AIRCO INDUSTRIAL GASES, INC. DIVISION OF THE BOC GROUP,
INC., Appellant,
v.
The TEAMSTERS HEALTH AND WELFARE PENSION FUND OF
PHILADELPHIA AND VICINITY, Pension Trust Fund of
Philadelphia and Vicinity.
No. 87-3642.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued March 1, 1988.
Decided June 30, 1988.
Robert J. Bray, Jr. (argued), Stephen M. McManus, Robert J. Bray & Associates, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellant.
Francis J. Trzuskowski (argued), Trzuskowski, Kipp, Kelleher & Pearce, P.A., Wilmington, Del., for appellees.
Before SEITZ, HIGGINBOTHAM and COWEN, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
A. LEON HIGGINBOTHAM, JR., Circuit Judge.
This appeal concerns an employer's suit to recover nearly seven years worth of erroneous overpayments to a multiemployer employee benefit plan. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that the plaintiff-employer had a federal common law cause of action to recover the overpayments, in the nature of an equitable action for unjust enrichment. After a bench trial, the district court ultimately entered judgment for the plaintiff-employer and ordered the benefit plan to refund the employer's overpayments, but only for the last four months of this seven-year mistake. Thus, while the employer sought to recover approximately $25,000, it recovered only $1,500.
We are unable to review the district court's legal conclusion concerning the existence of a federal common law cause of action, because the defendant-benefit fund has not cross-appealed from the district court's final judgment. The appeal that is before us, brought by the employer, seeks a larger refund than the district court awarded. The employer also appeals from those aspects of the district court judgment that deny interest on the refund award and attorneys' fees.
We hold that the district court's factual findings concerning the applicable refund policy and time period were clearly erroneous because the court disregarded a key pretrial admission of fact. Accordingly, we will vacate the refund award. On remand, the district court will enter a larger refund judgment that reflects the one year refund policy in effect at the time of the employer's refund request. We will affirm, however, the district court's legal conclusions concerning attorneys' fees and interest.
I. BACKGROUND
Appellant Airco Industrial Gases ("Airco"), a corporation located in Delaware, is an employer of unionized labor. Appellee, the Teamsters Health and Welfare Pension Fund of Philadelphia and Vicinity ("the Fund"), is a multiemployer employee benefit plan, as defined by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA"), 29 U.S.C. Secs. 1001-1401 (1982). During the time period in question, Airco was a party to two collective bargaining agreements. One of these agreements (and its predecessor agreements) obligated Airco to make contributions to the Fund on behalf of its driver employees. The other agreement obligated Airco to make pension contributions to a pension plan other than the Fund, on behalf of its production and maintenance employees.
The mix-up underlying this lawsuit began in 1976, when Airco erroneously informed the Fund that two of its employees, John Lucas and Walter Dobromilski, were covered by the collective bargaining agreement that required contributions to the Fund. Without verification, the Fund accepted Airco's representation that it owed the Fund monthly contributions for these two employees. From June 1976 to April 1983, Airco made contributions totaling $25,831.41 to the Fund on behalf of Lucas and Dombromilski. These men, however, were production and maintenance employees, not drivers. Airco, therefore, was not obligated to make any such contributions to the Fund.
During a review in 1983 of its corporate pension plan contributions, Airco discovered its error. On July 6, 1983, it notified the Fund of the situation and demanded a return of the mistaken contributions, with interest. A second such request was made in August 1983. In a letter dated September 26, 1983, the Fund rejected Airco's refund demand.1 The letter declared that "the Trustees of the Teamsters Health and Welfare and Pension Funds of Philadelphia and Vicinity have concluded that no overpaid contributions shall be returned to any employer." Joint Appendix ("J.A.") at 934. The letter also announced the Fund's "further determin[ation] that no contributing employer shall be entitled to an offset against delinquent contributions due and owing." Id. The Fund's administrator stated to Airco, at a later date, that Lucas and Dombromilski, who were not covered by the relevant collective bargaining agreement, would never be eligible to receive benefits from the Fund.
