The Secretary of the United States Department of Labor sued Thomas J. Schwent, among others, for alleged violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (1994). The District Court granted judgment against Schwent, and Schwent appealed. In
Herman v. Mercantile Bank, N.A.,
The Secretary’s claims having been dismissed, Schwent applied pursuant to the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA), 28 U.S.C. § 2412 (1994), for payment of his attorney fees and costs by United States. The District Court granted Schwent’s application for costs but denied his application for attorney fees after determining the Secretary’s position in the litigation was substantially justified. Schwent appeals. We reverse.
I.
As Mercantile Bank describes in greater detail, Schwent was a vice-president of Lenco, Inc. and the administrator and trustee of Lenco’s health plan. Jerry Ford purchased Lenco in 1986, relying in part on funds borrowed from Marine Midland Bank (Midland Bank). Seeking to ensure repayment of its loan, Midland Bank established a financing arrangement that ultimately caused Lenco to suffer serious cash-flow shortages.
When cash-flow shortages occurred, Ford elected to pay certain operating expenses instead of funding Lenco’s health plan fully. Lenco continued to pay medical claims, but payments for most claims filed between November 1986 and March 1988 were delayed several months. (Len-co switched to another health-insurance plan in March 1988 and remained current in its payment of claims filed under this second plan.) When Lenco entered bankruptcy on June 20, 1989, approximately $143,166 in claims had not been paid.
The Secretary subsequently filed suit against Schwent and other Lenco officers, claiming in part that Schwent had breached his fiduciary duty to the health plan. Before trial, the Secretary knew that Schwent frequently had demanded additional funds for the health plan and twice had induced Ford to make personal loans to pay delinquent medical claims. The Secretary also knew that Schwent’s efforts had caused Lenco to pay almost ninety percent of all medical claims filed between November 1986 and March 1988, and that Schwent had convinced Ford and Lenco to change plans in March 1988 to protect health-plan beneficiaries’ rights. Nevertheless, the Secretary took the case to trial and there asserted that Schwent had breached his fiduciary duty by failing to
The District Court agreed with the Secretary’s position. It entered judgment in her favor, awarding the Secretary $137,-770.41 in damages (the amount of unpaid claims not satisfied by Lenco’s bankruptcy estate) and enjoining Schwent from serving in the future as an ERISA plan administrator.
Schwent appealed to this Court. In
Mercantile Bank,
we determined that the circumstances of this case required the Secretary to prove that, if Schwent had sued Lenco, the lawsuit would have been successful and provided benefit to the plan. The Secretary offered no evidence supporting this conclusion.
See Mercantile Bank,
After the District Court dismissed the Secretary’s claims against him, Schwent applied under EAJA for the United States to pay $54,290.42 in attorney fees and $867.30 in costs. The District Court awarded Schwent costs, but denied his application for attorney fees after determining the Secretary’s position in the litigation was substantially justified. See Herman v. Schwent, No. 1-.91CV00011ERW, slip op. at 5 (E.D.Mo. Aug. 25, 1998) (Memorandum and Order denying attorney fees) [hereinafter Order Denying Attorney Fees]. Schwent now appeals the denial of his application for attorney fees.
II.
EAJA allows most parties who prevail against the United States in civil litigation to recover costs.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2412(a) (1994). EAJA also allows those parties to recover attorney fees and some litigation expenses if the Government fails to prove that its position in the litigation “was substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.”
Id.
§ 2412(d)(1)(A);
see also Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness v. Thomas,
This Court previously has stated that the Government’s ability to convince federal judges of the reasonableness of its position, even if the judges’ and Government’s position is ultimately rejected in a final decision on the merits, is “the most powerful indicator of the reasonableness of an ultimately rejected position.”
Friends,
The District Court did not abuse its discretion when it determined that the Secretary reasonably could have believed her position was supported by the applicable law. But the District Court did abuse its discretion when it concluded the Secretary’s position was substantially justified on the basis of facts and arguments we rejected in
Mercantile Bank
as clearly erroneous and unsupported by the record. In
Mercantile Bank,
this Court determined that the District Court’s finding that Schwent failed even to consider filing suit against Lenco was clearly erroneous. All the evidence in the record instead pointed one way: Schwent did not file suit because, having thought about the issue, he realized a lawsuit would harm, not help, the plan and its beneficiaries.
See Mercantile Bank,
Neither in
Mercantile Bank
nor in the present litigation has the Secretary offered evidence refuting any of these reasons or showing the basis for her belief that a prudent plan administrator would have filed suit despite its obvious futility. In the absence of such a showing, the Secretary has failed to carry her burden of proving she was “justified in substance or in the main,”
see Pierce,
III.
Schwent made reasonable, prudent, and largely successful efforts to obtain as much funding as possible for Lenco’s health plan. He then successfully defended his actions against the Secretary’s baseless claims that he should have done something more. The resulting situation is one EAJA was designed to prevent: an individual’s suffering financial ruin because he had to defend himself against the Government’s unjustified lawsuit. In these circumstances, we conclude the District Court abused its discretion in denying Schwent’s application for attorney fees. The District Court’s order denying Schwent’s application for attorney fees is
Notes
. The judge who denied Schwent's application for the recovery of costs and fees was not the original trial judge.
