Bakery & Confectionery Union & Industry International Pension Fund v. Ralph's Grocery Co. ( 1997 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    BAKERY AND CONFECTIONERY
    UNION AND INDUSTRY INTERNATIONAL
    PENSION FUND; BOARD OF
    TRUSTEES OF THE BAKERY AND
    CONFECTIONERY UNION AND INDUSTRY
    No. 96-1095
    INTERNATIONAL PENSION FUND,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    RALPH'S GROCERY COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
    Alexander Williams, Jr., District Judge.
    (CA-94-2630-AW)
    Argued: April 11, 1997
    Decided: July 9, 1997
    Before MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge, and BUTZNER and
    PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Senior Judge Butzner
    wrote the opinion, in which Judge Murnaghan and Senior Judge Phil-
    lips joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Julia Penny Clark, BREDHOFF & KAISER, P.L.L.C.,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellants. William B. Irvin, Sr.,
    MCLAUGHLIN & IRVIN, Los Angeles, California, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Alice O'Brien, BREDHOFF & KAISER, P.L.L.C.,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Kenneth W. Irvin, MORRISON &
    FOERSTER, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge:
    The Confectionery Union and Industry International Pension Fund
    (Fund) and its trustees filed this suit pursuant to section 515 of the
    Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29
    U.S.C. § 1145, to recover delinquent pension fund contributions from
    Ralph's Grocery Company (Company). The central issue in this case
    is whether the plan documents and the Company's collective bargain-
    ing agreement with the local union require it to make pension contri-
    butions to the Fund based on severance pay received by the
    Company's employees. The district court concluded that the Com-
    pany was not required to make contributions for severance pay and
    entered summary judgment for the Company. We reverse and remand
    with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Fund.
    When the facts are undisputed, summary judgment is appropriate
    only if one party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(c). We review the entry of summary judgment de novo,
    applying the same standard as the district court. Stone v. Liberty
    Mutual Ins. Co., 
    105 F.3d 188
    , 190-91 (4th Cir. 1997). When review-
    ing cross-motions for summary judgment, we may, if appropriate,
    direct entry of judgment in favor of the party whose motion was
    denied by the district court. Monahan v. County of Chesterfield, 
    95 F.3d 1263
    , 1265 (4th Cir. 1996).
    I
    Section 515 of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1145, states:
    Every employer who is obligated to make contributions to
    a multiemployer plan under the terms of the plan or under
    2
    the terms of a collectively bargained agreement shall, to the
    extent not inconsistent with law, make such contributions in
    accordance with the terms and conditions of such plan or
    such agreement.
    Section 515 "creates a federal right of action independent of the con-
    tract on which the duty to contribute is based." Bituminous Coal
    Operators' Ass'n, Inc. v. Connors, 
    867 F.2d 625
    , 633 (D.C. Cir.
    1989).
    In a collection action based on section 515, a multiemployer plan
    can enforce, as written, the contribution requirements found in the
    controlling documents. Central Pennsylvania Teamsters Pension
    Fund v. McCormick Dray Line, Inc., 
    85 F.3d 1098
    , 1103 (3d Cir.
    1996). In this respect, section 515 puts multiemployer plans in a
    stronger position than they otherwise occupy under common law con-
    tract principles. See, e.g., Central States, Southeast and Southwest
    Areas Pension Fund v. Independent Fruit and Produce Co., 
    919 F.2d 1343
    , 1348 (8th Cir. 1990); 
    Conners, 867 F.2d at 633-34
    . Because an
    employer's obligation to a multiemployer plan usually arises through
    a collective bargaining agreement negotiated and agreed to by the
    employer and union, the multiemployer plan is, under common law
    contract principles, a third party beneficiary of the collective bargain-
    ing agreement. See Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Inc. v. National Bene-
    fit Fund for Hospital & Health Care Employees, 
    697 F.2d 562
    , 568
    (4th Cir. 1982). Although a third party beneficiary can enforce the
    terms of a contract that inure to its benefit, it is subject to defenses
    that the promisor could assert against the original party to the con-
    tract. 
    Connors, 867 F.2d at 632
    . This often meant a multiemployer
    plan would be subject to defenses the employer could assert against
    the local union. Independent Fruit and Produce , 919 F.2d at 1348; but
    see Lewis v. Benedict Coal Corp., 
    361 U.S. 459
    (1960) (recognizing,
    before the enactment of section 515, an exception to the common law
    third party beneficiary rule in the context of multiemployer funds).
