In this matter, the district court, understandably deeming itself bound by our holding in Williams v. Ashland Eng’g Co.,
We have considerably greater freedom than the district courts to evaluate the impact of recent Supreme Court precedent on our previous decisions. Having reexamined Williams against the changed legal landscape that now confronts us, we are persuaded that subsequent developments have overtaken our decision. Consequently, we abrogate the central holding of Williams,
I. BACKGROUND
The individual plaintiffs performed carpentry work on a public works project in Peabody, Massachusetts. All of them belonged to Carpenters Local No. 26 (the union). At the times relevant hereto, their employer, Henry Construction, Inc. (Henry), was a party to a collective bargaining agreement with the union that required contributions to various fringe benefit funds on the individual plaintiffs’ behalf. Henry defaulted on this obligation before completing the Peabody job.
In Massachusetts, a so-called bond statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 29, the pertinent text of which is set forth in the margin,
Resolution of the controversy eluded the parties. The individual plaintiffs, the union, and MCCCA (hereinafter collectively the appellants) then sued USF & G in the state superior court. The surety removed the action, see 28 U.S.C. § 1441, and immediately sought judgment on the pleadings. The appellants opposed this initiative and moved to remand the action to the state court. On November 3, 1998, the federal district court denied the motion to remand. Some seven months later, it granted USF & G’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. Relying on Williams, the court anchored both orders in ERISA preemption. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s preemption ruling de novo. See Demars v. CIGNA Corp.,
ERISA is a comprehensive statutory scheme that governs employee benefit plans. It was enacted in response to growing concerns about “the mismanagement of funds accumulated to finance employee benefits and the failure to pay employees benefits from accumulated funds.” Massachusetts v. Morash,
Despite this prophylaxis, ERISA preemption is not inexorable. As the language of section 1144(a) makes plain, the incidence of ERISA preemption turns on the parameters of the phrase “relate to.” See California Div. of Labor Standards Enforcement v. Dillingham Constr.,
Importantly, these variations in emphasis have led the Court to conclude in recent years that the phrase “relate to,” as used in ERISA’s preemption provision, cannot be read literally. “If ‘relate to’ were taken to extend to the furthest stretch of its indeterminacy, then for all practical purposes preemption would never run its course.... ” Travelers,
A. Connection.
Travelers plainly signaled a significant analytic shift in regard to the “connection with” portion of the ERISA preemption inquiry,
For the same reasons that infinite relations cannot be the measure of pre-emption, neither can infinite connections. We simply must go beyond the unhelpful text and the frustrating difficulty of defining its key term, and look instead to the objectives of the ERISA statute as a guide to the scope of the state law that Congress understood would survive.
Travelers,
Cataloguing the objectives of the ERISA statute is a fairly straightforward exercise. When Congress conceived the ERISA scheme, it made manifest its intention to “protect ... the interests of participants in employee benefit plans and their beneficiaries ... by establishing standards of conduct, responsibility, and obligation for fiduciaries of employee benefit plans, and by providing for appropriate remedies.” 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). Achieving this end requires the avoidance of “a multiplicity of regulation” and, concomitantly, the creation of a climate that “permit[s] the nationally uniform administration of employee benefit plans.” Travelers,
It is well accepted, however, even under the new regime, that state laws which furnish alternative enforcement mechanisms threaten the uniformity that Congress labored to achieve and thus are preempted by ERISA.