Airco filed this federal lawsuit against the Fund on March 2, 1984 in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. Airco's complaint alleged four distinct causes of action: (1) an action under section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act ("LMRA"), 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185 (1982); (2) an action under section 302 of the LMRA, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 186 (1982); (3) an action under section 403(c) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 1103(c) (1982); and (4) an action under the Delaware common law of unjust enrichment. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that Airco had no express or implied statutory cause of action under LMRA or ERISA. It further held, however, that Airco could maintain an action to recover its erroneous overpayments under "the federal common law of unjust enrichment." Airco Industrial Gases, Inc., v. Teamsters Pension Trust Fund of Philadelphia & Vicinity,
At the conclusion of a four-day bench trial on the "unjust enrichment" cause of action and a post-trial hearing, the district court entered judgment for Airco. Airco Industrial Gases, Inc. v. Teamsters Pension Trust Fund of Philadelphia & Vicinity,
Airco, but not the Fund, appealed to this Court. Our appellate jurisdiction is conferred by 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291 (1982).
II. THE DISTRICT COURT'S SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
Asserting that this Court must " 'satisfy itself not only of its own jurisdiction, but also that of the [district] courts in a cause under review,' " Bender v. Williamsport Area School District,
In support of its argument that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, the Fund relies primarily on Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Teamsters Pension Fund of Philadelphia & Vicinity,
In fact, the district court here made the same finding as did the district court in Crown Cork and the court of appeals in Dime Coal. Specifically, it found that no implied cause of action exists under section 1103(c)(2)(A) of ERISA. Airco I,
More significantly, however, the Fund misapprehends the distinction between the existence of subject matter jurisdiction and the existence of a cause of action. The district court found that it had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1331 (1982). Airco I,
The distinction between subject matter jurisdiction and cause of action was recognized by the district court when deciding the question of whether an implied cause of action under ERISA exists. Airco I,
Mere invocation by a plaintiff or court of section 1331, is not enough, by itself, to confer federal question jurisdiction. The Supreme Court has noted at least two situations in which federal question jurisdiction would not obtain, despite a plaintiff's reliance on section 1331: "where the alleged claim under the Constitution or federal statutes clearly appears to be immaterial and made solely for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction or where such a claim is wholly insubstantial and frivolous." Bell v. Hood,
Under the Lindy test, "a distinctive policy of a federal statute,"
Unlike issues of jurisdiction, which this Court may examine sua sponte, see Bender,
III. THE DISTRICT COURT's FACTUAL FINDINGS
As the district court stated, "[t]he key [factual] question [in this case] is what refund policy the Fund operated under when Airco submitted its refund request in July, 1983." Airco II,
During discovery, Airco had submitted to the Fund a request for admissions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 36.8 Among the proposed admissions was Admission No. 23, which stated:
At the November 3, 1983, meeting of the trustees of Defendant Teamsters Pension Fund, the trustees unanimously agreed to adopt a policy whereby there would be no voluntary return of employer contribution overpayments.
J.A. at 870 (emphasis added). The Fund responded by admitting to this proposed statement of fact. Id. The parties prepared a pretrial order that included this admission as plaintiff's exhibit 16, id. at 24, and the district court apparently admitted this and other admissions into evidence during a pre-trial conference held March 2, 1987. Airco argues that this admission "conclusively established that the Fund did adopt the 'no-refund' policy on November 3, 1983--not in 1981." Appellant's Brief at 20. We agree with Airco.
The question of the effect of admissions made under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 36 has not been extensively litigated. The 1970 amendment to this rule added two new sentences to subsection (b), which now begins:
Any matter admitted under this rule is conclusively established unless the court on motion permits withdrawal or amendment of the admission. Subject to the provision of Rule 16 governing amendment of a pre-trial order, the court may permit withdrawal or amendment when the presentation of the merits of the action will be subserved thereby and the party who obtained the admission fails to satisfy the court that withdrawal or amendment will prejudice that party in maintaining the action or defense on the merits.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 36(b). The advisory committee notes with respect to subsection (b) state that, before the addition of these two sentences, "[s]ome courts view[ed] admissions as the equivalent of sworn testimony ... [that] may [be] rebut[ted].... The new provisions give an admission a conclusively binding effect ... unless the admission is withdrawn or amended."