    Before section 515 was enacted, collection actions by multiem-
    ployer plans often were complicated by issues that had arisen between
    the employer and the local union but were unrelated to the employer's
    obligation to the plan. Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas
    Pension Fund v. Gerber Truck Service, Inc., 
    870 F.2d 1148
    , 1152-53
    3
    (7th Cir. 1989); Independent Fruit and 
    Produce, 919 F.2d at 1348
    .
    Injecting these tangential issues into collection actions consumed plan
    resources by increasing the cost and delay involved in litigation. See,
    e.g., Independent Fruit and 
    Produce, 919 F.2d at 1348
    . And, in cases
    in which the employer's defense was successful, the plan was left
    without contributions it had been promised and had expected. See,
    e.g., 
    id. Ultimately, these
    losses were shouldered by employee benefi-
    ciaries through reduced benefits and other employers through
    increased contributions. Id.; Gerber Truck Service, 
    870 F.2d 1151
    ;
    Benson v. Brower's Moving & Storage, Inc., 
    907 F.2d 310
    , 314 (2d
    Cir. 1990). Because multiemployer plans typically involve many
    employers and unions across the nation, in most cases it would be dif-
    ficult and costly for such plans to monitor the problems or under-
    standings that arise between the individual unions and employers.
    McCormick Dray 
    Line, 85 F.3d at 1103
    ; Gerber Truck 
    Service, 870 F.2d at 1151
    .
    Section 515 strengthens the position of multiemployer plans by
    holding employers and unions to the literal terms of their written
    commitments. Because an employer's obligation to a multiemployer
    fund is determined by the plain meaning of the language used in the
    collective bargaining agreement, the actual intent of the contracting
    parties (i.e., the employer and the local union) is immaterial when the
    meaning of that language is clear. Independent Fruit and 
    Produce, 919 F.2d at 1349
    , 1352-53; see also 
    Connors, 867 F.2d at 635-36
    .
    Consequently, an employer is not permitted to raise defenses that
    attempt to show that the union and the employer agreed to terms dif-
    ferent from those set forth in the agreement. See, e.g., Gerber Truck
    Service, 
    870 F.2d 1148
    (refusing to enforce an oral agreement
    between employer and union). Nor is an employer permitted to raise
    defenses that relate to claims the employer may have against the
    union. See, e.g., Agathos v. Starlite Motel, 
    977 F.2d 1500
    , 1505 (3d
    Cir. 1992) (fraud in the inducement); 
    Connors, 867 F.2d at 632
    -36
    (mistake of fact). By allowing multiemployer funds to enforce the lit-
    eral terms of an employer's commitment, section 515 increases the
    reliability of their income streams, reduces the cost and delay associ-
    ated with collection actions, and reduces or eliminates the cost of
    monitoring the formation of collective bargaining agreements. Never-
    theless, multiemployer funds are not permitted to"enforce a nonexis-
    tent contractual obligation." Teamsters Industrial Employees Welfare
    4
    Fund v. Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, Inc., 
    989 F.2d 132
    , 138 (3d Cir.
    1993).
    II
    The Fund is a multiemployer defined benefit pension plan, which
    was created in 1955 to provide retirement benefits for employees
    working in the baking and candy industries. The Fund was formed
    through an Agreement and Declaration of Trust (trust) and is adminis-
    tered by a board of trustees, which is composed of an equal number
    of employer and union representatives. Pension benefits are funded by
    participating employers through periodic contributions. Currently,
    1,100 employers with over 60,000 employees participate in the Fund,
    and the Fund pays benefits to over 40,000 retired employees.
    The Company is a member of the Food Employers Council, Inc.
    (Council), which was formed by the grocery supermarket industry in
    Southern California. The Council is a labor relations association that
    negotiates and administers industry-wide collective bargaining agree-
    ments with unions representing employees of the Council's members.
    The Company has participated continuously in the Fund since
    1957. Its commitment to the Fund has been set forth in the collective
    bargaining agreements that it has negotiated through the Council. In
    1992, the Company and the Bakery, Confectionery, and Tobacco
    Workers International Union, Local No. 37 (Union) entered into a
    three-year collective bargaining agreement, which consists of 35 sec-
    tions and the standard clause. The Union represents the employees at
    one of the Company's plants. The Company and the Union were par-
    ties to similar collective bargaining agreements during past years.
