DocketNumber: Nos. 17-1826-cv; 17-1985-cv; August Term 2017
Judges: Chin, Livingston, Parker
Filed Date: 12/12/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This case presents two questions concerning the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"):
• whether a litigant may bring a denial-of-benefits claim under ERISA when the limitations period is six years and his claim accrued twelve years before he sued; and
• whether Frommert v. Conkright ("Frommert I "),433 F.3d 254 (2d Cir. 2006), ordered Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee Lawrence Becker ("Becker") not to apply the so-called "phantom account offset" to plan participants who did not bring timely denial-of-benefits claims.
The answer to both questions is no. We therefore AFFIRM in part and VACATE in part the judgment below and REMAND the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
Becker administers the Xerox Corporation Retirement Income Guarantee Plan ("Xerox Plan"). This case concerns the method by which Becker calculates benefits for employees who left Xerox, then later returned to Xerox, and then later retired (the *680"rehired employees"). When they initially left Xerox, these rehired employees typically received a lump sum payment equal to the total value of their then-accrued pension benefit. Consequently, when these rehired employees ultimately retired, their final pension benefits were reduced by the lump sum that they had previously received upon their initial departure. During the period at issue in this case, however, Becker offset more than just this lump sum.
In 1999, a group of more than one hundred plan participants sued the Xerox Plan, alleging that the terms of the Xerox Plan did not allow it to apply the phantom account offset. They argued that the phantom account offset violated ERISA's anti-cutback rule, which provides that "[t]he accrued benefit of a participant under a plan may not be decreased by an amendment of the plan." ERISA § 204(g)(1),
We concluded that the Xerox Plan "attempted to implement the phantom account offset without properly amending the terms of the Plan or providing adequate notice to rehired employees."
After we decided Frommert I , Becker continued to apply the phantom account offset to some rehired employees who were not parties to the Frommert litigation. This spawned a new batch of rehired employee litigation-including this case. Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant Robert Testa ("Testa") began working at Xerox in 1972. He left Xerox in 1983, taking a lump-sum distribution of roughly $30,000 from the Xerox Plan. He was rehired in 1985 and retired in 2008. When Testa retired, Becker applied the phantom account offset in his calculation of Testa's pension benefits. In January 2009, Testa received a "pension calculation statement" that informed Testa of the amount of benefits he would receive pursuant to the phantom account offset calculation.
II. Procedural History
After contesting Becker's calculation of his benefits in two 2009 letters, Testa sued *681Becker and the Xerox Plan in January in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. As relevant here, he alleged two principal claims for relief: denial of benefits under ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B) and breach of fiduciary duty under § 502(a)(3), see Devlin v. Empire Blue Cross & Blue Shield ,
The case was transferred to the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Larimer, J. ) in April 2010. Becker then moved to dismiss both claims. On October 30, 2013, the district court granted Becker's motion in part, dismissing Testa's denial-of-benefits claim on timeliness grounds. Testa v. Becker ,
At the end of discovery, both parties moved for summary judgment. On May 9, 2017, the district court held for Testa. See Testa v. Becker , No. 10-CV-6229L,
The district court entered final judgment on May 10, 2017. Becker appealed the district court's May 9, 2017 decision granting summary judgment to Testa, and Testa cross-appealed the district court's October 30, 2013 dismissal of his denial-of-benefits claim.
*682DISCUSSION
I
We begin our analysis with Testa's challenge to the district court's dismissal of his denial-of-benefits claim on timeliness grounds. We review de novo a district court's grant of a motion to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), accepting all factual allegations in the complaint as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff's favor. See, e.g. , O'Donnell v. AXA Equitable Life Ins. Co. ,
Testa first challenges the district court's dismissal of his denial-of-benefits claim on timeliness grounds. ERISA does not specify a limitations period for denial-of-benefits claims, so we apply "the most nearly analogous state limitations statute." Burke v. PriceWaterHouseCoopers LLP Long Term Disability Plan ,
The district court held that Becker clearly repudiated Testa's claimed pension benefits in 1998 when he updated the SPD to state clearly that the phantom account offset would be used for all employees. See Testa ,
Testa does not contest that an SPD can amount to a clear repudiation of benefits. Instead, he argues that the 1998 SPD did not meet this bar, notwithstanding our holding in Frommert I . Testa makes four *683principal arguments in support of his position. All four are unavailing.
First, Testa maintains that "Defendants repeatedly said that they would not apply the phantom account to anyone , including Testa, if they ultimately lost Frommert (which they did)." Testa Br. 18; see also id. at 29 (accusing Becker of making "ongoing misrepresentations" about whether the phantom account offset would be applied to Testa). In his view, these misleading statements by Becker both illustrate that the 1998 SPD was not unambiguous and judicially estop Becker and the Xerox Plan from asserting a timeliness defense. We apply judicial estoppel when "a party both takes a position that is inconsistent with one taken in a prior proceeding, and has had that earlier position adopted by the tribunal to which it was advanced." Uzdavines v. Weeks Marine, Inc. ,
But the only "misrepresentation" that Testa identifies is a single sentence from a 2014 memorandum in Kunsman v. Conkright , in which, Testa argues, Becker admitted that "[t]he decision reached in Frommert ... will, as a matter of law, be applicable to" everyone rehired before 1998. Defs. Mem. in Opp'n at 16, Kunsman v. Conkright , No. 08-CV-6080 (W.D.N.Y. July 7, 2017). Testa has quoted Becker out of context. That memorandum repeatedly makes the same argument that Becker does in this case: that Frommert I permits him to apply the phantom account offset to rehired employees whose claims are untimely. See, e.g. , id. at 13 (opposing certification because "there are statute of limitations defenses that will apply to individual plaintiffs"). Moreover, Becker made this statement sixteen years after the Xerox Plan issued the 1998 SPD, ten years after Testa's claim went stale, and four years after Testa sued. Becker's Kunsman brief thus has no bearing on whether the 1998 SPD was ambiguous. Nor could this brief have been "to the prejudice of" Testa, Uzdavines ,
Second, Testa contends that when the 1998 SPD was issued, Becker failed to disclose that he would refuse to comply with our decision in the Frommert litigation. This is beside the point: even if Becker had failed to comply with Frommert I , this would not make the 1998 SPD any less of a clear repudiation of benefits. We also note that Testa's premise here is faulty because, as we explain below, Becker has not failed to comply with Frommert I .
