Appellant Slocum Dickson Medical Group, PLLC, appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Hurd, J.), granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiff-appellee Rudolph A. Buckley and awarding Buckley attorney's fees. Buckley has filed a cross-appeal related to the amount of the fee award. We assume the parties' familiarity with the underlying facts, the procedural history, and the issues presented for review.
Dr. Rudolph A. Buckley worked in Slocum Dickson's medical practice as the group's only orthopedic physician specializing in spine surgery. The employment agreement, executed in December 2000, required Buckley to provide 90 days' notice before leaving the group. If Buckley failed to give the required notice, the agreement called for him to pay liquidated damages of $10,000. On June 2, 2009, Buckley gave his 90 days' notice that he would leave Slocum Dickson on August 30, 2009.
Beforethe 90 days elapsed, Buckley realized that an earlier departure date would yield a greater severance package, because the plan calculated severance as a percentage of the accounts receivable associated with Buckley's department at the time of his departure, and Buckley had performed a disproportionate number of surgeries in July 2009. On August 4, Buckley informed Slocum Dickson that he was unilaterally terminating his employment, effective that very day. He immediately paid the $10,000 liquidated damages for termination without notice. The liquidated damages did not appreciably reduce the advantage of early departure: Buckley's calculated severance amount under the plan on August 4 was $455,096, whereas it would have been only $47,912 had he waited until the end of August.
On September 1, 2010, Slocum Dickson's Board of Managers decided to pay no severance to Buckley. Buckley filed this lawsuit in New York Supreme Court alleging common law claims for breach of contract. Slocum Dickson removed the action to the Northern District of New York. The district court granted Buckley's motion for summary judgment as well as attorney's fees.
As a threshold matter, this Court must ascertain whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over this dispute. As a general rule, federal question jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 turns on whether a well-pleaded complaint relies on federal law.
As to the merits, the Court reviews
When a written plan is governed by ERISA and "confer[s] upon a plan administrator the discretionary authority to determine eligibility," a court "will not disturb the administrator's ultimate conclusion unless it is `arbitrary and capricious.'"
The first question is whether the Slocum Dickson board properly applied the terms of the severance plan with respect to Buckley's claim for severance pay. Section 2(i) of the plan provides that an employee in Buckley's circumstances "shall receive . . . an amount equal to sixty-five percent (65%) of Employee's share of the accounts receivable of the Corporation, existing as of the date of termination, assigned to Employee's department in accordance with the accounting practices adopted by the Corporation, as to which there has been any activity (either to billings or payment) within the preceding two (2) years." In assessing Slocum Dickson's application of this term, we give effect to its unambiguous meaning to the extent that one exists.
The result would be the same even if there were some ambiguity with respect to Buckley's entitlement to severance pay. Whatever deference otherwise is due to a plan administrator abates when the administrator has a conflict of interest, both determining and paying the benefit.
The contractual arrangements here specified the financial costs and benefits of Buckley's abrupt departure. First, the employment agreement set the price tag for resignation without sufficient notice—
The medical group defends the denial of severance based upon various costs it encountered when Buckley resigned. To the extent that these losses actually derived from Buckley's decision to leave before his 90-day notice period elapsed, the liquidated damages must be deemed adequate compensation, and Buckley wasted no time paying that sum to Slocum Dickson upon his separation. Accordingly, the medical group could not reasonably contend that the cost of Buckley's departure justifies a complete denial of his severance.
In the alternative, Slocum Dickson contends that it was justified in denying severance because Buckley abandoned his patients when he resigned without notice, thereby breaching his ethical duties. The record would not support this contention even if the board had discretion. Buckley offered to supervise a physician assistant in his specialty, even without pay, to ensure the continued treatment of his patients at Slocum Dickson. And it is undisputed that no patient suffered any harm as a consequence of Buckley's abrupt departure.
Given the unambiguous character of Buckley's right to severance as well as Slocum Dickson's conflict of interest in deciding Buckley's severance, the unambiguous contractual scheme, and Slocum Dickson's unavailing justifications for its decision to deny severance, the district court was correct to grant Buckley's motion for summary judgment.
Having won summary judgment, Buckley was entitled to seek attorney's fees pursuant to both the employment agreement and Section 502(g)(1) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1). The district court awarded Buckley $47,723 in fees. This fee award was within the district court's discretion and was consistent with the robust record surrounding the motion for fees.
For the foregoing reasons, and finding no merit in the parties' other challenges to the district court, we hereby