    The collective bargaining agreement includes a provision that enti-
    tles the Company's employees to severance pay under specified cir-
    cumstances. The severance pay provision, section XV, states:
    [T]he Employer shall not be required to make Benefit Fund,
    Pension or any other contributions of any nature on any Sev-
    erance Pay paid pursuant to the provisions of this SEC-
    TION.
    5
    Section XXVI of the collective bargaining agreement provides that
    the Company shall make contributions to the Fund of an agreed
    amount. This section of the bargaining agreement makes reference to
    an agreement supplement that sets forth "the terms and conditions of
    section XXVI in more detail." This supplement is the Standard Col-
    lective Bargaining Clause, which the Union and the Company exe-
    cuted as a part of their collective bargaining agreement. The Fund
    requires every participating employer and union, as a condition on
    participation in the Fund, to include the standard clause in their col-
    lective bargaining agreement. The standard clause establishes each
    employer's required rate of contribution. Subsequently, the parties
    executed superseding standard clauses that adjusted the Company's
    contribution rate for 1994 and 1995.
    The standard clause contains the following provisions:
    a. The Employer hereby agrees to be bound as a
    party by all the terms and provisions of the Agree-
    ment and Declaration of Trust dated September 11,
    1955, as amended, establishing the Bakery and
    Confectionery Union and Industry International
    Pension Fund (hereinafter called the Fund) and
    said Agreement is made part hereof by reference.
    ***
    g. This clause encompasses the sole and total
    agreement between the Employer and the Union
    with respect to pensions or retirement.
    After the Company and the Union executed the collective bargain-
    ing agreement, including the standard clause, they forwarded a copy
    to the Fund. The agreement was reviewed by one of the Fund's cleri-
    cal employees, who completed a contract analysis form, which indi-
    cates, among other things, that the employee checked the severance
    pay provision and noted that the standard clause had been completed.
    On the basis of this review, the Fund, by letter, approved the Compa-
    ny's continued participation in the Fund.
    6
    In 1971, by formal resolution, the trustees declared that participat-
    ing employers were required to make contributions based on sever-
    ance pay. The Fund has communicated this policy to participating
    employers on several occasions. In 1982 and twice in 1985, the Fund
    sent notices of the policy to the Company's payroll department. In
    addition, the remittance form that the Fund has provided to employers
    from 1975 through 1993 states that contributions are required for sev-
    erance pay. The Company's payroll department completed the form
    each month and sent it to the Fund along with the monthly contribu-
    tion.
    In the fall of 1992, the Company began to reduce the workforce
    covered by the collective bargaining agreement, and, in 1993, it began
    disbursing severance pay to approximately 200 employees. This was
    the first time the Company had awarded severance pay. It did not
    make pension contributions based on those payments. When the Fund
    discovered this, it informed the Company that contributions are
    required for severance pay, and it demanded the delinquent contribu-
    tions. When the Company refused to pay, the Fund filed this lawsuit.
    Following discovery, the parties stipulated the facts and filed cross-
    motions for summary judgment. In its motion, the Company took the
    position that it is not required to make contributions for severance pay
    because the main agreement expressly excludes such an obligation.
    On the other side, the Fund argued that the extent of the Company's
    obligation is controlled by section 515 of ERISA and the standard
    clause, which it contends requires contributions based on severance
    pay.
    The district court granted the Company's motion for summary
    judgment. See Bakery and Confectionery Union and Industry Interna-
    tional Pension Fund v. Ralph's Grocery Co., Civil No. AW-94-2630
    (D. Md. Dec. 12, 1995) (unpublished). The court decided that the
    entire collective bargaining agreement, rather than only the standard
    clause, determines the extent of the Company's obligation to the
    Fund. The court pointed out that section XV expressly excludes sev-
    erance pay contributions while the standard clause does not specifi-
    cally refer to severance pay. The district court also ruled that the
    Fund's 1971 severance pay resolution does not affect the Company's
    7
    obligation because the resolution is ineffective. In the court's view,
    the resolution exceeded the trustees' authority to amend the trust.
    III
    According to section 515, the scope of the Company's obligation
    to the Fund is controlled by the plan documents and the representa-
    tions that appear in the collective bargaining agreement. Interpreting
    those documents in accordance with the principles embodied in sec-
    tion 515, we hold that the Company is required to make contributions
    based on severance pay.
