Bаrbara CLER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ILLINOIS EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, National Education Association, IEA Unified Legal Services Plan, and Kate Frank/DuShane Unified Legal Services Program, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 04-3193.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 7, 2005. Decided Sept. 9, 2005.
423 F.3d 726
For the foregoing reasons, we must reverse the award of attorneys’ fees assessed against the Director.
REVERSED.
David Stevens (argued), Heller, Holmes & Associates, Mattoon, IL, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Before ROVNER, WILLIAMS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
SYKES, Circuit Judge.
When Barbara Cler was terminated from her job as a schoolteacher, she asked her union‘s legal services plan to provide her with an attorney for purposes of pursuing an employment action against her former employer. When the union refused her request, Cler hired an attorney at her own expense and was ultimately successful in her case. In the present action, Cler contends that the defendants wrongfully denied her request for legal services and seeks to recoup the approximately $25,000 she was forced to spend in retaining an attorney on her own. The district court dismissed the case on the defendants’ motion pursuant to
I. Background
The first task in resolving this appeal is identifying the defendant(s) against whom the various claims in the complaint are asserted, an inquiry that should bе straightforward but has been complicated by the complaint‘s confusing structure and cavalier approach to grammatical usage. The caption and opening paragraph of the complaint identify four separate entities as defendants, two of which are labor unions—the Illinois Education Assoсiation
After asserting the separate existence of these four defendants, the complaint immediately becomes subsumed in confusion as to whether, and to what extent, the two labor unions and two legal services plans are considered separate and distinct entities for purposes of the claims in the lawsuit. Paragraph two of the complaint reads in part: “The Defendants [IEA] and [NEA] are a labor union ....” Paragraph three reads in part: “The plans, [DuShane plan] and [IEA plan], is an employee benefit plan ....” There is an obvious disconnect between the plural subjects of these sentences and their corresponding singular objects or verb tenses. The confusion generatеd by this careless usage is exacerbated by subsequent factual allegations referring only to “the Defendant” or “the Defendant union,” without specifying which of the two unions or four defendants is intended. For example, the complaint alleges that “the Plaintiff made several requests of the Defendant that an attorney be aрpointed on her behalf” and “Plaintiff went to the Defendant union and requested that they provide legal representation for her ....” In short, it is difficult to assay the complaint and come away confident as to which defendant is being referenced at any given point.
This lack of clarity spills over into the third and final count of the complaint, in which it is alleged that the defendant(s)’ failure to provide Cler with legal representation constituted a denial of benefits to which she was entitled under the terms of a welfare benefit plan, in violation of ERISA. This claim, by virtue of its invocation of ERISA, provides the sole basis for Cler‘s assertion of federal jurisdiction.2 Thе DuShane plan is mentioned by name in Count III, but there is no overt mention of the IEA plan. However, in the five paragraphs comprising Count III, the words “defendant” and “defendants” are used. For example, paragraph twenty of the complaint alleges that “the defendants failed to provide benefits to her which she was entitled [sic] under the plan in violation of the provisions of ERISA.” As in other parts of the complaint, this allegation refers to plural defendants but a singular “plan.” Count III of the complaint also references an exhibit described as an excerpt from “the Defendant unions’ booklet relating to providing legal representation.” This allegation uses the plural “unions” and the exhibit appears to be two pages taken from an overview of services provided jointly by the NEA and IEA to its members.
All four defendants moved to dismiss. The district court construed Count III as leveled only against the DuShane plan. The court then held that the DuShane plan was not a “welfare benefit plan” for purposes of ERISA because the scope of legal services it provided to members was limited to employment-related matters. This limitation, in the district court‘s view, took the DuShane plan outside ERISA‘s definition of a welfare benefit plan. That definition includes plans that provide “prepaid legal services,” which the court construed
Having determined that the DuShane plan was not a welfare benefit plan within the meaning of ERISA, the district court held that Count III failed to state an ERISA claim, and also declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction ovеr the state law contract claims. Accordingly, the court dismissed the action in its entirety.
II. Discussion
A. Construction of Count III of the Complaint
Cler argues on appeal that she intended to bring Count III, the ERISA claim, against both the IEA plan and the DuShane plan and that her failure to specifically name the IEA plan in Count III was an obvious oversight that was improperly seized upon by the district court as a basis to dismiss her complaint. She argues that her intention to bring Count III against more than one defendant was clear enough under the liberal rules of notice pleading and that the district court erred when it analyzed only whether the DuShane plan was a welfare benefit plan for purposes of ERISA. Cler points to the fact that earlier in the complaint she clearly alleged that both the IEA and DuShane plans are welfare benefit plans for purposes of ERISA, thereby putting the defendants on notice that she was pursuing ERISA claims against both entities.
A motion under
Working hand in glove with
The liberal construction given to a complaint, combined with the minimal notice pleading requirements of
B. “Prepaid Legal Services” under ERISA
Because of its erroneously narrow reading of the complaint, the district court did not consider whether the IEA plan was a welfаre benefit plan under ERISA. The court did conclude, however, that the DuShane plan was not a welfare benefit plan because it did not offer “prepaid legal services.” Under the definition of “welfare benefit plan” contained in
ERISA does not define the phrase “prepaid legal services” as used in
Specifically, the court turned to a provision in the IRC that delineates the circumstances under which an individual‘s gross income should include amounts contributed
In short, the district court‘s construction of the phrase “prepaid legal services” as used in ERISA was based on an income tax statute defining a different phrase and a list of examples of the types of legal assistance available under an NEA program that apparently has nothing to do with this lawsuit. The defendants rely on this same convoluted analysis on appeal. This mode of evaluating whether the complaint states аn ERISA claim is clearly flawed.
Our own research has disclosed no cases attempting to define the phrase “prepaid legal services” as used in ERISA. We again note that “the cardinal rule is that words used in statutes must be given their ordinary and plain meaning” and that we will “frequently look to dictionaries to determine the plain meaning of words.” Sanders v. Jackson, 209 F.3d 998, 1000 (7th Cir. 2000). Black‘s Law Dictionary contains an entry for “prepaid legal services” that reads as follows: “An arrangement—usually serving as an employee benefit—that enables a person to make advance payments for future legal services.” Black‘s Law Dictionary 1220 (8th ed. 2004). For purposes of the present case, coming to us in the posture of a motion to dismiss, this definition will suffice. The meaning of the statutory phrase “prepaid legal services” is not limited to “personal legal services,” whatever the scope of the latter phrase may be.
We express no opinion on the merits of this suit, and indeed do not decidе whether the DuShane plan and/or the IEA plan are in fact prepaid legal services plans falling within the scope of ERISA. These are questions the district court will have to answer on remand. Neither do we find it necessary to attempt to articulate a more precise definition of the term “prepaid legal services,” beyond what we have noted above, in order to resolve this appeal. Given the preliminary stage of this litigation, we hold only that (1) the district
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