We answer that question in the negative. ERISA preemption proscribes the type of alternative enforcement mechanism that purposes to provide a remedy for the violation of a right expressly guaranteed and exclusively enforced by the ERISA statute. See Ingersoll-Rand,
That ends this aspect of the matter. The Massachusetts bond statute does not constitute a proscribed alternate enforcement mechanism. By the same token, it has no other meaningful nexus with ERISA; it does not, for example, interfere with the administration of covered employee benefit plans, purport to regulate plan benefits, or impose additional reporting requirements. Last — but far from least — it regulates an area of the law traditionally thought to be the states’ preserve: enforcing contracts under state law for the citizenry’s protection. See Operating Eng’rs Health & Welfare Trust Fund v. JWJ Contracting Co.,
B. Reference.
Discerning no impermissible connection, we turn to the second branch of the ERISA preemption analysis and ask whether the Massachusetts bond statute refers to covered employee benefit plans so directly as to justify preemption. Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Travelers, this court answered that query affirmatively, holding that the bond statute singled out ERISA plans and was therefore preempted. See Williams,
We do not gainsay that the principle of stare decisis forms an integral part of our system of justice. Withal, that system is not only precedent-based but also hierarchical. When emergent Supreme Court case law calls into question a prior opinion of another court, that court should pause to consider its likely significance before giving effect to an earlier decision. See, e.g., Odum v. Boone,
Let us be perfectly clear. We value finality, stability, and certainty in the law, particularly in the field of statutory construction. See Hubbard v. United States,
The place to begin such an odyssey normally would be with Williams itself. Here, however, we retreat further into the past, cognizant that Williams relied heavily on an earlier precedent, McCoy v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
In McCoy, we ruled that ERISA preempted the operation of a Massachusetts mechanics’ lien statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 254, because the language of the statute “expressly single[d] out ERISA plans for special treatment.” McCoy,
[A]ny plan that grants benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 186, which is another way of describing any plan that grants benefits under section 302 of the Taft-Hartley Act, is by definition an ERISA plan. Put bluntly, by singling out “section 302” plans for special treatment, the Massachusetts mechanics’ hen law, in the same stroke, singles out ERISA plans for special treatment. It is, therefore, preempted as it applies to ERISA-regulated plans.
Id. at 19-20. We attributed this conclusion in large part to what we termed “considered dictum,” id. at 19, appearing in Mackey v. Lanier Collection Agency,
McCoy set the stage for Williams. There, we harkened back to McCoy and depicted the mechanics’ lien statute and the bond statute as “sisters under the skin.” Williams,
The key precedents are the Supreme Court’s subsequent opinions in Travelers and Dillingham. The extent to which the analytical shift chronicled in these opinions applies to the “reference to” aspect of the ERISA preemption inquiry is less than obvious. The Travelers Court quickly ruled out any possibility that the state law it was called upon to consider made reference to an ERISA plan and refined the ERISA preemption analysis in the context of the “connection with” inquiry. See Travelers,
USF & G contends that, absent an- outright endorsement, we should disregard the reasoning of Travelers and Dillingham in pursuing the “reference to” question. We think not. Although the Travelers Court had no occasion to link its newly conceived “objectives” analysis to the “reference to” inquiry, the two building blocks on which that analysis rests — the starting presumption that Congress did not intend to supplant state law and the requirement that no preemption be deemed to occur in areas of traditional state regulation except in accord with the clear and manifest purpose of Congress — logically undergird both inquiries. See Travelers,
To begin with, Dillingham makes clear that two types of state laws — those that impose requirements by reference to ERISA plans and those that specifically exempt ERISA plans from otherwise generally applicable provisions — as" well as state causes of action that are predicated on the existence of ERISA plans all refer to, and thus relate to, ERISA plans for purposes of 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). See Dillingham,
Examining Williams through the prism of Travelers and Dillingham, a rational distinction between the mechanics’ lien statute and the bond statute, not previously thought to be important, bubbles to the surface: unlike the mechanics’ lien statute, the bond statute makes no direct reference to section 302. Instead, it states that bonds for public works projects shall cover, in addition to labor and materials,
any sums due trustees or other persons authorized to collect such payments from the contractor or subcontractors, based upon the labor performed or furnished as aforesaid, for health and welfare plans, supplementary unemployment benefit plans and other fringe benefits which are payable in cash and provided for in collective bargaining agreements between organized labor and the contractor or subcontractors ....