    The first question we examine is whether the Company's obliga-
    tion to the Fund is limited by section XV's severance pay provision.
    According to the trust, each participating employer's collective bar-
    gaining agreement with the union determines that employer's rate of
    contribution to the Fund. However, in order to be approved for partic-
    ipation in the Fund, the collective bargaining agreement must specify
    the contribution rate that corresponds to the benefit package promised
    to that employer's workers. Those contribution rates are set by the
    Fund.
    The collective bargaining agreement in this case includes both sec-
    tion XV and the standard clause. Although section XV purports to
    exclude contributions based on severance pay, the standard clause
    renders section XV's exclusion ineffective against the Fund. The stan-
    dard clause states that "[t]his clause encompasses the sole and total
    agreement between the Employer and the Union with respect to pen-
    sions or retirements." By agreeing to this language, the Company
    unambiguously represented that it had not agreed with the Union on
    any other terms relating to pensions. By virtue of section 515, the
    Fund is permitted to rely on and enforce the literal meaning of the
    Company's representation. In other words, the Fund was entitled to
    assume that, as promised, the standard clause was the parties' com-
    plete agreement on pensions. The Fund was not required to comb
    through the other parts of the collective bargaining agreement search-
    ing for additional terms related to pensions. See Central Pennsylvania
    Teamsters Pension Fund v. W & L Sales, Inc., 
    778 F. Supp. 820
    , 830
    (E.D. Pa. 1991). Instead, because the Fund was permitted to rely on
    the standard clause's representation of completeness, additional pen-
    8
    sion terms set forth outside the standard clause do not alter the Com-
    pany's obligation to the Fund.
    The primacy of the standard clause also finds support in the trust
    to which the Company agreed. The trust authorizes the trustees to
    require employers, as a condition on participation in the Fund, to exe-
    cute any written instruments the trustees prescribe. It is pursuant to
    this authority that the trustees require employers and unions to enter
    into the standard clause. According to the trust, the Fund's acceptance
    of an employer is based on the terms of the prescribed instruments.
    Therefore, the terms of the standard clause form the basis for the
    Company's relationship with the Fund.
    Furthermore, allowing the Fund to rely on the "sole and total agree-
    ment" language of the standard clause is consistent with the congres-
    sional policies embodied in section 515. As noted in the previous
    section, multiemployer funds typically serve many employers and
    unions nationwide. One purpose of section 515 is to reduce the cost
    of administering these funds. Gerber Truck 
    Service, 870 F.2d at 1154
    .
    Other courts have recognized that such costs are minimized when a
    fund implements uniform rules applicable to all employers. W & L
    
    Sales, 778 F. Supp. at 830
    ; Gainey v. Vemo, 
    627 F. Supp. 408
    , 411
    (W.D. Wash. 1986).
    The Fund uses the standard clause to achieve a uniform standard
    of participation for all participating employers. By means of the stan-
    dard clause, the Fund requires every employer to agree to make con-
    tributions at the specified rate, to be bound by the trust's terms and
    conditions, and not to enter into any additional agreements with the
    union regarding pensions. By promising that the parties have not
    agreed to additional terms regarding pensions, the employer relieves
    the Fund of the need to search the rest of the agreement for additional
    pension terms. This arrangement reduces the cost of administering the
    Fund in two ways. First, the Fund need not retain counsel to inspect
    every provision of every collective bargaining agreement it handles.
    Second, the Fund does not bear the risk of losing contributions due
    to overlooked or misinterpreted provisions that appear outside the
    standard clause and purport to alter the uniform standard of participa-
    tion.
    9
    IV
    The Company argues that the severance pay exclusion is not
    trumped by the standard clause. In its view, the integration language,
    which purports to make the standard clause the parties' exclusive
    agreement on pensions, should not be given effect. The Company
    points out that inclusion of an integration clause in a writing does not,
    by itself, establish that the writing is, in fact, the parties' entire agree-
    ment. According to the Company, the evidence in this case establishes
    that the contracting parties, the Union and itself, did not intend the
    standard clause to be their exclusive agreement on pensions. The
    strongest evidence the Company can offer in this regard is the sever-
    ance pay provision itself. If the parties intended the standard clause
    to be their exclusive agreement on pensions, the Company argues,
    they would not have bothered to negotiate and agree to an additional
    term involving pension contributions. Because the contracting parties
    did not intend to make the standard clause their complete agreement,
    the Company contends that the integration clause is ineffective.
