires a "reasonable inquiry," not a "full-blown investigation" (internal quotation marks omitted)). Thus, a claimant's evidence may simply be insufficient to establish his entitlement to benefits, even in the absence of evidence tending to refute his theory of entitlement. See, e.g., Jiras, 170 F.3d at 166.
In this case, it is undisputed that Roganti offered no direct evidence that the FINRA award represents back pay, and that the time for seeking clarification of the award from the arbitral panel was allowed to pass. Accordingly, the question is whether it was arbitrary and capricious for MetLife to determine that Roganti failed to establish his entitlement to additional pension benefits based (as Roganti's claim was) solely on inferences that Roganti urged should be drawn from the materials that MetLife reviewed in assessing his claim. In light of the principles described above, we conclude that MetLife's determination was not arbitrary and capricious.
With his initial claim to MetLife, Roganti submitted only the award itself, a news article describing the award, the statement of claim that he had submitted in the FINRA arbitration, and proof that MetLife had, in fact, paid him $2,492,442.07. Based on these materials alone, it was not arbitrary and capricious for MetLife initially to reject Roganti's claim on the ground that the award did not "clearly fall within the definition" of benefits-eligible compensation under the Plans. J.A. 831. As Dudas explained in her letter denying Roganti's claim, and as Bernstein likewise emphasized in adhering to Dudas's determination on appeal, the award itself — consistent with Roganti's statement of claim — indicated that Roganti had asked for "unspecified compensatory damages" in addition to punitive damages, an accounting of R. Roganti & Associates' revenues and expenses, back pay, front pay, and reimbursement for lost benefits, plus fees, expenses, and interest. J.A. 803. The award specifically stated both that it represented "compensatory damages" and that "[a]ny and all relief not specifically addressed herein" was denied. J.A. 804.
As the district court recognized, it arguably begs the question somewhat to conclude that the award was not benefits-eligible simply because it was labeled "compensatory damages." If it were clear, for example, that the award were "compensating" Roganti only for wages he should have earned while still employed at MetLife, then the award might appropriately be considered benefits-eligible back pay in substance, regardless of what the FINRA panel labeled it. Judging only by the materials Roganti initially submitted to MetLife, however, the award easily could have been intended to "compensate" Roganti not only for his reduced pre-retirement wages, but also for wages that he would have earned had he not retired in 2005 and/or for the reduction in pension benefits traceable to his deflated pay — each of which was a category of relief requested in Roganti's statement of claim. Accordingly, even assuming that some of the FINRA award might have constituted back pay, it was impossible to tell how much based only on the materials Roganti submitted. It was reasonable for MetLife to determine that Roganti was not entitled to any increase in benefits at all in light of the dearth of probative evidence regarding the extent to which his benefits-eligible compensation might have increased.
Of course, MetLife was later presented with the entire arbitral record following remand from the district court.
First, Roganti's contention that the award exclusively represents back pay requires the assumption that the arbitral panel did not include increased pension benefits in the award, even though Roganti (sometimes) specifically asked it to do so. As Bernstein explained, however, the panel heard extensive testimony about how Roganti's pension was calculated. It is true that Roganti's counsel, in summation, presented the panel with the option of simply awarding Roganti back pay and leaving the benefits calculation up to MetLife. But had the panel taken that route (and there is nothing in the arbitral transcript to suggest that it did), one would reasonably expect the award to have made the panel's intentions clear to MetLife by using explicit language, breaking the award out on a year-by-year basis, or both. The district court's indication that "the Award's inexactitude" was an impermissible basis for denying Roganti's claim because that inexactitude was what "prompt[ed] these proceedings," id. at 672, was misplaced. As Bernstein explained, the award's opacity was not merely a source of uncertainty; the omission of particulars that would have been necessary to implement Roganti's version of the award's meaning constituted evidence against Roganti's claim.
Although Bernstein did not advance his own mathematical breakdown of the award, he was not required to do so in order to deny Roganti's claim. The district court faulted Bernstein for "pass[ing] on the Court's request that [he] posit, based on the record, a concrete alternative explanation to Roganti's for the Award." Id. at 671. Initially, however, we have doubts as to whether the district court clearly communicated this request. Its opinion determining that remand was necessary stated that MetLife should review the record "to permit a determination to be made, in the context of the evidence offered and arguments made by both sides at the arbitration, whether or not the award represented back pay." Roganti I, 2012 WL 2324476, at *8. The court suggested that MetLife might then be able to "posit an alternative explanation" for the award, id., but it did not say that doing so was the only way for MetLife permissibly to determine that Roganti had failed to establish his entitlement to benefits. Similarly, the remand order merely instructed MetLife to "conduct a close review" of the district court's decision and the arbitral record "to determine whether or not ... the arbitrator's award ... constituted benefits eligible compensation," and to explain its conclusion "with clarity and in detail." Special App'x 18.
Regardless, while we appreciate the able district judge's impulse to get to the bottom of what the award represented, we must measure Bernstein's explanation against the arbitrary-and-capricious standard,
For similar reasons, we place little significance on Bernstein's failure specifically to refute Roganti's explanation for the award. Again, it is unclear from the record whether Bernstein was even aware of that explanation. The district court's first opinion mentioned that Roganti had a theory but did not say what it was. See Roganti I, 2012 WL 2324476, at *8. In reviewing Bernstein's decision, the district court indicated that Roganti had "first articulated" his theory "during the motion to dismiss litigation," Roganti II, 972 F.Supp.2d at 671, but as noted, the remand order instructed Bernstein only to look at the district court's decision and the arbitral record, and not at briefing or oral argument transcripts.