The most insightful commentary on the rationale underlying this provision of Rule 36 appeared seven years before the passage of the 1970 amendments. Noting that the rule as then written did not bind the party making the admission, Judge Freedman stated that
Rule 36 serves a salutary purpose as one of the means for reducing the area of dispute at the trial. Requests for admission of relevant facts under Rule 36 would be even less useful than interrogatories to parties under Rule 33 if they were not conclusively binding on the party making the admission.... An answer to a request under Rule 36 is unlike a statement of fact by a witness made in the course of oral evidence at a trial, or in oral pre-trial depositions, or even in written answers to interrogatories. It is on the contrary a studied response, made under sanctions against easy denials, to a request to assert the truth or falsity of a relevant fact pointed out by the request for admission.... [T]he presence of the party's oath in both instances, with its sanction of the penalty for perjury, does not make an admission of a request the same in all respects as sworn testimony. For requests for admission, although answered under the oath of a party, are normally made under the direction and supervision of counsel, who has full professional realization of their significance. Therefore, their similarity to sworn testimony in one respect should not reduce their effect from conclusive admissions to merely evidential ones.
McSparran v. Hanigan,
Our scrutiny of the admission in question here leaves us with no doubt that the "no refund" policy was adopted by the Fund's trustees in their November 3, 1983 meeting. The language of the statement that "the trustees unanimously agreed to adopt a policy" at that meeting, J.A. at 870 (emphasis added), is unambiguous. The district court mentions the admission only once in its final opinion, Airco II,
Parenthetically, there is no evidence contradicting this admission, for, as the district court pointed out, "[t]he record contains no evidence contemporaneous to the period from September, 1981 to November 1983, when defendant asserts it ... operated under a 'no refund' policy." Airco II,
This admission is not merely another layer of evidence, upon which the district court can superimpose its own assessment of weight and validity. It is, to the contrary, an unassailable statement of fact that narrows the triable issues in the case. Thus we hold that the district court's factual finding that, at the time of Airco's refund request in July 1983, a "no refund" policy was in effect, is clearly erroneous. We will therefore remand this case to the district court for modification of its award, to reflect the one year refund policy in effect at the time of the refund request.
IV. INTEREST
The district court denied Airco's request for interest on the refund amount, holding that policies underlying ERISA prevented it from exercising its equitable powers to award interest. Airco II,
[i]nterest, which is the accrued value of money over time, is not a part of the overpayment but an incident of it. The amount of interest a court might award comes directly from the plan's assets and will deprive participants and beneficiaries of its use.... The decision to order restitution is an effort at correcting an injustice, but payment of interest means an amount greater than that paid in as excess contributions may be awarded while the fund has encountered certain [administrative] costs related to the overpayments. An award of interest, therefore, could cost the fund more than if the excess contribution had never been made.
Id. at 904. The district court concluded that section 1103(c)(1) barred an interest award that presented a potential danger of "diminishing a plan's assets." Id. at 905; accord Dumac Forestry Services, Inc.,
Airco argues that the district court erred in adopting what is essentially a per se rule against awarding interest in restitution actions. Appellant's Brief at 40-41. It contends that any determination of whether interest should be awarded should depend on a specific determination of the impact of the interest award on the pension fund's financial stability. Id. We agree with the district court that the anti-inurement policy of ERISA bars an award of interest on any refund, regardless of the fund's financial stability. We will therefore affirm the district court's denial of interest on any refunded amount.
V. ATTORNEYS' FEES
The district court also denied Airco's request for attorneys' fees. Airco II,
Airco views an action brought by a pension plan under section 1451 to recover delinquent contributions from an employer as the mirror image of this action. Appellant's Brief at 42-43. It asserts that the district court should have, therefore, extrapolated an attorneys' fees provision from the express provision of section 1451 to the federal common law action here. Id. at 42-47.
We do not see why the express statutory remedy provided by section 1451 should be controlling in this action that is neither expressly nor impliedly predicated on ERISA. The legal remedy provided by section 1451 is unrelated to a federal common law cause of action allowing recovery under the theory of unjust enrichment. Furthermore, the result of the district court's analysis accords with the "American rule" that each side bears its own costs absent express statutory authority to the contrary. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
VI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the monetary judgment of the district court and remand this matter for further proceedings. On remand, we will direct the district court to award the employer an amount in accordance with the one-year refund policy in effect at the time it made its refund request in July 1983. We will affirm the district court's denial of interest and attorneys' fees.