    This argument misses the point. It is generally true that, although
    the inclusion of an integration clause "suggests that the agreement is
    fully integrated, it does not by itself dictate that conclusion." Bowden
    v. United States, 
    106 F.3d 433
    , 440 (D.C. Cir. 1997). And, it is also
    generally true that "a writing cannot of itself prove its own complete-
    ness, and wide latitude must be allowed for inquiry into circum-
    stances bearing on the intention of the parties." Restatement (Second)
    of Contracts § 210 cmt. b (1981). Traditional rules of contract con-
    struction, however, apply to collective bargaining agreements only
    when they do not conflict with federal labor law. See Rolls-Royce
    Motor 
    Cars, 989 F.2d at 135
    . In the specific context of a multiem-
    ployer suit for delinquent contributions, the traditional rules regarding
    integration clauses conflict with section 515. See 
    Connors, 867 F.2d at 635-36
    . According to section 515, the literal terms of the agreement
    control the employer's obligation to the Fund. The actual intent of the
    contracting parties is immaterial when it differs from the ordinary
    meaning of the language used in the writing. Independent Fruit and
    
    Produce, 919 F.2d at 1349
    , 1352-53. By reason of section 515, the
    Company and the Union are bound by the statement that says that the
    standard clause is the "sole and total agreement" on pensions or retire-
    ment.
    10
    V
    The Company also argues that section 515 requires us to enforce
    the severance pay provision of section XV as written. The difficulty
    with this argument is that it ignores the unavoidable conflict between
    the severance pay provision and the standard clause's integration lan-
    guage. If the severance pay provision is given effect and considered
    to be part of the parties' agreement on pensions, the integration lan-
    guage in the standard clause becomes meaningless. On the other hand,
    if the standard clause is taken to be the parties' complete agreement
    on pensions, then the severance pay provision is left out.
    When two conflicting provisions of a collective bargaining agree-
    ment cannot be harmonized, the court must decide which provision
    should be given effect. See Arizona Laborers, Teamsters and Cement
    Masons Local 395 Health and Welfare Trust Fund v. Conquer Cart-
    age Co., 
    753 F.2d 1512
    , 1518 (9th Cir. 1985). In this case, section
    515 makes the choice clear. The purpose of section 515 is to permit
    multiemployer funds to rely on the representations made to it. Section
    515 allows the Fund to impose uniform participation requirements
    and to rely on the representation agreed to by the Company and the
    Union in the standard clause.
    VI
    The question that arises next is whether the standard clause
    requires the Company to make contributions based on severance pay.
    We conclude that it does.
    By agreeing to the 1993 standard clause, the Company promised to
    contribute $2.083 to the Fund "[f]or each hour . . . for which an
    employee, subject to the Collective Bargaining Agreement, receives
    pay." By its plain meaning, this phrase requires the Company to make
    a contribution for each hour of pay received by an employee. Its
    application is not limited to a certain kind of pay, and there is no
    doubt that severance pay is a type of pay. Cf. Nolde Brothers, Inc. v.
    Bakery & Confectionery Workers Local 358, 
    430 U.S. 243
    , 248-49
    n.4 (1977) (noting that severance pay is a form of deferred compensa-
    tion). The Company awards severance pay on an hourly basis (with
    a maximum limit of 900 hours). Therefore, the standard clause obli-
    11
    gates the Company to make a pension fund contribution for each hour
    for which an employee receives severance pay. Cf. Bakery & Confec-
    tionery Union v. United Baking Co., 
    495 F. Supp. 170
    (W.D. Pa.
    1980) (interpreting a similar provision--"for each day or portion
    thereof on which an employee subject to the collective bargaining
    agreement receives pay"--to require severance pay contributions);
    Bakery & Confectionery Union and Industry International Pension
    Fund v. Stroehmann Brothers Co., No. HM82-3259 (D. Md. Jul. 18,
    1984) (unpublished) (interpreting a standard clause similar to the one
    in this case--"for each hour . . . for which an employee, subject to the
    Collective Bargaining Agreement, receives pay"--to require sever-
    ance pay contributions).