In any event, Roganti's theory is undermined by the very facts that Bernstein identified. Roganti's theory depends on the assumption that the arbitrators awarded him the difference between $1.506 million annually and his actual earnings from 2003 to 2005, and then intended for MetLife to calculate his pension. But despite the fact that Roganti's counsel specifically suggested that the arbitrators direct MetLife to recalculate the pension, the award does not manifest any such intention. The silence is significant. The arbitrators' authority to craft a remedy was not limited to Roganti's proposed damages calculations, and Roganti's counsel acknowledged that the arbitrators were capable of reducing pension adjustments to a lump sum themselves. As one arbitrator observed, "I have a calculator, I could do it." J.A. 2291. As a result, the arbitrators could have arrived at a back pay figure for 2003 to 2005 that was lower than what Roganti requested and added their own pension adjustment in lump-sum form.
We also find the $19.46 discrepancy between the actual award and Roganti's calculation more notable than the district court did. The appeal of Roganti's theory lies solely in its power to account for the very precise amount of the panel's award. But that power is undermined if the theory does not, in fact, predict the exact amount of the award. The district court attributed this discrepancy to the necessity for "some degree of arithmetic extrapolation" to account for "the 2005 stub year," id. at 672 n. 8 — to the fact that Bernstein resigned in the first quarter of 2005 — but neither the court nor Roganti explained how the panel might have arrived at a number that was off by just $19.46. Given these shortcomings, we cannot say that MetLife was required to accept Roganti's theory as adequate proof of his entitlement to increased benefits.
Finally, it warrants emphasis that Roganti failed to obtain clarification of the award from the FINRA panel within the time limit prescribed for doing so. Once that opportunity was no longer available, it effectively became impossible for anyone — Roganti, MetLife, or the courts — to determine definitively what the award was compensation for. Permitting Roganti to recover under these circumstances, despite the uncertainty that he could have helped
The district court recognized the peculiarity of forcing a plan administrator to comb through thousands of pages of arbitration testimony in order to reverseengineer an explanation for an arbitral award. In the district court's view, this was a reason to grant less deference to MetLife's determination on remand. See Roganti II, 972 F.Supp.2d at 673-74. But that conclusion does not follow. Where an administrator has discretionary powers, courts reviewing its decisions are assessing the reasonableness of those decisions, and not "considering the issue of eligibility anew." Pagan, 52 F.3d at 442. Among other goals, "[d]eference promotes efficiency by encouraging resolution of benefits disputes through internal administrative proceedings rather than costly litigation." Conkright v. Frommert, 559 U.S. 506, 517, 130 S.Ct. 1640, 176 L.Ed.2d 469 (2010). Accordingly, a plan administrator's decision is intended to be final — within the bounds of the highly deferential arbitrary-and-capricious standard — and not merely an input with "the potential to assist the Court" in making the ultimate determination.
Roganti's argument that MetLife was operating under a conflict of interest does not affect our analysis. In Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Glenn, the Supreme Court held that when a claimant demonstrates that an ERISA plan administrator with discretionary authority is subject to a conflict of interest, courts should not apply a more exacting standard of review, but should instead weigh the conflict "as a factor in determining whether there is an abuse of discretion." 554 U.S. at 115, 128 S.Ct. 2343 (quoting Firestone, 489 U.S. at 115, 109 S.Ct. 948) (internal quotation marks omitted). Once a conflict of interest is identified, determining the weight that it should receive relative to other relevant factors requires a totality-of-the-circumstances approach:
Id. at 117, 128 S.Ct. 2343 (citation omitted); see also, e.g., Durakovic, 609 F.3d at 138-41; Hobson, 574 F.3d at 82-83; McCauley, 551 F.3d at 131-33.
In this case, it is undisputed that MetLife has a "categorical" conflict of interest because it both evaluates and pays claims. Durakovic, 609 F.3d at 138. We conclude, however, that this conflict should receive no weight in our assessment of whether MetLife's denial of Roganti's claim was arbitrary and capricious. In the district court, MetLife submitted an unrebutted affidavit from Bernstein, who averred, among other things, that MetLife's business and finance departments "are kept completely separate from the administration of the Plans," that he "did not consult or consider MetLife's or the Plans' finances in connection with [his] determinations" in this case or discuss Roganti's claim with the business or finance departments, and that his compensation is not tied to whether he upholds or denies benefits claims. J.A. 2905-06. These are the kinds of "active steps" that, the Supreme Court suggested in Glenn, may reduce a conflict's importance "to the vanishing point." 554 U.S. at 117, 128 S.Ct. 2343. Nor has Roganti established that MetLife has a history of biased claims administration or provided any other reason to assign weight to MetLife's conflict.
Moreover, we have in the past declined to assign any weight to a conflict of interest "in the absence of any evidence that the conflict actually affected the administrator's decision." Durakovic, 609 F.3d at 140; see Hobson, 574 F.3d at 82-83. Roganti has identified no such evidence here. It is true that a smoking gun is not always required; under certain circumstances, an irrational decision or a one-sided decisionmaking process can alone constitute sufficient evidence that the administrator's conflict of interest actually affected the challenged decision. See, e.g., Durakovic, 609 F.3d at 140 (assigning weight to a conflict because of the "decisionmaking deficiencies" evident in the defendants' denial of the plaintiff's claim); McCauley, 551 F.3d at 136 (inferring that a conflict had affected the defendant's decisionmaking because nothing else explained its failure to allow the plaintiff to cure certain defects in his claim). But as discussed above, we think that MetLife's rationale for denying Roganti's claim — i.e., that it was impossible to determine whether, or the extent to which, the FINRA award represented back pay — was not, in fact, unreasonable.
We have considered Roganti's remaining arguments and find them to be without merit. For the reasons set forth above, the portion of the district court's judgment granting Roganti relief under ERISA is