Third, Testa argues that it was illegal for Becker to apply the phantom account offset to Testa after the plaintiffs won in Frommert I because ERISA plans must be "applied consistently with respect to similarly situated claimants."
Finally, Testa maintains that his denial-of-benefits claim has been equitably tolled ever since 1999, when the Frommert plaintiffs sued. All ERISA denial-of-benefits claims, in his view, are "akin to ... putative class action[s]" because "Defendants were under a duty to apply any remedy granted in the pending Frommert action to all Plan participants." Testa Br. 36. Therefore, he argues, his claims should be equitably tolled because the Supreme Court's original "rationale" for equitable *684tolling in Am. Pipe & Constr. Co. v. Utah ,
This is a radical argument: no court to our knowledge has ever held that equitable tolling applies in every single ERISA denial-of-benefits action. We will not be the first. Cf. Heimeshoff v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co. ,
In sum, the 1998 SPD was a clear repudiation of benefits that started the six-year limitations period. Testa's denial-of-benefits claim thus became untimely in 2004. We disagree with all of Testa's arguments to the contrary, and we therefore AFFIRM the district court's October 30, 2013 dismissal of Testa's denial-of-benefits claim.
II
Becker challenges the district court's May 9, 2017 decision granting summary judgment to Testa and denying Becker's cross-motion for summary judgment. "We review de novo the award of summary judgment, construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing all reasonable inferences and resolving all ambiguities in its favor." Jaffer v. Hirji ,
Testa's fiduciary-duty claim is straightforward: "Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by not complying with this Court's decision in Frommert I ." Testa Br. 30; see also, e.g. , id. at 31 ("Testa asserted a valid cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty based upon Defendants' refusal to follow" Frommert I ). Becker argues that he, not Testa, was entitled to summary judgment on this claim. In his view, Frommert I did not order Becker to stop applying the phantom account offset to plan participants who were not parties to the Frommert litigation. We agree with Becker.
Frommert I did not order Becker to stop applying the phantom account offset to every single rehired employee who was hired before 1998. Testa's argument to the contrary turns on one clause in Frommert I : "the phantom account may not be applied to employees rehired prior to the issuance of the 1998 SPD."
Read in context, Frommert I did not direct Becker to stop applying the phantom account offset to every single employee *685rehired before the 1998 SPD was issued. Frommert I stated that "the phantom account may not be applied to employees rehired prior to the issuance of the 1998 SPD" when holding that the plaintiffs should win on their individual denial-of-benefits claims.
At the very least, Frommert I did not foreclose Becker from raising legitimate affirmative defenses against rehired employees. We held as much in Frommert II . There, we concluded that the phantom account offset could be applied to Xerox Plan participants who had waived their rights to bring ERISA claims, notwithstanding Frommert I . See Frommert II ,
Both Testa and the district court respond, without further explanation, that there is a distinction between applying the phantom account offset to plan participants who waived their rights and applying it to those who slept on them. We disagree. Timeliness serves "several important policies, including rapid resolution of disputes, repose ... , and avoidance of litigation involving lost evidence or distorted testimony of witnesses." Carey ,
One might argue that an ERISA plan fiduciary reading the Frommert I sentence at issue should have decided to stop applying the phantom account offset to Testa and employees like him, even if Frommert I did not technically order it. But that ignores the complex considerations that these fiduciaries face. ERISA's fiduciary provision does "not necessarily favor payment over nonpayment"; to the contrary, fiduciaries have an obligation "to preserve assets to satisfy future, as well as present, claims." Varity Corp. v. Howe ,
As such, Becker did not breach his fiduciary duty by applying the phantom account offset to Testa, and Becker, not Testa, was entitled to summary judgment. We therefore REVERSE the district court's May 9, 2017 grant of summary judgment to Testa.
CONCLUSION
For all these reasons, the judgment below is AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and the case is REMANDED with directions to enter judgment for Becker and the Xerox Plan.
The facts presented below are, unless otherwise noted, undisputed facts derived from the parties' submissions at summary judgment.
Throughout this opinion, we refer to the Defendants-Appellants-Cross-Appellees collectively as "Becker."
After we decided Frommert I , the Ninth Circuit also held that ERISA did not permit the application of the phantom account offset, though for different reasons. See Miller v. Xerox Corp. Ret. Income Guarantee Plan ,
Because he filed his complaint in California, Testa initially alleged that Becker was enforcing the phantom account offset in violation of the Ninth Circuit's decision in Miller . After the case was transferred to New York, Testa began to argue that Becker defied both Miller and Frommert I . On appeal, he has dropped all reference to Miller in his fiduciary-duty arguments and instead relies principally on Frommert I . We therefore focus our fiduciary-duty discussion on Frommert I , rather than Miller . See, e.g. , Norton v. Sam's Club ,
Becker also appealed the district court's October 30, 2013 denial of his motion to dismiss Testa's fiduciary-duty claim, but he does not contest the court's timeliness analysis for this claim in his opening brief. He has therefore forfeited this challenge. See, e.g. , McCarthy v. SEC ,
See Hirt v. Equitable Ret. Plan for Emps., Managers & Agents ,