    This straightforward interpretation of the standard clause's contri-
    bution requirement is supported by the Fund's consistent and long-
    standing severance pay policy. Through the standard clause, the
    Company agreed to be bound by the rules of the trust. The trust pro-
    vides that the employers are bound by the trustees' actions taken pur-
    suant to the trust. Adopting the severance pay resolution was such an
    action. As a result, it obligates the employers, including the Company,
    to make severance pay contributions.
    VII
    The Company resists our interpretation of the standard clause. The
    standard clause provides:
    [T]he Employer agrees to make payments to the Bakery and
    Confectionery Union and Industry International Pension
    Fund for each employee working in job classifications cov-
    ered by the said Collective Bargaining Agreement as fol-
    lows:
    ***
    For each hour or portion thereof, for which an
    employee, subject to the Collective Bargaining
    Agreement, receives pay, the Employer shall make
    a contribution . . . (emphasis in original).
    12
    The Company directs our attention to the qualifying phrase "subject
    to the Collective Bargaining Agreement." In its view, that phrase
    makes the Company's obligation subject to any additional terms or
    conditions set forth outside the standard clause. In that way, the Com-
    pany argues, section XV's severance pay provision becomes part of
    the standard clause.
    We reject that construction. In the first place, it runs contrary to the
    rules of grammar. "Grammatical construction of contracts generally
    requires that a qualifying phrase be construed as referring to its near-
    est antecedent." Gibbs v. Air Canada, 
    810 F.2d 1529
    , 1536 (11th Cir.
    1987). Application of this rule requires the qualifying phrase to mod-
    ify the term "employee." Read in this way, the phrase simply makes
    it clear that contributions are required only for those employees who
    are in the pertinent "job classifications covered by" the collective bar-
    gaining agreement. The phrase does not, as the Company suggests,
    subordinate the contribution requirement to terms or conditions set
    forth in other parts of the collective bargaining agreement.
    This is not only the better grammatical construction of the clause,
    it is also the more plausible construction. The Company's interpreta-
    tion renders the standard clause unnecessary. Under its interpretation,
    employers and local unions could amend or supplant the standard
    clause's contribution requirement simply by striking their own bar-
    gain and including it elsewhere in their collective bargaining agree-
    ment. If that were the case, requiring employers and unions to enter
    into the standard clause would be a pointless endeavor.
    VIII
    The Company's next argument challenges the validity of the trust-
    ees' 1971 resolution, which established the Fund's severance pay pol-
    icy. The Company contends that the trustees exceeded their authority
    under the trust by adopting the resolution. The trust specifies:
    No amendment [to the trust agreement] may be adopted
    which will . . . be in conflict with the Collective Bargaining
    Agreements with the Local Unions as such agreements
    affect contributions to the Fund . . . .
    13
    The Company claims that the severance pay policy is, in effect, an
    amendment to the trust that conflicts with the severance pay provision
    of its collective bargaining agreement. For that reason, the Company
    argues that the severance pay resolution is invalid. The district court
    agreed.
    The primary difficulty with this argument is the premise that the
    Fund's severance pay policy is in conflict with the Company's collec-
    tive bargaining agreement. Such a conflict arises only if the collective
    bargaining agreement excludes severance pay contributions. But, the
    meaning of the collective bargaining agreement is the very issue in
    this case. As previously explained, the controlling language in the col-
    lective bargaining agreement is found in the standard clause, and, as
    we have seen, that language is consistent with the Fund's severance
    pay policy.
    Furthermore, there is no evidence that shows the Fund's severance
    pay policy conflicted with any collective bargaining agreements at the
    time it was adopted. The policy was adopted in 1971, but the Com-
    pany added its severance pay provision to its collective bargaining
    agreement in 1980.
    Another difficulty with the Company's position is that the trustees'
    action did not amend the trust. By adopting the resolution, the trustees
    simply exercised their undisputed authority to establish the minimum
    amounts and rates of contributions required for participation in the
    Fund. Requiring severance pay contributions amounted to no more
    than an adjustment of the minimum requirements for participation.
    IX
    The Company also argues that the structure of the trust prevents the
    Fund from compelling it to make contributions based on severance
    pay. As previously noted, the trust specifies that the collective bar-
    gaining agreement determines an employer's rate of contribution. The
    trust regulations specify that, if an employer's collective bargaining
    agreement does not provide for the minimum contribution required to
    support that employer's benefit plan, as determined by the trustees,
    the Fund can disapprove the employer for participation. Relying on
    these provisions, the Company contends that disapproval is the only
    14
    course of action available to the Fund if a collective bargaining agree-
    ment fails to require sufficient contributions. Applying its reasoning
    to its own case, the Company argues that the Fund cannot retroac-
    tively impose a contribution requirement that was not specified in the
    collective bargaining agreement; rather, the Fund's only recourse was
    to disapprove the collective bargaining agreement.