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 29. The language concerning trustees is not ERISA-specific, but stands at the end of a long list of items that contractors are required to secure (e.g., amounts due for labor performed, materials furnished, transportation, equipment rental, and the like). The diversity of this list is telling (especially since most of these items have nothing whatever to do with ERISA). Furthermore, the bond statute treats contributions to fringe benefit plans in exactly the same manner as it treats the other (non-ERISA-related) elements that fall within the statutory sweep. Given the Dillingham screen, this combination of factors stretches any inference that the bond statute singles out ERISA plans for special treatment past the breaking point.
The sockdolager is that emergent Supreme Court precedent, by disavowing a strictly textual approach to the interpretation of ERISA’s preemption provision, encourages us for the first time to conduct the “reference to” inquiry in light of the actual operation of the challenged state statute. See De Buono,
USF & G’s argument that the bond statute singles out ERISA plans because it is limited to public (as opposed to private) construction contracts lacks force. It is common ground that state laws of general application are safe from ERISA preemption even if they impose some incidental burdens on the administration of covered plans. See Washington Physicians Serv. Ass’n v. Gregoire,
In our view, the concept of “general application” cannot be parsed that closely. A state law that applies to a wide variety of situations, including an appreciable number that have no specific linkage to ERISA plans, constitutes a law of general
To sum up, the bond statute, gauged by the principles embodied in recent Supreme Court case law, neither singles out ERISA plans for special treatment nor depends on their existence as an essential part of its operation. Rather, the statute is “indifferent to ... ERISA coverage.” Dillingham,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. The issue here is whether ERISA preempts the appellants’ state-law cause of action. Believing, as we do, that Williams no longer aids us in our consideration of this issue, we abrogate its central holding. See supra note 1 & accompanying text.
Taking a fresh look at the Massachusetts bond statute and giving due weight to Travelers and its progeny, we conclude that USF & G has not overcome the starting presumption against preemption. Accordingly,, the bond statute does not “relate to” any covered employee benefit plan within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). It follows that the entry of judgment on the pleadings must be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Following the procedure described in cases such as Trailer Marine Transport Corp. v. Rivera Vazquez,
. The statute provides:
Officers or agents contracting in behalf of the commonwealth or in behalf of any county, city, town, district or other political subdivision of the commonwealth ... for the construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling, repair or demolition of public buildings or other public works ... shall obtain security by bond in an amount not less than one half of the total contract price, for payment by the contractor and subcontractors for labor performed or furnished and materials used or employed therein [subject to certain restrictions]; for payment of transportation charges for materials used or employed therein ...; for payment by such contractor and subcontractors of any sums due for the rental or hire of vehicles ... and other appliances and equipment ...; for payment of transportation charges directly related to such rental or hire; and for payment by such contractor and subcontractors of any sums due trustees or other persons authorized to collect such payments from the contractor or subcontractors, based upon the labor performed or furnished as aforesaid, for health and welfare plans, supplementary unemployment benefit plans and other fringe benefits which are payable in cashand provided for in collective bargaining agreements between organized labor and the contractor or subcontractors....
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 29.
. This aspect of the case does not require us to consider USF & G's stare decisis argument. Our decision in 'Williams focused solely on the “reference to” furculum of ERISA preemption analysis, see
. In Ingersoll-Rand, the Supreme Court recognized that a state law can be preempted as an alternative enforcement mechanism to ERISA § 502(a). See Ingersoll-Rand v. McClendon,
. Footnote 12 of Mackey (and, thus, the McCoy rationale) likely endures. See Dillingham,
. Temporal considerations bolster this conclusion. Massachusetts adopted the bond statute in 1957- — a quarter-century before Congress enacted ERISA. This chronology
. The Court listed three examples. (1) The reference in Mackey was too explicit to be construed any other way: the statute at issue there targeted "[flunds or benefits of a pension, retirement, or employee benefit plan or program subject to the provisions of the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act....” Mackey,
. On remand, the lower court should consider whether any other basis for federal jurisdiction exists (and if it discerns none, should restore the case to a state forum).