Notes
As legal authority for its denial of Airco's refund request, the Fund's letter cited a then-recent judgment order of this Court, Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Teamsters Pension Fund of Philadelphia & Vicinity,
The Fund's letter did not accurately describe the legal force of a judgment order in this Circuit. Under the Internal Operating Procedures ("IOPs") of this Court, a judgment order, which is never published, is entered "when the panel unanimously determines ... that a written opinion would have no precedential or institutional value...." IOP Chapter 6.A.1.a. [Judgment Orders]. The IOPs are thus understood to establish, at least by implication, that a judgment order of this Court resolves no more than that particular appeal. A judgment order does not bind district courts in this Circuit (including the district from which the appeal that produced the judgment order was taken) or subsequent panels of this Court. Cf. IOP Chapter 8.C. [Hearing or Rehearing In Banc Criteria] ("no subsequent panel overrules a published opinion of a previous panel.").
For several other reasons, Crown Cork and Dime Coal are inapposite. The district court's opinion in Crown Cork did not address the question of whether an equitable, federal common law cause of action exists. Thus, the question of the validity of this specific cause of action was not before this Court on appeal. Even if it had been, this Court affirmed the district court's decision by judgment order which is a judgment without precedential value. See supra n. 1
The court of appeals in Dime Coal did hold that "no federal common law right to recovery of the disputed contributions at issue in this case exists." Dime Coal,
However, it prefaced this holding with the observation that "the question is not well presented, since appellee has not seriously pursued this alternative basis for affirmance on its appeal." Id. Most importantly, however, the Dime Coal decision is not a decision of this Court. We of course are not bound by a decision of the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.
Justice Black's opinion for the Court in Bell v. Hood,
where the complaint, as here, is so drawn as to seek recovery directly under the Constitution or laws of the United States, the federal court ... must entertain the suit.... The reason for this is that the court must assume jurisdiction to decide whether the allegations state a cause of action on which the court can grant relief.... Jurisdiction, therefore, is not defeated ... by the possibility that the averments might fail to state a cause of action on which petitioners could actually recover. For it is well settled that the failure to state a proper cause of action calls for a judgment on the merits and not for a dismissal for want of jurisdiction. Whether the complaint states a cause of action on which relief could be granted ... must be decided after and not before the court has assumed jurisdiction over the controversy.
In Northeast Department, each of the three judges on the panel had a different view as to the jurisdictional basis of an action brought by one employee benefit plan against another, seeking declaration of which plan was "responsible for the medical bills of a woman who [wa]s a participant of the former and a beneficiary of the latter."
Both Franchise Tax Board and Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
We interpret Franchise Tax Board and Delta Air Lines to teach that, at a minimum, federal question jurisdiction exists pursuant to ERISA where the rights being disputed are "of central concern to the federal statute." Franchise Tax Board,
The question whether an action by employer-contributors to recover overpayments can be implied from ERISA, or created under the theory of unjust enrichment, is one that is currently hotly debated. See, e.g., Dumac Forestry Services, Inc. v. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
It is undisputed that as of June 7, 1979, the Fund had a refund policy that allowed a refund for contributions based on mistakes of fact, for amounts paid within one year prior to the date of the refund request. Airco II,
Rule 36 provides, inter alia, that
[a] party may serve upon any other party a written request for the admission, for purposes of the pending action only, of the truth of any matters within the scope of Rule 26(b) set forth in the request that relate to statements or opinions of fact or of the application of law to fact including the genuineness of any documents described in the request.... A party who considers that a matter of which an admission has been requested presents a genuine issue for trial may not, on that ground alone, object to the request: the party may, subject to the provisions of Rule 37(c), deny the matter or set forth reasons why the party cannot admit or deny it.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 36(a).
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c) also contemplates the binding effect of admissions made pursuant to Rule 36, by allowing a court to grant summary judgment based on, inter alia, the "admissions on file." This Court has approved a district court's summary judgment based in part on a Rule 36 admission. Goodman v. Mead Johnson & Co.,