    The difficulty with this argument is apparent. The issue before us
    is not whether the Fund can impose contribution requirements in addi-
    tion to those specified in the collective bargaining agreement, but
    rather, whether the collective bargaining agreement, properly inter-
    preted, requires severance pay contributions. If that agreement
    requires the contributions, as we have decided it does, there is no
    doubt the Fund can recover the unpaid portion of those contributions.
    X
    As an alternative defense, the Company asserts that the Fund is
    equitably estopped from pursuing its claim. The Company claims that
    the Fund misled it by approving each of its collective bargaining
    agreements since 1980 even though those agreements included the
    severance pay provision. Because the Fund failed to inform the Com-
    pany of the inconsistency between the severance pay provision and
    the standard clause, the Company contends that the Fund should be
    precluded from collecting the severance pay contributions.
    In this circuit, equitable estoppel is not available to modify the
    written terms of an ERISA plan in the context of a participant's suit
    for benefits. Coleman v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co., 
    969 F.2d 54
    , 58-60
    (4th Cir. 1992). We need not decide now whether equitable estoppel,
    when premised on the misconduct of a multiemployer fund, is avail-
    able as a defense to an action for delinquent pension contributions.
    The reason is that the facts in this case would not support such a
    defense even if it were available. See McCormick Dray 
    Line, 85 F.3d at 1106
    .
    Equitable estoppel "arises when one party has made a misleading
    representation to another party and the other has reasonably relied to
    his detriment on that representation." Black v. TIC Investment Corp.,
    
    900 F.2d 112
    , 115 (7th Cir. 1990). Reliance on the misrepresentation
    15
    is reasonable only if the party asserting estoppel does not or should
    not know the truth. Heckler v. Community Health Services of Craw-
    ford County, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 51
    , 59-60 n.10 (1984) ("If, at the time
    when he acted, such party had knowledge of the truth, or had the
    means by which with reasonable diligence he could acquire the
    knowledge so that it would be negligence on his part to remain igno-
    rant by not using those means, he cannot claim to have been misled
    by relying upon the representation or concealment."); see also
    Cannon v. Group Health Service of Oklahoma, Inc., 
    77 F.3d 1270
    ,
    1276-77 (10th Cir. 1996) (listing common law elements of equitable
    estoppel).
    Although the same person signed all the pertinent documents on
    behalf of the Company, it asserts that he was unaware of the Fund's
    severance pay policy when he signed the standard clause. Neverthe-
    less, the Company should have known about the Fund's policy and
    about the inconsistency between section XV and the standard clause.
    The Fund sent at least three notifications of its policy to the Com-
    pany, and the remittance forms, which the Company completed
    monthly from 1975 through 1993, conspicuously stated that severance
    pay contributions were required. It is evident that the Fund repeatedly
    disclosed its policy to the Company. In addition, because the Com-
    pany reviewed and agreed to the standard clause on a regular basis,
    it was in as good a position as the Fund to detect the inconsistency
    between the standard clause and the severance pay provision.
    
    Heckler, 467 U.S. at 59-60
    n.10. In fact, the Company is arguably in
    a better position to detect the inconsistency because it deals with one,
    not 1,100, collective bargaining agreements. The Company's equita-
    ble estoppel defense is unsupported by the facts.
    XI
    The Fund is entitled to prevail because the collective bargaining
    agreement, construed in light of section 515, requires the Company
    to make pension fund contributions based on severance pay. The ordi-
    nary meaning of the standard clause's integration language, upon
    which the Fund is permitted to rely, precludes enforcement of section
    XV's severance pay provision. As a result, the extent of the Compa-
    ny's obligation is controlled exclusively by the standard clause which,
    together with the trust's 1971 resolution, requires severance pay con-
    16
    tributions. Finally, the Company's equitable estoppel claim is not sup-
    ported by the facts. Accordingly, we reverse and remand with
    instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Fund and move on to
    the computation of contributions.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 96-1095

Judges: Murnaghan, Butzner, Phillips

Filed Date: 7/9/1997

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/2/2024

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